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 Serafin. Hello my friends, and welcome to the Kyle Serafin Show. Today we are going to show you part two of our interview with Mickey Willis.
We were talking about relationships and the permanence that can exist in a healthy marriage. I think you guys are going to really appreciate jumping back into this and if you happen to be watching these back-to-back, if you watch part one and jump right into Part 2, then you can just Fast forward probably about two minutes and you'll see that we got through that. I want to give you guys a running start. Nothing like doing a cold jump into a conversation that was already flowing.
But I think you will have a logical progression and you'll really enjoy that. Before we do, let me say quick thanks to my friends over at Catholic Vote. Please go to catholicvote.org. You can sign up for the loop right there, as you see, as you well know, put in your e-mail address. Put in your name. Put in your zip code. Get the loop in your e-mail address. It cost you nothing. It will give you a lot of useful information. You will be smarter. You will be more informed.
You will know more things about what is going on in this country if you get the loop, so check them out. And you can also check out our friends over at Patriot Cooler. It's just a short say it's in the show description, you click through the link or you use our promo code. Kyle. Kyle. That is a promo code. I use their Patriot Cooler tumblers every single day. Literally every single day. My wife has one by her bed and right now we are in baby mode
right now. So she is hydrating and using our Patriot cooler. Check them out promo code. Kyle Kyle and you'll get 10% off. You spend 50 bucks. It's free shipping. It's great. Deal. Check them out. A great company. OK, without any further ado, our interview with my new friend Mickey Wellis. I think you're really going to enjoy this, folks. Here you go. I was married once before my my current marriage and and it was interesting, we kind of fell into a pattern of kind of
competing against each other. Well, you did this. Well, I did that while you did that for, you know, it's this whole thing like and there's scripture about this, you know, Yeah, the house divided will not stand. That's right when I got. There's a lot of truisms in there. A. Lot of it. When I got in this, my current marriage, I learned from my first marriage and I said one thing and I just my wife is just just an extraordinary human being. So it makes it easier.
She's taught me a lot. But I said, let's never forget that we're on the same team above all because. When I tell you something that might sound like criticism, when you tell me something that might sound like criticism, if we can just remember it's because you love me. And it's not because you're not happy with me, but it's because you see something that I can't see or I see something that
maybe you can't see. That more effective way of behaving in our lives that might, might actually serve us. We want the best for each other. We're not trying to. When I don't want to win above you, I'm not competing against you. I want us to win. You know, it's a it's it's a cooperative sport we're playing. It's not a competitive sport. And if we can just remember that, then when that stuff comes up that wouldn't that could be
offensive. If we can just remember she's only saying this because she wants her lives to work, and that thing I do, that habit I do isn't the most optimal way to
live. You know, and it might be, you know, like, I think the last thing I brought up to my wife was I'm like, do you notice the pattern in our life where we clean up the whole house, get everything, We go through a whole weekend of just making everything clean, and then everything piles up and then everything piles up, and then four weeks later, let's go through the holes cleaning again. And I said, wouldn't it be better if we just kind of cleaned up every day a little
bit? Instead of the taking the whole weekend out once or every month or three. And can we see how this actually reflects on our lives, right. Our taxes get all behind and then we spend a month trying to get all our taxes paid and caught up and everything falls behind. Again, I said you see this is kind of a pattern. How you do one thing is how you do a lot of things. This is a pattern in our lives And you know, are we willing to try something new?
And that is. Just like, set some rules and and and stick to them. You know, like if we say we have a shoe closet. Every time you take off your shoes, put them in the damn closet. All of us. Otherwise one pair gets left out and someone goes, oh, that's a good spot for today. Suddenly there's eight pair of shoes sitting there by the front door that we trip over. Like, do do we recognize that?
That might seem like a mundane, meaningless little thing, but do we understand that by being aware of that pattern? That larger patterns in our life get taken care of the more we are efficient with each little choice we make and our daily duties. And you know, those conversations we can have as a team to to optimize the experience of our lives. And if more couples worked together that way, instead of just feeling like we're. I'm just going to criticize you now.
You stop doing this and stop doing that. But again, you know, the same way I mentioned the beginning, this is to teach, to work with each other, even as couples through what we want collectively, what we want instead of what I want. I want you to be this way. But look, if you're that way, it creates this circumstance and it moves us further away from our goal, which is being in love and continuing to fall in love and and and you know it's, we've been here 20 years and you know it's.
When I leave, and I'll be, you know, leaving Saturday for event and I guarantee you before I catch the plane, I'll be texting her to tell her how much I miss her, you know? And I never knew how that that was possible because my experience of relationships growing up was they're really exciting for a few months and then they get old. I had never knew it was possible because I never saw my mom in a real relationship. I didn't know it was possible to
continue to fall in love. But we have to. We have to. Apply some effort into generating that. What do you think? The What do you think the motivating foundational
principles are there? Because I think a lot of people go in. This is something I've been starting to explore a little bit with folks, especially people that feel like their marriage is really good, #1 There's nothing worse I see than people like criticizing their spouse or or berating them negatively in front of their friends for a laugh. I just find it to be really off putting, and I think that's really common.
