Vets as Threats (FF #3) - podcast episode cover

Vets as Threats (FF #3)

Jul 07, 202359 min
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Episode description

Steve and I link up for "Friendly Friday #3" for hot takes over the week. The arrest of Taylor TARANTO in DC, reflections on the FBI's manufactured war on terrorism, veterans as Domestic Violent Extremists, and a discussion of the Covid vax mandate memory hole. Buy Steve's Book: https://a.co/d/hmcJf5N ____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________Today's podcast supported by https://CatholicVote.OrgIf you are interested in supporting the going litigation against the FBI over religious liberties, you can visit https://CatholicVote.Org. Visit http://PatriotCoolers.com and use Promo code "KYLE" for 10% off and free shipping over $50. 🇺🇸 Follow on Twitter: https://twitter.com/KyleSeraphin🚨 Follow on TruthSocial: https://truthsocial.com/@kyleseraphin⭐️ 5-star Reviews (scroll to the bottom to leave one): https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-kyle-seraphin-show/id1654162813

Transcript

Take a look behind the curtain with a real whistleblower, an American patriot. Prepare to embrace the uncomfortable truth, because this program has no time for comforting lies. Here is civil liberties enthusiast, Second Amendment defender, and recovering FBI agent Kyle Seraf. Hello my friends, and welcome to the Kyle Seraphin Show. I better hit that record button over here. I've got another edition of Friendly Friday. We're bringing on my buddy, the real Steve Friend. Steve friend.

You want to pop on there? I think Ryan is back there producing, so we'll bring him on the screen. Folks, It is July the 7th. We are the first week down in July. And man, you look sorrowful. What's going on over there? Steve, you good? Yeah, man, I'm just. I'm a little bit melancholy after. I think I need to pick me up. I need some. Motivational speech from maybe our dear leaders. Yeah, I think we're going to do that. Thanks so much. There's something about Steve. It's in his brain.

He just cues things up. We had a whole show kind of lined up. I had some some links and some articles and things we're going to talk about. And then he just kicked it right off the bat and he said, are we ever going to get this minute back of our lives? Which of course makes me click on something and I have to deal with that. We're going to do a little bit

of motivation right now, folks. I want to set the tone for a Friday. Sometimes it's important to reach out to the stratosphere of Washington, DC and get the thought leaders of our nation to just really dial us in. And before we do that, let me just say thanks to all the folks that are in the chat. I see some new faces in there. Joe 1911, I assume that's the pistol. 1911, So I'm into that.

We saw gypsy Princess who said we're going to be walking around in her pocket while she's walking her dogs. Sounds like something my mother does, but let's let's get a little little motivational thought. Let's set the tone for today's show.

And Ryan, if you want to cue that video up, I think we're all going to be better off for it. Well, I think culture is it is a reflection of our moment and our time right and and and present culture is the way we express how we're feeling about the moment and and we should always find times to express how we feel about the moment. That is a reflection of joy cuz you know. It comes in the morning.

We have to find ways to also express the way we feel about the moment in terms of just having language and and in a connection to how people are experiencing life. And I think about it in that way too. Sorry Steve, what is your reflection on the moment that comes in the morning? I feel so bad for Dan Quayle that every time that our vice president's face, all I can think of is how that man's entire political career was flushed on a toilet because he misspelled the word potato.

How old were you when when Dan Quayle was the vice president? So that was 901990 right when he did that. So so I was like 3 or 4 years old. I would have been like in the age of the class where the kids were spelling potato. Right. And and then we and he's always gone down as sort of like this dim ball. But I think Dan Quayle was fine. And then we have Cackles here who just sets the record for the dumbest things I've ever heard in my life. They're fluidly. They're fluidly retarded.

You know, you have a great metaphor of the the Magneto. Bridge, when you're responding to a lot of these questions that media gives you where you're kind of like flying by the seat of your pants and maybe you could you can go into that. But I would compare her experience is like the the Coyote and Coyote and the Looney Tunes where he runs off the Cliff and there's no bridge there at all and just falls

down. It's. She's in the air for one second where she's thinking about is something going to happen, is the bridge going to materialize and it doesn't. I was thinking if she. OK, so my Magneto analogy. For those of you who don't know, I get asked these questions all the time. I have no idea what I'm going to say. And I'm like, Oh my God, what? What are they asking? What? What is even going to come up

here? And then this sort of bridge of pieces sort of come together as I'm saying it, in real time. So I just step with faith. I walk off into the abyss and I end up where I need to be. Sometimes I think that's just the Holy Spirit that moves me. I have that sort of special moment in time. Kamala Harris's Magneto bridge would actually be a bridge in a circle. And it touches the same word over and over again. In this case, emotion, reflection, just nonsense.

You can't see my hand if you're not watching our rumble channel, just drawing this little circle. It's not a big circle by the way. It's about a four inch circle and she just sort of pivots on it in this little thing. There's a there's Ryan. Ryan. What do you got to say about this? Did you do you feel enriched by our leaders? Is that something that is added to your your life? It's a great time to be alive, Kyle.

It's a great time to be alive, man, how many times I want to give you that five minute warning? How how many times have you seen that video? Three too many. Three times too many, right? Which is 3 * I assume. All right, before we get into the topics of the day, I want to jump in and I want to say thanks to my sponsors real quick, so we'll pull them up. This is catholicvote.org. They are sponsoring our show.

We're very grateful for them. If you want to visit their website at catholicvote.org, you can sign up for the loop. I actually read The Loop every morning now, and I actually learned things that I didn't know. What I found in the Loop this morning was apparently Bill Clinton and Alex Soros, the son of George Soros made a visit to the Vatican and they got to meet with Pope Francis. So that's good to know. And all kinds of little interesting stories in there they do stories about.

You know, people that are pushing abortion bans, which I think are happening in, man, I forgot the state already and I should go back and reread. There's a couple of things coming out of their own new service and there's some things that are coming out of other wire services, so check them out. By all means. catholicvote.org, sign up for the loop, get it in the loop. And I've got a loop myself back in obviously here cuz I failed

myself. And while we're doing that, let's go ahead and start rocking down what's been happening. We are in a loop of interesting media cycles we are hearing about. Now, round three of the story, what is happening with the White House, the the coke and hose mixer that we did not get invited to? Can you kind of give people, do you remember what all three versions of the story look like? It's too many to keep track of.

I just every time I hear the story, it's it reminds me of the game Clue. Because now, now the cocaine was found in the library with the Candlestick near where Kamala Harris apparently parks her car. Because apparently the Vice president just rolls up in her own vehicle now. She's just like, she drives in in like a Dotson or something, or she's got like a Honda Accord and she just self parks. They have valet, but she's not going to valet anymore.

She's done. She they scratched her car one too many times, so she's in the self park mode. So I I think the initial story was that they found it and it was like along a tour route, which was the most believable lie. If you're going to tell why? Well there's all these people and I mean I think that they're just not very good at lying and and the whole thing that I think Bongino's talked about this before where?

