The Prepper Broadcasting Network - The Rising Republic: Saints and Sinners

Episode Date: March 18, 2025

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Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 The American people are entitled to transparency. We can't sustain a system that bleeds billions of taxpayer dollars on programs that have outlived their usefulness or exist solely because of the power of politicians, lobbyists or interest groups. They're entitled to be able to figure out where their dollars are going and they're entitled to accountability to make sure that we're using the dollars for what we said it was for. We are going to go through our federal budget as I promised during the campaign, page by
Starting point is 00:00:40 page, line by line, eliminating those programs we don't need and insisting that those that we do need operate in a sensible, cost-effective way. What should be easy is getting rid of the pointless waste and stupid spending that doesn't benefit anybody. We hope to be instilling an entire new culture that not only our administration, but every succeeding administration will in fact pursue. No amount of waste is acceptable. Not when it's your money.
Starting point is 00:01:17 Hey, hey, hey, welcome to the rising Republic. It's your boy, Zell Douglas Hogan. And Ryan Buford, glad to have you. Heck yeah. How you like the new intro there? I do like it. I mean, it's nothing like using someone's own words to prove a point. And one thing I liked about Obama was he was such a concise speaker.
Starting point is 00:01:42 I mean, when he was reading, don't get me wrong, remember he was a teleprompter king, like he was great at teleprompting but after he got off the script he was like Trump, he just fell apart. Yeah, I mean he was an eloquent speaker when it came to that and I've been told that good presidents are made by good speechwriters. So true, that's why even when Trump has, you see he's got this mannerism about him whenever he's reading from a teleprompter, he's like he's got this this he tries to have a commanding voice He kind of breathes in through his teeth and tries to say this commanding kind of a tone to him But God forbid you get him off that teleprompter. I'm like, please don't talk. Please don't talk
Starting point is 00:02:18 Right, it's like oh no all hell is breaking loose Yeah, but uh, no, it's been kind of kind of crazy Like you said when you kind of kind of crazy. Like you said, when you kind of use their own words against them, you know, Elon Musk and the crew that is being used, um, at Doge to uncover all this wasteful spending that we've talked about in the past, there's been even more stuff come out since then. It's the, it's like the, the Democrats right now,
Starting point is 00:02:40 they don't want the wasteful spending to stop, but you won't hear them say that because they're lining their pocketbooks, obviously. Well, yeah, they're lying for your vote. And I think people have gotten enough of that to the point where they've lost faith in the Democratic Party. I think I saw somewhere today that the Democratic Party,
Starting point is 00:03:00 I think I saw it was on actually a newsfeed that is at an all time low as far as like their favoritism, like not favoritism. What's the term? Yeah. And yeah, that's kind of, it's eyeopening really because you kind of, they seem to be such a powerhouse over the last 12 years and you know,
Starting point is 00:03:24 it's and 16 years, maybe even beyond that, but now we're starting to see that it was just a uniparty system the whole time. And the, the extreme left is getting hated more and more and eating themselves alive, which I mean, I kind of had a feeling that that was going to happen, but it's fun to watch. It's their favorability rating. It's, you know, it's what you were trying to, the word you were trying to use earlier, their favorability rating is an all-time low and it's because of the fringe.
Starting point is 00:03:52 It's like, and we just briefly spoke about this at the beginning of the show before we started recording. There's just a small, it's just a small, tiny little percentile of the left. And every time I talk about the left and the Democrats, please I'm talking about the far left like the friends I'm not talking about the ones that are moderate the ones that are centrist I'm not talking about those guys I'm talking about the extreme ones same thing you know I can I can complain about the ones on the far right I don't like any of those views it's just that the ones on the left right now are so far out of touch with reality
Starting point is 00:04:22 that they've completely lost touch with their voter base and if they think that their voter base is the ones that's being the loudest and being the most clamorous but that's not the case at all those are the ones that most Americans I'll say 96 percent of Americans absolutely detest they're trying to appeal to about 40 percent of their voter base. Howard Glassman Yeah and somehow they managed to get into power so now I I mean, some of them we're starting to see that it's like, oh, wait a second, this was a bad idea. You know, I threw my vote, my intention away with this person who's just running with an agenda
Starting point is 00:04:54 and they've gone so far that it's not even, you know, it's not even reality. I mean, we're off in Lalo land here. And after the last four to eight years of seeing what that can become, people are, I mean, fed up with it. I am I'm sure some of our listeners are one or two Probably probably a couple
Starting point is 00:05:13 the I know the big one is the open borders and You know people people don't want it's not just that that that immigrants are coming in unlawfully That is a problem don't be wrong, but it's it's the elements that are coming in with them, right? It's not just, you know, it would be different. I'm not saying it's good or right even to have open borders. I don't think it is at all. Even if we knew exactly, you know, the only good people were coming in, that's still a problem because we've got all these undocumented people. It's a strain on the economy, you know. There's a lot of problems there. But what I'm trying to say is there's this, if I gave you a bag of M&Ms,
Starting point is 00:05:48 like a family size bag of M&Ms, and I said that there's two pieces in this entire bag that once you eat them, it'll instantly kill you. They're poisonous, it'll instantly kill you. Would you even stick your hand in that bag and eat an M&M? No, of course not. Of course not. And that's what's going on with the border
Starting point is 00:06:01 when it's open like that. Yes, there are good people coming in, even though their first act of getting here is committing a crime, right? That's why we say it's their illegal immigrants, because their first act of getting here and coming to the United States is to commit a crime. It's a border policy and it's US federal law.
Starting point is 00:06:19 You cannot do it. And so- It flies in the face of the people who actually did what they were supposed to do to get here legally. You know, go through citizenship, do all that stuff. I mean, it's like, these are the people who I want to immigrate to the country.
Starting point is 00:06:33 The people who want to be here. Not just people who are floating across the border because they, you know, find an opportunity or they get a coyote to be able to haul them across the border. And, you know, they have, they don't have any intention of assimilating. It's just a matter of coming in and taking over. And that's not immigration.
Starting point is 00:06:54 That's warfare, really. I think, and Elon Musk hit it on the head one time. We're gonna talk about him here in a little bit. But he was on the Joe Rogan podcast on February 28th in I believe episode number 2281, 2281. He hit the nail on the head. We've talked about this also, but this, basically what they're doing
Starting point is 00:07:11 with the open door policy on the border is it's like you're buying votes pretty much. Because when the Democrats are in charge, they're saying, here, there's no more border policy. We're just going to ignore the federal laws, we're gonna open up the gates, just let people flood in. What they're essentially doing is saying, here, the Democrats are on your side, vote for us.
Starting point is 00:07:34 And Elon Musk, he's on the head in this episode of Joe Rogan, he's like, it's not necessarily gonna be felt right now, but in time it will be, because once these people begin to settle down, and the districts, the voting districts are realigned, But in time it will be because once these people begin to settle down, you know, and In the districts the voting districts are realigned you're gonna have in these swing states or are organized and They become settled with these ill-immigrants and they let's say start voting for example They're no longer going to be swing states. They'll be forever blue states and see that's the problem
Starting point is 00:08:02 You're gonna have situations like California and Illinois and Washington, right off the top of the election process, they just say, we're gonna give California to the Democrats, because we know, but all those electoral college votes, you got four counties in Illinois, for example, that are blue, but they're so densely populated, that they control the entire electoral college.