But there's something about the the values that we are putting out there that we are teaching people how to date. And you've got boys that are about to be in the age where that's real. So I'm sure that you guys have had this conversation. What values are you telling them this is what you're looking for, for successful partnership as opposed to the highs and lows and the, you know, fall in love and fall out and then you get sick of them?
Well, yeah, my, my 12 year old, we do have talks because he's, you know, he's really respectful and when it comes to girls, but you know, he's he's. We've had some talks about, you know, no, these girls are pretty and he's starting to become interested and sure and he's and he has a a little girlfriend that they both talked and so they're too young and so they just want to be friends. But they're incredible friends.
The way their little partnership, like they're making a a anime comic book together now. So they get together and it's just full creative. They're learning Japanese together, you know, but they're just, they won't even tell each other that they like each other, you know, because they will independently. They'll tell their parents, but they're like we know. But we don't want to get into that cross that line because it's just we're too young for that.
Like they're both making that conscious decision. It's like, wow, it's incredible. But what we have talked about is just being aware that I've had a lot of talks with my boys around porn. OKI think this is probably a pretty interesting topic to dig into. It's a long ways away from that with mine, but maybe not as long as I think. Maybe not as long as you think
at at 7 years old. My wife's parents, we moved them across the street from us now, but they used to live in Vegas and my wife went and took my son's to see their grandparents and they. My little guy ended up in a hotel room with access to stuff he shouldn't see. Sure. And it was crushing for us to discover what our little guy had seen. And it's all over the place and no matter how hard you try, we're finding, you know, we run a home school coop.
So we've had talks with a lot of intimate talks with families who are admitting that they're six year old little girl. Has found porn that their seven-year old son and it is happening at a younger and younger age and it's detrimental to them, it's detrimental to their relationships. So that sparked when we found out what he had seen and it was because he was walking on the strip with family and there was all this, you know, stuff and he was listening to old.
The the older people talking about God, everything is nude, nude, nude, nude, nude, nude, you know, and he got back to the hotel room and it just so happened that my wife had a protection on this iPad and he had just had educational stuff on there, but it had just expired the protection and my kid end up saying out loud the word nude and and he ends up going down the rabbit hole. What?
What? Oh my God. And he ends up telling us, and I had to go look at what he looked at. I went, Oh my God, are you kidding me? What is it kind of damage is going to do this little kids brain. And then there was something that got acted out between him and his little buddy and A and A and A and a little girl who decided we've all done that as little kids. But they explored each other's bodies and it turned into this thing that the parents had to get together and go.
They're seven years old. Wow. You know, we thought we should wait till they're. Eight or nine or ten or something like that. You think you got time? You think you do. And but almost every parent that we're involved with in our educational system have been shocked at how early it is available to kids now. When I was a kid it was, you know, Playboy magazines. That's that's the big deal, right? If you found them under
somebody's bed or had them. Sure box full of vintage Playboys. And that was in my, my, my tree for it when I was a kid. Right. And which seems so innocent compared to what's out there now. So innocent, you know, if we could go back to that world. So we had to sit down and have some real talks about it. We had to have some really real talks about it, you know, and it was a blessing like everything else because it, my older son, hadn't experienced anything.
And so to him it was like, what do you see? And what? And he was so innocent, you know, and. And he was hurt, too, because he was afraid that, you know, little brother, it's awesome that might harm him, you know? And so turning this real intimate family discussion that lasted about three weeks of just let's, wow, I wasn't planning on having this one with you guys for a few years from now, but we're going to have this talk right now and I'm going to, you know, let's let's talk about
this. And so we were able to talk about, you know, all the downsides of that and what it did to me as a child being exposed to that kind of stuff. How I became obsessed with the physicality of a woman's body and would look past the essence of who that person was and and as a result ended up in a lot of bad relationships with with, you know, bad women with good bodies and a really toxic combination it turns out. Yeah, really toxic.
And there's a lot of them out there, a lot of men with good bodies and bad men and. But when you're looking at that because it's it's a visceral thing. It's just a it's just boobs it's a let's just you want to what is that stuff about then you're you're you're engaging into an attraction. You're attracted to the things that that matter only on a lower level, it's not.
It's why that there's, you know, people get older and they're like they dump their bride of 30 years or their husband of 30 years for something younger just because that body aged. And they're really, it's like being bonded by agreement. I'm, I'm, I'm married a body and that body had four kids and it's not in shape anymore. So I'm not attracted anymore.
That's a shame. That's a shame because you could also see that body and and the way that it's changed and look at it and and have a deeper reverence and love. Because it changed. Because it brought you children, you know, like, that's what that little body went. I'm in the middle of this right now with a wife that's, you know, almost nine months pregnant. And there's something really. It's something incredible, if you can see that, how incredible it is.
