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 Serif. Well, hello my friends. Welcome to the Kyle Serafin Show. Today is Thursday. It is May the 16th and we are live right now on rumble.com/kyle Serafin.
We are live at Kyle Serafin on X Twitter, whatever you want to call it. And we are also rolling on Facebook and YouTube. But you guys know where the live chat is. You're seeing it right there. Where is it? There it is. It's on this side here. We're over here on Rumble. Join us. I want to say thanks to all those who have rated us. We had. If you guys don't know what a raid is, we actually can have a show running somewhere else and that chat can dump right into
ours. And we have Mcgroy Nation joining us and we've got the Amrads joining us. Really happy that you guys are here. I'm going to do a show that is very heavy today. I already know it's heavy. I have kind of a pit in my stomach knowing what we're going to get involved in and what we're going to talk about. It's going to be uncomfortable for me, but also for all of you who have served in the military
and in law enforcement. We are going to get into some heavy topics and we are not going to shy away from it. We talk about uncomfortable truths here. So that's it. I also sometimes wake up and have a sense that doesn't come from my own brain. I don't think it comes from me. I think it's inspired from somewhere else. And so sometimes we have a little bit of movement of the Holy Spirit. That's my belief. I've had it said to others, you know, others have told me as well.
You get these these thoughts that don't seem to originate in your own head, and we're going to talk about something from way back in the past for me that I want to share with you. I think it's an interesting lens to view the world, but I wanted to row it, warn you right up front that this one is going to have. Some weight to it today.
Before we do that, I want to say that today's program is brought you by a couple of folks that bring weight to my life that are keeping us moving and rolling and that is our friends over at patriotcoolers.com, patriotcoolers.com. I've got one sitting on my desk right now. You can see it's very similar to the one on the screen. We've got the engraved ones inbound. If you guys want to customize Tumblr, that supports the suspendables, my little brand of FBI whistleblowers that are
willing to take the fight. To the man you guys can get your. Your own at patriotcoolers.com. Pick out any of the coffee cups or the mugs or anything like that and you can go to customize and then under stock images our images are uploaded. You guys can use promo code. Kyle, Kyle again. Kyle will save you 10%. You'll get free shipping if you spend 50 bucks. If you buy 2 tumblers you get free shipping. That's the way to do it. And yeah, they look awesome.
They will let everybody know that you're in it for the fight to win it against this evil and weaponized government. And you're supporting guys like me and Garrett Boyle and Steve Friend and the other FBI whistleblowers that have stepped forward and said enough is enough. Like the badge is one thing and we like the job, but we like being Americans first. Patriot coolers.com is how you
support them. I also want to say thanks to my friends over at Catholic Vote. I'm going to get all these up front guys catholicvote.org. They are our underwriting sponsor. They are the reason why I'm able to do this and stay in this the way that I do. You can follow them on social media at Catholic Vote. You don't have to be Catholic to really appreciate what they send out every single day, which is a newsletter called The Loop. It's free. It cost you nothing.
It is some of the best conservative curated news feeds that you'll find anywhere. It takes about 3 minutes to read through today. They're talking about the border crisis and the number of God aways that the Biden administration have. They're talking about the debate between Trump and Biden, Obviously. If you listen to Dan Bongino's show yesterday, you know there's some hot takes on that that should be looked into. But they're covering all the important stuff.
They're talking about pro lifers who are being sentenced. A guy just got 21 months, another one got 32 months, another 50-7 months. Really good information. catholicvote.org. It's a free e-mail to you. You just put in your e-mail address and let them send it to you. And it's very, very low on the spam meter as far as I'm concerned. It's almost all news with a little. Bit of Catholic prayer at the end of it.
You're not going to be hurting for it, even if you're not Catholic. As I said, check them out. And then lastly and not least I want to say thanks to my buddies over at Matt Hat Jerky. Guys Matt Hat Jerky 2 D's in matt1tinhatjerky.com/kyle. The promo code Kyle saves you 20%. If you guys have been watching this bag, it is slowly. Disappearing. This is my absolute favorite. I'm going to probably be getting almost all of this black truffle. It's USDA prime beef. It is incredibly tender.
My wife doesn't like jerky that much. She came and sat in the office yesterday sitting in the chair behind me. And she's sitting there with our infant. And I gave her a bag and she reached and she was like, man. So she ended up taking a couple of handfuls. And even our eight-month old was like sitting there gnawing on it. It's tender enough for a baby, which is a couple of teeth, to eat it. It's so good. It really, really is good. Matt Hat jerky.com Slash Kyle.
Young kid, 18 years old, living the American dream. Has like 20 employees as a teenager because he's out there doing the right thing, which is starting a business that brings a great and quality product to your house. Mad hat jerky.com/kyle OK, let's get let's get into this. Today we're going to be talking about the story of Rodger Fortson. He's the young special operations airman that was killed in Florida. That's going to be really heavy. We are in the middle of National
Police week right now. It's a time when our nation celebrates both the heroes and and should also look at how do we do better policing in this country. We celebrate the people that put their lives on the line every single day to keep American freedom free and they do. Our local law enforcement is hands down the most important thing that keeps your life the way that it is, so you don't have to worry about marauders. And chaos on the streets and in
your neighborhoods. But everyone who puts on a badge is going to take off that badge someday. Every single one of you is going to take that badge off if you're wearing it. And every single one of you that wears a uniform is going to take off that U1 day and be a former member of the military, going to be a former member of law enforcement, going to be a former member of the red line of a fire department or an EMS service. I have the. Weird sort of space where I have
done all of those things. I was a served I served in the the Air Force. In fact, I'm carrying right now. In my pocket I just pulled this out and put it on my desk. This is a coin from the command from the command Master Sergeant of United States Special Operations in the Air Force, the Air Force AFSOC community. And it says on there you can run
but you will only die tired. This was given to me while we were marching across the country honoring some airmen who died in the line of duty overseas and we were interning some some wooden batons that had their names on them. We walked all the way from where we start at Lackland Air Force Base outside of San Antonio. We walked all the way across the country on foot and we went to Herbert Field, which is where this young airman, Rodger Fortson was killed and we walked
all the way across. You can say what you like about all the special operations divisions, they are all great. Navy Special warfare is incredible. The Marine MARSOC guys are amazing, those. Who? Those who serve in the in the Army Special Operations community, I've got friends who are Green Berets. They're absolute studs. Those of you who are SWIC operators and seals, like all of these people are studs. Absolute studs. But there's no debating that the folks in Air Force Special
Operations have the. Ability to kill more people, more bad guys, more quickly than any other force that exists because they have J tax. And they've got the special Operations air wing that flies around with AC130 gunships. And that's what this gentleman, this young man was a crew chief on. He was a senior airman. He's a young guy, he's 23 years old.
He was enlisted. The picture that we have of him standing on a ramp tells us a little bit about what it is they have the ability to do, to leash, unleash more hate on more evil people than anybody else. And and he was taken in a in, I think a an absolute miscarriage. Of what our law enforcement is supposed to do in this country. So we're going to warm up to that that, but that's where I'm going with it.
