Take a look behind the curtain with a real whistleblower, an American patriot. Prepare to embrace the uncomfortable truth, because this program has no time for comforting lies. Here is civil liberties enthusiast, Second Amendment defender, and recovering FBI agent Kyle Seraf. Hello my friends. Welcome to the Kyle Serraphin Show. Today is Tuesday, September the 12th.
I always have to look off to the side to make sure I've got the right day, because every day starts running together when you are fighting the federal government and the evils that are existing in this world. If your head is bobbing along to the opening song, that means you are listening to the musical stylings of my younger brother, Casey Serraphin. Happy 30th birthday to him yesterday. I didn't want to take away from the 9/11 solemnity that we were
opening up with, but. That is my brother's song and he is a fantastic musician in his own right. And if you hear the opening every time, my that's my father. This is a family affair here at the Kyle Seraphin Show. I've leaned on the talented members of my own clan to be able to put this thing together. We got a really interesting show to you for you today. We've got another live guest. So I think you guys are going to really enjoy that.
If you've already seen the show notes, you know we're going to be talking to David Summerall. But before we do that, I want to say thanks to the folks that make this Kyle Seraphin show possible. I was literally walking upstairs. I looked over at my wife and I said we are. Standing on both feet, she's breastfeeding a little tiny baby.
We have a healthy family simply because these people have decided to support us. And against all odds, we are able to stand against our former employer and bring you guys information, bring you guys interesting guests and make this microphone, this platform something that did not even exist and I didn't even fathom it when I was working for the FBI and decided to come forward with my story. So here we go. Let's say thanks first of all to
our OG sponsors. These are the first ones that came to us and they said we'd like to sponsor the Kyle Seraphin Show. Here they are, my friends. Over at Patriot Coolers. You can go to patriotcoolers.com. You can use promo code Kyle that will get you 10% off. There's other ways to get 10% off, but that's the only way that you support the Kyle Seraphin show promo code. Kyle 10% off 50 bucks or more. You're going to get yourself free shipping.
And as you'll notice right up on there, we've got the patriotic drinkware line. I think our friend Ryan Matta is sporting one of those suckers right now. He's got his. There it is right there. There's the free the cup solution and made it down to Texas. It is now a multistate traveling patriotic cup. And I have mine as well. Here, look at this. Fuck. This is the O G1. This is the one I've been carrying around since 2017. I have the other one they sent
me recently. Oh, this is kind of my jam. That's what I use in the gym. So Patriot coolers.com promo code. Kyle, use those suckers and I support them. Support our show. We really appreciate that. Couple other little things we want to bring to your attention. You know my friends over at Catholic vote That's not Catholic vote. There they are. Catholic Vote, the Americans top advocacy program in the fight for faith, family, and freedom.
We've got some really interesting announcements coming from catholicvote.org pretty soon, so stay tuned to the show for future announcements. But you can also get The Loop, which is an outstanding e-mail. It's got all kinds of great information in it. And here is today's loop. I'm looking at it right now. On my screen for the 12th, they have Vice President Harris supporting a no limits abortion. Yeah, they love that baby killing, don't they?
We've also got Nikki Haley is joining the Biden administration saying that Tommy Tuberville is not doing the right thing while he's holding up military appointments. Good for Tuberville. Way to hold the line there Senator. We've got a couple of other ones here. They're talking once again about the anti gun moves that are going on in New Mexico. It's a whole list of great stuff going on.
Just check out their emails. You get them about 5:00 in the morning, my time and they are nothing short of helpful in your day. They will get you rolling. Catholicvote.org. And lest we forget, let's go ahead and give our free promo that we do for our buddy Garrett Boyle. Go to the dash suspendables calm. The dash suspendables calm. We'll get you access to. The Suspendables online store directly supporting the Oboyle family. This is their jam. This is what he does.
He's got a little press and he is going to be sending these things out. So if you guys are ordering them, there's a little delay, but they are coming out your way. You will be getting suspendables merged soon and we've got some really cool limited edition suspendables lapel pins if you want to wear them as you're dressed up. I'm sure I'm going to start wearing them on my interviews. All right, that is all the news that is fit to print on the support thing.
We've got a rumble rent already from B, can sell us A and free the Jan Sixers. Free J Sixers. Let's get started with that. That we're going to be talking to. David. David, welcome to the Kyle Sarafin Show, bud. Thanks for getting up with us man to see you this morning. It is always good to wake up on the side of the grass, isn't?
It it certainly is, yeah. It's certainly good to be able to walk out and breathe the free air, even in a country where we've decided to go after political prisoners. Man, it is a different world than we grew up. And I know you feel the same way. And yeah, there's a lot of risk in what you do and what I do. And I don't think people fully appreciate what that looks like for not only us, but our families and friends and everybody else. It's a.
It's a strange, unfortunately. Make sure we make sure you remind me to come back to the the the risk to friends and family, cuz I do want to cover that first. But first what I want to do is find out a little bit about you as a person. We're going to talk about your work after that. So where'd you come from? Where are you from? So born and raised Texas, you know, just good old, around probably 100 mile area around Dallas, Fort Worth. But I do travel.
So this is not all I've seen, which is I think a huge, huge difference for a lot of people that don't leave their backyard very much. But I'm just a Carpenter, man. I'm a Christian. You know, my dad was a pastor. Just have a a feel for people you know a concern and and a desire to bring people together. Back in 1992 my wife was pregnant with my son and we saw the LS you know on television from Texas and and I just thought you know not everybody hates each other like they say on the news.
And I saw what the media did with the little piece of video and divided, you know the the different races, I guess for some kind of big battle and and and I couldn't see raising a child in that. So we started on awareness program. Stop Hate is an acronym, start turning off prejudice, heal attitudes through education.
Just meant to kind of start those conversations that are kind of difficult sometimes or whatever and learn to get to know each other again because the fear is in what we don't know. It's the ignorance that drives that. So, you know, I I believe after 32 years watching this whole thing continue, this is where we are now. And on one hand, it makes me feel like, hey, I haven't done my job at all. But then I see where we are in the picture right now.
And I think, you know, maybe God kept it for this moment. You know, if Stop Hate did anything back in the 90s, it it wouldn't matter now. And it's just a really strange position to be in. It's nothing we signed up for on purpose. And you know, guys got a bigger, bigger plan than us. Definitely the truth. Tell me about the family. I heard you were married. I heard a kid. You have more than one kid. Yeah. So I was married and divorced. I was married for 21 years, I think, and divorced.
One child, one son. And then I remarried. And now I have two bonus kids, a boy and a girl. So I've got two boys and a girl and and a beautiful wife, great family. She's a nurse and her name's Cindy. She is amazing. And I'm sure, as you know, we couldn't do what we do without the support of a super spouse, and she is definitely that for me. She's a great help mate and understands what we're going through in a way that most people don't. Let's talk about that a little
bit too. What's what does Cindy's take when you first started and has that evolved. So we did a bunch of demand free spill it's kind of funny story on my 50th birthday she said David you know it's big birthday you need something nice something memorable. It's 50 and I said well OK I'll think about it. She knows I'll never say anything. She said what do you want a truck.
We can put it down payment on a truck or if you want to take A to your friend and I'll and we can go over there and and I said you know I'd really like to put about that much of down payment or a trip cost on stop hate and see if I can kind of kick it up again. I just feel like I have to give it another try and you know 50 years I I haven't done anything with it. I've never tried to blow it up
bigger than something local. Back in the 90s I took on the Klan and the KKK and and the Nation of Islam and and Black Panthers. So I got a lot of death threats and stuff and kind of laid low for a couple of years and just did local things, community, you know fundraiser things for other groups to help. And so we did a lot of demand free speech things when Trump was in office. You know, from 2019 really is when I my birthday was. So I put a little money and stop.
Hey, got another guy to help build a website. Started doing these these rallies for free speech with you know Lord Loomer and and a bunch of people that were, you know already in the movement or whatever. And it was very interesting. We did one in Washington DC in
2019, demand free speech. Excuse me, you, but the one on free in DC was really interesting because the Proud Boys did security for us and what makes it special is Officer Lamond. The inspector is the same guy that they they would not let testify in the Proud Boys trial And and I think that's amazing because I have emails from him. I have you know our correspondence back and forth saying I have a peaceful event, all these things the Proud Boys
are doing security. There's news clips of of reporters asking me about the Proud Boys. I said, yeah, they're my friends. They're working with the police to provide secure tifa and it's really crazy to me, Kyle, how none of that made it into the trial. You know they wouldn't let Lamont testify. They said they threatened him with charges. Then after he didn't testify
they charged him anyway. But you know I could have gotten up there on the stand and I offered, I was available to say there is a relationship between the Proud Boys and Lamont. They do work together and the Proud Boys were saying, look we were texting them all day on the 6th saying we're going to party after you know tonight. We got beers and girls and we're going to have a fun time and they weren't doing anything. And there's proof and that's amazing.
And I know you know this story about how they don't let the facts get out when it when it's detrimental to them. No, they really don't. And actually I read the indictment against Lamont the other day and and my instinct is that he was probably running the boys as either official sources or as what we would call hip pocket source, which means you don't fill out paper book, but you're getting information from them and you're using it as an Intel on the ground.
We'll talk about that a little bit more in a second. I want to. I want to kind of dig into the background. You said you're a Carpenter by trade. You're one of many kind of blue collar trades that we've had that have that have been interested in in making America better. Tell me about how you go from being a guy that's swinging a hammer and and looking down at, you know, building something and then looking at the country and seeing you want to do a change
there. Well, you have to kind of be careful the friends you hang out with, I guess. You know, we started doing the demand free speech stuff. It was a tour thing and it was cool and it was an awareness. You know, there was a lot of censorship and banning and people didn't understand. They thought, oh, you lost your social media account. We're saying no, no, no. We're talking Airbnb's and banks and abilities to be a normal citizen and nobody really listen.