Starting point is 00:08:20 And so these swing states, when they're out of existence, will control the narrative for all future elections. And that's why I said last time, before this election, I was really worried that there was even willing to be another Republican president ever again. That may be a reality before long, once all these illegal people start settling in and they're allowed to vote, which they're not supposed to be,
Starting point is 00:08:43 but let's face it, in a lot of counties, in a lot of cities in states they are voting and these things are not being controlled by by law because there's no ID checks and you know there's no voter ID's they just come in and they grab a ballot and they they cast it. And then you know children that are naturally born in the United States to illegal immigrants become they become citizens. So at that point, it might not be a generational problem
Starting point is 00:09:08 right now, but for our kids and our grandkids, they're gonna see a completely different country. Yeah, and that was the thing with Trump too, because he tried to get rid of that law, and I think got stopped by, I wanna see the Supreme Court said no, because this whole thing was, it wasn't just that, it's ingrained in our Constitution that if you're born
Starting point is 00:09:29 in the United States, you're a nationalized citizen and I get that, but when the Constitution was written, let's look at this in the context, when the Constitution was written, it was not, people that are in the United States are not looked at as being, they're illegally, right? They're saying at some point these people came here legally through the proper immigration process and then they were born here
Starting point is 00:09:47 and therefore they are citizens by default. You know what I'm saying? What Trump is saying is these people are coming here illegally and they're having children here and now those children who are the offspring of illegal immigrants are now citizens. And I see the gray area there and I agree with Trump but I think the constitution needs to be amended,
Starting point is 00:10:07 is the issue. And I don't want the constitution necessarily being amended because it has to be a super majority. And once the constitution, you open it up for being amended, who knows what they're gonna put in there? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:10:19 And that's kind of, it takes quite a bit to make a constitutional amendment. When was the last one? Maybe in the 60s or 70s? I mean, it doesn't seem like it's unheard of, but it would have to be, like you said, a super majority. It would have to be a significant portion of the nation who would have to come to an agreement that, hey, look, this is not what our country is about, you know?
Starting point is 00:10:37 Right. The last time the U.S. Constitution was amended was on May 5, 1992, when the 27th Amendment was ratified. This amendment deals with congressional compensation, stating that any changes to the salaries of members of Congress can only take effect at the next election of the House of Representatives. Of course, they're gonna vote calls in for the,
Starting point is 00:10:55 I mean, you know, raises and stuff like that, which happen all the time. These guys have ridiculous amounts of money in their pockets and they vote themselves, they're on raises all the while, off the backs of the taxpayers, you know, our taxes go up and up and up so they can eat better. Yeah, it's, you know, it's gonna be nice to see what happens. I mean, people are starting to feel some of the pain
Starting point is 00:11:13 with the Doge findings and, you know, I think the next one on their chopping block is a public education system, you know, and we're starting to see some of the pain that comes along with the realities that we've been living in the last two or three decades of misspending and hiring people at outrageous salaries for not doing jobs, not showing up to work,
Starting point is 00:11:38 barely be able to come up with five things that they did the week prior. I mean, we're starting to realize that, hey, look, this is massively corrupt and that corruption extends into daily lives of normal Americans. And for those funding avenues to be disrupted, sometimes people are like, oh, well, you know,
Starting point is 00:11:58 that's not right. This person should still have a job. Did you hear about Trump's, his latest, he's trying to cut some, I think it's like seven or eight agencies, he signed an executive order to cut seven or eight agencies. I got a list of them here, the Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service,
Starting point is 00:12:18 never even heard of it, United States Agency for Global Media, never even heard of it, Woodrow Wilson's International Center for Scholars, never heard of it. Institute of Museum and Library Services, same thing, never heard of any of these really. United States Interagency Council on Homelessness,
Starting point is 00:12:34 Community Developmental Financial Institutions Fund, and the Minority Business Development Agency. And that's a list straight from the epic times. I get subscriptions from them just to stay up on stuff. Yeah, I mean, a lot of those things are already, they're kind of self-sustaining. I don't see why the federal government should be involved in funding and or managing
Starting point is 00:12:54 or having any sort of regulation over those industries. That's the problem with it. Presidents can create agencies by whipping his pin around. It's that simple. It's crazy to me that I'm seeing on a regular basis how federal courts are telling Trump or issuing court orders that Trump can't do this or he can't do that.
Starting point is 00:13:16 I guess he fired a bunch of federal workers here recently and one of these federal courts ordered a halt against the termination of those employees. I'm like, what gives you, no court has the power to tell a president that he can't fire his employees exactly that's what that's the executive branch's power to hire and fire and there's it's not just that I get these all the time on these different things like you they're far reaching far they're overreaching and they they're trying to utilize more power than they have the president has powers to do these things.
Starting point is 00:13:45 Yeah, and at what point does losing your job turn into a human right or a civil right or something that can be even possibly remotely contested in a Supreme Court level? Right, it would take forever for like, I would understand it if somebody gets terminated on the basis of their race or their age or something like that, but it takes years
Starting point is 00:14:04 for that stuff to get fought up to the Supreme Court level. Yeah, and you can't just, if it's a blanket thing, whether you're any kind of different religion, race, color, creed, whatever, and the entire department gets whacked, that has nothing to do with it. It has to do with the department itself and either performance or funding or whatever.
Starting point is 00:14:22 So there's, yeah, I don't see how that would even hold water in a Supreme Court or even an upper district level court. In and of itself, you can tell, you know, that the, I mean, the proof is in the pudding here. When the entire agency is getting whacked, they're not discriminating, you know? So no court has a power to tell an executive branch that he can't hire or fire his people.
Starting point is 00:14:44 It's ingrained within the constitution what their executive powers are. And if that's the case the Supreme Court should be able to do the opposite and prevent any new branches from being formed by any president. That's not part of that branch of government. So that being said a lot of the executive orders that Biden has has written Trump has has unwritten so to speak right so that's the power of the pen because an executive order isn't legislation and another led another executive can come in after that and say sorry no more and just undo it.
Starting point is 00:15:19 I think that's one thing that that really needs to happen in this term is watching to see I think that's one thing that that really needs to happen in this term is watching to see What is effective after this first 12 months? once the dust settles The economy is going to change the lifestyles in the United States are going to change the rules and regulations are going to change and If those things trend on an upward positive level where people can go back to their normal lives without having to worry about what bathroom they're going to be able to go into or what bathroom they're going to be able to let their kids go into. That change has to happen and I think if that is an executable that happens during this term then we're going to be in good shape.
Starting point is 00:15:58 If it isn't, if there's all these stopping blocks and government agencies that start throwing their weight around, we're gonna wind up in another election cycle without having enough successes, so to speak, to be able to write off the next Joe Biden or Barack Obama or Hillary Clinton. And it's just gonna happen, you know, it's gonna happen again. We're just gonna creep back into wherever we wound up four years ago
Starting point is 00:16:27 Yeah, and I feel that Trump's already done so much in favor of oh, yeah the you know, like the for example Allowing men and women sports for example to me. That's a woman's rights issue So I would say you know from a conservative perspective that he's done a lot for women's rights Where you got your feminists who are big on women's rights, it's largely a leftist group, have always been quiet about this. Like, you would think that they would be outspoken about it. Be it men, biological men coming into their sports.
Starting point is 00:16:58 I mean, ladies, females in general have done a lot in the past to get to where they are currently. And it seems to be all being undermined when you get these female sports athletes who are, a lot of them incredible, they compete for years to get to where they're at. And then some male comes in who can't rank in the series of men.
