The Tucker Carlson Show - Erik Prince: CIA Corruption, Killer Drones, and Government Surveillance
Episode Date: May 21, 2024Erik Prince is an entrepreneur, former Navy SEAL and founder of Blackwater Worldwide, a private military corporation. His latest project is Unplugged, a phone, messaging application and VPN that is pr...ivacy focused and won’t collect or share customer data. Visit www.Unplugged.com/Tucker to learn more about our paid partnership with Unplugged. (00:00) Introduction (06:40) The Liz Cheney Wing of Congress (32:45) The Main Villains of The Iraq and Afghanistan Wars (44:20) We Keep Sending Money to Ukraine. Where’s it Going? (01:21:50) What Happed to Privacy in America? (01:51:30) Hillary Clinton Really Doesn’t Like Erik Prince Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Welcome to the Tucker Carlson Show. We bring you stories that have not been showcased anywhere else.
And they're not censored, of course, because we're not gatekeepers. We are honest brokers
here to tell you what we think you need to know and do it honestly. Check out
all of our content at tuckercarlson.com. Here's the episode. We had this pattern for years of
taking, of hoarding tape like you do ammo. Yeah. Like I don't even shoot 7.62x39 really. It's just
not, I'm not that interested, but I have, you know, like it's unimaginable how many steel case
rounds i have
like why do i have those because i'm crazy just in case it's like so that the prepper you have
and not need the need and not have i totally agree with that yeah but i'm not rational about it like
i'm sure you who's like equipped an entire private army is you're pretty rational about it
i'm not i'm like i'm not exactly sure i need i don't give a shit gold ammo you know
whatever i just want to hoard it and um because i feel you know i can feel all this stuff
and tape is the same way the dudes with guns yeah are not a match for dudes with drones
so if you're if you're the kind of person i and I'm not naming names or identifying myself by name,
but if you're the kind of person who sees a deal on Steelcase 7.62x39, you're like,
I need another 10,000 rounds.
Because in your gut, you feel like something, you know, volatility is coming.
Is that pointless?
I've just been reading a book called Firepower, which is a history of basically a history of gunpowder.
And you track the change of warfare going from spears and longbows to the wheel locks, matchlock muskets, flintlocks, artillery with bursting rounds.
And I read that to try to understand we're now through a massive step change. Cause you know, despite all the techno wizardry
of the US military, the best weapon the enemy had
was an IED.
Yes, I noticed.
And now the IEDs would be positioned along the road
and clacked off remotely.
Now the enemy can fly the IED at you at 120 miles an hour,
low to the ground, even in a highly jammed environment so the threat
highly jamming there's there's no way to stop the highly highly jammed right even because the
russians are really good at jamming yes and the ukrainians yeah they've developed they've innovated
taking a cheap racing drone like with the goggles that somebody wears f FPV drone. And you put a beer can size charge
that you can 3D print the casing for it in the field
with a little copper disc on the front of it
and drive that into the back of a tank.
And for $1,500, you destroy a $2 million tank.
So that is like having a sniper rifle
versus a guy with a longbow.
It's a step change in warfare warfare and we're there right now and the longer this combat goes in ukraine the russians are getting a lot better
ukrainians have too but they're just trying to you know the the battle is the ultimate cauldron
of learning yes and bad ideas are quickly destroyed and discarded.
And so the proliferation of that knowledge is staggering.
So what are we learning from watching?
I don't think the US military is learning much.
Oh, good.
No learning.
Well, no, the problem is the US weapon systems
aren't even that high demand
because they're not that effective
in that highly jammed environment.
For 20 years of global war on terror,
you were fighting against
a very comparatively unsophisticated enemy.
Now in a big state-on-state type war,
the U.S. systems are not holding up.
You know, the Javelin missile,
which Raytheon sells to the taxpayers
for $200,000 a shot with a $300,000
command launch unit. The Ukrainians can only use that for the first shot in an ambush because
their IR detector, if they shoot the first tank, the tank is very hot, it's burning.
If they try to shoot a second and third missile, the other missiles go for the very hot spot
on the battlefield, they can't even discern.
So then the Ukrainian shift from a $200,000 missile
from the Americans to one that they build themselves
for $29,000 and it works just as well.
And it's delivered on a drone.
Delivered on a drone or from an anti-tank missiles.
Yeah, so the super high dollar American stuff
is not doing so well in that battle space.
So I would assume, I mean, the world is watching this.
Potential future adversaries are seeing on display
American military capability.
And we should be concerned as taxpayers and as citizens
that all this money we've spent,
we have not gotten very good value for in the same way but doesn't it doesn't it display our our vulnerability too if
our weapon systems aren't working in ukraine why would they work in other parts of the right aren't
we sort of showing our hand look some of the stuff works well but at what cost right because you know
the hooties are using a 20 to 50 000 drone to attack
commercial shipping or u.s shipping in the red sea gulf of aden uh and the u.s has to shoot that down
with not one but two missiles that cost two million dollars a piece so you're costing us
four million dollars to shoot down a 50 000 drone bad drone, bad math, even in Washington, D.C.
Why wouldn't, because this is on display
and the world is sort of watching,
why wouldn't military planners in the United States
be taking notes and adjusting accordingly?
Because the money flow keeps on going.
The same way with no accountability
and no self-introspection, no learning.
Look, who got fired?
Who got punished for a complete debacle in Afghanistan
where over 20 years,
we replaced the Taliban with the Taliban?
Yeah.
And nobody's been fired.
The only guy that got fired was Stu Scheller.
What a good man he is.
The young Marine who stood up and said, enough.
That's right
because if because if one of his marines went to jail i know because if he said look if a couple
of my young marines lost a rifle on the rifle range they would be punished we lost we left 80
some billion dollars worth of military equipment and turned over the country to a terror organization
and everybody's been promoted and everybody is is just, it's business as usual.
That's a problem. This kind of incompetence is not going to end well.
So, I mean, I have too many questions, and I do want to circle back to your initial point that
warfare is completely different. It's a step change, as you said. But how, on this thread,
how does the U.S. Congress, how do people who claim to support our troops,
back the military, strong defense, the Liz Cheney wing of the Congress, how do they keep
sending money to an organization that's increasingly incapable of defending the country?
I spoke to a bunch of members yesterday morning in Congress, and they were at the point of despair
because they're trying to restrict the money and to bring
some accountability. And they said the, the money is the the
amount of money that is sprinkled around the Capitol by
the defense contractors by the effectively the brigades worth
of lobbyists, thousands of lobbyists spreading 10s of
millions of dollars around politicians and they just keep the money train going.
It's really disgusting.
And the big thing, in the article I wrote recently,
I'd said, you know, in Rome,
like when the Romans lost a whole bunch of people
at the Battle of Cannae,
when their Senate met a couple of weeks later,
it was 40% undermanned.
Why? Because the Roman elites actually served in the military
and bore the consequences of failure.
Our elites don't serve in the military.
They have very little skin in the game or no skin.
And so for them, it's about money and grift.
Or their children serve in foreign militaries.
So just back to the technology itself,
which you've been watching all your life
because you've been around it all your life.
I think you had the world's largest private air force
at one point.
Is that true?
We had 73 aircraft that we owned and operated
and flew into garden spots for the US.
It was fun.
I was just at a Blackwater reunion last weekend. flew into garden spots for the US. It was fun. So what-
I was just at a Blackwater reunion last weekend
and we had it at the Alamo and it was just,
it was really cool standing there on hollowed ground
because I didn't realize that across the street
from the Alamo is the Menger Bar.
And that's actually where Teddy Roosevelt
started the Rough Riders.
So there's all kinds of Rough Rider memorabilia in this bar,
raising a glass to a great American.
And if I'd convinced Trump to change policy in Afghanistan
to prevent the debacle, which ended up happening,
I was going to call that unit
the second US Volunteer Cavalry.
The first US Volunteer Caval cavalry was the Rough Riders.
Sam Juan Hill.
Exactly.
This was going to be two USV.
It would have worked.
Afghanistan would be stable.
We would have saved America the embarrassment.
Yes.
And really that, I'd say a pivotal moment for a massive collapse in American credibility and deterrence.
And it would have cost 5% of what the US was already spending.
So why couldn't, I remember that very well.
And in my memory, you were not making the case for a forever occupation.
You were making the case for a sensible drawdown that didn't destroy the credibility of the United States.
All the conventional forces could have left.
Right.
90% of the contractors could have left.
There would have been a small stay behind special operations force,
6,000 contractors.
That's it.
And would have kept accountability for the tens of billions of dollars of
US equipment that was already there and would have kept the government upright.
And there's now every Al-Qaeda,
every crazy terrorist organization
has set up shop there in Afghanistan.
Again, we've not heard the last of Afghanistan.
It's really sad.
So why, and I remember, again, I remember that.
In fact, I think we talked,
or I know we talked about it at the time.
And it seemed sensible.
It seemed kind of non-ideological, practical.
How do we get, this is kind of a clusterfuck.
How do we get out in the best way possible,
preserving our own interests to the extent that we can?
Why didn't the administration,
the Trump administration take you up on that?
I would say the same neocon perpetual war presence
in Washington that wants to do it the same way
that we've been doing for decades.
And I would argue losing doing that.
And it's about money and power and perpetuation,
not about actually putting a bow on a bad situation.
How do those people, as they inevitably do,
seize the moral high ground in the opening moments
of the ideological battle and position themselves
as like the champions of freedom and human rights
when in fact they're monsters?
Like how do they get away with that every single time?
I think it's a direct result of the all-volunteer force,
which seems a good idea.
I'm still supportive of it,
but it means it's a very,
the people that actually serve,
that bear the cost of these overseas efforts,
is maybe one half of 1% of the population serving.
Three or 4% know that 1%.
And then 95% of America has no clue
and no skin in the game.
And so they're easily bullshitted
by the posturing jackasses in Washington.
That's, yeah.
That's why Dan Crenshaw has a job.
So I just want to get back to to the technology
because i'm just i'm interested on behalf of all people who sense turmoil ahead and are say
stockpiling ammo right i think there are people like that um is that fruitless given the technologies
um i would argue for Taiwan, for example,
facing a possible invasion or issue
coming from mainland China,
the best thing they could do is build a home guard
because a well-armed, well-motivated people,
I mean, as we showed in Afghanistan,
as the Taliban showed the US military,
well-motivated people,
even using weapons that are 70 years old,
can still beat a superpower with all the techno gimmickry.
It's not the steel in the ships that make a great Navy,
it's the steel in the men, the steel in the crew.
But are you ever going to see another war between states
that's won or lost on the basis of artillery tanks?
I mean, is that, are those the cavalry charges of today?
Artillery is still the king of battle
as Ukrainians are learning the hard way.