Now you see the issue. So I saw that as a way to, you know, bridge the gap between the two different sides politically. You know, as a Christian, I guess I'm supposed to try to love everyone, right? And and of course the propaganda and the programming and the poison that we all drink the kool-aid on both sides. I guess you want to say there, there's a real separation that is obvious, especially when you go to these events and you see the vitriol from East Side.
And it's really amazing to try to have conversations with people because that's when you break that barrier and say, hey, I'm not as scary as you thought or I'm, I'm not as dumb or smart as you thought. You know, I'm just a person. I'm just trying to get through this like everyone else. So as a Christian, I think that's kind of our thing, is to be active, keep your hand on the plow, you know, all those things
that we hear. But it's more personal than that to me and I think that anyone with children can understand it, that we don't want our kids getting beat up because of their height or weight or or anything and it's just a kind of a a mutual feeling. I think everybody can as far as
in defense of their children. Now we can be idiots all day long but when we see it started families and and all that stuff it's it's a lot different and that's really been my perspective on it. So with the free speech stuff it it naturally I see what the media does. I saw it in 1992. I've always tried to expose, you know, the lies that they create or the the misdirection I guess is a better word. And so when January 6th came up, you know we did the demand free speech.
Before that we did the Stop the Steel rallies down in Texas. I helped organize the ones at Austin at the state capitol. Had a really good time. Had great people, all peaceful events as usual. We never have outbreaks or violence or anything. Try not to. I mean that's the whole point. And so after that I didn't want to go to DC and everybody kind of convinced me that said you know you kind of have to you've been doing stop hate so long.
This is a culmination of of all your work and my, you know, you really need to go. And we had a house full of COVID and a new puppy dog. I did not want to leave. But we took a handful of people down to film. You know, it was not for Trump. We didn't go for the the parade or anything. We went to film and capture history because we know how important that is and we spread out that day and caught some amazing stuff.
You mentioned things about faith, yours in particular, but maybe we could talk about America. Has America lost faith at this point? Are you seeing any changes? Unfortunately, you know, there's that part, the well with quits and stuff. But the one guy said something about all this is made for a moral society, you know, And honestly, I I think that's I say
all the time, man. And I'm not a preacher or anything, but I do read the Bible enough stories and some of the things and how they kind of relate. And I always tell people, you know, you think it was bad back in Noah's time when God said enough's enough, you know, and we've got to clean this place up. I can't think that we're in a better place than Noah was.
I I can't think. You know we see what's happening to the children and to people and to countries and and it's just steamroll and I can't think that the morality level is higher than it was during so that there's me because we can't see eye to eye if we can't empathize. I know you were talking the other night empathize. We can't do any of that with each other. We we don't want to. We're taught to hate each other. It's a long game. It's propaganda on both sides.
I don't think people realize that it doesn't matter which side you're on, you're still consuming what they want you to consume. And it's made and developed to pit us against each other and and look for the 1st 20 years of stop hate. I noticed them use race, religion, sex, you know, financials they could use to divide people. But during that process, it's like the powers that be said, I believe that we can divide everyone politically by making everything political.
Now we have health issues that are things that shouldn't even be in that sphere so many times that are being used against us as people to make us see our differences and not like each other because of it. I'm right, you're wrong and and that's no place to live. But it's intentional and I don't think people really understand the depth of what propaganda does and and and how it's affected every aspect of our lives from entertainment to to government. How we interact on a social level.
And and when you hear the media say, hey, everybody hates each other and we're we're this close to a civil war. But then when you go to the grocery store of all shapes, sizes, colors, helping each other reach the thing on the top shelf or lift the case of water or whatever it is. Excuse me. How you doing? You don't see it in reality. So there's that disconnect and we've always just tried to tell people to plug into what's real and and have some conversations. Plug into what's real.
I think those are great words. My father and I always say the same thing back and forth. People hear it on the show. Twitter is not real. Social media is not real, and I think there's something there. In the 1950s and 60s, they used to say that families would would disavow a marriage based on race. And today there is a much higher percentage of people. That's a very low percentage.
Today, there's way more people that would say that about political parties, that they would actually disavow a new spouse or they would disavow a union because of political parties. Do you remember when that change happened? You know, I don't know specifically, but I can tell you another point is you know for smokers, people that smoke cigarettes when they started the censorship of where you could smoke. You know, banning it here and there.
And and honestly I know it sounds stupid in a lot of ways but people didn't stand up and it and it was just another little chip that they could take off and say hey, we can control you and then the seatbelts and this and that. And I'm not saying these things for us, but some things you're you're able to choose for yourself. I mean if you have to put a warning label on everything, I worry about you, you know if you don't have the common sense.
But that's been taught away from people in every aspect. Kyle. I I think that's what we're seeing. You know, and and I tell people of all the wars that America's ever fought the only successful, successful fight that we've had is against the American mind, the dumbing down of America. And it's a sad, sad thing. And I'm not calling people stupid, but I am because they don't take the time to understand. They don't do their own research.
They listen to the talking heads and they think, well, that's the way I'm supposed to believe. And I can't see better example in the world than what we 6th. All right. So I've called January 6th the American Rorschach Test. I've said it to a number of people that attended that day, and then people that are in the space talking about it. Are you familiar with the concept of a Rorschach test?
Yes, somewhat, somewhat. So just for the audience awareness, if you're listening and you haven't heard my the comparison, a Rorschach test is the the the common psychological inkblot test. It's where they put a BLOB of ink down in the middle of the paper, they fold it in half, it smashes down and makes a shape. You open it up and tell me what you see. And then we're supposed to be able to interpret things about you based on what you saw in
this amorphous, not real shape. It's like looking at clouds and calling out of shape. But in many ways, I think the the American Rorschach test of January 6th is if you tell me what you see on January 6th, I can. I can interpret a lot of things about the way you look at the world. Do you do you find that to be true? As you go out and talk about J6 with folks, you know that that is such a super way to look at things, man. I haven't really considered
that. I've been more interested in trying to figure out why they see what they see or why they don't see what they don't see. Because I've got everything that happened that day and I've got it on video half the time, you know, and witnesses and it's a amazing call. Amazing that people have become so hateful toward each other because of Orange Man bad or because of whatever reason that they say horrible things to people like Mickey Ashley's mom.
You know, come on, you know, anytime you lose a child, I don't care if the child was right or wrong. They why add pain to pain so much in such a hateful way. But that goes for both sides. Look what we say about George Floyd, you know what I'm saying? It's really amazing. But to think that the way people view it is is anything other than programming. I don't think people realize how deep this is and how strategic and how long it's going on.
You know, the fact that propaganda is legal, how much of what we see is real from either side, Why are they both trying to always direct us toward conflict within the people? Because it is always a left to right in the street fight. And the one time we go to the government and say, hey, y'all are the problem, what happens? Yeah, you're correct. That's definitely a problem. Okay. So here's here's what I'm going to put you on the spot with a couple things. What did you see when you saw
the George Floyd footage? Tell me. Tell me what you interpret and how you see that in the world. Yeah, I didn't see a lot of, a lot of pressure, you know, as far as I could see it. And just as a common sense kind of guy, you know, I'm big and physical. I played ball and I wrestle all that stuff. So I don't feel like what he did could have caused someone's
death for one. And I and I see the crowd around that situation that day that was antagonistic and almost planting seeds for people to be able to take later and say this is this and you know just just the spin on it all And and people understand that the same coroner that weighed in on the original coroner's decision there on the Floyd trial is the same corner from DC that lied about all the deaths of the of the citizens from January 6th. It's the same guy.
So you're seeing this whole power thing from the top down and it and it trickles into our lives every day even when we don't know it. But he reversed that shop in decision that the first coroner said, yeah, you know, drugs and the cop didn't do it. And this coroner from DC called and said you should fire your publicist. You should have never said that in public because you're wrong and we need the political points or whatever.
So I think it's interesting people don't know if they don't do their own research of who these people are and how they affect the whole game. Do you celebrate the death of George? No, not at all. Nobody's death. But but I also don't celebrate it. But I can place responsibility where it goes, you know? And that's the thing. You don't have to do that through hate, you know. You can do that just through common sense or knowledge or whatever. Or what an unfortunate day.
You know I think it's horrible and I think there's more to do with the the behind the scenes story than his death that people have any understanding of. You know with the counterfeit bills and all the other thing I think that's everything's a cover up of a cover up of a cover up at this point you know and and a diversion you know so I mean chasing rabbits we could do all day. We we don't have whatever facts we don't have but we have that video.
We have the policeman that's sitting in jail for 30 years or whatever. I I think that's ridiculous. You know, and and I don't how things changed all of a sudden in the length of time during this administration. We were seeing long, long prison sentences from before this administration. I just don't remember it. So it feels personal to every all they're really punishing us. They're, you know, taking that pound of flesh, and they are.
But I want to know kind of when it started, how it started, why it started more than just sitting here and and trying to suffer through it because we need to fix it. That's what people understand. This is a great time call for everybody to come together and say the justice system's broken. You know, this is not, this is torturous. You know that there's things that you're not supposed to do to people and seems like our government doesn't mind doing
those things anymore. That's why everybody's so mad Oh, brown shirt this and not see that. And I totally get it. I totally get it. But calling names doesn't fix the problems either. You know, and even Trump said in his inauguration, you know I'm giving the power back to the people. Well, why aren't we acting like that yet? You know that that and and kind of the direction I I like to try to to take action. It's about information, you know, education, motive and activation.