Lies almost like a garden where you have to like constantly tend to it. Whereas the truth to just will grow. And on its own it's like just like a stone. I mean, it's not there's nothing you have to worry about with it where you have to upkeep on it and they're not very proficient at lying and they just come across as being. Desperate to to spin it in any

way. And and they can't ever just let it sit because even with the media that you would think at this point is just sort of voicing whatever they want them to say. Nothing is holding up to reason whatsoever. And then they keep changing the story so drastically that eventually somebody's going to have to say like guys quit lying and then just tell us what the facts are and then we can move on to the next story because obviously there's going to be no consequences.

It's almost like we're seeing a reflection of the culture in a moment. That comes in the morning. What do you think? Well it's it's all about that time and and it's the the the significance of time is very significant and wherever Google takes me on my auto fill. Yes, nothing, nothing is more significant than the passage of time. Ryan. If you pull up Article #1, I'm going to do a quick read of this. We're going to recap now, the third story that's coming out of the White House.

This is coming from Becker News. If you guys are watching on our Rumble channel, you can see that just tells us that the White House is now peddled a third version of the cocaine story, this time implicating that it was near the the Situation Room, which is also located near Vice President Kamala Harris's car, which Steve just alluded to. Want to read Kind of a a quick little piece here. According to the report, the cocaine was just discovered one floor below the Oval Office.

In proximity to the Situation Room, NBC reporter Andrea Mitchell pointed out that access to that area is much more limited than the second story, which was that it was in a cubby hole near where the tour routes are. And the first story was that it came out of a library with Hunter Biden near the laptop. So we've got that sort of now, the third version of it, and I'm going to just read you something. I want your reflection on it

here, Steve, if you don't mind. It says that they've actually cited a potential violation of the Hatch Act as a defense. Reportedly meaning that speaking about it further could have implications in the upcoming election. I think that's number one. And and then here's the last one, a report claimed one official familiar with the investigation cautioned that the source of the drugs was unlikely to be determined given that it was discovered in a highly trafficked area of The West Wing.

So we are now counting the number of things that cannot be determined ever. Can you going to give me the running list over the in the Biden administration Things that we'll never know. Because they cannot be determined cocaine. Yeah, cocaine's one. Whoever attacks crisis pregnancy centers, because that happens at night time. It's dark. We'll never know. That it's really hard. Yeah, that's really hard pipe. Bomber on January 6th.

It's just floating around. There could be anybody motivations for the national shooter manifesto. No, No ideas. No. I'm starting ongoing investigation sources and methods. Yeah. And and and we're going to lean with Hatch Act. Is that like the the Christopher Rea ongoing investigation? Can't comment. I'm just going to pull something out of my butt and say they. Definitely came up with a fun one on that one because I had not heard a hatch act.

And then obviously the last one is who leaked the Dobb decisions. That's obviously impossible to determine from a very limited pool of people. We could never find that thing out. No. No. And and the the Hatch Act I was that guy needs to be worried about a Baker Act because that was just. Flat out crazy to say that, I mean make no sense to me

whatsoever. The Baker Act is the red flag law down in Florida. Yeah, that's, I mean, we're the involuntary committal to a mental institution because you have a psychological problem. There is a problem there. You remember? Did you watch Harry Potter? Were you with that kind of guy? I mean, yeah, I I've read the books, yeah. OK, do you remember the Department of Mysteries? Yeah, I think the Biden administration needs a Department of Mysteries.

They now have 4 mysteries that will never be solved, some of which have multiple. Likely subjects, probably also some of the, you know who's going to charge people in the Antifa case, what's going to happen?

Do you think that this is just everything is stupid because we live in idiocracy times or is this potentially this is very salacious, this is going to get a lot of attention so we can distract from things that are going to be impactful, like, I don't know, the release of the Afghanistan withdrawal report where there was no accountability. To which they did on a Friday news dump going into July 4th

weekend. Or, you know, maybe something with this latest witness who has gone into hiding because he has information not just about the Bidens but about everybody that was bellying up to the through on the the China grift. You're talking about you're talking about Gal Loft, who's now running for his life apparently and was, you know, arrested and then skipped bail in Greece.

This guy, yeah, it's, I mean, it's it's it requires a second level or third level of thinking, but everybody can just look cocaine and it's like a ferret on meth. We could just get distracted that easily. I like the ferret on meth. I used to have a ferret. His name was Bandit. My mother killed him by leaving him outside. Left him outside when I used to live in Texas and he just he burrowed under his blankets to try to avoid the heat and he ended up just scorched.

They are a narrow range of temperatures they can live in but ferret on cocaine. A ferret, not on cocaine, is a frantic animal. So on cocaine, that sounds, it sounds like someone who's put like an electric, you know, toothbrush up the butt of a cat or something like something really, really horrific that's just moving insanely. As long as we're getting into the pet territory, nobody has thrown the cocaine at commander, that German Shepherd that the

Biden family owns. How do you know that dog was going full cocaine bear when they first moved in the White House and was biting all these Secret Service members? I think that's your most likely suspect. That's Hunter. He he likes, he likes the cheap stuff, man. He's into the crack like powder, not so much. You think the dog is into powder and you think Hunter is into rock. Yes, hunters is hard and and that soft is going straight to the shepherd. Interesting.

That's a high dollar. That's a high dollar dog. I mean, that makes sense. It's just kind of a Primo animal. Primo taste. Interesting stuff, Okay. So if that's the case. Let's let's try to rain this thing back into where we're where we started off. We're going to talk a little bit about this guy named Taylor Toronto, right. And the the spelling of it for those who are looking out there. If you want to go look this thing up on your own, it's TRANTO. And Ryan's going to put the

thing up on real quick. I'm going to read a couple choice parts out of his detention. This is a motion that comes out of the district of DC. So here's what we got. We've got a court document here filed in the district. Of DC That's the federal court and it's the United States versus Taylor versus Taylor. Toronto. He's apparently this really troubled guy that was living in Washington state.

He's a Navy veteran. He was living in his van down by the literally living in his van down by the river. He was down by Rock Creek, which is a kind of a famous green area that runs through DC And he's been charged and and requested to be basically locked up indefinitely under 18 USC 3142, which is the serious risk of flight. This is what the government has basically alleged.

What's really interesting in here is the quote, UN quote factual history of this guy who was live streaming on YouTube on June 28th, 2023. He has a 20/20/20, sorry, a 2000 black Chevrolet Express 1500 van. So he's got this like crappy old man and he was in Gaithersburg and he's got this like fascination with the Institute, the National Institute of Standards and Technology. I have no idea. This person has all the hallmarks of what we call like an emotionally disturbed person,

Right Steve? Yeah, yeah, 100%. Just one of those frequent Flyers that is always calling the FBI office to report the laser beams in their head. The laser beams in their head, yeah. Or the implant in their nose, which I think I've mentioned to Dan Bongino before. There's always something if someone's monitoring my thoughts, I get some of these on on Twitter sometimes they'd be like, they've got the wetware in my head. Don't act like you don't know about the Bluetooth neural link, Kyle.