Absolutely. And she still makes dinner. I mean, she still walks around and does like all of her regular things, but she's carrying like a little person that's in there kicking around and and that is that's a miracle. I mean it really is. And so if you can't appreciate that and what it takes to do that. It really, it really instilled in me in a young age of like I needed someone with a perfect body. I think a lot of us heard that that was a 70s and 80s, maybe a
90s thing too, but it didn't. It doesn't make any sense once you know a little bit. Now you went perfect 10. What did perfect ten really mean? Back in the day, it was always perfect 10. Perfect 10 wasn't, you know, there was. Personality wasn't. Unlimited Perfect 10s. It was just how does she look? That's a perfect tent.
So that and that's your meter. And this is something, I don't know if you got into this with the boys yet, but this is something that kind of occurred to me as I talked to one of my buddies who's been married for 20 years now. So he got married much earlier than I did. And one of the things he said is he's like, you know, it's exciting to know that there's a a female form that's naked and looks really great. But how much time do you spend without your clothes on in your regular life?
How much, like, how can you do that in your regular life? It's a very, very small fraction of what's going on and so it should basically be about that much value in the greater picture as you evaluate, Does this thing make sense? Do you get along with them? Do they share your goals? Do they want to inspire your dreams?
Do they want to support you? Anyway, this is, this is nice to have enlightened friends when you're kind of a dummy and you're out there running around in the world looking going like, hey, I don't make great decisions, Maybe someone who's figured this thing out has got something better going on and and you know, I'll take wisdom wherever it comes. That was one of the things one of my buddy shared. And I thought it was it was me. I'll share with my boy.
And there's a level of that attraction to good bodies that is intrinsic, that is natural. Sure. Because there's a, you know we're attracted to health and when someone is in good shape, there's something attractive about that because they they, they it triggers a lot of things. It it it triggers that this is a healthy person. This is a person who must care about themselves enough to stay fit. And so there is, I think there's sometimes we cross the line
where we get married and. Let ourselves go because it doesn't matter anymore. It does matter. And you know, we, we call ourselves the CrossFit family. We all the four of us do CrossFit together. And for my age I'm in good shape. And for my wife say she's in fantastic shape. And so we still want to look good for each other. Just because we're married for life, there's nothing that ever come between us. And that's a guaranteed thing.
Doesn't mean we're not still trying to impress each other. And that that that never has to go away. But when that becomes the the only scale through which you find yourself attracted to another, you will most likely end up in a lot of bad relationships because you're you're actually looking past what's most important. And that is who is that person? And and and so that these experiences have opened my kids up to.
To explore that to I want to be careful what I say here because I don't want any other parents to hear this. I'll just say my son had the choice between a little girl that was stunningly gorgeous and one that was very cute. Yeah, I know what you're talking about. And he he is attracted to the very cute one because there's a connection there, they shared the. Connection there. And they're learning Japanese, of all things. Yes, right.
I mean she's beautiful, but does she compare to this other little girl that was attracted to him? I don't think any child does. This little girl was like you know like wow she is so beautiful and this other little girl is is little more awkward going through her awkward teens and. And and beautiful also. I don't want to take that away
from her. She really is a beautiful girl but but not as poised and and perfect as this other girl But to watch my son kind of pivot from I could probably you know attract her but I'm much more much more you know like cognitively attracted to this person like that we it's their their relationship is so you know creative. You know and they have projects together.
So they're bonding on that level and it's so healthy and and so all these things that happen at an early age have led us to have these conversations that I probably wouldn't have had until, you know, probably now with my 12 year old. But we got it much earlier because, and I'm so glad he did, because it really set them up in their formative years to
consider these things that. A lot of people don't learn their entire lifetime of of really what really matters, you know, and and if you look at this porn stuff, you're going to be, you're going to speak so obsessed with body that you're going to miss what's really important. And that is that connection of spirit when you have that with someone else. And I told him, I said I lucked out with your mom because I got both and that's possible too. But, but that's not what you should.
That's not what you should make your priority, you know, because it's about the essence of who people are. And in that in every realm of just they see, you know, they see me. I I have a lot of I, you know, I'm associated with a lot of people that are well known and and they'll be like, why aren't you like, that person's cool, he's in a cool movie, he's a celebrity. And I'm like, I'd much rather hang out with someone.
Who? Who isn't the celebrity, you know, Is that that when I'm talking with them, they're not looking over my shoulder to see who's recognizing them or you know, so there's a lot that comes with that, and I'd rather be with real people. Do you remember them moving and distilling in them that it's about being real? You remember the movie Swingers with Vince Vaughn, the early, you know and and they sit talking about going to parties in the hills in LA where the women are always looking to.
Yeah, they're trying to find the one, the so that they should be talking to someone cooler than he was, you remember. And and that's endemic in that culture, it turns out. Totally. Totally. It's one of those, one of those great, one of those great films that both poked fun at an industry and made a lot of people want to get into at the same time. I know guys that were in high school with me wanted to be writers after watching that, and I was like, why?
