The Prepper Broadcasting Network - Matter of Facts: Trek is Passing the Torch
Episode Date: December 16, 2024http://www.mofpodcast.com/www.pbnfamily.comhttps://www.facebook.com/matteroffactspodcast/https://www.facebook.com/groups/mofpodcastgroup/https://rumble.com/user/Mofpodcastwww.youtube.com/user/philrabh...ttps://www.instagram.com/mofpodcasthttps://twitter.com/themofpodcasthttps://www.instagram.com/cypress_survivalist/https://www.facebook.com/CypressSurvivalistSupport the showMerch at: https://southerngalscrafts.myshopify.com/Shop at Amazon: http://amzn.to/2ora9riPatreon: https://www.patreon.com/mofpodcastPurchase American Insurgent by Phil Rabalais: https://amzn.to/2FvSLMLShop at MantisX: http://www.mantisx.com/ref?id=173*The views and opinions of guests do not reflect the opinions of Phil Rabalais, Andrew Bobo, Nic Emricson, or the Matter of Facts Podcast*The MoF boys are joined by Trek for a walk down memory lane; through his long career training responsible armed citizens, to the moment he decided it was time to pass the reigns to the cadre he had shared the range with so many times. trainmdfi.comhttps://www.instagram.com/trexicotrek/Matter of Facts is now live-streaming our podcast on our YouTube channel, Facebook page, and Rumble. See the links above, join in the live chat, and see the faces behind the voices. Intro and Outro Music by Phil Rabalais All rights reserved, no commercial or non-commercial use without permission of creator prepper, prep, preparedness, prepared, emergency, survival, survive, self defense, 2nd amendment, 2a, gun rights, constitution, individual rights, train like you fight, firearms training, medical training, matter of facts podcast, mof podcast, reloading, handloading, ammo, ammunition, bullets, magazines, ar-15, ak-47, cz 75, cz, cz scorpion, bugout, bugout bag, get home bag, military, tacticalÂ
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Welcome back to the Matterfacts Podcast on the Prepper Broadcasting Network.
We talk prepping, guns, and politics every week on iTunes, Stitcher, and Spotify.
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I'm your host, Phil Ravely.
Andrew and Nick are on the other side of the mic, and here's your show. Welcome back to Matter of Facts Podcast. I have
sworn to my co-host and my guests, I will keep the admin work as short and sweet as possible
because we have a lot to talk about. So I think the record so far was five minutes. Let's see if
we can do this in two minutes. Thanks to the patrons.
Y'all support the anarchy here, and I definitely appreciate that.
Because if y'all stop paying the bills, then I have to do this out of my own pocket, which means I get wooden spoon to death by the wife.
And I don't like any of that.
So thank you very much.
If you'd like to support the show, the link for our merch is in the show description.
You can get really fun, cheeky stuff like I Choose Violence or What Would Bert Do?
And if you don't know who Bert is, then you had an awful childhood.
Your parents owe you reparations and probably some money for counseling because you missed out on tremors.
And I'm not angry at them.
I'm just disappointed.
And Cypress Survivalist.
So the links for this are also in the show description.
My wife and I started a nonprofit.
We're going to start doing preparedness-related events in our local community down here in Southeast Louisiana, because for years it's been kind of gnawed at me that we do this on the Internet and not everybody's on the Internet.
As strange as that sounds.
And we need to reach the local community and try to educate them, bring them up speed, because if the flag ever goes up, I don't need, no offense
to y'all, a couple hundred friends scattered around the country.
I need a couple hundred friends right here in this area.
And if we could do that here, then we could do that anywhere and try to educate whole
communities instead of just autistic weirdos on the internet.
So that's all the administrative work.
I see two minutes and 30 seconds, which is probably a world record for doing admin work.
of work. I see two minutes and 30 seconds, which is probably a world record
for doing admin work.
I just need to take a breath and turn
the show over to
my two co-hosts, Nick and Andrew, and our guest
Trek, who it's been a
couple of months since we talked to you
last.
You haven't let grass grow on your feet. You've been busy.
I was terrified. It's been so long when I saw that we're
going live. I got real nervous.
We'll see. We'll calm down. We'll be all right. It's been so long when I saw that we're going live. I got real nervous. We'll see if we'll calm down. We'll be all right.
Yeah, no, it's been a busy couple of weeks since we last talked, for sure.
Nice. So what have you been up to?
Well, a big thing right now is closing out the handover of MDFI to my team, Thundercat,
which has been a long time coming after 15 years.
And so we made the public announcement and we're working on all the behind the scenes to get that transition taken care of.
And then I'm unemployed for a very short amount of time.
And then on January, I start the new gig.
And on top of that, the revolver optics conversion from Shield Arms is finally coming to market.
I'm very excited.
So I got a lot of stuff happening right in the next 30 days or so which is pretty awesome very cool man very cool now were those the your your thundercat team were
those the guys that were uh that were teaching with you uh when i took your foundation shotgun
class uh well if so that was probably was that blue water what was the class that was mount That was Mount Pleasant.
If that was the 6th of October class, all the guys kind of showed up.
That was my last class. We didn't announce it.
Oh, okay.
That was my last live fire class.
I'm glad I made that one.
Yeah, it was pretty cool the entire time.
I'm just like, nobody shoot each other. Nobody shoot each other.
I mean, 15 years when you've had a relatively stellar safety record,
aside from one guy that shot himself in 2016 in Waxhatchee, Texas, and another guy that shot himself not in my class in an adjoining bay in 15 years and 20,000 plus students.
Yeah, we couldn't have asked for a better group.
That entire group on 6 October was awesome. Bay in 15 years and 20,000 plus students. Yeah, we couldn't have asked for a better group. That
entire group on 6 October was awesome. And of course, we were dealing with, you know, 70 and
72 caliber scattergats, which I was just happy the class went as good as it could have.
So what you're saying is you desperately didn't want to have to reset the so many days since last
action and back to zero on your last day. Well, I just posted a picture of me shooting from many years ago,
and one of my cadre was like, oh, look, you didn't used to have white hair.
And it's like, I've seen some things, man.
I've seen some things.
So, yeah.
So I'm ready to leave the live fire days behind me and focus on other things.
But it was a great run.
It was an absolutely awesome run.
So I'm very
excited about handing the reins over to them watching them take the next 15 years and then see
who carries the mdfi torch then and i think that's the biggest takeaway of kind of what my brain has
been going through is we've done a really good job of it was it was the brand not the person
behind the brand and so when the announcement was made, I had my letter of stepping down.
Tim Nelson had the letter of the guys taking the reins.
And the feedback, I mean, my phone was blown off.
Lots of people saying, thank you for the 15 years.
I learned a lot, became a better person, a more responsible citizen.
At the same time, the kudos to the guys that are taking the torch was epic.
And so that's really
all I wanted from this was their hard work be recognized. And I think that everybody has done
that and they're going to just seamlessly jump into my shoes and then run the treads off them,
which I'm really looking forward to. Yeah. Yeah. I mean, if the quality of their instruction and
the classes they run is anywhere even close to yours, they blow out of the water any other class I've taken.
Well, I appreciate that. And for the longest time, my concern, this is well before they came on board, it was one day.
And I've said it numerous times. It's not a secret. Pat Rogers, God rest the man.
But I always told everybody that I met, I did not want to do what Pat did.
And it's not a dig on Pat in any way, but he was 70 and full kit down in Alliance, Ohio. He was
doing what he loved, but that is not what I wanted. I wanted to build up a cadre of guys that could
take it over. And if I stayed with MDFI, I could become more of a strategic level, you know, doing
curriculum development, whatever it might be. For me, and that's the
most important thing, and I kind of made it my letter of stepping down, no one should have any
doubt that if I'm handing the reins to anybody else, that they will surpass my expectations
about what MDFI needs to be. And they've proven it to me. Now they get to start in the hours that
they're at, and I'm going to stop with my 16,000 plus hours
of instruction under my belt
and they're going to surpass me one day.
And I look forward to seeing the lessons that they learn
and the stuff that they pass on to their next crew,
which is going to be awesome.
Well, and if I may say like,
I think the simple fact that you are able and willing to like,
I don't want to use the word step down or step aside, but really like pass that responsibility off to your cadre.
I mean, it says a lot for them.
It says a lot for yourself because a lot of people and it's not always like ego or anything. It's not always trust in their their subordinates or their teammates.
A lot of times people just have trouble letting go.
or their teammates, a lot of times people just have trouble letting go. Like once you've gotten that, like you can't do what you've done for as long as you have
without getting emotionally invested in some degree.
It's not possible, I don't think.
So to get that emotionally invested in it and then recognize that like for the good
of you, for the good of the brand, for the good of the instructors and for the good of
the students, like I have to pass this torch and to be able to
let that, let go of that. I think that's, that displays a lot of maturity, man.
