Ronald Coleman | Ep 263 - podcast episode cover

Ronald Coleman | Ep 263

Mar 13, 20241 hr 41 min
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Episode description

Ron Coleman is a lawyer, an activist, and podcast host who invited me for one of the most fun interview/conversations I have had since I started this public life. Today, I return the courtesy. Join me for a honest and genuine talk about life, the law, and taking the step to unify your social values with your lived values...  Follow Ron: https://twitter.com/roncoleman  ____________________________________________________Today's podcast supported by https://CatholicVote.Org (Get in The LOOP)Use PROMO CODE "KYLE" at these sites:https://contingencymedical.com/ (Emergency Antibiotic Kit!)https://4Patriots.com/KYLE (Survival foods)http://The-Suspendables.com (Show Merch)http://PatriotCoolers.com/ (Tumblers & Coolers)http://MyPillow.com/Kyle (Pillows/Towels/Bedding) 🇺🇸 Follow Kyle on X/Truth Social/Instagram: @KyleSeraphin⭐️ APPLE Podcasts 5-star Reviews (Leave one and listen for us to read it): https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-kyle-seraphin-show/id1654162813

Transcript

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 Sarah. Well hello my friends and welcome to the Kyle Seraphin Show. Today is Wednesday and it is March the 13th. We are midweek and we are mid interview cycle here.

We've got a whole week full of interviews that you guys are going to enjoy. I think you guys will appreciate this one as well. Today's guest is going to be Ron Coleman. No, not Ronnie Coleman the bodybuilder. Although as he has told me, they've never been in the same room together. No one can prove they're not the same guy. We're going to have a good interview, a little discussion about about free speech, about religion. It's placed in the workplace, it's placed in your life as it

sets your values. I think you guys are going to get a good kick out of this and let me start off with my sponsors so we can get them appropriately addressed. Let's start off with something that is in the workplace and religion. There is catholicvote.org. They are our underwritingsponsorcatholicvote.org. You guys can get the loop by going to their main web page there as you see below me on the screen, catholicvote.org. Type in your e-mail, type in your zip code and you will get

the loop, which is great. You get it every, every day except Sunday. Which case you're getting a little bit of different kind of news. Hopefully. Hopefully you're getting the good news on that day folks, You can sign up for that. If you don't want to sign up, you can always go to catholicvote.org/loop and you can just read it. But I encourage you, go ahead and sign up, get the best single one minute e-mail you can scan through and catch all the

important headlines of the day. It will give you a good perspective on what's happening. You don't have to be Catholic to go to catholicvote.org. In fact, Catholic means universal and it is a a unified position for people who are in the fight for faith, family and freedom. They are an advocacy group and you guys can always donate to

them too. If you guys want to support our show financially, that is a great way to do so Really appreciate them stepping in. And if you want to follow them on social media, it's at Catholic vote. Yeah, on all the major ones. All right. Let's also say thanks to my buddies over at Patriot Coolers. You guys know how to get there as well. Patriot coolers.com. That's the website. Kyle. Kyle is the promo code. Those are the two most important pieces.

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Without any further ado, let's bring on Mr. Ron Coleman. All right, folks. Today's guest, Ron Coleman. He needs a little bit of introduction because he's a lawyer, he's an activist, he's a podcast host, he's semi retired. It's very funny. He let me on his podcast and we had a lot of fun with it. It was actually probably one of the most fun podcasts that I've done, and I'm going to bring him on right now. Mr. Coleman, thanks for joining me. Well.

It's a real pleasure to be here. Thank you. And your podcast is like like a play on words. It's the culmination, which you think some people probably don't get, but I think my audience gets that. What do you think? I think your audience is well above average, although some of the smartest people in the world haven't gotten it because it sounds it's like other people's shows where they call themselves like a thing, a nation thing.

But I never would pretend to think that there's a nation like that. I have a nation dedicated to me. I mean, who Who used to do that? It was that crazy old Jewish guy who did radio. I don't remember his name now, but he had a he. Had a whole nation a followers. Had a nation. I don't have a nation but culmination finishing. The fact of the matter is culmination isn't really a great concept either. It's it's the I wanted a pun because that's what I do.

But what's the pun? I mean, why would I? Anyway, here I'm glad to be on. You're much more logically entitled. I'm not sure that we're going to do that. I think we're going to prove otherwise right now. Let me throw it on the screen here, folks. Culmination season three is going on. You can find me on Season 2, and I had a lot of fun doing it. It was one of the more, I'm telling you, it's one of the more fun conversations that I've

done in this space. I I, I as you know I used as an excerpt you're comparison of leaving the FBI to breaking up with a crazy girlfriend. It's a spot on. It's 100%. All right. I'm sure your listeners have heard. Use it. Use it many times. Yeah, we call the FBI my ex-girlfriend. They love that I it. It's the easiest way to quickly convey a point. And that's that's what we're all about, All right. So, as people can tell by your voice, you're from just outside of Dallas.

And let's get into, let's tell, let's tell about who you are as a person. Because. It's really that obvious. That Texan blood, it shines through. I could see it by the cowboy hat. Tell tell folks a little bit about kind of who you are as a person where you grew up. I want to kind of give them that lens before we get sarcastic. We have a long. We have this is long form. Yeah, as long as you. I am originally from Brooklyn, NY, the Brooklyn, NY section of Texas.

Yes, and I went to the public schools in New York. And that meant that my parents saw what was going on during one of the earlier crises of urban left wing meltdown, which took place in the late 60s and early 70s. So we participated in part of the Great White Flight leaving the city in the early 70s and moved to New Jersey's first planned unit development, which was called Twin Rivers in East Windsor, NJ. Was that a prestigious move?

Did the white flight. It all depends on what you're used to. I mean, moving from a two-bedroom apartment to a four bedroom attached house to us was pretty much a Beverly Hillbillies guy in reverse. Like, wow, we have our own postage stamp sized backyard and you know, we we really, we were very, very and plus central air conditioning. Oh man, that was big time. We so we were, and and I lived there through my high school

years. I attended Hightstown High School and then found myself quite unsurprised, quite surprisingly, at college at Princeton University. And I say, surprisingly not, because I didn't always know I was the smartest guy in the world, but I didn't necessarily think that it would. I'm out that way. Neither of my parents had attended college. My mother is an immigrant. She legal, of course. She came here from Cuba, her parents having left Poland.

They're Polish Jews from who wisely left Poland in the 1930s. My father was an orphan who was raised by his grandmother on the upper on the Lower East Side of New York. And we were, you know, regular kind of people. So no one had gone to college and all of a sudden I'm in this unbelievable world and those days. Too, right. I mean that's. Well, yeah, that was the long shot. That was the long shot. I was like everybody else.

I was prepared to go to Penn if I had to, you know, But I I sold him a bill of goods and but apparently I had a great time in college, learned of some stuff, but mostly had a great time. I was a radio. DJI was, you know, a singer, a dancer, a writer, everything like I said. And sometimes I went to the library, not too much. Did you have a bar that was called the library outside of Princeton? Is that a thing there? No, we oh, so people could say to their parents, if I'm in, I'm

at the library. Yeah, this was a big thing. So they imported that. There must be one. Maybe outside of Yale. They had one of those where I went to school in Oklahoma and I, you know, you could go to the library, you could tell your wife if you were a grad student or whatever, and you'd be like, no, I'm. I'm at the library grading papers. We did great papers. We just had beer.

Well, keep in mind, in my day there was, there wasn't the kind of I graduated in 1985. So there were no cell phones. Like if your parents heard from you once a week from the phone in your room, that was considered to be respectable. OK, So what wasn't so much they were calling you and wondering

where you were, you know? But I went on to law school at Northwestern University in Chicago, worked in a bunch of law firms of different sizes, none of which really was a very, very good match for me because the bigger the firm, the worse of a match. I am a little bit of an out-of-the-box guy, but I'm a litigator. I developed an interest in trademark law and ended up getting involved in a lot of very cool trademark law cases

and also in free speech. And in fact, part of what I had sold Princeton on was that I had been involved in the writing and publication of the of an underground newspaper, such as it was an underground mimeograph newspaper in high school. And so I was very interested in free speech and censorship, and also in in brands, and I got a little bit more and more into speech, and especially when the Internet was invented. By Al. By Al Gore, and I remember it

very clearly. I remember him rolling that out, and I began to see on the Internet from a business perspective, how intellectual property laws such as copyright and trademark in particular, were being used as a way to shut down competition and also to shut down wrong think. So I got a little bit more and more involved in that sort of

stuff. And ultimately, I had the experience of appearing before the United States Supreme Court in a case called Mattel versus Tam, which was a perfect fusion of trademark law and free speech.