And it's like, dude, you know, I wasn't read into that program, I

guess unfortunately, this guy. And I'm going to just kind of keep reading a little bit out of here while you're while you're kind of reflecting on it. But some of the stuff that they that they mentioned in there are are completely new stories, new pieces of information to me. Apparently we have some no go zones that are restricted by the federal government when we talk about areas in DC Have you ever heard about that anywhere in America before? No, not not before.

I was told that the the lawn on the outside of the Capitol on January 6th, 2021 is now considered restricted area. And I was trying to. Reflected, if there was maybe anything that's justifiable. And the only thing I could think of would be like Mera Lago, somewhere like that, a former presidents presiding. So there's some sort of Secret Service presence there which might restrict the public access. But that's no different than

just private property. No trespassing, just with a lot more resources to go to preventing a trespass. So supposedly the neighborhood that he's walking around in is Obama's neighborhood. That's what they said. That, and that was the claim that he was basically looking for the Obamas. He's looking for the Podestas.

And yet anybody that goes looking for the Obamas and the Podestas in Washington, DC with a cane and a couple of guns in a van that are not on his person and you know, a couple 100 rounds of ammunition, how you know you you've done threat analysis. You've done sort of Interstate threat cases. I'm sure you get him coming in from all over the place. Like how does that, how does that matrix bother? You I I mean it.

He I think he had enough of a chance to get to Obama, as the people did, of overthrowing the government government on January 6th with bear spray. And a Viking hat, especially when you see the video apparently. And having read this document where he was looking into sewer grades and saying these are my access points to get to Obama's house. Yeah, 100%.

And you know, that's why I like you on here because you have these sort of interesting leaps and and analogies that that don't necessarily hit my brain at the same way. One of the things that I did notice is that they spent all this, this detention document talking about history. They talked about how, you know, he was at January 6th. So obviously he's a very, very bad person and he's one of those. What was it, Ralph, in the very, very bad, no good day? Something like that.

I know it was long. Oh yeah, yeah. That goes back Alexander Alexander and did terrible, horrible, no good, very bad day. Very good. OK, I got to get a copy of that for my kids now, because that's one of my favorites. They talk about he's this very, very bad man, this terrible, no good, very bad man because he had a social media account where he's streaming his weird thoughts, First Amendment, and then he's saying First Amendment and they'd make fun of him for it.

And they're like, oh, how you know, how dare he's say First Amendment? Like it somehow protects him from speaking and saying crazy things. It's pretty sure it actually does. I think that's what the 1st Amendment says. Yeah, I mean, like, look, I'm not disputing this guy's in EDP. He's an emotionally disturbed guy who who needs help and when we should as a society try to provide that for him.

But reading this document, all I can think of the whole time was like, So what you're telling me is everything he's doing is perfectly legal. That's what he needs help. But you just, it's streaming on YouTube and saying things like, I have a First Amendment right. Is is, oh, this.

Now the government's going to snicker and say, oh, you and your cute little First Amendment, we have to control you, Sir. And and we're going to lean on and wrap ourselves in the American flag and say that, you know, that there was an insurrection that day. And at the time he was walking into the Capitol, somebody was shot. It had nothing to do with him. I mean, what does it have to do with the price of tea in China, bro? That's.

Completely unrelated, right. So they actually quoted in the document, and I'll kind of paraphrase it for you folks. What they said is while he was physically in a building, somebody who wasn't him did something that he wasn't involved in and he wasn't physically next to that person and he had no responsibility for it.

But that was a very bad thing. So you can imagine how bad this guy is. There's another thing I'm going to read directly out of this detainment document, because I think it's it's relevant here when I'll get your hot take on this one too. It says June 2023, quote, UN quote Freedom Corner. I like that they put it in scare quotes. Freedom Corner is a part right outside of the DC jail where people regularly gather to do protests on behalf of the January Sixers.

And it says since coming to Washington DC, Toronto has been a regular fixture at, quote, UN quote, Freedom Corner. According to those who routinely gather there, Toronto has been banned. They didn't put the word banned in quotes, by the way, from the area due to his offensive conduct towards the other protesters. It's also been reported that he was displaying erratic and

incoherent behavior. Have you ever heard of people being able to just ban somebody from a public space where other public people are are walking around? Is that a thing? No, not there's an actual effective First Amendment. You don't have a right to not be offended. Right.

I mean if if he's making actual assaults and threats of violence that's one thing but if he's just out there saying things that make you hurt you and give you the the bad feels then that's that's a you problem and and and reading that a lot of the statements he's he's he's making a lot of them are funny that he's just being tongue in cheek and.

Obviously the lawyers who draft this document are either willfully ignorant and they're trying to pull his things out, his statements out of context to make him look bad and and not express the tone where he was maybe being joking, or they're just incapable of understanding sarcasm, which is equally likely. And he says stuff like look mom, I'm an insurrectionist on TV right?

That's 100% something that I would say because it's very sarcastic and tongue in cheek and clearly not something where it's a confession to a felony. But it's still quoted in this document and the FB I's taking it because they have either no sense of humor or they have no sense of how human beings are. They're being disingenuous. One of the things that we mentioned, you said EDP and emotionally disturbed person. Most likely this guy has some some issues.

We we know that the FBI loves to target people that have those kind of mental issues. Right now if we can pull up the article #3, I want to kind of run that through for historical context just to see what we think about it. It's something that came up in a organic chat that I was having with Girardo Boyle. So if we'll pull up that. It's a it's a piece from NBC News. I should put news in quotes right there. This is written by a guy named Michael Costner.

This is actually going back to March of 2020, and we're going to put some interesting perspective into it, it says. The FBI says man killed in Missouri wanted to bomb a hospital amid the coronavirus epidemic. Apparently in March of 2020 it was an epidemic. This was pre pandemic. They didn't know a man named Timothy Wilson was the subject of a terrorism investigation and

the agents tried to arrest him. When he arrived to pick up what he thought was a bomb and they they got into a shootout. He was killed by members of the Joint Terrorism Task Force as they tried to arrest him. And the FBI says Wilson was the subject of quote. A months long domestic terrorism investigation and quote and then it says it's not clear whether Wilson was wounded by the FBI agents or whether he died by

suicide. They said he was armed and then after being shot he was taken to a hospital where he was pronounced dead. I'm guessing that he was actually killed by agents but we won't ever really hear anything about that. Let's let's talk about this guy who was mentally ill and decided to get into a shootout with the Bureau over a bomb that he was picking up.

We don't have all the information there, but you and I have been enough, part of enough of these cases to talk about what was he picking up and who was he picking up from and what do you think was involved in the FBI end?