Well, it was actually very easy for me. I have been part of the firearms training industry for
15 years now, and I have always kept one foot just across the line to stay in, but I've done
everything I can to keep the rest of me out of it because it's kind of like Camelot. It's a very silly place. Nine versus 45 arguments.
Everybody thinks that the way that they reload a gun is better than everybody else's. And so
that's easy because I'm getting ready to go to a job where I get to be a spook again,
and I don't have to have a public... I might come on here and talk about personal defense,
use of force, which i always love and i
will still be carrying that torch for mdfi teaching uh the beyond the door when a gun's not an option
and human element classes which are very use of force which is what i absolutely love and love
building people up to be thinkers and not just shooters but uh it was very easy because i'm i'm
i don't need i'm very proud of what mdfi is i'm proud of what i did but I'm very proud of what MDFI is.
I'm proud of what I did, but I'm very proud of what they have earned.
And it's been very obvious for the past couple of years, I would say, even since they joined the team, they're far better shooters than me.
I'm far better of an instructor than they are.
And the reason being is because I've got more time, like I said, 16,000 plus hours.
So what it's been the past couple years is i'm teaching
them how to be a better instructor they've been teaching me how to be a better shooter and it's
just been a great uh back and forth and what i love you know i've talked to some of the guys
they're like man trek you know overruled us on this one thing and it and all of a sudden we were
sitting around watching the class go and they're like son of a bitch trek was right the flow worked
a lot better it's like guys i've made the mistakes. You just don't see. And
hopefully I'm trying to prevent you from stepping in those pitfalls that I've done.
It was even funny. I think you may have noticed the last rep of the qualifier with Relay to it
Foundation Shotgun. I realized that if I flip-flop part three and pipe part four the
students will run dry at the very end of it which then saves a step in time management
and brandon looks over at me after i do this ad lib real quick and goes you wait to 15 years to
do that one like your last curriculum and it's like here you go it's yours now take it or leave
it so i love it i like i'm very excited about it this uh the guy's got me this display box it's like, here you go. It's yours now. Take it or leave it. So I love it. I'm very
excited about it. The guys got me this display box. It's got all the alumni cards. We started
in 2015. I've got Tom McNaughton's 1911 in there and then the signed alumni cards where I actually
got to take MDFI classes because I had instructors that could run the class. And I still remember
vividly the first day I got to sleep in
when an MBFI class was happening. And I didn't wake up in a panic because I knew the guys
were doing everything exactly as I would expect. And they weren't doing it because I expected
they're doing it because that's the way they want to run their training. So I'm very excited for the
future. Yeah. I mean, I mean, uh, coming from somebody who I have taken,
I've taken classes,
uh,
under you and now Tim,
Brandon,
Derek,
Grant,
uh,
you know,
Rome.
And,
uh,
and so I,
it's,
it's interesting.
Cause yeah,
I like,
it's funny.
Cause you talk about how you're a better instructor.
They're better shooters.
It's interesting.
Like taking a class from you.
I don't remember what classes they were, but it was one I took with you.
It was a week or two later, I took one and it was under Tim.
The things that he's adopted from you, but it's really funny because he still has his own style of teaching,
which is really cool to see.
Tim's a great teacher.
All of them are great instructors, but the but the, the company is in, uh, I think it's in great hands to, uh,
with Derek, Brandon, and Tim. Uh, those guys are a solid group of guys. They know what they're
doing. They know, they know the firearm industry and they know, you know, if they need to do
something different or kind of change course, I think they'll, they'll see that writing on the
wall and they'll be able to adjust and adapt, which I think is needed in today's society.
In the gun industry, it changes so much.
I mean, Trek, you and I were just talking about that with Red Dots
and the pistols out there nowadays.
It's like with some of these companies that are coming,
or with all the companies that are out there right now,
because, I mean, you throw a stone and you can hit a ton of companies that do milling
for slide milling.
And it's like, well, how are they going to adapt?
Because now the industry is caught on.
So you're seeing, I mean, it's, unless it's,
I mean, usually 1911s,
but they're even starting to get more popular
as far as becoming optic ready.
But you have the Smith & Wesson, you have Ruger, you have all of these companies, you have the smith and weston you have ruger you have all these
companies you have sig they're they're coming optics ready whether yeah some of them have a
crappy ass footprint that apparently now you got to buy an adapter plate and stuff like that which
is shit but uh but that's besides the point i mean the thing is those they are becoming optics
ready so now i don't have to send my 700 or 600, 500, whatever you spend on a pistol.
I don't have to send it off and get milled, spend another couple of hundred dollars to
$300 or more on getting something milled.
It's like, all right, that saves me money.
I'm going to do it now.
Okay.
It's like, how are they going to adapt?
And I think MDFI, as the firearms industry goes through changes and everything i really feel
like the the the new guys are definitely going to be able to adjust um on the fly as needed um
100 bill blowers a guy that i respect tap rack tactical uh very intense awesome dude if you get
a chance i think we're think we've got him.
I'm switching hats.
As an owner of Black Creek Range in Mount Pleasant,
we actually have him coming with Mark Smith next fall for a three-day night vision package
that we had down in Lake.
Another one?
What's that?
Oh, yeah.
Yep.
So we took a year off.
That's a tough class to fill just because it's very niche.
I mean, you've got to have guys that have night vision and this and that. Well, they're coming back. But Bill Blowers has made public that when he steps down full time, and I can't remember if Bill still does anything law enforcement, but he basically said at a certain point in time, he's going to acknowledge that he has an expiration date, not as a guy that's a good
instructor, but tactics are going to change. And so the shield work that he does, the law
enforcement training that he does, heck, laser blasters come out tomorrow. And all of us dudes
have been shooting projectiles that have been dealing with stoppage clearance, things like that.
There's going to be some new Thundercats that know a lot more about these laser blasters. And so,
some new Thundercats that know a lot more about these laser blasters. And so, you know, I was an iron sight in the military, iron sights, my God, I didn't get a red dot on my M4 until my last
couple of years actually carrying one. And then I went in to become an instructor. And so I missed
out time with that. I was a diehard iron sight shooter. I enjoyed shooting iron sights, even in
a red dot world, because I wanted to show people you don't need them. You can certainly be very proficient.
In fact, I think they require a lot more proficiency.
The new guys especially, they came into the fold with red dots.
I am, of course, now a diehard red dot guy.
I think I'm very proficient with it.
But the new guys, of course, my Thundercats, far more proficient.
They created the class, the dot life endorsed by Modern Samurai Project.
They are mentees of Scott. I mean,
I have to acknowledge the fact that there is an expiration date.
I can keep this going.
And there are guys out there that I know that are,
they're going to keep doing it. The only downside.
And I say this with all respect to them is start grooming your replacements.
And I'll say this with absolute respect with EAG Tactical, which was Pat Rogers.
EAG, to the best of my knowledge, is still out there.
You don't hear about it anymore.
And the reason being EAG was Pat.
And no disrespect to whoever took over the company.
And I don't know who that was.
So there are great programs out there.
Hopefully those guys are starting to think about, hey, maybe I should hand it over.
Maybe they have plans to once it's over and the brand will disappear.
And every day there's new training companies, good and bad.
We just saw the video of that dipshit shooting behind the woman on the firing line that was going viral.
That's what had been sent to me about 50 times and made my blood pressure go up.
But good or bad, there's new companies coming on board some will have good stuff some will have bad stuff but uh yeah it's
uh we all have an expiration date and i think this transition is great for the brand mdfi and i'm
looking forward to knocking the rust off and going back to uh how i left the military and what i
started doing which is professional investigation which i really enjoyed and frankly i thought I was very good at. And so I'm looking forward to
stepping into a new position, standing up an investigation division and getting back into
protective work. And so that'll be nice. And I'm going to get to learn from
some guys that are less experienced than me, but especially in the age of chat GPT, my God,
the amount of work that I'm gonna be able to do,
I've already been toying around with it,
that used to take me forever compiling information.
I'm really looking forward to seeing what I can do
with the new technology and then bringing the smarts
that I had from how we used to do it analog
to the new digital age.
And I'm gonna be leaning on a lot of people
when I first start off until I get my feet underneath me.
But that's just the name of the game. Guys with no gray in their beard take over for guys with gray in their
beard and hopefully we built them up and be guys that'll be long-standing men with gray beards
eventually so there you go um yeah that's go ahead andrew that's that's a problem that we see in, I think, every industry. You know, you guys know I'm in manufacturing.
The founder of our company passed away a few years ago.
Fortunately, he took the time like track to train up his replacement beforehand and started to retire in stages and pass that on.
You know, it's really a shame. You do see that in a lot of places,
a lot of small manufacturing companies, one-man, two-man shops where you've got the guy with all
the knowledge and you've got his handy guy, his helper guy that's doing largely labor.
If you don't take the time to train those people up, then once you're done or God forbid,
get hit by a bus, everything stops.