In which the United States Supreme Court affirmed A ruling that we had secured from the US Circuit Court for the Federal Court for the Federal Circuit, US Circuit Court for the Federal Circuit, to the effect the US government could not refuse to register a trademark on the ground that it was disparaging. Because that just don't cut it. Under modern First Amendment law. You can't. Government can't decide what points of view it will endorse and which ones it will not endorse.

Trademark registration is a ministerial act. If you do XY and Z, use a trademark in commerce and Interstate commerce, and it's really legitimately entitled to be recognized as a trademark, Fields don't matter, and that

was the rule. That's that's a very modern take on it. The fields don't matter And yet isn't it interesting that a lot of the stuff is coming back into view because we keep seeing it seems like the government is coming in with a either a hand on the scale or they have they're they're looking for an outcome. One of the guys that I I talked to all the time, Bill Shipley talks about the government is supposed to remain agnostic. That's really the purpose of government.

It's not supposed to have any of those fields as you said. How interesting is it? But what year was that, that Supreme Court ruling? 20/16/2017 was the Supreme Court rule. OK. And then as you've seen that kind of roll forward and some of the other sort of infringements in that space, did you start off as a conservative guy? Is that where you were in the household? Is that your, you know, at a young age was your dissident, you know?

You know that famous expression that is attributed to Winston Churchill, though? Nobody knows that he actually said it. You know, if you're a young man and you've never been a liberal, you have no heart. And if you're an older man and then you never and you're not a Conservative, you don't have a brain. I never had a heart. I was like the guy from what was the What was the show? What was that show? How can I? I didn't really actually watch it. But there was family something.

Something. Family ties, yeah, where they had a son who was, you know, this conservative and the rest of the family was a bunch of hippies. Right. So I was, I was always that guy. And that was despite the fact that I grew up in, you know, a fairly, I mean my parents were not particularly ideological, but I did attend Jewish Labor Bund summer camp for six years. You know, this was before I was, I became religious.

I I became an observant Jew. I decided to step up my religious observance after college and before law school. So and and when I did that one Orthodox friend who I'd had in college was actually was my roommate and his mother introduced me to my wife. Later I said, well, now you make sense because before you didn't really make a lot of sense. You had all these right wing views, but you you weren't. You didn't really have the true theological basis for it.

And the thing my problem was that I didn't really understand that a Jewish person, like there aren't really different kinds of Jewish obligations to God. God says Jewish people, here's what you have to do. Can't eat this. You got to eat that, got to get up in the morning, you got to go to say your prayers and that it that's that's for everybody. So I never wanted to displease God. So can we. Can we go down that road a

little bit? And here's why I say that in the in the Northeast, people are very familiar with sort of culturally Jewish people and then religiously Jewish people. Where I grew up in Texas, there are no Jewish people that we are aware of. I think there's in Houston there, there's some now, but not that anybody was really understood. So my first real big experience with this was my wife who is from Brooklyn as well.

She's her buddies were a lot of more Jewish guys and they come down and they would talk about Jewish stuff like at a bar in Austin, TX and they're like doing this talk back and forth this New York Jewish thing and and I'm like guys knock it off like nobody here knows what you're talking about and you just seem weird like this is not the this is not the place for this and they're doing this thing he's like look at you Jewy knows like look at you like everyone knows what's going on

in your head and I'm going this is Texas, America, man. Like nobody has the concept of it. So I'd love to go down that rabbit hole a little bit. Actually, and I'm the best person in the world to go to go down it with you because I I have thought about this a lot and I've written on the topic and I and I. And one of the things that I consider to be my job on social media is to acquaint Americans with the what we might call the 21st century version of Orthodox Jews who are conservative.

You know, people think of Jewish people as being liberal. And in fact Orthodox Jews are overwhelmingly politically conservative super family oriented. You know I I married off my youngest son although his twin who is 3 minutes older is still on the market at the and he's 25. He's you know that that in our in our circles that's not that's not late but it's a little bit beyond the the median. I have more grandchildren than I would like to say because we are a little bit superstitious about

that kind of thing. But I have two other married children, very family oriented, very traditional, and we are embarrassed to a large extent by the prevalence of Jewish people doing the wrong things and saying the wrong things. And, you know, we consider that to be a a fairly predictable result of what happens when you separate yourself from God. You're either 'cause you're pretty much either there, or you're not. And it's and people you know

aren't comfortable with that. But I'm not here to make people comfortable, Kyle. There's no reason. Yeah. I mean, and you know, what's interesting too is that I think this is the time when that is going to be the most relevant to most folks. We're seeing this, this, this sort of there's been a soft and squishy culture in America for the last maybe 30 years, maybe

40 years. I don't know where it got softer and squishier, where everything was OK And if you think it, it's fine and all this kind of nonsense. And then it got like, like the hard way has always been the way that people have sought out. At least people at principle have always looked for something like what's difficult, what's being asked to me, How do I achieve that? There's a reason why the Navy Seals recruit and most people don't become Navy Seals. They become dudes who like chip

paint on a battleship. You know, finding things that. Are. I don't think we even do that anymore. Do we not? We have somebody else we have like. Like, have you know, have you seen these pictures of U.S. Navy ships with rust on them? In history, the US Navy has never sailed around with rusty ships. We don't do that anymore. We have. More drag Queens than we need, though. That's right, DEI. Is, is, is job one. Yeah. But yes, you're right. You're look, you have to find a mission.

You have to. If you go through life floating, floating through it without meaning and without an uphill, some kind of uphill struggle, you might get by just fine. But you are. You're going to, if you if you even, I mean look, anyone who has children and raises them or as my wife insists you say, wears them. She got to do a better law school than I did, see. So I have to defer. If you were children, then you have had some uphill experience if you, if you make any effort

whatsoever. But if you want to hand over to your children any kind of character, any kind of sense of what, what does a person achieve in this world? And then they've got to see you, you know, moving against the stream on something at some point. Now, you and I both know from past experiences that we've had we're mostly surrounded by people who are comfortable to be

spectators and lurkers. And one of the things I do try to get to do, You know, often people say, Ron, what's the one thing we can do to change things? As if I'm some wise guy? Well, I'm old, right? And that gives you a certain amount of people, I think do need to do what you've done in your life, step up and be counted and be prepared to be separated from the herd.

Because if you're not, first of all, when you do, besides possibly maybe achieving, you encourage other people to achieve, you encourage other people to step up. We do, you know, even those of us who look, I mean, I'm with Army, Dylan's law firm. Now that's a Group, A group of troublemakers, a group of people who are willing to put their names out there. Again, you're a you're a whistleblower. You know what I'm talking about.

If you don't stand up for the truth, at some point you will have to compromise, like anyone who's ever worked in law enforcement. I mean, gosh, coming out of Brooklyn, you know, the the Serpico hearings were when I was very, very young. But everyone knew about that. The premise was if you work in the New York Police Department, you you're some kind of crook and you're either in on it. It's kind of like the the 1960s version of Training Day.

You're either in on it. Everybody gets a taste or you make everybody else nervous. Right. And and and and if it's the latter, they're going to take care of you, they're going to take care of you. And that's how that you know if anything means anything to you. Now, the amazing thing is, in this world, there are a lot of conflicting. We've gone so far off where you wanted to talk about but we've got so many conflicting feedback mechanisms and one of them is money and wealth.

And I remember taking a reading a book in or part of a book in in college about in America we associate success with wealth. In other words, that that's how you you've made it when you've. Got. That's how we keep. Score. But in fact, that can I'd like to be wealthy. I'd like to, I just, I'd like to have a short experience of it just so I can say I've been

there and done that. But if, besides the fact that it that it makes you soft, being wealthy makes you soft, very few people are able to retain that sense of mission and remain wealthy or continue to, you know, to earn money. And that's, which is what makes what Elon Musk has done in the last couple of years so extraordinary. And there are people, there aren't really committed people, who will stick their necks out, but you know, a lot of moving parts to this. No question about it.

The the original spot that I wanted to kind of hone in on, you said at some point you decided that you were going to be an observant Jew. Yeah, and. And I don't think that's disconnected from anything we were just talking about there, but at some point. No, no. You may actually agree the decision connected. Yeah, let's kind of hone in on what that So you were your family members, were they not observant or were they not particularly?

They weren't so my like, like most people my age, I'm 60. I I had grandparents whose own grandparents and and parents were religiously observant. This was true of most people in East, most Jews in Eastern Europe 100 years ago. Then there was a massive dislocation that took place as a result of World War One, social dislocation as well as

geographic and economic. A great deal of, you know, communities that for hundreds and hundreds of years had been insular and who did not expect to have any kinds of rights. The combination of the experiences of World War One and the changes in politics and and regimes, as well as the influence of the Enlightenment from Western Europe finally finding its way into Eastern Europe and the Scientific Revolution resulted in people of faith.

