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 lives here. Our civil liberties, enthusiasts Second Amendment, Defender and recovering FBI agent. Kyle seraphin. Hello, my friends. Welcome to the Kyle. Serif and show. What's today, today is the 7th of June. It was supposed to be my
daughter's birthday yesterday. If you listen to my mother, she doesn't know what time it is. I've got Savannah Hernandez in our studio today. She joined me for breakfast and coffee and a chat. We're going to talk about what's going on in the southern border. So, welcome to the podcast, thank you for having me Kyle. And, you know, I would just say I'm not usually awake this early. So our friendship means a lot to me.
All right. So we have a mutual friend, we had dinner the other day, you grilled me? Because you thought here's a Fed here, trying to entrap me immediately immediately. You're like, oh, I'm former FBI. And I was just like, oh, it cause if you ain't seen the face, it was that was pretty close to what it was. Yeah. It was a mixture of contempt potentially contempt. Yeah, a little bit of discussed. Maybe I was like, who fed? Yeah. Like you said, that out loud, I did.
And how dare you is kind of the thought, folks. We're going to get into a conversation about a lot of the stuff that she's going on, if you're not familiar. With Savannah's reporting. You can find her at Sav underscore, s ays underscore on Twitter, Salve says, in fact, I didn't actually know Savannah's last name. I just knew her Twitter handle before. Any of this stuff, I wasn't really in the space other than I was aware that she was out there reporting.
I think you'll be shocked at some of the things that she's been involved in especially if you're just sort of waking up. A lot of people have been in the last year or two, and Savannah is one of the people that's been making that happen at a very young age as well, which you can tell by looking at her actually, probably can't tell how old she is. But I do, thank you. I was always, I'm always surprised when I find out that people are alert to politics at
a, much younger age than I was. I'm gonna do a quick sponsor. Thank you. We're going to thank Catholic vote. This is Catholic vote, as you guys. Well, no Catholic vote.org is the sponsor of our podcast. They do a fantastic job advocating for faith, family and freedom. They have the loop which you can sign up for my mother. Just let me know what's in there and now she's constantly sending me text messages saying hey did you notice what they're into? You see what they said about Biden.
It's an excellent sort of newsletter to keep you on track of what's going on as a Christian in this country. And there are many sources of news. So, you know, it's just in the one more option to be able to be aware people covering different stuff Catholic vote.org, and let's bump into Patriot coolers what quick as well. Patriot coolers. I'm going to show you what they're hard tumblers. Are there hard coolers look like
these are a row. Demoted thing they are I would say equivalent to a Yeti but they are less pricey. They have better capabilities and they say Patriot on the side of them they've got Teen stripes, the bottom always have stars, they are fantastic patriotic company. They give back to Veterans and they take care of the Kyle Surf and show as well. So check them out at Patriot coolers.com. Let's let's jump right into
this. I want to make sure that we pulled up. I see you all in the live chat, your rock and roll and we are going to just sort of send it here. So I want people to know a little bit of your background. Like I said, you're younger than I am by quite a bit. You're younger than a lot of my audience I think is well tell people how you came into this business, how in the world you end up reporting and then we'll talk. Some of the stuff you've seen
recently, absolutely well. Good morning everybody. Again, my name is Savannah Hernandez. I have been a reporter now for about five years and I actually really love telling people why origin story of how I got into politics because it was a complete accident actually. You know, when I was in university, I was not politically involved at all. I was always kind of interested in politics, but it was never something that I was fully into.
I was probably one of those dumb college kids who might not have known the three branches of government like, that's how I Out of the loop. I was okay. Did you know how many were in a dozen maybe? I don't know. You know, I've seen this man on the street interviews where they ask some questions. Oh, yeah, yeah, no, I when it comes to math, I'm not the smartest Asian. I'm not going to lie, but, you
know, we're working on it guys. Okay, so in college now politically active and then after college, I was like, okay, have a journalism degree. Let me go put it to use. I got a call from Infowars. Never knew who I looks Jones was never heard of Infowars in my life. They Ask me if I wanted to become a production assistant. And I was like, absolutely, I am in no position to say no to a job. Did you have a resume out there in the world, had in the world that even find you?
So, I was throwing my resume out for about a year at that point, and I did have prior experience in video production news. Writing, PR, I had the degree, but I just didn't have enough experience because I was home-schooled. So I graduated when I was 20 and I didn't have enough, you know, prior experience to get an entry level job in local news.
So, If I was kind of struggling and then they reached out, and it was really funny because the first time I showed, Alex Jones is hand had no idea who he was Zero, political understanding of what was going on. And then I'm working on Alex Jones is show for 3 hours a day for a year straight. So that's kind of how I got my crash course into politics. There's nothing funnier than the idea.
And by the way, we're sitting in here, you're getting ready to you know to go on the live stream and you've got Alex asking you questions. He still he still in contact with you still friend obviously. Introduction to politics politics was three hours. Plus a day of Alex Jones full
speed. Alex Jones has not slowed down since then, no, no. And yeah, it, like I said, it's the craziest part of politics to because I'm getting like this very in-depth understanding of the Rockefellers of all of these, you know, upper echelons of society that are ruling over us. So it's not just like oh Republicans and Democrats like these globalist want to kill all of us and they're targeting your kid. Do the Alex boys, I can't do the Alex voice. I'm a girl I you know I can't go.
Oh that deep but it was it was just absolutely incredible to like sit there every day and it was funny because I remember he was talking about, I believe in Vietnam, they tried the government was experimenting with this gay bomb. They wanted to like drop an estrogen bomb on the like, their enemies. In Vietnam, to try to see if they could turn into no idea. This is true or not but it sounds amazing. That's what I'm saying?
And so I was like, okay, this man is crazy and what my job was is like we are live looking up articles as Alex's talking to Dove, you know, add to the show. And so I'm looking this up and I pull a Wikipedia page about how. Yeah, the government did try to propose this program, they tried to experiment with this and I was just like, okay, that's that's enough for me today. So that was the intro worked as a production assistant for most people that would be the end of the story that be like.
And then I became a horticulturalist and I spend all my days in a garden. Yeah, it was so funny because I would go home on the weekends and I would tell my parents all this crazy. Stuff. I was like, there is fluoride in our water. We are being poisoned. There are two Trails, okay, people who are being spied on by the government. Right now, our phone is listening to us. I don't like the feds anymore and they were just like, you need to calm down, and I was like, no, the government's here.
They want to kill us, man. And so, so funny because even my parents were like, maybe you should find a different job, but I stayed there for two and a half years, worked up my way up to lead, producer of their afternoon show Alex, had me feeling in, I was doing man on the streets. One of my first viral Clips. I went to a Protest, because again because I was politically a knowledgeable, this was during
2018, right? So we're halfway through the Trump presidency and I had the basic understanding that everybody hated trumpet as a Hispanic woman. I was supposed to hate him, too, because he hates Hispanics and he also hates women, right? So I would go to these. You have that in your head when you go out there and no, no, absolutely. That's what the people look at you and saw. That was the narrative. That's what the people expected me to thank.
And so I would go to these Trump rallies with the intent of Tell me why I should hate Donald Trump. If you are taking time and energy out of your day to hate somebody, please tell me why I should hate them, too. Because this is clearly an issue. If you're really out here like at 2 p.m. in the Texas summer, holding a sign about how much you hate Donald Trump. You think I want to be out here in the sun? You must really hate this man, right? And you must have some reasons. Yeah, exactly.
And so, my first viral clip, I go to an anti-trump protesters in Austin and these were grown adults. Okay, these people are in their 50s. 30 to 50 years old soul. Groan. But adults. All right. Like, you all have developed brains. You should know why you hate somebody. If you're protesting them, not one of them could respond as to why they hated Donald Trump. I was like, well, can you just give me one reason? And they were like well there's so many.
I was like I know right? Give me one. They couldn't give me one. It went super viral and more than anything. It kind of unlocked for me the reality of where America was at that. The average person had no idea why they were angry. It was all false outrageous. Was all based off of a lot of government propaganda and then we fast forward to the BLM rights to 2020. I'm an adrenaline junkie, I like
seeing things firsthand. I like witnessing history with my own two eyes and so I was going out because I was watching the media. Tell us that these were fiery, but mostly peaceful protests on the streets and then Austin was being targeted. And so, I went out and I was watching said, peaceful protest. I was watching people's cars. Get firebombed. I was watching police officers, get bricks thrown at their head and it really lit a fire.
You're in my soul, I guess. Because I was like, hey look, I get it. If you think that there was some type of Injustice here but one what were being told about George. Floyd isn't true to BLM, is a lie and they're profiting off of you guys, and they're using your outrage to destroy the United States of America based off of a lie and three. Yeah. Okay. I don't always love the police in every situation either, but I don't think it's right to throw
bricks at people's head. It's just not a nice thing to do. No, nobody wants to go to their job and have a brick thrown. Yeah, it's not a nice thing to do, you know? I mean it's why I really did feel bad for these police officers and I was like I want them to know that there are Americans that stand up for them and are on their side. So I went, and I held a police
lives matter sign. And on the other side, it said, say his name, David Dorn because David Dorn had just been murdered by BLM looters for having the audacity to defend his friends store from being looted. He was murdered for that. I listened to the story and it just really, you know, struck a chord with me. So I went and I held that sign and of course, BLM try to beat my ass. Got mobbed. I got my hair pulled, I got swung at and I don't regret your
security element looking. Like, at that time, it was looking like me with a five dollar poster board. So that's what it was looking like. And, you know, it was my security was like, me being pissed off because I was like, look, you guys are bullies, okay? I don't care if you think that there is an injustice, Americans don't deserve to have their neighborhoods burned down their stores.
Looted their lives put at risk, they don't they don't deserve to be again like fearing for their lives because you're mad about
something that happened. So what it stood up for police got beat up went and did it again to really prove the point because I don't like bullies and I also believe that we still live in one of the greatest countries in the world and we have our first amendment and that's very important and so I wanted to go Express that and I didn't even realize that in going and holding up this poster.
It was a really good example of how far we have gotten as a country and how dangerous it can be to express your first amendment because they had grown men trying to beat me up for holding a sign silently, which is ridiculous. I'm not a very big guy and and I feel like I could probably like just throw you over my shoulder and run you somewhere. Probably that's that's just you're not a big person but you
have an enormous personality. I listed this as the indomitable Savannah Hernandez and many ways a word you refused to be cowed or back. Down by these people. You said, adrenaline, junkie has that always been the case because there's it takes something to go into the into a mob. I've been in a mob, I've been in a mob as a law enforcement officer. It's not fun. It's not cool when you're armed and you have body armor and you know that it's there's too many
people there for backup. It's way different if you have a microphone and just a lot of personality and spunk, you're gonna walk in there and see if you can walk out. Yeah, how did you end up there? Well, Alex actually sent me to Hong Kong this was during their pro-democracy protests back in 29. I thought you're going to tell us that you were doing martial. Arts training. No, that's why I wanted to hear. No, absolutely not. I'm just crazy. So, Alex sent me to Hong Kong.