That guy's job stops. Your customers have got to look for a new shop. It's, it's really, uh,
it's something that I think more people need to be comfortable with and accept that they need to
train their replacements in everything. It was a, it was a something that to me, and it, it,
I was air force. My, some of my guys are army Marines. That's something that to me, and I was Air Force, some of my guys are Army, Marines.
That's something that's really hammered in the military is that you're always training your subordinates to take over your job.
In the civilian sector, that's difficult because what happens a lot of times is the subordinate is more competent than the supervisor and takes the job.
And so a lot of supervisors that don't put in their own time,
their apparatus is about training the replacements because they don't want to be replaced. In the
military, you only get rank, you're testing and time. So it's kind of a, you know, if I fall in
combat, you got to be able to pick up what I'm doing and lead people. So that's a very easy
thing. But I'll take a lesson from, I love movies and whatnot for making things relevant.
I've been watching a show on Apple called Silo.
Very interesting.
I kind of got hooked on it, but every person in this limited space has a shadow.
They're always training their shadow because there's a limited amount of people and there's very important jobs.
They always have somebody that is right there as a shadow.
I think that's just a good thing in life to in any profession to have that. And if we go even more socioeconomic, the stuff that's happening with
we're talking about, there's not enough people in the world, the demographics are shifting,
and we've got very skilled laborers, they're getting ready to retire if they're not already.
And there's a lot of people that they don't have the skills. I mean, my God, these kids don't have
to change a tire on their car. So yeah, it's's the same reason why right now if you are a tradesman you can set
the price and you can set the time because there is competition but there's not enough competition
for the amount of demand and so that's what we're seeing right now is skilled laborers there's not
enough of them so yeah it's just a good life lesson to keep training people the average age for a person in my career is 59 and climbing um yeah which tells you that i'm
gonna be in a good place in five years so 15 years of training what are two things that you've taken away?
Ooh, man, that's, that's put me on the spot. Um,
a lot of people from all different walks of life want nothing more than life living in the pursuit of happiness.
And very few of them will train to protect it. Uh,
that's a big one. And I seen i mean we've had we train on
average a thousand students a year record year pre-covid was 1500 students and that's that's
80 plus classes i mean and even with the two teams we've been i'm the i was the full-time guy
uh tim and brandon those guys are full-time they have full-time gigs they were working themselves
uh and we had to be very careful we We could fill more classes, but we have to balance the, we can't burn people out. It got to 15 years. There was times that we had demand and I would
say to my beautiful better half, I got to take a break. I got to not be on the firing line.
It's ridiculously hot, ridiculously humid. humid and i'm just i need a little
bit of down time and we were running about 70 80 classes um but that's people that came to us
um you would hear the stories um of all the bad things that happened to people and a lot of times
people were there because they either heard the story and they didn't want to be a victim
or something bad happened to them and then they said never again i'm not going to just get lucky
or something bad happened to them, and then they said, never again. I'm not going to just get lucky.
So what I hope from MDFI and any other company out there that's doing good things is keep training because there's lots of people that need it. We need to get a lot more people involved.
Current events have definitely made it blatantly clear that I'm from the government and I'm here
to help. Those are scary words. I've always joked that when you have a CPL, the government says
you're good. That should be the telltale sign that you're not trained enough because the government, the second one is there to protect against, says that you're good to go. And then people go, I got my CPL. I'm good. And the government's like, yeah, yeah, you're good. Stay right there. So that's one, two.
Boy, that is a tough one.
I would say, and this is a tough thing to say, is every, and I'm going to preface this because you know how things get taken out of context in clips.
If I am killed tomorrow with a firearm, if I'm killed tomorrow by a guy that has a CPL, a class three license, and he decides to murder me, nobody better try to take the guns from any of my neighbors because of what happened to me. I will die on a hill of brass
casings to protect any American's right to keep and bear arms as protected under the Second
Amendment. So there's my preface. A lot of Americans, every American, every human, but I'm
just going to stick to America because I'm an American. Every American has the right to own as many guns they want of any kind that they want of any caliber they want.
A lot of Americans shouldn't. That's fair. Not saying not saying they can.
I will fight. You can. I want my neighbors to have as many guns as they want.
All I'm saying is as their neighbor, you shouldn't. There are a lot of people out there, and I'm not talking about students I've seen.
There's a few people.
There's a reason why I have Garrett's rule, and I'm not going to go any more.
That's the last name of the worst student I've ever had, which was to me an embarrassment as a man, as a father and a protector.
There are very few students that I've ever had that I'm like, you, you should not
own a gun. You have no business, no emotional control, whatever it is. But I'm just saying
those stories, the stuff that we see, the video of that guy that literally loads his gun behind
the back of his, I'm guessing, beautiful bed or a lot. And if he had just cooked that round off,
it would have blown her brains out. And then he proceeds to fire, like, limp-wristed behind her head.
The thing that got me about that as I was watching it, of course, that stuff ticks me off.
There are a lot of people that are saying that's stupid, that they have done that stuff.
It hasn't been broadcast on the Internet.
But that's a big thing is that my goal with MDFI was to always put MDFI out of business by having everybody trained to a level of training that they would be competent and confident with a gun.
And I prefaced that statement always saying we have a lot of work to do.
And so there are people out there.
Everybody wants their life, living pursuit of happiness.
Very few people actually train.
They'll hope that somebody else comes for them.
And I'm very proud of the people that did.
But there are a lot of people out there that shouldn't.
And I'm not saying they can't.
And I would never vote to take away the right.
And I certainly would not allow the government to regulate that they can't have a gun.
I'm just saying as your peer, as your neighbor, as a fellow American, you shouldn't.
You have no business touching a gun.
You're a liability.
Andrew, I think I've talked to you ad nauseum about there are days that whether it's a video that's going around the Internet or something I saw at the range.
Currently, we are dealing with Black Creek Range, which is going from the classic old conservation club to a new entity, a commercial business that is going to have the control standards of an MDFI class.
75% of what said, well, it is your club if you can keep it right.
Benjamin Franklin. So 75% of my encounters with the membership,
the current membership have been yelling at someone for being stupid with a gun or being stupid in an unsafe manner on a shooting range.
And that's a problem.
And that is maybe because I'm in the trenches.
Maybe it's because I've lived it for 15 years.
So those are, I guess, my two big takeaways.
And now don't take those as frowns.
Those to me would be a lesson of, well, here's a guy that's seen a couple of things like
State Farm.
Know a few things because we've seen a few things.
Be better.
Work to be better. And for what we do, I'm guessing the four of us sitting here would say,
well, I'm not that guy. I'm not the guy that violates the four rules of responsible farms handling around other people. We have to take on the responsibility of saying, you cannot come to
the range with me. And they're like, why? But I got a gun. It's like, I don't want to die in the
range. We've tried to tell you what's acceptable and it's unacceptable. And you still keep doing dumb things. I'm not saying you can't go to the
range. You're not going to the range with us. And through ostracizing, unacceptable behavior,
maybe we can make those people come into the fold. And if we keep educating people and keep
educating people, eventually through that process, we will become the majority and they will become the minority. And I think right now
is that we are the minority as responsible gun owners. Lots of gun owners out there.
Responsible armed citizens is something to hang your hat on because that does take a lot of work
and you should be very proud of it. My father-in-law, I built him a 300 blackout
rifle for deer hunting, went over the four rules
i've had to have a couple talks with him about his gun handling and it's very tough as the son-in-law
but he got the same instructor version when he started to do something unsafe with the gun
and he always comments he goes i don't understand it because when you handle a gun it's like you're
a robot it's like when i have a gun in my hand, there is nothing else in my world.
Yes.
Because you are here and my wife is here and the cats are here and my car is out there
and there's neighbors over there.
So when I'm handling this gun and I know there's a human I can mess up, in a blink of an eye,
you could be gone.
She could be gone.
I could be gone.
And there's no taking it back.
So yeah, I i mean you put
me on the spot i don't want those to sound bad but those are the two kind of things that came to the
front of my mind and we can we can change that and i hope that i know the guys will continue the
gospel and there's lots of other good instructors out there and there's lots of responsibly armed
citizens people that i am proud to call friends and alumni of mdfi and other schools that will not tolerate
that and we'll keep on um bringing the the good gospel to people but i think you'd all agree with
me the last thing we need is another story of the person with the gun that hadn't done anything
wrong does something incredibly stupid and then everybody looks and goes hey all you guys that's
you those are your people and, no, they're not.
But they don't take the time to understand there's a big difference between those types of people.
Yeah, the potential downsides are just too high.
I think it's also important for like, because I saw a comment in here.
Joe Oliveira said that the gunner that says they are perfect, that they have never violated one of the four safety rules as a liar. And I do think it is important, like, for us as individuals to be accountable to ourselves
to admit that, like, we are not all Michael Schumacher behind the wheel.
Some of us are Helen Keller with a driver's license.
Like, you know, we can get better, but we have to first admit that we've screwed the pooch.
And show of hands, has anyone here never had an ND?
pooch and show of hands, has anyone here never had an ND?