You know, a traditionally faithful community losing its faith and going, going in the direction that Jews in Western Europe had already gone 100 years earlier. So by the time my grandparents were raising children, they were not observant. They spoke Yiddish at home, Judeo, German, that was that was their idea of how to ethnically realize. In other words, it was a very clear thing to to people like my grandparents that of course were Jewish. Of course, of course I'm a Jew.

Not only that, of course I'm a Jew. And I and I and I'm very proud of it because it makes me special somehow. That was just baked into them. This is also food. This is style of speaking. These are valves. There's all that. But that was kind of cultural. I mean, again, in my, in my grandparents, they, they they've, by the time I'm born, they're living in Brooklyn by way of Havana. Like they've had plenty. What a wild way. Yeah, right. They've had plenty of

opportunity to assimilate. But they did a very poor job of it because, yes, they're Yiddish speakers and my grandmother cooks what her mother cooked. So yes, you have this kind of cultural, but by the time. So here, now, let's Fast forward 20 years. I'm now in Princeton, OK? And I'm a member of the Tower Club and I'm going out with the daughter of the Unitarian minister who is the nicest, finest person I ever met in my life. And yet I know that we can never get married.

But I'm also saying to myself, but I'm like my grandparents, I'm not a bigot because I grew up in the 60s and the late 60s and I'm not prejudice against non Jewish people. And I I understand that our backgrounds are different. But what is it that makes me so certain that I have to raise a Jewish family and that to do so requires that I have a Jewish

wife? And the thing about Princeton in particular, Princeton, and schools like it in particular, is that, as opposed to if I'd gone to Rutgers, my father tried to pay me off to go to Rutgers, he'd buy me a car. If I go to Rutgers, they offered me, they offered me a scholarship, and it was a lot less expensive than Princeton, which of course was chump change compared, even adjusted for

1980s money. I mean, the numbers were because the racket, it was a very different the most you could borrow in those days was $2500 for the government. That was it. In any event, these elite schools provide tremendous opportunities for assimilation. Now looking at me now as a 60 year old man, much less with a yarmulke and a beard, you might say, well, Ron, you would never have passed anyway. Who do you think you're kidding?

And that might be true, but I But what I did see was that other Jewish students who were further up the assimilation curve than I was because their families had been in the in the US for multiple generations, not just 1 1/2 as mine had been. I saw what they how assimilated they were. And indeed, they didn't pass. They were still conspicuously Jewish to me. Interesting, Judar, I guess you know. Yeah, you can see it.

Well, it's like, well, I'm talking about my, my, my wife's buddies who are down in Texas who are not practicing. They're not observant Jews and they're. But I would say that they are more obvious to us as New Yorkers than they are as Jews, which is, which is also a thing because the thing that is always, maybe This is why I have a fondest for talking to you. You remind me very much. I have two father in laws. I have my wife's stepfather and

my wife's actual father. One of them is Italian, from Manhattan, grew up in Manhattan, raised his family in Brooklyn, now lives in Florida. Classic New York story. The other one married with my my mother-in-law at 16 years old when she was 16. My my wife was 16 rather And

then the stepfather. They now live in Connecticut and he's non observant and Jewish. The two of them have many similarities because they're both New Yorkers and New Yorkers. The Italian guy is more Jewish, is more Jewish style, then you're Connecticut Jew. Maybe he's because, but he's he's like sort of an atheist and hates religion and so I don't know. I don't I don't know if that's true. Anyway, I I see you as kind of a. Religion. He's not an atheist.

He actually, he's angry at God. He hates that he. Really hates to care about it. Have no attitude toward it whatsoever. But he's but he. Which I actually yeah, that may be the case. He he does have a strong feeling about it. It's it's the same thing we talk about guns. Listen, there's a lot of cognitive dissonance If you live in New York and you have thoughts that don't make any sense, like nobody should own a gun. But the police can't help you because you don't believe he

grew up with that. Police are all corrupt attitude too. And I was like, yeah, that's why we have the Second Amendment. And he's like, no, you know, it's just it just doesn't jibe. But there is something, New York, about your character that is maybe more recognizable than specifically Jewish, minus the Yamaha. You take that off. And yeah, I don't know that everybody sees that, at least not a no.

No, I agree with you 100%. You go around the country and you and you meet guys like me, you know, and you don't know anything about our religion. But yeah, this guy's in fact, when I was when I was registering, like we on the first day of law school, there was, I was talking to a friend of mine who was also going to Northwestern, who was from the Upper West Side of Manhattan. And there was a woman behind us who had spent her entire life in the Chicago area.

And she was Jewish. And she was listening to us talk. And she finally said, you people from New York have opinions on absolutely everything. Yeah. Yeah. I guess that's. I guess that kind of nailed it. Yeah. Anyway, I in so in the so this raised my consciousness when I was in Princeton of what it means to be Jewish and what it means to assimilate. And that I really had priorities, that I didn't really understand where they came from, other than just a sort of

cultural gut feeling. Which if that's all it is, I owe it to myself to transcend that. Because I, I, I Why should I be deprived of love or other opportunities just because of a sort of a cultural bias. Meanwhile, however, my roommate for three or four years that I was in school was a graduate of the high school division of Yeshiva University and he was a

Sabbath observer. And not only was he not a sort of medieval figure, because of course growing up in New York and my my grandparents had a store on the Lower East Side. So I I knew what Orthodox Jews looked like. But this guy was modern and he majored in chemistry and he graduated summa cum laude from Princeton. I mean, so he's a super smart guy. He's keeping the Sabbath. So obviously I see you can do that and succeed. He's at Princeton, as I am.

And you know, all this consciousness raising resulted in my choosing to go to a a summer program in Israel geared towards overripe fruits such as myself, or maybe I should say overripe fruit such as myself. Because that's one thing no one ever accused me of. And they they knew it, you know, that was what I was looking for. They they explained to me, they fill in gaps. And the fact is, my father, my late father, had did not have much of A Jewish education.

But he made sure that my brother and I had a something with Jewish education because he wanted us to make our choices regarding observance from a base of knowledge rather than a base of ignorance. And the vast majority of people who are critical of religion have no real understanding of what religions teach, much less the specific religion that they're usually criticizing and and seldom their own religion.

And that often can include people who have attended one of the some of the most anti Catholic people in the world are people who will start out by saying I went to Catholic school and. Yes, or I would. Or you'd be like my brothers. I have, I have two brothers that are both sort of functional atheists at this point or agnostics. I don't know what they're what they claim and they both went to Catholic University, one of them getting a degree in like theology, philosophy and walked

out. But that's like, kind of a classic Jesuit move. OK. But that's, I mean so that's that's that's an A truly exceptional situation well. If you if you knew my brothers, that wouldn't surprise you even a little bit. Like not surprising built in contrarians. I have a whole family of contrarians. If I told them one thing, they would set their watch the other

way. Well, I think there's also, there's a, there's a particularly American aspect to this, which is Americans and we see this in social media all the time. Everyone's an extra to every damn thing. And Americans don't want to be told and they're used to. And you know, they take a great deal of pride in having this anti authoritarian streak and what people often call organized religion. And if you've ever been to an Orthodox synagogue, you would laugh at the concept of organized.

But the concept or institutionalized religion makes people think, well, you know, there are all these doctrines and they're all these ideas and then they're all these forms of conduct that I'm not going to have full comprehension of and that I'm going to be asked to do. And that's UN American I I 'cause I'm a free man. And that isn't an unreasonable conclusion to come to.

If you have not been exposed to the idea that God is infinite, you will never understand in this world the true nature of what God demands of us and and what the divine, what the Godhead is about. And now it's only a matter of degree and we have a a tradition. This is actually something that came up in the in the recent weekly Torah reading that when the Torah was given on Mount Sinai, the Jews said we will obey and we will learn in that

order. In other words, look your God, you know what's best for us. You created us. You made a special mission for the Jews, whatever it is. You gave us this recipe. Here's what's again. Here's what you're going to eat. You're not going to eat. We're going to do it because you want what's best for us. And now we're going to spend the rest of our lives trying to figure out what what you want, because we want to love you as much as you love us, which is impossible.

But to at least get on that road or that level of affection and understanding as somebody who prided himself on his intellectual attainments, this was something that I recognized I would have to do. And when I made the commitment to become observant, it was at, it was at a sort of what's called a a beginner. I call beginners yeshiva. You know Yeshiva University people who may not understand this. Yeshiva is a generic word that means a place where rabbinic studies take place.