I think that he probably had online conversations with somebody who shared all of his bad ideas and happened to know somebody else who could get him all the equipment he needed to carry out this attack that they both really, really wanted to do for the perfect price that met with his financial. Parameters. So if he had $2000 in the bank, I can get you a nuclear device. For $18150 I'm. Going to call this the Seraphin rule. I know Dan Bongino has his own rule.

This is the Seraphin rule and how to avoid dealing with the feds online. And it's very simple. You just paraphrased it. But this is the way I always say it if you ever meet anybody online. And they agree with all of your worst ideas, especially the violent ones. They're willing to help you carry them out, and they can do so at exactly the amount of money that you happen to have in your bank account. That's a Fed. Don't hang out with that person.

The last giveaway tip is they'll probably only meet you during the weekday, and it'd be nice if it was before 5:00 PM local time. That's always a help. But you know on on special circumstances they will meet you outside of that, just not on Sunday. So those those people are not your friends, those are feds and as you well phrased, so we think that what do you think undercover or CHS what what's involved in this one or both?

I think CHS probably bumped him and then was going to introduce him to an undercover who was the bomb tech. And that's usually the way this works. So people don't, you know. We're not giving away any special secrets here. This happens in over and over and over again in affidavits that are worn out to get these guys to deplete the terrorism charges. It looks like this. I met you online. I want to hang out with you. You should really meet my buddy Steve. Steve knows a bunch about bombs.

He was in the army. He's a deadly killer. He's got bomb skills and he has bomb skills. At the price that you could afford, he'd be willing to get in for the cause. But only if you could throw a little bit of money our way. Why do they do the money? Do you know? I mean because it's it shows. Free thought and. It it. The material support angle to it and then they also can justify getting all their subpoenas for people's bank records and and

hit the stats on those as well. It it is indeed so kind of gross. This is just a historical piece. And we had some reporters ask us a little bit about the story and they said, well, how do you guys know that there was a source involved and we may or may not know somebody who worked out of that division who may or may not have been on that JTTF. Who may or may not have been able to confirm that all the things that we just told you are in fact accurate. Would you would you cosign on that?

Yes, I would. About, about, yes, fantastic. Folks, it's a it's a weird world. The FBI is not our friends, as you know Steve friend and I know this in a big way. We got that. I actually had that Gerda Boyle on my show roll call last night, which I do on Badlands, and we just kind of kind of rift about it and it opened up with one of those wounds. We're going to get into the COVID memory hole at the end of

this. The next thing up I want to talk about is kind of the demonization of real patriots in this country. But before we do that, let's talk about Patriot coolers real quick. Ryan, I'm going to pull this guy up. So if we can pull up the full screen there, folks. Patriot coolers, you know, are one of our sponsors. They do a fantastic job. They have sent us some great stuff. I'm actually sitting next to my my OD Green Patriot Tumblr right here, actually.

You want to show that sucker. And we go and my wife fills it up with smoothie with me before I before I go on this thing so that I don't end up grouchy at the end of the show, which is always smart. Patriot coolers. You can use promo code Kyle Kyle that gives you 10% off. If you spend more than 50 bucks, which you know. Buy a Tumblr for you. Buy one for a friend. You'll get free shipping over $50.00. So again, promo code Kyle Kyle 10% off. And check them out. They're a great company.

If you're looking for something small, you can pick up a couple of their tumblers. They're steel. I drop mine all the time. They hold up. They have actually been able to save most of my fluids when I drop them on the way out of the out of the van because I've got little kids in my hands as well and I use them when I'm working out. I actually tweeted out a picture of me working out with mine the other day. Have to fill it up because it is hot here in Texas.

And then of course they've got the the soft sided stuff which you can use on a float. You can lash them down onto a kayak or something like that or a Jeep or a four Wheeler. And then they've also got those hard things which will compete head to head with the Yeti. Same kind of stuff. Good times. I got to send Ryan one of these things. Ryan needs a Patriot Tumblr as well I think. What do you think, Ryan? Definitely, man. We were in the live chat

yesterday. I was saying I'm going to put in my 2 weeks if I don't get one in a couple weeks here, so. Yeah, yeah. But I wanted to let everybody else and. I wanted to let everybody else in the live chat know how much we appreciate them. And thank you guys all for going out of your way to hit that like button, hit that subscribe button. We got a surprise for you coming up at the end of this show. There it is. There it is. I want a green one too, just like that.

You want a green one? I want to get the black one with the American flag on it. Like, yeah, producer Phil had. That, Yeah, that'd be sick. All right, I'll take that. I'll take that. I'll take two. We'll send you 2. But we have a, we have a good post show. We got a little something special for you guys. We're going to be jumping over to YouTube to do a 20 minute follow up post show wrap up after these live streams. So I'll be sharing the link over

there. If you guys have any questions for Kyle, drop them down in the main comments, not in the live chat because I can't keep up with it, but drop them in the main comments below. When we jump over to YouTube, we're going to be pulling up those questions, playing one video of the day, getting Kyle's commentary on. It's going to be a good time. So thank you guys. Yeah, and by all means, if you're going to do those things, you know you got to come to rumble.com/kyle Serraphin.

You can always use our permanent link, which is rumble.com/kyleserraphin/live. That will give you the current playing or the most recently streamed episodes. So you'll always be able to go there and find out what we're getting into. Steve, let's talk a little bit about vets. Are vets the threats? That's the question of the day. That's what I titled this thing. I think that's the meat and potatoes. What's going on? We had some friends send us 2

interesting studies. One was done by what do they call here? The House Committee on Veteran Affairs, which is run by Mark Takano. Do you remember? Did you watch? What is a woman with with, what's his name, Matt Walsh. Matt Walsh do. You remember when he sits down with the gay congressman in California and and the and the interview. Yep. And and the the aid is over his shoulder the whole time and he's like, you can see that he looks like a hostage.

He's asking the aid to stop the video. Yeah, Okay. So that's Mark Takano. I thought that was Ted Lieu. And I I give myself a little bit of a pass because I'm like, Oh my God, did I just do that? Like all Asian guys look the same. They don't all look the same, these guys. One is Japanese origin. The other one is, I think Chinese. But when you put them together, they both have like, Gray salt and pepper hair. They have very similar shaped faces and they're both lunatic

leftist. I I I was always confused because I kept seeing, I knew that in my head that this Matt Walsh thing happened. And I was like, there's a gay congressman in California. I'm pretty sure that was Ted Lieu. That's what's in my brain. And then I'm reading about Ted Lieu and it's like, no, he's got kids and he's talking about some other stuff, but he's obviously, you know, huge. Pride Advocate and some other stuff. So I didn't jive it.