And I'm going to tell the story, actually of three black men today, strangely enough, we're going to tell the story of of Rodger Fortson. We're going to tell the story of of Harry Dunn and. We're going to tell the story a little bit. At least the beginning of the end of the beginning of the story of Dexter Taylor, who's been interviewed on this program. If you guys haven't seen that interview, you can go back. It was called Brooklyn After Dark.
It was a Saturday special. We did live with Dexter Taylor, who's now sitting in Rikers Island, and he was sentenced to 10 years for doing something very American. And I think these stories all show kind of a through line. So as I said, it's going to be heavy. I'm going to start with something that I don't rare. I rarely do this, but I think it's really important. Many of you have probably not seen this.
This is one of the great benefits of the classical education that I was entitled to that my parents spent a lot of money and sent me off to. This is a piece from a lecture slide in entitled The Genre Wheel and it's a The Genre Wheel was developed by a PhD in literature. I believe her name is Doctor Louise Cowan and I always refer to it in my brain as Cowan's Wheel. This may be totally. Foreign to you?
And it may not make sense until later, but I view a lot of the world the way that I learned Cowan's Wheel when I was a sophomore in high school. And I'll give credit to my sophomore English teacher or literature teacher. Her name was Linda Felice and she was outstanding and she was excellent. This is the way that literature can be defined and many of our stories.
The reason that we love literature, the reason why stories are so important, is because while history tells us what happened, literature tells us what happens. It's an ongoing story of of the people, all right. And what you're seeing on the wheel, on the wheel here in front of you, if you're not watching at the top of it, is what's called the lyric world. It's a section, It's a quadrant down to the right as you move clockwise around it is the is
the section called tragedy. And at the bottom at the 6:00 position, it basically covers from 4:00 until 7:00 is what's called comedy. And over at the 9:00 hour, as the sort of the end of it goes, it's called the epic cycle.
And this cycle turns clockwise. It almost always every story that you hear, every, every story, whether it be a a person telling you their personal story or whether it is a story that you're reading or whether it's literature, a great story including the Bible. These often fit into these categories and they move clockwise around Cowan's wheel. It progresses in a certain way. I heard a a quote.
From a long time ago when I was a kid, it was like one of those toilet book readings like Chicken soup for the soul. It's a comedy is tragedy plus time and partially we can say, OK, fine, when when there is a tragic situation and what is tragedy? We're going to have to talk about that in a second. But when you talk about tragedy, if you add enough time, we can all make fun of it, right?
There are there are dark jokes about 911 at this point, especially for those of us who've been in the first responder community that have worked at law enforcement, those of us in the military, we get what that's about, that dark gallows humor. It's tragedy. Plus time. Equals comedy. But it's also true in the way that our story, our human story progresses. I want you to look at what goes
on in the lyric world. It's anticipation, consummation and lamentation that moves into what's called the fall, which is the beginning of tragedy. After the fall is always suffering, and then there's an attempt for redemption. Often times that redemption doesn't end up. In a place of. Of comedy. At least not in the way that we think of comedy. It's not funny, ha ha. Comedy. It's in a in a place where the world starts to rectify itself.
And the comedy world is defined in three terms, and and you can imagine this. It's almost like hell, purgatory and heaven. It's referred to as infernal comedy, purgatorial comedy and paradisal. It is the movement towards getting to human fulfilment. And then lastly, we end up in the world of the epic, which is kind of that just like in our economy, we want to be in the peak position. The peak position is the story of the epic and that's the battle and the founding and the
ruling. America is currently, right now in the ruling status. What we don't want to do is fall out of that into anticipation, consummation and lamentation. We are attempting to keep ourselves in a place of permanent ruling and all societies are constantly trying to tweak whatever it is, whatever mechanism they have to keep ourself in this. If you're not familiar with coward's wheel, I highly recommend just just type it in Genre Wheel. But Doctor Louise Cowan?
Read it and. Apply it to to the lens as you read stories and we're going to start off with something that is almost comic and it's in its nature. It's not it's not sad, but it is the the situation that our country is currently facing with an open border and a bunch of chaos going on. I'm going to lighten this in as
we get to the heavy stuff. So this story comes to us from the Marine Times. Two people are now in custody after attempting to breach the Virginia Marine base at Quantico. I spent some time at Quantico as a trainee in the FBI. Any of you have gone through the Officer Basic School? They're the basic school is where they teach new lieutenants how to spell the word lost. You have to use the, the, the letters Lt. Anybody who knows that and has ever done Land Lab with a young
Lieutenant knows. Exactly what I'm talking about. You can't spell lost without the Lt. We need. We need our lieutenants. These are young men. There's also the there's a fake embassy there where they learn how to defend the embassies all around the world. US embassies. And these two guys decided to enter that place. Unknown needs unknown. Unknown mission set. Two people drove up to the Fuller Rd. Gate at the United States Marine Corps base at Quantico,
Virginia, in a box. Truck, they were stopped by the military sentries. There they were. They were questioned. And it turns out that they claim that they work for a subcontractor. With Amazon, we're seeing a lot of people with some very weird sort of Muslim, terroristic sort of tendencies working for Amazon. I'm going to share with you a
quick little story. When I was working for for the FBI on the surveillance team, one of the one of the actual scariest guys that we ever dealt with was someone who's been in the United States for quite a long time.
He done a bunch of weird stuff they had like an electronics business but he had a job with Amazon and they thought that he was getting ready to do a legit jihad action and and this guy basically shaved his head and he shaved his beard and he got very clean and he started spending like hours and hours and sensory deprivation in a in a. Pool at the.
YMCA. And so we're following this guy 24/7 and they're looking for any kind of indication that he was going to go and get operational and a terroristic sense. So we're following him everywhere. And then then he got a job on Amazon and we were told to let let his truck go, just let him do whatever he wanted while he was on work duty for Amazon. One of the scariest things that's out there is the access you can have.
Now with the current delivery systems, we have Uber Eats, whether you're talking about people who are, you know, driving things to you, just getting into cars with people or getting access to buildings because we have these contractors and subcontractors that are representing legitimate authorities, but they don't have any background checking. And so these guys were claiming to be with Amazon, whether they were or not. Is another story.
They claimed they were going to the US post office which is located in the town of Quantico, so that is on the the Oceanside of the base and for whatever reason these guys were actually taken out. They had some basic under undergoing of the vetting procedures that happened at those gates and then it turned out that they. Were. Not allowed to be there, they. Were not the people that represented themselves. One of them was a Jordanian national.
The other person turned out to be on an FBI terror watch list. How interesting, right? Just going to say we should generally take a lot of personal responsibility for our own safety. We're in the middle of this police. We're going to be talking about a police story. But it's important for you to know that the police are there to investigate wrongdoing after the fact. It's very rare. Most of you do not live on a military base.