Yeshiva University is named is so named because it combines rabbinic studies with traditional collegiate study. So in this beginners yeshiva they certainly in in the 80s. It's not the same. Now someone had like me would make the commitment, say, OK, I want to, I want to live the rest of my life religiously observant. I want to do it and say, OK, but I know you want to go back to law school now, Ron, but you don't really know what you're doing. I mean this your, your roommate

in college grew up that way. You're not, you're not going to just recapitulate what you saw from. And I said, no, I'm an American, but also not so much that I was committed to it. And you know, I I recognize that the there are limits to autodidacticism that I can only teach myself so much. But again, I came from this working class background and I've been admitted to this top ten law school. And I'm not going to just walk away from that to studying Yoshiva.

Let me let me get the law degree and I'll come back to you Shiva. And they said, Ron, no one comes back. You you're you're not going to come. So of course I'll show you three years later, right after the bar exam. This is the Luke. Skywalker story You're just describing Luke Skywalker walking away and coming back. Did you know this? Did you know we were going to do a Yoda thing? Well, I will tell you that my father and I have a much better relationship than Luke and his father.

That's probably good if you cross swords with your father. It just doesn't end well. My father didn't did not really get me because he was a smart guy, but he was normal. He was not a nerd. But I came back. I spent then two years in yeshiva's before starting my legal career and I was a different person. No question about it. You know, I'm gonna Look, I was not such a wild and crazy guy in the 1st place.

I had conservative tastes. I you know, I mean, I like girls like them a lot, but I tended to be a one woman man all the time and wasn't much of A partier. I was kind of an intellectual so. I like that you said nerdy. I can relate to that sort of thing. I like to be like a like to be like a poet jock, you know, or a jock poet kind of thing. I want to go.

Yeah, that's right. I mean, I like and in fact, if you mentioned being a jock, there was a period in my late teens when I said I'm going to, I'm going to force myself to be a sports guy, a sports guy. How do you think I had never sports, sports. I mean, I would, I'm not a natural athlete. Just trust it. Can't jump, can't run. But you know, I had some bulk and, you know, upper body strength. I'm pretty good actually. You know, decent hitter, cannot

make a layout. But I kind of got tried to make friends with and get into the sports scene, which we're like with a nice Jewish guys were, you know, playing ball after school and that kind of thing. For a couple years. I was kind of a jock, but it didn't really take because it wasn't. So when I got into high school and I found the drama clubs guy, I was, I was home. That was, that was your career. That was really where I wanted to be. And you know, that was pretty

much the end of sports. You. Can't You can't live in both of those worlds at the same time. Oh, I think you can. I think you can. But if you really suck at sports. No, that's what I mean. Yeah, you're not. If you're not both good at both you. You get a pretty good actor, you know? I mean, it's kind of like with me on the SAT's.

I mean, yeah, I had a respectable math score, but I had a much more respectable English score, and therefore I kind of left calculus behind in high school and, you know, went with the words instead of the instead of the the integers. What do? You you said that coming out after the yeshiva experience really changed the way that you went into law and not from being conservative to to or you know not conservative to conservative but to being maybe more

principled. Is that is that would that be accurate you had more? No, no, no. That was always a goody 2 shoes, to tell you the truth. I was always a nerdiness. I was always pretty much a rule follower. I mean, I had my, you know, adolescence stupidities, but by and large, you know, I was a pretty good to shoes. But people who met me after yeshiva could tell the difference.

The way I spoke, the words I didn't use any more than I used to use it's and I found that interesting because I didn't really think I was. I was so different. I don't. What was fascinating to me was that when it well a lot of things were but here I was now in law school in Chicago. Well, just like there were there were two steps. There was the commitment over the summer and then sort of the self education during law school And at Princeton there had been this, you know, which is in the

New York area. There had been this community of Modern Orthodox kids. So I said OK, all major universities must have something like that. No, they don't. They don't. This is not New York, this is Chicago. And there was one guy in my class who was an observant, but he happened to be a Lubavitcher classic. And Lubavitch is that's Kabad. Those are the guys with the house in Crown Heights and their thing is outreach.

I mean, he wouldn't have been in law school otherwise because other Hasidim don't go to law school. So they kind of helped get me up the curve as well. And there were a lot of, you know, a lot of growth took took place, you know, as part of that experience. And that was kind of interesting because because of my background, I was unusual among newcomers to the Achieva world because I already understood Yiddish pretty well.

Most people in my situation don't know a stitch of Yiddish, so you know, that kind of made it a little bit more interesting for me. How critical is that the Yiddish skills? Well that combined with the the Brooklyn style enabled me and and plus having a having a good cup, a good, a good head. OK, I'm smart, I was able to pass for a non newcomer and I was also very sensitive to social cues. I knew how to dress like how to had a pass. So it's not a matter of, you

know, fooling people. It's a matter of not wanting to feel the social discomfort of being an outside. So I was able to integrate well, but I was, of course, I was really an an ignoramus. And even after two years of yeshiva, I had made what's considered to be very, very good progress. But it got me to the level where my kids were in 8th grade. OK, you know, you know, and here I am a 25 year old Ivy Leaguer, but it, you know, it certainly

helped. It got me a much better quality, you know, girl for, you know, who wanted a guy with that kind of background. And then I got into the professions and I will tell you that, you know, here I have broken through this ceiling that my father never could professionally. He was like a benefits clerk in in one company and then they kind of got smaller and smaller and they had fewer and fewer benefits.

He was like a really good guy and with a good head on and he and he ended up becoming kind of a small time private investor and ended up having a decent retirement and you know providing for my mother decently well in a way that I mean people an hour age can't even imagine that somebody with just a high school degree could could do right, Unless they were in social media of course. You know, yeah, well, that's that's, that's not real. That's so gross.

And it's such a small fraction of people that can do that. And then I get into but then I get into into this into this elite environment and I'm leaving early on Friday and I'm not really able to go out for lunch to network and and and it's it's a gigantic choice It's it doesn't just implicate that

hour or that evening. It implicates your entire the entire way that you relate to people because you're just not developing the same kind of contacts and the same kind of social you know shared social experiences. But I never never did I say to myself boy what a mistake. I mean, I had come to the conclusion that this was what and who I should be. And wherever things took me, I would, you know, I would do my best with them.

Frankly, I had a harder time adjusting to the social milieu of the professions because of my socio economic background than I did because of my religious observance. Because I didn't really pick up on cues all around me that even that that at Princeton, that people really studied assiduously in a way that I had never had to do in high school in. Other words, they spent more time just literally consuming. Studying books, preparing for tests, doing outlines. And I didn't really.

I I didn't know how to do that because I had, I had been in a much less competitive environment than kids from like from Chappaqua, OK? And I just was the best in the class, one of the three or four best in the class, just by being Ron Coleman. And it wasn't until I got, you know, and then when you were in college, you get to choose which classes you want. So you choose, you know, the

ones less resist. One thing I did do that was kind of intellectually idealistic was I majored in economics when I didn't really. I'm not a quantitative person as such, and I really my history, my interests were in history and politics. But I said, well, here's a paradigm for analyzing problems and behavior that will at least introduce some level of rigor into my thinking in my. And I think that was very valuable for me.

And it really paid off in law school, because when I got to law school, Northwestern is good, but it's not full of people from Princeton, Harvard and Yale. And I ran the table first year by by studying but because I because I had watched the paper chase and I knew that in law school you do study so. You learned that from the movie? I learned I wouldn't have known otherwise. That's. So good. I think that's so relatable for most people, too. It's like, how'd you know about that?

I saw a movie. It just let me know what was coming. It's like how? I learned that's how I learned manners. Standing up on a lady leaves the table. The rest of, like, all the taking off your gloves and you shake someone's head. My father's from the Lower East Side. You know, He's a real polite guy. Thank you. Please. But, you know, he's kind of

nice. Cities were not the kind of things that I was going to pick up at home, nor did we have, I mean, who I wasn't even interacting with people like that. I was interacting with a bunch of Eastern European. And, you know, Eastern Europeans are really blunt. God bless you. You put on a lot of weight. Yeah, just straight up. No, no punches pulled, no, no niceties.

So it's a harsh world. You you mentioned that difference was not so much the religious difference that you saw and even walking into the profession, but it was a class difference. At least, yes and and it cost me. I remember, in fact, one time after I I I was out of a Park Ave. law firm. I'm not avoiding mentioning and it just doesn't mean anything to anyone. That's fine, yeah, nobody knows.