And I was, I was following what was happening over there. They were fighting back against the CCP and I was watching all of this happen and it was one of the coolest moments of my life. Because if, you know, how in the United States, the left likes to be like, save our democracy. Oh my gosh, I actually feel like I did witness people. Who really did want, true democracy You see, right? They wanted their voices heard. They didn't want to be ruled over an authoritarian
government. They were find the American flag. It was a beautiful thing to see and then you had the CCP come in funny enough. A lot of the antifa tactics that we see in the United States come from the hongkongers and their protest. A lot of those umbrellas. The tactics that they use to put out tear gas canisters that all came from Hong Kong,
interesting. So when I was over there where there you think people were observing it and saw that was successful or those were those tactics things that have been briefed before? And the people in Hong Kong took him to do one thing. They wanted democracy in the people and the antifa groups wanted to do fascism. Yeah. That's what it was. Is the people in Hong Kong are actually trying to be like,
please help us and then antifa. We're like well we're trying to take away other people's freedoms away so we're going to use the same tactics for other purposes. Sure. So was over there was getting tear gas with the hongkongers bricks whizzing past my head. I also don't have any body armor at this point because Alex was like just go, you know, he was a. Who wants to go to Hong Kong? I raise my hand. I was on a flight. The next is the same as just you. I mean, a camera crew of some
kind. I was just with one other camera person and Alex was just like, just go. It was funny because everyone kept coming up to me and speaking Cantonese and I was like, I am American. I was like, I'm an American Asian, sorry. How was that received? They were really nice. Hongkongers were great because they were really grateful that journalists were there to go cover their story because oftentimes in China, if you speak out against the
government, you get disappeared. So they were really wanting cover. John what was happening over there and again it was really an interesting thing to go witness. But as tear gas canisters, you know, we're flying overhead and I'm choking and dying. I was like this is awesome and I just was like witnessing history with your own. Two eyes is so cool, and I wanted to do it and then when it came to the BLM rights as well. II did.
See the media trying to lie to the people and tell them one narrative that was happening on the ground that actually wasn't so I was like, okay. I guess I'll go do your job since you refuse to accurately tell the American people, what's
going on? So I think that's where a lot of that comes from to was, I don't like, people being lied to, and it is very easy to go out with a camera and go show people the truth about what's going on, especially with Twitter, especially with social media in the modern day. So yeah, that's how that got started. Now, you're still pretty young relatively speaking to people in the news industry, tell people how old you are because they're going to have their heads blown off.
For this experience, you just laid out, I'm 26. So technically like 50 and woman years but you know, it is what it is. So you're 26. You've been doing this for five years since many people were still trying to find their first job out of college and you went through journalism School, specifically, I did. Did you take information from journalism school and apply it? Or did you realize that, you know, how does journalism School compared to doing the real job that you do?
Most people don't ever actually do the job you're doing coming out? Yeah. It's really interesting because I feel like the entire education system. And again I think one of the reasons why I'm successful in my career. I tribute that to my mom a lot because you did homeschool me and she was like you need to be an individual thinker. If you want to learn something, go do it yourself. Go figure out life yourself. Don't tell people to tell you what to do. Just go do it and the education
system is kind of the opposite. If you look at the American education system, whether that's K through 12 or even in University, you're Put in this box and you're told to listen to Authority. You're told how to do something a certain way and regarding journalism in the modern day. It's kind of the same thing and it's really funny because a lot of, you know, people working for the notable organizations, the notable mainstream media will scoff.
At me, we drop names here. You don't have to, you don't have to notable them. Yeah. Okay. You know, Rolling Stone, NBC CNN. You guys know, all of the major players here. A lot of their reporters will scoff at me and they'll call me a fake. Journalists and that my journalism isn't real. And I'm like, I'm out going out with the camera and I'm showing the American people, what's going on?
One of the artists journalism, should be one of the arguments I used to make, or I started making since I've gotten involved in any of this and it's the same thing, I think, Matt, Taibbi has said, and he's broken big time with the mainstream and gone out there. Independent, the way that the only reporting is getting done. Journalism used to be a blue collar profession, it used to be a gumshoe types.
It was detectives in their heart, even if they didn't have the badge in the gun and they were trying Break stories. They're trying to learn things. You're trying to expose them the American people. They didn't need a degree. They didn't, they just needed tenacity like you have, they needed a curious mind and a penetrating intellect. And like the joy for them was exposing the powerful, hmm to criticism and exposing corruption and so on. Hmm. And that's not there anymore.
Now there's another bootlickers, like your generation and, you know, just between Our Generations, their bootlicking, you know, government harder, daddy kind of people there there on the world. That happen. Yeah, they're the propaganda arm of whatever Administration is in office. Essentially, I think under Donald Trump was the first time that the media, you know, they
were completely upended. And he really did expose them for exactly what they are, which was a propaganda arm because they couldn't control Trump. They were trying to twist every single story and make him seem like this K KK, Nazi dictator, which was just, you know, absolutely hilarious because one of the things that I like to do with my journalism as well as actually go out and talk The American people.
So, for example, last year, Joe Biden was tweeting out about how the economy was doing, great, and Americans had more money in their savings accounts, and let, you know, job market was doing great. And so, I simply take his tweets, I print them out and I go to lower-income communities, and I show them that we can I say, hey, the President says that the gas prices are lowering. What do you think about that? And they go, what the hell is this? That's not true.
We are struggling out in these streets and it's horrible. We're out of baby formula. The shelves are empty.
Gas. Prices are high, we have record high inflation, so Joe Biden can sit here and tweet all he wants, but it's an absolute lie and then it goes Super viral because CNN isn't going and interviewing these people CNN is sitting there and they're, you know, reiterating these fake statistics that the Biden Administration is putting out as opposed to actually going and speaking to the people that are living under the bad policy that we have been put under.
So I think that's another important aspect in like you said, that's the way that I view journalism. You know, it's kind of crazy to me. Because people are like, oh, survival of your work is so great. How do I do that? I'm like dude, I'm not special at all. Anybody can do my job. Anybody with the will to go?
Tell the truth can do what I do. And I love telling people that because it's like, you don't have to be some, you know, big name or have a huge following to be a journalist in the modern day, especially with where Twitter is that. Anybody can do this job, anybody can go out, talk to their fellow man. Go get the story, go point and shoot a camera. If you see something going on, it's a, it's a really great. Great Market to tell the truth
right now. So we were just talking at breakfast about how the the mainstream media that the sort of Legacy Media is going to die under its own weight. They are IP boys. It's, there's a lot of money behind it. There's a lot of infrastructure there and as you just said, a Twitter account and a phone is enough to go out there and get started.
A microphone. Like this is not incredibly expensive, you don't need a big Studio, we're sitting in a you know, an extra bedroom of the house that we rent here and we can talk to as many people as are interested in listening. Hmm. So That's changed since you started even though, absolutely because they're, you know, Alex Jones. One of the things that happened is did, he used to have a mainstream? Was it on carried on any cable or something like that?
How is Infowars? It was, it always online. So, he is still on radio shows and then he was on radio. He started on access television back in the day. When feel like there was a. Yeah. But it was, it was very small, it was smaller, it was on a smaller scale, but then again the social media, he did have a YouTube channel. He had a Twitter. He had a Facebook and I was actually there the day that all of that was taken away. It was crazy.
I remember, I woke up in the morning, I looked at my phone because I had the news alerts on and I looked at my phone and it said, Infowars, banned from, I believe it was all in the same day. Apple podcast, Facebook, Twitter, maybe even YouTube. It was like four of the big big platforms and he got banned simultaneously and, you know, the Basically worked in cohesion to silence him which was
absolutely insane to see. And I think living through that as well opened my eyes again to how controlled the information that we are receiving. Really is like, we we are kind of sold this illusion that we do have freedom of speech and that we have freedom of thought in the United States of America. But to be quite honest with you, Alex Jones is still currently censored on Twitter. He's still banned on that
platform. For me, he's still banned from YouTube and I think that not having access to that information or knowledge even if the left-wing thinks that it's misinformation okay then combat it with better information than going, you know, set the record straight. You have the ability to do that and Alex has the ability to say
whatever he wants. That's the beauty of Free Speech. But what a lot of people don't understand is that, like I said, what we are even given or The Narrative of why we're in a certain warlike, look at Russia and Ukraine right now that is very controlled what we were. To see is very controlled. And so it's interesting to see in the United States in 2023, what we're allowed to think.
And that's really what it is. Is so C sub, put out some documentation stating that they were going to basically co-opt Americans thought, processes under cognitive infrastructure, right? So they have access to do infrastructure control. Now, they've said what's between your ears is part of the infrastructure, the cognitive infrastructure of the information technology. So we are literally seeing Government agencies saying 1984 orwellian type thought part process controls wrong, think
wrong, speak. And Alex is obviously one of those people when you're when you're out there in the world seeing this stuff this is most of your most of your adult life has been this way. Yeah. And you also got to be sort of maybe broken out of that mold by being a homeschooled person. I think so. So when you looked at your colleagues going through the
academic career, hmm. Could any of them see this and go like, oh yeah, like I don't want to be censored or did they, you know, because you're essentially advocating, a liberal position, the liberal position like true liberalism. Yeah, not the courage. He lived like lowercase L liberalism, which is to say that you should be able to have whatever thoughts and experiences and state anyway
that you want. And if it's bad we're going to just beat it down with better information with facts with questions with the fact that you don't know why you even believe that way. And so that's that's a liberal position. That's what freedom is about and they're sort of illiberal 's. That are that are looking to
control narrative. It's very it's the opposite of liberalism did your colleagues, do they at least have that like instinct as young people because that's kind of where it's always been a punk rock world where it's like you're young. You want to damn the man you want to fight against it. You want to Rage Against the Machine like Rage Against the Machine now is like pushing for vaccine shots and stuff like
that. You can't cover the feels like rage for the machine a doula guys but they're old now they're you know, they're old enough, they're older than I am they're you know, twice your age, do your colleagues in your age bracket at least get it that like You know, they're supposed to push back against the the the way that they're told to thing because that's what young people do or no. I mean, regarding the people that I went to college with a lot of them went into local news.
So I think that it's a bit different for them than it would have been for me, just because my career path was more political. And when it comes to politics, you are like much more at risk to be censored. I mean, I was censored for two years, I was banned off of Twitter for two years, their next for journalism.
I think it's a little bit different for them, but I do know of people who were even working in that local new setting where it's like, okay, maybe you work in a small town in the biggest story of the day is like a cow being in the
middle of the road. But when covid happened, a lot of local journalists were like, hey, you know, there's a big uptake in myocarditis cases in the city right now or this person is coming forward with a story about a vaccine injury and then they were told that they couldn't cover that. So that's when at the local level that It wouldn't necessarily be I guess tied to politics or censorship or be involved in that messy I guess situation.
That's when a lot of like the Normie is if you will started getting dragged into that and started waking up, it makes sense. Let's talk about censorship. Let's talk about your censorship. We know, Alex Jones was pulled down, you got to see that happen. You were there when it went down and then you got your experience, your own version.
I did and, you know, I do think the Lord that he gave me such a stubborn Personality because yes, when somebody tells me, no, I'm like, okay, I'm gonna go even harder, I'm gonna go 10 times harder and I think that has been really great for my journalism career because you know, if government officials tell me that I can't record something and I'm in a public setting and I know that I can record them.
Like, guess what? I don't really want to record this but now I'm going to record it even harder than I was going to. So congratulations, we'll get into that in a minute. But basically, I did have my Twitter account from well, During the beginning of my reporting career, I didn't even get censored. When I was working for info wars and Alex Jones. I had quite the following at that point.
I'm not a numbers person but just to give people an idea like I had over 100,000 followers at that point. So it's like okay as a journalist when you're, you know, on the independent side it's like you're falling kind of shows your credibility and you're on the map with 100,000, like they're people who write for Daily Caller there, people who write for the Washington Post that hit me up, you know, New York Times and they've got 15,000 followers on. Better. So it is a gauge, right?