And the Russians have gone from,
if you shot at the Russians a year and a half ago,
it would take them about an hour and a half
to shoot back accurately.
Yes.
To geolocate and to coordinate with their fire,
you know, fire control centers to shoot back.
Now they're down to about two or three minutes.
So they've learned and they're coordinating
and they've gotten a lot better.
And it is wrong for us to assume
that our Kung Fu is all that good right now.
And what role did drones play going forward to the extent you can predict and imagine it?
Very significant. You know, people say the tank is dead, it's gone forever.
It will go just like chariots were the attack helicopter of 2000 years ago.
There'll still be a role for tanks,
but people are gonna have to figure out how to knock down
the swarms of incoming drones
with hard kill and soft kill, et cetera.
It is always gonna, you know,
warfare is going to ebb and flow,
but the ability to program very sophisticated devices
that fly very fast, that are very hard to kill.
You know, the first strategic offset after World War II
was nuclear weapons.
We had nukes, then the Russians did,
and then it was about tonnage.
Then the second offset was precision weaponry.
Now everybody has precision weaponry.
So I would argue that the third offset
that the US should try to pursue dominance,
and we're far from it,
is in an AI
drone innovation application. And I would say the most
innovation that's happened has been in Ukraine and Russia right
now. And we are way behind. Because, again, Washington,
procurement people, the the approach people in Congress keep
spending money in the same way on the same stupid cartel of defense contractors
with the same failing results when at the bleeding edge of battle, actual innovation
is happening by dudes in their garage in Ukraine that are fighting for their lives.
And they've innovated, and we ignore that to our detriment.
So these are countries with fewer marketing majors and more engineers coming out of there,
right?
Yeah, they've definitely-
The marketing major's bad at creating drones.
They've done well at STEM.
Yeah, they have done well.
And they're smart people, which no one wants to say, but it's true.
You may have come to the obvious conclusion that the real debate is not between Republican
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You will not regret it. What will drones be able to do, do you think, in 10 years? What will that look like?
You could load a face, and between network surveillance and the facial recognition on that drone,
find one person and fly into that person's head that fast.
Seriously?
Yeah.
So identity management, privacy will become even more essential.
You think about how many cameras,
how much data is being constantly collected everywhere
from street cameras, from door knock, from doorbell cameras,
from facial recognition at the airport.
Privacy is really under attack.
But yeah, well, I've noticed.
And now TSA has decided to take your photograph every time you walk through.
I went through yesterday,
and they had a, you know,
staring to the screen and will assess your face.
I said to the guy, is this mandatory?
And he said, no, it's not.
And I said, fuck that, I'm not doing that.
And he goes, I agree with you.
Okay, I mean, but like, what is that? I'm not doing that. And he goes, I agree with you. Okay.
I mean, but like, what is that?
Why are they doing that?
Data aggregation.
Because they can.
So it's not a good sign when your own government is gathering data on you, is it?
Like, why would they possibly need that?
What chipped our founding fathers off.
Right.
Paying some taxes on tea and land taxes.
I mean, I guess our idea of what we will resist over
in terms of liberty and government intrusion
has been very steadily eroding.
And now it's, I would would say increasingly a steep curve of
dissent yeah and it does seem like the purpose of politicizing the military and
making it left-wing anti-white pro-trans all the stuff which I think the right
just sort of says well that's gonna be less effective military it's bad they
make fun of it but that seems way darker to me. I mean, it does seem like it's being weaponized against dissent in the United States.
I think the military was one of the most trusted institutions.
For sure.
And I saw already even in the 80s.
I mean, look, I went to the Naval Academy in 1987 and I left after a year and a half
because I found the political correctness
and the nonsense already then on the double standards
that were pursued by the academy leadership
while saying there are no double standards.
I just found ridiculous.
What were the double standards?
I remember going to the O course, the old course the first time.
And they said, there's, this is one height of a, of a wall to get over for one gender
and one height for the other one.
And they said, oh, the standards are all the same, but wait a minute.
They're liars.
So, yeah.
So just let's, if you're going to, if you're going to call it the same, then be the same,
but, but at least let's, let's be consistent.
And so the, and the amount of recruiting for specific sports teams of people
that were completely unqualified to be there or to be naval officers was staggering i love the navy
i just didn't like the and a school run by the federal government so i went to you i didn't
fully realize it so you made it through the first year where people drop out. Yeah. No, I left halfway through my sophomore year.
I finished my finals.
So you did the hard stuff and you still dropped out.
Yeah, it's not that hard.
It's just you have to have a high tolerance for bullshit.
That's all.
Yeah, that's dropped in you, I notice.
Yeah.
Yeah.
But I rolled to Hillsdale.
So, you know, went quite the opposite to one run by the federal
government to one that accepted no federal funding at all interesting so even in 1987 why didn't
anyone say anything about it because women don't fight different wars presumably it would be the
same war so that's like very obviously insane look i had no issue with women being at the academies,
but at least make equal enforcement.
That's all.
If it's going to be,
you're going to call it the same,
then be the same.
That's fine.
And you,
but I,
what I also found,
I went to Hillsdale and I joined the fire department of the local town.
And I learned more about small unit leadership there than I did in the very
artificial learning lab. that was the academy.
Why'd you join the fire department in college?
Because it was cool.
Because it was fun.
Come on.
I got to do a lot of things in life, but driving a fire truck to a fire, lights and sirens, is definitely in the top five.
How many kids in your class were in the fire department?
None.
Since then, it's been more of a thing.
But I was the first one ever at Hillsdale to join the fire department.
And it was convincing the gruff firefighters and it was a full-time part-time.
So there was a couple of full-time guys,
but the rest were like a butcher and a trash truck driver and building
contractors.
So convincing them that this snot nose college kid was okay to go through a
burning building with them was,
there was no small admissions process.
One of the things I think is most interesting about you, which I know you hate to talk about,
but is the fact that you were from an affluent family.
And so you didn't actually need to do any of that at all.
So why did you do that?
Sense of mission, sense of service, and mostly a sense of adventure so you never thought like
you know we're rich i don't need to this is just nonsense i'm going to
no that was never bum around europe for the summer never part of the equation why no i did no i did
i got married uh between my junior and senior year and I took a long honeymoon and we went through Eastern Europe.
But the funny thing is we-
We went through Eastern Europe.
What year was that?
That was 91.
That was as the whole Soviet Union was collapsing.
Yeah, I got married that year.
I remember.
And we went to the Baltic Liberation Tour
with Pat Buchanan and Lou Rockwell
from the Vinicius Institute.
And we went to Lithuania, Latvia, Estonia.
And we visited the government buildings,
which were still surrounded and occupied
by Soviet interior ministry troops,
but they'd had free elections.
So it was fascinating to see a place
literally at the inflection point of embracing-
What month in 91 was this?
That was May.
Okay.
So I got married that summer also,
and I went to the Medocean Club in Tuckerstown, Bermuda. So I got married that summer also. And I went to the Medotion Club in
Tuckerstown, Bermuda. It seemed more romantic than Estonia. What does your wife think, your young
bride think when you're like, we're getting married, but actually the honeymoon is in Eastern
Europe. It's like the hellscape of Eastern Europe. Honey, do you know anything about Stalinist
architecture? I'm going to show you. We road tripped through, but it was really funny. I'll never forget, Babe Buchanan bought an entire uniform off of a Soviet border guard,
a captain for 20 bucks.
And we were at a restaurant and comes back with a whole uniform on the hanger and 20
bucks.
And as we're leaving the country, another one of our group had a luggage that you have
to put through the scanner.
And you can see in the scanner,
it looks like there's a manhole cover in his suitcase.
There's this huge disc.
The Soviet border guard opens the thing.
This is a very big problem.
How much to make the problem go away?
$50.
It was an entire bronze bust of linen
that had been yanked off a building.
And my, our friend was exporting it. So I thought, you know, if they're selling linen foranked off a building and my our friend was exporting it so i thought
you know if they're selling linen for 50 off a government building this is not long for communism
in fact it was i think it was in august it was like two months later it was done that's incredible
um so my final question about the drones i mean is it is it a crazy thing to consider the
possibility that the government might employ this technology
against its own citizens, deploy it against its own citizens?
If people are still rotting in prison
for protesting at the Capitol on January 6th,
if they're putting, a woman got four years in prison yesterday
for protesting outside an abortion clinic,
it's a government at war with its own citizens.
So why wouldn't drones be part of that?
Entirely possible.
How hard are they to shoot down with say a 12 gauge?
Ah, that's actually one of the,
it's a big problem for the small FPV drones.
They're so small and so hard to hit.
It's almost like hitting a ptarmigan.
Very hard to hit that bird.
Very fast.
Very fast.
I know you love bird hunting.
I do.
So I try to correlate it to,
you know,
or maybe a very,
like a quail on cocaine.
Oh, it's that tough.
Yeah.
It sounds kind of sporty.
So what is the defense?
So if-
Nets.
Nets?
Nets are a cheap,
simple defense for small FPV drones
because it's a small charge.
If you can keep the charge away from the target,
the small charge doesn't have that much effect.
But, you know, P for plenty,
you can always increase the poundage.
My sense is that police departments
and state police have drones now.
For surveillance, yes.
For surveillance.
How hard is it to alter a surveillance drone
to become an offensive weapon?
Well, the Ukrainians and the Russians have done that
in their garages or in a tent on the edge of battle pretty easily.
Okay.
So why wouldn't, I mean, if you care about living
in a non-totalitarian country, if you care about America,
why wouldn't someone say, actually, no, we're not,
we're just going to pass a federal law that no law enforcement or intel agency
or the US military,
these things cannot be used domestically
against Americans, period,
under any circumstances.
Or certainly not armed.
Or surveillance.
Like, why do you need,
you know what I mean?
Look, for stopping a mass shooter
or some actual terrorism event,
it provides good situation awareness and it protects the cops who are trying
to do an honest job.
But the,
the,
the leakage in the same way that the forever wars of Iraq or Afghanistan and
all those surveillance tools that the government tells us they need to protect
us.
The,
the danger is certainly some of that tech on the arm side leaking back to be used domestically that's a i don't see any effort
by the u.s government to stop mass shootings in fact they seem to be abetting them and time and
time again you find in the small print in the write-up after the shooting that the person has
been detained repeatedly by some branch of government you saw in uvalde the cops refused
to go in and save the kids as they were being executed etc etc there just doesn't seem any will
to stop mass shootings there seems to be instead yeah but i don't see that i i don't the uvalde
one was not a i wouldn't say that's not a top-down federal conspiracy that was that was
individual inadequacy of training readiness because there's because there's dozens of other ones where the cops have just been spectacular like in nashville yes but then you see the political correctness of
them being reluctant to release the the the the writings of this trans shooter who is out to kill
christians right so great individual valor by those cops bad by the cop leadership or the law enforcement
leadership by not releasing the truth let's have a massive disinfecting effect of truth
on this situation so for sure but there's no will obviously in the media to get to that
information so it's left to like people on x to do it but i mean you've been in and around the
government since you were 18 and shipped off to annapolis so do you think it's left to like people on X to do it. But I mean, you've been in and around the government since you were 18 and shipped off to Annapolis.