But one that was known as having a lot of Orthodox Jews and one time as so we have, we pray three times a day, once in the morning before you go to work, once in the evening before you go to sleep or after work, and then once in the afternoon or evening and you've got to find a time to do it. And we had a we had a, it's called a minion, a group of 10 men who would meet in one of the offices at this law firm for

this afternoon service. At one time, one of the older partners who you know, an observant man, called me over. I said, I want you to know we're with you. And he said, you really have to. You're going to have to change the way you you interact with you, you, you. You're not going to make it in a place like this. You, you you're too maybe. I think it's you. You you picked up too much in the Shiva world with the expressions and and and talking with your hands.

And I really had no idea what he was talking about. I'd gotten through instead of gotten through Northwestern. He was 100% right. I was not clubbable. I really still had the stink of and and by. I mean history is full of people coming up from the, you know, from much more modest backgrounds than mine and learning how to do this. And it might be that if I had been a really good law firm associate, I might have gotten away with being who I am. But I wasn't a very good law

firm associate. So you're you're. I didn't last. They could tell where you were from. They could tell by your mannerisms, by your inner like that, that sort of like a Polish. They used to have this thing. Do you ever, have you ever heard of cotillion? You know what that is? Yes, I mean, I've, I've heard of it. That's the best fact. I got invited. Yeah. I got invited one day to be some girl's date when I was in, I don't know, 4th grade or fifth grade.

It was some, you know, childish thing. And I went to it and they were doing the box step and they were doing the foxtrot. And I was like, what is this nonsense? Like, what is this all about? And they were talking about where the forks go. And I was like, who cares? Because that's not the world I came from. My dad grew up very, very modestly and then did really well and and you know, but that wasn't our world. We were just like regular people. We didn't have multiple forks on

the table. That's crazy. Well, what are you going to do? You have one fork. That's what you need. So I went to this thing. And there are people that do that, though, like, they literally are raised in a way that is outside of my understanding and probably outside of what your understanding was at the time. And it's visible when you show up. And we can pretend at a certain age you learn to observe around you and kind of adapt if you're

a good enough chameleon. But if you don't even know what to look for, and you don't even know if there's a difference. And and Princeton was great for that. It was a finishing school for me in many respects, even though I didn't, you know, even though Stanley could still tell that I was from Brooklyn. And but I did learn how to tie a bow tie, a real bow tie, you know, and had had a dress. You know, I mean the things, the things you would learn.

And then I go and spoil it by putting this really conspicuous big black yarmulke on my head. And I go to like I sometimes have occasion to go to formal events now and I feel quite well prepared to present. And in fact I I would say that I'm on the upper quartile of nailing it in terms of because I look around and I see how people they don't know what they're they don't know what they're doing with their with their

evening clothes. OK And then I'm wearing the wrong kind of shoes and but I'm the most but I'm the one with the yellow star because I'm in a I'm in a Penguin suit and then the the black this just does not it just really doesn't go that is what God wanted for me and that's just that you know it it. And I will tell you what was a very interesting turning point though. For most of my career I did not wear my yarmulke in professional settings especially as a

litigator. You know going into court what you don't want to give, You don't want to cede anything and you're not. You're there to represent your client and to maximize ethically and what not his or her or its results. Not to make a statement about your faith or to tell people when you're not reachable, what you can and can't eat, whatever it is when COVID came and every which is not to say that I was hiding like everyone who met

with me or work with me knew. Because when I would, when I would eat and, you know, I would, everyone saw me in a yarmulke, but it wasn't part of my presentation as such. But then when COVID came and we were all on zoom, thinking I'm taking off my yarmulke in my own house, No, I'm not going to do that. I'm not going to do that now to this day. I mean, I was in front of the 9th Circuit a couple weeks ago, especially, guess what? There's a thing of anti-Semitism going around.

You might have heard about this. Yeah, I want to. We're going to get to that too, I think, because it's so wild how raw it is right now and on the surface. And I obviously, again, I'm not fooling anybody about who I am. But when you were a yarmulke, people quite mistakenly are under the impression that if you were a yarmulke, you were more of an Israel guy than someone else who doesn't necessarily.

I just didn't want that baggage. And so, you know, I went bare headed in front of the in front of the 9th Circuit. I don't know whether that's going to help my case at all because it was. I was brought in as a ringer on a kind of a stinker of a case at the very end. But this nonetheless became around that time I started doing video on social media because the platforms became so much more powerful and amenable to it, and I began to socialize.

My wife, she's, she's from New England and she's a very modest and private person and she knew that she was not marrying that kind of person. But she has a very, very well developed sense of dignity and privacy, which is, I mean there's a lot of good reasons to marry someone who is your opposite, not when it comes to values, but when it comes to

personality, there are limits. And sometimes it, you know, because I'm a bull in a China shop kind of guy and she's a, you know, she's a little Pussycat, but. Does she? Does she temper you?

Yeah, she she does. As bad as it would be, as bad as it is as many Ron Coleman faces you see staring out at you on on, you know, in My stream, it would be worse if it weren't for Jane. She has given me a, you know, at least the sensibility to understand that smearing yourself as she puts it around is not necessarily an inherent good. Do you rub off on her in the same way that she has a little more assertive nature?

Yeah, a little bit. The fact is, she really, really hated Twitter. It's a long, long time. It's the worst. But then she realized she's a writer. If she wants anyone to read what she writes, she needs to be on Twitter. You know, unless you're really a very big, established person, that's how you know that's how it's going to be. So she has, you know, she sends me stuff to retweet.

And you know, I love this. I mean, I frankly, I wish she would get on the podcast with me because she's she's really smart. When she writes about something she like she said to me, Ron, what? What if we would have met when we were in college? Wouldn't that be cute? We would never have met if we were in college. Because you were in the library the whole time. That's right.

I never went into the library. Plus, you would have looked at me and said that kind of wild, irresponsible guy is not the kind of guy I'm looking for. Yes. So it, you know, God has a plan. I don't always know what it is. I always tell people I can only see it in the rear view. That's when it like sort of makes sense to me. That's me attempting to justify something that was always going to be and always made sense, but it made no sense to me at the

time. And it makes no sense often times afterwards, if it gets far enough away, you start seeing this sort of the bigger picture and you go, oh, what an interesting arc that we are on right now, how you can't see it. It looks like a straight line. The straight line looks like it's going and God knows what way. And then you look and you're like, no, it was a natural curve. It always went to the way it was supposed to go. My wife and I joke about this

all the time, too. We met when we were 27, and we would have never met before that. In fact, we actually did meet briefly for one night. We were in the same dance club with some friends and we were all kind of out. And she was the only gal that was there. And it was my buddies from college and buddies from high school and and there was nothing, there was nothing there. And then, you know, two years later, you know, then it wow, stuck forever. So that's kind of wild.

Well, my so went went out. So Jane and I were in law school at the same time I was in Chicago. She was in Palo Alto, and I became a writer for the AB as Law Student magazine, which was called Student Lawyer. And the editors there were fascinated by the fact that I was attending law school. But I was an observant Jew. And that I would walk up eight or ten flights to my dorm room on Friday nights because I couldn't take the elevator and they just thought it was fascinating.

And they, they asked me to write an article about this experience, which was much less common than it is now, although it was hardly, you know, exotic. But then again, I was from the New York area, so I wrote this article and then actually ended up winning a couple of of awards.

And they had one of these little, like editor's words in the beginning of the magazine and they had a picture of me and, you know, introducing the article and how how much they liked it. And someone else who was in law school, a friend of my wife's, said, oh, why don't you marry this guy and like that one look at me in my bomber, my leather bomber jacket and said no, that's not, that's not what I'm

looking for. Like she wanted a, like a rabbinical student looking guy and I was a cool looking guy. I love it. She ended up actually getting the cool guy who dressed like a rabbinical student, so. That's a perfect. That's the that's the perfect jam. So my my wife and I, I'll just share this kind of briefly. It's the same kind of sense she says everyone thinks that you're really mean and I'm as mean as anybody. And I I feel like that given the opportunity. Oh yeah, if you're on the wrong

side, I'm, I'm heartless. You you talked about the guy that was born without a heart. I almost sociopathic. I have the ability to just, you know level in and get mission focused. But. Never with my or with the FBI after. All you have to well, you have to be able to do what we call flip the switch, which means that when it's time to do work, feelings don't matter. Nothing else gets in the way of accomplishing what is happening. And I'm very driven in that way.

And I think it came from from many, many years of being a swimmer where I just had my own thoughts in the water and nothing else. That's interesting. Yeah, just I love being alone. I I. In fact, even around people, I can be alone. As long as I can't hear you, I don't care. Oh no, I get that. Yeah, it's funny, actually, because I'm I'm an INTJ. I should know what mine are, but I think that sounds right. Yeah, I'm an introvert. Me too. OK, Ron, I could be an introvert. You're.