There are some people probably that live on military bases that listen to this story. But I'm just telling you, there's not an armed gate guard who has a a vehicle blocking barrier in front of your neighborhood, most likely. Which means that you're responsible for your safety. You're responsible for you open the door to you are the one who has to look around and decide whether or not what's going on
around you is safe and not safe. Not all of us have the benefit if either contractors or Marine Corps guards standing in front and screening all the vehicles that come nearby. And there are some weirdos out there. That one that I went out there and followed this guy, like I said, shaved his beard, was like hanging out in the YMCA. He ended up getting a search warrant served at his house. They weren't able to arrest him. Classic FBI incompetence, but they didn't have the goods on him.
They did a search warrant. They let the guy go and the guy started speeding, clawing close to 100 miles an hour on surface streets. Me and my team pursued him. He disappeared about a mile away from my house. He was able to get away from us because he had such a head start. The team actually that was doing the search warrant let him go before they let our surveillance team know to get in place. Classic stupidity.
And as we follow this guy, he ended up having some predetermined drop point at a Taco. Bell about a mile away from where I lived. He jumped out of his vehicle, jumped in the vehicle with somebody else, claimed that he just randomly met this guy. When we found him later, he got in that vehicle, drove away, disappeared for about 5 or 6 days and was out making preparations to leave the country. Then he popped up at 5:00 AM on a Sunday morning.
My team and I picked him up. We were completely burned. He was driving like 15 miles an hour and a 40 in front of a bunch of military contractors that are all in a place called Springfield, VA. It's just outside the Beltway if you guys are familiar with it. So we followed him around. He went, he got to his Amazon job. He we were told to let him go once again and he ditched his
Amazon truck. He got on a bus, took it down to Georgia, got on a bus from Georgia, went to Mexico City, got on a bus in Mexico City, went down to Panama, tried to catch a flight to Marrakech. He was trying to fly overseas and join up with some of my ISIS affiliates, I want to say. And that flight actually flew over US areas. It flewed over the tip of Florida and US airspace. So he was actually kicked off for the no fly list.
The Panamanians deported him to Guatemala, the Guatemalans back to Mexico. The Mexican sent him right back up to Northern Virginia. To my knowledge, he's still there. And we let him all go because he was, you know, assumed to be working for Amazon. Like, that's OK. The idea that you have a terrorist who has access to an enormous box truck and has access to a lot of buildings with those credentials, he was a legit Amazon employee. I'm just telling you, you got to
be careful. And this is one of a sort of a a walk. Up to it. We're all responsible for our own safety in this world. We're all responsible for our own personal accountability. And if not, if you do not, hold on to that. You will give. That responsibility to someone else and they may not treat your safety. The way that you would and. We're going to get a little bit to that in just a second here, too. Let's get into the heavy stuff right now.
Experts say gun alone does not justify deadly force in the fatal shooting of. Florida airmen. His name is Rodger Forson. When I hear people ignoring this story, and a lot of people have, and I've been sitting on it for a little bit, I wanted to get a good sense of what happened and what did not happen. So I've been, I've been digesting this slowly. I have this, this video, and for whatever reason, it's the thing that rings like it's just over
and over in my head. I just feel like this is where I I keep thinking of this scene and it's it's not 100% applicable, but the the sentiment is, so I'm going to play it real quick here and then we'll come right back. I understand in death a member of Project Mayhem has a name. His name is Robert Paulson. His name is Robert Paulson. His name is Robert Paulson. His name is Robert Paulson. His name is Robert Paulson. His name is Robert Paulson.
His name is Robert Paulson. His name is Robert Paulson. His name is Robert Paulson. His name is Robert Paulson. His name is Robert Paulson. Is it? Powerful scene from from the movie Fight Club. It's something that always kind of sits me. A lot of these movies stay with me and they tell us, like I said, they tell us the story of not what is happening but what has happened, what happens. For human beings, there's power in the name, and this kids name was Rodger Forson and he was a
Special Operations airman. And as far as I can tell, we're going to play the body. Cam footage and we're going to go through it. I don't think he did anything wrong. He may have done things that are less advised, but that shouldn't cost your life. Not in America. This is America.
And when you swear allegiance to to the Constitution of this country as a law enforcement officer, listen, when you are a member of the military, you're actually swearing allegiance to a different part of the Constitution. It is my take that when you put on the thin green line, you're saying more that you are going to lean towards the foreign enemy. That's the nature of what our military does. It looks outward.
And when you do so as a sheriff's deputy or a law enforcement officer in the federal government state, you're actually facing more of the domestic enemy. They're both real enemies for you, no doubt, but as a member
of the military we're facing. Externally, that's where we want to go. When you are a member of law enforcement, your job is to leash yourself under the Bill of Rights. You're not necessarily protecting the Article 1 powers of Congress, of the Article 2 powers of the executive, the Article 3 powers that's put up our judiciary. That's not your job as a law enforcement officer. Your job is to know that the government has limits and you are limited in your scope and
your authorities. It's incredibly important. There's this kind of funny joke that I play every single day. You guys may not know that. It's kind of a tongue in cheek joke, but as I enter into this show, we talk about how I'm a recovering FBI agent. Why is that? Because the FBI is not a place where you should go at this point, and so in a lot of vices. People recover through 12 step programs. It's an ongoing joke between me and the Buddies. Civil liberties enthusiast.
When I when I had my dad do the voice over for that, yes, that's my dad's voice here. It's a family show. When I had him do the voice over, he was like, what does that mean? Like that doesn't have a meaning. A civil liberties enthusiast is something we all should be. It's kind of a tongue and teek joke, because you can't be an enthusiast for something that is a God giving liberty. We have to actually be willing to give our lives over our civil liberties.
So enthusiast is kind of a play on how serious this is really supposed to be. It's supposed to be the most serious thing. Second Amendment defender. I lost my job at the FBI specifically because. I wouldn't give ground to a local law enforcement officer who did not have the authority to tell me to do something with a firearm. And he told me and I was safe. I had a holstered up weapon talking to another cop when I was an FBI agent and he said would you go somewhere else?
And I said no, I won't. And that got me thrown out of the FBI officially, that was what they they called it. I'm wearing a duty belt. I'm wearing an FBI badge. I look like he looks like in plainclothes. I'm out doing firearms training, doing things like I would almost guarantee that guy couldn't do. I'm practicing shooting at a silhouette from 50 yards out of a draw and under a second and a
half. That was my part time for what I wanted to do. I wanted to make sure that I want any gunfight with a bad guy, but the real key is it's got to be a bad guy. And he recognized that I have a holster and a. Duty belt.
And I'm not a problem. They didn't recognize that with this guy, Rodger Fortson. He showed up at a door of his own home, in his own home, and in America, when you swear allegiance to the Constitution as a law enforcement officer, you're also swearing that you will protect and you will limit yourself against all of those things. Unreasonable search and seizures you will.
You will engage and due process. You won't let the process become the punishment, as the 8th Amendment tells us that they can't do cruel and unusual punishment things that are. Outside of the of the chain and really importantly, you shouldn't be limiting things like speech, the practice of religion, the ability for us to assemble freely and petition our government for the redress of grievances.