So do you think it's fair for the rest of us who haven't to be skeptical of massive increases in government power, particularly military and law enforcement power that are justified by some threat?
We should be highly skeptical.
Yeah.
Mass shooters, child mol molesters human traffickers
islamic terrorists like i don't think the government does a good job of protecting us
from any of those things but they've certainly increased their power and their power to kill me
and my family on the basis of those threats more on poverty more poverty more on drugs
more drugs more on terrorism didn't go so well.
Right.
And just to that, I know we're jumping around,
but I have too many questions, but... Maybe we both suffer from a little ADD.
Yeah, well, I mean, there's just a lot to go through.
So you were at the center of the war on terror
more than any other American, I would say.
No.
Well, how?
We had our shoulder to the wheel pushing like everybody else.
But the scale was, you know, I don't think there's ever been a more effective military contractor, you know, in a war that I'm aware of in the United States than Blackwater, which you started in Iran.
So, but, you know, you were subject to the policymakers as well. And as in the Afghanistan withdrawal, not one of them,
not only was not like indicted or punished, but not a single one of them sort of
lost a step in career advancement. They all kind of went on to the Atlantic Council or whatever.
Or their board seats.
Or their board seats.
On the big defense contractors.
So how, since you watched that, how did that happen? Like how did Tori and
Nuland go from Dick Cheney's office to being like the number two person in the State Department
overseeing the war in Ukraine?
Like, that's just crazy to me.
Because it's at that, it's almost a uniparty.
It is the party of big government and big Washington
and more spending and more warfare.
And 100% wrong. and more spending and more warfare and a hundred percent wrong the guys that you
serve with in the SEAL teams and that you know you've been around in the
subsequent 30 years like how do they feel about that like guys who did you
know three or four deployments or more guys that actually paid the cost that's
exactly right bad policymaker decisions you know where their friends commit
suicide and they didn't get to see their kids grow up
or they got killed or lost a limb.
Like those guys.
Yep.
What do they think?
They're disgusted.
They're angry.
They're righteously angry
because they believe in the Republic.
When you join the military,
you swear to defend the constitution
against all enemies, foreign and domestic.
And you kind of join thinking
all those enemies are going to be abroad but some
of the enemies of liberty are probably here and and when when a elite enriches themselves and
separates them from the realities of consequences of accountability that's a that's a pendulum that
swings out far but nature has a way of swinging the pendulum back to the middle. And so that
either it gets done in within the rule of law and accountability, or things can come apart very
quickly, frighteningly. It's part of the accountability is informal. It's social pressure,
which is very effective. Shame. Exactly. And humor. We need, first of all, we need to just laugh at the freaking incompetence. I'd say when you,
when you track, um, I made the last deployment on the USS America, an old, uh, it was a fuel
fired aircraft carrier. And they used to, uh, everything is measured on an aircraft carrier,
especially the landings. Cause it's all about the aviators
and who has the best launch and recovery,
especially the, you know, the traps.
So they measure which,
why are you catching everything?
So once a month,
there's a thing called the foc'sle follies,
which is the front of the ship,
but below the flight deck
where the chains come out of the belly.
And so all the air wing
and the senior ship's crew would muster there and they'd go through all the scores, but then it would go through the most merciless roasting of anybody.
It was the most vicious humor I've ever seen in my life.
Like guys who screwed up the landings?
Screwed up the landings, the XO, the CO, it was no holds barred.
It was fantastic. It was hilarious and very healthy and but now that you've you have a much more politically correct military
you can't do that at all they don't do that anymore nope no but i mean if if you can't
land an aircraft on a pitching deck of an aircraft carrier, I mean, you put your own life, the hardware, and the lives of the sailors at risk, correct?
Right.
Right.
So the stakes could not be higher. the line and it's good to to reinforce good behavior and to punish bad behavior and and and
shame and derision of your peers matters so looking back since again you you were so close
to what was happening during that whole period or at least until maybe 2012 but for the critical
years you were like right there who who do you blame most
for the mistakes made in afghanistan and iraq and the subsequent wars
who are the villains who shouldn't get board seats look any we went through like 18 different
commanders 18 different four-star generals over the course of afghanistan a lot of four-star generals over the course of Afghanistan. We've got a lot of four-star generals.
We have as many generals now as we did in World War II when we had 14 million men under arms.
So now you have 10% of that.
So you have basically 1.4 million under arms versus 14.
And we have the same amount of flag officers.
So yeah, we are massively overstaffed.
And you think about all the,
I mean, they have-
All chiefs and no Indians.
Each four-star general has a personal butler
and a valet and a driver and a cook
and all those kind of quaint 18th century habits of staff
that they surrounded military generals with.
We have that yet for
our generals back when generals were brave though generals got killed in the civil war
yes and not so much now so it's just it's just enormous the the the there there can be a massive
winnowing of of headcount across the board in generals, in staffs,
and in civilians, the tooth to tail ratio of the military,
of like how many, when you say teeth,
people that put warheads on foreheads versus tail
has gotten way out of whack.
We have way too much tail,
like an alligator-sized tail with a salamander-sized bite.
It's just, it's so unbelievably corrupt. So, but, but again,
but again, no, it's, it's, it's corrupt because we just keep throwing money at it and no one ever
calls bullshit. A business that goes through a massive growth cycle, everybody can get fat
and sloppy and lazy because you just, there's always more money and we never have to tighten
a belt. And so the US military has been on like a Krispy Kreme bender of donuts.
Compounding amount of donuts consumed every day and no one's ever tightened them up and saying,
all right, today we're just PTing and we're not eating donuts. That's across our entire government, but especially in the military, which is supposed
to exist constitutionally to defend and deter. And I don't think we're not getting the value
that we're spending money on right now. No, it seems we're at a point where it's dangerous.
Yep. And it does seem, I just want to restate i i don't know this as a dead certain fact but i can
feel it very strongly i think the purpose of it is to keep you know i think i think the enemy that
they're seeking to fight lives here i mean i think this is a political i think the policymakers feel
that way they're very anxious to control any instrument of force? I would argue it's about for for the defense contractors, they
just want to keep selling expensive weapons, right? And
they will keep paying politicians to keep buying the
expensive weapons. I almost feel I don't feel sad for that for
the White House as they deal with a problem like in Yemen,
where the Houthis have become long range pirates and
have shut off the entire Red Sea, like 50% of global
container traffic flowed through the Red Sea. Now it doesn't.
Egypt is losing $800 million a month. It lost toll fees from
from container traffic and all those ships have to go all the
way around South Africa now to make it to Europe coming out of
Asia. It's a big problem. And I'm sure the Navy that are the
the DoD policymakers only provide the administration with
the 50 and $100 billion solution to go beat down the Houthis to
make them behave. And in that article I wrote, I just come back to,
there's such a constant rejection
of market-based private sector solutions
because the Saudis and the Israelis
actually had this problem back in the 60s
when there was a war in Yemen
and they hired David Sterling, the founder of the SAS.
And he went there with 30 guys and they kicked ass
and it worked and it was cheap and simple and practical.
And this article I wrote just is a litany
of those kinds of rejections.
And that's my frustration
because I provided a lot of those options
even to deter the Ukraine war in the first place you know um when um it's pretty i i my
internal intel sources gave me pretty good idea that already in december of 21 three months before
the invasion that the russians were going to invade that it was not a it was not a song and
dance and so i wrote a paper proposing a combination of lend lease
and flying tigers to deter the war because in 1940 when britain was really in it the u.s gave
50 destroyers a bunch of aircraft guns gave it to the brits we also provided aircraft and allowed
u.s pilots to take leave and go to work for the nationalist Chinese to stop the Japanese from bombing cities called the Flying Tigers.
Yeah.
In this case.
And we armed Stalin.
Yeah.
And made it possible to go from Moscow to Berlin to stop the Nazis.
But Biden could have done one very simple thing.
He could have announced, okay, no war necessary in Ukraine.
They're never going to join part of NATO, but they're at least going to have an air
force because there was already 200 aircraft set to retire from the US air force to be
flown to the desert in 2022, 50 F-15s, 50 F-16s, some a-10s already written down to zero value to the taxpayer
they're going to be flown to the desert to the boneyard and parked for eternity
transfer those to ukrainians would have been less than a billion dollars prevent the war
and the discussion of nato done but they wanted the war obviously apparently why are they or they believe their own bullshit
that they that their powerpoints and their posturing would dissuade look i i understand
why the russians get ornery about it because if if the the russians or the chinese were looking
to make uh the northern provinces of mexico into active parts of a chinese or russian
alliance we'd get ornery about that well obviously yeah they're putting if they put you know look at
what happened when they put missiles in cuba in 1962 but missiles in tijuana it would be unacceptable
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Nothing to see here.
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No one believes that.
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So my question is, and this is all complex and delicate and, you know, I understand to some
extent, but what I don't understand is sending Kamala Harris to the Munich Security Conference
and saying at a press briefing with cameras rolling to Zelensky, we want you to join NATO.
You only say that if you want a war, you want the Russians to invade. Like, why would they want that?
Maybe they're just that dumb.
I don't think, and I think they are dumb.
I mean, well, they're definitely dumb.
Tony Blinken?
I mean, really?
Dumb.
Having a rock concert in Kiev during massive combat operations
while the Ukrainian army is getting crushed
he just he just visited and he's up there on stage video he's up there on stage with his
guitar it's like that is Nero fiddling while Rome burns here it is so yeah i mean he's a child obviously um and and like an angry destructive child
but what happens like where does this go we send another 60 billion dollars to ukraine
most of that money goes to five major u.s defense contractors yes to replace at five times the cost
what the weapons cost that we already sent the ukrainians meaning you know if we send them
something that was built 10 years ago well now it's going to cost four and five times as much
so again it's a massive grift paid by a pentagon that doesn't know how to buy stuff cost effectively
it doesn't change the outcome on the battle.
As the fields dry, it's May now,
coming up on tank season.
Oh, is it tank season again?
Weather still matters in warfare.
And if you have a wet snow covered farm field,
it's very muddy, very gooey, not great for tanks.
Mud season.
Mud season.
I think the Russians call it the Great Rasputitsa,
the Great Slush.
Yeah.
That's done now.
And as June comes, it'll be game on.
And I think the Russian bear is hungry,
and they're going to have a time.