Starting point is 00:17:19 So they come over, they identify as a woman, and they come over and they compete in the woman series of whatever it is. We'll say track, for example, and then knock the top woman out, easily. You know, that's unfair, and you think that the feminist groups and the women's rights and advocacy groups would step in and say, oh, yo, yo, yo, but no,
Starting point is 00:17:37 they're largely quiet about it, but Trump, he's doing this in his second term. It would have been an appropriate thing for him to do in his first term, I would like to have seen it, but you know, those are the kinds of things that you wanna take care of in a second term like we talked about last time. That's a second term decision, and he's done so much already for women's rights,
Starting point is 00:17:53 so I applaud him for that. Yeah, and I mean, I think what, that Brittany Greiner, Greiner, I don't know what her name is. She was a WNBA, he was a WNBA person. I don't know if you remember that story. He went to Russia, got busted with weed, and then they wound up imprisoning him,
Starting point is 00:18:14 and then Biden swapped him some sort of like, you know, terrorist. Yeah, a basketball player. Yeah, Brittany Greiner. Yeah, I mean, that is the exemplification of what can go wrong. I mean, and I don't even know who's gonna be carrying that standard forward saying that,
Starting point is 00:18:31 oh yeah, this is good, this is a good thing. Let's go ahead and let women and men sports. I remember when it first started happening, it first started, I wanna say in like MMA and like boxing and stuff like that, like always smokes. And you were seeing like women, their careers are being ended within seconds of getting into the ring with a biological male.
Starting point is 00:18:51 Yeah, that's not acceptable. I don't know on what planet anybody can say that that is acceptable. And I think that's why these feminists, so to speak, aren't saying anything about it because they're pinned down by their Trans-agenda friends or whatever. So I don't know that's it's messed up. I'm glad to see that that's changing though. Yes, sir Let's do this. Let's because I want to talk I got a clip here with with Elon Musk when he's on the Joe Rogan show he's
Starting point is 00:19:20 He's obviously I'll say he's definitely fretting but I'll say probably possibly even scared. And he's a slow talker anyway, because he thinks, and I don't have a problem with that. Some people talk really slow because they like to think about what they're gonna say, and that's good. I have a lot more respect for people
Starting point is 00:19:36 who do more listening than they do talking. He's articulate about his words, but I know he's also autistic to some point. But he's talking here about his worries with what he's uncovered in Doge. And I want to talk about this and then we'll take, we'll talk a little bit about that, take a quick break. And when we come back, I want to talk about more Elon Musk, but in the scientific, if you will, area of his business. So let's, here's this clip real quick here
Starting point is 00:20:05 from the Joe Rogan podcast. It's really gonna get me assassinated. It's more than just insider trading. Like the insider trading stuff, like the stock portfolio stuff is quite trackable, but there's, it's a lot more than insider trading. The way they're acquiring wealth. Correct. And what other methods? It's a lot more than insider trading. The way they're acquiring wealth.
Starting point is 00:20:25 Correct. And what other methods? I mean, this is really going to get me assassinated. I'm not lengthening my lifespan by explaining this stuff, to say the least. I mean, I was supposed to go back to DC. How am I going to survive? This book is going to go back to DC. How am I gonna survive? Because it's gonna kill me for sure
Starting point is 00:20:51 So In fact, I do think like this it's like I actually have to be careful that I don't push too hard on The corruption stuff because it's gonna get me killed. You know, yeah, you know. It's like, I was actually thinking about that on the plane flight over here. It's like, if I push too hard on the corruption stuff, people get desperate is the issue.
Starting point is 00:21:24 So he's not laughing because he's funny. That's obviously nervous laughter. How many times did he say, it'll get me killed or assassinated? This guy's worried. This is an issue. Yeah, and I think even before he wound up having this position, once he started doing things,
Starting point is 00:21:38 switching over to the right, leaning in that direction with certain things he was saying on social media, he started getting these death threats, credible threats and his you know all this all this kind of stuff and yes he's a multi-billionaire and has all these things and and I could see how he would be a target but for him to clam up like that that is telling you know what are these people doing beyond corruption to make money that he is so terrified of that he can't even say it, you know, that's,
Starting point is 00:22:10 and it's not a matter of, oh, I can't say it because it's, you know, it's under, currently under investigation. He knows, he knows what it is. And it is so bad that he can't even say it out loud. Right. And then, and then it is scary. And then he can't, if he does say it,
Starting point is 00:22:23 he can't go back to Washington. Yeah. I mean, what, who has that kind of power, you know, he can't go back to Washington. Yeah. I mean, who has that kind of power? You know, this is big, and it tells me that there's more than one person involved, there's probably a group of persons involved, and that they're all mutually aligned for whatever cause it may be,
Starting point is 00:22:37 and that there's a lot of people benefiting from this, and if he was to say it out loud, he knew for sure that something awful would happen to him. Like you said what could it possibly be that he came speak this out loud because Rogan asked him quite simply what are the methods because it's clear that there's corruption that he's uncovered and he's talked about some of that corruption that he's uncovered it's more than just shifting money around and Rogan's like well what are the methods and he's afraid to say.
Starting point is 00:23:02 Yeah he won't give yeah yeah, he's like, it kind of is telling too, like, oh yeah, this insider trading, that's traceable. That's something that you can look up, you can find out. Because you have to put that out on your taxes, like what your trades were and what your losses were, any shares that you sold, that kind of stuff. But now we're looking into things that are seedy. We got politicians and factions of government
Starting point is 00:23:31 that are making money, billions and billions of dollars, doing illicit things, horrible things probably. I mean, if you can't even say it, I mean, child trafficking, government takeovers, blackmail, I mean, murders. Who government takeovers, blackmail, I mean, murders. Who knows?
Starting point is 00:23:48 Culture, pizza gate. Human trafficking, yes, pizza gate's very real. I mean, that's a whole other freaking short story. Right there. Definitely a whole other story. But let's do this crazy. All right, let's take a quick break here. And then when we come back, I wanna talk about SpaceX and the Teslas
Starting point is 00:24:06 and stuff like that. Be right back at the Residence Public. Nice. Who is on your side, PBN family? When it comes to healthcare, I know no better ally than the folks at the wellness company. They've been our sponsor now for months
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Starting point is 00:24:50 So Ryan I think you've been up to up more up to up than I have been on on what's going on with SpaceX and people in space. I guess there's been some folks have been stranded up there and we've been trying to What's going on? Eight nine months ago. there was a group of astronauts that went up to the International Space Stations. These are US astronauts, and for whatever reason, they had an issue during the Biden administration with getting another rocket ship back up there,
Starting point is 00:25:18 or their equipment back down here. Short story, they were supposed to be up there for a couple of days, and they've been up there for eight months and you know, it never came up during the election, you know, what was going on with these people but I mean, this is like a rescue mission type thing and for some reason we're just leaving these astronauts up in space.
Starting point is 00:25:39 Well, Elon Musk had made a comment, hey, well, just untie my hands and I can send a ship up there and we'll go pick him up. I mean, it's just like, it's like leaving your kid at the soccer field, you know? Well, you forgot to pick him up, okay, well, I'll just drop what I'm doing and go do it, but then sitting here and having your hands tied to the point where you can't do it.
Starting point is 00:25:59 And I honestly believe that if anybody but he and Trump had gotten into office those astronauts would not only still be up there but they would not be getting home and they I mean they don't have that kind of supply up there they have enough to survive this long but I mean for whatever reason they couldn't bring him back. Well this morning I opened up my phone and saw that oh here we have the SpaceX Dragon loading up to the International Space Station and being received by the astronauts up there. And it's essentially a rescue mission that's not getting any publicity.