Your job is to protect the civil liberties of those that are not authorized to carry a gun and a badge and be the violent arm of the state. So what else does that include? It includes the Second Amendment. We don't just have the ability to keep weapons in our possession. We have the ability to bear them, to bear the means to carry them so as to use them. And this kid was doing that. He's a kid, he's 23 years old. He's a man. He was a young man.
But having a gun alone does not justify deadly force And all the cops that are out there on the social media apps that are coming at me and saying, hey, he was carrying a gun, the guy had a reasonable fear. Did he, though? You could articulate it, but then you have to articulate what the hell you were doing in that place. In the first place. How dare you show up to somebody else's house, you're on their turf, and then you're going to dictate the terms of their interaction.
If man holding gun equals deadly force to you, put down the badge and get out right now, 'cause you are a problem. That means you are poorly trained and you are a liability to the public. There's no two ways around it for me. Just because you can articulate that this was a deadly force situation where you can justify it doesn't mean that you did it right. OK. Holding a firearm at a low position, He wasn't that low ready. He wasn't prepared to deploy that.
He's handling it below the waist, is he not? We're going to show you the video. It's very, very quick that you see it. This kid has almost no time to respond to it. And that cop does things that I think are objectively bad. His not. I'm going to set you up for what you're going to hear why I think this is the case. We're going to. First of all, we'll show you the whole body Cam footage in a second, but let me prime your mind to it. He bangs on the door.
He pounds on the door like he's doing what I would call a knock and announce. A knock and announce is when you're there to serve legal process, you either have a search warrant or an arrest warrant and you are looking to engage in lawful activity that is going to, that is going to infringe on somebody's otherwise legal space because you have a court order from a Magistrate Judge authorizing you to use the force of the government to go into that place.
It it, it is a it is a command, not a request. This man was doing what I would also call in reality, not a knock, knock and announce. He was doing what we call a knock and talk, a field interview, a voluntary contact. And that means that this, this airman had zero legal requirement to engage with the cop. He didn't have to open the door, not even a little bit. He didn't have to speak to him. He didn't have to engage with
him. He could have looked through the people and ignored it. He chose to answer it. And many people have said, you know, he's in the military, he's part of a special operations wing. He's surrounded by guys like combat controllers and para rescue men, by tack pees, by people who know what what violence looks like and have to do it overseas. He's assuming that we're on the same team. I know that because I stood in those shoes. When you look at law enforcement, you think Team
America, one team, one fight. That is how you look at it when you're wearing the green uniform. Cops are my friends. I got their back. This is the kind of kid who I have to imagine. If he drove by and saw a highway patrolman engaging in a one-on-one fight on the side of the highway, he'd probably pull over and get involved because that's what you do because that's what you think you signed up for.
When you agree to have the same oath as those that are serving domestically, it's one oath with two different focuses, and you're allowed to carry a gun in your own home and open the door. I assure you that if someone bangs on the door at my house, especially with an authoritative knock, I'm coming there with a gun. You may not see it, but I'm going to have it now. He's young, he's 23 years old.
He didn't serve in law enforcement the way that I got to see it. My guess is that if you're smart, you carry a gun, but you conceal it and you train to be able to take it from concealment and engage if you need to. I always have a weapon on me. It's either out of sight or it's under on my body where you can't see it. But I'm always going to be armed. But that doesn't mean that I'm not going to open the door sometimes with a weapon in hand and I'm allowed to in my home.
You're on my turf and you have no legal right to do anything there except knock and ask for voluntary compliance for an interview. We're going to watch this video. What I did not show in this video because this is, this is a body Cam clip, Obviously there's some before it. I'm going to let you know the part before it showed him going into an office that seems to be the apartment office.
There's a young man there who sounds very weak and he says I didn't make the call like this other lady does. The cop goes into the office, speaks, then he steps out, then he talks to the woman who you're going to see him talking to, and then he goes up and engages at this apartment solo. He says backups on the way. It's worth listening to all of this. Number one, there is often times there certainly was in Virginia. When I was working.
Legal requirements for apartment complexes and landlords to surrender information to law enforcement if they have an authorized law enforcement purpose about the tenant in any given place. If I wanted to go in as an FBI agent showed my credentials, walked in and said, listen, I'm going to go knock on door 14 O1, which is what they're talking about in this door. Do you have any information about what this guy does for a living? Do you have any information about the people that are on the
lease? Can you tell me who I can expect behind that door? They are legally required in Virginia to give it. And there's a general reason that if you're going to make the phone call and say, hey, we need a cop to come out here, respond, they'll probably do it if the privacy laws in the in the state don't forbid them. It's their information. They can voluntarily give it. It's very easy to ask for it cost almost nothing. It's a few seconds of your time. This was not an imminent call,
by the way. This isn't like someone is screaming at the top of their lungs and we think someone's dying. This is there may be some kind of a fight going on and we'd like to stop this in the future because they get at it all the time. He doesn't do that. This officer, this deputy does not go and ask for information who's on the lease. Do you know anything about it? Because you know what it would say on the lease. What is your source of income? What is your? Employment.
And you would know that this guy works at Herbert Field. When you find that out and you would know that he's an airman. It doesn't mean that there's not dirt bag airman. I know a bunch of them. Like a bunch of unlisted guys are garbage, right? But at least tells you what kind of character you're dealing with there. And if I think that I'm going to approach somebody who has a a military uniform hanging in their closet that is off duty, it is my assumption that they at least know how to handle
firearms and they may own one. It's a likely assumption that they have one, and it wouldn't be weird to imagine that somebody who's seen death and destruction, this guy was given some medals that show that he had done time in combat zones on an AC130. He's seen what happens when you got to go and do violence against bad guys. Violence is, at least in his mind, It's a possibility, and answering the door with a gun is not outside. The range of like acceptable per views.
OK, this is also the same agency Bill T just pointed out in the chat. It's the exact same agency that had a guy do a combat role because a freaking ACORN fell on his own Suburban or his own SUV where he had an unarmed handcuffed subject in and the guy turned in mag dumped on his own on his own vehicle and thank God didn't hit the the subject in there because that would be an Eighth Amendment violation,
would it not? It tells me that the people that are working in this department are jumpy. If two out of your deputies have shown up on recent Cam footage that have gone immediately to gun when things did not warrant a gun that says that you are training somebody poorly. One is just, you know, maybe one guy's experience two points to find a line in geometry. We can draw a line straight through it. And I got some real problems if your guy sees man with gun equals deadly force situation,
right? Now. In fact, I will also share with you before we show the body Cam footage that there is a training scenario at Quantico for FBI agents that specifically deals with this. You go into an interview situation and you walk into the house. This is like in Hogan's Alley, the famous Hogan's Alley, which is a bunch of like actual homes, but instead of having regular drywalls, they have oriented Strand boards. You can shoot SIM rounds and stuff into them. It's like a shoot house.