So the war should have been
ended never should have started they should have made a deal froze the lines six months into it
but but the biden administration believed that uh all this american weaponry would have saved the
day it hasn't and it's ugly and you it's ugly. And the Russian commanders are not idiots.
They know their history.
The Battle of Kursk, which happened just north
of where the fighting is now,
was the largest tank battle in history.
It was the last offensive effort
of the German army against the Soviets.
And they tried to push from the North and South on this salient.
It was a bulge.
And the Russians knew they were coming.
And so they built lots of lines of defenses.
It's the same thing they've done now,
that they did last summer,
which ate up all that equipment.
And now the Ukrainians are very thin.
They've had a lot of corruption issues.
All the defenses that were supposed to be built
by the Ukrainians are much smaller or non-existent.
And so now it's allowing maneuver.
And especially as the tanks, as the fields dry and you can maneuver, it's going to be a very ugly summer.
Very ugly summer.
What do you think the Russians want?
I'd say now they want to absolutely humiliate the West and make sure that they never have a problem with Ukraine again.
And that seems achievable.
I'm afraid so.
What happens to Ukraine?
I don't know if it survives as an independent country. If they
take Odessa, if they take the ability for Ukraine to export
its grain, that really threatens the long term economic
viability.
Maybe it goes back to, look,
Western Ukraine used to be part of Poland.
Eastern Ukraine used to be part of Russia.
So, you know, maps move depending on, you know,
military victories drive diplomatic breakthroughs.
And right now the Russians are winning and they're going to have a very good summer.
Is there anybody who's knowledgeable on this subject
who believes Ukraine can quote win,
which is to say push Russian troops all the way back
to the old Russian border?
Well, I didn't really believe it ever.
Oh, I know that.
But I don't know who's advising the White House
at this point or who they're listening to,
but they probably need to change out their advisor list but so but then you have the secretary of
state our buffoonish secretary of state tony blinken um boomer parody uh showing up and telling
the ukrainians during his rock concert that you know we're with you forever like how could you
say something like that when i've never met a single person who knows anything about the region who thinks Ukrainians
will achieve victory no matter how much money we send them? How could you say something like that?
It's good money after bad. And all we're doing now is facilitating the demise of Ukrainian men
and destroying them for future generations.
So how many have died? I've asked members of Congress who are funding this stuff.
Hundreds of thousands.
But here's what I understand.
If you're paying for this war, which the United States is,
the U.S. Congress is, Mike Johnson is,
don't you have a moral obligation to know its consequences?
Like, how can you just, how can you get up there with a Ukrainian lapel pin
and talk about the brave Ukrainian people who are being killed by the hundreds of thousands and you don't even keep track of the casualties?
Like, aren't you kind of a monster for doing that?
I don't understand.
And you look at, if you made the pictures of the modern battle space on the front a little grainy and black and white.
Yep.
It's indistinguishable from the Battle of the Somme or World War I.
Well, that's exactly right.
Artillery, a grinding, grinding crushing pointless loss of humanity but it's being abetted by our policymakers
like they they they're responsible for this to some extent like what and and it's it's shocking
how uniparty government has become you don't seem shocked that they don't care about how many ukrainians have died they don't care about how many u.s troops die really good point no it's totally fair point
because they because they'll send they'll send u.s troops to war with a whole bunch of cockamamie
rules of engagement and policies and it's just not a serious way to wage warfare the the the
the whole premise of g watt was that we could, by American magic and precision,
we could always just clip off the head of the snake and the whole body would die of the snake.
And that flies in the face of every kind of warfare. When you look back to World War II,
we killed off 30% of the German male population.
World War I, same.
American Civil War, same.
The Continental Wars in Europe in the 17, 1800s,
back to the Punic and Pelvenesian Wars.
You destroy their manpower, the logistics, and their finance.
This, cutting off the head of the snake, is a fool's errand.
Is there any precedent for it in history no so i thought a sort of a key component of education at the military academies was military
history no i'm serious and you i mean you're a living example of it you you went to one and
you know an awful lot about your business i didn't read i didn't learn that at the academy
really no no that's a lifetime of curiosity i
i was a military history geek as a kid when we my family went to normandy when i was 11
and uh you know i was the tour guide sword gold juno beach pegasus bridge all that yeah i was
i was that but i mean nerdy geeky kid so do you think your average like modern flag officer is
just sort of not aware of
the history of warfare i'm sure they get some level of it but they have not made it a career i
i'd say the best book i read on general officers was that one it was a british military study it's
called the psychology of military incompetence and it and it went through five of the biggest disasters
in British military history,
like the surrender at Singapore.
Yeah, Khartoum.
Yeah, Khartoum, Baghdad in World War I.
Of course, the Afghan withdrawal.
Yes.
Into Peshawar.
Yes.
And it literally looked through the guy's childhood,
where he went to school,
his relationship with his father, all the rest,
and very consistent themes.
And-
What were they?
They were very bookish, very geeky,
no introspection.
Yeah.
So they're Tony Blinken, basically.
Or just not people able to say,
okay, this is not working.
We're going to attack the boat
because this is not working in this direction.
And so the-
They're weak men, in other words.
Yeah.
Look, the anomaly of Patton is doesn't occur very often Patton who's been maligned
since his death um remarkable human being um and of course you know Hollywood is I don't know how
many movies they've done telling us Patton was bad um but you know there are some suggestions
that Patton was also murdered do you think that's possible? It'd be a hell of a difficult,
well,
I don't know if the traffic accident,
the Jeep rollover.
Yeah,
yeah.
Was an accident.
But he survived it and then died later.
I,
man,
I don't know,
but he hated the Soviets.
He hated communism.
Oh,
I know.
So,
I don't want to get too far afield here,
but I,
that does seem like a pivot point in world history where that, you know, April 1945, Hitler kills himself, Berlin is occupied by the Russians, et cetera, et cetera.
We win in Europe.
And then we sort of like kind of pivot toward the Soviet Union for a few years until maybe the Rosenbergs or shortly before.
Well, and even the amount of communists agents that
were surrounding Roosevelt oh well yes of course well Harry Hopkins literally a communist Soviet
agent yeah right so um but like why did that happen like how do we fight this war for freedom
and then wind up sort of handing Poland to Stalin, for example, or on the side of the totalitarian.
Handing all of those countries of the world.
Well, of course.
Yeah, it showed.
So how is this a war for freedom
if we're handing half of them?
An exhaustion of moral leadership.
Yeah.
I think.
Who was that?
Who do you think,
if we could hold one person responsible for that?
Truman was president.
Yeah, I know.
Because Roosevelt was dead.
So as Churchill said, he died in the traces but i think um
i i think when you look at history the the lie of socialism communism it is such a it's it's easy
for elitists to love that paradigm because it's because the because the right-wing Austrian school economics approach
is massive decentralization,
decision-making at the micro level.
A farmer knows what prices are,
has a good idea what demand is going to be,
decides whether he's going to plant more acres that year or not
and takes that risk himself.
The Soviet planner says,
I need everyone to plant this
many acres and we're going to do it at this price and it's it's the lie of individual incentive
versus massive central planning to the betterment of elite thinking right with it with the grift
that goes with it and that's just a that's like a mind worm disease that so many people continue generation
after generation continue to fall for yeah it's a mom-based system whereas the let the farmer figure
it out it's a dad-based system yeah it's true yeah what are you a farmer like how do you know
like that's what your dad says your mom's like no let's let's get it all. Sorry. But that's why I'm so excited to see Mille
having success in Argentina for a guy.
And maybe it's analogy to America
because he got sick of, I mean,
at the end of World War II,
per capita living standards in Argentina
were higher than Switzerland.
Yes.
Peronistas, socialists take over.
They run the country basically off the
cliff. Hyperinflation, economic wreckage, terrible. Millet gets sick of not only the
Peronistas, but the pathetic so-called right-wing opposition, which is not opposition. He starts his
own political party and he wins. I mean, I like any guy that'll campaign with a chainsaw i agree with that you
think that'll happen here i don't think the republican party is really that salvageable
anymore no because it's been gobbled up by corporatists yes and the you know the defense
industry now spreads money equally right and left not even really right just
across the washington insiders uh so yeah maybe an entirely new political movement that's why trump is
transformational because he kind of came outside the republican party right and did it and um
i hope he can i hope he can move the needle somewhere in the right direction because it's
it's teetering so i gotta got to ask you a personal question.
We were in the Middle East together not that long ago.
And I noticed two things.
One, you flew coach to the Middle East, which obviously you don't need to do.
But you did it on purpose.
I think that is your custom.
We're the same age, three weeks apart.
And I think most, like, why would you do that?
And the second thing i
noticed is you went from there to some far more obscure part of the world um so like explain those
things if you would i um when i i got out of theAL teams earlier than I wanted to, I loved being a SEAL.
I was pretty good at it, I think.
And I would have had a nice career going there.
For those who don't know the story, if you could explain why you got out.
Oh, my dad died when I was 25 and my wife got cancer.
No, I was 26, he was 29 and she got cancer.
So I got out to sort out the home front.
And that's really why I started Blackwater
just as a way to stay connected to the SEAL teams.
I knew nothing of business, nothing of land development,
nothing of government contracting,
but I kind of knew what the special operations community needed.
And building that business was a really great experience.
It was family policy for my dad to not come and work in the family
business after college, you had to go do your own thing. I had
nothing I didn't want anything to do with this business. I was
not. I don't think I was really suited for it. And but I was
going to come and work with him after 12 years or so of being a
seal. Starting Blackwater building it was one of the most satisfying things
I've ever done in my life.
Because bringing together people with great talents
that were really good, that they'd gained in the military,
and they'd retired or gotten out,
and having it smashed the way it was
really left a bad taste in my mouth.
And I'll be honest, I carry a big chip
on my shoulder yet for it. And I'll be honest, I carry a big chip on my shoulder yet.
And I try to keep it in perspective.
So look, I had a business that was crushed and lost.
Thousands of guys lost their lives, their limbs,
their mental health, their spouses over a badly run war in two theaters
by idiot Washington elites.
Same idiots that smashed my business.
So yeah, I got a chip on my shoulder to do
something big and effective and spectacular again and run hard until that happens or i'm or i die
trying but i mean you know 54 55 year old guys who've been successful which you have been despite
having your business smashed they don't fly coach like what is that is that like a just a spartan
impulse or you just don't get there soft you get there at that? Is that like just a Spartan impulse? Or you just don't want to get soft?
You get there at the same time.
Yeah, but it's... Tucker, I fly so much that...
Anyway, look...
No, that's just weird.
I know.
We're the same age.
I know how this works.
Look, I'm not a purist.
I do fly business class 10% of the time.