I know you talk about that all the time. You got to do something. You got to put your hands on it, you know, and and people just seem to be allergic to that or scared or don't know the importance of it, you know how important it is to the person that you're helping a lot of times. And we've learned a lot of lessons, man, in the last 2 1/2 years, very hard lessons. But we've learned them together. We've found solutions as a
family, as a group. And you know, I don't think either side of the political spectrum understands the power and the people and what they created with this information that we have now about the uni party and about how they're all working against this and how they're not defendants. They're not legislating in our behalf. They're not doing what they could or what they should for
the American people. And I don't care which political side that is. They're people, they're Americans. They don't need to be tortured and suffer like that. So there's two words that come to mind. One of them is sympathy. That's the way that I feel. I I see that you feel a certain way and and I'm kind towards it. And then there's empathy, which is means you feel a certain way and I can put myself in your
shoes and feel that way as well. And I think a lot more Americans seem to have gotten a sense of empathy watching people that look more like them, that sound more like them, that had backgrounds, military service, working in a trade, something like that going to jail over January 6. We have a lot more empathy for the prison system.
I'm going to monologue just for one second because you just brought up that we talked on the Twitter space about how, you know, I can have sympathy and I can sometimes have empathy for people going to jail that have punched a lady in the face and broken or orbital socket. I don't feel great putting that guy in a cage, especially when you see their face. They're another human being and they get locked up for the first time and they've been in county before and their buddies are all
there. They go to federal prison, You check them in and we drive into the what they call the mantrap, which is where the other gate closes and another one closes behind you. You're in the vehicle. And he goes, is this the door? And I said, no, this is just the yard. And then you take him in through multiple, multiple doors through the Sally port and you go, and he set him in and they weigh him and they change him.
And I mean the the look in people's eyes when they realize that they are in a federal prison is a very unsettling thing to watch. And so I can feel for that person. I can feel for them, even if I don't like them as a human being. I think the things they've done are atrocious. And right now, more people on the political right are getting a taste of that. I think people on the political left had a big sympathy towards criminals, maybe in a way that
was not even healthy. But but there is a healthiness that everybody understands. We're talking about human beings. We're talking about taking their freedom. That should not be discussed lightly. And and even people in law enforcement are a little bit guilty of it, this callousness, because that's what you do for a living. You you got to kind of brush it off.
So we're in a place now where we have a potential to see that there are human beings involved in the justice system and some of them are going to be treated badly. Let's talk about the exploitation you see of prisoners if you do. I know we've kind of been in spaces about that, but I want to bring it to this audience in a in a tight way. Couple minutes of your thoughts on how the justice system is treating, if there is a justice
system at all. Yeah. You know, I think it's really interesting that people are finally understanding what's happening. Our J. Sixers are in these prisons and they're talking to other prisoners that aren't J Sixers. And the common theme is, yeah, we're guilty, but we're not that guilty. They stacked all these charges on us to get us to take a plea, you know, and and now they've got us in the system and now we're paying phone calls. They're making money on our labor.
They're it's a system thing. I mean we've got more prisons than anywhere in the world and we it was profitable for these people. But that, that lack of humanity, bro, that that's I think something that politically, it's really strange because like I said earlier with Trump, man bad. You know, we even have women who were killed by police. We have black people who were almost killed. Phillip Anderson for one.
And And you would think there'd be some crossover there with, with communities to say you know, this maybe, maybe something's going on here. We didn't know. We thought it was all a bunch of white supremacists or whatever. Enrique Atario, Afro Cuban. Nobody cares. So at that point we even lost the advantage we had amongst ourselves to humanize each other because of politics.
And and I don't think that the elevator reaches to the top for people when they realize there's a political pendulum that swings
back and forth. So how people feel if if we had our version of Sedition Hunters that was hunting down people in the street, hunting people on social media, turning them into the FB. I I mean, to be honest, I went ahead and bought Antifa hunters.org because hey, it's either going to be used to find the bad Antifa guys or used in a way to protect someone else from using it in a horrible way. I don't want to hunt people. I don't think it's healthy for a
country to feel this way. This is like right before a civil war, right? And and I don't think people understand how close we get sometimes to just pop it off or how close that the government wants us to be. I think that's the the main key from that. But I don't know, man. I see these trials, I see the court cases, I see the the posts on social media and there is such an anger and such a hatred. People are not connecting, They're not communicating thoroughly or properly about
this. They're not in a place to where they want to understand. And I said, and until your kid gets hit by a drunk, you're not going to join Mothers Against Drunk Drivers. This is kind of that same thing, because unless it affects you to understand, but when a criminal justice system, it affects everyone and it's the same suits that have been doing this to other communities for decades.
And oh, I see the comments, Oh well, y'all didn't care when it was us, y'all didn't care until it happened to you. Didn't that the way it always goes though, So now we care. Now we see now we're experiencing that because time was past the point to where we can even afford this legal system, or we even understand it, or the laws have been changed just enough to where we can't operate properly, function in it and defend ourselves. So now we're all in the same
boat. Do we work together and row to save ourselves or do we just let it sink around us? Because to me it should be both sides addressing our politicians saying this is what we want, otherwise they're going to miss us and make us destroy each other. I want to. I want to make sure we continue that vein. I want to talk about dehumanizing language and also humanizing language which has happened on both sides. Before we do that, I want to try
to troubleshoot a little bit. We're getting a little bit of audio drop here and I know that's taken away from our message. So the question is as one, are you streaming the show in the background somewhere on the way in so we can eliminate that? Brian's giving me troubleshooting hits over the over the text messages there. And the second thing is if you got it up, if you got a VPN on, that would be also a possibility that would would cut you down.
Let me see what's going on here. I know it's mostly because we're just catching momentary little glitches of the of the audio and I know it distracts people and I think the message here is is important and more importantly I think the message carries over while we're doing that. If you think of the piece of the trailer, you've got a a new documentary style film that's out called January 6th. What is it called the the real timeline True. Timeline. What is? What is the best trailer?
What's the best place to find that Ryan's going to go dig that piece up? I know we had a couple different ones lined up, but you can go to 1000 Days of terror.com 1000 Days of Terror and see both of the trailers and just people watch them both. Because if you just watch one, you'll be sad. You need to see them both so you can be properly outraged. We've kind of made one for each audience, if you will, and we're doing a little experiment in that respect to see how people reacted.
It's been an amazing experiment so far, I can tell you that. Okay. So we're gonna pull the teaser from that. I see the coming soon and that was obviously released yesterday from what I got from you. Is that correct? Yes, yes, that's right. Okay, let's run that trailer. Like I said, if you have VPN or anything like that on if we can. Debunk it or shut down anything on the computer that's running in the background that that
might help a little bit. If it's not, we'll stick with it. We'll figure it out. I'm going to let Ryan run the trailer this and then we're going to talk about what you saw on January 6th. If that works, David, one is a minute, 9 seconds and one is a minute and 42 seconds. Which one would you like to run first? I'll run back-to-back for you. Let's do the the longer one first.
Fellow Americans, good morning. Certain dates echo throughout history, including dates that instantly remind all who have lived through them, where they were and what they were doing when our democracy came under. Assault dates that occupy not only a place on our calendars, but a place in our collective memory. December 7th, 1941, September 11th, 2001 and January 6th, 2021. We didn't look away after the attack on Pearl Harbor. We didn't look away after the attacks on 9/11.
They have may have been from foreign powers, but we still just because it was Americans who did this, we cannot look away after the attack of January 6th. Don't dare call the protesters they were a riotous mob, insurrectionist domestic terrorists. Donald Trump and the migrant Republicans represented extremism that threatens the very foundations of our Republic. What if I told you that the full story of January 6th isn't what you've been led to believe?
What if I told you that at least four unarmed people were killed at the Capitol that day? What if I told you that there was no published restricted zone available to the public and that President Trump wasn't allowed to direct people to the specific rally points around the Capitol? What if I told you that police removed hundreds of barricades from the area of the first
breach hours before it happened? What if I told you that the first group of demonstrators that breached security gates that morning had a police escort? What if I told you nothing but showed you everything? What if we published the first accurate timeline with all of the French and all of the context? What if we allowed you to decide January 6th? A true timeline coming soon? Who I muted myself coming soon and available right now. Actually.
This was the teaser trailer. It was released yesterday. I think we have David back and we actually may have corrected this this little connection problem. So Dave, I'll look forward to having you kind of tell people what they can expect looking at that after seeing the teaser, unless he didn't write back in in 2 seconds, yeah, he came back in, but he was frozen. So he just left and he's coming right back in. Fair enough.
So what you didn't see, if you were not watching our the trailer was the the fact that you were, you're seeing the Kamala Harris. There's obviously a lot of pause. There's a lot of drama that is built up around these speeches that they're giving. They're all Democrats at this point and they are pushing this, this long narrative. And I think that Joe Biden is probably the best at showing what their position is, which is to say that they are they sound unhinged to me.
If you you do these comparisons, I actually got in social media discussions about this literally yesterday. I saw January 6th equals 911 sort of evil on January 6th on a on a day when we could all say Americans came together in, you know, 22 years ago. We watched something horrific happen to our country. There are many reasons why you know that, that people have have looked into it and stopped trusting media narratives because of it. But the end of the day, a lot of people lost their lives.