And you're, and you're in the game at 100,000. So and exactly. So that's how it's kind of viewing it. I was like, okay, like people are following me. I'm a little I'm credible at this point. People trust me to come to me for what is going on and I gained that following via. Like I said, doing a lot of that man, on Street work doing a lot of the BLM riots just speaking out about what I was seeing in the modern day and pushing back against that fake narrative,
that were being fed quite a bit. So at the end of 2012, 20. I went to the million Maga March in DC and I got a beautiful pan of the crowd singing, The Star-Spangled Banner in unison, a gorgeous moment, Donald Trump himself retweeted it. This is when he was still on Twitter. It racked up 10 million views and two weeks later without notice my entire journalism career was gone. So I logged into Twitter and the entire account was just, it was
suspended. And again for people who might be like and it's just a Twitter account when you're an independent, That's your platform. That's how you break news to the masses because I wasn't on Fox News. I didn't have a news organization. Backing me. I was working with at, well, actually, I wasn't working with Alex at that time. I was producing a different show. So I wasn't even in or under, you know, Infowars at that point.
So it was very much like me, depending on my Platform, One to break the news and that was taken away from me. And at that point as well, like I was going on. Fox News. I had broken national news stories with that Twitter account I had Various news organizations like Daily Mail or Fox News or you know a bunch of them that would lose my videos on Twitter to link to the story about how white antifa member stop.
The black man from going to work in the name of black lives matter because they were blocking the road now. Yeah, when you go and you read that article, there's no video to corroborate that story anymore because my Twitter account got deleted. So what were you doing these live? A lot of times that you are streaming them through Periscope, whatever the tools were on Twitter. Wasn't doing lives just because it's harder to break news in that way.
When you have like the one long, our stream, so sometimes I would do lies but I felt it was more effective to do like pieces, right? I'm just uploading small Clips, you still at least have those clips they? Yes, they have been reposted now. Nice. So, two weeks after Donald Trump retweets me, I was like, oh, this is awesome. Two weeks later. I was like, that was not awesome. My entire career is gone and Twitter gave me the excuse that I was.
As a dating, a band, even though that was my only account I had no other prior accounts, and they wouldn't get back to me. And that's when you came to me. That's when I was aware of you for the first time, honestly. And I think that's the, that's the other funny thing that's a Streisand effect in some ways because your account is far bigger. Now, is it, is it bigger than it was before? It's it freaks me out how big it is.
I'm like, why do this many people follow me to cross a so she's just topped 400,000 followers which is a significant thing. It's cool. I feel very grateful wild reach and catching a 10 million view, tweet is Within your range on any given day, if you put out, good information and you do, thank you. Yeah, there's no question about that. So it's they shot themselves in the foot.
I think a lot of people saw that during 2020 and 2021 the the aggressive political left and maybe even just, that would you Munich party the sort of establishment? Yep, they went hard at people like you and it backfired and it's backfiring right now. Beautifully beautifully. It's been incredible. Because, yeah. So I got the initial, Dan. And then a year later I was like, yeah. I'm going to make another account because I started my own podcast and I was like, let me
make a podcast account. And then because it's me, you know, I was at, I was out on the ground, doing journalism and I went, and I covered the 2022, NCAA Women's swimming Championship that Leah, Thomas women. I was the only reporter on the ground and I actually spoke to the first athlete that spoke out against the autonomous. She was a young freshman Virginia Tech's Rose Schwimmer.
I don't think anyone's really heard from her since, because, you know, she didn't even want to be political, she was nervous to get. Clip out. But she was so upset that she was willing to speak to the media because it was her teammate that was knocked out of the final round. It was her team each senior year and if it wasn't for Leah, Thomas her teammate would have
made the finals. So I was there covering this event and I was actually inside and I was getting those first clips of Leah, Thomas, absolutely, annihilating, all of the other females I was talking to the parents there, I was listening to them. Tell me our daughters were told by the NCAA. Don't say the autonomous is named in the locker room. Don't talk to the media, but this girl was Brave. Tough to do so.
Now the interesting thing about this clip is she came forward and she said that, of course, A lot of the girls felt very disenfranchised because they worked their entire careers to swim in this competition. And they were being stripped of that. I went, and I spoke to the pro, Leah, Thomas, protesters, who told me that Leah, Thomas was a beautiful woman and you couldn't even see a biological difference between Leah Thomas or any of the other girls mind you.
My friends. This is my first time at a swim meet. Okay. Never been one before, and if you go to these things, a lot of swimmers are in the same. It's they have their caps on so they all look very similar, I knew when Leah Thomas came out because that was a big man with broad shoulders, you know coming in at 6 feet tall, you could very clearly see that he stood out Above the Rest. And it was interesting to see the crowds reactions because the parents would politely clap when
Leah Thomas came out. But when another, you know, female 1, it was cheers. The parents were happy. A lot of the parents were upset too, and people were asking well, these athletes should have stood up where the parents, but I did go and speak. To these athletes. And a lot of them were these young 18 year old College freshman. And you know, think about back
to when you were 18, right? Would you have wanted to have made a stand against one of the biggest political issues risk, your entire swimming career potentially be kicked out of your school and labelled a bigot. Or would you rather have just referred to swim and again, I know people don't love that because there are a lot of people, especially in this audience that are like, no, you have to stand up for what's right? But that was the mindset of a lot of Young athletes.
It's that's really hard at 18. It's hard at 40. It's hard at 60 for most people to do what's right? Because it's right we saw this, you know, a lot of people are asking where the FBI whistleblowers. My experience that it's like doing the same thing. You did. They're shutting their mouths and try to do their job. They're trying to keep their mortgage and keep their kids fed when you're 18 and you have no concept of what the world looks like. Yeah. And I was a swimmer.
So I don't know if you knew that but I swam a lot of the types of women that work is women, I hope well. I swam with women, they were just faster than me. That's why. Not. That's why I wasn't that competitive. I swam with women who went to the Olympics. I swam with women, who were at the top of the game that all got scholarships to top tier schools. And so knowing what they put in every single day and most people have no idea. I mean, I used to swim five
hours a day. Well, we would do 10,000 yards in a workout which is wild. These women put everything on the line for all of their life. You eat if you know, if it's only just the four years in high school usually, it's a lot beyond that. It's way way earlier. You're taking a dream that has been a decade old and that is the majority of the time that they were Conscious, you know you just met my five-year-old she probably won't remember a
lot of this stuff. Yeah but from 56, whatever on until 18 these women are swimming every day. Yeah, they're putting their whole life into it and then they're getting crushed. So I'm not speaking out. I don't feel bad about that. I feel extremely angry about the coaches, not speaking out the NCAA and the administration's that are doing this, because that's gross. So this young girl spoke out and this was the second deletion of my second Twitter account because her interview went
viral, of course a mess too. Two million views, Tucker Carlson, picked it up. And the background of that is that I had put the clip up, and she had made a Twitter account and she messaged me. She's, can you please take the clip down and I thought it was an anonymous account that was just trying to get me to delete the account. And I was like, oh, I don't know. She didn't have contact with her otherwise.
Yeah, I didn't have contact with her and then she said, no, it's me. She sent me a selfie and she was like, please take it down. I don't want my entire swimming career to be destroyed and I don't want to not be able to swim in the competition. Luckily, I was able to talk to her and I did tell her, you know, I'm not going to make this decision for you, but I think that your message is very important, we talked about it and she said, okay, leave it up.
So she was brave enough to leave that interview up in a mass 2 million views. Got picked up by Tucker Carlson three days later, Twitter, deleted the entire account. And at that point, I wasn't mad about my work being deleted. I was mad because this young girl was courageous enough to stand up push back against the entire narrative. That was being pushed that men are now women. They should be swimming in women's sports and her voice was deleted. So that was the second time.
I'm and then I made another account after that because I was like, I'm still going to keep doing what I do. And I went to Pride in DC. Last year, I took a video of a transgender man with his exposed breasts because I guess he had fake boobs twerking on a cop in front of children that went very viral. Got picked up by almost every single right-wing media Network. On top of that, I did go do that clip where I went to the inner city and Dallas and I said, Hey,
Joe Biden says that gas is low. What do you guys? I think and the black community. Absolutely roasted Joe Biden to filth and people love that clip amassed about 4 million views in a couple days account deleted again, right? So, those were the three times when he made national news and Twitter deleted it. Of course. So in that was the old. That was the old Twitter that was the experience. Conservative had, I didn't have
that. I know a lot of people probably in the audience had that and they had smaller followings, but still same experience. Yeah, so many of them, may not know that you were, the one behind all that, because I've I knew all those Lips, you know, and I didn't know who put them all out necessarily. And when we started talking, I was like, oh yeah, of course, of course, it comes from one, Brave
voice. That's the other funny thing, like a light in the dark shines an awful lot and people can see it. And so you've been a light in the dark doing that kind of stuff. Thank you. But no, honestly, it's not, it's not me, it's the American people. Like, I truly feel like, I just, I want to use my platform to highlight the voices. We otherwise wouldn't hear from. And so I'm like, you know, this, this really isn't me doing this. This is the American people that are brave enough to talk.
Me as the American people who are brave enough to push back against the narrative and tell the truth about what's going on. I'm just the one that is lucky enough to be able to help Elevate their stories. So, you know, it did take Elon Musk spending forty four billion dollars for my account, to, finally come back and when I did get it back, I'm not gonna lie,
I cried. And I called my dad, because every single time I got deleted, I would call my dad, and I would be so angry, and I wouldn't necessarily be Crying. But I would just be angry because journalism is a lot of work could it's and I would get mad because the work got deleted because I was really just trying to do something positive because I was trying to tell the truth and I kept getting punished for it or because like with, you know, the Virginia Tech swimmer.
She was courageous enough to get her voice out, and she was the one that was silenced at that point because, you know, even when I'm at the scale of breaking national news, I'm still not good enough to have a Twitter account and I'm still, you know, not worthy of being able to have utilize my And Free Speech via big Tech. And so getting the Twitter
account back was awesome. And I called my dad and I was so excited and you know, he was there for all of the censorship and he really helped keep me going to because he was like, okay, he would listen to me cry, be sad and then he'd be like, okay now go make another Twitter account and keep going. Stop crying about this. I love it. That's really, really important stuff. The frustration is not that you lost something.
It's the it's knowing that it's an injustice and experiencing that, you know, coming at you in a real way. It's frustrating. It was a bit frustrating. But what ended up happening is on handy when you say a bit
frustrated. So bit frustrating, the best part about getting the Twitter account back, is that, within 24 hours of coming back, I had amassed 100,000 followers in 24 hours, plus the original 120 that I already had it, because I didn't realize, and I'm so grateful to every single person because I had so many friends who would take my work and they would share it on their Twitter accounts. When I would get deleted, I had Instagram at the That time.
So some people would take my clips from Instagram, put them on Twitter. You know, I had a lot of people, I know we don't love Fox News Now guys. But, you know, back in the day when Tucker was a part of Fox News, his people made it a point to platform my work. So I did have people and Fox News helping elevate my work because they knew it was censored.
So I just felt so supported because in the right-wing Community they were seeing that this was happening and that this truth is being silenced and so so many people supported me and you know, like you said Streisand effect as soon as that Twitter Account came back. It is exploded beyond anything that I could have ever imagined. But like I said, I never had the intention of being a speaker. I never wanted to be in the space. I never thought I would have a
big following. It still freaks me out to this day and I'm like oh like when I got my Twitter account back I was nervous to post because I was like, this is too many people. I'm scared. It's a lot of people, it's a lot of people to Big megaphone. It's a big responsibility to and it's one that I take very seriously, like, when I go out on the field because I do a lot of videos, and sometimes they're just selfie videos, right? And it's like a two minute of me.