So I've cooked a round off into the berm unintentionally once before, but it went into the berm.
It didn't hurt anybody because I only violated one of the firearm safety rules at a time.
I think that's important to notice that normally when someone darwins themselves, it's because they violated two or more of them at the same time.
But I do think it's important, like you said, Trek.
We first of all, like for ourselves, we have to have a little bit of humility and say, I'm capable of screwing up.
I'm a human being.
I mean, like your father-in-law said, you look robotic.
But it's because of years and years and years of like training yourself to do it a specific way so that you don't have an accident. Yeah. And it's, to be honest, when he says I look robotic, that's the most dangerous thing if
I was robotic.
Robotic would mean that I'm doing things without thought.
Yeah, I've had nightmares for 15 years and I will continue to have nightmares.
I've had nightmares about muzzling a student with a firearm.
I think that's very healthy.
I tell all my students that.
Never done it. I've seen instructors in muzzling a student with a firearm. I think that's very healthy. I tell all my students that. Never done it.
I've seen instructors in the safety briefing do it.
Turn my blood cold because you can't take it back.
And I've used that as a big teaching point.
But, yeah, you know, I've had – I've never cooked off a round.
I wasn't supposed to, thank God.
I have never, to the best of my knowledge, never muzzled a person with a gun that didn't deserve it i appointed a gun to human beings before um but i i
can think back to uh rule number one rule number one treat a gun like it's loaded which i did
uh and luckily had safeguards in place because i was a human and that is you know we talk about
press checks are free and always check the condition, even if you think you know. And I had picked up a gun that to the best of my
brain's knowledge was unloaded. I was handling it like it was loaded. But I did a quick press
check. And when I saw a brass in there, there was a couple of choice words to myself about, hey,
thank God you've ingrained this process into your head because it could have been a millisecond.
It could have been, hey, just press out and do that dry wrap.
Thank God it didn't happen.
I mean, so, yeah, we are human, and we are protecting ourselves from the moment that we will never be able to plan for.
The gentleman that my team, and I say team as in cadre and students, we had to do some medical on and poor Huron oh I want to say
it was 2020 I was teaching a you suck it's not the gun class and had an individual in a bay
adjacent to us he had no med kit no cell phone no medical training I had a stoppage with his
nine millimeter handgun and when he was clearing it he had his finger on his trigger and his support
hand over the gun and it got into battery and it went off and it blew a big hole right through his support hand um he did not wake up that day saying i'm gonna go shoot a hole in my hand
i have alumni i i won't of course name names to to protect a mistake many years ago but i had a
student that showed up to his first class at MDFI. And during the opening briefing, just looking at him and listening to him, I noticed a really weird scar on their arm. And later on,
I kind of knew what it was. And later on, he confided that when he was a brand new gun owner,
he bought a 1911, was sitting in his living room with his new big screen TV, and he was doing
something with a 1911. And all of a sudden his ears went he and
there were sparks out of the TV and there was a big hole and he looked down and there was a 45
caliber hole here and out right here and somehow did not obliterate his bones and he wrapped a
towel around it he laid down on his front step after calling 9. And luckily, he got medical care and he carries that.
And we know what happens to people. But many years of training later, became a far better,
more competent gun handler. And I guarantee you, I guarantee you, I took a ricochet. I took a
ricochet in a lion's shootout many years ago, a round bounced off a railroad tie, caught me in my elbow, peeled my skin back to the bone, shuddered my body for a couple seconds, and then I was with a pretty sore arm for a few weeks afterwards.
That's as close as I've been to being shot.
It wasn't my fault.
That guy that put a round into himself, he's probably even more controlled now with the gun because he shot himself and he knows what it feels like.
And I think Clint Smith did a thing, one of his safety briefings, where he pulls out a pocket knife and starts to walk towards people.
And, you know, of course, they back away.
He goes, why are you doing that?
And they're like, because I've cut myself before.
And he's like, exactly.
He goes, you fear this because you know, but most people have never put a round in themselves.
They get really lackadaisical about gun handling. And so I thought that was a very interesting take on it.
But yeah, we are human. The moment. And if I was in a class and I had someone say that they were infallible, I would get off the range immediately.
I tell my instructors, all it takes is for you to mess up once.
And I really look at that over 15 years of any pride that I have in me is I've never put a student's life in jeopardy.
And believe me, if I'm handling a gun in the class, it may not look like it, but I am very, very cognitively thinking about what I'm doing with that gun because it takes a millisecond.
I sweep a student with that gun.
I ND that gun.
gun because it takes a millisecond. I sweep a student with that gun. If I ND that gun,
if I sweep myself during a demo, they're going to look at me and say, hey, hypocrite,
you're telling me not to do it. You did it. You clearly don't care. And then I would leave the range. And we've seen it. I've got two photos that I save, excuse me, three. Now, I have three
photos that are saved on my phone and they are very world-renowned instructors doing very stupid things with guns.
And they're not there to show people.
I kept them on my phone that if I ever needed a reality check that I could go, don't be this person.
Because their status, they might have had their white knights that were defending them.
And, of course, their black knights that were saying, I'd never take a class with you.
Well, I don't want any black knights because my gun handling is brought into question
and the safety in my classes so yeah we um there's a big difference between someone messing up
and it has i've got great friends that have been removed from mdfi classes that i would absolutely
go take like bcqb i would get i would get in a gunfight not against them i would be with them
yep because they're better shooters than me.
I want them to back me up.
Just the fact that they were kicked out for a safety violation in one of my classes does not mean that I think they don't deserve to have a gun.
Make no mistake about it.
You've messed up.
You learned from it.
And those people, when they come back, man, they are the epitome of lessons learned. It's the people that willfully, whether I'm
willfully ignorant or I willfully know that I'm being irresponsible, the gun that keep
doing it, no matter, people point it out, be like, hey man, I'm not trying to be a
prick, but you just swept me, you swept them, it's unacceptable, stop doing it.
And they keep doing it. Those are the problem. Those are the problem. They think they're God,
they think nothing bad's ever going to happen.
That's what really bothers me the most about that video.
That dude doesn't understand that in my brain, in your brain,
everybody else's brain, we saw that young lady's head do this
or her body slumped to the ground.
And that's the worst.
When people send me videos like that, sometimes I do see that.
The body slumps to the ground.
And I just watched a video of a law enforcement instructor, law enforcement instructor that was teaching less than lethal techniques,
collapsible baton, pressure point control tactics. So they had taken all the Leo's real guns.
They put them away. They gave him red guns. That way there were no lethal weapons in the.
guns they put them away they gave them red guns that way there were no lethal weapons in the and all day long they had a red gun the class was over they were all still in this indoor space all the
real guns come back out this instructor draws his email officer he says he thought it was a red gun
pulled the trigger and shot her right in the heart she dies on camera and it ain't an instant death
blood spurting out of her and he is freaking out.
And all I can do every time,
I think it's one of the healthiest things to do,
is I go, what if that was me?
Fix yourself.
Don't ever put yourself in that situation.
Andrew, I think you've been in our non-lethal training area.
We do that stuff that happens.
We take it very seriously about bringing any type of real weapon into an NLTA environment.
And the reason we are such sticklers is because companies with green berets, just happened three years ago,
shoot a student in the neck, a 22-year veteran of law enforcement who's now a quadriplegic, father of two, husband, 22 years,
didn't get shot by a bad guy, got shot in a training class to be a more responsibly armed officer.
And so, yeah, I mean, I don't know who made that joke.
The comment you made, no, people are going to mess up.
There's a big difference between someone that messes up and learns from it and says,
I'm going to be better the next second that I touch a gun.
I'm talking about those people that you see.
I saw a wedding party at Specter Lake before I bought it,
and they're sitting there with 44 Magnums talking,
just loading the guns, 1911s, right in each other's chest,
and they think it's okay.
And they're like, oh, we're a bunch of law enforcement.
I don't want you responding to me.
That's how we all die.
So, yeah, those are two, and that's that gun owner
and a responsibly armed citizen.
Responsibly armed citizen ain't God. They god they're gonna mess up learn from it and that that i'm glad joe said that that's a very important thing to differentiate you know i'll admit i had your
cadre call me out on the line i knew the shotguns i was uh i was not manipulating the safety when i
should have been they called you are not alone in that, my friend.
You're not alone.
They called me out, and you know what?
They did not have to call me out a second time because I made it very important to myself
that regardless of the drill, regardless of what else we were doing, I was doing the safety
manipulation properly.
And by the end of the day, it wasn't even a thought in my head.
The safety would click before I realized I was moving to click the safety off because it was pointed out to me.
Yeah, absolutely.
Yeah, and I expect them to continue that torch.
And I love that.
I love hearing that.
I got called out for it, didn't realize I was doing it, and now it's very, very conscious in my efforts.
Versus one of my first years of teaching back well before the alumni cards,
I almost lost a foot to a shotgun.