They live in crappy apartments and they have no money. But but it's it's so funny that that's how bad the culture is. And we know it's bad. And you look at it and you go like that looks terrible and yet it attracts unlimited people to it still. Are all your podcasts this long? Are we still doing a podcast or we just? Yeah, Some, not some. We've gone long. We go short. It's just kind of some people have a story at some point. I kind of wanted to hear the
story arc. And and honestly I was so interested in in you as a human being and and kind of the arc of it that I started watching your first Pandemic One and I watched her and I don't know what I think about Doctor Judy other than I read some things about her. She seems reasonable. And so I took that for what it was. I kind of it was short enough to digest it. And I go, OK, that's that's one thing. And then I started watching
indoctrination. And I got a little bit in there and I went, there's this is way more complicated than the first work. I think that's fair. Is that accurate? What's going on there? So I got into a little bit and I went, I'm going to back off because I want to see, I'd like to talk to you first before I actually went to go watch the rest of it. And I haven't even touched the third one.
I didn't even look it up. I didn't even open it up other than I saw the the picture of it and I didn't even open the trailer. And do we just lose him? Yeah. There he is. He's back. I got I.
Just lost you for a half second. So I I saw that like I said that was that was my step in. I walked in about the waist deep into the water and then I walk back out and go I'm going to go find out whose pool this is and and I'm I'm glad I did in many ways because I'm I'm very much enjoying what you have to say.
I I really appreciate this lens. So maybe you can tell people what the arc is, what you started out to tell, and if you ended up telling the story that you thought you would as you went across those three, because. They, they are a single work, right? I mean that that's the way to look at them. No they're not. No, no. Okay. So the fact that they're a series of. Okay, explain it. Yeah. So I recommend that everyone
goes. They go directly to #3, #3 is the big picture of what's going on in the world. And number One was simply a scientist who had worked under Anthony Fauci and had discovered the way that the lab was operating, how corrupt it was. And when she wouldn't be silent, they turned on her and made her life miserable, locked her up for five days, took every all the money she had, her cars or boats, everything. So she really wanted to expose
The Dirty game of science. And I mean, of course, to warn the world what was coming in terms of the COVID lockdowns #2 was a reaction to number one in that we realized that because no one, I put a cash, I put $10,000 in an electronic escrow and and invited anyone in the world to prove one major claim in Pandemic One or two to be incorrect and you could have my money and nobody could do it. It stayed up for 6 1/2 months. So we were really clear about the the accuracy of the
information. But after the media came out and smeared it and smeared her, they couldn't. They couldn't, You know, they had to just smear our characters because they couldn't call me a white supremacist. They couldn't, they couldn't say I was a racist because everything online I've done has been helping women and minorities and indigenous cultures and all of that. So they had to just attack our characters.
And I realized you know how how quick the global population is to believe the lying media, the thing that lies to them every single day. They were they went from when plan to make first came out. Everyone was celebrating and saying it was wonderful. Then all of a sudden the media come out said no, no don't listen to this guy. He's he's a conspiracy theorist and grifter and he's doing this
for fame and fortune. And even though I give all my movies away and I've turned down millions of dollars for them. And so plan Demic 2 was following the paper trail. It was showing you how all the secrets are hidden within patents And then it's all about it's all about pushing patentable medicine forward and and hiding the medicines that actually are safe and effective, which are mostly natural
medicines. Medicines that have been deemed quackery or and and we exposed within plandemic 2 what we what is called Rockefeller medicine. That John D Rockefeller who was the America's first billionaire and he was the tycoon of steel and oil when it was discovered that you and. That's about where I got you. Just so you know that's that's where I got up to. I got the the 80s law which was the boil something or other. Is it the dole boil or the by dole? By dole act?
By dole act. That's where I got to see it. And then I watched the Rockefeller which allowed doctors and scientists to to profit off their patents. And that changed. That changed medicine in a bad way, because then it became a game, a game of getting getting patents and hiding all the medicines that are actually effective so that your patented remedy would be the only one mandated and therefore you could make hundreds of millions of dollars on one medicine. There's a big racket going on
there. And so Pandemic 2 indoctrination and follows an expert who created technologies that are tracking white collar crime since the late 80s and his photographic memory is a man who helped weave the paper trail and to prove that Anthony Fauci is was gaining gain. It was was funding gain of function research through the NIH through the Wuhan lab to really trace it to show what the world is just waking up to right now that this was a man made situation in a in a laboratory man made.
And I'll tell you it was intentionally released. It was not an escape, a lab or get leaked out of the lab. This was a bio weapon and that. There's a lot of evidence that proves that. But it'll it'll be more evident as time rolls on this year and next year.