Laying out. This is what's happening at the border here, some stats. Here's what we're seeing. And I will retake those videos, 10 times because I have to make sure every statistic is correct because I'm not trying to be fake news especially with that many followers. And it's just, it feels like such a big responsibility to me and it frustrates me that people in the mainstream with an even bigger platform are so flippant with what they're willing to lie
about us and so careless, right? Yeah, when you go out and somebody calls, you, You to the carpet on one of your stats on something that you've made an allegation of what does it feel like when you read it you're because because you get the same
mention. So anybody who's on social media gets the same thing that you get is you just have, you know, a thousand times more 100,000 times more than they do and and I have a small version of what that looks like, what is the feeling when someone calls you the carpet on something? Whether you know you're right or not or whether you proved it, right? And what does that kind of that gut instinct? You know, are you an angry?
Are you Did I mess this up? Like, where's your kind of your emotional reaction to an initially? Obviously, you can always come back to it, but my emotional reaction is have you gone out and seen this with your own two eyes? Because I have, because I've gone and spoken to the people who are dealing with the horrible economy. So you feel very confident when somebody comes in challenges and it's time to go to work.
Absolutely, I remember I was doing this debate with this liberal guy named destiny were talking about covid-19 and he was trying to throw all these statistics at me and I was like, I'm sorry, were you at all of the rallies?
He's where people were crying because they lost their jobs and they couldn't feed their kids, or you there, when the salon owner Shelley Luther and Dallas was arrested because she had the audacity to open up her business because I was, because I went and I saw that and I think that there is something very important especially with journalists, right? When it comes to going and bringing that human aspect to a story because it's one thing to watch a clip online or read an
article. But it's another thing entirely to see the Experiencing that emotion of what they're going through whether it's in a rest because of an injustice, whether it's you know the anger of a lot of people from January 6 because I was at that event as well like that's why I like being at these events because nothing pisses me off. More than Talking Heads who will sit there all day long and tell me how I should feel about things. I'm like no you're not going to tell me.
The American people were living through this are going to tell me what they're experiencing and then I will have the privilege of relating to other people. How Oh, they're feeling. So this is not my opinion. This is what's happening on the ground. It's not my opinion. And I'm like I said, the average journalist, it's all opinion, based nowadays, they're all reading off of Government propaganda statistics. And yeah, it's just it's, it's a
job. I take very seriously, like I said, I dig it and there's a lot of responsibility in that that used to be a thing. That journalists always knew that they have a special place. And if they lose that credibility, it's not coming back. Hmm. That doesn't seem to be the concern of some, of the, the We see in Ms, NBC or ABC or CBS or any of the mainstream stuff that I grew up with, which was always the news. It's not the news anymore.
Now it's, it's talking points, it seems like absolutely. It's it's not even talking points either. It's this like it's actively lying. I mean, what else would you be able to call a journalist standing in front of a burning dumpster fire in 2020 saying that this was a fiery but mostly peaceful you imagine doing? Like You imagine looking behind you and hearing people like burning stuff and smashing things, and then just being like, yeah, people like guys, this is fine.
It's like, yeah, we are standing here but if you actually look at the majority of the city and the suburbs, 90% of everything else is fine. Why are you standing in front of the fire then? Yeah, that's the newsworthy thing. Obviously, you know, it's funny too because border journalists will do the same thing.
They will go and this is my favorite thing in the world, we're going to get to the Border like right now I want to I love it when Democratic officials And stand in front of the wall, the portion of the border that secure and say there is no border crisis here. As you can see, there's nobody here, right? There's a 25 foot piece of Steel that is blocking human beings from coming in. And we're fine. It's like the border. So secure right now and I'm like, why don't you go stand?
Like a mile down, where there's a huge opening, there's people walking in, maybe try that instead. So you recently went down, tell people where you went if you don't mind and then we're going to chat about sort of what it looked like on the ground to you. You you obviously spent time in Las Cruces Las Cruces only 40 miles away from the Mexican border. So this is not a foreign area to you. And in fact, El Paso looks a lot like how crude but Las Cruces,
right? Yeah, I think Mexico, actually, it actually does we, where specifically, where you kind of focusing your reporting on and then, you know, what kind of stuff are you seeing? That is not being reported on in least mainstream sure. So, I have been to the Border in Eagle Pass in Yuma, Arizona, in El Paso. So a single pass, I was there quite a bit just because that's such an interesting crossing point because you have the Rio Grande Right There. And you'll just watch the
migrants crossover all day. Sometimes they drowned there, it's not a good area to be in and I've heard some crazy stories from National Guard there, but the Border was really interesting to me because like I said, if I see something in the in the media that is questionable and like let me go see this for myself. And so the Border crisis I was seeing the numbers of 2.7 million illegal immigrants Crossing in the fiscal year of 2020. Me too. So that was a record high
number. We have hatched unfathomable. Yeah, and beings like, we can't picture that. It's absolutely insane. And so I was like, I gotta go see this for myself. That seems kind of crazy. So my first job was in Eagle Pass and because I had gone down there so many times, I actually had some national Guardsmen that were willing to talk to me on one of them on record. Actually we made in kind of anonymous, but he wore his National Guard attire outfit. For me, or for, thank you.
I think it's a girl word for that but uniform, thank you for this, the girl word for uniform. I dig it. So he was telling me, you know, and keep in mind, guys, this is in Texas. Okay, so Roma Texas is basically cartel. Run the cartel owns that area National Guard's. Like yeah, don't go over there because there's gun fights, every single thing. National Guardsmen actually gave me this photo of a man, the cartel dipped His head in acid. So it's just a clean skull.
They crossed into the Texas side of the border and they drop the body off as an intimidation tactic. That's something that National Guard is seeing quite often down there on top of that. There's abandoned children, how many is what is quite often? Actually I would say yeah, the cartel runs that area. So regarding you know, dead bodies. They're dropping as intimidation tactics. I'm not going to give you a solid number on that one because I'm not sure how often they're
doing that specifically sure. But in regards of shootouts, dangerous situations, the Tell smuggling drugs, children humans, take your pick that's happening every single day. The cartel runs that area. So National Guard had told me that in the Eagle Pass area and then we go to Yuma and Yuma. The illegal immigrants are usually Crossing from Midnight, to 6 a.m. because it's so hot over there. You can actually go. And there is a big opening on
the cocoa pod reservation. And I believe what it is with that is the like the Indians, who own that reservation don't want the world. Out there. So there's big opening and so you can watch the cartel or human Smugglers. You'll see Vehicles driving the
stop. And then all of a sudden like a group of 50 to 100 illegal immigrants, just kind of emerge from these rocks and then they start running into the United States. And so on you while you will see two to five hundred people crossing per night and they're just walking right into the u.s. some of them don't want to wait to get processed. So they just run straight into
the country. This is happening every single night in Yuma. Now, we just had the expiration of 42. And I went to El Paso for that one and covering this was interesting because as somebody who has been to the border and has seen, what has been happening under Joe Biden? It was really funny to me to see the media be like, oh, the Border crisis.
It's so crazy, it's so bad. And I'm like, yeah, bro, this has been happening for like the past two years acting like it's the first moment that we've seen a bunch of people sleeping on the streets and I'll Paso. And then there's all the the, you know, expanded beyond the shelter capabilities.
Hmm, but that's not the case. Yeah, and I even had beef with Greg. Abbit because he was trying to launch, you know, this program where he was at bringing in the National Guard, putting up barbed wire and areas where migrants are crossing. And I'm like, hey Greg this has been happening for the past two years. Where was the barbed wire? Then why is it that whether it's in the right or the left wing when it comes to our officials?
It really does seem like until the public or the media applies pressure and starts highlighting an issue. Then they're like, oh let me come in and fix this. I'm not saying they Greg Abbott has completely abandoned our border but the he could have been doing a lot more. And it did take the media's focus on the expiration of title, 42 for him to be like, oh we're putting up, barbed wire, we're fixing this problem. But there are already been millions of people who have crossed into Texas.
And the funny thing about title 42 that a lot of people probably didn't hear about. And the reason why we saw such a big surge of migrants before the expiration is because under title 42, migrants could be expelled from the US deported and they could keep free crossing over and over and over again. But now they're going. Owing to be crossing over under title 8, which means they could potentially be deported and potentially have to wait up to five years before seeking Asylum again.
So we saw I believe in the last week's of April 60,000 illegal immigrants cross over and just those last few weeks of April, the three days prior to the expiration of title 42, we saw over 10,000 people crossing, every single day, we've already had Millions Crossing in since Joe. Biden has taken office because he did run on amnesty for
illegal immigrants. He Run on, you know, the United States, essentially being open to everybody and we have seen these same policies and Sanctuary cities like New York. So after a Paso after going and watching the expiration, which funny enough will I was over there as well, Customs and Border. Patrol officials were trying to shut me down from recording, them bringing in illegal immigrants on the buses. There are some great people and
CBP. There's also some pretty bad people who cover up, what's going on, who will take bribes from the cartel, if you guys my My you know wonder how a lot of these illegal immigrants getting through these checkpoints because in Texas when you're at the border oftentimes you know if you have a drink you vehicle I had one when I was working at the border so I would get Yankee vehicle.
Yeah. So oh my gosh because I'm a woman and Asian. I crashed my car like 58 times and it was just so beat up. And so it looks like a car, you would smuggle bunch of Mexicans in, okay. Now that there's even Mexicans crossing the border. It's so funny because people are like, all these Mexicans are coming in. I'm like, bro, they're gonna sway. And they're Honduran there. Ecuadorian there from Ukraine. There from Pakistan. Yeah, they're from, they're from various parts of Africa.
I've never actually had never met a person from Mexico, crossing the border into the United States, funny enough. But for everywhere else, I've seen people crossing over and I have friends that live in Mexico and they are saying like, even the Mexican Nationals over there are pissed off with the immigrants coming into their cities.
And there are cartels that are coming in and like cleaning up Up the illegal immigrants, off the streets with a lot deadlier tactics than we would use in the United States. It makes sense that there would be a frustration in the even the
stop points. It's like watching somebody bring a caravan through and then just trash like you know, trash the place and move on. And if you left that over and over again because the cartels are running a business e they have a vested interest in keeping at least the nation's that are the stop points. Somewhat happy. Yeah, it's exactly because you know oftentimes to with the Mexican officials they are working with the cartels.
Sometimes even us officials are working with the cartels, that is a sad reality of it. And like I said, sometimes the cartels do payoff CBP, agents to say, hey, this vehicle with the, you know, 10 migrants in the backs coming through. Maybe just look the other way and sometimes they get through. And again, this is coming from National Guard sources, who have seen this with in National Guard seen this within Customs and Border Patrol. So again, I'm not trying to say
they're all bad. There are some great people in all of these organizations who truly care but just like with the FBI or, you know, various parts of the Durrell government. There's also really bad people who are taking advantage of the system. Sure. So you guys were getting blocked, your cameras where I saw you were down there with own. Is it own Trier? Is that own Shroyer? Yep, sure. So you're down there filming. He's hilarious. And very combative, very varied.