We saw some buildings fall down in a Great American city in the skyline was forever changed. It was dramatically affecting me as a 19 year old. I know many, many men that are my age right now, looked at that event and they said I'm going to war over this because someone has attacked our country. And they didn't go to war against the mainstream media, and they didn't go to war against the political
establishment. They went to war against a tangible enemy who legitimately hated the way of life that Americans lived. And instead of our our politicians saying we have the common thread, we have unity, we have a bunch of people that have looked at each other. And for the first time in quite a while, they said my brother is an American. And I don't care what they believe and I don't care what they look like. And so many of us that went into the military know what that
looks like. I'm sure, David, you know what I'm talking about. But you see guys go in and you know, it doesn't matter whether you're on a construction crew or whether you're on a platoon. That's marching through Afghanistan. The guy that's next to you is making sure that your job gets done. They're looking out for your safety. They're making sure that you're able to do your job in a way that you can come back home at the end of the day and make a
living. And. And man, it is really, really tough to say that instead of using that political capital and passing a bunch of things that said we're going to protect the American people, we're going to reclaim a bunch of stuff that has been, you know, seeded away. They just passed a bunch of surveillance laws and they've been using it against us now. So we waited 20 years to see the seeds of that grow into the, you know, the choking binds to
tyranny. I don't mean to get too poetic about it. Let's talk about dehumanizing. Let's talk about the fact that some of your people are now seeing in, in a new way, the humanization of the prison system on both sides. You know, we're getting accused of it, but that actually could be a really good thing that people on the political right are looking over and saying, I now have some skin in the game when it comes to prisons. Listen, I think one of the best examples right now is sitting in
jail. And you know, we're talking about 911 people who took up that fight. I know a guy that, that when 911 happened, he was so upset that he joined the military. He went and served. He was awarded 2 Purple Hearts and you know, all kinds of awards, medals for service. And he's a January sixer now, sitting in jail for 17 years. Now, if I stop the story just before January 6, we'd be looking for him to put him on the news and call him a hero. You mean you left your life when
you saw 911 happening? You went and fought in the military and earned Purple Hearts, Save people's lives. You're a hero until you say January 6th. And that's where the disconnect is. That's where the the people don't know what they don't know. And all we've tried to do is show them. But that's what's happening, the dehumanizing.
And you're right, man, if the right can look over to the left now and say, hey, we've been, you know, passive on this, we we've just let this go. We didn't pay attention to it, which is the normal job of our politicians not to listen to us, I guess. So, I mean, it's par for the course, but we're listening and we're experiencing it and we're befriending other people in the prisons.
You know, I've got one friend that he goes to prison and and they separate him from America. He starts to organize and he's like, hey guys, what are you charged with? Yeah, yeah, it's overcharged. Let's talk about remedies and and ways to fix it. So there is some bonding going on between people. And look, the Bible's really specific how it says to minister to the widow, the orphan and the prisoner. It doesn't say witness to the innocent prisoners. It says all of them.
And and here we're trying to quantify who we can support and who we shouldn't because they're good or bad or they did things. But that goes for the widows and the orphans too. Do you just want to minister to the good orphans? You don't want to minister the hard cases or or the little old grumpy ladies. You want to leave them but be with the nice ones. It just doesn't work that way. So I think the more that we see that we're more alike than we
are different on both sides. Look, we suffer from the same problems. We have the same hopes and desires. We have the same fears and the more that those are made to look similar, then I think we'll find ourselves a lot faster. And right now that biggest fear is the government for all people. You think people on the left aren't worried about Trump getting back in and flipping the switch and and doing this whole
thing? It's it's terrifying to people because they don't understand what the programming is. Yeah, I would hate to see our country get into sort of like a Palestine and Israel scenario, but we're we're kind of in that we we at least the first shots have been fired on there. Yeah, but they have. And listen, Mana in Bloody Hill, our other our second documentary put up at the end. Man, I cry like a kid and I'm like, you know, hey, we don't want a civil war. That is not what we want.
But they're pushing us and pushing us and pushing us. And they stick those words in our mouth and they say all these extremists and these violent Christian groups and look at the SPLC, what they do, look at these groups that are made to label people and and drive hatred toward the, you know, when you've got abortion, people that are okayed, and then you've got Christian adoption agencies that are on a hate list. I I, I, I don't understand where humanity is disconnected from.
Children for one, for babies. You know, I worry for us, punishment wise from God for what we've done to our children. I mean, these are real issues that a lot of people don't see out to out. And then, oh, it's the crazy Christian guy. Well, you know, maybe it's just my morality is different and I can't see, you know, murdering a child full term. I know there's families out there that would gladly love that child and raise that child.
I'm a product of adoption, so I kind of kind of get it different. I guess you want to talk about that just a little bit. That's I wouldn't have known that if you hadn't just volunteered it. And I probably should have been able to find that out. Tell me. Tell me what that's like growing up, knowing that somebody opened their house to you. Yeah, you know, emotional. Did you know, growing up that you were adopted? Yeah, yeah, from from as probably as early as I could understand it.
You know, my brother was adopted from another family. He's four years older than me and you know, put in the best house. I can't. I can't express. How great it is to know because not everybody gets that, especially through those systems. So I'm one of the lucky ones. And you know, even to this day, we work closely with the nonprofit for kids that age out of the foster system. You know, we're trying to build a place for them because there's
nowhere. And you look at statistics for these prisons if you want to build a prison. You go to the foster system and you see what their numbers are because that's what you base your prison population on. That's the kids that'll be staying there eventually. And we see the trafficking, we see the crime rate within those communities of these kids that are just turned out in the street. And it's not like they were in a good environment up to that point because they weren't.
They're abused by these people. They're given the Falchi drugs by these all these different. Mind altering, mood altering all you have 88, all these things, so they're not in a good place when they leave and now they're on the street. What are you supposed to do when when they just turn you loose, when you're a T.O.K, you're on your own. We can't keep you here any longer.
They end up homeless, they end up in crime, they end up in bad places and and look, the church should have never let that happen. They should have never let the state take that responsibility away from them. And I'm not saying the church is perfect, because we know it's not. But I can bet you it's better than the state and what they've done to a medically, psychologically, the the court system, anybody that's familiar with it knows it's it's it's just trash.
These kids don't have advocates. They don't have someone fighting for them in their corner and and we've learned so much about the abuses in that system that people just aren't aware of and hopefully if they knew they would care. But call we're at a place to where. If it's not Applebee's and soccer and T-ball and my 40 hour week job, that's all I have time for.
I really don't want to get involved with anything else that's out of my wheelhouse because it's uncomfortable or I don't have time for that or I'm not here for that. I want to be entertained, I want to be pacified and I don't want to have to work, you know, That's our microwave society we've been raised in to get everything quick and easy now and and we don't want to have to work for anything. It. It's our downfall man.
Extensively. We're a Christian nation of at least a majority Christian founded nation tolerant of all pace but but that's the foundation. One of the things that always sticks with me from the Bible and it's hard for us to live it is that whatever you do to the least of these, that's what what you doing to me. That's what Jesus says to us. So what is our society doing to these least of us? Yeah, it's being the worst to us, you know? It really is.
I mean, imagine you just said it that that they look for the, the populations of foster kids and then they decide what they're going to do with their prison building, if that's the mindset. I mean, that's the most unchristian, uncharitable thing that anybody could imagine, That you just look, what a what a hard, pragmatic look in the world with no hope. But it's the most profitable way, you know, why don't you think prisons pop up all? We need this.
Our community needs this prison. It's a cash cow. You know, we make money. And until you're a prisoner and you say, gosh, man, it cost me to make phone calls, the shoes are marked that we talked about this on the space. Yeah, please dig into that as far as you can. Everything's more expensive and I'm not saying it's two to three times or five times the price. It's just more expensive and and we'll we'll talk about it from AJ6 perspective.
These people are broke. They've given all the money that they have to try to put a down payment on an attorney for the lawyer so that they have to pay out the rest. The rest of their lives they'll be in debt forever. They're not winning the cases, so they're winding up in jail anyway. They can't pay their bills because they're the breadwinner and they're the ones sitting in prison. So they're reaching out to the public trying to get support just so they can have those
phone calls. It probably takes about $200.00 a week for these guys in commissary. And here's the reason why. I'm not saying sodium and sugar are are better for you, but the things that they feed you from the prison probably aren't. So a lot of them live on the ramen noodles and the honey buns. That you can buy a prepackage where people aren't spitting in your food or worse. And so the expense in that, it's
a racket. And then I know one guy that's working for the laundry, excuse me, the laundry, he gets $31.00 a month that that would be slave labor. And we know that it would be slave labor if they didn't pay him a dollar a day. So that's the way that they get out of it. But then they charge the state. 12/18/20 bucks an hour for that laundry service and that's the money they're making. They've got work programs,
education programs. It's not really rehabilitation, it's how can we make our prison population more profitable for the shareholders? How can we maximize expense? Well, if we charge a little bit more for commissary, a little bit more on those shoes they have to buy or the when it's cold they had to buy warm stuff because the heater's not on in the summer. You know it's new underwear Shoes Flip flop. It's a racket on a racket.
People don't appreciate it. And they think, hey, if you did something bad, that's where you belong. You know, I don't know about all that. And and I think that first step back Trump's been working on has done wonders for the, you know, nonviolent offenders. And and then we have to start breaking that down and say, well, so you're charged with violence, but were you? We're having a lot of issues in our community right now. People are having this big disconnect.
Oh, y'all were violent. You know, y'all did bad things, so we really can't support you and and they don't understand what self-defense looks like. They they really don't. I mean, when you're attacked by someone and you react and you respond and you defend yourself, if someone were to walk up right at that point you can't tell who started the fight. You just see a fight and you don't know what to do. Well, the police started this altercation. We have videos and stuff and it's cool.