Starting point is 00:26:35 The guy's not getting any kudos for this. And he's doing it essentially on his own dime. This isn't, I mean, he's not using US taxpayer money to go get US citizens. He's using his own money, his own resources, his own tools and equipment, his own team, everything for this rescue mission. And he's basically, he's getting lambasted
Starting point is 00:26:57 by people on the left. And it's like, what in the hell are people thinking? How do you get so much hate in your system to where someone can do something like this and you still can't give the guy a little bit of slack? This is big bad Elon you're talking about, right? The guy that's going into all these government programs, wasteful spending programs,
Starting point is 00:27:17 and basically the budget of the United States and all the waste that we've been spending. And the guy that's been exposing where all of our tax dollars is going, that bad guy? Yeah. Spent his own money to go to send a ship into space to rescue some, how long were they up there? That's something like six or eight months. How much food, how long was the mission supposed to be?
Starting point is 00:27:36 A couple of days. Well, hold on a second, I'm confused. And again, I don't wanna catch you off guard because I didn't follow this. But if they went up there for a couple of days, did they only take what, how much food did they take? Well, the space station has supplies on it. Okay, so.
Starting point is 00:27:52 They had to have tapped into those space station supplies. I mean, you get eight extra people there. Yeah. You're gonna have quite a bit more coming on. So it's kind of like, you know, they have resources but they're tapping into them, which is going to stress the remaining mission of the space station
Starting point is 00:28:07 to be able to stay stocked up. So I'm sure he sent a ship up with supplies to resupply the space station, which, you know, I don't know, I don't have all those details, but it does kind of make you wonder, like, how did they survive for eight months and they probably went to a ration scale to realize that oh well we're not gonna be able to have a turkey dinner every night we're gonna have to pare it back until
Starting point is 00:28:33 we get word from NASA and oh by the way now we're in the middle of an election and oh by the way we got to wait to see what's gonna happen because our new administration then we still NASA hasn't done boo about this, you know? Right. That upsets me because our taxpayer dollars are funding NASA. Well, we have a SpaceX program, what's that being used for? I don't know, I think that is Tesla's own pet project,
Starting point is 00:28:59 or I'm sorry. Trump? What's his name? Elon Musk. There's a SpaceX program that is essentially, it's a private company that is using U.S. resources to be able to get up and out. But I think they've moved outside of launching from, what's the one in Florida or Texas, the NASA launch sites to where they're essentially moving toward their own space station launch setup.
Starting point is 00:29:28 Chad Well what's the thing that Trump created in his last term he created some kind of space force I'm sorry yeah yeah I said SpaceX and then Space Force so what's that all about look we need to spend a reasonable degree of money for this kind of thing because we have there's a lot of dangers out there. There's asteroids all the time, there's big ones. At some point, we've gone through how many extinction level events via meteor, right? And it will happen again.
Starting point is 00:29:54 It's not a matter of is it gonna happen, but when will it happen? This is going to happen. At some point, we're going to be hit again by something that is going to annihilate us. And so I think that we need to have a reasonable degree of money, not just us, but some kind of global fund, something, you know, that goes into protecting our world. Because when this thing comes, after all the family feuds are over with and all the countries
Starting point is 00:30:18 are done fighting, we're still a human race. Yes. And the only planet we have is this little blue ball that floats around in a finite universe. And there's an infinite amount of rocks that could level this planet easily. And we need to work together to get this, some kind of space studies, some kind of something. We need that, I believe that we do,
Starting point is 00:30:40 because a mua mua, have you heard about that? The asteroid, it's elongatedated and it came from another celestial like they're saying it's not even from our galaxy So they believe that this thing came from another galaxy You have to look up look just do a Google search good luck spelling if you even try to spell a moo a moo a you're Going to asteroid or meteor a moo a moo a you're going to you're going to get all kinds of studies on it But this thing came around a few years ago and they thought that when it passed through it was going to leave and we'd never see it again. It has come back around again.
Starting point is 00:31:12 And this thing is unlike any meteor that our world has ever seen as long as we've been able to look at the stars. This thing is long, like a pencil. It's elongated. It's not roundish like most meteors are that fly through space. Most meteors that fly through space they have gases that kind of eject, you know, from the back of them. They have a tail. This thing emits no gases. It has no tail. It's almost like it's
Starting point is 00:31:40 just other galaxy. I won't say otherworldly but of course it is. It's almost like it's from another galaxy. It's just other galaxy. I won't say otherworldly, but of course it is. It's almost like it's from another galaxy. It's nothing like anything we've ever seen. And some believe when it first came here, when it was rather far distance away before it got closer to us, that it was some kind of an alien ship, some kind of a planet or some kind of a scout.
Starting point is 00:32:01 That's what a Mu'umu'u actually stands for in the Hawaiian language. I believe it's either Hawaiian or Samoan, I won't say Hawaiian, but it stands for scout ship or scout, something along those lines, and they believed it to be some kind of a scout from another planet or another galaxy that came here. Look it up, it's really, really deep.
Starting point is 00:32:19 This thing has passed by, and I don't know if it's big enough to end us, it's big it's big enough and close enough that we're able to bounce lights off of it to determine what it's made of and to see it really closely and it's unlike anything that has ever we've ever studied in as long as humans been studying asteroids and comets. It's truly amazing. Well that's kind of stuff, I mean, like you say, we have to have some sort of international level of readiness when it comes to that kind of stuff
Starting point is 00:32:52 to be able to survive as a race. And the reality is there, I mean, it's just like you say, it's a matter of time. But if we can't even bring eight individuals back that we put up on a space station that's orbiting our Earth, we got some major problems. And I think that Elon stepping up to do something like that, it's a move in the right direction.
Starting point is 00:33:16 And I think more people need to recognize that. And if it wasn't for his role right now, what he's doing in assistance to the United States budget, he would get some kind of a medal some kind of he would get something from all countries of the world for doing what he did and you know if if who will who was it who who did you rescue exactly? Um I don't have the names. Not names but like countries. From the United States. They're all from the United States?
Starting point is 00:33:41 I believe so yeah. Okay well that's worthy of some kind of recognition, but he's probably not gonna get it unless it comes from this current president. Yeah, and even then it's gonna be shunned, like oh, just one billionaire, pat another billionaire on the back. It's like, well, we got eight human beings that have been stranded up there because the previous administration
Starting point is 00:34:00 couldn't pull their heads out, and billions of dollars, we are finding out, has been wasted on stupid stuff like gender plays in or or wherever you know Bolivia and it's like we don't we had the means to be able to fix this problem a week after it happened and instead it's just been pawned off on the private sector to pull up and get shit done. And that's where we are as a nation and I think most of the people are like you know what yeah we need to start cutting these programs get rid of that stuff and let's see what we
Starting point is 00:34:35 can come up with on our own. And this guy is just exemplifying that through something as simple as well not as simple as you know, by stepping in where the government has failed. People seem to forget that, because a lot of people, they place, once they place a large dollar sign on a person, they seem to forget that that person is also still a person, and a human, and he has a heart. And nobody cares to bother to look into the charities
Starting point is 00:35:02 that he pays into, and the things that he has done and sacrificed his life. I mean, Elon's not just letting his money, using his money to enrich himself, which any good capitalist would do, but he also does things like, the things he's doing for us right now for the United States and Doge, he's not taking a paycheck for.