I mean, that's fine if you're flying to Fort Lauderdale
from DC or something but you know Dubai's
a long way I just think it's very very interesting
learn to sleep in any position
so that's what it is
yeah
I like that what's the weirdest place you've been recently
why are you always in Africa
um what do you do for a living eric
i feel like i knew you pretty well i'm really sure i would say there are lots of countries
that um need help organizing with the basics of tax collection and security assistance and border
security and police advisement because what we take for granted in America, if you want to start
a business in America, you can call a law office in Delaware, get a business in two hours for 200
bucks. It's simple. And you can
get title to your land here and you can get a bank account. You get a business license. You can,
you can do all those things that make capital formation possible. There are so many parts of
the world where that's not possible. And so providing them the very basic means of
a reliable police department or the means to stop gangs,
jihadi gangs, criminal gangs, whatever.
So I do provide some advice to countries
how to do that from time to time.
Judging by what little I know of your travel schedule,
it seems pretty frequent.
That's interesting.
So since you are everywhere all the time
and most americans
are including me sort of only dimly aware of what's happening around the world name three
places we should be paying more attention to now than we are the chinese communist party has been
very active in mexico um the fentanyl crisis is very much you know last year fentanyl in america killed like
109 000 people yes um it is funded organized logistically facilitated by the chinese company's
party to move the precursor chemicals that are actually made near Wuhan, China, shipped to either Venezuela or Mexico,
fabricated into fentanyl,
and basically blended with other common drugs that people are taking.
And it doesn't make any sense to do so
because why would a drug dealer want to kill his customers?
That's what's happening.
And it is an absolute,
it's a fuck you from the CCP against the West
for the opium wars of the 1840s.
And it's done to-
To murder American children.
A hundred percent.
Yes.
And just to be clear, these are not junkies who took too much.
No.
These are kids who ordered a volume off Instagram.
Yes.
Or a bootleg Percocet or something.
Yeah, exactly.
Exactly.
And so there are people dying.
And that is, you trace that, and I can show all that going right back to mainland China.
Why are we sending all these armaments to Ukraine and we could bomb those facilities in Mexico?
If they're killing, excuse me, 100,000 Americans a year.
You don't need to bomb.
Fire is an underutilized tool.
That's true.
Well, it's happening here.
I noticed there are quite a few manufacturing and agricultural facilities that seem to be
going up in smoke in this country.
Yeah.
So the people trying to wreck our civilization want you to be passive.
They want you weak so they can control you.
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And so, look, at the same, and on that,
last time Blinken was in Beijing,
he didn't even call him on it to say, stop.
He said, well, no, it's, yeah,
maybe some of the stuff is coming from China, but it's really just a shipping,
accidental shipping problem.
I mean, it is such a denial of reality.
It's hard to stomach.
So I guess what you're saying is you're not speculating about this.
This is known.
100%.
Do the intelligence, I assume, know this?
Yeah, but nobody wants to do anything.
Why?
I think you have an agency that doesn't want to do their job.
Which agency?
CIA.
Because I think, and I know you have rightly very mixed feelings on the CIA.
However, the mission of the CIA, if you think about the State Department can handle 5% of issues, diplomats and embassies.
You want your military over here, your conventional military, it's a big, angry dog waiting to be let off leash
that hopefully never is. The middle of the world, those problems, you think about how
the Soviet Union was really undermined in the 80s. There was 20 covert action findings that were signed, coupled by Carter,
mostly by Reagan,
done to undermine the Soviet Union
economically, politically, culturally, socially.
And that was done under Title 50 authorities
and that worked
without having to involve big military expenditure.
There are, if you want to stop,
like how, we know fentanyl is a problem we
know the Chinese are a problem doing it that's specifically what the title 50
authorities are for to say to six guys go make that problem stop I think if you
have an agency that doesn't want to do their job that's why it's not happening
but they seem to be doing so many other things I mean I'm here exactly my worked with cia i'm not i was never against cia i thought only like dumb liberals were against
cia you know and traitors or whatever so my views on ca have evolved based on things that i have
seen and personally experienced and my conclusion is not that everyone they are particularly you
know the paramilitaries i know a million of them seem like great guys, whatever.
But on some basic level, it seems totally out of control to me.
It is.
I mean, when you have the leadership of the CIA, this Havana syndrome is a real thing.
What does that mean? it's effectively a microwave weapon that's been used to effectively blast the brains
of Americans working out of embassies,
first in Havana, Columbia, Delhi, Hanoi, Vienna,
Washington, DC, lots of places, okay?
Hurting, severely hurting Americans serving abroad and the cia director says
it's all in their minds it's bulimia yeah it's it that that's wrong when your people are getting
screwed by a so you think that's it's just i don't have a view on that i mean i'm sort of
i don't know the answer but i'm sympathetic to open to both possibilities being true but you think based
on evidence that this is absolutely real yes i know it to be real wow who's doing this and why
it was a it was a it was a uh a device that was developed in the soviet union in the uh early
70s actually in ukraine so and i think the kharkivarkiv development plant, it had nothing to do with
Ukrainians now, but it's about the size of a beverage cart on an aircraft, that size device.
And it's very damaging. And the fact that the Russians can do that to us without consequences it shows how how pathetic they view
the cia and the us government to not push back on consequences so cia what motive would they have to
pretend this wasn't real because it would require pushback somewhere somehow but they're literally
fighting russia in ukraine cia is all over ukraine Russia. Good question. I mean, put it this way. They don't like me enough that I was uninvited from
a dear friend's retirement 10 days ago. Oh, I bet. I bet they don't like you. And
you've obviously worked with them most of your life, right?
We did a lot of great work for them. 100% success rate. But yeah, look,
people, the wrong people being in charge,
the agency has also gotten hyper bloated,
basically the same number of case officers that there's always been for 25
years,
but the place has grown tenfold of all the wrong kind of people under the,
you know,
the decision making of a guy like Brennan.
Yes.
And why does Brennan hate the actual DO,
the director of operations?
Yes.
Cause he's a failed case
officer he flunked out of school i mean how did a guy that voted for gus hall in 1976 who was gus
hall gustavo hallberg he was the finnish american head of the american communist party in new york
city exactly how does a guy vote for the head of the communist party in 1976 at the height of the
cold war and then pass
whatever background check the agency is doing and have a security clearance i find that stunning he
retains his security clearance because the last administration refused to strip him of his
security clearance despite the fact he was actively working to undermine a democratically
elected president yeah no i know the the levels of betrayal and self-betrayal are just almost
mind-boggling.
Let me ask you specifically about what the CIA does in Ukraine.
So I think it's fair to say, based on what even the New York Times has reported, that the CIA is running effectively the Ukrainian intel services.
I don't know.
I honestly don't know that.
I'm sure they have been there advising and supporting, but I think the Ukrainians probably grew frustrated
at lack of willingness to do certain things.
So I don't know where the US support ends
and where the Ukrainian unilateral stuff begins.
I asked because they've assassinated people.
I think they tried to assassinate me, for example they definitely killed alexander dugan's daughter um they you know
allowed an american critic of the ukrainian government to die in prison alira gonzalo lira
and you're sort of like well wait a second if this is a proxy war and we're overseeing it, then is the U.S. government aware of this?
Responsible for it?
Like what?
U.S. government should protect American citizens.
But clearly it's not.
And if you had a honest, look, Devin Nunes did a good job as the chairman of the HIPC of trying to dig into the nonsense.
And he obviously
met all kinds of resistance but he had fight in them now the republican oversight of the intel
committee or of the intel agencies completely inadequate but even then and i i like devon a lot
um but they're those guys are all afraid of the cia as you know they're afraid of them they know
they're being spied on by cia or nsa or any you know them. They know they're being spied on by CIA or NSA or any FBI.
They know they're being, members of Congress,
they're supposed to be in charge of overseeing these agencies
or being spied on by them.
They're fully aware of that.
I know because they've told me to my face.
I'm not guessing.
And that's just, that's not democracy.
That's like totally crazy.
Yeah, that's like Marcus Wolff in the Stasi.
That's exactly what he did. That's exactly right the east german ref the most because the stasi was way more
effective than any other intel service even the kgb yes it was the embodiment of german efficiency
innovation and was like the only effective institution in the entire country. Alles war in Ordnung. What does that mean? Everything was in order. Yeah.
Nice.
So, and then I know that CIA runs businesses, like runs businesses outside the country.
And those are sources of income for the agency.
That, like, how can a government agency run businesses?
I don't understand that.
I am truly not aware of any of that. Okay. How do you rein it in? I mean because it of course could be an essential tool of diplomacy,
statecraft, of you know the projection of power. I mean you could see how CIA could be helpful to
your country. The agency is the most easy to reform of all federal agencies. Civil service
rules don't apply. Yes. You can fire anyone for any reason that fast.
You could clean house, have a all hands meeting at the bubble on a Friday and send 50% of
them home.
Send them out to their cars and tell them we'll ship your stuff from your desk.
You could clean it out that fast.
But why does no one do that?
Maybe no one's had the balls as the director or the deputy director to do that.
Do you believe CIA has in the last 25 years used violence against any American citizen?
Yeah, Barack Obama killed an American citizen and his 16-year-old son.
Correct.
In Milwaukee, in Yemen.
Right.
And that's publicly known, but there are all sorts of,
there's evidence that that's not an isolated.
Maybe there's more, but I know that one.
Yeah.
So you don't think it's crazy to assume that?
Entirely possible.
Well, there's a lot of people
that are considered American citizens
that probably shouldn't be considered American citizens.
I agree with that completely.
But in actual America, someone who grew up here.
Yeah, yeah, fair.
But the left has so devalued citizenship,
it should mean something to be an American.
I mean, a Roman citizen, it meant something.
Oh, a Venezuelan gang member who's here illegally
is every bit as American as you,
who were born in Western Michigan.
So yes, I'm quite aware of that.
Anchor babies, birthright citizenship,
all of that must go.
Yeah, you wonder, you know,
if we've reached a point where that it's impossible
for the country to act in its own interest,
just because of the changes due to immigration.
I read a lot of history and I know that things have been a lot worse in
certain societies and corrective events can be shocking and traumatic to
people,
but it's still possible.
CIA and not just CIA,
but FBI and other agencies supposed to be enforcing the law
and gathering intelligence have this has been shown withheld information from democratically
elected presidents a number of them certainly trump that's a crime is it not yeah and and and
it should be met with immediate discipline and and that's a matter of having people that will follow through
and wade through the bureaucratic process
and exercise the authority that they're charged with doing, right?
When you join the military,
you swear to defend the constitution
against all enemies foreign domestic.
We should probably do something similar
for any civilian employee of the federal government
that they swear to defend the constitution,
not swear allegiance to a political leader.
Of course not.
Constitution.
Right, but it's not a constitutional republic
if unelected employees of the federal government
ignore the elected employees.