Bird shot in the end of the ground on the firing line.
Gun got heavy.
They weren't using workspace.
Started to catch it as it came down. Safety off finger when the trigger single action weapon mm-hmm
running even closer to that was another instructor so we were two of us were
right there it happens that fast and so does hopefully hopefully that gentleman
and I know he turned ghost white when it happened and he was removed from class
hopefully that dude when he handles a shotgun to this day is like nope never again never ever again yeah it's uh interesting uh
the stuff over 15 years i mean you talk to anybody in any field and it's hey what have you seen in
15 years i could imagine in 15 years everything that you've uh you've witnessed seen uh you know on the line but uh
but congratulations on uh i guess you can call the retirement from live fire uh looking forward
to i i know their classes go live so mdfi classes go live january 1st uh go Go to trainmbfi.com and sign up for the classes. The downside of you
retiring though, Track, is I believe their classes get cut because the three lead instructors,
or the lead instructors rather, because of their main jobs they still have,
there's not as many classes this year, correct?
still have uh they're not that there's not as many classes this year correct yeah i think they've reduced it it kind of makes sense it's down to about 30 ish classes which
makes sense normal average 80 on the schedule five or so maybe don't get filled um so yeah
they're doing they're doing pretty much a pretty hefty lifting for one team for their first year.
And they are some classes the guys are real veterans at.
Some classes they're not.
They haven't taught many.
So they're going to be balancing the classes that they are very well versed in and then building their own versions of classes that they're not.
And I'll give you a great example.
They've got one on the books.
I'm not teaching it.
In 15 years, I am the only person that tells the story of the two wolves.
I don't know what they're going to do,
and I don't expect them to try to teach it the way that I do.
They know the material.
They know the material, so they're going to make their own,
and I'm very excited to see it. So, so yeah 30 30 classes and I guess my advice would be
they are the same quality MDFI classes less of them I'm gonna wait what we
really find is the alumni they kind of get it the moment the season goes live
the alumni start to sign up really fast to get their spots we get a lot of
emails every year in the years past where it's, you know,
three days before class and people are like, oh,
I want to take the class that's sold out.
It's like, yeah, it's sold out like a month ago.
So there's one two months from now you might want to jump on.
And they go on the wait list.
And if they're lucky, there's a cancellation.
But a lot of times we'll have wait lists of 10 people.
Maybe one or two will get in.
And that's if someone cancels so yeah i
think they're taking on a very very good undertaking um it will it will grow right before
by the end of the live fire season we did a back-to-back train the trainer where roman
and grant got to actually take the uh unders under tutelage of Brandon, Tim, and myself,
we evaluated them teaching a class of 12 veteran alumni
in both Foundation Handgun, Foundation Carbine.
They learned a lot.
There were things they did really well.
They know there's things that they need to work on.
It was in a very controlled environment.
They will be the new lead instructors.
They just need a little bit more time.
So eventually, MDFI is going to have two teams again and it'll be it'll be back up to the numbers that uh that
is normal for mdfi but yeah the first year i don't it's not a training wheel year it's just
hey let's let's figure out in fact it's kind of funny my wife and i uh they're probably going to
learn a lot more about what goes on on the back end of the system, like the registration system, the emails. So welcome to the party, pal. That's going to be
the answer to them. So they've got a lot. It's amazing when one student transfer,
people wonder like, why can I only transfer a class once? Well, when you find out what has to
go into the man hours, not hours, but there's a lot of work that has to go into moving the credits around and this and that.
The guys are going to be learning all that.
In fact, Allison's going to be spending a day with them going into the back end of the system so they can learn how to build classes and all the website stuff, which that's not my game.
I am the guy that's on the fire. Currently, if someone emails
MBFI, does it go to Allison or does it go to
who does it go to?
Up until the next couple of days, you'll get Allison.
After that, you're going to get Tim Brannon or Derek or whoever it is they appoint.
You'll notice when the signature changes.
They'll be taking over the full operation
of the company.
That's awesome. No, man, it's well deserved. It's well earned.
Thanks. I did see, I got two comments just real quick. So Joe asked, do we immediately remove a
student? If you put someone's life in jeopardy, you're done at that moment. And we make it very
clear, our briefing, we have the most in-depth safety briefing of any school in the world.
very clear our briefing. We have the most in-depth safety briefing of any school in the world. And I only say that as a fun competition because if any other school wants to try to compete against our
opening control briefing, it's just going to make the world safer. In fact, I am giving out the
outline of our opening briefing to anyone that wants it. And I've had, I'm very proud of that
over 20 law enforcement officer instructors contact me and say, Hey, can I get a copy of your opening briefing? Absolutely. All I ask is
give us credit. We've, we've developed it over time. And so if anybody out there is listening,
did you have to be a Leo? You want it? You want to go to the range with your friends and you want
to read or paraphrase our briefing. That would be great. So yeah, if you put someone's life in
jeopardy
and it's made very clear what's acceptable
and unacceptable, you're done.
If you put your own life in jeopardy,
muzzling your foot, muzzling your sport hand,
we'll come on over and we'll be like,
"'Hey man, hey girl, we like you,
"'but you should love you more than we love you.'
"'So stop doing that.'
The only time someone gets removed is if it ain't
sinking in and we don't want to have to put a tourniquet on someone it's generally gets to the
point where we'll walk up and we'll be like and at the third time like they get multiple warnings
but if it's if it's someone that doesn't deserve it you're done if you do it to somebody else if
you muzzle somebody uh if you fire if you nd in the class, you've lost control of the gun.
We had a first rule number four removal in my 15 years, and that was last year.
We were teaching a foundation shotgun class, and there were puffs of dirt up at the top of the berm.
The berm was 20 feet tall.
And we said, what's going on?
The guy's like, oh, my red dot's not working on my shotgun like well
we just went over inspection inventory and we asked you to let us know if anything wasn't working
and you're doing unarmed fire now so you're literally we're giving you the gun command
instead of being an adult saying i can't safely aim my gun you are just bringing your gun up and
shooting and you're almost sending rounds over the berm that was that was a first so that is a gigantic berm how far away is this gigantic bill it's not that's a 45 degree angle to shoot over
that berm yeah well this was not at mount pleasant but it was still a pretty big it was still a
pretty big burn but yeah um so that's the answer to this question. And a guy that comments, certainly press checks,
he said, press checks aren't free. I&I is very important. Chambering and rechambering rounds.
When I was in USAFE, 31st Security Forces Squadron, Aviano Air Base, Italy, if we lost a
single round, it was the end of our life. And so every now and then when we would bring a magazine back in on a security patrol, they would make it.
It's called blocking ammunition.
And we ran a four to one ball to tracer ratio.
So they'd have this wooden block.
There'd be four holes and a red line with a hole.
And we'd have to take one.
They would just pick a random mag and we'd have to block.
And they want to see that all of our rounds were there.
You put the tracer where it's supposed to go. there was a round missing article 15 it was ridiculous well they
were so anal retentive about round count that i actually have photos on 35 millimeter film that's
how old i am of i brought up that rounds were being pressed back in the nine millimeter rounds
being pressed back in because they had been loaded and unloaded so many times the brass casings had been stripped there was chunks missing out of them i took photos
of nine mil rounds that had that problem pushed back i had five five six rounds that were dented
and deformed through a 40 millimeter high explosive dual purpose rounds with giant dents in the war
head and i brought this film footage to my leadership and they said well you don't know
what it's like to have to do accountability.
These rounds are going to stay until we do a full ammo changeout of the entire squadron.
Instead of just saying, here's the bad round, here's a good round.
They wouldn't do it because that's the government.
That's the stuff that all the Shaker, especially veterans.
So if you're doing an eye-on-eye right, if you're thinking through you shouldn't shouldn't have a problem yes look over your ammo just like you look over your mag look over your gun
i i see where he's saying uh yeah if you've chambered and unloaded and unloaded rounds
especially ar-15 rounds the free floating firing pin that firing pin if you notice every time you
take around the chamber there's a little tiny indentation there on the primer uh rounds are cheap i know expensive but they're cheap when it's compared to your life so yes i just wanted
to address it um i and i your stuff inspecting inventory your stuff and when in doubt don't
change it out um i don't have to worry about my leadership saying you can't change it out i just
go to my ammo box and go okay i'm taking this new round and I'm tossing this one either in the trash or I'm going to immediately
take it out and shoot it at the range.
So, there you go. Just wanted to
I saw those two comments. I thought that was good to
bring up. Yeah, I
replied back to him because I
did want to, I wanted to in like
a very short sentence draw a distinction between
what you were saying, which was a press
check and what I think he
was referring to, which was literally like unchambering, rechambering around,
because nerdy BS nobody cares about,
unless you're just a gun guy and you already know this.
If the tip of the bullet hits a feed ramp,
then yes, over time you're going to set the bullet back.
But if you have to pull your slide, your charging handle,
your whatever back that far to check for brass,
you need glasses.