Starting point is 00:35:19 And this thing that he did on this rescue mission, he's not gonna get paid for that. Like you said, he's doing this of his own money. And what did he do with the Starlink for the people of North Carolina, right? When that hurricane came through, you and I was there, we slept through it. We was not 10, 15 feet apart from each other
Starting point is 00:35:37 on the side of that mountain that hurricane came through. We were, you know, we pulled together as a little group of preppers and survivalists when we were there and helped clean the wade and get, you know, we pulled together as a little group of preppers and survivalists when we were there and helped clean the way to get, you know, for us to get out. But most of the people that was there, they lost everything in that state and parts of Tennessee. They lost their homes. They lost all electricity.
Starting point is 00:35:59 Everything was flooded and the trees were down, the lines were down. It took months. A lot of them are still suffering. But they had no communication with the outside world that President Trump went and visited because Biden didn't go and Kamala Harris didn't go. They put on a makeshift show like they did. They filmed somewhere like they went,
Starting point is 00:36:15 but the people that said that were at the landing pad where they were supposed to go said, well, they never showed up here. So they said they were gonna go, but they didn't go. They filmed that they did go. So something weird was going on there. But Trump actually went and he made a phone call to Elon Musk and Elon Musk is on there, man.
Starting point is 00:36:35 And he sent out these, I don't know how many units he sent out, but he sent out a lot of Starlink units and he made it available to people who couldn't communicate with the outside world there in North Carolina. Made it possible for them to get on their phones and or their tablets or whatever they had to reach out to people outside of their state for assistance. Yeah, and that was our lifeline when we were there
Starting point is 00:36:58 is one Starlake unit for probably two, 300 people. You're right. Jasmine, Jasmine threw out, I mean, I was unable to communicate with my wife, you know, and she was worried, she knew that there was a hurricane coming in there. We knew that there was a hurricane coming when I went. I'm like, this is, this is Prepper Camp, I'm going.
Starting point is 00:37:21 And my wife was worried about me, and I could not reach out to my wife. I'm sure you're using the same exact situation. She couldn't reach out to your fam and Jasmine had, she had a Starlink mobile unit in her backpack and she gave me her password and she said, here you go and it was, I don't wanna say lifesaver because there were people
Starting point is 00:37:39 out there that lost their lives but man, it helped in such a way that I was able to reach out to my wife and say, hey, you know, the day after storm, I'm safe. You know, it passed through, you know, I'm good to go, I'm safe, I'm gonna work on, you know, getting things packed up and getting back home here pretty soon, which I did because of the floodwaters that we had, you know, I know me and a few others
Starting point is 00:38:03 left a day early because we were vending. I know Sarah Hathaway left a day early. I left not long before she did because nobody's getting in. Nobody could get in and we barely got out, to tell you the truth, because of all the power lines and trees that were down. Yeah, I mean, in events like that,
Starting point is 00:38:24 scenarios like that, somebody stepped up to make it happen one person and in our instance or our circumstance it was Jasmine with a tool that was provided by one person you know that was designed that five years ago that wouldn't exist it but that little that little thing that that existed because somebody went through the channels, built that thing, employed however many people to get it made and shipped and delivered and all that kind of stuff. There's a whole chain of people
Starting point is 00:38:55 and a whole chain of events that came to pass just for that thing to be there when we needed it. And if it was a government supplied unit, it would have never showed up. It had been a week late and it would have cost 10 times as much when nobody needed it. And by the time we saw it, money had been spent and we were already off on our way.
Starting point is 00:39:16 I'm hesitant to say what I'm about to say here, but I believe that we're not attracting the types of listeners who would react negatively to this, so I'm gonna go ahead and do this. But this is reported widely, and I'm gonna read something here now from ABC News. Shots have evidently been fired at Oregon Tesla dealership.
Starting point is 00:39:37 It's an ongoing vandalism since Musk began working for Trump. I guess people are doing drive-bys in any kind of, there could be more than Oregon, because it says here that more shots were fired at Oregon. Seattle, do you think? But these, yeah, exactly. So Trump put on Elon to do this.
Starting point is 00:39:56 Trump, who himself is not taking a paycheck, brought in Elon Musk to help with this, who himself is not taking on a paycheck, and people who are working with Elon are not taking any paycheck, at least not from the government. I mean, he's a billionaire, he's probably paying his own people, hey, probably detailing them from their businesses to come over here and do this thing,
Starting point is 00:40:14 which whatever, you know, the Trump has the executive authority to assign whoever he wants to to look into any kind of executive actions that he wants to look into in the budget and all this other stuff, but it's just, it's shameful that they're shooting. How long ago was it that he released the blueprints for electric vehicles and he was hailed as some kind of a green energy god?
Starting point is 00:40:38 And the left loved him. Everybody loved him because he just released the blueprints. Here's how you do it guys. Because Elon is not the type of person to say I'm just going to keep this to myself And I'm gonna copyright this and patent this and I'm gonna make all the money off this but he released it He said here you go. Here's the blueprints of this. Do you remember when he did that? And and and they they held him as a hero. Okay, here's our green energy guy, you know, and now years down the road He's doing more good things
Starting point is 00:41:05 but it's for the wrong person in their minds. And so now they're taking shots and how many millions of dollars you think have gone into waste. I don't even know that I don't I haven't read these articles in full as far as the money goes but I wonder how much loss there is at these Tesla dealerships shooting their guns and putting holes in these very expensive vehicles to prove a point that they Haley to Elon Musk. Yeah and there's been 15 attacks since January 20th everything from Molotov cocktails to spray painting, AR rifle attacks, they had to make sure that they get that one in there. Let's see what we're seeing, shots fired, Molotov cocktails, a lot of the
Starting point is 00:41:48 same stuff, which to me screams Antifa. So on tariffs, let's talk about tariffs for a second, because it seems like everybody's freaking out about the whole, Oh my gosh, we're going into a tariff war. How many of these countries? I think right now at this point, 100% of them have all conceded. Am I, am I wrong about that? I don't think any of them have all conceded. Am I wrong about that? I don't think any of them have backed out. I mean, there have been concessions
Starting point is 00:42:10 and there have been some sword rattling, but for the most part, those terrorists are still in place and until these nations are getting ready to start putting in some real work on the international level, that doesn't make sense why we should pay extra. We're paying for everybody's global security and food supply and all this kind of other shit.
Starting point is 00:42:31 And then we turn around and just take it on the back end because everybody else is outsourcing their labor and their materials and all that kind of stuff to Mexico or Canada or China or wherever else. So you know what, we bring that stuff home, or Canada or China or wherever else. So you know what? If we bring that stuff home, we'll be self-sufficient. I'm all for it personally. I've read an article more recently
Starting point is 00:42:52 that some of the tariffs that Canada has on the United States are as high as 360%. Everybody's freaking out that we have a 25% tariff on them. 360, are you kidding me right now? You know, and here's the problem, you know, if they're not assisting with the border issue and some of this Fittinall crisis and stuff that's coming down, you know,
Starting point is 00:43:14 of course, raise those tariffs. I think 25% is extremely fair. Especially when your tariffs on us is 360% on some of these goods. It varies, you know, from the 200% tile to 360% tile. That's an extremely high tariff. If we did that, we'd almost get nothing from these other countries.