Yeah, well, that's something,
love it or hate it at Blackwater,
every contractor that worked for us
swore to defend the constitution the same oath they swore when they joined the military or law
enforcement they swore it again in our presence as a reminder that we're here to serve so um
i want to ask you about spying uh on american citizens so we know that it's widespread it's
accelerating data is being
collected about every single one of us and the vector for a lot of that is the phone
so it's it's like super useful of course um but it's also the main vulnerability if you care about
privacy and freedom so you've created a phone that allows people to to to some extent, to opt out of the current spying regime.
Let me back up to where, I guess, where this started.
You know, if you think about after 9-11,
suddenly, holy shit, all these federal agencies are waking up and how do we prevent this kind of conspiracy
and attack against us again?
And so they start looking at data.
But of course, in 9-11 we didn't
have smartphones but as smartphones become available and the uh technology that goes
around a smartphone because what is a smartphone it's basically a highly capable personal computer
in your hand yeah that's constantly linked to a network yes Yes. And so as ad data,
and the private sector always innovates much faster
than governments do.
And so as Apple and Google mobile services
start developing phones,
they put ad IDs and tracking information on those phones.
Why?
To micro-target you to sell advertising.
They gather and collect micro information about you so that they can sell precision information
to advertisers who want to sell you stuff can you give us a sense of what
that what that information is what do they know about you well an advertising
ID is a it's like a 25 digit alphanumeric code that sits on your phone. And it enables
to collect where you go, what you buy, who you call and what you browse. It even works with
the apps sitting on your phone, which are also built with a software developer kit
that comes from Google. And they pay you more to put the Google hooks in
so that those apps can also turn on the microphone on your phone or the camera or the GPS
so that your phone, yes, it's a computer, but effectively becomes a mobile microphone
collection listening device that fits in your pocket
or sits in your nightstand and it collects anything
and everything about what you do.
And so it's been, it's almost been like a slow boiling
of a frog because we, as smartphones become common,
it becomes very convenient and it's wonderful.
And it becomes more and more pervasive in our lives,
providing us music and news and communications
and pictures and videos of our family.
Every bit of that data is collected, analyzed,
parsed, and resold to advertisers.
That's the five leading big tech companies
have a combined market cap that's like the third or fourth largest nation in the world. advertisers. That's the five leading big tech companies have
a combined market cap. That's like the third or fourth largest
nation in the world off of that surveillance capitalism model.
So as smartphones have become available, it's slow boiled all
of us into a point of holy shit. And I guess for me, the oh shit moment
was after the 2020 election and seeing the power that big tech
had to sway that election. And to then coordinate to, to
control who, who could speak, who could speak on certain
platforms, and zeroing out certain people. And I actually
had a tech team together at the time doing a
forensics thing. And in a rage phone call, I said, fuck it,
we're going to build a phone. And we pivoted and that team
then started working. And yeah, we built a phone as an answer because we're never going to make big tech change by whining about it.
They're way too much money and way too much power.
We have to provide a means for people to communicate freely, securely, and most importantly, that they can control their data.
I think it's inherently american that we
accept we we expect privacy as americans think about the constitution first amendment is free
speech freedom of religion freedom assembly second we know what that guarantees the first
what's the third amendment what's what was most important for the founding fathers?
Privacy.
Get these damn British troops out of my house.
Of course.
No Quartering Act,
because there was actually British soldiers
being put into people's houses.
Privacy.
Fourth Amendment.
The right to privacy in the searches of our personal data.
Yes.
What big tech has created in surveillance capitalism is more pervasive and more intrusive
than anything you could ever possibly...
It's more pervasive than Marcus Wolff of the Stasi
or Beria of the KGB or the NKVD could ever possibly imagine.
Or anything that happens in contemporary North Korea.
Yes, exactly.
And we give it away.
We give it away freely.
And so people still close the bathroom stall
when you go into the toilet.
You still close the shower curtain.
We still do lots of things that we expect to have a privacy,
but yet people with a regular phone
put on their nightstand
and are surprised that the microphone is listening.
I've had so many people I've talked to about,
they said, I was talking to my wife
about needing a new mattress in our bedroom.
And the next day they're getting advertising for mattresses,
which means the camera or the phone
was listening to them in their bedroom
with all the follow-on conclusions to be drawn from that.
Yeah, given what happens in healthy bedrooms,
that's, I mean, so what happens to those recordings?
Well, we've been doing a study following our device,
a Google mobile
services phone, any Android running Google mobile services,
which is all of them, or an iPhone, and about 3am, we're
seeing a spike of data, leaving the phone, but 50 megabytes.
That is basically that phone dialing home to the mothership,
exporting all of your goings on all your pillow talk is
going to pillow talk whatever right it's so zuckerberg paid 20 billion dollars for whatsapp
why because every message call video picture voice note everything that goes through there
they say well it's end-to-end encrypted yeah it's end-to-end encrypted. Yeah, it's end-to-end
until it passes through their server where it's sliced and diced and analyzed and used to sell
advertising to that customer. If you're not paying for something, you're not the customer,
you are the product. So if you want to get, well, I think people right now are used to Mark Zuckerberg listening
from their nightstand every night because that's effectively what your phone sitting
So why isn't he like the creepiest person in world history if he's listening to what's
going on in your bedroom?
Because they're able as big tech to shape that message.
That's the frightening thing about the power of big tech and their ability to
influence what you watch, what you think about candidates. If you search something,
how they score those rankings, it is shocking. We have an antitrust problem here in America,
vastly worse than in the late 1800ss early 1900s with oil and railways
this is not the sugar trust this is more important yeah
this is literally how we communicate interact with other human beings in our lives, how we gather and, and share information about the realities
of life, of food, of medicine, of vaccines, of healthcare
issues, of, of truth. And so it's in, especially in an era of
AI, it's scary stuff. The average kid in America, by the
time they reached the age of 13,
has had 72 million data points collected on them
by big tech.
So it's almost like that much collection
allows digital grooming by big tech
to share and to shape your preferences,
how you interact, et cetera.
Including your sexual preferences.
I mean, if you're being honest here.
Yeah, exactly.
Considering that young people are introduced
to sexuality through pornography.
Yep.
Yeah.
Given that there's no privacy,
it's probably pretty dumb to watch porn.
Yeah.
Nothing's private.
Right.
So what happens to all this data?
Well, now, obviously, it's used and stored. I mean, the bloom of data centers surrounding all these tech hubs around America is horrific. And all that data is being collected and stored.
Can I just ask you just a far field question?
I'm just interested.
So given that those data centers
are some of the biggest users of electricity,
they're like a steel plant, okay?
Yeah.
Massive electricity draw.
And using electricity is, of course,
destroying the planet and accelerating climate change.
Why are the climate change zombies defacing paintings
in museums and not protesting data centers?
I would say if they were coming after data centers,
then they would be getting a nonstop stream
of social media messaging of why they should be attacking art instead of data centers.
Well, exactly, but like, why are the AI ghouls,
why is Mark Zuckerberg, why are they not climate criminals?
Why am I a climate criminal for having a wood stove
and a Silverado, but the people who run data centers,
which literally draw more power than a fucking steel.
With 100% backup as well.
Right, so I'm not against using energy. I'm pro energy actually and cheap energy, more power than a fucking steel. With 100% backup as well. Right.
So I'm not against using energy.
I'm pro energy actually and cheap energy,
but by the current rules, they're criminals.
So why does no one call them criminals?
Because big tech has shockingly complete control
over how that messaging is.
Yes, over our minds and what we think.
Sorry, but you brought it right back to the point, which is-
And so now Congress, including a lot of Republicans
in their idiocy have not only extended FISA, right?
FISA started as the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act.
Yeah, 1977-ish.
Yeah.
It's supposed to be measuring, monitoring
how you collect intelligence
or communications going to foreigners.
Now FISA is really all about Americans.
I guess we're treated as foreigners by our own government.
And so the federal agencies got sick of getting beat up when they'd come before Congress
for millions of times illegally accessing what was supposed to be FISA unauthorized
communications information.
And for buying all this commercial data that's collected and held and disseminated by big tech
to facilitate advertising and typing and measuring where you go, what you buy, who you call,
what you browse, everything about you in a way that any previous intelligence boss would have salivated over.
So now the new FISA, it's not an extension, it's a massive enlargement,
says that any federal agent for any reason without probable cause or a warrant
can compel any company that holds any of that personal data to turn it over.
Allowing a massive phishing expedition on anybody that's considered an opponent of that off the reservation federal agent. It's really disgusting. Really, if it's not a Stamp Act Tea Party 1775 moment,
I don't know what is,
but it is ultimately your government having carte blanche
to do a digital proctology exam on you
with no questions asked.
Well, considering that these companies hold
audio of you having sex with your wife,
video of you watching pornography,
like stuff that,
audio of you telling racial jokes or whatever,
like your most intimate moments,
the ones that could be used to blackmail and destroy you,
doing things you would not do in public
and shouldn't do in public.
Like that's just, that's the ultimate power, isn't it?
Yeah, I guess you either have to not give a shit and fight anyway yeah or try to live virtuously too it helps that always helps
yep so how does your phone protect people so again this like i said this this era started three and a half years
ago and we came at it from a completely contrarian view yeah this phone it's our
hardware made in Indonesia at a Singaporean facility our operating
system all our code and we are solely focused on data sovereignty that you control.
It's pretty cool just that I am kind of impressed that you made hardware.
You didn't just build an app.
Correct, because you have to control it down to the root level of the hardware and the software
so that we don't have an advertising ID and our operating system blocks any attempt by
any app to turn on your camera or your Wi-Fi or your microphone or your GPS or anything.
We don't allow any of that leakage. In fact, we have a privacy center.
This is called the unplugged.
This is an unplugged phone. And this is effectively a firewall,
which prevents apps from doing all the things they're used to doing
on all the other phones.
So you're in control of what of your data goes out,
which is effectively zero.
This is like a safe.
It comes in, it doesn't come out.
So just to bottom line it
i'm protected from what am i protected from if i use that here's the thing the the uh if you're
using apps and some federal agency goes to that app purveyor and says uh give me everything you
have on tucker that he's been using on app. There'll be nothing because there's no data leaking
from you, from your device to that to that app. If, if you
call somebody, we have our own secure messenger. For example,
you want to call and make a secure call. And you call me, it
takes about five seconds to connect, because it's literally
creating a encrypted tunnel between you and me.
Generates a new encryption key every call.
It's completely different.
So the government hates that and there've been all kinds of legal battles
over this question.
They don't want secure communication between citizens
because all of a sudden they care
about human trafficking or something.