You only need to pull it back
literally just enough to be able to see the brass.
And as long as the tip
of that bullet is still in the chamber,
there's nothing for it to hit going forward
because that's how guns work.
That said, you know, you wake up
if your posture is
bumping the night, chamber round
with your AR, shotgun, whatever. If you keep doing that, you clear it out.
Yeah, just check your stuff.
And that's – I have not seen in my 15 years, press checks being the cause of pushback.
I have seen lots of Leo ammo have setback issues from constantly loading and unloading.
You see it a lot with daily carry ammo too with guys that
sure that unload their gun to put it in the safe every night uh take a shot i've actually got a
little take a sharpie on your top round the round that you chamber and and after a while just get
rid of yeah put that in the if it's if it looks safe put it in the range file if it looks unsafe
just get rid of it um yeah and then look check your brass, the rim around your brass for extractor.
So yeah,
the only,
the only reason I push back against what you just said,
Trek,
is that like me being a reloading nerd and stop me if you reload your own
ammo.
But like the difference between loaded properly at overall length and loaded
way too damn deep is literally like several thousands of an inch
so like i always tell people i'm like you it's almost impossible to visually inspect the ammo
by the time you can tell one of those bullets is too short it's way past way too short yeah
and that's true so like that's the only when it's like that's the only warning i ever give people
like yeah like when i've been in this situation years ago where I had, I'd done exactly what you all were talking about, and I got it in my head.
Like, I wonder how much bullet setback I have.
I literally took all the ammunition I have in the magazine, pulled out micrometers, and checked every round of that magazine, and I was terrified to find out how short the short is.
Well, you'd be surprised, though.
There's actually a fairly good safety buffer in the SAMI spec.
If you're loaded within normal specifications,
10 or 15,000 is a setback on a pistol round.
It's probably not going to detonate your gun.
If you guys would just build a box.
If it probably really would, what did you say, Trey?
Just get a box, load rounds backwards, put rocks in it.
Right, right.
It works.
I got a Staccato 2011.
It'll explode if I look at it wrong.
Right.
So I did want to, I know we were talking about some current events.
Trek, what's your time?
Do you have some time to get into some current events?
Oh, I can go full in the weeds.
It's been a while
perfect you see look we got we got plenty at least a half hour yeah so i mean yeah i i kind
of want to switch gears here uh and i know one of the things that we wanted to talk about was a
couple there's there's been a couple things going on in the news lately that the mainstream media
is throwing out there for distraction purposes uh just because of everything that's going on but uh we have a uh
a marine in uh new york uh daniel penny who was acquitted of all charges uh and i know this because
i saw the tweet from kyle rittenhouse that says hey congratulations on um your charge you know the
the charges being dropped uh which i had to
giggle at um and then also if anybody's been living under a rock they're calling it the
i've been seeing some a couple uh uh headlines of the um it's the highest basically that this
person is one of the most popular shooters of all time. I guess they forgot that Trump took, you know, was they sent two guys after Trump and you don't hear about them anymore.
But what is his name?
Luigi something.
And I can't pronounce that name.
But anyway, he is the guy who killed the UnitedHealthcare, supposedly.
I was going to say we're going to edit that out there.
Yeah, supposedly.
Killed the United Healthcare CEO.
He's the murder suspect.
But, again,
it's one of those things where we laugh at because
it was a manhunt for
however many
days it was a manhunt.
And then he was found at a
McDonald's because he was flirting with the girl.
And he was found with everything on him, same exact, never changed any clothing.
And I don't know, it was very odd kind of.
So, yeah, I mean, I know we wanted to kind of talk about these two things mainly
and just the repercussions that we're seeing because I'm seeing gun control
groups are already pushing that,
that envelope of,
we need to ban ghost guns.
We need to ban suppressors.
It's the death.
It's,
it's so terrible what happened.
And they're not taking into account of what was actually going on.
The fact that this guy was getting ready to testify.
If you, I mean, I've seen a lot of Hitman movies and stuff,
and this looked like a straight-up hit.
If it was ever one, it was not a very good one,
but it looked like a straight-up hit out of a movie.
Yeah, so the Penny trial, first of all, Kyle Rittenhouse, mad respect.
You need to shut up, though.
Well, here's the thing.
We did the three-part series back then.
I was very steadfast on the way the verdict was going.
I'm very proud that I can keep my job doing use of force discussion.
But aside from that, my views on Kyleyle like man i wouldn't have gotten involved in
that you did i'm glad that you got acquitted you didn't do anything wrong you defended yourself
get off social media dude stop stop look that's just me rock on i don't hate you or anything like
that that's my advice secondly um if the ridden house trial was a doozy, the Penny one was a no-brainer.
It was a no-brainer.
That was a guy defending a subway car full of people.
Three guys defending a subway car full of people, and one got charged.
Yeah, well, yeah.
Extra layer of bullshit on the top is all.
Oh, 100%.
The video evidence, of course, then you've got the...
And it's been such a long time since we talked about it. And now there's evidence coming to light about the Chauvin case, which at the time, my God, you know, if you're telling me, if the medical examiner is telling me that no, there was a lot more shenanigans going on. So that might need to be,
I think it needs to be revisited, but to get back to the current case. Yeah.
That was a very political race-based sham trial.
I'm glad I, I,
I looked at Allison the day of the verdict and I said,
that dude's going to prison or he's going to go to jail.
I didn't know what the second trial was.
I was like, the New Yorkers, as much as I want to put faith in fellow Americans, I just didn't see him.
I thought the jury was going to kowtow to the mob.
I'm very glad they didn't.
I'm very glad he's walking free.
He has no business being in prison. If he had been found guilty, if you want to talk about why are all these men just not doing
anything, well, you would have had your answer. And here's the thing. Still nobody in New York
City is ever going to help another person. I wouldn't. Not a chance. I'm going to have to
start looking at how a place voted before I would ever even contemplate intervening and intervening is a a topic that i spend an hour on in our use of force class so um yeah that was good
now uh there was another case that that happened almost at the same time where the the race cards
were reversed and there was no charges brought whatsoever and so it shows clearly you know
political bias uh now the people are
losing their minds. The dad that, that was nowhere for his son for his entire life is now screaming
bloody murder and they're going to, and that's, they're going to, you're going to try to go buy
some more mansions with, with, uh, donations to their, to their cause. But I'm glad that's a,
that was a very cut and dry case and I'm glad it's over. Um the the the ny the nyc ceo murder is very interesting
especially with the gig that i'm getting ready to kick off i called my future boss i'm starting on
the first of january and said hey how's the phone doing today and he goes bro there was every
executive every executive that never thought they needed a detail.
They are now on. So business is going to be boom in the moment I hit the ground running.
Yeah, I've got a couple issues from the security point of view.
If you're valued at that, if you are responsible for that entity and it's 630 in the morning and you're in your thousand multiple thousand dollar suit bebopping down a street in New York.
your thousand multiple thousand dollar suit bebop and down a street in new york
i i don't get that one at all but um i was amazed the thing i made multiple posts that people the cbs news and nypd said it was a bnt well rod see a station six also known as the vp9 veterinary
pistol and i'm like so let me get this straight first of all, if you've ever tried to run one of those, he was just chambering around from a normal slide type weapon.
The B&T, like the well rod, is you have to do quite a bit more on the reverse part of the gun.
But let me get this straight. I'm going to try to do a hit in a city that has got the best intelligence gathering service rivaling many countries out there.
Cameras everywhere. And I'm going to use a gun that is a
class 3 weapon very rare by numbers and easily traceable no i said it was a 3d printed blaster
and probably a timu can yep and from from what we know it was a 3d printed frame where it looks
like a glock slide and it didn't have a nielsen device. They're saying it was a 3D printed can. Can't
stop the signal mail, which is why I'm very excited for 3D printing technology. Not that
they're going to be used in crime, but that's just the way of the future. People can make this stuff
now. And he was clearly just chambering around because it wasn't cycling. I have people saying
it was subsonic. I've got an Omega 9K on my Glock 19. It runs subsonic like a dream when it's got the Nielsen device in it.
So, yeah, the thing that gets me about it, one, wow, what a manhunt.
They put a lot of resources into finding this guy, but I still don't know who shot Trump in the ear.
Yeah, about that.
I don't really know anything.
I didn't know you could hose off a crime scene roof and you could cremate a body and the house is completely sterilized with no silverware in it.
And just,
that's really weird,
but they,
they sure put,
I mean,
and of course the NYPD has got great resources,
so I'm sure they were looking into it and doing their job professionally.
But the,
the big thing is either this guy who know,
and the worst part is you can say conspiracies.
They're able to,
what the past three years,
they're all true. Like they're, they they're conspiracy facts so either this guy is framed
left a backpack full of monopoly money uh who know whatever he's framed or he's the dumbest
criminal on the planet knows the full world is looking for him, goes to a McDonald's and carries the
murder weapon, the fake ID, and I think it's whatever else to make a slam dunk case.