I literally learned it because of this this hearing that they did on veterans, which is it's old news. It's from last year actually. It's a it's a year old now anyway. Yeah, because he was not the Majority Leader anymore. That checks. That's why he's not on these things, Okay. So I'm going to read some choice pieces out of there. Ryan, give me one second here and we'll pull it up. If you don't mind. Just kind of the the the what is it called? That's not what it's called the

the, the article. Is report on the importance of support for present preventing domestic violent extremism. Sorry, it's a mouthful. Classic government nonsense. They've got this picture of this kind of heavyset dude wearing a a floral shirt, which makes him a boogaloo boy. Based on my training and experience with the FBI and this particular thing was published by the majority staff, the House Committee on Veteran Affairs. Like I said, Chairman Mark Takano, I'm going to read to you.

What they left they listed on the main cover sheet. It says any viewpoint when expressed through violence crosses a dangerous line. Violent conduct is not constitutionally protected speech and is outside of the limits of the law. Ideologically motivated violence should be rejected by all of us in public office, regardless of party or politics, and it must be a bipartisan concern. Any chance in in your experience anyone has ever been like Oh

yeah, a political violence. I avow that sort of thing, like that's what I'm behind. Is there any political party doing that right now, Steve? No. And similarly, I don't think anybody's saying, well, that violence wasn't ideological, so that's okay, that's acceptable. This is this is kind of like the guy saying water is wet and wet water also is in the ocean, and everybody in the ocean should know that the water is wet. We feel strongly about wet water in the ocean. Are you on my team?

Did Did Kamala Harris write this report? Yeah. That's a good tie back, Yes. She might have been involved in this. She is from California. I'm sure she has some good contacts with these people. Ryan, if you'll pull up the graphic that we have on there, I want to kind of bring up. There were two kind of graphics that were of value and I think they say a lot. There's a now. It was a picture of like 314 people. You'll see it's just words in a little box.

What it says is between 1990 and 2021. Individuals with a military background killed 314 people and they injured 19178. So we're talking about 314 people over a period of 31 years. How does that sit with you, Steve? Is that sound like that's the one of the biggest threats facing America right now? 10 a year and 20 people get struck by lightning and die a year. So I'm going to go with now. So this is almost as bad as half of the threat of lightning to the average person.

Well, but I guess it checks because of the devotion to the climate change that we're seeing. So to prevent 20 lightning strike deaths, we're going to throw trillions of dollars. So maybe we should just mobilize the entire government to prevent 10 wackos from from carrying out an attack, which this is. We're taking on good faith that these were actually tied to domestic violent extremist

beliefs. Not just maybe somebody going through post traumatic stress or just a nefarious actor who, you know, happened to have a military background. So here's the other fun piece of it. It says an average annual of 6.9 individuals with a military background committed DVE crimes. These are made-up terms in my experience, DVE between 1990 and 2010, so that's a 20 year period. And then at 2010 they mentioned there's an average of 28.7. So we have a multiple X increase

for that last 12 years. Is there anything that happened around 2010 that we might notice like in the military? That was going on. Do we ever have, like a significant number of people come home from big wars and maybe more veterans in this country or what? Yeah, we had a surge, the number of veterans and we also had this thing called integrated Program management become implemented by our FBI, where we saw the number of domestic terrorism cases quadruple. There it is for some reason.

Yeah. And so Ryan pulled this graphic up for those of you who are watching our Rumble channel and you can actually see the numbers, I'm just going to kind of read some of them off here. 28.7 is the average individual, average number of individuals with a military background.

I guess they're saying veterans, but they don't want to save veterans because that's a that's a positive word from 20 to end of 2012. And then it says since 2015, approximately 10% of all domestic terrorist plots and attacks were committed by veterans. Now they're going to use the word veterans. And, you know, I think a lot of people in the FBI have always

turned on that 2015 date. I sort of the time when the Bureau got stupid about this when these the IPM program really kicked off and started moving it. The last little fact on here that we're missing here is over 15% of those charged in the January 6th, 2021 attack on the US Capitol had a military background. So 15% of those that have been charged in J6 stuff are veterans. So that's the picture that they're painting. We can pull it back down.

They're they're painting this, this very fun picture. Military veterans are obviously the problem. And this was subject to one of my whistleblower drops, which was to say that they had basically picked up on the Punisher flag and the Betsy Ross flag and all these other sort of patriotic symbols that every veteran I know, what about cops, every cop, you know, they've got those things.

They all have the bumper sticker and every SWAT team has it as their patch and and and we just have to recognize the fact that law enforcement military attracts people of more conservative band. That's just the way it is. And the Venn diagram overlap there between military service and conservative worldview has quite a bit of overlap.

And I mean, I think I was listening to the The Martyr Made podcast and he made the comment that America wouldn't have an inventory if there was no Appalachia. That's so true. Well, even even last night Garrett, Garrett and I were talking on on the The Badland Show and what he said was is like I've been a a man of violence my whole adult life. He joined up at 18, like so many. I know, you know, there's members of our chat right now that are talking about it. 18

years old. That's where the primary power range is for recruiting imagerymen from the Army and to the to the Marine Corps. Now some people go there and they get their college paid for. And I dealt with that when I was in the Air Force. That was like the number one reason why people join the Air Force around me. But I'm sitting there going through basic training at 27. You don't join. Well, maybe some people do, but I wasn't the kind of guy that joined up at 27 ago.

What I want to do is get college paid for. I already paid for my own college. And so I've got this, you know, a bunch of kids that are like, yeah, I I want to learn a skill. Like I I'd like to go to school and I'd like to get my degree. They get to you and they're like they or me rather. And they go, you know, why did you join? And I was like, I was like I came here to kill bodies, You know, I want to put warheads on 4 heads. I was I was exactly what they

want man. That 18 year old who's angry and just doesn't know why and doesn't know where to direct that rage and our military is like hey I got a target for you yeah you want to join and and I'll be where my my. My drill Sergeant uniform. So you think dad's mad at you and and I'm going to motivate you and give you direction and

give you purpose. And that's that's why our military, our military can't function and do its full, you know, not not social experimentation, but it can't break things and kill bad guys without these guys that are, you know, from Appalachia or Texas or Florida or Montana, these guys who are just aggressive alpha males and those people tend to be conservative. And that brings us back to this.

This report, which is saying that that's military veterans are the problem here, which I think is coded language. We're saying the same thing that we keep seeing at January 6th and and even the national security branch within the FBI now that violent domestic extremism DV E's are people who are antigovernment. I mean we just celebrated a day where 56 guys signed a document that was antigovernment. That's right. 100% And I also will just do a little thing

about that. People that want to be anonymous on Twitter and take a tax on us. This guy was out there, you know say, oh, the founders would have been really big on that. I said really that the founders who all signed their actual names to to a document and then basically pledged their life and their liberty and their sacred honor to it and most of them died penniless and destroyed. They put everything on the line.

They were living pretty good. And then sign their names to it And and this guy came back to me and he said, obviously you've never heard of the Federalist and the anti Federalist papers. And I was like, oh, those are part of the Declaration of Independence. I didn't realize that. Like, I understand you can you can still have a political discussion while having an anonymous account. But if you want to be a, you know, you want to be a coward and stay anonymous, then you're a coward.