Yes, and their latest excuse
for this massive FISA enlargement was drug trafficking drug
trafficking right because they've been failing for 40 freaking years at that well they just opened
the southern border to fentanyl and human trafficking so these exact same people are
suddenly really worried about human trafficking and drugs yeah it's just it's a it's a joke so
we've um we uh we produced 500 units fielded them last fall.
We did a big beta test, and now we have 10,000 units.
So people can order and deliver.
And look, it is our effort to fight the power of big tech.
So what can't I do?
I mean, I'll just confess that I use an iPhone made by a company I actually kind of hate
and that hates my country and me.
And I use it anyway because it's super easy.
And we figured there's a lot of people like you that would want to digitally opt out of the lie of big tech.
And so what you can't do, obviously, we don't have the Apple Store.
We don't have Apple Music, but you can use Spotify.
You can use a lot of the other streaming services on here we just
prevent them from collecting your data as to what you're listening to or or
where you are when you do it what about pictures of course you can take pictures
and you can share pictures you can send pictures we have a lot of the other
privacy related apps whether it's signal or three ma or proton or telegram we
have why is nobody done this so everyone
complains about this everyone who pays any attention or all understands plus the iphone's
incredibly expensive um but they have a hammer lock on your life and so this seems like a pretty
other people have tried it before and they they burn through a lot of money and i don't think the timing is right
they're not flying coach to dubai are they we we we did this man you're a dutch i love that
it's like coach to dubai for example this phone also has a kill switch an actual uh switch which
separates the battery from the electronics you can't shut your iphone oh i know
it's always listening it's always pinging towers it's always pinging wi-fi building a digital
breadcrumb trail of where you go and what you do even if i turn the iphone off it's not off
correct this you turn that off it's off because it physically separates battery from electronics
just like pulling the battery out of an old Nokia phone.
So I'm sorry I interrupted you. So this, I love this, of course. It's incredibly ambitious,
but also on some level, it's kind of obvious, like why haven't we had this before? So you said
people have tried, they spent too much money, and then I interrupted you.
And they tried maybe just with an app, and just with an app doesn't work. And people have tried
to do it with a re-ned Google phone. We have,
this phone is incapable of running Google mobile services. So you're not going to get Google Maps.
We have a way to navigate that works well. But again, so many of the freemium approaches where
they've been boiling the frog of the American, of the people of the world,
we provide them a digital alternative to that where you are in control of your first
amendment rights and your fourth amendment rights how how amen how hard is it to text people who
don't have that phone um it's just we look it emits electrons so ultimately you can see if it's
on a tower or not but we even provide it with a with a sim uh with a sim provider a data provider
uh a network airtime provider that um collects the minimum amount basically all they need is
your zip code where you're buying it that's what i'm saying is if i am using an unplugged phone
and my wife has an iphone i can text her yes sure and she can even put unplugged messenger
on her ip iPhone as well.
How much more expensive is that than an iPhone?
This is $989.
So it's cheaper, about $500 cheaper.
And it's comparable in speed, storage, camera quality.
Can you actually get one?
Yeah, you can order it at unplugged.com slash Tucker.
And we will, look, we're big believers.
We're a big believer in your audience.
I'm a long ardent fan.
And we think your fans are our people.
And so we are happy to compensate them and you guys.
And we want to win in this together
and give people a digital alternative
to big tech owning their lives.
Man, I really, so if, I mean, it's not a threat to Apple right now, but if there's big take up, it could be.
So what, how do you expect them to try and stifle competition?
It's a monopoly.
Sure.
They want to retain monopoly status.
Look, if you search for, if you do a Google search for unplugged phone or things like that, they tend to stack every negative article possible written about it first.
Oh, there have been bad pieces written?
Of course.
Of course.
Of course, the left will always come after me and hate on me for anything.
Is it a racist phone?
The left used to be about free speech.
Right.
And now they're really about kind of state control.
Does the phone deny the election in 2020? The left used to be about free speech. Right. And now they're really about kind of state control.
Does the phone deny the election in 2020?
I would argue that the phone cares about your First and Fourth Amendment rights.
Okay.
This is not a political phone.
So there's no QAnon feature on the phone at all.
I don't know if there's a QAnon app.
You know, we do have, the funny thing is, we do, we are.
It's flying, it's just so funny.
We even have an app, a dating app for people that are unvaccinated.
Because they were thrown out of the Apple and the Google store.
So yes, we are also a repository for the apps that have no home elsewhere.
So if you want to have like really healthy babies,
you can go on to this dating app.
If you're not a big fan of the mRNA strand,
you know, changing your eugenics for future generations, yes.
You need an unplugged phone.
And let me just ask actually to follow up on that.
I think what you just said, the last sentence you uttered is maybe the most interesting story of my lifetime.
The possibility that the mRNA technology could affect your genes,
which is not crazy, actually.
I don't know if it's true or not.
Do you think it's true?
It would be an interesting study
to ask how many of the executives
of those pharmaceutical companies
actually took their own product.
That should be a congressionally,
I don't care if it's a HIPAA issue or not,
that someone should find that out.
Well, HIPAA doesn't exist.
I mean, when they're forcing you to declare your vac status
to use businesses or travel,
clearly HIPAA doesn't mean anything, right?
There's no medical privacy.
Look, and since the erosion of that privacy,
I just want to encourage everyone to use cash yet as well.
Don't go to these, you know,
anyone that goes to these woke coffee shops
and they say, we don't accept cash anymore.
Look on the front of a dollar bill.
It says, this note is legal tender
for all debts, public and private.
No one has the ability to deny you using cash.
So leave them the right change on the table
and tell them to have a nice day.
They cannot make you pay with a credit card.
That is actually insurrectionist
if these businesses are denying you the ability
to use legal tender of the United States government.
I had never thought of that.
Has anyone tried that? Oh yeah, I make an issue of it all the time much to my kids um
uh embarrassment but yeah i'm a big ad cash is freedom but the amount of data that is collected
on you everywhere you want to buy gas buy gas pay cash whatever but the the what what we see in china
where they really don't accept cash anymore and it's become the ultimate surveillance state
that's where we're heading unless free people unite and resist that kind of totalitarian impulse
of big government big tech working together in china
they you have to pay with uh with a wechat app so you do your banking through that you acquire
tickets for a bus an airplane a train through that you pay road tolls through that everything
is through this app controlled by the state and so before they even go to a central bank digital currency
they literally have you by the balls and they can zero you out at that point instantly right
correct and so we did this as because for free people to be able to live in a free society they
have to communicate they have to be able to hold and store data um and and and be able to gather
that data without someone else filtering it through an app store that the bad guys control
that the that the big government guys control um you know the the where do you get cash
from a bank so do you it sounds like a stupid question but there seem to be fewer atms
i don't think that's my imagination in fact it's not sure yeah they don't want you to use
there's a de-emphasis on cash right so if cash equals freedom i could not agree with you more
and there's something kind of old school and cool about it anyway um but i still remember my dad having $500 bills. Yeah, why don't we have those anymore?
War on drugs.
Really?
Yeah.
That would be a great thing for the next president of the United States.
What does that mean, war on drugs?
So they just, they stopped?
It was a war on cash to cut out illegal activity that was paid for in cash.
William McKinley is on the $500 bill.
I think they should bring it back
and put Donald J. Trump on it.
Can you imagine the heads exploding?
Yeah, that'd be pretty wild.
But you know, so much of this explosion of government,
perpetual wars and perpetual government stupidity
comes back to very unsound money.
And when we went off the gold standard,
when Nixon did,
how was it done?
Was it a vote through Congress?
No.
Was it debated?
It was an executive order.
Which means you can go back on with executive order as well.
Where are you on gold?
I'm very pro-gold.
It is for millennia been a store of value.
And I'd say I'm very pro-gold. It is for millennia been a store of value.
And I'd say digital blockchain currencies, also interesting.
It's hard.
Look, anything is a value if someone recognizes it as a medium of exchange.
Right.
Right? I mean, there was a tulip inflation in the Netherlands in like 500 years ago.
Yes.
But tulips were currency, tulip bulbs.
So lots of things can become...
It's the prettiest currency ever created.
If things get really scary,
ammunition will be currency.
Yes.
Always has been.
Yes, I've had that thought personally.
You've stored up.
Ammunition dogs have a lot of dogs too. So i feel like dogs will be more valuable at some point
so so are you a gold buyer without getting too specific about it some yeah but i mean
for heaven's sakes, started a
company which took on not one but two multi trillion dollar
companies. Because, you know, that was a dumb, crazy idea,
you know, three and a half years ago. So that's, that's, I've
been investing in this capability for people to
communicate securely and freely. And I hope it works. What are
the and it will never be a public company.
We've taken no institutional money.
It will be a private company,
not subject to the SEC and all the other nonsense.
It's not even an American registered company
because I didn't want the US government
to be able to shut it down.
Yeah, it's interesting.
Again, we haven't had a conversation really about
your personal story which is one of the most amazing personal stories of anyone i've ever met
but um among the many twists and turns and ironies of your life is that someone as patriotic as you
was basically at one point forced to flee to a foreign country well i didn't flee i went there for a job opportunity but i'd been uh attacked
unbelievably oh i remember by talking about putting you in jail i remember every federal
agency in the world was coming after us and i paid i paid about two and a half million dollars a month
for two years straight in legal fees i paid the highest per capita fine in state department
history is the only
federal agency that actually stuck us with something because we had no means to contest it
because they, at that point, we were working for the State Department doing diplomatic security,
protecting Americans, something we did more than 100,000 times with no State Department or U.S.
official ever killed or injured on our watch. And sometimes the State Department would be demanding,
I need 50 more men here, I need 30 more men there,
go immediately.
But another part of the State Department,
the licensing department of the Directorate
of Defense Trade Controls, moving at the speed of peace time
would be slow rolling on the licenses,
the export license for like body armor or helmets or guns
used by our people working for the State Department.
And yeah, I'm not going to send a guy naked to a war zone.
So we'd send stuff to do that mission
for the State Department in Iraq or Afghanistan or whatever.
And so, yeah, that was what they had us over the barrel.
So they fined me $42 million for that.
Did you pay? to yeah hillary clinton why didn't she like you i don't know didn't like your vibe i guess what not that so much she doesn't fly coach um once again where did
where do people watching get that so i've been very active in the media,
but they can go to unplugged.com slash Tucker.
Simply very active in the media.
In other words,
you're,
you're out there talking about,
yeah,
I'm for,
for lack of a better spokesman,
I'm kind of it for now,
but we're,
we're looking for more if you'd like to be it.
But yeah,
no,
people can order and they'll get it within within uh 36 hours usually how hard is it to
operate it's very simple look so it's it's based on the android kernel so anybody any of the apps
built for android almost 95 of them work on on this phone but they look a little different because
they're not blasting all the personal ads at you right using the app. So again, it's a way for people to be in the world digitally, but not of the world
and not have all your stuff collected, stored, and disseminated to all kinds of people that hate you.