It was, he always like that. You must have known him beforehand. Oh absolutely. Owen, will go and tell you to your face that you're corrupt the government official and you're committing treason and the and he just, he just enjoys doing that. It looks like, yeah, he loves, you know, He really loves taking it to the Man and so he was there. And it's funny because my tactics a little bit different where this woman is trying to shut me down and I just like
very calmly. I'm like, ma'am, ma'am. Why are you trying to shut down the American people from seeing what's going on here? You guys are bringing illegal immigrants into the country and I'm trying to show the American people, what you guys are doing and then always the calmer than you are approached. Yeah. And then Owens tactic is why are you letting you legal immigrants into the country? This is treason. I can't believe the American taxpayers about to pay for this
and people love. He's the guy that screaming getting like dragged off by security. Exactly. Still getting his point done and you're the kind of more your D escalating and saying it calmly but still it's still poignant. Yeah. I like I like to do it that way because and I learned this because when I was in East Palestine, actually Pete Buddha judges press secretary because I confronted people to judge and I was like, hey honey, why did it take you almost a month to get
here? Yeah, not not in the video but his press secretary was like, you're being so aggressive right now. My comment was like, how am I being aggressive? Oh no, you went yeah, that's the best. It's you want some more? No, I'm /. I'm good. Thank you. But um, they came and tried to ask you to shut it down. I assume because they don't want to answer these questions either. Yes. Yeah, I'll look, I'll talk about East policy and let me finish up order stuff really fast.
So after El Paso, I was like, okay, cool. So this is nothing new. The media is pretending that the immigration crisis is really bad right now, for the expiration of title 42, but guess what? The migrant circumvented this and they already came across. At the border. And they're still coming across the border because the borders wide open. Right.
Let's go see where they end up. So I made my way to New York and I had a whistleblower who actually worked for two different organizations, and the first time you blew the whistle was last year. Who's working for Indian ink? This was a organization called mzm, Inc, MVM Inc. Yes. Okay.
So this organization had received a hundred forty million dollars in federal funding from the Biden Administration and my whistleblower came forward with That basically we're telling employees like, hey guys, when we are transporting migrant children throughout the United States of America, let's make sure that we are actually checking the IDS of the adults that were handing them off to. So, what do you exposed there?
Was that this federally funded company was taking migrant children and basically giving them to random adults throughout the United States that may or may not have been related to them? They don't know. So we worked for that company and then after that, he was like, I can't work with the kids anymore. So he made his way to New York and he Actually, then worked in management at the largest migrant Hotel in New York city.
So, this is a story that I just broke two weeks ago, right there were upwards or up to 5,000 illegal immigrants that are currently at this hotel, the Row NYC. It's a block away from Times Square previously, rented rooms out for upwards of $500 a night. Many of the migrants were telling my whistleblower that they could see the ball drop from their room. That when they come here, a lot of them are giving birth. They're given a free ride to the hospital. Free transportation.
Chen. Free health care. Free car seats, free cribs. Anything that they need laundry. Service housekeeping, they're given that hotel room. He brought forth incident reports of 10 to 14 year olds that are getting drunk in this hotel because their parents will just check them out or check out and leave them there and be like a, we'll be back in a week. The leave their kids at this
hotel machetes. Have been swung at my whistleblower and various other employees, because a lot of these migrants sometimes do get violent, and when these migrants are violent, there's cases of domestic abuse. Let's say no. My It's NYPD is never called Isis. Never called DHS has never called, it's always give them a different hotel room. And what's happening is often times.
These migrants are then given two separate hotel rooms and they're going back and forth between them in the city of New York and the taxpayers are paying for all of this just to run through some numbers here. The Federation of American Immigration Reform had put out their own report and they speculate that just for the year 2023. It's going to cost the New York tax payers upwards of 10 billion
dollars. To house all of these illegal immigrants billion with a be billion over 65,000 have already made their way to the city of New York since last spring. At the beginning of this year, are the atoms 9275 million dollar contract just to house a couple thousand of them, I believe it was like Navy in the range of five to seven thousand migrants as about a budget of 55,000 dollars per illegal. Immigrant 50% of New York hotels are currently filled with
illegal immigrants right now. And more hotels. Don't want to get into the Sheltering business because spoiler look, guys, we got some inside. Look at the row hotel. And these migrants were absolutely trashing the rooms on top of that, Eric Adams, because he's a sanctuary city, which means that if the illegal immigrants go to these areas, they don't really have to fear deportation. They can live their American Dream while you know, circumventing the law essential
free for free. Yeah, they get, like I said, the Free Housing, the free health care, they can utilize ID NYC which is New York's program where regardless of immigration status, you can go and apply for a government ID and you can That ID to go apply for employment. You can go and be a part of New York's affordable housing program. You can utilize Public Services, you can even open a bank account at select institutions with this ID.
So these, migrants are getting everything for free, all on the taxpayers, dime, billions of dollars over a billion has already been spent to shelter these migrants and Eric Adams is in a state of emergency right now. Not only is the city actually in a state of emergency, but Eric Adams himself has no idea what he's doing. Doing. I mean, he has just proposed potentially putting adult migrants in school gymnasiums where children are actively present on top of that.
He just I believe on Monday came out with a press conference saying. Yeah, we have to spend four billion on illegal immigration so why don't we put it back into the pockets of New Yorkers? And go ahead and how's the migrants in your private residences, guys? Right, so that's what's happening in New York, how what is the endgame? Like you're looking at that. You're obviously very sharp, you're walking around, you're talking to people on the street as well.
One of the actual hell. Are they going to do? And how is that marketable, as a elected official to their constituents? It's not the New Yorkers are pissed off. They're very upset because what's happening now that New York City and the Times Square area is overrun. These migrants are being bused into the suburbs and there are various suburbs of New York and various Districts, I guess that are suing to stop Eric Adams from blessing these migrants to their area.
So it's a big battle. A lot of people are very just dropping them off. Is that you're saying? I think they're. Yeah, I think they're trying to like utilize Emergency Shelters or like I said, the school gymnasiums and Eric Adams is like, oh we're just going to put these migrants here and then the various cities are like, no, we are not and so it's this big back and forth and, you know, the New Yorkers were pissed but it's just like Liberals are really Their Own Worst Enemy, right?
Because I even interviewed A store owner, he was an immigrant himself row hotels here, his business is right here, okay, so he's right there block away from Times Square, so they should be a tourist, hotspot. He said that business for all of the restaurants, all of the souvenir shops, all of the various businesses in the area down 50 to 80%. Because if you go to this area, you will see Venezuelans in the street. You will see all of the migrants right there. They're stealing from some of
the local businesses. Like I said, you know, not all of them are bad. Some of them are committing violence again, my whistleblower who has worked in Immigration Services in the United States, like he himself has worked under Customs and Border Patrol. He's worked with the kids. He's worked. You know, with the city of New York housing, the migrants he's washed, the process of the US
Government funding. The transportation of migrants from the border further into the US, which funny enough Customs and Border Patrol. Try to say is happening and because of new Twitter, they got brutally fact-checked and yeah, Twitter was like, actually it was Community notes or Something. Yeah, it was amazing.
It was so beautiful to see it was like, um, yeah, actually the federal government is giving money to the Charities and then the Charities are buzzing the migrants throughout the United States of America. And that's what happens, right? That's how the federal government circumvents responsibility is because, for example, with my New York Story, the New York Post also wrote about the piece and the City of New York. I guess had responded and said,
oh, he never worked here. We do have no idea about this, this whistleblower, write to disk, The story and with the reason that they can circumvent responsibility is because the city of New York contracts out a company that contracts out a company that deals with the migrants cutouts after cutouts. Exactly. So technically the city of New York hasn't hired anybody. What are you talking about,
right? Well, the FBI does the same thing, and you're starting to see that in many, many circles people are waking up to the idea that the things that the government cannot do, they're willing to Outsource and then the things that these companies and contractors know would be
Valuable to the government. They just do it and then they know, they can go get paid on the after end whether that's infiltration of places, that should be first amend protected and so on, they're more than happy to engage in the sort of cut out Behavior. This sort of contractor behavior that ends up. It would otherwise not be acceptable and it gives plausible deniability its
coverage. Yeah. And, you know, I went through a period of being really blocked build about the state of the u.s. black belt, is that I had to learn about this recently. It's like, when you, when you were just like everything sucks, what's the point of anything? The government says, And they want us all to die. It's a hopeless position. Exactly. It's just like everything so bad just start the Rapture guys, which I'm still at that point, but you know, it's just because
it's like I don't like it here. It's scary. I tell people that every day I go to bed defeated every morning I wake up willing to fight does that that seems to be the same
sort of attitude? There's a lot of people that feel that way I think that I think so I think so and that's why it's important to I think for us to verbalize these feelings ourselves because I think Like with commentators to when people, you know start following you are looking up to it's like oh you're great your fighter and it's like nah, bro. Sometimes I get really discouraged about the state of the country because on top of the Border crisis.
I was also covering the Fentanyl and Drug crisis in the United States because like I said, I like seeing crazy stuff and I heard San Francisco was insane. So last year, you know while taking a break from the border after the after Co had died down. I almost lost my entire YouTube channel because of that because Tyra T of 2022, 2022. I was like, yeah, this vaccine doesn't work and it's killing people. Almost lost my entire YouTube channel from that one, which is an income Source.
Yeah. But it's like, you know, it is what it is. And so we have for two years and it's funny because YouTube backtracked on that just like they backtracked on whether or not you could say there was election interference in 2020 or election fraud, right? YouTube slowly backtracking on everything but I was covering
the Sentinel crisis. It's jumping back to that and I went to San Francisco and it was shocking to me that these are the streets of the United States and the interesting thing about San Francisco and the way that it ties to the border is it's also a sanctuary City. So if you go to San Francisco you'll see groups of Guatemalans and Hondurans and they're selling fentanyl on the street and they utilize the city Sanctuary status, so that they can sell drugs and not have to
worry about deportation. Interesting. Hmm. So actually the last time I was in San Francisco, it's kind of cool because I was walking on this. I like that. You took a vacation from the border to go to San Francisco and see more vacation or just call it intense strange curiosity. That I have change of scenery. Yeah and it's because I got to San Francisco.
I'd heard it was crazy and I was like I got to see this for myself and it was so shocking to me to see people slumped over at 2 p.m. with like a needle sticking out of their arm. Have you ever been to San Francisco before that when it used to be nice? No. When you were a kid growing up, you never went there. I've never been to San Francisco my life in the first time I went, I was like, why are there people pooping in the street?
I'm scared. So, you're familiar with the sort of the north side of the city. There's a place called The Embarcadero. Have you seen that the Embarcadero Plaza? So the three big towers that kind of the end of the, the BART station, you can walk around in the financial district. Like that's what maybe maybe if you go into the City and you
know, there's Pier 39, right? It's up here at the top and if you just kind of keep walking around on those trees, you'll end up down in the financial district which is the big downtown thing, right? I was a kid. I used to go in there. You know, this is 35 years ago. My old man used to run radio stations down there. He was the news director. It was a beautiful place to go. It was safe, it was pretty. It was really one of the coolest
neat. Like just it had a vibe that was very different than many other cities they used to say. I think excited might have been Mark Twain. He said, you know, New York is a great pillar of American Ingenuity. Chicago is the Great American city of business. Los Angeles is a plastic constellation, which is kind of funny because Los Angeles is Apple and San Francisco is a lady. This was not a lady anymore. She's like a, she's like a hobo San Francisco is a cracked-out hobo now.