And when you go into that that house, there is someone sitting at the table and they've got a shotgun leaned against the wall right behind them in arm's reach. That's not a shoot situation. It doesn't matter if they had it sitting on their lap. It's not a shoot situation. You might want to draw and give commands. And that's acceptable if that has to happen. But you got to have a reason to disarm somebody, especially in their own house, when you're a guest, and that's what's going
on in this. Thing all right. That's enough set up for the body Cam. I want you to look about the way that he stands and where he stands. Some of this is tactically sound. You don't want to stand in the door well when you don't know what's coming on the other side, but you may want to stand in the door well, when there's no expectation of violence on the other side, you're making a
voluntary contact. You should expect that somebody was going to want to visually ID you as law enforcement, because people say crazy things all the time. And if you have somebody that is otherwise like disinclined to open the door, you can stand there. You can have them look at you and you can say, hey, you know, I'm with the Sheriff's Department. We had a report. Do you have a moment to come outside, talk with me, take them out of the environment, go and
have that chat? You're asking to make contact. There is no legal authority to make a demand on this kid, and he died for it. Here we go kind. Of sounded like it was getting out of. Hand OK, Which door? No. I'm not sure. Two weeks ago I was walking by like by their apartment basically on this side and I was hearing someone yelled like stupid like right after, but I wasn't sure where it came from and I couldn't call. Like I didn't want to call. Which room is it?
1401. 1401 OK. But the girl sounded scared. The one that called, she said she was like staying out of it. Sounds like it's getting really out of hand. So it's hit #4, OK, we stand out there and directly the deputy is coming 3/12, 1:11, 312 and 111. All right, where are we at right now? We've got a guy that's taken an allegation. From a third party. This is a woman who took a report from someone that lives on the property and now he's
taking it from this woman. So we have the game of telephone being played. She's confirmed that it's apartment 14 O1 and his initial contact is going to go solo up to 14 O one on his own. She repeats it. The second time, she sounds a little less sure. The easy thing to do would have this person come up and point you towards it. He tells her to stay in the parking lot and direct the other deputy that way.
We already know that there's a guy in the office that could do that, and we also already know that he's got a radio and dispatch and they're dispatching another officer. If you can't give clear directions, I'm on the 4th floor, come up and go to 14 O1 the same way that he just got it. Then what the hell are they doing? That's the purpose of having comms. We don't leave a third party to try to direct somebody unless there are so many bodies around that we're looking for a job for them.
I've done that as a paramedic. I've asked people to go and do something on my behalf when we didn't have enough hands. He's one handed. He needs her to ID the door. If you ask me, that's the right thing to do because fourteen O 1 is what she said, but she's not looking at it. And she could walk up there and be like, oh you know what I said 14 O one. But what I really meant was something else we don't like. As far as we know, this was the apartment that was supposed to be going.
That he was supposed to go to. But he's out there now. He listens to the door. That's where we just stopped. He listened to the door. That's fine. And we don't hear anything on the body Cam. So nothing is loud enough that neighbors are going to likely be hearing anything going on outside of that door. And if there's something going on inside of there, all you need to know is is that he doesn't hear what's going on inside the
apartment. That means that they probably don't hear very well going in. This kid apparently was on the FaceTime call with a girlfriend, which might mean that he had earbuds in. It certainly means that he was distracted. Now we're going to listen to this guy do the knock and announce and as I said knock and announce. Knock knock and talk. A knock and talk sounds like this. OK. Sheriff's Department got a minute? Can we talk to you?
I'm. Not going to announce this Bang Bang Bang Bang bang Sheriff's. Department. Open the door. There's a major difference between those two The way that you choose the technique often times will choose the outcome. If you choose to kick down somebody's door at 0600, the way the FBI likes to do, then you are going to confront somebody when they are groggy, sleepy, and they may choose to go for a firearm because it's still dark outside. And they're just getting their
bearings. If you knock on the door or you grab them while they're getting gas, they're out in the world. You've been able to view them, see them, you know they're awake. You know that they are at an appropriate state of awareness that they are in public. It's a big, big difference. When you engage somebody and the way you engage someone, you often times will choose the outcome of that engagement. By choosing your technique, you choose the outcome. This guy chose a technique.
He also ended up in an outcome. He started with aggression in a place that doesn't necessarily warrant it, and it ended in violence and death. All right, we're going to go back to the to the video here. All right, right there. I just want to stop and and and talk about this. You heard that soft knock, then he stepped out of the way. Imagine you hear a soft knock at your door. Are you going to go look, This is when they claim, oh, you look through the people. It like it, like he he looked
through the people, saw nothing. That's totally reasonable. He looks through the people and the cop is left. He doesn't want to linger in the doorway because he's afraid of getting shot. It already tells you the mindset that this guy has gone to, like a tactical mindset. When you step out of the doorway, you're concerned about one thing, rounds coming through the door. Why would you think that in this case? Why are you there by yourself, if that's a possibility for you?
All of this is bad. It's bad policing. And so just because he's going to probably end up being justified in shooting this kid and putting him down because he had a firearm and he's able to articulate an imminent danger of death or serious physical injury, which is the legal standard, generally speaking. And as far as I can tell, that's the same in Florida. His authorized purpose for being there is so low. He's doing a knock and talk and he just walked away. From the people.
Where the guy's going to be able to see him, we're. Going to keep going with this now. You're going to see he changes tactics once his mindset changes. Sheriff's Office Open the door. He's out of view when he yells Sheriff's Office, right. So now you've seen this all this argument says, well you know he he did a a knock and then he announced himself as police. First of all he did a soft knock then he got out of the way then he goes and does a hard knock call Sheriff's Office.
The guy says something about police on the inside, like I think he said it was, you know, I don't know, maybe it's the police or something to that effect, but that guy announces it afterwards, right? Very, very different to announce in a in a loud way when you're banging on the door like that. Now we're about to get really aggressive and this is going to be the end of the video, obviously. Sheriff's Office. Open the door step. Down. Of course it just cut there.
I have no idea why that just cut off. That's when he shoots the kid. Maybe it's because they don't want to show this. I know on YouTube they get really upset about you about showing a shooting. He's standing there with a door, with a gun below his waistband and a straight arm relaxed, with a hand kind of hanging on the door. And the cop draws down very, very quickly, I might add, and puts him down and kills him right there. That's the story.
It's bad tactics. It's predictable that somebody would have a bad outcome from this and it's not OK and it's not OK to cover this stuff. I'm not saying that this man should be put to death for what he did, but this, but this deputy, that's two it's very, very it's two in very, very close succession, bad instances of visibility from the same Sheriff's Department in Florida. So what the hell is going on? He's been on, he's on administrative duty.
They're going to investigate it. The problem with this is, is that articulating the same way that I would have had to articulate it on duty, the deadly force policy for the DOJ is very similar for all. There's sometimes more restrictive, but as far as the most permissive deadly force policy that exists, the DOJ has it.
As far as I'm aware, everybody I've ever talked to that was a cop said it. And our deadly force policy said that law enforcement officers may use deadly force only when necessary, that is to say, when the subject of such force poses. And here's the key part. An imminent danger. Of death or serious physical injury to the officer or another person. That's it. OK, you have to pose an imminent danger of death or serious physical injury to A to the officer.