No, no, no. At a party, I'm not afraid to talk to people. But I'm. I'm very happy to sit there with my own thoughts. I, I, I, you know, I don't need, you know, it's a contradiction. But I you you know. Yes. You know what? Your energy is not coming from being around those people. It probably it drains you. It's exhausting to be around people for me and I feel the same. We probably. Especially especially when you're so much smarter than that. It's that's the worst.

There's nothing worse. I had a, I'll tell you a funny little story with my one of my FBI bosses, she said. She said something. You know, the throwaway line. I'm not the smartest guy in the world. Objectively true, right? You're not the smartest guy in the world. I'm not the smartest. Even I don't think I'm the smartest. Yeah, we've met people smarter than ourselves and and you'd be ridiculous. I I know a guy, I I've said this

once before, maybe on a podcast. But I had a a guy in my class when I was in high school and his physics notes were in the shape of a cartoon bird character and he had an entire series that was called The Birds of War. And if you got drilled down the tiny little lines were all physics equations that he was working through. But they were. They were animation. OK, that's another level of weird. Smart. He also was socially kind of retarded. He just wasn't able to talk to

people. He wasn't a cool guy. He was as. You might well expect. As you might expect, almost. You know, we would always say spectrum type, but he wasn't. He was just he was just a very cerebral guy with A and his dad was a lawyer and that was interesting. So long and short. He's that guy. So I know there are smartest people. I'm talking to my my boss and she says something to me and I go, look, I'm not the smartest guy in the world, but I know this it was a set up to the next

line. I know this is true. And she said, Kyle, I mean, I think you're smart. Who are you to affirm me? I don't require this of you. I don't know who you are, lady. And at some point she pushed me. And then we started getting into breaking out where I stood in the the IQ scores to let her know that I don't need her affirm your assurances anymore. She wasn't. I was just saying it, I'm. Just saying it. It's a throwaway line lady. Get off my back like you're not

a good manager. We we touched him briefly on this anti-Semitism thing. I feel like it's we have Kamala Harris that's going to solve the problem in the Middle East now. That's really exciting for me. And she's going to go and she. Did so well at the border she did. Got to give her a shot. And she's handled AI, so I'm no longer afraid of the Terminators. So all the things they put her on, she's handled. She's going to deal with the with the the Middle East.

What in the world is happening in this country where we have people that are blatantly saying the the only solution is revolution and Intifada and all these other kind of wild things. People that don't even know what is going on in the Middle East or don't understand the conflict. They are now marching in the streets, shutting down traffic mostly in the northeast it seems like, but all sort of live big city areas. How are you seeing that?

Well, these are mostly Muslims, overwhelmingly international students or recent immigrants from the Obama era. It's interesting to me that you're talking. I mean these are the ones who are snarling up traffic and you know rushing into synagogues and you know causing the real, the real problems. And it's really important to understand that yes, they are animated to, you know, they they really are. I think the word hate is

overused. They they're interested in asserting power and dominance and they see Jews as part of the power equation in the United States, quite understandably, especially in universities which are filled with these assimilated Jews who can't do enough to show how down with the revolution they are. And what they're mostly doing is flexing. I'm not saying that they aren't vicious anti semites. They are. But just the word hate has just become empty.

It's become empty. They are confronting institutions, academic, government, you name it and spitting it in their faces. Not because they're interested in a saliva covered face on the other side, but because they're pissing out territory. They're they are the the vanguard of a Marxist destructive, nihilist movement. And I think all those words apply.

All those adjectives apply whose mission, the mission of which is to undermine the institutions in the United States and in the West, to take what we have and which they cannot build for themselves and they can never build for themselves in any country, anywhere. You take what we've built either for themselves or just to. Destroy it? That seems more like it. Just to destroy it out of pre modern rage and the institutional majority left. In other words, I mean white, overwhelmingly female.

Now, even males are females feminized, either approve of this or have convinced themselves that they approve of it, which is by a much larger group than the first group. But they have hip MO ties themselves into believing that they approve of it because they can't imagine any other way of living. And if they did, they couldn't say it. And that's the third category.

They don't even believe that they approve of it, but they are terrified for their careers, for their standing, for their whatever, for their social standing. And it's it's, you know, it's hard for me to really envision. I mean, I've spoken to, I keep citing him. It's not name dropping, but he really helped me to understand a lot. James Lindsay, about the Marxist

roots of of this phenomenon. I'm hard pressed to believe that even in the darkest moments of the Soviet secret services during the Stalin era that there was and I, I I have seen that video of that former KGB guy who who says, no, Ron, you're wrong. And really this is what we plan and this is how we do it. I get that. But I think to some extent he would like to take credit for more. This is Yuri Besman or whatever. I'm sorry. Yuri Besman off, or whatever his name was.

Yeah, right. There is a real, a really strong inclination towards when when a society succeeds. We see this in the history of every great civilization. It gets soft and it gets weak, and there's going to be some vulnerability somewhere. I don't know.

You know, to me, the generation that let this happen above all is the one that my generation grew up being told was the Greatest Generation. The ones who won World War 2 are the same ones who opened the doors, opened the gates to the Barbarians in the 50s, sixties and 70s when they were running things. And I remember even perceiving this as a young child in the late 60s when rioting, race riots and Vietnam protests were taking place, and wondering when

does somebody stop this? When do the people in charge, those white people with the square jaws and the full heads of hair? My dad doesn't look like I remember looking at we we used to have the Dick and Jane, you know, right. And I was remembered. It's so I didn't know what it was, but I knew that that dad

didn't look like my dad. And I love my dad, but I could tell it was a different kind of. This was the guy that that you know he he he ate K rations and you know he had a he had a helmet that you know when he when he when he came home he didn't have that. He had the full head of hair and he wore like a tie or something, but for that. Absolutely cigars, guys who were in, who were in charge, and why wouldn't they act like they were in charge? So there's this strain of liberalism, of American

optimism. He'd let everybody have his say, and we have an airing of grievances and we have better communication. It's going to be OK. And it seemed that we had gotten past that and a lot of the problems that that attitude permitted. But what we didn't realize was that, again, I don't really understand that it was people sitting around a real or virtual conference room table planning this out. Because I think natural forces and people whose interests coalesce acted in a coordinated way.

That wasn't planned, but but nonetheless, you've had this Color revolution that is underway right now that just satisfied so many agendas. And when we left New York, one of the things, again as a child in the early 70s, one of the things that was going on was bussing. They were bussing kids. And I remember being so confused because my Eastern European relatives would say to me, you have Stratches in your class. Why were they asking me that? Why do they care? Why do they even care?

Like, who care? And then what does that? Start again. Help me what that means? Schwarzer. You never heard the word Schwarzer. I may have but but it doesn't. Say yeah, so that's the Yiddish word for a black. Person that makes sense. I mean, that's what I took from context, but I. Yes. So it's a famous scene from emblazing saddles. Mel Brooks, playing the Indian chief, watching, watching the

black sheriff arriving. He says, oh, schwarzers, they dock it in India. You could never make those movies today. No. The point is, though, when black kids from other neighborhoods started showing up in our schools, I was astonished they were coming to school in underwear. In other words, T-shirts, right? How do you go to school in your T-shirt? How is that a way to go to school? It was this big, this big shock.

And then we experienced 2016 and the the rioting that took place and no one who was in charge of do anything. It was such a deja vu that. 2016 You know we're talking post Freddie Gray This actually Ferguson 2020. No, 20/20/16, no, but the, I mean after the, the, the inauguration. In 2017, when when Trump was at. He's right. He's right. 2017. That's the 2016 election. It was that same feeling of why are we letting everything just utterly go to go to hell now?

But but in retrospect, as a conservative and someone who had, by virtually becoming orthodox again, as my roommate had observed, I I now really had a consistent worldview for being a bona fide social conservative. And you could I remember on the right one of the things that had really bothered me. I I've been active in the Federalist Society, which

everyone knows about, right? The lawyers, the conservative lawyers, one of the some of the leading lights of the Federalist Society though of the 90s were very involved in achieving same sex marriage. And you know this was where the libertarians and the cultural conservatives really parted ways. And I, and this was, this is something that has really never quite been examined because it's uncomfortable for the conservative movement.

But I knew that there was a certain amount of rot there. And besides, how pure can you really be? We're part of the entertainment complex, the news complex, the business complex, the government complex. These are all severely compromised. And I have a theme that I'm beginning to develop. I might actually write. I might have really actually found the book. We have been cursed with abundance, and it's not some kind.

I'm not making some sort of vague connection between wealth and or poverty and virtue, but rather saying a lot of the things that when I said this sort of American optimism is liberalism which turned into affirmative action, which turned into DEI, which turned into anti war, explicit anti white racism.