Starting point is 00:43:32 It'd force them, and here's the whole idea behind tariffs, is to force them to move their businesses into the United States so that jobs are created here. And that's what we're starting to see already with the semiconductor company out of Taiwan, I think, that made it eight or ten billion dollar Deal or partnership of some kind. I haven't heard that. Yeah I don't have all the details on that but that is something that that has
Starting point is 00:43:56 come about recently as a direct result of these tariffs because it's like well if you're gonna put a bunch of tariffs on our product out of coming out of Taiwan or whatever, then it'll be less expensive for us to build them in the United States because we're still going to need it. And if they are shipping their own materials in and assembling here in the United States, guess what? That's a job here in the United States. And that's a product that's built here in the United States. And the rest of the world is gonna need
Starting point is 00:44:27 these same semiconductors and other stuff, you know, parts and pieces, vehicles, computer components, stuff like that. So why not? I mean, bring that stuff in. We can still do these things, and if we have the means to be able to make it happen, let's make it happen instead of just sitting there
Starting point is 00:44:44 and, you know, trying to buy stuff cheap from other nations that's getting cheaper and taking jobs away from American citizens. That's a whole part of this whole tariff story that I think the news isn't covering. You never hear them talk about how it's gonna create jobs in the United States. You only hear them talk about how it's gonna cost
Starting point is 00:45:04 other countries and they're not going to want to do trade with us and all this other stuff. They don't talk about how the prospect of pushing them or forcing them to move their businesses into the United States. Because what, here's what people don't understand. When we put a tariff on let's say Canada, okay, all imports from Canada are going to be charged as 25%. It's basically a tax, but it's not called a tax because they're not a citizen, right? It's another country, so we just change the word
Starting point is 00:45:31 from tax to tariff. It charges them 25%, and that could be adjusted by executive fiat pretty much. But those businesses inside of Canada can move their businesses from the United States. They can move their businesses. They can send representatives over here and start a business inside the United States. It's not like, don't get me wrong, you know, those countries understand that they're going
Starting point is 00:45:58 to be losing those businesses because right now those businesses are in Canada. They're in Canada and those businesses are in Canada. They're in Canada and those jobs are in Canada. And when we trade with them, first of all those jobs are not with us. If they come over here, the price of those items are rather expensive because of the price of tariff. But once they get so high, the people who are working on the Canadian side are like,
Starting point is 00:46:22 this is expensive, I don't wanna close my business. If I wanna keep money in my pocket, I'm gonna have to move my job to the United States. When they move their job to the United States, it lines their pockets and it creates more jobs here, and our products become cheaper. Yep. And I think people are crying about,
Starting point is 00:46:39 oh God, the tariffs are gonna come out of my own pocket, it's just gonna cost me more and all this kind of stuff, but the reality is, like you say, you're gonna have more income in the United States as a result of this, more buying power, and it's a form of stimulus that is far more long-lasting than a stimulus check. On top of that, the other side of these tariffs
Starting point is 00:47:02 is once they become established and we start making money off of tariffs as a nation, that's less money that we wind up needing as a tax base. And you know, if they're, if they're, because they've been talking about eliminating income tax, tax on tips, all that kind of stuff. So if this actually happens, I mean, I'm that to me that's about a $800 a month difference. So you know what, if it cost me $400 a month extra to do the, to buy normal stuff that I wouldn't normally get because it's, you know, it gets hit by some kind of tariff
Starting point is 00:47:36 like building supplies or plastics or something like that, then guess what, I'm still 400 bucks ahead every month. So I'm looking at it more on the long term side of things like 10, 20, 30, 40 years down the road not oh you know I can't afford eggs so I can't afford these tariffs because my iPhone is going to cost more you know. It's just I don't the short-sightedness is pretty much I can look past that and realize the long-term value of what is trying to be achieved here. And I think that's a big problem with the leftists is they always wanted instant gratification
Starting point is 00:48:14 and they're not willing to be patient and to work and to labor for you know like you said the long game or you know extended outcomes you know some of these things you just got to you got to work and wait for and tariffs aren't an instantaneous gratification it takes time it's like what we were talking about them a couple episodes ago with with chickens if you get baby chickens you're gonna you're gonna have them for a while before they get to egg laying age which by the way I mean my wife been talking about that and we're absolutely gonna start raising us some some chickens but we might be getting I think some adult chickens which are quite a bit more probably double the price of a chick.
Starting point is 00:48:51 But it's a lot less work right out of the gate. So that'd be like essentially getting a tax refund every year on whatever you put out, to offset the time that it would take to raise those chicks on your own. And the price of eggs right now are astronomical because as we discussed before, how many of them have, they were killed because of this bird flu thing. So with fewer egg producers, the price of eggs are going up.
Starting point is 00:49:24 So if you have your own chickens I mean you're doing yourself a favor you're you putting money in back in your pockets like there's the whole doge thing The money that that they're finding all the wasteful spinning that they've they found and then they put a halt on there They're sending that out in in kind of like a relief check. I guess Yeah, and you know, that's just the thing I'm hearing a rumor I know, you know, I guess. I'm hearing rumors about that, yeah. Yeah, and that's just the thing, I'm hearing rumors. I know, I've heard, oh, is it Catherine? I wanna say, I don't wanna get her first name wrong,
Starting point is 00:49:54 Catherine LeVitt, the new press secretary. They're coming, it's just a matter of, and the price I guess can be $5,000 per income earner. But, and then I don't, if you don't hear directly, you hear all these other rumors. It's like, where are you guys getting this information? And one of the most recent rumors I heard that you have to make at least $50,000 a year
Starting point is 00:50:17 to get one of these checks back. And I'm like, I don't understand, partly I do because the more tax are taken away from people who make more money. And so if you make more, if you make 50,000 plus dollars a year, you're getting taxed by the, we'll say raped by the government, the hardest. Like they're taking more from you, like more money. It's not a fair tax situation.
Starting point is 00:50:41 They take more money from you because you make more money. And so that money then was being shifted to these wasteful spinning groups that we've seen are going to the Himalayas and to all these countries that a lot of people haven't even heard the names of before for LGBTQ, LMNOP training. And you know, I've seen some things as crazy as studying the binaries of mice and if you cut their testicles off and do they become more feminine, you know what I'm saying? That's
Starting point is 00:51:15 just wasteful tax spending. True story. It's like this is so wasteful but that's being re-diverted back to the American people then and so it's a like that, but in a smaller scale with chickens. You put your money in now, let's say you buy some chickens, you take care of them when they're small, you raise them until their laying age, and then you get to reap the harvest of eggs, and that's just less money that you got to put out for other things. You get to pocket that then. I mean you could buy food. Food on the table, you know. It's a baking supply.
Starting point is 00:51:48 It's something that you can use every day and you're not going out to pay for it. Let me ask you this. I saw something today that was like, I think, what's the guy's name? Ah, he does a survival podcast. What's his name? Spearco, Jack Spearco but he retweeted something out on X we posted something on X today that I had seen
Starting point is 00:52:15 earlier in the day about this guy who was like well you know if one in three families had just three chickens it would eradicate the entire egg laying industry. You know, and that to me was kind of like an interesting way to look at that. If one out of three families in the United States had at least three chickens, that means that, and I would consider myself one of them, I have enough for myself and potentially two other families. And that's totally possible with the amount of chickens that I have and how to be able to manage and maintain them.