It's so scary. It's sad because you won't ever get to see that, maybe they'll clean it up at some point, but it was such a neat, cool place, it's gone. And yeah, and just to the detriment of all the people that live there, they voted for all that stuff. I know they wanted it and it says, you know, I did the mini documentary on San Francisco because again, it's like, okay, let me go talk to people who are directly affected by drug addiction, right? To First and how the city got so
out of control. And I talked to Richie win, San Francisco, local former addict, who dealt with these problems himself, and he walked me through the city, because he lives in the tenderloin. He's paying thousands of dollars for rent to live on Market Street. I believe it's called checks, and there's tents everywhere, there's people shooting up. There's people smoking, fentanyl on the street, there's kids walking past this.
It's absolutely terrifying to see the state of San Francisco because you have harm reduction programs over there as And we went to a harm reduction Center. Tell us what that is, because I will that sounds like a leftist euphemism for something that it doesn't do. Oh yeah, it does the opposite of harm reduction, my friends. Imagine that so harm reduction center, right? You go to San Francisco and you say I'm a drug addict, please hope so they give you a box of
100 clean needles. They give you a band so you can shoot up you. They give you a meth pipe or a crack pipe. They give you Chopsticks so you can push your crack rocks. Further into your pipe. They actually instructed us on how to use, you know, all these different tools. Tools. They give you water. They give you vitamin C so you can melt down your meth a little bit easier. They gave you the pieces of foil so you can smoke your fentanyl.
They give you everything that you need except for like a program. A sobriety program that seems nice. It was shocking. It's enabling. And again I made sure to go speak to former addicts, who have dealt with this problem themselves and ask them Why is this problem? So out of hand and they themselves told me it's because when you're an addict you can't have drugs pushed in your face every single day, you're not going to be able to stop your
addiction. You can't have the city enabling you and allowing you to do drugs openly in the street. Because a lot of the funding in San Francisco is going towards helping homelessness, which actually equates to keeping people dependent on the government, by keeping them drugged out by keeping them in the street. So it's absolutely horrific what's going on there and I discovered these harm reduction centers and I was like, what is this? How many of them are there?
They're all over the nation. So I also went to Philadelphia and in Philly, they have this program called prevention Point. That's their version of their harm reduction. I got slapped in the face by a crack head over there and I got doused in urine. That was a fun trip. I got very sick after that and it was because they were you know, I'm walking on the streets of Philly and I was in Kensington Avenue. And I think back on this trip
and I'm like What in the world? We're getting a phone call, guys, I think it's probably Donald Trump. He's got to take this guy's. Can y'all hear the rigging? We're not sure where the Rings coming from, guys. Okay, think we stopped it. All right. Sorry guys, we are taking a very important FBI fed phone call. It's always a possibility, always a possibility, you know, it's feds listening right now. There's stop. There's about a hundred percent chance that the feds are
listening at some point. Whether it be friends of the show or, or foes of the show who are looking for us. So sting. Yeah, you you put yourself on the radar when you come and talk to us, but you're on the radar just with what you're doing. Okay, I never harm reduction. Called harm reduction in Philly. What's it called? Prevention Point. Prevention point, which actually is an encouragement point. It sounds like yes. So, this is another program that is funded by the taxpayers,
millions of dollars. Funny thing about this is that and again, I spoke to an addict. Okay, very nice man, young young dude. I'm like, hey, can I talk to you about that? What's that you got there? And again, I will go talk to any American. Okay, if you are a drug addict on the street, I will still talk to you. You tell me your story, my friend. How did you get here? Who's enabling this, you told me how you got to this point and A lot of people are willing to talk.
When I was in Philly, they are dealing right now with this tranq epidemic, and it's called the zombie drug because it's rotting their flesh. And so, a lot of them are showing me, their Rotting Flesh and they were telling me Oh you know we are injecting a combination of elephant or horse tranquilizer and sometimes like a ketamine type thing I guess so. But it's like it's crazier than that and it's rotting their flesh because they're white blood. Those can't process it.
So their skin just rots. And so I'm talking to these addicts in the street and they're telling me about what's going on and a lot of them themselves. Say yeah, the reason we're out here is because the government gives us free tense. Free free meals, free health care, free needles. They let us stay out here. And why wouldn't we stay out here? Think about how desperate a human being. You have to be that. That sounds like a good like you
live in a nice apartment. I'm sure you've got, you know food you have access to you have a shower. Yeah. Yeah. And you have access The, you know, no one's going to kick in your door on it. Bet you at least have a physical door, they're like, if you imagine like, just like, when, like screw it, I'm just going to go down on Cesar Chavez. I'm going to pop up a tent and that's where I'm going to hang
out and try some guy. Could you totally could hear ya, you can't in Austin. Now, I'm far enough outside as you experience driving out here that we're yeah, we're a Long March for the, for the druggies to come out. To me, you're a good ways away. And moving to Austin, actually, was another part of why I was really passionate about speaking out against Democratic policy because I moved to Austin.
Right. At the end of its, I would say, Peak rate, what was the year was 2018, to right before they passed the hostess ordinance. Yeah, but it was already over the hell. I left to 2016 and Austin left with me in some ways because because even in that time and so this is very very relevant. We lived downtown.
We lived on Cesar Chavez. We lived on the east side about half a mile away from 35. So for folks who know, Austin, we're talking about, there's a little public library right there, there's a homeless shelter, there's a Food Kitchen, which always had military age males at it, And then you talking about Arch. Yeah, that while the Arches there that's up on 7th or 8th Street. Okay, so that's okay. So on the other side of the
freeway okay in, right? Well, the East Side, kind of we're talking about we're living in this building which was really the first residential commercial Co-op. Now, there's everything, there's a Whole Foods. It was nothing there. By the way, you train station over on East 5th, used to be a vacant lot. In fact, that was where my wife and I like walked home the first time that we were ever like out on a date.
Very funny. But that apartment building started getting all the, we had to turn off all the outlets on the outside of the building because we were using them for things like leaf blowers and you know plugging in different kind of equipment to maintain the building homeless. People are just setting up camps underneath in the bushes like outside of our window literally we're on the second floor which was the you know there was a garage there.
Yeah the second floor is where we lived and they were people that were smoking meth or you know doing heroin directly underneath our window, 8 feet outside of our window and there's you know, bushes and Trees and stuff they could climb on. There were cars that would go by they could park there. So I started finding these hype kits and it was like you know sterile water which I don't know where they got hospital-grade sterile water but they did.
They had multiple needles they'd be in a little baggie. They'd have little syringe that have little invention programs here in Austin and they're the exact they were leaving them in our bushes so I would go and clean them up and you're like oh God there's there's needles everywhere. See, well I was here then for the homeless ordinance being passed, that was the next step of death.
We're the first step of it. You saw the second everything just became more Apparent and prominent that at that point because I was still I was living on Riverside at that point to. So I mean, Riverside, it was one of the worst areas after they did pass that Homeless ordinance.
But when I lived there like you didn't see tent cities, you didn't see the homeless there as prominently as you get you walking distance from downtown and they literally spread I watched him go down past Rainey Street. Yeah, into the overpasses. And you would have been the next stop on the Chain, just on the other side of the river. Oh God. There's nice foot Bridges. To get across the river now too. Thankfully true. It's so true, but yeah. So Philly, they have their own
prevention Point program. This addict himself, he tells me about their needle exchange program. So if you go and you turn in dirty needles per this guy, he said, they'll give you two clean ones back. So it'll give you double the clean needles that you bring in a dirty needles. Just like the the guys collecting aluminum cans exact for monies, but they're collecting needles to get more drugs.
Yeah, and so, when you go walk down Kensington Avenue, it was really shocking, and I think Back on this trip and I'm like, I would never go there again because I didn't understand the danger of the environment which, you know, it's like my ignorance is a blessing and a curse because it makes me not scared to go into environments and go report on them. But also like, it makes me scared for you.
We're, you're telling me some of these things because I used to sit in these neighborhoods with a gun and a badge in a car. And I just like, walking around. You're marching around, like all, like 115 pounds a year and, and you're in there, like, picking fights with drug addicts, that have They're drugged out there to cracked out there to focus on their drugs to care. It was the white liberal that round up the drug addicts, and like sick them on me.
So what happened with that is kind of prevention point, right? Is happening. And I love filming in public because it's my right to do so Kensington Avenue. Very scary. There are needles, lining the entire Street. You have people like, you know, slumped over doing drugs, you have drug dealers on every street, the first day I was there. Talking to some addicts who were talking to me about their lesions and their sores and how they got there.
I watched a woman, you know, who was teaching me how to shoot up fentanyl. I got that on camera. Go watch that video guys. It's just it was interesting to me and so as I'm sitting there talking to them, there's two of them and his friend starts laughing and I had another friend with me and he was like, you know, why those vans keep pulling up behind you guys, right? And she was like, know why it was two of us.
Females not smart situation and he goes well, sometimes those vans come and they just scoop up. Women off the street. So you guys should be careful. We left after that. So that was something that we were told by these guys on the street and you're like, okay and then the next day, we see prevention point out. We had brought some muscle with us at that point and I see these guys spooling up, buckets, of dirty needles. I've never seen anything like it on a public street.
I was like bring them out pouring them into like bigger biohazard. Okay beans. But it was buckets and buckets and buckets and I was like, that's why look like that. Seems really dangerous. Like I'm just going to fill But what? With no intention to expose anything, just like, that's cool. Like, I'm just going to fill my, I'm just filming the buckets. So nobody's faces are in the
video. Like I said, when I am in these situations like oftentimes addicts, are either to spaced out to even know they're being filmed, or I'm talking with them, you know, it's funny because people be like, oh, you're exploring your exploiting, these people. How dare you? And I'm like, actually, I'm showing the streets that Democratic politicians are allowing to prosper and are allowing in our children to walk
down every day. Sure. So if anybody is exploding, anyone as the Democrats that are keeping these people addicted on drugs and addicted on these government systems. But anyway, that's another story. So I'm filming this. And then this white liberal, of course, it's always the white liberal comes in and she's like, um, excuse me, you can't film
here. And I was like, I'm actually I can, because this is a public Street and she was like, no, you're violating their Hippa. There's you're violating HIPAA laws by filming their faces, and I was like, okay, if you're going to do drugs in public, I'm going to film it. Okay. Also, this is a public Street and I'm not filming anybody's faces.
I'm filming those needles. She makes a huge issue out of it. And then all these crackheads start getting riled up. One of them comes, slaps me in the face and other one comes and smashes, my camera, tries to steal my equipment, the security guard there as well, takes my smashed equipment refuses, to give it back to me. She starts yelling at me because she's, like, get out of here. You making everybody mad and then at that point, when you tell me that, I can't film something, it's on.
Yeah, I was like, okay. Okay. You know what? I was going to get my clip and leave, but now we're going to make a big Tory out of this. And so the only time people have ever acted that way to me, filming them is when they are doing illegal activities. Actually got mobbed in Austin by a group of 12, I got beat up by them than it was because I was filming in Tifa committing illegal activity. So I got beat up for that one.
But I have no regrets because maybe you shouldn't be committing illegal activities for me to go and report on. So, that's not the first time. I've got beat up, it is what it is, you know, even in, I didn't even realize I got slapped in the face until I watched the footage. Back because like I said, the adrenaline had just kicked in at that point and I was just filming. I was like, I'm from prevention point. They're spilling needles everywhere. They're enabling the attics right now.