And it's hard for a lot of people to accept that their government would do that, which I don't know why it's hard because we've, if you know anything about history and false flags and how many wars have been started off with complete lies to get everyone to rally behind the lie so that we can go bomb a country or go and, you know, create a regime change or whatever it is. So remember the main that's
right. And and so, but people still are in denial about, you know, the lengths to which our government will go to gain total control over all nations. And so plandemic 3 is about the big picture. It's what COVID was used to accelerate that has been in the works for decades, if not 100 plus years. And it is no one has. We only have one Fact Check that. And that was a Fact Check about a ZT saying there's no proof that AZT killed hundreds of
thousands of innocent people. Like I like I say in the film, yes, there is proof. But anyway that's the only Fact Check. They won't touch the rest of it because they're they, you know it's right there. And we learned we we coined a style after Pandemic One and you'll see it in Pandemic 2 where I realize people won't do their own research. Even if you tell them where to find it, they won't do it. They'll just listen to the media
and move on with their day. So we zoom in on patents, we go really close, we make it nice and sexy and underline them in yellow and show them the number. So all the everything we talked about, we put it right in front of them. So people are like, God, you can't deny this, It's right there. And we do more of that in Pandemic 3. But we we, we expose what's really happening. And I won't, I I won't give any
spoilers away. But I'll say that what changed the direction of the narrative for me was while we were a few months into the project, I realized I was witnessing this birth of what I call citizen journalists, all these people waking up and average people doing their own homework and sharing information on Telegram And and I I know that the experience as a public speaker, I used to go out on stage and and I'd have my bullet points of my latest research and I would
say it out loud and people would be like really? Is that real? And I can't do that anymore because. People not along because they know that's all they do is they go, we saw this, but did you see this? And I'm like, they're telling me stuff now. I'm like, no, I didn't see what what happened. What Dang you like? They're doing deeper research than I can do now and that's wonderful. And but what happens is is because they see it sporadically.
My metaphor is this. It's like if I had a 3000 piece puzzle. I said, Kyle, here you go. Here's check this piece out. What do you think that is? And you go, well, that looks suspect. I think I can tell what it looks like. Leaves and maybe some water. Maybe some clouds. Interesting. Thank you. Now you forget about that piece and then somebody else goes, hey, check this out and you go, oh, looks like a wheel of a car maybe. And a interesting. I can kind of imagine what that might be.
Interesting. Thank you. And you forget what each piece is. You you never fully put it together. The The Great Awakening is taking all the puzzle pieces and putting them together and showing everyone the big picture. And it's been very effective. People are. There's a lot of people saying it's most important documentary ever made.
There are people that are saying it's bringing their families back together because young people are watching it, going, oh shit, we're in the middle of a cultural revolution and we're being turned against their families. This is what Mao Zedong did in the 60s. Oh my God, I'm being. I'm part of the mass formation. I'm hypnotized, all my friends. No wonder all this insanity of transgender movement and all the stuff that suddenly has people going, what is happening in our nation.
The movie makes sense of it all, you understand? This is all all calculated, all to create the division and the breakdown of everything worth living and dying for. That's ultimately what it is. And that's what dictators have always done, is they have to divide the families. Because if you, if you ask yourself, just make a list of what it what are the top five things to you that's worth
living and dying for? I'll ask you right now, what are three things that are worth living and dying for? How broad are these answers? Wife. Children. Their ability to determine their future? Freedom, I guess let's, let's, let's call that one thing family. Family is one thing. And their liberty, liberty. Freedom. Yeah. Free association. I think their ability to meet with other people interact with them. Cool. So I'm. I'm working on a. Couple of them here.
I wasn't prepared for an intense follow up, but I'm that's that's all the perfect, perfect example for the example I want to make. So family is family under attack right now? For sure, yeah. Is freedom under attack right now? Obviously, yes. Is there freedom to associate with the people we want to associate with and speak freely under attack right now? I think more and more okay. So you ask any man, any woman, what's worth living in dining for.
They'll give you their top list and you'll recognize every one of those things are under attack right now. And and then you go, why? Why? Because when you strip away everything that's worth living and dying for, why do you think men have gone to battle for this country? They go for they they, they fight for their country and for the family and for their life. And so why, why do the protocols affect those things?
Why did it tear apart families? Why did it tell us we can talk to these people, not these people who stand at a distance? And you know, because everything our children are are under attack. Our families are under attack because just like Mao Zedong did, you know, they had kids so possessed by his ideologies that they celebrated when they turned in their own parents and their parents were tortured and executed. And those same people, now, many
of them are online. You can find them in their 80s, they're in their 80s, and they're tearfully repenting, saying, you know, the never ever could get over the fact that when they were 15 years old, they told the party to come get their mom and dad because they weren't obedient and they celebrated when they did something.
So noble for their party. And when their parents were tortured, you know, force fed to death and at labor camp, they celebrated because that's how devoted they were to the party. That's how gone they were. And now they're 80 year old, miserable people, the ones who haven't killed themselves, realizing how far and deep in the darkness they were led. And and so we today we have not only kids divorcing their families, Mom and dad. You're fascist.
You, you don't think you know Leah Thompson should be destroying these women and sports. I heard what you said when you're watching the Olympics. You're fascist. I want to leave. And then ironically, you got the politicians at the same time trying to push through laws that say if your kids want to leave or be transgender and you don't honor it.
Just like in California and Minnesota and whatever you you know or you even misgender them you call your son you know a son when he identifies as a daughter then it's a felony and or we can take your like in in Washington state and in parts of Oregon we can take your children. Your children can come and we've passed a new law with says we don't have to tell you where they are. It's kidnapping now.