Or another person. Is a guy with a gun in his hand that's casually answering the door that doesn't know what's going on, that doesn't know why you're there? Is that guy in imminent danger? He might be by the time you open the door and he's got a gun in his hand. But is he answering the door with a gun in his hand because you weren't standing in front of people doing a knock and talk and acting like you were going to be doing a knock and announce
like you're serving process? This stuff is so bad. It's so bad and this kid is dead. Because of it, Yeah. Sheriff's Department. Open the door. It's ugly. It's all ugly. And like I said, if you come to my door and you act like this, you're going to probably not get the door open. That's the right answer. It turns out folks don't answer the damn door.
The cops are so scared because we have such a shitty existence in this country when it comes to the way that people deal with cops, that this became an imminent danger for him in his mind. And yeah, he's probably going to be justified. I'm sure his shoot was actually going to be justified, but his name is Rodger Forsen and he's dead because of it. It's ugly. I want to talk more about taking some responsibility.
I'm also going to let you guys know where he's going to break break for one second here and pivot over. I got my first chance to use my my pillow towels, the the bath sheets that I ordered up, they're actually really good. I wanted to not like them because I'm such a contrarianmypillow.com/kyle promo code. Kye we got 30% off with that. Using my own promo code, you
guys can do the same. You get 30 to 50% off depending on what's going on. Sounds like they got like a really good deal going on in the slippers if that's your world right now. I've got slippers at the moment, so I'm not ordering up, but you can at mypillow.com. Kyle Kyle will save you just like anybody else. It's. A short, short little. Promo code that gets you the same deal that anybody else would have. And I can now actually recommend the towels. They're they're solid.
They're an absolutely solid. They're just a terrycloth tall. There's nothing like magical about them, but they do a good job and they work well. And if you guys are so interested, check out mypillow.com/kyle. Get the same deal as anybody else will get you, but we. Do it here. You're supporting our show. I want to keep talking about this idea of responsibility. We outsource things to the cops like this. Right. We outsource the violence in the state. I'm not comfortable with that.
Not as a man, not as an American. At some point in time, you're going to take off that uniform. You're going to take off that badge. You're going to take off your military apparatus, right? You're not going to be there. You're going to be a. Retired member of the military or a former member of the military, you're going to be a former cop or law enforcement officer. At some point, you will be an American again. So you're always an American
first. That's the reason why I don't work for the FBI right now, for whatever it's worth. I knew that right away. Husband and father, those are non negotiable American, not negotiable. I will always be those three things. It turns out what I do for a living is negotiable, and doing it for the FBI is something that didn't have to last forever. That's why I wanted. To. Hold on to American Civil Liberties.
That's why I say that I'm a Second Amendment defender, because the Second Amendment is mine all the time. From the time that I'm born to the time that I die. It's a God-given, right? The privilege of serving with a uniform or a badge, that's negotiable. It can be taken away. And I'm going to say that in this light because we're going to tell a story that's really tough to watch. This is another really tough
one. There's a young Indiana boy who's 10 years old, and he killed himself after suffering bullying. I don't know what suffering horrific bullying looks like, but here's my real. Problem. And I'm not trying to jump on these people because I think that they are in a bad, bad place. I want to use them as a as a springboard for us to learn a lesson. The parents say. They complained to their school 20 times. They outsourced it. They sent it to someone else. This was their problem.
This was their son. This is their responsibility. When you give your responsibilities up. When you surrender your responsibility to. Somebody else, and you expect them to take the actions that you would take. You are wrong. You are absolutely wrong, because nobody is going to protect your freedom and your liberties and your. Children, I'll say the way that you would You can't trust anybody else to do the job that you should do for yourself.
And. A different way of saying that is. A different way of saying that is is. How? How on earth are? You going to take the most precious thing in the world that you have and assume that somebody else is going to feel the same way about it. The government's job is to get the best outcome for the best number of people. That turns out to be getting everybody to and from school and getting them checked through the boxes. They are never going to care about your kids the way that you do.
It's my major problem. It's the reason this is another argument for homeschooling. It turns out it's also an argument for dads to engage. Yesterday we talked about make men masculine again to embrace masculinity. Masculinity also involved sometimes getting the threat of violence across to a stranger. Because your tribe, your little family and your friends circle are yours and they are your
responsibility. And if you're going to wait for the police to do it, or a school to do it, or a government to do it, you're going to wait. Nobody is coming to save you. I know Mike Glover's in some hot water right now, but the fact that matter is no one's coming to save you. He says that correctly in a lot of his videos. You know, it's up to us. You be your own first responder always. And when your child at 10 years old. And I'm going to show you this video. This kid looks adorable.
He looks like the the nerdiest little 10 year old kid, exactly like me. And some of my best buddies look like he's got glasses, which were way more fashionable than my glasses were when I was that age. I know that my folks watch this sometimes and they'll see I had some really, really bad nerdy glasses, like some BCG, like what they call birth control glasses, the ugly ones from the military. I had those when I was like 10 or 11 years old, going into fifth grade.
I remember it. I had the buck teeth. I was a goofy looking, awkward kid at ten, 11-12 years old. But I also had a very masculine father, and I don't think this would have gone anywhere. I'm really sad for this man. I'm really sad for him because he's going to beat himself up over this forever. But we should learn from it. There's no there's no horrible thing that we can't take a lesson from. And this lesson is a couple of things #1 be your own 1st Responder. #2, You should home
school your kids. We need to be engaged with them. This is the saddest thing, but we're going to watch it anyway because we need to. Kind of We need to be aware of what's happening. How was it? Good. He. He was my little boy. He was my baby. He was the youngest one. Held him in my arms, isn't it? I did. I did things that no father should ever have to do at any time. I close my eyes. It's all I could see. They were making fun of him for his glasses in in the beginning.
They went on to make fun of his teeth. He was beat up on the school and on the school bus, and the the kid broke his glasses and everything. And I called the school and I'm like, what are you doing about this? It keeps getting worse and worse and worse. It's not getting any better. As a matter of fact, it's getting worse. They do. They knew this was going on.
I. Always tell the kids because Sammy and his sister went to bed first because they were younger and telling them they had to brush their teeth and get ready for bed and having them him not being there to hug before bed. It's awful. It's absolutely awful He And as he said he didn't think that no father should have to do bury
their child right. But the minute that it got physical and they showed pictures in that little video the bruising on his neck, the fact that they broke glasses it's like where you at man it's a masculinity check father's your job is to protect, provide and lead your families. We had Mark Houck on here before. He's the guy that went and fought the DOJ face to face.
He went to a federal courtroom to affirm his right to protect his child when some dirt bag outside of an abortion clinic was being disgusting and profane and evil, and he shoved the guy to the ground gently. By the way, Mark Hot was a huge guy. He was a college football player, and he gently pushed a man to the ground who was being wildly inappropriate to a child. Why? Because that's your child. Because you are setting an example of what men look like to your child.