There's enough to go around. There's so much freaking wealth out there and so many people among the elites who are who have learned how to absolutely glom onto it in ways that you and I could only dream of that there was the sense that what's the harm? So we'll let people into schools who don't really belong there. They'll figure it out. Meanwhile, we've our system works. Everything works. And now it's 2024. What do we see? I let's Who don't know what

they're doing? Doctors who are being trained on wokeness instead of medicine. Right. Entertainment companies like Disney unable to enunciate a single rational creative work because of the damage that because all these, whether it's in brand equity, I mean also the, you know, the news and journalism business and nothing's legit anymore. Nothing's legitimate. Everything is compromised because we thought we had enough fat enough extra that we could get away with moving away from

meritocracy. Now, there's a legitimate argument that meritocracy is over soul. After all, I went to Princeton, and what it took me many years to learn was places like Princeton largely reinforce existing social networks. They're not there to introduce you and include you into new social networks. True, I made friends and contacts I never would have done. But those people were not inviting me to their events. They were. They were. I was not coming up to their

houses for the weekend. You weren't joining their country clubs that have been. There for 200. Years or whatever. That kind of thing. That's right. So yes, there is a distinct there's always been nepotism. There's always be that as it may, We know that hypocrisy is the is the the the tribute vice pays to virtue by at least holding out meritocracy as a

goal. We have a standard to say when favoritism or nepotism or departures from a meritocratic goal of achievement and capability and responsibility are not being met, and then we can have the discussion based on some baseline. What we've seen in the last couple of years is you may not even assert the existence of a baseline. That's the problem is the baseline for for people now. And you know, what's interesting is that, and I keep saying it in a different way, but I think

we're saying the same thing. In the same way that people debase a currency which has a standard and you can depart from it and you can cheapen the standard, which we've done, we also debased all of our institutions in that same way. And you're saying it is a departure from meritocracy. I'm saying people have basically they've they've traded away their credibility and to the point where. They don't have a great, a great display of that.

So the Supreme Court I have actually, look, I've been disappointed in the Supreme Court plenty over the last 10 years, the incrementalism, the all the things. But one thing I did say was I do believe there is a sense of seriousness retained in the Supreme Court, having stood in the well there that has been lost in most of the courts where I practice on a more regular basis. So I don't know how long your delay is between recording and. Yeah, we're going to play this in a couple days.

So folks, this will still be fresh enough for folks. So today, of course is Monday the 4th. And the Supreme Court ruled unanimously that this taking Trump off the ballots because some, either local trial judge or some state official, like a Secretary of State, has decided that he engaged in insurrection and they're going to unilaterally declare that. That being the same as the Civil War. OK, 9.

Nothing. How many commentators, distinguished professors, leaders in civil rights law and constitutional law signed their names to predictions that Trump would lose on this appeal? Yeah. It's and it was shocking. It's shocking because it's such

a dumb, obvious statement. It's like there's no way the court retains any legitimacy and rules in favor of what they thought I. And and and to some extent this is also an answer to well, you know that incrementalism, Ron, that you are so critical is of instead over caution gives that court the remainder of a backbone to do this. Even when all the elites are saying, of course they're not

going to do this. Even to the extent that justices who from whom we do not expect particularly rigorous work, one of whom has admitted that she doesn't know the difference between boys and girls, actually feel obligated to do their jobs. It was too much of A shock to to do this ridiculous like this was a step too far even for them. Look, it's an it's an amazing thing that we live to see it. But look who they've left behind

now. And now you have an entire sector of society that believes that a, there there's one Supreme Court Justice who happens to be the black, the black one, the the black male who shouldn't even be allowed to decide cases because of some preposterous thing they they cooked up. And which is largely coextensive with a group that believes that the entire Supreme Court is MAGA extremists, including Justice Jackson.

Judge Sotomayor, I mean. Having listened to their bump stock arguments and their questions which they brought their fantasy world to to play. And I you know, I don't listen to oral arguments to the Supreme Court all the time. But when I happened to be an expert on things like firearms and their and their and the way that they work, which I am compared to any of them on the court for sure, compared to most people. You know, I've I've built them. I've taken them down to the springs.

I can pick up a spring and tell you usually what what weapon system it comes from. Not very many people to. That now you had a very good shooting range story for me on my podcast. It turns out, yeah, I I know a little bit about that, that world. And when you watch a justice come in and say the purpose of the function of the trigger, which is the operative term right in the in the discussion of of the Firearms Act of 1934 or the national. Yeah, the NFA, she said it's to

to initiate a chemical reaction. And that's objectively false. There are multiple things in the chain that is, you know, sometime down the the the cause, the the chain of events that happened, but not always. In fact, as I I want to do on my podcast, sometimes I have one right here. We have a weapon system that is empty and there's nothing in it. And this is the function of the trigger. And you'll notice its job is to make the click, which is a

hammer going forward. That's the that's the function of the trigger. I can debunk what she said right there. They won't let you bring a gun into court, but that's the function of the trigger. That trigger functions properly. So she's wrong, but she brought that to bear anyway. And then for that Lady to be a MAGA stream is is hilarious to me. It it reminds me one to one honestly, 51 intelligence officials, this has all the hallmarks of Russian

disinformation. And then it didn't because that was made-up. This is the same sort of debasement, I think, for you to put your name to this opinion. That's, that's right. And, and, and the reason, again, you know, someone just decided to stop in the middle of this, you know, video and say, oh, they're talking about the usual MAGA complaints about, you know, how the world's gone to hell.

No, no. This is a very specific point and very relevant to what we've been talking about all along, which is, yes, a systematic debasement of meaning of the very idea that there are boundaries, that there are governing standards that adults should be prepared to apply. I remember the big I guess it was one of the banking meltdowns. And as an economics major, I

learned all about moral hazard. And you just know, every time there's going to be some kind of whether there was the savings and loan crisis, whatever limit the FDIC said was the limit, Congress would say no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no. Any amount you have, we we, we got you covered. There are no consequences there. I mean, think of how our government operates now. No one is held responsible for

anything. Even when that person is personally responsible for something going terribly wrong. There's zero accountability. You don't win wars that way, Greatest generation, but that's the will, you. That's what they bequeathed to us. OK, this is where I wanted to end. You just said something that I hadn't thought of because of the Greatest Generation gets a pass on almost everybody's book. They always want to blame the boomers.

And I kind of have have listened to that and it made a lot of sense. It's like, yeah, the boomers were the people that were busy doing their careers or cocaine or whatever was going on in the 80s, and they allowed things to happen the way that they did. And so the world went the way it went. They were raised by their.

Parody, it turns out most likely right this this idea that as these social revolutions were happening, the group of folks that went overseas and won World War 2 liberated Europe in very young ages, came over here and then ignored. They went back to work. They shut their mouths, they put their head down and they try to accomplish and build businesses

and do the things that they did. But that generation essentially let a a a misbehaving teenager let's call it of the American youth run the show and we are now seeing it happen in the same way. So the question I I think and I guess every generation is to blame every time one of these things happens because my generation now in the 40s, we are now the folks that my generation went to war for a very different reason but came back.

A lot of folks that are listening to the show right now have either lost limbs, have lost loved ones have given a lot for this country even if those were for bad reasons. Even if we look at it in the past and go, we don't think those were you know just or or ethical wars. They were fought and the skills that picked up and the hardship that was endured were real regardless.

And when that happens is it time for my 40 something year old generation to start putting putting the the consequences to these 20 somethings that are basically unruly teenagers that are acting out and and seem like they're desperately in need of boundaries. Is that where the the line has to? Because it sounds like the The Greatest Generation may have missed it. Let's put it this way. Those children of the Greatest Generation are the octogenarians who are running everything.

Still, you're the people your age are the ones who should be coming into their own, and instead what they have done is signed up for a system in which as long as they get a big piece of the pie, they don't care who's in charge. And remember Joe Biden was chosen specifically to be the person regarding whom it doesn't matter who's in charge because he would not in fact be in charge.

Meaning that as as going down to what you said, the 40 somethings and 50 somethings who should be in charge in that are being bought off. Look, I was once in AI, once almost tasted. Well, I once was in a law firm that was very, very profitable, small law firm. And it began to occur to me that they were not and I was an equity partner. They were not dealing faithfully with me. They were withholding information from me that was relevant to they had no right to withhold. But they were not.

They were not playing fair with me. And I left that law firm and I never made that kind of money again. They couldn't believe it. Why would you run? We were paying you so much to do what you do here. Why would you complain about these insults to yourself? Respect. And many, many people would ask the same question. Answer is you can't buy me, you can't buy me. And I didn't go through everything I've gone through in my life, which is why people's problems all the way down, OK.