We can put your children up, take them away from you, even if they're 12, and we don't have to tell you where your child is, that those laws have passed happening and and and if that's not enough to have people go, there's some dark shit happening right now in our lives. We need to take care of this. Right now, there's no way around it, so that's what Pandemic 3 The Great Awakenings you'll wake up and understand what's happening. So you're stitching a lot of
this, this information together. People have pieces of it. They're seeing puzzle pieces. I think a lot of those puzzle pieces will be familiar. And do you propose a solution that that's at the end there if people can okay? OKI won't. I won't ask what it is because I actually I'm going to go watch it. I will and and I will start with #3 is it? And then work my way backwards. The two and one.
Is that the move? I've already seen one, so I guess it doesn't matter the the ending's very positive and it and it's filled with solutions. But I'm not the guy that says go here and sign this petition, go here and do this. I'm very careful not to do that because I don't want to mislead people that I'm the next leader to follow.
That's not my job and I don't want people to follow anything I do. I just want to show them what's happening and to them to remember that they have a choice on how they can guide their lives and and so my, my, I always have people. You got to do a call to action at the end you got to no I don't. I'm not going to tell people what to do.
I want to reawaken their humanity and and trust and help them remember that they can trust themselves to to choose the right choices because they are that intelligent that brilliant that resilient and we have to you know, wake up return to that, you know. So we stopped following the leader and thinking that someone's going to there's some superhero going to come save it's never going to happen. This is the moment. We are the ones we've been waiting for like the hope you said.
And So what I have at the end is a reminder of of what I think we've been driven to forget that if we can simply I I say it only requires 1 action and I won't give it away what that action is. But it's it's so simple that sometimes people miss how important it is. But those who get it go wow. Like like I didn't think that was a big deal until I really sat with it and and realized that that is all I need to do again.
I won't give it away what it is but it's just I just say there's one action we must take and and it's it's I think it's it's more profound than it sounds because it's what's helped me come out of what my path was heading into it a dark alley for a number of years and and this taking this one action kind of not through even conscious choice but being thrust into extreme experiences being at the which will maybe talk about the next podcast.
But you know being at the World Trade Center when the 9/11 happened in the World Trade Center was attacked was a huge turning point for me in my life of of that kind of forced me into this action that I'm I'm suggesting at the end of the movie that that we need to take because we've lost our humanity and and humanity is is incredible. But we've been led even through biblical stories.
We have to be careful with all stories that get exaggerated and they get manipulated and they get used against us. But even even the story that has us feel like we are just these lowly sinners and if we can just repent through this, this hellish existence on earth will someday be in heaven and have a
good life. I personally think that's a very destructive story, and I think that it's that while there's truth and value in it, I think it gets taken too far to where we have too many people for getting the value of this life, of God's gift, of this life, of that we are made in the image and likeness of. We are that incredible. And the only way to really show your love for this benevolent, incredible creator that created you is by appreciating what was created. And that's you.
I Very few people appreciate what they have right now. Everybody. Wants something else? Well, let me just say this. You seem to be a very hopeful person. Would that be a pessimistic you think where you, how would you describe yourself? Because the words you're saying here are both altruistic and they are very hopeful, but sometimes those come from really dark people too. I guess I may be one of those as well. I lost hope a long time ago.
OK, So what do you, what do you, what do you espouse? You get up in the morning, you put your feet on the floor. What drives you? Certainty. OK, tell me more. Hope indicates things might work out. OKI know they will. That's very that's a that's a nuanced take on that. OK, I'll. I'll accept that. Yeah, I don't. I don't want to give people hope. I want to give them certainty.
I want them to know that there's something divine orchestrating this entire experience, and this is what we all came here for. We're not cursed that we have to live through this. We're blessed that we get to live through this and we get to be the generation to do something about it. And that perspective changes everything. It changes everything. I'm not a big fan of hope. I know it's a it's a viable step on the way to certainty, but I'm way past hope. That's intense.
Give me a second to just breathe on that one for a moment. I wanted to ask you to look into your crystal ball and kind of give me, you said that there's going to be some tough times coming. How do you, how do you imagine that either specifically or or or more broadly if you would kind of your your take on what that looks like? I know I can tell you thought about this a lot. So I have to, yeah. It's my job and it's there are some deeply wounded people and their numbers are very small.
When these people talk about the 1%, they sometimes think we're up against the 1%. Not even close. What 1% means is those are the people in the top earning brackets. Those aren't rich people, aren't bad people inherently. The people that are at the helm of these agendas are way under 10,000 people strong. It might be closer to 3-2 or three. I've had some very educated people tell me it's around 8000.
I don't know the exact number, and I don't think that there's any way for us to know who's hidden behind the scenes of names that we'll never know. But but take that in for a moment. Let's let's give them the maximum benefit of the 10,000 of them compared to 8 billion of us, 8 billion of us. And we're afraid of them. This is such an unfair fight, it's ridiculous. If we would just get off the idea that we're powerless.
If we would just get off the idea that we need other people to guide us. If we just get back to nature, to a belief in something greater than our own personas and egos. To remember what we knew as children when everything was possible and people were fantastic and fascinating. So these few people that have amassed some serious power because we've given it to them and until we get that we're we're not going to going to heal. We've given them power. They have not taken it.