And he did it judiciously, and he did it with restraint. He did it with the proper amount of force. But he used. Force. None the less, there are times when the only answer is force. Why was this dad still letting a kid ride a bus after this? Because of his job? Because he was inconvenienced?
Because he had to go to work. If you can't drop your job for the reason that you really exist on this planet, if you can't walk away from it, and I'm talking to myself here too, as much as anybody, I really am. If you can't look and say there's a real problem that's going on in my home, one of my people that I am charged with responsibility for, I'm charged
with protecting. God has entrusted me with this person, and I've got to step up. If you can't do that, God help you pray for strength and then do the right thing. This is what being a suspendable is about. It might cost you something. It might cost you a promotion. It might cost you overtime pay. It might cost you something out of your paycheck. It might cost you your friendships. You might be the weirdo family that has to take your I knew a guy.
He was a Green Beret. His son got himself into some trouble, got into a really bad crowd. He picked up his whole family, left his job and his life and he moved to Montana and put the kid on a farm because that's what needed to happen. That kid ended up serving with me in the Air Force. He was a good kid. Dad was a hard, hard man and left everything, sold
everything. They had pulled the kid out because his 16 year old kid was running around with a bad crowd and he was going to end up in jail or dead. So that's what he did. Sometimes you got to be that guy. Men are supposed to make hard decisions, Protect, provide. And lead leadership is the key
there. Did that dad ever get on the bus and get in that kids face that was punching him and just said the next person that hits my kid is going to find themselves like on the other side of the engine block of this vehicle. I'm going to throw you through this windshield. Go tell your dad, that's what's going to happen if you touch another child on this bus. If you bullies want to be bullies, you're going to deal with men you want to get in the game of. Violence.
You're going to get into the step, you're going to step into the arena where men operate and it will go badly for you. Did that ever happen? Bus drivers are bus drivers, man. They're not. They're not supposed to be disciplinarians. They don't have the ability to shepherd the flock. That's happening before. My wife and I were just talking before we went live. There's all kinds of crazy shit that happens on school buses. Drugs are dealt, kids are
bullied, sexual assaults happen. Voluntary sexual contacts are happening. Exploration, all this other stuff. You can't outsource the raising of your children to the government and expect good results. You're going to get flipping government results. You're going to get mediocrity and your. Kid may be that sensitive, gentle soul. With the goofy big glasses and the goofy teeth, that just isn't ready to handle it, and that's
on you as a parent. It turns out we don't want to kick these people when they're down. We want to. We want to bring them up, and we need to learn the lesson that they are showing us, which is very important. You show them how to be men, young men, how to be men by being a man and doing things that are difficult. All right, You want to talk about men who are foolish and cry in public and act stupid? Here's one, Harry Dunn. What is done is done.
Ladies and gentlemen, this is a little bit of kind of like our our movement towards we're we're we're moving in the comic wheel. Maybe this is the the purgatorial Harry Dunn, former police officer who defended the Capitol. Isn't that some bullshit? On January 6th, defeated in the Maryland House primary, this guy raised well over $4 million. Our buddy Steve Baker has been covering this at the Blaze. If you're not checking it out, he he raised something like $4.5
million. His his FEC reporting showed 3.8 million in change that he spent on campaign. He's wearing AT shirt right now. If you're not seeing it says Insurrection, a violent uprising against an authority or government, January 6th, 2021 is the second thing. He had his. Own T-shirts made showing that he was the hero of the insurrection. Most of the things he said on that day or about that day were lies. He was speaking falsely and he just lost to a state senator named Sarah Efreth who had a
powerful pro Israel group. Oh, isn't that interesting? A little smear from NBC there. Like it matters. They won the primary and heavily Democratic third district. OK, fine. Well, at least we know that there is a little bit of justice that Harry Dunn is done, at
least in this particular run. Doesn't mean he won't run for something else, but he didn't make it in this time around, and we were almost sure of it. You guys remember we just covered his that the groups that were endorsing him, he was endorsed by a flippin veterans group when he's not a veteran and there are veterans that were in the race, pretty wild. It shows you a little bit of the injustice of what the Democrat
Party is willing to get behind. And yes, I know they just found some cocaine in the offices of the Capitol Police this week. The Capitol Police are not police, for whatever it's worth. They may get to participate in Police Week. They may have the word police in their title. But the Capitol Police are not police. They're glorified federal security guards. They get a very good pension. They have almost no investigative capabilities and all the things to expand them.
The expansion that you have of of their authorities and going places to like protect members of the of the US Congress. Very strange. Those are executive authorities that they are trying to to engage in and it is I think a very strong constitutional problem. You can have a security guard, but they don't have, they don't have executive authority to engage in law enforcement because they are not part of the executive branch of the government. They fall underneath the
legislative branch. It's very weird. So I call them the National Mall cops, you guys know, I call them that. I don't have a lot of respect for, not that the individual people can't be great people, but the institution, the agency of Capitol Police, was the bottom of the federal barrel when it came down to it. And it's mostly because they were not an executive agentry. It's worth knowing they are not in the business of law enforcement. Even with the word Capitol
Police in front of them. There's all kinds of people that hold special police status in Washington, DC, and they're all security guards. That's all they are. I'm not mad at them. Like I said, I don't. I don't. I don't hold anybody in lower regard because of the job they have, but I don't want to add them into the category of people that like you don't support the
thin blue line. Harry Dunn was not that, and apparently he never was able to progress beyond the length, the rank of private first class within that organization. Which is to say that he was an unpromotable, intellectually maxed out mid wit at best, and probably a dim wit if you ever heard him speak. He barely is able to articulate
anything of value. And if you've ever seen his writing, apparently he's basically illiterate, had to go to the press pool in order to write things he was unauthorized to write on duty. Follow Steve Bakers reporting over at The Blaze. He's got his own tab. It's theblaze.com/ithink. I think Truth is his is his title there. So you can go to blazeortheblaze.com/truth and read all the reporting.
There's plenty on Harry Dunn there and we're going to finish up with something that is both dark and very important. Like I said, we're going to talk about Dexter Taylor and so here it is. Actually, you know what? Before we do, let me just say if you guys want to support our our guys, especially gear to Boyle, he just got out of the hospital. He did a long fast that revealed some medical issues he's recovering from that He's going to be OK.
I'm wearing a shirt right now. This is the black version, the night OPS version of the exact same shirt that you see on the screen, which is the last line sub stack logo. It is the AR15 rifle with a plume coming out of it. It is a idea and our memory that our civil liberties are not to be trifled with, that there is a pen that is mightier than the sword and then a sword sometimes is necessary and will be mightier than the pen. It depends on the situation.
The 1st Amendment is first for a reason. It is the weapon of mass destruction and mass information, but sometimes you got to do it on a point level. It's worth noting you guys can support that at the dash dispendables.com The dash dispendables.com is the websites the merch store 100% benefits. The O'boyle family sweatshop. The dash dispendables.com. The promo code Kyle will save you 10%. We just have a promo code to track who's going there. Promo code Kyle.