I was here just filming what was happening and this is what's going on This Woman's trying to shut me down, boom slapped. In the face, I was like, as you could see, I am now being attacked like that happened in Philly. It's so gutsy. It's dumb. It is dumb. But and, and we talked about that privately that I really want you to have security. Just for me, just me, just because Because one half of America. Yeah, we just want you to do it.
And actually, I talk to Garrett O'Boyle last night, so my audience knows Garrett. Garrett is a, you know, six-foot-two 275 pound, combat veteran, former FBI, you know, former SWAT guy and defensive tactics guy and and he said he'd be once again he's more than happy to join you and do some of these things. He also looks like a homeless dude cause he's got a huge beard and long hair and he has
important. He got to blend in hoodie and greasy if you need it perfe, I know, but he's got, you know, tattoos and all that, but it is, it's disconcerting. Someone's got to do it, someone's got to go out there and do that. You've taken on the burden of it? I think it's really fun. What other what other wild things have? You got beat up by a T5. You've been slapped by crack faces, or crackheads your down the Border. You mentioned that there was a border patrol official.
I want to Circle back to something. You said earlier a border patrol officials trying to keep you from filming and you were resisting that, and that obviously, got you going, we didn't finish that story. Do you want to kind of, tap on that for a second? Sure. I mean, funny enough. She's the same person always women. It's always women. Every single In time.
Why is it always women? I don't know because they're the ones dumb enough to try to stop journalists from filming the truth about what's going on. Because and it's funny because they always try to bring the more emotional side in like when it's male border patrol there. They're just, they're just kind of rude about it. They're like, you can't film
here get out of here. This is our policy, no more of a very Stern, but the women are like, please, the woman that was trying to shut me down as I pleased were trying to protect the privacy and I was like, man, these these people are illegal. They just broke our laws. Give a damn about taxing honor that was like, excuse me. I'm trying to do my job and
funny enough. Somebody had discovered this is the same woman that tried to stop Ted Cruz from filming when he was touring on Migrant Center in Texas. Same woman who got in front of his camera and said, excuse me sir, you can't be filming her for the Privacy, it's just like, no, yeah, what rights of privacy do you have in a public place? Breaking American laws? Yeah, exactly. It's funny that we that's a reasonable question, right?
Illegals have more rights and privileges and Vasily than we do as American citizens. So people can see all these clips on your, if you click the media part of your Twitter, and my Twitter, you guys can see all of it. Your Twitter accounts in the show notes, so you can click below, if you guys want to do that, you either now or before or after we're done and go and scroll and see some of the stuff. A lot of these things. They've probably seen the footage somewhere else.
Yep. Because they get picked up by a lot of news outlets and it's always women. That's very funny and strange. But I know, I know, I think that segues kind of nicely your, you're working for two different groups right now, where you work on behalf of too. It's turning point USA. Pays your bills. Yes. Hmm.
Talking about USA. And they have you and so we link to that there's a you know you're listed as one of their contributors and then you contribute also to post-millennial yes, Andy knows organization and you're writing pieces for those folks and they've got you covering the most important news of June. What is the most important news of June? I wish it was crackheads but sadly, it's pregnant serious. Something very Twisted. About what you just said. I do.
Okay at least at least the Rockets are honest, that's what I'm saying. Drug addicts are very honest people what before we get off of that topic. Go up Portland. That was the other place. I went to 4 p.m. I'm walking downtown and I went missing last year last year. Again, I was covering the drug crisis and just how out of control, things got over there and I'm witnessing a drug overdose at 4 p.m. and their financial district. It's nice area.
You have people walking past in business suits. At this guy's just overdosing, like, foaming at the mouth and then there's other homeless, woman, is trying to pickpocket him for his Drugs gun. And then this cop rolls up and he's super chill. And I'm like, it's this is the most messed up stand up of my life if he was okay, which is why I posted it. But I'm like standing there and I'm like, hi guys, we're in Portland. It's 4 p.m. and this guy behind these overdosing.
Um, I guess this is just normal here and it is like that. It is like the classic reporter thing when something would just happened next to them. Yeah, and I just did the stand up and I sent it to one of my friends and he was laughing. He was like, what is this? An episode of South Park? You got a guy overdosing behind you. I Like this is just Portland bro so it's funny because I'm talking to this copies. Very open. This guy's overdosing in the background fire department
comes. They're you know they're doing the whole routine with him. He was fine. He I guess kind of just OD'd a little bit on a fentanyl but he ended up getting up and walking away. Maybe he was just taking a little nap. He was. Okay. So the fire department bear. He's getting pickpocket at the same time. Yeah. But then the fire department comes in.
So like I'm conducting this interview with this police officer and the fire department, like, has this guy in the background, you know, they're like flopping around. Is like amazing background stuff, first day of that crazy and where I'm just talking to this cop and he's like, oh yeah, this happens like three or four times in a one-block radius every summer. This is nothing new. This happens all the time because actually the state of Oregon decriminalized hard drugs back in 2020.
So this happens there's nothing we can do. We can't take this guy to any type of Center for rehabilitation. If they don't want to go to the hospital, we can't even take them to the hospital. We just have to let them go. And what ended up happening is the guy got up after the fire Revived him walked off so that was Portland. Rise up. Rise up, have you ever seen the movie called bringing out the dead? No, I'm going to recommend it.
So my audience, you may have seen this if you haven't, it's one of the smaller kind of really interesting. It's John Goodman, it's Nicolas Cage, they're running an ambulance. I want to say. It's in the 90s and Ving Rhames is in it, and they're running an ambulance. One of one of the FBI paramedics that I used to know, was a consultant on this. And so, they're driving an ambulance, like drinking bourbon bringing people back from the dead.
And at this one moment, Ving Rhames goes in with, with Nic cage. And they've got this guy who's OD'd And he supposedly DJ, hmm, right. And they're like, he's, you know, he's dead and they go in the check it, and he's like, he's like, yeah, it's a heroin overdose. So prior to fentanyl that was the drug of choice that would not people down. And so Ving Rhames does this whole thing. He makes all the crackheads, all the dirt, all the druggies, hold
hands and start praying. And he was like, rise up, rise up and go see what's his name and they go I be banging. He goes what's his name? And they're He's a DJ, his name is a be Bangin. So they scream rise up, IB Bangin, which is one of the great scenes that nobody's ever seen. But if you're a paramedic, almost everybody, in the EMS world is seeing it. The next time you see a crackhead, get off the ground, you're going to hear rise up. I'd be banging, it is it's a
special thing. God. And then you'll laugh and everybody will look at you like you're sick because you'll have this just silly moment but that was a big thing all the way through the 90s during the heroin epidemic. We're getting it back again with fentanyl. Yeah I think people just rising up off the street and some of them make it and some of them don't eventually they Make it yeah. Fentanyl is very dangerous. High death rate with that one.
Not good at all because people don't know how to dose it because it's so small. Yeah, they're my present drug and coming across our open Southern border, right? Just spilling across and they can move a lot of it with very little people. Yeah. So you're filming Portland. Yeah, you've hit all the high points. Anywhere, that's crappy. Have you gone to like Southside? Chicago, to go see what the drug, you know, the gun gun battles look like or no.
Yeah, just resist. That for a while, not get shot. But, you know, I'd rather you make a shot too. That's why I've kind of stayed away from Chicago, but I did hit Seattle as well as we did. I did Seattle Portland, San Francisco, Skid Row, Philadelphia, kna it's Kane, a Kensington Avenue, K is like local. That's what they call it. So those are the five points that I hit and New York. I've touched on a little bit, but that's been more migrant type stuff.
And yeah, I've heard in, I think it's embossed. And they have methadone Avenue or something like that. People keep telling me to go there. I can probably set you up with some people in Boston too, so, give you a walk around there. Yeah, one of our folks who's telling you what to do who's directing your reporting, if anybody or is it just your emotion, in your
spur-of-the-moment. My curiosity, my curiosity is what's directing it. It's really cool to work with the organizations that I do. Because they trust my instinct and they basically say yeah, go report on whatever you want and it's been very successful so far and like I said, my Whole tactic is go report on what nobody else is touching and you have to earn that with these kind of people, definitely.
But I also think to the tactic tactic of going and Reporting on what nobody else is. Is immediately a success? Because people are going to be shocked by the footage because they're going to be like wait San Francisco. Looks like this and you know the San franciscans and the thing too is because there is local news that will cover this stuff, but they get tired of covering it because they get tired of getting attacked. They get tired of having to cover the same thing over and over again.
And so, What I try to do is because I have more of a national audience, is go to these places even if something has been covered and the exposed my audience, which like I said, is people from all over the United States and show like, hey, this is what various parts of the country look like.
And oftentimes we are seeing the same pattern of democratic Progressive, loving inclusive, diverse politicians, time and time again, being the people who are enabling this type of destructive Behavior. It's almost like you could predict the Ohyou're based on the previous experience and performance. It's crazy. It's crazy. Let me tell you, I just ate its yummy. You see a d next to the name, you know, that your stands for Destruction. I don't know. I love it.
Speaking of Destruction, we are now in the month of June. I alluded to it earlier. You have a new task from your, from your lovely employers, and they want to cover the big story that the left would shove down our throats and make us accept. So what are they? What are they have you going? What do they have you doing? And then where can people sort of like expect to see? Your next month where the reporting what's going to be involved in?
I usually don't say where I'm going preemptively, just because, you know, let's stop. Let's talk about topic that will do topic. We have to set a bodyguard with you, definitely. We will be covering Pride this month. That one of my least favorite topics because it's just, it gets very degenerate. It's not my favorite thing in the world.
I went to Pride in DC last year and it was like a gigantic like marijuana and alcohol fest with children present and hash Street orgy, yeah, it was like Half-naked adults like grinding on each other in the middle of the day and I was like, Mom, I'm scared. Please help. I don't want to be here. It's really gross, but it's funny. It's like, do you ever wonder why they call it pride of you ever reflected on that one of the seven deadly sins? It is.
It's the original sin though, and it stings, it's the sin. It's the original sin is the sin of Pride, its when man Rivals to be that, like, like, God not to get super religious on it, but I grew up in a religious background and so you look at that and you go these people now Are taking something that they claim is an immutable. Characteristic, you can't choose to be trans, you can't choose to be gay and I'm more or less okay with that assertion. So why are you proud of it?
Yeah, exactly. And I think that there was this small period of time where it was like, okay we passed gay marriage and maybe there was like a couple months where everyone was kind of chilling but then you know, corporations and Holy Wood, Wood Full Throttle and it was like we have to put a gay person in every advertisement in every TV show. That's right. And then it kept progressing and progressing in progress Assessing.
And so it's like we gave an inch and they took 58,000 miles and now we're living in a period of time. Where if you say that, a man is not a woman, you're a bigot and that just you you deserve to get punched in the face, or get your entire career destroyed over that. And they're more than happy to come and destroy. You, you grew up more or less in a world where I imagine in even in college. Like you didn't see it when you
were being homeschooled. But being gay was if not celebrated it was certainly accept it, would you agree? So it was so Updated. I mean I have never and it's just like, it's so ridiculous that it's like, oh, gay people are just being genocided everything else at this point. Yeah, it's a little bit when I was a kid.
Okay, I agree with, I believe that, you know, I'm sure there were a time, like, from the 80s to the 90s where people were more like more put off by it. I mean, I don't even know if that, like, it was slowly accepted over time, like, by the early 2002 during lie entire I guess childhood, it's I never experienced, you know, nobody. Scared ever. It used to be almost like a social death sentence.