We've given it to them and we continue to give it to them. But as we see what we just accomplished with Bud Light and Target, name all the other companies that were destroying by simply not participating in their products anymore, billions of dollars of damage to what they care about most, which is the bottom line. Bud Light is suffering big time. They're laying off hundreds of people right now. They made one error. They crossed the line.
So to Target to the cost of billions of dollars, we could drive them out of business if we chose to. And if they make another mistake, we probably will. We can close every single franchise of Target on the planet. If they continue to come after our children the way they have, we're that powerful. But it's our irresponsibility. It's our addiction to comfort and convenience that will have us continue to go to Target. My family will never step in another Target again.
That's a lie. I did to use the restroom. I'll never buy a Target again. That's fair. We're hardcore about that. You know, it's like, where's that company from? From China. I love Chinese people, but am I going to continue to enrich a nation that is out to destroy my nation? That's suicide. That's what that's called. That's suicide. But we do it every single day.
And so these companies that were forced from the top by the World Economic forums to play this game, one game called ES G's environmental social governance that ultimately is it forces companies to virtue signal how welk they are. Otherwise the deals that were made with all the central banks won't allow any investment within those companies. That's what ESG program is, coercion scheme.
And so. But these companies that have massive influence over the world wouldn't have massive influence if the moment we say, listen, NBA, we love black people. But I don't like Black Lives Matter and I don't. I don't, I don't mind saying that out loud. It's a corrupt organization that has taken most of the money from communist China and from people like George Soros who is out to destroy our nation. And in turn they have stolen the
money. They've done nothing for the black communities except for encourage them to burn down their own neighborhoods. So why should we be afraid to say I don't support that organization, we need to speak up and say it out loud. There's a vast difference between loving and supporting black people and supporting A corrupt organization that's using black people is cannon
fodder. And so by giving our attention and money to these multinational corporations so they can paint Black Lives Matter on the floor of the basketball court and get everyone to kneel and and convince everybody that they're kneeling because America is systemically oppressive and racist and they're influencing all the upcoming generations to hate their country, How do you think that's going to end? It's incredibly destructive. It's cancer and we support it.
Every time we buy a jersey. Every time we TuneIn to NBA. Every time we buy a product without looking. I was so happy that last yesterday I got Honey, there's this new app that our friends turn this on to It's called Timu. Check it out. They have everyone using the app for the first time that that was the boy boy's new tennis shoes. 5 bucks for first time users she goes. That's the Chinese app. Honey, I should have known that all those products I went, no,
is it? And I went and looked and went, oh shit, delete. But most people, like, let me just, that's a good deal. I'm not going to delete this. These. Of course, of course. China's going to sell you $5, you know, $100 sneakers for $5 to lure you into their trap and get all your data and all the other things they're doing. Capturing all of our data on TikTok and all the other other apps. But we're saving money. I just saved 45 bucks, babe. Yeah, you sold yourself out in the meantime.
That's the old fable of selling your soul, comfort and convenience. It is.
And so once we once we say I'm willing to drive out of my way to not use this convenient app, to not be, to have uncomfortable conversations once I'm willing to get uncomfortable and inconvenient and stand strong in my conviction to only support that that is made in America, that supports the Constitution, that that that loves children and family, that supports the things that are most important to to me and to the values, to the foundation that this country was built upon.
It takes a little more time. You have to make a list. You have to go through, like where where my family's making a list and going okay. All these companies are like shit. I drive a Jeep. Jeep played this game. Damn it. I was going to buy a new Jeep, but I can't now. And and that's the way you do it. Because when they feel the wrath of the consumers as they call us when they go, we can't play this anymore because these people are
awake and aware. And when we make these moves just to flex, so the central bankers will then give us their lines of credit. The public is watching and they stop buying from us. If they stop buying from us, we don't exist. Last metaphor I want to throw out at you because I have to go. They always use with the Illuminati and all these secret societies and even on our dollar bill they use the symbol of the pyramid they all see.
And I at the top, if that's where those 8000 people reside, let's just say they've they've they've occupied that little top of that pyramid. What we have forgotten is we're the entire foundation of that damn pyramid. We walk away. There is no pyramid, that little tent that they're occupied at the top collapses. And so we have to remember that we are the bulk of the foundation of that pyramid. People have somehow. What's the top this little? Are you kidding me?
We are the whole thing. We have a 99.99999% of it. When are we going to start acting like that? By every choice that we make, by not just repeating their slogans because they keep saying them on the news. Let's get smart and realize whatever they're saying on the news, Truth has never been easier to find. Just tune on the news and go what it What's Fox saying? Okay? What's CNN saying? What's MSNBC saying Okay, That's the lie. So. So clearly it's just super easy. That's a lie. Okay.
That's none of that's true. Hottest day on record? Nope. Never is. Anytime they say that, never is. And if it is, it's because they have the technology to make it the hottest day on record. Yeah, where they buried it in concrete or something and they're measuring it in a new way for sure. Yeah, it needs context. Isn't that what the fact checkers like needs context, needs context.