And if you want to get involved with me and you want to look me in the eye and say something to my name, I use my name in my face, just like you when we're out there on social media because we believe what we stand for. So anyway. This is, this is small but but it's something I actually reflected on recently because I I had this book out and people have asked for signed copies and I don't have an autograph. I'm not famous enough to have,

you know, got the scribble. So I I actually write my name in cursive. My third grade teacher would be very impressed by my penmanship. Do you go like above the line and below the line? Where you go Yeah, with the nice little slant. I mean, it's very neat. And there's not, it's not an autograph, it's it's a signature with cursive. And then I thought about I was like work for John Hancock. That's right.

She worked for me. And every guy who wrote his name on the document, they there was no autograph. They wrote their name very clearly because they were putting their name on that document and they knew what the consequences were. Well, it was before. Like having to sign like curved baseball and leather and stuff like that. They were just signing parchment with a feather. I mean, it's probably easier to keep your hand moving correctly. So that's kind of funny.

But yeah, I don't think they're teaching cursive anymore, Steve. I don't. I think that's a dying art. No, I mean, well, my my kids are in Christian School, so they did, they did learn it. My my third grader was very excited to learn it. He felt like he was learning a different language. That's exciting stuff. Let me let me just throw one weird anecdote in there. When I was in second grade, I was learning cursive.

I remember being part of that, and obviously you get better at it as you go on. And I fell off the monkey bars and I broke my right wrist. I'll always remember it was the summer of my my 8 year old summer. And it was the worst summer ever because everybody was going in the pool and I was a really good swimmer at a really good breath

hold. And at 4th of July, one of the things they did at this pool that we used to go to is they would take these, these jars full of coins and they would throw them all in the the thing half dollars and quarters and stuff like that. And you know, a quarterback then would buy us like an ice cream, which was a pretty big deal. So we could actually buy ice cream with a little snack bar. So this was like a summer's worth of ice creams for me and my brothers. And that summer I had the cast

on so I couldn't go swim. And I was the ringer for my family. I had, you know, I've got 5, there's five of us that I had three brothers and I have an older brother as well. So there's four brothers. I was a ringer who could go in there and just hold my breath and go and pick up like, you know like 5 bucks in coins. And I couldn't do it because I did. I had this like thing and when I took off the the cast, which I think we took off on the 4th of July. And then I was still really weak.

And I'm trying to remember when it exactly was. My dad cut it off with, like, a hacksaw because that's the kind of family we were. We didn't wait to go to the, ER where they have, like, the, you know, the saw to cut off all the plaster. So I got this wrist, and the wrist was like, the size of, like, maybe two of my fingers right now. It was, like, so small. It was so, so silly looking. It was just the bone of my tiny little arm. It was the worst.

But I have no idea why I was telling you that. Person. Because. Because. Because when I fell off the monkey bars I get pulled into this into the the handwriting class and the first thing that I had to do with my broken wrist, which they didn't know was broken at the time they pulled me in. This is missus dykes from my second grade class has me sit down and start writing in cursive. And you can just imagine the torture of having a broken right hand when that's your that's

your writing hand. Like I had a fracture I think on one of the two bones and I'm in here and I'm like gripping this pencil and just like tears going down my face trying to write because I was a good student too. Like I had to do what I was told. And then they go and they X-ray. Then I went home. Totally unrelated. Go home. My mom sends me out to go play. My mom's probably listening to this and she probably remembers vaguely.

She sends me to go out and play because I'm like, my arm hurts And she was like, whatever, go out and play with your friends. So I go outside and some 8th grader, some big dude threw a basketball right at my face. And of course I blocked it with my bad arm, which probably didn't make it any better. So I got hit in a broken arm with this basketball, full speed. You know, these are the things. The same day that your your ferret died. This. Has been like this has been kind

of a therapy session. I'm feeling way better. Thanks for coming on for being a friendly Friday. That makes me feel now I've gotten those off my chest. It's all good. Let's, let's talk about something that actually does bring this sort of thing back because you know, you get corrective action. We've got this this document here. Thank God the Rand Policy Institute or the Rand

Corporation did an actual study. Not a politically motivated study like we just read talking about the vets are obviously so dangerous and highlighting it. And there's a graphic if you see it, Ryan, that I put up there. It's got a bunch of circles and it's got a bunch of percentages if you can pop that sucker up on the side. And I want to kind of share these things, the actual numbers on on the prevalence of veterans support for extremist groups and extremist beliefs.

So this is that should be like graphic number two I think, buddy. This is says support for that. It's going to tell us that the breakdown for different ideologies and one of these ideologies is Antifa. The general population has about 10% support for Antifa. Veterans only have 5.5% support. So just keep track of the score. Right now we have less support for Antifa in the veteran community. There is no general number for black nationalist ideology, but veterans are supporting it at a

5.3%. So we can imagine that based on the other ones. The white supremacist ideology, apparently 7% of our general population has a a belief in white supremacy. I find that very hard to believe, but so be it. Whatever their sample set was was racist. Apparently .08% of veterans espouse white supremacist believes, so that's very, very small. Again, 9% of the general population has a support for Proud Boys, and veterans only

support the Proud Boys at 4.2%. So there's a couple of other things on here when it comes to political violence with they agree with the the use of it. Generally or mostly 19% of the general population, this is all sides of the coin, say that political violence is acceptable or something they think is okay only 17.7. You know people of actual violence veterans believe that, so less again there.

When you talk about Q Anon and adherence to Q Anon, 17% of the general population says that they have some interest in it, that they completely or mostly agree with the with the information put out by their only 13.5% of veterans. And then lastly, the great replacement theory which I think we've all kind of established is is pretty legit.

It's been it's been stated by leftist not right people and and then you know it's like Republicans pounds kind of thing, 34% of the general population believes that there is some sort of a replacement going on of the US population only 28.8. So again smaller veterans turn out to be less extreme than pretty much everything that goes on in the in the general population you have less.

Less percentage support for Antifa, for Proud Boys, for white supremacy, for political violence, for Q Anon, and great replacement theory done by the Rand Corporation. Does that surprise you even a little bit? No, I think it's consistent with the, I can't remember his name. There's a gentleman from Space Force who you had as a guest and. Matt Lowmeyer. Yeah, yeah, He was talking about how you check your politics.

At the door and you're mission driven and that's sort of the overarching prime directive when you're in the military. And I think that those people go through that experience and then once they move out of the military, they sort of retain that default setting. And with all these polls, here's the other thing. Have you taken a general poll just in your personal life of people who pay attention to the extent that they know what all those organizations and and

terms even mean? Majority of people have no idea. I I'm supposed to be this, you know, outspoken political person now and my wife would have no idea what replacement theory was and I live and spend time with her every single day. You can start texting with my wife. She'll be she'll be dialed in right away. There's a couple of us that have. Yeah. My wife is 100% following the

same stuff. In fact, one of my favorite stories was I'm sitting on surveillance and my wife sends me a video from Infowars and she was like, is Michelle Obama a man? Which made me die laughing because it's like, and then I watched the video and then I was like, oh, man, that's pretty weird. We had a we we talked about that with, I think, Frank earlier on Monday. I'm going to read you kind of a quote here. This comes from.