And he's not striking me like somebody that had the, yep, I did it. And I want to spread my
message to the world. He's now screaming at reporters every time he gets a chance saying
something's not right. i don't know where's
his pre-prepared video release that was timed to go out to youtube or twitter or instagram i mean
come on if he was if he was the i want to get caught and spread my message guy where's his
digital manifesto time to be released after the hit because that's what you see on a lot of these
where's his live stream recording of the hit you see that on a lot of these
yeah my biggest takeaway i mean we're we are either going to know the truth or like the trump
assassination attempt we're not going to know the truth until 55 years later. Now, with the new administration coming in, I'm looking forward. Here's the deal. We gave Trump the House, the Senate, and the presidency
his first term. He is saying that he didn't know there was 10,000 appointees. I agree that there
was a lot of working against him. Nothing really got done in that first term as far as you've got the House,
the Senate, and the presidency.
He's now saying we're going to roll.
Okay.
It's his football to drop at this point in time.
So I'm really hopeful that a lot of things that have been hidden from the
American public are going to be brought to light.
But here's the big thing.
From my point of view,
the funniest thing in the entire thing was the amount of people that have been
there, done that background.
They were saying it was a suppressed 22 and it was a station six we don't
they they're not letting us know the facts and so people put a lot of they put a lot of weight
into a grainy video and now it's out there forever um, I'm just really happy it stopped the 9 versus 40 versus 45
and what gun is the best for like five minutes on the internet.
But yeah, it's very interesting.
It is very interesting the background of the victim,
what they're saying about what he was supposed to be –
if he was testifying or if he was going to whistle blow
or whatever the heck it was.
Seems very interestingly
timed um i'm amazed that the shooter for his first attempt was that calm of a cucumber
that's very rare to see people that i mean you can be motivated and dedicated to do it but
most and i can't remember biological Biological responses are hard to get rid of. Yeah, physiological responses, psychological responses.
And most assassins that have been caught on film or have testified, they run up, they pull the trigger until the gun doesn't work, either because it stops working or they run dry and then they just take off running.
I mean, there's lots of things that strike me of, hmm, who farted in the church?
Like, we need to get to the bottom of it.
So the one thing that I won't be doing is when the Pentagon says, don't worry about the drones over New Jersey, I'm going to go, you know what?
We should really be focused on those drones over New Jersey.
I'm not going to leave anybody standing at a podium right now telling me, yeah, here's the facts.
No, it's probably not because you guys have been caught in lie after lie after lie.
But if the FBI is about to get one heck of a new leadership, I will probably find out the facts if they stick to what they promised they were going to do.
So, you know, for the next couple of days, just sit back, be skeptical.
And yeah, those I'm really glad for Penny. For the next couple of days, just sit back, be skeptical.
I'm really glad for Penny.
I hope New York doesn't burn, doesn't strike me.
I don't think the NYPD is fooling around anymore.
It's too cold out.
Yeah.
So hopefully there's no ramifications.
I hope he leaves.
I don't know if he was a resident of NYC or visiting,
but I really hope that he now gets out and goes to a place where freedom is actually celebrated versus um prosecuted and uh yeah um we'll see if they put this uh nyc ceo shooter
in prison with diddy and um we'll see what happens if all of a sudden both of them just
you know die of a heart attack they'll'll probably suicide each other with two bullets.
Oh, yeah.
Murder, suicide in a locked room.
Murder, suicide.
Both will have like two or three shots to the back of the head.
They'll be fine.
Secured cameras will fail.
Yeah, we know the drill by now.
You know, I think that in all reality reality here penny has a hell of a lawsuit
opportunity on his hands you know i don't malicious prosecution at the very least just for the fact
that they only saw one of the three i saw today that he he apparently has secured a lawyer and
they are going to be pursued he should well which frank frankly at this point i
kind of feel like you know like the four of us i think would all agree that malicious prosecution
is a thing in certain parts of the country and i kind of feel like it needs to be dealt with
in much the same way like false allegations have to be dealt with my only my only irritation is
always the fact that it's never the prosecutor whose butt winds up on the leash.
It's the taxpayers. But the taxpayers voted for that prosecutor.
Well, yeah. That is kind of the other side
of that coin. It's like, yeah, y'all get to foot the bill because y'all
installed this retard in charge of this process. I guess I just
kind of feel like if you know, if,
if some kind of way, if we could, in Phil's fantasy, maybe one day we'll make it to where
elected officials lose their, you know, lose their immunity to prosecution for doing historically
stupid things, and then they can individually be sued. Well, you're immune for prosecution until
you actually do something against proper jurisprudence. And so the kicker is, were things violated?
And if you look to the case of Kurt Kulik, you know, Kurt, I think, had a hell of a case.
And I would say there is evidence of violations of proper jurisprudence with the ex parte communication that happened between the judge and the prosecutor and lots of other shenanigans.
But in Kurt's own words, is it worth it? He got his life back. He walked free. He walked away a
free man and proven that what he did was justified. Does he want to bank, possibly bankrupt himself
even more? And by the way, thank you to everybody out there listening. We did take in, I believe,
even more. And by the way, thank you to everybody out there listening. We did take in, I believe,
$25,000 with Operation Skywalker. And I was very proud. Kirk was at least able to get the mortgage taken care of at the house. Their house is theirs. Fantastic. That's absolutely huge. He's never
going to be made. I mean, still far, far under from what he had to spend, but get that CPL insurance. But yeah, I don't know. And
he probably has enough high profile-ness, unlike Kirk did, that there's probably a lot of attorneys
that are saying, you don't need to worry about the fees. We will take this percentage. You don't
have to front a bill. And if it was me, yes. That would be someone needs to pay.
It's a point of principle at a certain point.
Yeah.
And if New York's like, but you're taking our money.
Like, well, it is your fault.
You did put him in there.
Like, stop voting for these people or voting for people who put these people in one way or the other.
So, yeah, I would not blame him if he's like he disappears, leaves the state, goes and gets a job somewhere and we never hear his name again.
He has earned the right to disappear that I that I in are run like that understand that the consequences have already been done.
When you were on a bus, a train, a subway in public, and someone is doing something like that, now even less people are going to try to help you. So be prepared.
You better train yourself.
You better go to a place where you can actually carry a gun,
carry a knife, carry pepper spray, get some jujitsu training,
whatever it is you need because no one's coming to save you,
to quote Matt Graham.
And that's the worst part about a good victory is that the people of New York
are not safer.
That's the worst part about a good victory is that the people of New York are not safer.
And people are touting the election, not only the electoral victory, but the popular vote.
That's great.
But the popular vote was 5 million more.
There's still 75 million people that think like the people that would put him in prison for saving the lives on that,
that subway train. So, um, get to a play, you know, uh, this kind of goes into, I think I've been on the show numerous times and I've said, you know, we got to write letters to our government
officials. We need to do all this stuff and then get involved in grassroots organizations. I've
gotten to the point now, especially in Michigan, um, right now with what's going on, the lame duck legislature is pushing through over 100 bills
right now. They want to criminalize my spray painted guns that aren't, if they're not black,
gray, or rainbow colored, I will go to prison for having camouflage. They want to make it even more
restricted on where I can carry my gun. They want, oh, I'm trying to think. Oh, they're going after Phoenix Ammunition specifically.
It's clearly tailored that a firearms manufacturer,
ammunition manufacturer that runs their mouth on social media,
the Attorney General can dub them like a threat and shut them down.
Of course.
What I've basically, I've changed, like I've written this year,
I have written some letters to my representatives.
And all I get, whether Republican or Democrat, is a canned response.
And then they sign up for their newsletter where they tell me how much of not doing anything they're doing while trying to make it look good.
Become a member of FPC.
Yes.
For the longest time, and I know some of the guys that PC and the leadership I said,
I've supported,
I did a joint party with them at the leatherneck club and shot show a
couple of years ago.
I will support them forever.
At first I was kind of like,
Hey,
the old F you know,
like I totally get it.
Like I think it,
but a marketing,
maybe we should,
let's get a little bit more people to our,
no,
no,
no.
I am fully these people.
And RFK Jr. said it very eloquently.
You know, this is not the Democrat Party of his father and his his uncle where Democrats and Republicans, they wanted the same end result.
They disagreed on the way to get there and that and he basically
says the democrat party left me i did not leave the democrat party this this current
democrat party letters ain't gonna work no lawsuit gonna work we have to make them pay
we have to shut them down the firearms coalition, they are doing more with less
than the NRA, which was negotiating rights. The FPC is doing more with far less and they are
bringing the pain. And so I'm like, no, absolutely not. You guys are getting high on Zoloft and
Franzia. You're losing your minds and the legislator. You know what you pass. I'm not
going to take the time to write a hundred letters about a hundred different bills because all you're losing your minds and the legislator you know what you pass I'm not gonna take the time to write a hundred letters about a hundred
different bills because all you're gonna do is send me a Ken response I'm gonna
take the time and I'm gonna just put the money in to FPC send an email going hey
you guys see what's going on in Michigan and they're gonna say we got this and
they will yeah they've been doing it and there's others other FPC I call out
because I've been a member of theirs for a while. I'm sure there's other gun owners of America.