But people don't want to hear that. They think that we went to do violent things because there's some idiots in the crowd yelling some stupid things, which people always do. I don't care what side you're on, but for some reason everybody thought that first day that we killed a policeman for some weird reason, and we can get into depth as much as you want on that. But Sicknick was not murdered by the crowd. A lot of people still don't know that because it's still
mentioned. It's still never been properly retracted. They still have him at Arlington National Cemetery and you know, they still hit him in the. It's just terrible what they've done with that story. And Sicknick's family, they're mad at me because I won't stop talking about it, but they're not living in reality either.
They need to know the truth about what happened to their son so they can be properly outraged like we should because literally the police let him die as a matter of fact call. Let me just keep going with that because. I I I just got a message from a guy a few minutes ago. That's one of the witnesses in that case. He was What's the specific case? The sicknick situation, the civil case against people or what is? Well, no, it's it's more or less the guy that's going to jail
today. He just texted me to say, hey man, I'm, I'm about to go in. I said I'm on show, call me here in a little while. So I want to talk to him again before he goes into prison. He was the 2nd witness in the Brian Sicknick story. He's a combat medic, and he said he recognized Sicknick's name. And he said, hey, somebody said sick Nick. You all right? Blow it off. You know, whatever. And he said, did you say Sick Nick? I know his family. We're all exmilitary.
We're from the same area. I'm a combat medic. He's having a stroke. His face is white, his lips are blue. Let me treat him. Let me offer all we've got our own medics. And he said, well, where are they? Where are they? But I don't see anybody working on it. Well, they're coming. They're coming, he said, Dude, just uncuff me from the back to the front. Just let me, let me. They said mind your own business.
That's about 7:30. And you know, a couple hours later, sicknick collapsed because his stroke had eaten his brain. But the first witness had taken sicknick to the police line around 3:00. Between 3:00 and 4:00, took sicknick to the police and said this guy's having a medical emergency. Can you help him? I've got both these witnesses. And yet the media took sicknick and said, oh, they hit him with the fire extinguisher. They killed him. You know, the mob and all the stuff.
Now we've got video of a cop hitting him in the head with a stick hitting sick nick and we've got to pick a video of a cop spraying sick nick by accident. Let's let's pause on that for just one second, cuz I've seen the same video we had Steve Baker on. You probably know of Steve Baker, he's been on there. So he he he refused a little bit of what you said.
He said that he believes the cops actually did not draw first blood, but it was very close and it wasn't in a place where everyone could see it. But the the protesters, at least some protester, whether they're instigators or not, involved the first movement of violence, whatever that was. And I I'm not clear on it And he could he'll speak for himself. But that these things happened in all these different areas and
all these different places. So as you just mentioned, when you're in the middle of something in a crowd like that and I've been in those, you don't know where it starts, where it begins. You just know that suddenly around you it's violent. So I'll I'll will say that's that's totally excusable. But as far as the backswing, what it looked like from the video that I saw it.
I've seen this on social media. I haven't seen it moved in like Fox News, but what I have seen is that a a police officer from Capitol Police has one of the long collapsible extended batons. It's probably 36 inches, which is longer than DOJ allows us by the way. And and he takes a swing and as he does a big swing, he comes back and in his back swing to go forward again, he thumps sicknick right behind the ear and sicknick goes down and then
goes backwards. And so I've seen that video, I think that's what you're referring to, whether that caused longterm impact or not. But we do know the narrative was fire extinguisher had killed on site and the FBI was running that out too. Why was that narrative trotted out? Well, it was totally intentional. They even broke the story an hour before he was dead. One of the news organizations leaked it out trying to get first strike.
I guess they had to retract that story because they hadn't unplugged in there. He wasn't dead yet. There's also been statements made that just the other day in one of the in one of the trials that his family, they had to, you know, wait until this family got, Well, his family never made it. So for somebody, I think it was Inspector Lloyd saying that the the mob beat up one of the officers so bad they had to keep him on life support until the family got there. Well, Lloyd, the family never
got there. He died. Before the family got there. So I don't know who you're talking about because the crowd didn't beat up anybody like that and send them to the hospital and put them all life support. That didn't happen. More lies in court. But hey, let's let's backtrack that Matthew Black with a hole in his cheek at 107 when off Inspector Lloyd and Waldo there's two different cops are giving the orders and Waldo screaming. They're throwing stuff, They're
attacking. Shoot. Fire. Fire. Fire. Fire. And the video we we're sitting there looking at, nobody's throwing anything. Nobody's shooting anything. Nobody's doing anything. They're all standing right there. And Waldo seem to be motivated to incite this violence from the police toward the crowd. But but listen, I found that I found the video of the cop in the perch with the gun. And then we look down to where
the pushing on the left started. It depends on what side you're looking, but Joshua Matthew Black is standing there peacefully, not doing anything, and this policeman shoots and you see his head flip around and he looks like what just happened. He he he didn't know where it came from at all. He thought was next to him. Somebody hit him or something and these are rubbery munitions. These are the less than lethal is what they call them, but those are not meant to be aimed at faces.
Actually this was a marking round from what I understand an expired. Marking round that congealed, so usually it would hit and spray, but it dried up. It was expired. This is one of those things that activates under UV lights. They can find out who's who later on if. Well, bright yellow splatter
because it's yellow. So I think it was supposed to paint whatever they were trying to mark people in the crowd, but this thing set up and became a bullet, you know, it didn't explode like it was supposed to have penetrated him. And they were shooting those into the crowd. There's no telling who else. Probably for fear of of retribution. There were so many injuries that day. Thousands people getting their
heads cracked. Joshua Matthew Black ended up going inside the Senate chamber to sit, you know, with with the rest of the crowd. He never did anything violent. He never struck or pushed or did anything and yet he's sitting in
jail right now. That kid that got shot in the face is in prison right now and and and I just don't see how that how that works you know and how people can be happy about that on either side actually because to be fair you use something that has expired like that in a malfunctioning device that means usually the not just the the company that manufactured it or the the the entity that held onto it for too long if it wasn't marked properly like they all get sued.
That's I I I would see that in a Ferguson. Right if that happened. In Ferguson, it's Everybody's lawsuit is named and nobody's lining up to take that guy's case, I imagine, right? No, no, no, no, man. We can't get legal help for these guys. I mean, we, you know what we can get. But no, there's nobody trying to knock it out of the park for these guys and get justice for Jay Sixers. And that's where we come in. I mean, nobody else is pushing this, and we believe it has to be in the public.
You know, we're not going to get this through the politicians. They've had 2 1/2 years to help us. They've had the evidence. They've had the murders and we have evidence and witnesses for every single death. And you see this policeman here with the grenade launcher. We've got reports from the EMS radio grenade launcher shot to face teeth missing. You know all all this and you're not supposed to do that. That takes a less lethal munition and turns it into a lethal munition.
And we know that Kevin Greeson had his emergency down there in the front when the grenades went off and and witnesses say. That, you know, the grenade stopped his heart. That's where he was getting CPR. Now, Benjamin Phillips is a different story. He had a medical emergency and collapsed. But you you can't imagine getting these grenades into a crowd full of women and children
and people packed in so tight. And they're just randomly throwing them not at suspects that are doing a specific thing, and not in front of the crowd to push it back, but in the middle of the crowd to make it spread out, which does what even pushes it toward the police. I mean, people were so scared of those, and yet the people that weren't directly close to him took it as a rally crowd. They were like, hey, you know, you're not going to scare us. Well, it didn't land next to you
and take a man's life. So it's a really kind of a weird situation to witness for one. But the reality of it is there was so much Bruta now in these pictures, you're not seeing the crowd fighting at all. Do you see anyone? Running at the cops or any of their standing, these cops are standing there. Oh, now there's a little push on the left where the cops are being pushy, trying to offer cover for this guy to throw more grenade. I don't understand why people can't see that and just say,
hey, those cops acted horribly. And I think this next documentary that we put out about the timeline is really going to shed the light on that because we put the police body cams and their conversations and really try to show what actually happened. Through video, not not narration. We ask more questions than we then we give narrative to. So it's it's going to be an interesting thing for the public to actually get to see what happened that day. It's been a long time coming.
One of the things that I feel like I can weigh in on is somebody who's you're trained in use of force and been able to, you know, at least have the authority to use violence when necessary. You talked about less than lethal musician munitions. That's the term we use less than lethal. And there are certain things that are less than lethal, which is specifically things like batons. Right.
But the way that you even train, Ryan, I'm going to do a quick demonstration visually here so people can see, I know we're showing a lot of footage, but the the way that we train with less than lethal is that if you have a baton and we train them to hit things like hands, because hands are a compliance tool, if you're coming at me with your hands and I tap you in the hand with a baton, you're going to pull that hand back. And so that is a less than lethal move.
We might break your bones. I can hit you in arms, I can hit you in body parts to the, you know, body blows. We train for those. Those are less than lethal. The minute that I get above the shoulder now I'm striking
towards shoulder, neck and head. Those are potentially lethal strikes with a less than lethal tool, because as anyone knows, you've seen people die with a baseball bat, hit to the head, and so on. So when you use a less than lethal technique and you move it into a lethal range, a beanbag shot to the head can cause death. A beanbag shot to the throat could cause death. A beanbag shot to the chest generally will not. It's a body blow and it makes them think twice about where
they're going. So these tools, when misused, are a major problem. I don't mean to monologue on this thing, but it's so important that people understand the way those stun balls are designed. They are meant as crowd control methods to drive people to a certain direction. If people are charging at you and you throw a area denial tool like let's say CS gas in front of them, they don't penetrate the gas.