It's attributed to an old retired Army veteran, a retired Colonel. This is by Colonel David Grossman, who wrote on Killing. And it's one of the great sort of discussions about what I think our veteran community looks like. So he says most people in our society are sheep. They're kind. They're gentle, productive creatures who can only hurt one another by accident. And this is true.

You have to remember that the murder rate is roughly 6 per 100,000 per year, and aggravated assault is only four per thousand per year. And what this means is that that vast majority of Americans are not inclined to hurt one another. Some estimates say that there are two million Americans victims of violent crime each year, a tragic and staggering number. Perhaps an all time record rate for violent crime.

But there's almost 300 million Americans, and that means the odds of becoming a victim of violent crime is considerably less than one in 100 on any given year. And furthermore, since many violent crimes are committed by repeat offenders, the actual number of violence is considerably less than two million. And there's the paradox. What he says is, is there are wolves, and there the wolves feed on the sheep without mercy. Do you believe that there are wolves out there who will feed

on the flock without mercy? You better believe it because there are evil men in this world and they're capable of evil deeds. I think that's what we're pointing out with this, and I think that's what the Rand Corporation discovered, says the moment you forget that or pretend not to do that, you become a sheep and there is no safety in your denial. But then there are sheepdogs. I live to protect the flock. When I'm a sheepdog, I confront the wolf and the reason why the sheepdog.

Is is generally not accepted by polite society, and here's where it really gets into the meat of it. He says the sheep generally do not like the sheepdog. He looks like a wolf. He has fangs and the capacity for violence. This is our veterans. These are our first responders that are willing to step into it. The difference, though, is that the sheepdog must not, cannot, and will not ever harm the sheep. Any sheepdog who intentionally harms the lowliest lamb will be punished and remove.

The world cannot work any other way, at least not in a representative democracy or Republic. Such as ours today. Our sheepdog doesn't have fangs. They have an AR15, They have body armor. They have a training set and a skill set that is honed either overseas and violence or or locally by dealing with violence. But our sheepdogs are the things that they are actually trying to get rid of and that seems to only benefit the wolf. They're miss, they're miss

attributing. We talked about the language on my last show and how they are always kind of framing these things in a certain way. You got guys like Daniel Penny on the on the subway, right? A sheepdog. He stepped into the gap. He saw there was a problem. He saw an erratic and dangerous person, and he used the tools that he had his fangs to stop a wolf. Even a wolf that's confused is a dangerous wolf. You know, yeah, I agree with you.

And I I think that the last thing that that Grossman was talking about there were that the sheepdog can never turn on the flock. It's evidenced by the fact that

good cops hate bad cops. It it's this this whole mythology of though there's the thin blue line and then the blue wall we'll never we won't rat out each other no we if you are a problem within our ranks we will oust you from our ranks and if that involves you committing fraud or force against the flock that we are supposed to be protecting then that we have no need for you and then we'll eradicate you.

So anytime that there's these police involved shootings and and most of them are just type beyond belief that are they're they're just. They're not accurate, but if there was in effect a bad shoot, that police officer will be be removed and you know, and there'll be a judicial process against him. It's not like we're going to rally to a bad shoot. We are. My wife and I are rewatching the Amazon series, Bosch.

Have you ever seen that Love it, one of the great, one of the great police dramas that's ever been made and and they've made it obviously recently and it's quite good and I think it's either the 4th or the 5th season that we're watching again right now. And it's the the story of this, this attorney who's killed potentially by a cop and and at one point the Harry Bosh who's the the lead detective there and he's the hero of the story, is interviewing the wife of the

victim. And she says, you know nothing's going to get done, you know, because it was done by cops. And that's who killed this attorney because the attorney was famous for suing cops. And Harry Bosh says something that is almost exactly like what you just said. And it's a great line. He says if that guy, you know, if if there was somebody that killed your husband and he worked for the police force, that's a killer. That's not a cop. And I'm going to find him.

And just like you said, nobody is more offended by a dirty cop or someone who who plays outside the boundaries and abuses their privileges and their power than than really good police, than good cops. Unless it's the FBI working on keeping their IPM and getting their bonuses. You want to just reflect on that for one moment. Kind of the things that we've seen, sort of that is the weaponization I think of our government. It's it's it's the failure to uphold that particular line.

Yeah. And I think it's consistent with, you know the makers of Bosch for the same guys, a lot of them are connected to the wire and there is the, the line we talked about on on Badlands where it's you're not police, that's so much of the FBI, they're not police that it's a mindset. It's so a way about you go about your business and this IPM integrated program management, it's a quota system. It's about a decade old. It is like a traffic cop with a ticket book.

It's a number of cases they have to open reports, Intel products they have to create. Arrests and tools they have to use and it's tied to not only the the budget that they go in for the Congress and say look at all the great work we did with $10 billion, you should give us 11 billion. But the Senior Executive Service members in all the field offices, when those quotas are met, they get their bonuses 30 to $50,000. Per year for doing that.

And that is not just a one time payment because of those guys are at the tail end of their career, it's going to be tied to their their highest salary that is going to be attributable to their pension. So it's something the American taxpayer is on the hook for for the next several decades when that person is off in retirement. There was something that was said in front of Congress when you were testifying, You and Garrett. Garrett brought it up to me last night.

So it's it's fresh in my mind right now but they essentially tried to smear you as being anti police. Can you can you draw that delineation between being anti police or being defund the Fed and how that kind of works out in your head? Yeah I mean I think it's something that I've I've kind of fallen back on and and pointed out that I I am not anti law enforcement. I I wanted to see it done effectively and and the way that I see police work to be done is to bring crime down and the FBI

is not doing that. The the goal of the FBI is to manipulate the stats and to bring crime up and or at least generate that appearance. And I think that the the only way out if you're in, if you're going to try to salvage the agency, which at this point I keep that it's going to be hard, hard lift, but it's going to be the lean on the guys who actually for their living bring crime down. And that's at the local level. And those are the task force officers that actually do the lion's share.

The work that the FBI relies on when it goes in front of Congress and says look how awesome we are when it's in effect cases and and arrests that were brought to them by local deputies and and police officers. It is. I promised that we would talk a little COVID memory hole. I had kind of a fresh wound because I went back and read some of these documents that

have been hanging out there. So Ryan, if you'll bear with me, do you have the, the e-mail that we have from Amy, Bill Stone out of El Paso, it's, it's got some redactions on there. It comes from your e-mail to the to the agents and the employees in that area if you pull that sucker out. But I'll read from it right now and I'm just going to get your reflections, Steve. This is the require requirement for negative test results. This was dated 11/23 of 21.