That's how bad it was, and certainly in the 50s and the 60s and so on, you know, people the idea of being in the closet, like I don't even think you grew up with people being in a closet. It was just a matter of. When they were going to come out not if they were gonna come out. Yeah. Exactly. Because it even if you were gay, you were openly acting gay and people just want to nobody. It's just, I don't know.
It's ridiculous to see where we're at in the modern day and yeah, I'm kind of the same way too because I am a Christian woman but I am also, With libertarian in my politics. So, I'm like, okay, you want to get married, you want the government in your business, whatever, but you shouldn't be married in the church. And also, the church shouldn't be promoting homosexual relationships.
Just like, they shouldn't be promoting premarital sex or any other type of sin, like, I've you Olsen the same way you don't get you're not you're saying isn't special, okay? That's right. So, we shouldn't be as much a quote of the day. Yeah, it's like we shouldn't have the church and we shouldn't have all these institutions propping the Us up. And like I said, we really had been conquered, I feel by the lgbtq community and we see that
every single pride month. When the lgbtq flag is flying above. Our highest institutions in Washington, d.c. when we see the lgbtq flag a flying in place of the the, you know, flags of other nations. It really does feel like we've been conquered, and we are living through a time now, where you can't even speak out against
this. I went, I did a video and I went to Sixth Street and I said fellas, is it gay to date a trans Woman and I wanted to do the specifically to men because I wanted to break the conditioning that a lot of people have because, you know, there's this big Echo chamber that trans women are women. And I was like, let's see what real men think about this. And the saddest like you thought real men are on 6th Street, but continue. Well then who are on it, honest meant to beer, drink to drink.
Exactly, let me go talk to the fellas and see how they're feeling about that. Because at the end of the day, you know, men are going to be honest. And it was one of the funniest videos I've ever done because Most every single guy was like a dick. So dick, I don't think I'd go past it. Even if they were super hot, hilarious video went super viral. But the sad part about it is that a lot of the guys in the background were like, oh, I
don't want to lose my job. I don't want to be called homophobic or transphobic or I don't want people to come after me but like they were brave enough to say it because they're kind of drunk, but it's also, it's like, it's sad that you can't say that being in a gay relationship is gay. In the modern-day, also, the men that are dressing as women that are, you know, like the Leah Thomas types. My wife keeps me abreast of what's going on there, and it's
very weird. So thankfully, she keeps track of that instead of me and she's like, why he's got a boyfriend. He's also done a transition, both of them have kept, you know, kept their male genitalia. It's a fetish for them. Yeah. And it's called Auto Grand philia. You ever heard of this? Yes. Alright. So that was news to me. My wife is a mental health
professional. So I'm not ashamed that I didn't know it. I'm sort of sad that, you know it because it's only because Wireman, why in the world should you have to know that? Yeah, but there's an entire Fire fetish of men that fantasize about themselves dressed as a woman or being a woman and that's what gets them off. Well, dude, it's a bizarre. If you aren't super involved in the trans algae BT, Q news, which good for you.
I wish I would, then I want to be, I'll say that but the post-millennial actually just put out an article, the other week, where there was a transman transwoman. Sorry. So biological man. Yeah, help me help me stay straight with biological. So, like, let me give you an example. If Kyle took a bunch of hormones and started secreting breast milk, Then try to feed his child with the breast milk. That's what was happening. Is that weird guy?
That's kind of India is looks like he's what is this? It was a white dude. It was a white dude who was taking hormones, breastfeeding his child with his breast milk and then it was found out later on that. This trans woman had a cow fetish Course. So it's like, it's all weird like, publicly sexualized fetishes. It seems like much. It's like, you know what? If you want to be weird and you want to do your word stuff in the bedroom, go ahead.
I don't want to see it, don't get kids involved with it. That's not try to teach our children about this stuff. It's gross it. Nobody needs to know about it. Yeah, it's a lot in your lifetime. You've literally seen people go from. I want to be able to live my life the way I want to. I need you to celebrate. My life in order for me to have the validation to exist. Yep, that's mental illness. In a big way from in my book and I'm sorry solutely.
I'm glad you're out there. Pushing against it, especially in your age bracket. I think it's really, really important that people that are in their 20s, know that you don't have to get cancelled, even though you've been canceled already your uncanceled. Well, at this point in many ways because you guys, you've got people that have built infrastructure networks. There's places like Rumble where
we're streaming right now. There's there's voices that are big enough that have enough money that they can kind of give the the double-barreled middle. As Dan likes to say, yeah, to these types and damn body know, being one of the people who knows, who we're just talking the other day, he said, parallel economy. He's got a payment processor, you know, they've got their own servers for rumble, they're building their own ad servers as well.
So they're not using Google and it's sad that we've gotten to a point where you have to do that, but also it's so beneficial that we've gotten to a point where we have that now because there was a period of time where people were getting kicked out of their Banks where they didn't have access to their money. I mean, look at what Happened with January 6. A lot of people face repercussions for being there.
They were put in jail for that. They were, I mean, you know, the list of political persecution in this country goes on and on whether you have a certain religious belief or political belief, and you were fired from your job. You were ostracized from your community and then you know, even bringing the covid aspect of that, if you didn't want to get vaccinated, you were fired again. You were, you know, called a horrible person who didn't care
about other people. And that's been really interesting to see the manipulation of language. It's a very, very successful Tactic and it's gotten us to where we are today where people are afraid to speak common and basic truth because you know, like you mentioned 1984 earlier the wrong thing and having basic common sense and the courage to say the truth is wrong, think nowadays. And if you do that, you do risk getting fired from your job, or
being labeled a Nazi bigot. I mean, every single time I report on the border, I am told that I am a disgrace to the entire Hispanic community. The every single Hispanic that I have met in my life loves the reporting and they don't like the illegal immigration year. Most of them. I imagine probably came here. Put a lot of work into coming here at something. It's a point of Pride and Latinos that I know, you know, all my buddies who were border patrol were all Latino. Yep.
And they love they love this country. Probably more than people who were born here and didn't know any better, because they have family members. That remember something else that was harder?
Yeah. And now they have an opportunity to live in nice neighborhoods and have all the amenities that you have as an American. So I always say that too, The reason why we're seeing all of these fake ID made up problems because my generation is very coddled, as is Gen Z. They don't have real problems, they have easy lives in this
country. This is one of the easiest times to be alive, and I know, like, people like to pretend that they're so oppressed and their victims and this, and that, and they need reparations. The reason why they're complaining so much is because they've never truly been oppressed. If you look at other countries who have dealt very recently with Communism with socialism with authoritarian dictatorships, I mean you only Park escaped North Korea. That's a modern day story.
Of somebody who is living under such oppression that she had to eat bugs and she had to be sold into sex slavery. To escape her country. It is still happening every single day and then you have Americans who had the audacity to tell me that they're oppressed because they're obese. And people are being mean to them, by calling them fat. Right? What what what? Yeah, we've lost shame. The normal amount of shame that you should have for the things that are your weaknesses that
you can fix. Yeah. Yeah. These are not immutable characteristics being fat being lazy, you know, being dumb. And yet some people are genetically on a place where and I'm very gentle and tolerance people. You look at him, you go like that guy, you know, he's only like a 40 horsepower motor, he's not going out, he's not running on the Autobahn and and so you can, you know, be tolerant of that. But generally speaking, I think you're right. It's so soft.
And so gentle that we're going to be dealing with some pretty hard times simply because we've been coddling people in that way. Absolutely. Absolutely. And you know, this is another thing that I try to advocate for is just discipline in one's life and putting yourself through hard. Situations like I want to blast back by a crackhead, it's good for you. One of my life models is to do something that you hate every single day. And by hate, I mean that could be like going to the gym, waking
up early. When you don't want to reading the book. Like something that you don't want to, do you have to discipline yourself every single
day to to something difficult? Because if you don't, you do fall into this pattern of laziness, you do fall into this pattern of because he even thinking outside of the box, is hard to do, you know, especially with all the propaganda were being hit with going in, searching out new, and Our nation or thinking outside of the box or thinking for yourself, is a difficult thing to do on the modern day.
So I applaud people who even do that and that's why I encourage it and I always tell my audience to like look, don't listen to me, you know, don't let me be the end-all be-all for your information. Go fact, check me, go. Tell me if you think that I'm wrong go and, you know, listen to somebody else's Viewpoint at, that's why I really do encourage people to speak to leftist as well. I like to speak to people on the opposite side.
I'm like, tell me why you think the way that you do, because I'm really interested in understanding you. Let's have a conversation which usually ends in me getting slapped in the face but or urine thrown on you. Yeah, so I guess it is what it is. But yeah, you know that's like what I always encourage all audiences to do is just understand how blessed we are to live. In the United States of America, understand how blessed you are and how much opportunity that
you have. If you choose to utilize that opportunity because, you know, we've had so many incredible success stories of immigrants, who come to this country and have had zero dollars in their And they're now business owners, there is zero excuse for anybody in this country regardless of their gender, or their sexuality, or their skin tone, not to be successful in this country to be quite honest with
you. I think that, you know, I'm more elevated in society because I'm a brown woman, and I don't like that. I don't like that at all. That's why I try to work as hard as I do, because I'm like, I don't ever want anything to be handed to me and this life. And I don't ever want anybody in my audience to adopt the victim mentality. Go out and carve your own path go and utilize the opportunity that has become available to everybody in this country. Don't be a victim.
I love it. And I think you're successful because you are an exceptional person. Thank you are able to speak and articulate your point and you have tenacity which many people do not have so good on you way to be a good example to people tell people where they can follow you, your handles and things like that. I know your audience is bigger than mine, but we will share them as many times as we can and we will cross pollinate and get that thing up to 500 thousand followers.
Absolutely, thank you, thank you. Y'all can go follow my YouTube channel. Go watch my mini documentary. Salve says you can follow. On Twitter Salve underscore says underscore Instagram at Salve with one n. And then also, my website, says official.com where you can find, all of my articles. All of my mini documentaries, my own podcast as well. Everyone has a podcast nowadays. Mine isn't as good as Kyle Skies, but you know, it's there, don't even start.
We'll do it again at some point when you, when you recover from your pride and then your therapy sessions that have to come from all the nasty things you've seen. Oh gosh, pray for me, guys. Thanks for getting up early and driving out here against traffic into Into the, the nether reaches of Northwestern, Austin. Absolutely. I truly love you guys. I don't wake up this early for anybody, okay? So, she told me that earlier on to like this, share, subscribe, you've got it.
We my folks don't like to say smash, they say, like the smash button. The smash button is the thumbs like to smash button, guys. Fantastic stuff. Thanks so much for joining me guys, that you've been listening to the Kyle Serafin show. Again, if you liked hearing what you did, we do these things occasionally in the studio when we have someone. So exceptional as Savannah, Hernandez joining us. Grateful for you taking the time this morning and we will do this again on Friday.
I think we're actually gonna have real Steve friend as a recurring segment. Steve friend has some updates. He's flying around the country. I think he said he's gonna be in Columbus, Ohio. I don't know what's in Columbus. I'm sort of nervous for him to find out. What's that? Why he's there? But Steve friend. Another FBI whistleblower will see him again soon. And until then thanks so much to my guest folks we will see you again on Friday and let's do
this soon. There we go, there's the button. Adios. Thanks for listening to the Kyle Sarah. And show streamed live Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays on Rumble.com. Kyle Serafin. Follow Kyle on Twitter and true social at Kyle seraphin. And show streamed live Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays on Rumble.com. Kyle Serafin. Follow Kyle on Twitter and true social at Kyle seraphin.