That's the goal. You want to send it in front of a crowd and send them backwards away from the gas when you send it into the crowd, which is what we've seen done, and it's not always possible to do it better. But in a tight little crowd like that, it's not the same thing as port and where they were trying to disperse people and people had abilities to run away, they were sending it into the crowd and they had two choices. The people in the back could run away from it.
The people in the front had to run away from it as well. And that went into the police line. It's a really, really bad training technique. It's not the way you train to use these tools, and I know these guys at least should have been trained on that because DC has a ton of protests. That's the thing that I think maybe you and I both can understand. There are a lot of protests. Do you have any idea how many protests go on in Washington DC on a daily basis or on a weekly
basis? Oh, I would Figure 8 to 10 a week. You know that there there's a lot of activity in DCA. Lot of people want to go there and make their voice heard for many, many different reasons and most stay peaceful. You never hear about it, but. From 10 people to thousands of people, it happens with or without permits weekly. That's right. And I think people are going to be amazed at this film because
we show more of the upfront. So like we said earlier, if you don't see who started the fight, you just see a fight, You want to break it up, whatever. But when you see who started the fight, I think that's really critical, critical for people to understand. So we show the video where the crowd made it all the way to the front, and you can hear them on their megaphone saying, please don't shoot us, please don't spray us. We mean you no harm. We're here to redress our grievances.
You know, we're not BLM, we're not Antifa. And literally, they're standing peacefully. And that's when Waldo and Lloyd start giving the attack, which on the inside of the building, Ted Cruz was giving his objections. And it seems like a really misfortunate timing event, if you know what I mean, for the attack on the crowd to happen at the same time, to give the excuse to do what they did, you know, with the proceedings that day. But it it kind of snowballed
from there. The the people, you can hear them in the crowd saying. Get the women and children back soon as the police start shooting the rubber bullets in the crowd. At 1:21 or so, I think they started throwing the grenades into the crowd. And and it was really, I've got one video that's that you hear the crowd at 1:20 and they're standing, they're quiet. They're they're waiting for some direction because they really didn't know what was going to happen.
They're there to protest and they're all and it's very quiet. You can listen to this crowd. But at 121 and he turned his camera off and then there were explosions. He turned his camera back on. Who in this minute? And the crowd is totally USA angry. USA. And they're not going to back down. So you got guys telling get the women and children back. What does that mean? It means there's women and children and dogs in the crowd. Get them back. We're not going anywhere.
You're not going to attack us and scare us off. We're going to stand our ground. We're here to protest. We're here to make our voices heard. And you're throwing these grenades at us. And then it was like a rally crowd. Yeah, throw another one. We're not scared. Come on, man. What are you doing? So there's a lot of combat vets in there, not not actually instigated the same way. You've seen a lot of the footage, right? Hours and hours.
I see the government footage. I have access to everything. OK? At what point it was it declared on bullhorns and and loud speakers that this has been declared a riot and unlawful protests and you now must disperse. When was that done? An hour and 10 minutes after the police started attacking people, and that's what people don't know. There were no safety exits give there were no direction. Hey, if y'all will leave this way, we're going to start
hurting you. You know there was no compliance but the police, there was no warning. We we say a lot of times on spaces and stuff J6 with no warning. Because they didn't warn people. They didn't give you a proper exits. They're throwing munitions in the crowd. They're shooting people on the front lines. They're doing all kinds of things and never warned us. But yet you hear Waldo. Hey, I warned them that we're going to use chemical stuff. Attack.
Attack. No. An hour and something later, they bring this one little speaker out that nobody can hear saying you must leave the right area. But it's so quiet if you, if you're not in front of you can't hear it. You can't hear it 30 feet away. They had these big sound systems. Man, that worked.
And and it's not like they were malfunctioned they could have turned that on or you or Pittman or whoever gave the the the text could have said instead of hey there's a curfew at 6:00, Y'all enjoy your day and hang around until 6:00 but be sure and be in your hotel. That's basically what it said they should have said. If you're on the Capitol ground,
you're going to be arrested. You know you're going to prison and you need to evacuate the premises immediately and the and there's a curfew at six or if the police at the front gate that I was standing at. When I got there had just said hey listen we found some explosives over other other buildings so we're going to need to sweep this area to make sure
that everyone's safe. And I know y'all have permitted events on the grass, but it's probably in your best interest not to go on the yard let yet because there could be pipe bombs and I bet everybody would have stayed on the concrete. Or if they would have said if you cross this line you go to prison that I think people might have, but then instead they sent 2 girls and three guys. To try to block 10,000 people that were coming on the grass for what they thought was a
concert. They thought Trump was going to come speak. They thought all these politicians were going to be talking on the grass and then when we get to court, they want you. They don't want you to mention that. They don't want you to say, hey, there were permanent events and and we were supposed to be on the grass. What are you talking about? It, you know or First Amendment. You can't mention that. It's it's crazy call. I want to I want to see if I can task Ryan something in real
time. It's one of the joys of doing a live show. We'll see if we can make this happen. Ryan, if you would go look real quickly in the background, maybe search on your phone, see if you can find some of the riot announcements from Portland
about what it looked like. These were federal officers in Portland that gave riot announcements and we if we can see them, I think it'd be an interesting contrast because as my recollection goes, those right announcements happened before the chemical munitions, before the pepper ball started, they announced that you must now disperse. This was after like explosives were thrown from the Antifa crowd and so on. And they said it's OK now you're done. And this happened for 100 nights
in a row. So this should be, there should be plenty of evidence of this. I believe I've seen a lot of it. And you know what's interesting too, I think BLM and Antifa are a little bit more used to those kind of orders or they know the rules. They do know the rules. And you know who didn't know the rules? Us. Because we don't do that stuff. We didn't go for that. We didn't go for a ride. We didn't take our guns. There was not 1/4 wheel drive
truck on the grass. That's how you know it wasn't an insurrection. If it was an insurrection, we going to take our four wheel drives and we go, it would be some there'd be some Utv's hitting that door wouldn't there I'm. Telling you painted orange Dukes of Hazard up on the steps, all that stuff, and it wasn't so. But we don't know the rules and the rules of engagement and attack and and all those things. So they've used that against us. All right, Okay. See, look at this.
This is why we have Ryan. He's outstanding. Let's listen to a video of something from Portland and this. We're going to compare and contrast what we're listening to here. Go ahead. I think so. Anyways. Hopeful. Yeah. NATO to Broadway, Colombia to Harvey Milk is closed. Wow. This is the Poland Police Bureau. This event is riot. Columbia Harvey Milk is closed. Leave the area now. NATO to Broadway. Colombia to Harvey Milk is closed. Well, there you go. Man, it's loud.
It turns out you can hear that across the entire city and and having been in Portland during some of that stuff, the recollection is pretty strong. The the, the price.
The protests turn into riots. They get out of hand and that at some point the police drive around loud speakers, let people know what's going on. I know they have the ability to do that in DC. Oh listen, they had the big sound system on the columns there and they were actually there was bagpipe music coming out of them earlier in the day. So I don't they actually they were queued up and capable.
Even if they had to commandeer that, that that property which was already behind the riot line, absolutely give me warning, give me a unified look. I think there's, I think there's some nuance that happens in January 6th. I think if we were talking about it earlier, you look at the country and there's good and there's bad, and there's people that are saying things that are on gradients one way or another.
What is your unified view of what happened if you were to describe it in a couple of minutes to people who were not there? And if there's any balance to you know who the victims are in this this scenario? Yeah, you know, that's a tough one. It really is. Injustice is going to be even harder than that, but. You know, I see it as a set up in a lot of ways that people don't really consider, I guess,
and the politics of it all. When you see the government trying to push a narrative toward domestic violent extremists and, you know, anybody that's a threat to persons or property, I think that's the the most chilling factor of where we live now. Because that means that anybody goes in protest. Now, if you're a threat or or even a perceived threat, you can be thrown in jail indefinitely without due process. No bail, no bond. And no hope, no defense. And that's where the J.
Sixers have found himself. I think most people went down to the Capitol to protest, to make their voices heard, to peacefully and patriotically March, just like Trump said. What percentage do you think that was? 99.5 you know. And honestly, because the people that made it, this is another interesting point. And I and I say it all the time, man, it's been determined. Publicly by everyone that there were not enough police to control the crowd. So who controlled the crowd?
The crowd did listen. The police beat, shot and bombed this crowd for over an hour and the crowd just wouldn't submit and wouldn't play that game. We didn't eat any policemen that day. If we were cannibals of said this in the show, we could have eaten every policeman that that day. Everybody could have had two bites and we all could have gone home hungry because there weren't enough police to go around. But we didn't. We didn't kill any policeman at all. All day.
Over 50% of police injuries were self-inflicted. If they had to write down in their report that they got pepper sprayed or that they got gassed, they didn't put the part where it was, the police that threw it and it came back and wiped out two platoons. They just said they got gassed. Well they're the ones that had the gas. So it's really kind of funny how they stack. Oh 150 something. Officers were injured.
Well, you know, many hundreds of people were injured with those baton strikes to the head, you know, with grenades, to the face, with with just blatant abuse. So I think that conservatives by and large don't start fights, but they do defend themselves. And I think they were put into that position intentionally. And I think that the powers that were in control of that event wanted a higher body count. I think they wanted more bloodshed.
They wanted a bigger reaction from us and we never gave it to him. They got their four victims from that day and then they got Officer Sicknick. But all those deaths are on the Capitol in the Metro Police. And I'll tell you, I believe that the lack of information at Intel was to set the Capitol Police up. The Metro Police was basically the strong arm and and if you look in the media now, everybody's blaming the Capitol Police is all. They were woefully unprepared.