Yeah. And I'm glad you know that because most people don't know because there's some I've had I've talked with climatologists that will go I have actually looked at the data and it's it's well, of course it naturally really is heating up and of course all living life humans are contributing to it. But what you don't know is that a lot of the thermometers that read climate were moved from natural environments to concrete jungles to rooftops of
industrial parks. I'll just think about how many of them are in airports and airports and big tarmacs and all those things to do is gather heat and throw hold on. In 1980 it was this and now it's all it's 2 degrees hotter. Well, yeah, that's what happens when you put the thermometer in a concrete jungle. It produces heat and retains the heat. Of course it's a trick. We're out. It's a lie, you know.
And the worst part of it, as a 20 plus year environmentalist, it's taking our eye off the fact that we are polluting this planet to death and and we really are. We have. But why don't they just focus on pollution anymore? Why when I was a kid there was a whole thing about pollution, the ending. Remember the crying ending? Like stop. It's like that's right that. We And there was smog all over the place, and we had to get rid of the smog. Yeah, but why don't they talk about that anymore?
Because now they've made it an elusive beast that only politicians can slay. With more tax dollars, Exactly. When they call it pollution, we go, OK, what's polluted? Our air, our water, our soil. OK, cool. Do we have the technology for that? Actually, we've had it for 1020 years. How much are going to cost? 50 billion. Oh, so the money we just gave the Ukraine could have cleaned up our air, soil and water. But then you have the you have the ultimate problem that they don't want.
And that is if you've solved the problem. There's an old Demotivator poster I used to keep and it just said consultants, you know, if you're not going to be part of the solution, there's a lot of money to be made in continuing the problem. And that was that was the 80s, the 90s and the 2000s, the early 2000s in a nutshell in many ways for the fraud, waste and governmental abuse which I saw. And the other one which you'll love to, which is on this was on
my my computer at the FBI. It just said government, if you think we have problems, you should see our solutions. And it turns out that may not be the best thing to have if you work in a government job. That's awesome, though. But. It is funny to put it up there and people look at it and they go and anybody who's ever worked for the government or worked for the military goes like, yeah, that's obviously true. They know. Yeah, they all do. They should.
Look, I really enjoyed this conversation to tell people where they can go and see that. I know this movie doesn't. You could just stream it. I did. I appreciate that. We live. We live right down the street from each other in real life, so we should. And also my kids are also homeschooled, so I have taken the same sort of. Steps. We probably have a lot of the same ideas and I think so. I do. I did any let's keep in touch 100%. Yeah let's keep in touch. I I don't know if you have my
cell number. I I actually sent it to one of your team members today. So shoot me a text and and we'll we'll we'll catch that one person. We'll make that happen. Sounds good. Thanks for spending however many hours you just spent with me. I appreciate it. We'll probably, we'll probably break this thing up into two and let people digest a little bit at a time. That sounds great. Or four pieces. Yeah, nice communicating with you. Well, likewise. Thanks, Mickey. Thank you, brother.
You bet. All right, you've been watching The Kyle Seraphin Show, normally streamed live from Liberty Hill, TX today. Stream tape delayed, although taped in Liberty Hill, TX, America. We do really appreciate all of you and your support as you watch our show. Please hit that like button. Please scroll on down. Click the little thumbs up. Make sure it turns green on Rumble. And if you're not watching us on Rumble that is where the live chat is always going and bumping.
Please join our community over there rumble.com/kyle Serafin and leave us a 5 star review on iTunes, on Apple, on Spotify and all the places. Generally speaking you can see all of our five star reviews on Apple. It is in the show notes. Just scroll on down just a little bit of ways. Click on that and that. We would really appreciate it. We read them on the show live. I will read the next one as soon as we get back. And as I said, we are in baby mode right here welcoming our
new daughter. So thank you so much for enjoying this episode while I'm away and I will be listening to it probably with you all and I will be back very soon to share. In fact, probably tomorrow you will see my smiling face, unless you hear one of the other suspendables, in which case do not be dismayed. They have the keys to the boat and I told them they can drive it. I let the Steve friend and Garrett Boyle know driving the
boat. It's a little different than riding in the boat, but you might see a guest host on the Kyle Seraphin Show tomorrow. Folks, thanks so much for all of your attention. We do really appreciate it. Follow Ryan Matta on social media. You can find him at Ryan Matta Media. He's our producer. He does a great job, as you can tell. Ryan Matta MATTA on True Social. And a big thank you to my guest. Mickey Willis, who shared some really profound insights I think and some really, really
beautiful thoughts. A really nice man and you can follow him right here. That is Mickey Willis on Twitter. It's MIKKIWILLIS at Mickey Willis. Or you can also find him at his his movie The Plandemic series Plandemic 3 movie at Plandemic 3, The number 3 movie on Twitter. Folks, we'll see you very soon. Thank you for enjoying this with
us, and God bless you all. Thanks for listening to The Kyle Seraphin Show streamed live weekdays on rubble.com/kyle Seraphin. Follow Kyle on Twitter, Truth, Social and Instagram at Kyle Seraphin.