Kyle 10% off doing that. Let's talk about my friend Dexter Taylor. I don't make Internet friends folks. I don't know if you guys know this, but I don't have Internet friends. Generally speaking, it takes a lot of conversations and usually it has to be in person, but I've got a couple of Internet friends. Tracy Beans is one of my Internet friends. We've never met in public, but
we talk all the time. Alfa Luna, Alfredo Luna is one of my Internet friends and Dexter Taylor is one of my Internet friends, a real friend, and this is his story. This is coming from the sub stack from Jeff Charles. If you guys want to go check that out, it's called libertyorelse.com. Dexter Taylor Sentencing statement. As many of you guys know, he was convicted and he was just sentenced to 10 years. He's sitting in Rikers. And I want to read the entirety
of his statement. We're going to go a little bit long. We're going to read the entirety of his statement because it is. Very poignant at this moment, Dexter Taylor doing time. For. For exercising his Second Amendment right. Like I said, we're telling the story of three black men here, one who's a government sycophant. He didn't get anything out of it. Thank God he's got lots of money and he got all kinds of television. But his 15 minutes of fame look
like it might be over. Dexter Taylor's not getting enough coverage, and if we can share his story, I want to, he said the following at his sentencing. Thank you, Your Honor. I appreciate it. Friends, family and allies and foundationless and honored adversaries. Today we enter the next phase in the fight to protect our God-given rights from a government that wishes to take them from us and grant us mere privileges in return to quote another patriot from another
place in time. This is not the end. This is not even the. Beginning of the end. This is perhaps? The end of the beginning. And so as we enter this new phase, there should be no question in the mind of any patriotic American as to why we
fight. After all, only slaves lack the right to arm in self-defense, and we are no slaves but free citizens of a great Republic. And we contain multitudes of each of us from builder, a healer, a teacher, a statesman, a soldier, a judge, and an attorney at law, a Sergeant at arms, and an image of God. So we know why we fight. The question before us is how we must fight. What kind of discipline must we bring into this battle, and what spirit must we show our friends and adversaries alike?
And by way of answering, we refer to our core doctrines. The foundationless manifesto calls us to listen closely and to speak clearly, to deny the self, at the same time to defend the self, to respect tradition, and also to cultivate the future. In short, as Foundationless, we are called to embrace disciplines what seem to contradict each other, but nonetheless to embrace them with all of our strength. This is in our current fight because this system is as dysfunctional as it is often
unjust. It is nonetheless our system. It is a feature, not a bug, of our American civilization. Like any other structure built from man's crocked timber, it is not perfect. Judges and attorneys and trial courts and juries in the light of day are not perfect, and judges and attorneys and trial courts and juries in the light of day are merely what we have instead of the blood feud and the vendetta and the dagger in the night. Knowing this, we give challenge even as we give thanks.
Knowing this, we prepare ourselves for battle in the spirit of profound dissatisfaction and profound gratitude in equal measure. That is the apparent contradiction that we face as we continue to struggle for the civil rights of our fellow New Yorkers and our fellow Americans. On one hand, to hate this system, our system, enough to fight it, but on the other hand, to love it enough, love it enough to think that it is worth
fighting for. Nothing else will do for us but a profoundly Christian habit of defeating A contradiction by fully embracing both sides of it. And so when our adversaries look for us. Let them find us. And, to quote a Christian friend, a bee's shiniest at a Wasp's hostility. Let us show them a soldier's intensity and a diplomat's calm. Let us let our adversaries find us in stern battle, patient in defeat, and gracious in our ultimate victory, which is
certain. In short, when our adversaries look for us, let them find reasonable men and irrational patriots. When I was a boy, my grandfather told me that fire is a great servant but a terrible master. And so it is with the government, and to that extent with our own government's attempt to be our master. We must oppose it. We must fight to the utmost limits of our strength. But in that fight, our spirit must be one of restoration and not destruction.
We must confront the enemy as a firefighter confronts his enemy, and for the same reasons that structure itself may yet be saved. God bless you, may all of you. God bless, May God bless the United States of America. I thank you, your honor, and quote, that is the quote that is the statement that Dexter Taylor gave just before going to prison for 10 years for building guns that no one ever saw that hid. In his his apartment in New York.
We're seeing an interesting time right now where Donald Trump is exposing the legal system for what it is in New York. The fact that we have a lot of injustice in our justice system, it's not surprising, folks. It's not surprising that men are facing hostility simply for being those who embrace the ability to speak, the ability to bear arms, the ability to to engage in their religious, their religious freedoms, to assemble and to petition their government for the redress of grievances.
Dexter was petitioning for redress of grievances through his case. He was doing something that many people do not do. He was doing the appeals. Process. While they were arguing the facts, he was arguing the law and I hope that he is justified. If you guys want to support his Gibbs and go you can find it. It's Dexter Taylor's Gibbs and go legal fund. I will actually throw that in the show descriptions on update it will go out in the audio show so you'll find it there.
Dexter is a very eloquent person and he's a great messenger for this. His story is quite important. It's that we cannot let the government be the master. The the government is meant to serve us. And if we think that that we serve the government, then you end up being killed in your door for rights that you possess and the government does not grant you but simply is restricted from infringing upon. That's what I have to say about
today. I'm going to give you guys a five star review as always, and we will shut it all down here. This is from Rad Polly. I pulled this from yesterday's comments. I do read a lot of the comments folks says I watch a lot of podcasts and for me there's no more thought provoking podcast than the Kyle Serafin Show. It's obvious that God has certainly imbued you with a lot of good spiritual wisdom. I don't think that it's wisdom Mr. Rad Polly or Miss Rad Polly. I don't know.
It's not wisdom per SE. I think it's inspired, but I don't think it comes from me and I don't think it resides in me. So sometimes it just comes from somewhere else. I just wanted to share all these thoughts. Guys. If you disagree with my takes, I'm happy to experience them. You can engage with me on social media at kyleserifin. You can also give us questions, comments, sarcastic remarks at kyleserifin.com.
Feel free to do so. Make sure that you've hit the like button wherever you're watching this. Make sure you've given us either a like on X, whether you give it a like on rumble on YouTube. Make sure you subscribe to our channel. If you want to financially support the channel, you can do so. So by hitting the follow button that puts you in the followership. You can subscribe.
It's 5 bucks a month that goes directly, directly to us and Rumble takes not a penny of it. It's pretty awesome that they do that. If you guys want to support us through Rumble, you can do so. It's just like going to locals and we really appreciate the subscriptions. Think there's there's over 100 of you doing that right now. So really awesome. And we really. Appreciate that. We're going to shut it down for
the day. I look forward to seeing you guys tomorrow for a friendly Friday with my friend Steve. Friend, until that time, God bless you, be masculine men go out there and lead and protect. And provide. Thanks for listening to the Kyle Serafin Show streamed live weekdays on rubble.com/kyle Serafin. Follow Kyle on Twitter, Truth, Social and Instagram at Kyle Serafin.