Starting point is 00:52:50 So it's really, when you look at like world poverty and hunger and things like that, if you were to take that to that level and say, well, if you want to end world hunger, just make sure that you have one in every three families have at least three chickens. And you know what they did right before World War II? They encouraged every family, every household
Starting point is 00:53:13 to have at least two chickens. Now, not every household could, but if that's the propaganda that they're putting out to these people is because you know what? We're going into war, we need to make sure families are fed and the population continues to grow because we're gonna see a rapid decline. So get those chickens going.
Starting point is 00:53:32 And I'm seeing the opposite here. Like where it's happening is in, it's like an undertow in our community where people are like, look, we're seeing writing on the wall, maybe we should raise some chickens, not from the government or anybody saying, in our community where people are like, look, we're seeing writing on the wall, maybe we should raise some chickens, not from the government or anybody saying,
Starting point is 00:53:48 look, be more self-sufficient. Well, let me ask you this question. I ran there, sorry. No, I'm curious about this whole chicken thing because I'm going into it, my wife is knowledgeable on it, but I have a question for you and for listeners, if they would like to hear the answer to this, is the overhead. So I'm thinking, I have to buy food for chicken. I have a big like to hear the answer to this, is the overhead.
Starting point is 00:54:05 So I'm thinking, I have to buy food for chicken. I have a big old pasture that chickens can come out, they can do their own thing and they can walk around and free graze and go back, I guess they go back at dusk, right, back to the roost. But as far as overhead goes, because we're trying, if raising, getting your own chickens, the whole thing here is to save money.
Starting point is 00:54:25 So what's the overhead? Is there less overhead than there is produce? Yes, once they're established, yes. Okay, so- Because produce takes a lot of time and energy. Chickens, once you have a home for them, and you have a means to feed them, then you're usually fine.
Starting point is 00:54:43 And really, you don't have to pay for feed if you decide to grow your own or if you free range them. You know, they'll destroy a yard if you get a lot of them, but they'll also take care of bugs like ticks and, you know, things like that. They'll eat grass and comfrey. And so if you grow things that are prolific, like kale or comfrey or, um, you know,
Starting point is 00:55:07 different forms of spinach in the greenhouse or things like that, you can keep them fed and my wife will always give them like oatmeal or cake table scraps, things like that, that they can eat. Um, the most expensive part that I see people getting trapped in is their surroundings, like building a chicken run or buying one that's like thousands of dollars when you don't need to. So the overhead is what you make it, but the best thing you can do is recycle something,
Starting point is 00:55:34 repurpose something into a chicken coop or run. Yep, I have a concrete building that I just need to, the wall in the back end is open up and I'm gonna close it off with some exterior two by fours, probably some two by sixes, and if they closed off and board up the windows, and I just gotta repair a door on it and boom. There's shelves in there that they can use to lay on,
Starting point is 00:55:54 but I need to put, rooster easy to put, just a two by four, a few two by fours on top. We don't need a lot of roosters, probably, I mean, I'm not getting a rooster, we've decided against that. But some hens probably four, maybe six at the most.
Starting point is 00:56:12 Yeah, I mean I've got five. And I want, and that usually is, I tend to go up and down depending on how many predators get each year. But I mean a two or three dollar investment per chick, get three or four chicks every year, lose three hens every year, I mean, that cycles through enough to where I'm still getting anywhere from two to four eggs a day,
Starting point is 00:56:35 and even at the price of feed, say, you know, a 50 pound bag for 30 bucks for four to six eggs a day, or, you know, let bucks for four to six eggs a day. Or, you know, let's say two to four eggs a day on average. Um, that's easily two or three dozen eggs a week at eight bucks a week. You know? So, I mean, at Pencils Out, just fine if you have a decent type of hen. And mine are all egg layers.
Starting point is 00:57:07 They're not designed for me, but you could use them for both, basically. I have coworkers that do that. They run 100, 150 chickens every year. And they'll let them lay, and then they'll cull about a third of them. And then they'll let those continue to lay through winter and through the next year,
Starting point is 00:57:24 and then they'll cull a third of them and then they'll let those continue to lay through winter and through the next year and then they'll call a third of them and then rebuild their population. But I mean their freezers are always full and they always have eggs and they sell their surplus to pay for the feed. So it's a self-sustaining type of thing once you get to a certain point and you know depending on how you manage it it's really pretty minimal. And in places like in Illinois where I'm at, we can get a lot of snow in the wintertime. So through the spring, summer, fall, they could be out running around in the wintertime would be probably about one of the only times
Starting point is 00:57:55 we need to actually get out and put some food out. Yeah, and yeah, it's pretty much where I'm at too. I mean, we'll put food out and my chickens don't mind the snow. They'll walk around two, three feet of snow and make their little chicken trails. Yeah, that's pretty much where I'm at too. I mean, we'll put food out and they, my chickens don't mind the snow. They'll walk around two, three feet of snow and make their little chicken trails. And they'll find a little hut to hang out in.
Starting point is 00:58:12 And I mean, they still scrape around and do stuff. I mean, they got a built-in down jacket, so. Yeah, they don't, point being though, I guess we're not gonna find as many insects out there, greens and things probably under the snow. Yeah, you'd be surprised, Siberian kale, if you grow that, they will eat it. And I mean, that stuff will grow under two feet of snow.
Starting point is 00:58:34 So, I mean, there are ways to do it and keep them fed through winter with greens. They may not like it in the best, but they'll be fed. Right, yep. Well, then you can supplement with your own stuff. Right, man, well that concludes our show. I do have a little bit of news. I do have four books that have gone audible now.
Starting point is 00:58:56 So when I go to, every time I put out a new book, one of the earlier questions I get is, is it on audible? Because a lot of my readers, so to speak, are not quote unquote readers, but they listen. You got people who are, they work a lot and they walk around with headphones on or earbuds in or they're drivers and they're on the road and the books that you and I would normally be reading,
Starting point is 00:59:19 they're listening to. And so I get this question a lot, is it on audible? Well no, not yet. And it's a little bit of a process, and I've had somewhat of a grudge against narrators for a while because I just don't like the whole idea with, and I don't think I've ever talked to you about this, but the whole process, when you write a book,
Starting point is 00:59:35 how long does it take, you know, an author, especially for me when I'm writing like a nonfiction series, like every book, I got three books in the Patriot series. They're nonfiction books, it takes a great deal of time and resources to do studies and to put all this material together. So it could take me upwards of several months to write a relatively smaller book.
Starting point is 00:59:56 When I say relatively smaller, I mean, when you read it, it might only take up four hours of time. My point being, a narrator, well first of all, Amazon gets 50% of it, okay, and the other 50% is divided in two between the author and the narrator. So I could spend several months writing a book, and the narrator can spend four hours reading the book. Yeah, there's edits and stuff in there,
Starting point is 01:00:21 but you get my point, right? It's still substantially more time that me, the rights holder, has, because the author's always the rights holder. I put several months into writing a book and the narrator spends four hours reading a book and maybe a few more hours editing a book. And point being, it's probably less than a day
Starting point is 01:00:42 writing and editing for them, or editing and reading for them. And they get the same output that I do, the same royalties I do. It's equal split. And to me that is extremely unfair. I don't like the way that pans out, but that's the system that audio or audible has in place.