Oh, yeah. And then it's available, of course, to the US government, which...
And another important feature, which I think you'll appreciate on our messenger,
we even have a dump feature.
So if you're using unplugged messenger and someone comes and says,
Tucker, give me your phone.
I'm here to inspect it.
You say, sure, officer.
And you unlock it with a certain code.
When you hand it to them, it's a brick.
It's a paperweight because it wipes.
It's an auto dump feature, which wipes the messages,
or it can even dump the entire phone.
Dump as in zero it out hard factory reset unrecoverable
fu seriously yep so you're traveling through a foreign airport which is where this and our
airports this has happened yeah and you can yep erase the phone instantly so one of the reasons
that i really passionately dislike apple and google is because
they'll take your communications and give them the government without telling you
yes in fact out of this fisa bill just passed they're not even allowed to tell you
that your stuff has been accessed by this random federal agency or whatever so it's it's just uh
it is a big brother expansion bill is what that was so and this i mean luck or timing or i don't
know anticipating where the problem is going to be started this journey three years ago we're now
here it's not it's not hypothetical anymore these are available and. And we've just shipped 3,500 of them.
And there's a few left.
You see this in civil suits too.
Not that I'm speaking from experience.
But the people who oppose you can wind up with all your text messages.
And then it's a short trip from there to, say, the New York Times.
Exactly.
And a text without a context is a pretext for trouble.
Oh, I love that. A text without a context is a pretext for trouble oh i love that a text without a context
is a pretext for trouble yeah luckily in my case i wasn't really doing anything wrong other than
using naughty language but um all the better to have a burn time and all those messages
so it's not looked at a year or five years later well i agree with some completely different
because right and so and again, nothing is stored.
It's either on your device.
If you send me a message,
it's on this device or your device.
And we can set a burn time where it's gone,
unrecoverable, anytime, anywhere.
It can never come to you and say,
as the owner and spokesman for Unplugged,
we want the text messages for so-and-so.
We got nothing, man.
We store nothing nothing it's stored
on your device or this device and you can see whereas apple if i use i message which i do
correct and you can set a burn time on this where it disappears and it's gone so if i'm this is my
grubby iphone if i'm but if i'm if i'm texting on i and um they're storing all of it yeah i got 59 text messages while we
were talking this morning that's why you're so slow to respond to the texas text you're deluged
well it's also my birthday so lots of people are texting me but anyway the point is and i don't
have any unauthorized birthday messages, but that's a lot.
I mean, people conduct their, I'll speak for myself, I conduct my life through text message.
Exactly.
Apple has all of that.
For all eternity.
And they will happily give that to the government.
Without question.
And now they're compelled to turn it over without even a warrant.
Or probable cause.
So again, if people are sick of that. So of unplugged are protected from that invulnerable there's no that can never be unplugged if you
send a regular text on unplugged it's going to pass through a phone carrier right they'll have
that message but if you send a message on unplugged messenger yeah gone you can set a burn time on it
and it's gone and unrecoverable.
Not stored by us or anybody else.
Well, that seems like freedom to me.
I will always choose freedom.
Amen.
And fight like crazy for it.
So let me just end this with kind of an apology for interrupting you in the middle of one
of the most interesting things you were saying.
So I said said name three places
That Americans are not paying attention to since you are I don't want to violate your privacy by saying where you are
But I just happen to know that you're like you're in places
I can't even find them on a map and I'm pretty good at geography
So I think you are the person to ask what are three places?
That we're not paying attention to that
We ought to be in the i interrupted you after the first
one because it was so interesting and you said mexico mexico fentanyl the ccp very much promoting
so amlo is a super socialist president there now yeah there's a even worse leftist female about to
take over and absolute leftist female i love how you describe her she's a she's very much a a
marxist protege oh she is no she's a leftist female for sure
um with active programs by the ccp to support the most leftist candidates there
uh in mexico that's a problem um it's become more and more of a narco state with, with cartels having very significant
influence, if not control locally or regionally throughout the, throughout the country.
And that's literally our Southern border and, and, and the AMLO government
actively promoting and cooperating with that kind of CCP nonsense. Positive note,
just a right-wing guy elected in Panama who says he's going to shut the Darien Gap,
which is the area that moves all kinds of people. Now,
you asked for three. I might give you a couple more than three if you've got time.
Please do.
The active spend of NGOs that the US government funds,
which enables mass migration into Latin America to walk north,
to invade across our southern border,
is massive and disgusting
and illegal and wrong. I was just I remember three months ago,
I was contacted by an NGO in Haiti, asking if I could
organize an aircraft to fly from Port-au-Prince to Managua daily.
I said, Why on earth would you want to do that? They said,
Well, can Haitians can fly to Nicaragua visa free? I said, Ah,
I know why. To facilitate Hait can fly to Nicaragua visa-free. I said, ah, I know why.
It's to facilitate Haitians coming to Nicaragua and then walking north to facilitate illegal migration from there.
Do we have a Haitian shortage here?
I don't think so, no.
And there is a massive network of those NGOs.
And some of those guys are making,
the CEOs of these things are making a million dollars a year
taking US taxpayer money,
facilitating the maneuver entrance
of illegal migrants into the United States,
funded by the US taxpayers.
It's disgusting.
And if Republicans actually have the power of the purse,
this needs to stop and
the fact that they don't means we we have a uniparty problem so we probably need a melee
type solution of a complete change in parties to to fix this i agree completely but you do sort of
wonder since there's no economic justification for this level millions of uneducated people from
the poorest countries of the world coming to your country. There's no, especially with AI,
like there are no jobs for these people.
They're just-
But just the fact that the Democrats
were actively seeking to register them as voters
and to make it possible to vote,
you know exactly what they're doing.
They're trying to stack the deck.
But I mean, you've been around wars your whole life.
Like you tell me if you've got the mass movement
of young, of military age males into a country,
some of them with prison records,
like what are you looking at here?
Yeah.
Like, does that make you nervous at all?
Sure.
But I also know
cannon fodder doesn't do very well
against a sophisticated capability.
Yeah.
And the fact is the people that actually did
the fighting and the dying and the hard combat uh in the last 20 years they don't agree to that
kind of nonsense because they've laid their lives and their brothers and their health on the line
for america for a long time and they're not going to sit quietly about that nonsense. But there's already an effort in the Congress to make illegal aliens citizens
if they serve in the U.S. military.
I'm not opposed to a longer-term legionnaire-type program
if someone comes here and actually serves,
and with obviously very, very strict performance guidelines.
I mean, don't hire a guy to be a truck driver in the army and get citizenship, no.
But I'm not so opposed to that, but all the other stuff they want to do around voting and driver's licenses and all that stuff, there's a lot of actions that the next administration
could take to make it very difficult for those illegals to remain here by debanking and deplatforming them,
what the left has been doing to people like us
for the last 20 years to make that difficult.
Okay, so Latin America, big problem.
In Guyana, country most people haven't heard about
other than where Jim Jones served Kool-Aid,
made the largest energy discovery
in this hemisphere in the last 50 years.
So it's enormous.
And Venezuela has been now declared
that 70% of Guyana's territory is theirs,
dusting off a 130-year-old border dispute.
And I think you're going to see Venezuela annex
or seize that uh with largely
impunity uh in the coming uh months or years certainly depending if the if the democrat
administration continues they'll take it because there's no consequences for it and so you're
really seeing a a complete collapse a erasure of the Monroe Doctrine,
this idea that what happens in the Western hemisphere
is America's business
and not the business of Russia and China.
The collapse of credibility of France
and of the United States in Africa
is now really accelerating.
The jihad problem that was persistent in Mali
and Burkina Faso and Niger, and why do these countries matter?
Huge gold, huge uranium, all the minerals there,
and now Chad, Sudan.
The US had two big bases in Niger,
and they were just pushed out,
cost a billion plus easily.
Big air bases, drone bases
that were trying to do CT support all across Africa,
pushed out by a collapse of credibility
by the US, by the French,
and the Russians have pushed in. And the Russians are using a
Wagner capability, a hybrid private military company type capability to enable the expansion
of military capability in those countries, while at the same time, a voracious appetite for
gold and other minerals, uranium of high value there. And you're seeing to me it's a it's a
resort it's a it's a reversion to the norm of what you saw in the 1600s i was just thinking
that exact same thing as the dollar declines of course gold becomes more important yes gold and
and uranium and actual green energy that's right which uh. So there's nothing really that new in warfare,
just different,
maybe a little bit of different tech
that changes how things are done,
but how nations interact with each other.
I think you'll see a return to privateers
and to a lot more private sector
because our big bloated super state federal government
has proven,
well, at least now for the last 30 years,
it's not very good at putting the fires out.
Managing the conflict doesn't work.
Clearing the decks and putting a tourniquet
on some of these things is necessary.
Last question.
It does seem like civilization's in retreat in a lot of places, you know, order, free movement, you know, relatively open markets, civility, self-restraint, you know, just all this for the hallmarkers, hallmarks of an open society of like Western civilization.
They all seem to be in decline.
Do you see that?
And are you worried about it?
Yeah, look, civilizations ebb and flow.
And I look for pockets of normalcy of however crazy things get.
People still figure out how to get on with it and carry on.
And there's certainly pockets within Europe where they still do that.
There's pockets in parts of the Middle East.
There's even some pockets in South Africa
that I would consider islands of normalcy.
And in Latin America as well.
Again, I come back to Millet.
What a spectacular man
who just took on his entire political establishment
and said, afuera, out, right? So I'm still drawn,
I recommend the book a lot. It's called To Dare and To Conquer. And a friend gave it to me years
ago. And it's a history of special operations throughout history, all the way from Alexander
the Great and his men that climbed Sogdian Rock to the present of a few picked men and women,
very capable warriors that flew in the face
of insurmountable odds and made it happen
and change world history.
So I think there's a lot of hope in that.
And big government is really dumb and quite plotting.
And I know folks that have worked in Google and Apple and they pull
their hair out at how inane and stupid a lot of those things are. And so I view them probably as
dumb as the US was in Afghanistan. And an opponent that can be defeated with wily, creative, very
focused. And my dad always told me persistence and determination and I try
to live by that and my I come back to my favorite quote from Churchill and he
said he was speaking before the Canadian Parliament a year after the Battle of
Britain said he said a year ago here Hitler said he would wring the neck of
the British people like a chicken in six weeks and I stand before you a year ago, Hitler said he would wring the neck of the British people like a chicken in six weeks. And I
stand before you a year later and I say,
some chicken, some neck.
Eric Prince, thank you.
Thanks, Tucker.
Thanks for listening to
The Tucker Carlson Show. If you enjoyed it,
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