They didn't have the equipment. They didn't have that. But that's just a surface, a topical thing when you dig into it. Their helmets were taken away several days before because they were expired and they weren't replaced yet or they didn't get the information that they were going to have a a big event, of course. So when you look at the the give and take of information and how that was not a free experiment for everyone, Yogalanda Pittman
for one, held a lot. I mean, there's Intel that never made it to the top. It's choreographed chaos. It's intentional. It's criminal. And and you know our, our big push is to been, has been to take these congressmen and senators and say, hey, we understand what you've been told by the media. We understand the lies, but we don't say it like that. The reality is here's the witnesses, here's the testimony.
Three people were killed by the police, one was not rendered aid and one was the the stroke, which is also on the police. And there's the facts. Now if that's a felony. Aren't they supposed to report those felonies? And if they don't, can't they go to jail for three years? That's my hope that they can and that they do. Because we've reported these things and nobody's reported them for investigation. They still sit dormant.
One of the big criticisms I think of the J6 crowd was that this is a, you know, protect the police back the blue type of crowd. And this is all the thing you say right up until the police are, you know, doing something and quote UN quote their jobs and then suddenly they're they're willing to pile on the police. How do you answer stuff like that? You know, it goes back to self-defense. I don't think anybody can be in a position.
I don't care if you're police, I don't care if you're president. If the president came up and attacked me, I'm going to defend myself. I'm going to defend people around me. If I see the president running over there kicking some little kid in the head, bet yourself I'm going to go over there and do something about it. And that's what's happening on January 6th. People went there standing at the frontline. Matthew Black gets shot in the face out of nowhere.
How do you, how do you defend against that? You know, for the people that want to stand up for the police, how do you? There was nothing happening. There was no advance. There was no push and shove. People literally standing in front of the police and all were peaceful and then boom. So after an hour of that they finally call it a riot. They they never give proper evacuation orders. It seems like it it needs to be investigated by some, you know, real professionals.
We've done the best we can and try to submit all this stuff for court, for court cases. But you know the the judges are as biased as the public and. As biased as the politicians and we're not getting any support from our side. You know there there are politicians that know what we know about the deaths and everything that really haven't done anything about it. So it just kind of brings you to the position of it's us against them, unfortunately.
And you know us is all the people on both sides and them is the powers that be, the government, the representatives that don't represent us. And that's a real scary place I think for, for everyone, even if you don't know you're there. I think it's scary. And I hope more people wake up to that reality, brother. So let's talk about the the documentaries you've made. You've got now your third one in the can, it sounds like. And you've got to what two of
them released, is that correct? Yeah, The first one was called writing history. RIGHTING the journalistic battle of January 6th, which it is, it's still a journalistic battle. It's who's going to tell what story and who's going to get him to believe it. So it's the propaganda war in a lot of ways. But that battle continues, so writing history was the 1st 37 minutes long. It's not very bad.
And then the second was called Bloody Hill and it's basically three people's opinions of the day and explanations of how January 6 is comparable to the seven abominations in the Bible, lying and killing and all. So it's a really interesting but, but it gives you facts about the Select Committee and
events of the day. And Trinis Evans as well gives his personal experience as a defendant and what he's experienced with the raids from the FBI on his home and child holding his his son at gunpoint stuff. And you know we see more and more that the third one, the J6A true timeline is is really going to be kind of like both of them combined. But the difference is we've had 2 1/2 years of collection and and research. Investigation. So we figured out who instigated
what their names are. We got their body camera to prove it. We've got everything that people really need to see. And and to me, it's a really huge test brother to see who's willing to believe the truth that they see with their own eyes. And I know it's not a lot because we see this every day. We put videos out every day that show facts, show truth, and people still just try to. Destroy all you, you, you know, that's what you get, kind of stuff.
And they don't have any idea what they're talking about. They've been so programmed to react that they can't listen. You know, why do you think people are so emotionally connected to that belief they they grabbed on January 6th? You know, it's hard to say. I know a lot of it just goes back to Trump. You know, you either love him or you hate him. And unfortunately, he's just another him. You know, in a couple of years it'll be somebody else. And a couple of years ago it was
somebody else. And, you know, he's just a politician. And I tell everybody all the time like, oh, you Trumpers and you kool-aid drinkers and all that. Like, yeah, you know, I voted for him twice. But you know what? I don't own a Trump shirt. I don't own a Trump hat. I don't worship the man. I don't care about that. He's the president. He's done a great job with what he could do. And I voted for him again because I I like the policies. I like what he did for the
prison system. I like what he was doing at the border. I liked a lot of stuff. I didn't like everything. I didn't like Operation Warp Speed. I don't like a lot of the silence from him about January 6, when I feel like he could have offered Jay Sixers more help. But at the same time, he did tell people in that CNN interview, these are great people and they're being treated like hell. So I want people to understand
that. They deserve your your support and your respect, he said so himself. So let's be sure and get that connection made and and and listen Cal, I'll tell you we've we've tried to be proactive from day one. I did a podcast on on January 8th as soon as I got home as 24 hour drive. So I got home and jumped on a podcast.
I want to tell my friend from the UK everything I witnessed, you know, from the FBI to antifa to the to the police actions and brutalities, the deaths that we were aware of already. Man, I cried on the thing. It was crazy. But I wasn't wrong about one single thing I said and and I'm telling you 2 1/2 years later to look back on that and go, wow, how do we already know everything that was going on? And why is it taking 2 1/2 years and people still don't get it?
But from day one man I've tried to be proactive for the people. We started the stop hate Department of Defense so that people can have a place. A portal with all the gifts in goes for all these people that can support. We've got calls to action@stophate.com/J six from prayer groups to letter writing to Congressman to sing for freedom to free down. There's twenty different calls to action. Whatever your gift is, jump in there and grab something and help us out and.
You know, providing the tools to do the job. I know you know how important it is to have the right tools for the job. We've just tried to be proactive in that. As a Carpenter, you know, I want the best sauce so I can do the best cuts. And some of this stuff is like the free downloads. We've got posters and banners and things that people can order from their own print shop. They're free. I mean, we we provide all this just like our movies, the
documentaries, the articles. I've paid for everything out of my pocket as best I can. We get very little help, a little help and it's greatly appreciated. But I I haven't really asked for help for us because I've been asking help for these J Sixers. They're starving. Go to stophate.com and and there's a little box that turns around. You'll see the next story, the next story. One of those is a a Death count article and it talks about all the people who died in car
wrecks or suicides. You'll be amazed when you see the body count surrounding, you know or associated with January 6th. People have no idea. How many suicides we've had from people that cannot handle the weight of the federal government and the DOJ You you know you think Chauvin was bad for putting his knees so that right there 5 deaths and there's a FBI story and it just rotates around and what were the police doing is a really good video that'll
show you a lot of the brutality. But that right there, the death count article and and I'm telling you, just knowing that there's. 16 people is too many, wouldn't you say? I mean, we know of five those, and that's all we've ever heard. Nobody's kept up. That's intentional. They don't want you to know how much pain and suffering has trickled down to these families and how it affects communities and churches and neighbor. We call it social terrorism.
Because you can't not only bank anymore or use anything electronic, but you lose your life, you lose your job, you lose your friends. Because nobody understands. Yeah, there's a lot of, there's a lot of anger and there's a lot of hatred. I I guess stop. Hate is as good as any name for what's going on there. Because it does feel like it's hate drawn, and it does feel like there's an awful lot of, there's a lot of, there's a lot of negativity surrounding all of this thing.
The one thing I see a lot, too is that you you get called Grifter. Is that one of your things that you get hit with? Yeah, I don't so much. I know a lot of the people do. I'm very, super transparent and anybody that goes on the website can see that I'm a pass through portal. We don't touch the money, we don't collect it and divvy it out. You know, if I put somebody's link on there, it goes straight to them. So I've never really got, I'm not the money guy. We don't.
I'm going in the whole big time for doing this stuff myself. That's the thing that's so true about everybody. I think that's involved. I mean, well, actually, not that there are a lot of scams out there that are taking advantage of this. There are. There are. And look, we sell T-shirts and stuff. I don't push them. You know, we sell mugs and coffee cups and stuff. I just don't push it. You know, if I'm going to be on a show, people, people can't take two calls to action, man.
They just can't. You know, if I said, hey, support these prisoners and support me, they're going to pick one. So when I go out, I say support these prisoners and their families. They need it, man, so bad. Yeah, they're in bad shape. All right. You've talked a little bit about the the websites. Go ahead and hit them again, if you would, and plug those socials where people can follow
and see your calls to action. And obviously they'll see the the, the free documentaries that you guys have put out there, a lot of the work you've done into it. Yeah, absolutely. Please and share them. That's my biggest thing. If you people can get on there and just share. We've done a lot of the legwork. We've provided the tools but stophate.com and then of course
stophate.com/J six. The J6 tab is really what has the calls to action that you can help us share the different groups and supporters that that that are really involved in the mission and and these are things everybody has a gift. Everybody has a specialty. Just pick what yours is and adopt some people. We're about to do the the toy drive again for the children. We raised $53,000 last year through Patriot mail project. So get involved with these kids.
If nothing else man, don't blame the children. I don't care which side you're on. These kids are suffering horribly. Imagine Joe Biggs, daughter, you know Purple Heart guy that started fighting because of 911 and he's in prison for 17 years. He wants nothing more than just take his girl to school and give her a hug. I mean, and he can't. It's not going to happen until she's grown. If he stays in there. People don't understand the depravity that that these people.