But what my parents and grandparents went through to enable me to live the life that I do today and to have the healthy family that I have and to make a living even if I can't

have the wealth. And to you know to have a little bit of thought leadership role in a little tiny part of the intellectual you know world because I have things to say and and I'm going to put my name on them and get involved in sexy cases from time to time and sharing a big win for all the many losses because we we do tilted windmills quite a bit in in in in my little little spot I wouldn't have gotten to do any of those things and I would have to give up all those things and

I left. I had to leave two other law firms because I was because of controversial social media cases or or political cases that I took on. That's what life is about. Meaning goes back to the beginning of our conversation. It's about meaning and to be bought off. I don't care if Joe Biden. I don't care if Joe Biden's not really in charge. I don't care if he's realized this.

He's obviously senile. He's obviously senile and the people around him, the 40 and 50 somethings around him, are just fine with it. And the people in the press room were given scripted questions to ask and who he calls on, according to his his, you know, cheat cards. They're fine with it. They're making ridiculous money. They're all available to be bought. Every single person who looks at your career and says Kyle Serafin, there's a guy who wouldn't be bought.

He's not going to make more money. But eleven people call you a grifter because you try to you you want to do a podcast and maybe you want to get a sponsor or maybe you want to monetize. You know, on a grifter. You don't have the slightest inkling of what I've given up for principal and now you want to deny me the ability to to bring in 5 bucks a monthly subscription and you're going to call me a grifter. That's it. Anonymously. Anonymously. Keep doing what you're doing, Kyle.

It's that's really fun stuff too. There's something very amusing about people calling out with, like you say, calling you out on social media with this sort of nonsense. It's like #1. I've already shown you that I I did the math on it. You'll appreciate this. You do the math on what your

career is worth. If you have a constant income with a steady growth and the curve is predictable and then you have a pension and that's predictable as well and adjusted for inflation, etcetera, etcetera, you can do it out. It's about $5,000,000 with the benefits and paychecks that I, I walked away from. And and that's not that much money. I mean, it's a lot of money to me. It's a lot of money to a lot of

people. But that's not like the kind of money that you could buy my soul for because I, I don't know what my cost is, but it's a lot higher than that. And so you think I'm going to sell it out for 5 bucks a person on a subscription or for 500 bucks for a tweet, which somebody accused me once of that we were taking money for tweets. It's like you got to have you lost your ever loving mind you. I went for an entire year without a paycheck.

Like, I went for a whole year where I just didn't quit until the FBI showed up with a letter that said we're investigating you for 13 different charges, including a felony. And I went like, well, that's not real. And I'm not going to be an internal affairs investigation for you and make it any easier. So my attorney and I had this like easy conversation where it's like all right dude, he goes there's nothing that you're going to benefit from doing

this. By the way they accused me of things like having my podcast and putting a an upside down picture of the badge like you see spinning there as a federal that was that was a misdemeanor according to them which is absurd. These are publicly available designs. I mean we pay for them with our tax stock anyway. Actually that that'd be an interesting sort of trademark discussion at some other time the the the federal badge being used.

But what a weird moment and and it all comes down to lack of values and I I have to believe if you believe that there's a God and there's accountability at the end and that you're you're going to be meant to explain. I I always say we're accountable for every round that we send downrange. That means verbally that means you know a weapon system doesn't make a difference. Whatever you're shooting downrange, you're accountable. That's yours. Own it.

And if you're there's. A judge and there's judgement. There's a judge and there's judgment that that's exactly it. And at the end of the day, if you think that you're going to be accountable for all those things and it's cool for you to ask soft questions and be a Gavin Newsom who pretends like Joe Biden is so tough that you couldn't even keep up with him on his schedule or whatever other phony thing they've said. Saturday Night Live made fun of this, by the way.

Did you see that? No, no. I will send you a link. They they they had this pretty white lady, whoever she has the guest house who just lampooned all of these leftists. They're like, now we're going to go to someone from the Golden State Warriors who said he's like, oh, Joe Biden. Don't tell me it was disrespectful. He did a windmill like like they're they're they have to debase themselves to act like something that we know is not true.

Same way they talked about Ruth Bader, Ginsmer Ginsburg by the way that she was working out so hard that 25 year old journalists couldn't keep up with her. I want to put a bullet in my brain when I hear that stuff. That's the dumbest thing I've ever heard. It's embarrassing. And and they're not embarrassed and they'll know that we know that they're lying and when

everything is negotiable. Yeah, there's there's no concrete standard and that's the opposite of Western society and and all of western civilization been based on a standard. What is of what it's supposed to be anyway? There's always been that tension, but you're supposed to aspire to do. Better. And he said it any better, that's it. Can't be bought. I appreciate you jumping on with me. Let me throw this up on here. What's the best way? What do you like people to come?

Do you like to mix it up on Twitter best? Find it on Twitter events. Then you're going to get everything else shoved in your face. If you come, if you. If you, if you get the Twitter. Yeah. And plus, I've got the spelling there. I've got, you know, I've been on Twitter taking up taking up real estate for quite some time and I have a lot of fun. I appreciate your hot takes. I appreciate that you're reverend and can't be bought. Thanks for joining me today. That was fun.

That got more serious than I thought, that we're going to have more silliness, but the world is too serious sometimes, especially on this I really want. Fun. They can go to the culmination episode we did have. We didn't laugh a lot. We laughed. We cried. I went back and watched that whole episode again. Just so you know, I watched it again by myself and laughed at myself telling jokes that I had already told. That's how much fun I had with it. That is fun. That's a high level of fun,

ladies and gentlemen. It didn't. That's it, Ron. Thanks for joining everybody. I hope we do this again. Thanks, bud. All right, ladies and gentlemen, and that is the game. Thanks to Ron Coleman for joining me and a really interesting character. And you definitely have to go check out that version that we did. All right. And that is it. That is the interview of the day. You are midweek on Weird Wednesday, and I hope that you guys have a not so weird Wednesday.

I want to do a couple things before we ended up here. Let's say thanks to my buddy Garrett for continuing to put out cool merch for you guys. He's doing the best. He he's a one man operation. Be patient with my buddy who is slinging merch, including those T-shirts, including the new Kyle Serif and Show T-shirt which should start shipping pretty soon. It's the Dash suspendables.com that's the website for Suspendables merch. It's the, I don't know, the Suspendables gift shop if you

want to call it that. It is the O'boyle family sweatshop, the Dash suspendables.com. You can use my name as a promo code and you'll save a couple of bucks. It just takes a little bit more off the off the totals. We understand that times are tough. Nobody benefits from that, at least not from this show. That actually goes 100% to support a permanently suspended FBI whistleblower who's doing the right thing. He can't quit folks. If he quits and takes another job, the FBI wins and that's

what he's doing. So this is his wife's company and they're out there pressing out shirts in order to keep you guys showing support Physically, visibly and physically. Is that is that a thing? Physically, I'll just make that up. Yeah. Support the Dash suspendables.com by going over there, you guys can pick up the pins. You can pick up the the shirts and so on. I think the hoodies are basically almost done. Maybe there's a few more of the light duty ones.

And I think the hats are done for this run. There's going to be another run in any case, New stickers coming in, new PVC patches, all that kind of stuff. The Dash suspendables.com. All right. Five star review and then we'll get ourselves out of here. Here's a good one. We're we're kind of changing the game a little bit. I'm taking it from Spotify, so this one came in a couple days ago, says good afternoon, Sir. Thank you for all that you've done for our country.

You've been listening. I've been listening to your podcast for a few weeks. Really enjoy the podcast. The truth we present. The truth you present getting ahead of myself and corruption exposed. And that's from I in or maybe it's I in. Either way, thanks for the comment.

If you are listening on Spotify, you'll see that you're prompted with a automatic comment from me, and that is to say, if you'd like to contribute a question, a comment or a sarcastic remark, I'm happy to see it. I approve all those. I don't. I don't filter any of them. So if you guys have something on there, it'll take a second for me to put it through. But we want to acknowledge our listeners on Spotify, which is our second biggest platform.

Thanks all of you who are leaving reviews on Apple, on Spotify, on iHeartRadio and so on. The comments below and the live chat that goes on every single day here on rumble.com/kyle Serif and all the weekdays. Thanks so much. Make sure you've given us a like, make sure you're following, make sure you share the show if there's something that tickled your fancy or touched your heart. And we will see you again tomorrow with a a really important interview, I think an

update with my friend. Davy Nelson. So stick around. We'll see you in the morning. God bless. Be safe. See you soon. Thanks for listening to The Kyle Serafin Show streamed live weekdays on rumble.com/kyle Serafin. Follow Kyle on Twitter, Truth, Social and Instagram at Kyle Serafin.

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