GOA is fantastic as well.
Michigan Open Carry.
I know there's MCRGO and Michigan gun owners, but Michigan Open Carry historically has brought more good results through lawsuits
than any of the other groups that I'm aware of.
And I'd be happy to be corrected if I'm wrong. So think locally, state organization,
get with a federal organization like FPC. They jump around the country suing the pants off of
tyrants. And that's where we're at because we have realized even more so people have been,
their eyes have been open over the past couple of years does my gun color matter the bad guy doesn't care about the gun color by the way if my gun was
rainbow you'd go well that's fine but my my three-color woodland because i live in the woods
and i might want to you know disappear with my gun if i ever had to that's a problem you know i'm a
you know veteran of the united states, military, upstanding citizen,
want nothing but life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness for me and my neighbors,
regardless of political party.
You're saying I'm a bad guy.
Now you're saying I can't carry in a polling.
You can't have a gun concealed or open in a polling location.
And it was really funny to see all the polling personnel go,
yay, thank you for making me safer.
It's like, bro, you can't carry a gun in there either homie so the bad guy that comes walking through the door that
doesn't care about that law and you do because you're worried about getting slapped on the wrist
yeah you're now defenseless so congratulations um yeah it's it's uh we're in a trying time i'm
becoming far less okay with the classic this step from this to know just just go to the fpc go to
the nuclear option um yeah that that's the way that we've got to deal with this because it's
getting ridiculous between between Michigan and Illinois there is no compromise anymore there is
no discussion anymore the only answer is shall not be infringed yeah I I think it warms my heart so much.
I was just going to say it warms my heart so much
to see so many people in the gun community
finally start saying what I was saying 10 years
ago that got me kicked out of light spaces
because I was making people uncomfortable
by saying F your tax stamp and F
all this nonsense and damn the NFA and we
should all have rocket launchers and machine guns.
It's so
nice to not be the only crazy one in the room
guys. Thank y'all so much. You want to ban nukes?
Pass the constitutional amendment.
Well yeah
it has
come down, you know, and like I said, my disagreement
was the tagline
well, there are some businesses where
you probably can't have an MDF5
business card that says, you know, MDFI, fuck you on the other side.
That's not going to work out too well.
But then again, MDFI is training people to be more responsibly armed citizens.
I'm trying to get in the people that just don't know.
They don't know about their rights.
They don't know about what being responsibly armed is.
They don't know about what being responsibly armed is.
FPC deals with the worst people in our country that took an oath to defend the Constitution of the United States. And they go, you know, we're just going to take this little bit out of the Constitution.
How's that?
And they're like, fuck, you know, that's the way it has to be.
It has to be from now on.
So FPC, good job.
I'll keep making my membership.
Yeah, I want to reach out to Kyle with,
with Phoenix.
And also I think it's time we haven't had him in a while.
So I think it's time to get him on and discuss some stuff.
And I have to reach out to,
I know I wrote,
I wrote FPC a while ago about trying to get someone to come on,
but now I got nothing back.
So it'd be interesting to get someone from FPC on too.
But yeah, I think I'll reach out to Kyle,
try to line him up soon as well.
But yeah, they're trying to push as much as they can through.
It's ridiculous, the rights that they're trying to take away.
Well, and I know full well that if i'm not mistaken we may be taking back the legislature but they can try to
reverse it but then it can be vetoed so if you don't have overriding veto power which i don't
believe there's a majority control that can do that they're going to get stuck in there you know
i was just kidding the alumni group was talking there's a bunch of guys that work at FFLs,
and this new requirement when you buy a rifle,
you have to get a purchase permit or use your CPL.
And not even the state police,
the local municipalities don't understand what's going on.
The state police have no idea how to deal with it because it makes no sense.
And, oh, by the way,
I can go to Indiana or Ohio with my Michigan driver's license and buy a
long gun. I get my NICS check, get a long gun. I don't have to do some form. And by the way,
the loopholes, the legal loopholes that are still in place of Attorney General 3490 saying if I have
a Florida, Arizona, et cetera, and a Michigan CPL, I'm exempt from firearm registration. So
you didn't close that. That's still part of the way that it
works, but now you're mandating something that doesn't do any good whatsoever.
Yeah, we've got that same problem in Illinois right now. I talk with my local sheriff every
now and then to try and figure out what is going on. And the state police, the locals, the sheriffs,
they're not entirely sure to this day what is enforceable and what isn't in PICA.
It's ridiculous.
I mean, they're still arguing in the legislature exactly what the meaning of some of their sentences were last I heard.
All I'm going to say, guys, is Louisiana has enough room for all of y'all.
It has mosquitoes the size of my dog.
Listen, I just got back from Bon Air.
And Louisiana is like Bon Air humid.
So you're not going to get me down there.
I'm a danky.
I about died.
I about caught fire.
If it wasn't for the moisture there, I would have burst into flames.
I'm okay with the Hoth weather.
Great.
I can put more clothes on.
They arrest me if I take too many off yeah i got i got back from
from down off the coast of venezuela and i was wearing shorts when i got to detroit and said
i'm really happy to be cold right now up here i'm not happy to be cold go from my workshop to the
house is like 40 yards and i'm gonna probably freeze the outer marker before I get there. For you Star Wars nerds, there you go.
There you go.
Yeah, it's...
But on the upside,
there's no lightsaber or blaster control
down here, so you have that going for you.
Fair.
Alright, guys. Well, we're going to have to do
this again, Trek, especially now that you're
no longer...
Now that you're no longer the face of MDFI.
Maybe now is the perfect opportunity to rile you up and get you to have a full-blown rant like I used to.
I'm still working for MDFI as a staff instructor, so I don't want to get fired by Tim because he would fire me just to say he fired Trek.
I can't blame him.
I got to balance. So, yeah, I can't blame him. I gotta balance.
So, yeah, I gotta balance a little bit.
But is there anything you could say
that would be in character for you
that would get you fired?
Probably not.
Other than just...
I'd get a talking to.
I'd probably get a talking to.
A good stern talking to.
A good stern talking to and maybe a nasty letter.
I've been chewed out before.
That's right.
I think he would probably enjoy that finger wagging
a little too much.
He's more of a knife hand kind of guy, but that's alright.
Okay. Marine or Army?
Army.
No, we've got a Marine
on staff. If he knife hands, you've got to get out of the way
because he'll take an eyeball out.
Sounds about right. Alright guys, well, you got to get out of the way because they'll take an eyeball out. Sounds about right.
Alright guys, well we got to punt this one out the door.
I've seen the live stream numbers
go up as high as 8 and as low as
3, so there's a couple of you
sociopaths watching and I appreciate that.
Correct, you're still going to be around with MDFI
so I guess you could
give your cadre a shout out for where they can find more information about MDFI. And I look forward to seeing where your career takes you from here because you've already done a lot and you strike me as one of those people that like you don't know how to retire. So I'm going to be watching to see where you go from here. Yeah, I appreciate it. You can see me and the new ownership of MDFI at trainmdfi.com. We've got the 2025 season schedule currently up for viewing.
It goes live on 1 January for registration. Northern Woods Training Facility is sticking
around, so we've actually got that schedule currently up at northernwoodstraining.com.
If you are interested in taking a 70-plus- smith and wesson snub nose revolver
and slapping a modern red dot on it without having to drill or send it off to an ffl check out shield
arms dot com on 20 january i've been told at the start of shot show there will be in stock ready to
buy for the 442 the 642 and the 432 snub nose models with more more models to come and in fact
i think they're going to do like a little like a poll to see what the what people want what should
be the next model of revolver that they're going to make it for my my money is in for the 451 pd
22 magnum and the 43 c22 i think those would be great pocket blasters with the red dot on it but
yeah a lot of irons in the fire.
And once I'm okay to tell you what company I'm going to be working for, I will let you know what I'll be getting into.
I'm going to be the new director of special investigations for an executive protection company here in Michigan.
Starting on the 1st.
So that's going to be fun.
You might see me in a suit, which I haven't worn in 15 years. It's going to be a little scary see me in a suit which 15 years is going to be a little
scary so we'll see how that goes classy i think is what is the word you were looking for there
i'm negotiating on a tuxedo t-shirt there you go
i'm just gonna have to go to a really weird place
on the track have to go to a really weird place to put a tuxedo on you, Trek.
Alright. Matter of fact, it's going out the door. Thanks everybody for sticking around with us.
Thank you, Trek, for coming back and entertaining
us again. I always love to have you on, man, because
you're a font of knowledge.
I appreciate it.
Alright. Talk to you all another week. Bye, everybody. We'll be right back. Thank you. I'll see you next time.