Starting point is 01:00:59 Amazon has in place through ACX Audible Creation Exchange and Amazon, their Audible branch, if you will, for audio books. But they have something new out which I was selected and I got an email from Kindle Direct Publishing being an author, I guess they went through my inventory and saw that I had some books that had been successful but were not yet on Audible books or audio books
Starting point is 01:01:22 and they sent some emails to me to say hey, you've been selected for this new beta program, and what they've done is they've included some narrators in the beta program, and they've recorded their voices, and they've made this digital version, if you will, so I would go through and I would select a narrator that I like based on their voice, and I would select that and add it to the book
Starting point is 01:01:45 and that voice would be digitally written and would produce my book in a digital format. And so I get a higher royalty then from that. So what I wanna do here is just play a virtual voice sample and I'm gonna edit this down for a little bit so it's gonna start off kinda slow. But, and this is from my book, Culture Saloon. No, you know what, I'm gonna edit this down for a little bit so it's gonna start off kind of slow but and this is from my book culture saloon no you know I'm gonna do surviving martial law because that's more along the lines of or the program I'll do you know what I want to do let's do the program here
Starting point is 01:02:15 this is an audio just so you can hear what this is like it's kind of cool sometime prior to 2015 I heard what I thought was a conspiracy theory involving the United Nations. What was the conspiracy? Thanks for asking. It was Agenda 21, a voluntary act that was open to all nations to agree upon and to sign up for. An act so brazen that it opined the idea of population control upon the world. That is right. A global plan to modify the world's population. My original notion was that it is just a conspiracy and probably not even true.
Starting point is 01:02:48 I mean, how could you develop a program that could appease every world religion, every nation, every language, every culture, and more importantly, the nuclear family? No authority on Earth could enforce a worldwide planned parenthood. Right? Well, what if there was a worldwide mandated identification system and a way to bring financial equity to every human on earth? It sounds like science fiction. I had to dig deeper to learn the truth, to see for myself. I visited the United Nations website and there it was in all its colorful truth. Please do not misunderstand, the exact words population control are not used. misunderstand, the exact words, population control, are not used. Instead, the program used buzzwords and phrases that, when studied individually, pointed the finger at a population crisis and inequities.
Starting point is 01:03:33 In 2015, I wrote my first book, Oath-Takers, and watched it launch to best-seller status. I know that is not a big deal, since there are not a million books filed under law, ethics, and professional responsibility. But it made me feel good knowing I had put my voice out there and was heard by people I had never met. After a gentle push from fellow Marine and USA Today best-selling author G. Michael Hobb, I was put to the task of writing a fiction apocalyptic book. The thought scared me at first.
Starting point is 01:04:02 After all, no way could I possibly string together a good storyline that people would read let alone find interesting. The idea was a bit intimidating to say the least. As I lay in bed that night, a crazy idea came to mind. A lengthy story of America under the yoke of oppression and tyranny as envisioned by the United Nations. Agenda 21 in full motion. In my mind it was a story that grew from the book Oath-Takers. I asked myself the question, what would happen to America if oath-taking Americans stopped abiding by their solemn duty to uphold the oath that is sworn without end? Imagine a dystopian America where judges, lawyers, police officers, military personnel
Starting point is 01:04:41 etc. just stopped caring. That was the reasoning behind my fictional three book series, Tyrant and its spin-off books. I wrote the main three novels between 2015 and 2017. Not to give away any book spoilers, but ironically enough, much of what I wrote about has come to pass in the years since, including a man-made virus that was accidentally on purpose released. Sure, the means to bring about the ends were not the same but it was released nonetheless. I am not sharing that detail to say I can see the future or that I am a prophet. I am
Starting point is 01:05:13 certainly not but all one must do to see what is coming down the pike is to open your eyes and see what has been done and what they are currently doing. I'm just gonna stop it there but that was a kind of a sample. Can you tell it's digital? Yeah, you can tell it's digital. Yeah, but I mean, if it is something that allows you to hold on to a little bit more of those royalties, I mean, go for it.
Starting point is 01:05:35 I have three. Exactly. And no, it doesn't have the character of a live human reading it. Not as good as, like, I chose for, I have a Western also, a Western novella that I wrote that is really cool and I chose, you know, in the old West in the 1800s, the United States was full of immigrants.
Starting point is 01:05:57 They had come over, you know, and a lot of them had accents because some of them were, a lot of them were Irish and Scottish and they come over from all these other countries, England, you know Wales and but this is a sample of that one. This title is narrated with virtual voice. Just to show how there's a little bit of a difference. For audiobooks.
Starting point is 01:06:16 Coulter's Saloon by L. Douglas Hogan. Part 1. St. Elmo. Chaffee County, Colorado. July 1881. Taking a step out of public view, Emma dabbed her face with a handkerchief privily. She was a quiet, reserved woman, who never did anything to bring attention to herself or to make a fuss. If ever there was a lady in St. Elmo, it was Emma Coulter. On this particular day, the temperature felt near 90 degrees,
Starting point is 01:06:46 warmer than most Colorado summer days. That was pretty much the only thing out of sorts at the Lazy Snake Saloon. Sitting at the bar were the usual customers, miners and locals in for a bit of shade, laughter and lightheartedness. Oh, come on now, Miss Emma, the heavyset lady said, grabbing Emma by the arm and gently pulling her to a side room. "'Excuse me,' Emma said, laughing as she went. "'Please don't tell me there's another issue with the dancing lady's schedule, Mary Bell.'" "'Not at all, Miss Emma.
Starting point is 01:07:17 I simply saw that young buck over yonder looking you up and down. I said to myself that it ain't proper to be looking at a lady like that, so I pulled you aside to tell you, don't be looking back at that boy." What young buck? Emma answered, going to take a look. She'd barely made it a step or two before Mary Bell grabbed her again and pulled her back into the room. Look at you acting like a young filly. He looks 10 years your younger, Ms. Emma. He's too young. And he looks like he's been chewing muddy cud for a month. I'm just gonna leave it there. But that's Coulter's Saloon. It's probably my favorite
Starting point is 01:07:52 book that I've written. I had so much fun writing that. I actually had just had surgery on my right arm and I typed this entire novella with two fingers because I was off work and kind of recliner ridden and I had a blast doing it. Nice. But yeah, that was kind of cool. I mean, it's, I like it. It's actually not too offensive, you know,
Starting point is 01:08:14 especially seeing where some of that audio has come, you know, how far that's come along since, you know, digitized this type of thing. Yeah. And these narrators that pitch into this, they're getting a royalty too, don't get me wrong. I mean, they're still getting a royalty, but I'm getting a bigger chunk of the royalty than I would have been getting prior to that.
Starting point is 01:08:34 But I did, I got sort of four new books on Audible, The Program, which would be book three in the Patriot series, Survivor Martial Law, which would be book two in the Patriot series, and then Bloodcore, which was a spin-off, or a one-off, we could say, from the Tyot series, Surviving Martial Law, which will be in book two in the Patriot series, and then Bloodcore, which was a spin-off, or a one-off, we could say, from the Tyrant series, based on one of the favorite characters in that story.
Starting point is 01:08:53 Her name was Tori. She's one of the favorite characters in that story. A lot of my readers reached out to me about her, and they liked that character, so I made a novel just on her. And then finally, the fourth book would be Colter's Saloon, a western novella. But four new books out on Audible for the listeners
Starting point is 01:09:11 out there, if you're a reader and you were wondering if I have anything new coming out on Audible, there you go, it's been a minute since I put out a new Audible book. But I'm happy to do so. It's awesome. Yep. Anyway, that will tidy things up for this episode of The Rising Republic.
Starting point is 01:09:27 Thank you everybody for listening. I'm Al Douglas Hogan. And I'm Ryan Buford. Have a great week.

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