And it says and this is the e-mail that everybody in the FBI got folks. So I'm, I'm, I'm sharing with you because I want you to kind of see why like rip this open, it says. According to the my Med Link report, you've been identified as someone who is not fully vaccinated against COVID-19 as outlined in the e-mail that went out on November 19th, 2021. There are specific and certain protocols that must be followed for any employees that are not

fully vaccinated. It says you must wear a face covering at all times. So we need to now we're going to be wearing. Some people are thinking about getting a Jewish star on the face mask since they were the only ones that had to do it. You must main maintain a six foot distance and then you must upload a proof of negative COVID-19 test taken with the last 7-2 hours before duty. This was something that was a challenge. I know Steve did it every single day just to show it to them.

And there's a second-half of that e-mail. Which was, you know, signed by this woman. I don't need to read all of it to you. It says that employees tested under this policy are responsible for arranging their own tests, and required testing is considered official duty time. So you can do that on the government's dime. But it also said employees who do not have proof of a negative COVID-19 test starting on November 24th. This is when I got kicked out of the office.

Are not allowed in the office and will be charged absent without leave until they have uploaded a negative COVID test. So that was kind of interesting. The fun thing is I have, I have emails from the Phoenix division, I have emails from the Los Angeles division, from the Kansas City division, and they

all kind of say the same thing. The one that was the most poignant to me came out of Phoenix and it said all you're receiving this e-mail because you have not uploaded your COVID-19 negative test into the my Med link portal within the last 72 hours, which is required by the DOJ mandate. Please don't shoot the messenger.

And you know, when we talk about people and when we can drop all those things off there, when we talk about people that do the right thing for the right reasons, this is exactly the opposite. This is the thing that's kind of a fresh wound. Again, for me, even though this was two years ago, please don't shoot the messenger. You feel good about that one. Is that, is that the way that we do this? We just say it's not our fault. I'm following orders. Just following orders.

History is always smiled very kindly on people that just follow orders, and I am that that e-mail I'm sure sounded. Far better than the original German. Which you have like a translation in your head of what that sounded like. It sounds very angry. It's got a lot of like, it sounds like they just give me all, Yeah, give me the warm and fuzzies. Very much like learning about culture and time and place. All right, I got Ryan in the background. Ryan, you want to kind of catch us up?

What do we missed out on in the chat? I can only read so much when I'm going back and forth. Yeah man we have a we have a lot of people very active in the live chat. We want to give some shout outs to everybody. So I Steve Reed the hospitals are in oops sorry I pulled that one down. He says the hospitals are involved in domestic terrorism hospitals were the killing fields during COVID. I barely survived the ICU. Now I have no interest in going

to the hospital. Next up we got FBI panty raid says I guess entrapment isn't a legal defense anymore especially when you're. Dead. True. True enough. Kyle, love your show. You're so funny. Perhaps you should have been. A comedian instead of an FBI agent and that is Charlotte a G and then we have T, PH14 says.

I think Hunter was treating himself to an expenses treats since his child support reduct reduced the 15K and now he's pissed because he forgot something important again and now stucks over at the CD. Gypsy Princess says, pausing the dog walk to jump on the chat and say, hey, I'm loving this show. And then last but not least, we got Ground Zero, says Mega Mike America graveyard again equals the United States will announce on Friday that it will send thousands of cluster.

Munitions to Ukraine, yeah. I saw that. So those of you who are track of the Ukraine situation, I don't know the right answer there. But what I do know is that they basically stated initially 5 days in that the Russians were possibly using crust cluster munitions and that could be a possible war crime. Now if the good guys, quote UN quote, the good guys are using it, if we give them to Ukraine, cluster munitions are now very, very good.

Once more just that master of the language, the sort of the doublespeak that we get out of there. Awful stuff. But we do appreciate all of you being out there in the live chat and adding to the show. It is a value to us. Steve, I want to thank you for jumping on. Tell people where they can find your book real quick and tell me if you know anything about the sales. How's it going?

Sales are going well. I actually did a couple of book signings this week and got some more on the on the agenda for next week. You can find it on Amazon. I have a tweet pinned to the top of my profile where you can get easy access to it. Book is called True Blue, My Journey from Beat Cop to Suspended FBI Whistleblower. Twitter account is at real Steve Friend. True social account is at real under score Steve Friend. And just sign those books away with a very legible cursive

signature. Very good. Hey, thanks for joining me on Friendly Fridays. I I enjoy kind of getting your take on things. It's a nice chance for us to catch up that we have scheduled on the on the books and folks the link for the book is actually in the show notes. So you can go down there and pull that sucker up whenever you are ready. We'll say bye to Steve for now, but we'll see him again in a week. Thanks so much for being on there, buddy. I want to say thanks to Ryan

Matta for producing the show. So Ryan, you see him there in the chat, he's been fantastic and he's really helping bringing this thing to the next level. So those of you, if you're not following at Ryan Matta Media, please go ahead and bring him up on your on your Twitter follows. You can find him at Ryan Matta on True Social. Go ahead and follow him up there. And and then let's let's bring one of these five star reviews because this is really what it's

about folks. If you're hitting those like buttons and you're giving us those five star reviews, then we can bring one of those suckers up. So here we. Go Don't forget to tell everybody about The post show we got going on starts right after this, too. All right. So we'll be going over. He's going to be joining us. Is he? That's fantastic. All right, so I'll say bye to see for just a few seconds then this is the the five star view of the day.

It's coming from Herb 179 and it says one of my favorite podcast is podcast covers a lot of topics. It has a lot of inside information about the FBI and exposes the corruption within the agency. Kyle is very knowledgeable. Thank you so much. And passionate about guns. Also very true and shares his experiences. I can't help it, but part of his, the best part of his shows are the guests like Steve Friend. There he is, Alpha Warrior and

Ryan Maddow among my favorites. If there's something you're looking for that's different in a podcast, you need to check out Kyle Seraphin. We appreciate that, Herb. We appreciate all of you who are watching and following us. If you're sitting in the live chat, give us a thumbs up on the rumble channel and and that helps move us up a little bit. Share it with your friends and if you got questions, you can put them down in the comment section below the live chat.

We'll address those things either. Either during the show if it makes sense, or we'll catch them on the next round. Folks. We will see you again after the break after the weekend and I have a fantastic interview that we just did. You're going to really, really like this one. It was one of my more interesting kind of guys to talk to you. Another blue collar reporter, A gentleman who writes for Gateway Pundit. His name is Sean Vitzman. Vitzman, Not Weitzman.

I know Vitzman. It's the we're doing the German. I know it's a it's a W Anyway, I talked to Sean on Monday, so folks, tune in for that. We'll catch you there on the live show and we'll see you after good weekend. Be safe and talk to you soon. Thanks for listening to The Kyle Seraphin Show streamed live Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays on rumble.com/kyle Seraphin. Follow Kyle on Twitter and True Social at Kyle Seraphin.

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