And it's sad, man. It's torturous. And listen, if you look up terrorism in the dictionary, I got to go here. Terrorism, the unlawful use of violence and intimidation, especially against civilians for political aims, that's the definition of our government. That's what they've done to other communities for decades. That's what they're doing to us now. It's time that we all get together and see what it's about
to fix it, but peacefully. You know, we never advocate violence or anything, but this is the real place that we live, folks. And I don't think that everybody can fully appreciate it until it affects them. But when it does, it's too late. You know when they come kick your door in, you're in jail. You can't prepare for that anymore and your family can't. And you know, the FB I's been in my house five times. I've talked to him three of those times. And I'm, I'm not scared.
I'm not hiding. But I'm also not supposed to talk to him. And and I find that very difficult because I've done nothing wrong. I'm extremely honest. I have clear evidence in the last guys that came to my house. I even showed him the movie trailer for the the the. It was, really. Fun. How was that received? You know, Well, they, they asked me. They said, well, what do you do with this? Do you put it on YouTube? I said, no, man, are you kidding
me? YouTube won't let they censor us. And they said, well, even this I was like, I really felt sorry for those guys because they were so not in the know. And and I said, hey, can I get a business card from you? They're like, yeah, we really don't do business cards and stuff. They end up in the bathroom. I said, well, that's funny. The last FBI that was at my house gave me business card. I got a box full of my business cards from each one of my offices that I haven't handed out yet.
I got all kinds of business cards. That's nonsense. Well, he said that they don't hand them out. And I said, well, the last guy did. He said, what? The FBI's been here before. I said, dude, the FBI's been here four times. It's not in your file. You're coming over here, Green. You don't even know who I am. You don't know. I testified in three of these cases that I work with all the lawyers that I do, all this video stuff that I put out. Doc, you don't know who I am.
What, are you just gonna come shoot me and figure that out later? That's kind of the way it makes you feel. And like they're setting it when they're asking you. Like, are you in a militia? No. Do you own guns? Yeah, everybody in Texas owns guns. Dude, what are you talking from? BB guns up. What do you want? What are you doing? Do you know where the judge lives? Why would I care where the judge lives? No, I'm not after anybody. I'm not that guy.
I speak truth and that scares you and I'm okay with that. But don't come over here and shoot me and my family and my house and my dog and all that stuff just because you're an idiot and you don't do your homework. See, that's where I have a disconnect. And I felt sorry for these guys. They looked completely stupid because they didn't know anything about anything. So I recorded the second-half of that interview.
I posted it on our social media, all our social media stuffs that stophate.com follow us. You can find everywhere from you know Twitter down the line. So we try to put this information out for everybody call. We just needed help, you know sharing it and and getting the truth to a bigger audience. And anybody that can help with that is a dear friend of ours, I. Appreciate all that. You know what's really interesting about terrorists that I've always noticed?
What's it They always claim responsibility for their actions? Wow. Think about how. Think about how proud DOJ is, is what they're doing right now. They are acting like terrorists. I will say it straight up, and I'm someone who used to take that paycheck. There's something real sad about how little these guys know about it. It's called the banality of evil. For most people, it's when you just put your head down and go to work every day and you don't look around and say, what am I
being asked to do? When is this thing moral? Is it ethical? Is it legal? And if it's not, if it's illegal, immoral or unethical and you're not asking those questions. You're part of the terrorist, man.
There's a lot of people there in the FBI that are decent human beings that are participating in a in a very, very banal evil because they do not know, they do not know what they're doing and they do not have any awareness and they've never seen this footage and they don't even know who you are. They don't know who anybody is. They just go out there. They as as they used to teach the guys in Quantico.
Apparently because I used to get these new kids coming out, they would say your name came across my desk. That's why I'm here to talk to you. It's like that's is that is just a conveyor belt. You just pick off names. The hell are you talking about? You didn't do the background. I would go and dig into anybody I want to talk to. I want to know who I'm talking to. What is their background? Do they have a criminal history? Do they own a gun?
You know they have a gun permit. Are they someone that has been in the news. Are there any news article this. It's really easy. You just tell one of the Intel handles. That's what they do for a living. Say hey, go go. Give me background on this guy. Or targeting package is what they would call it if it was more serious. Yeah, well, I imagine I have a couple of those packages.
I don't know how it works, but, you know, it's funny because I'm still looking for those trumpers or whatever that had the plan, you know, I can tell you. There's got to be a blueprint on somebody's wall, right? Like with all the with all the strings. Yeah, they got the big mouths, man. You think they could keep this quiet for 2 1/2 years? Yeah, I really had the plan. It was me. I started. I did all that stuff. I haven't heard from those
people yet and nobody else has. So, you know, as far as the plan, I know that started when President Trump said, let's, let's March down there, everything after that, after the fight started, you know, it's really hard to tell what happened. I know that people defended themselves. I know I'm proud of the J Sixers for not reacting worse. They we we could. It could have been horrible. Death numbers is the way I was and it could have, man, we could have killed all those police.
We could have burned down the building. We could have took home paperweights. We could have destroyed the whole place. But you know, when we left, we didn't tear up things on the way home. We didn't tear up our homes when we got there. We didn't run. The FBI is not catching people all over the world. They're catching them at home because that's where they are because they're not scared, because they're not running because they know they didn't do anything wrong.
And they're amazed when they come knock on the door anyway and give the complimentary flash bang, you know, bring the family out holding the gun point at 6:00 in the morning. And and it's just mind boggling why the government is trying to create terrorists by these children that miss their parents and these people that are put in jail, you know, for wrong reasons and and that's how you make the citizens really, really mad. And then who are they going to
try to take it out on? We don't know. We don't want that. But is that something that's gonna be fought against each other? Or are they gonna get the point of who's doing this to both sides and be angry with the government and demand a change? I guess we will see. It is an ugly time right now and I wish safety for those. I wish discernment too. I hope we all pray for discernment for those that are in positions of power like this, right? That's really nice. Hey, David.
Thanks for joining me this morning. Thanks for sitting with us and talking and sharing the message. Thanks for what you do, Fighting hate. I think it's a great message. And folks, you can follow him. We'll have all the links in the description of the show. If you're listening on the audio or the video, you can find that and follow him on Twitter and all those kind of places. Hey, Kyle, God bless you, brother.
Keep you safe as well, man. I appreciate all you've done and it's been great to get to know you, man. Yeah. Likewise, I look forward to seeing you more on Twitter Spaces. I know we'll do it again soon. Sounds great. Thanks. All right buddy.
Ladies and gentlemen, you've been watching the Kyle Seraphin Show. We are stream live from Liberty Hill, TX. If you are a member of one of the lunatics out there that is trying to hunt down me and my family, I advise you against coming to Liberty Hill, TX. We got cemeteries here too. It's a good hill to die on. If you choose to, it will be you do not threaten my wife or family as I keep seeing people do on social media. That is just a no go. The Seraphin family are not soft
targets. We are aggressive and we defend ourselves in that way. I don't know why I need to say that, but that needed to be done. People are out there docks and my wife and coming after it so. Not your guy, man. I'm not your guy. And also you'll see we're going to be putting out some clips today on our social media talking about the open carry rallies that are going on in Albuquerque. It is happening at 2:00 PM in Albuquerque, so expect that
that's 2:00 PM mountain time. You'll expect them 3:00 PM Central, 4:00 PM going onward in the East Coast. We're going to start putting some of these videos we had been Luna on yesterday. He's going to take some ground footage for us. And we are. We are pro carry. Generally speaking, we are pro concealed carry. This is my concealed carry piece that I just picked up today. It's another one. One I've been carry to Glock for a long time folks. Carry your weapons. Take care of yourselves.
You are your own first responder. All right. Let's let's do some thank yous here. We want to say thanks to all of our super chats that came in today. The rumble rants, especially the last one that I saw up here from Poe. Rusty Poe, which said thanks for all you're doing. Kyle. Smash the like button. Please do please like this videos. Please share these videos. And we want to say thanks for all of the five star reviews we get on Apple. Here's one of them today.
This is definitely this is from 100% not at real Steve friend. This was definitely not real Steve Friend writing this. This review It says five stars for Friendly Friday. Absolutely love Friendly Fridays at Real Steve Friend offers fascinating perspectives, substantive insight and side splitting humor to the podcast. He's not hard on the eyes either. At Real Steve, Friend is totally the face of the suspendable franchise.
Kyle is Okay too. Again, that's written by 100% not at Real Steve Friend. I know our buddy Steve did not write that. He told me he didn't. He said he definitely needed that read on the podcast, but that he didn't write it. So there you go folks, put your own up. We'll even read silly things from our friends up there. If you want to leave us a funny message and a five star review, we do appreciate it.
It does help the podcast grow. We're almost at 700 and our goal is 1000. By the end of the year. I think we're going to get there just like we we talked 100,000 followers on Twitter. It's a little, a little finger, a little middle finger to the FBI that we are getting this platform in this region. So many of you guys are responding to it. We we love it that you guys are doing it. Share it on all the places you got and we want to say thanks to Ryan Matta.
I should absolutely say that Ryan Matta at Ryan Madam Media Ma Tta Ryan's a fantastic guy. You can see his show on LFA TV. There he is. He's got a Patriot Tumblr sitting next to him. He is out there on the on the active Real time research bringing us the videos we need. And cueing this thing out, making it all run smoothly, even solving the VPN problem in the background.
So thanks so much y'all for for supporting the show and we will see you again tomorrow with another outstanding interview. Stand by for that. Thanks for listening to The Kyle Seraphin Show, streamed live weekdays on rubble.com/kyle Seraphin. Follow Kyle on Twitter, True Social, and Instagram at Kyle Seraphin SMS Srikanth.
