Andrew Schulz's Flagrant with Akaash Singh - CIA Spy on Trump, China’s Takeover, & Israel-Palestine
Episode Date: March 13, 2024YERRRR we had the CIA's former (or not so former) Andrew Bustamante come through and tell us all about what it's like to work for 'The Agency', the tips and tricks he was taught to be help harness his... trauma, how Trump changed the CIA and much much more. INDULGE Learn your spy superpower: https://everydayspy.com/spyquiz 00:00 Intro 02:16 What is the CIA? 04:48 9/11 redefined CIA 08:10 CIA is the DMV 11:44 Trump challenging CIA + use of private intelligence 22:01 Cold War didn’t have an imminent threat 25:39 Corporations lobbying CIA + Who got the presidents? 30:01 Recruiting the right amount of crazy 32:05 Dating another CIA operative 33:59 Easiest race to trick? Americans??? 36:32 Training at the Farm + free cup of coffee 43:37 Not feeling guilt + getting through the application process 52:18 Does CIA have my best interests? What motivates you? 58:26 Service over self + justifiable mission creating validation 1:03:01 Bustamante has trouble with whistleblowers 1:05:12 Wanting to leave the US 1:14:10 Bustamante still repping CIA? + huge recruitment crisis 1:22:10 Military Industrial Complex is essential + China replicating it 1:27:31 Proxy wars provide battle experience + China too 1:33:53 Moving to Europe + worrying about hot war 1:36:37 China infiltration + exploiting motivations + sexpionage 1:43:18 UAE trying to flip Bustamante + Mossad’s tactics 1:48:38 US tactics in flipping + secrets are commodities 1:57:15 Corporate espionage is too risky 2:02:41 Trusting nobody + Cuba’s intelligence is immense 2:06:38 Russian infiltration + Cold War implosion 2:10:04 Space Race, Black Budget + now CIA’s risk averse 2:15:59 Marshall Plan pushing ideology + supporting 2:20:16 Israel-Palestine policy has backfired 2:24:17 Ukraine + Israel will end up at similar points 2:26:36 China might have a green light + outsource the bad stuff 2:29:22 Race relations + Chinatown is a sleep cell??? 2:31:33 US doesn’t have a 50 year policy + China’s legal takeover 2:39:00 Not CIA now + his business model to teach CIA principles 2:48:36 Wanting to restructure CIA + Attention span is so short 2:53:30 The heroes of CIA are still there 2:57:03 General Petraeus losing his legacies 2:59:57 CIA recruitment + regrets & dealing with trauma 3:04:19 Using learnt skills on his children 3:08:10 CIA might be listening… 3:09:44 UFOs are real but they’re not aliens 3:11:59 India is a sneaky, sneaky superpower 3:15:01 Exploiting economic disparity here 3:16:52 Clandestine acts, MK Ultra + remote viewing nonsense
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Is it part of your jurisdiction, working for CIA, to put holes in Kennedys?
First of all, we don't call them jurisdictions, we call them authorities.
What a strong denial!
I want to tell you why I think you're still part of the CIA.
I am not a part of CIA, it's not true.
It's not called the CIA, it's just called CIA.
I'm gonna get you to call it the CIA, then I win, then I'm the super spy.
There's a presidential election coming up in November.
There is no good outcome.
Trump said, you guys are a bunch of idiots and keep calling me a Russian spy.
All of a sudden that called into question
whether CIA even knew what they were doing.
He chooses not to use CIA?
Private intelligence can do things
that national security can't do.
Aliens, UFOs, real or not?
UFOs are real, but they're not alien.
It's us.
Did you ever kill somebody?
I cannot answer that question in great detail.
I can't say that I've never intimately killed anyone.
What I think is gonna happen is Zelensky,
and Netanyahu are gonna get political sanctuary asylum
in the United States.
The United States can't let Zelensky die.
Everybody knows Putin wants to kill him.
What do you think happens?
In Israel, Palestine?
Alex thinks Chinatown is a cell.
Like, yeah, sit yourself.
You're right.
What the?
Chinatown is a diaspora of Chinese immigrants,
so the intelligence community
plants its own operatives inside that community.
But keep in mind that the CIA-
The what?
God!
He's my asset!
He's my asset!
What's up everybody, and welcome to Flagrant,
and today I'm very excited because we're gonna expose.
Yes.
That's a good YouTube title, you got it right.
Expose.
Reveal.
Reveal.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Secrets.
Secrets, a CIA operative, who's still working for the CIA, as I say.
But we'll get to that in a little bit.
We got Andrew Bustamante.
That's fine.
Thank you so much for coming in.
Okay.
We have to do this thing, which you've said this on every podcast that you've been on.
But I do want to just set a baseline understanding.
What is, are you wearing leather?
It's fake leather.
Leather. Leather. That was crazy.
I didn't even notice that. You know a little something.
Okay. Okay. We all spent some gas. I had to dress up.
Fair enough.
Look how casual his
I know. I was going to say, I'm rocking
some Tiger Stripes sweatpants. You didn't get the memo,
man? Leather today,
bro. All right. All right.
We do have to understand a few things here, right? What the
fuck is going on? That took me for a loop. Okay. You dress like Janet Jackson, dude.
Okay. We need to know what is the CIA? I know you've answered this on every single podcast,
but I do think it's important. What is the CIA? CIA, the Central Intelligence Agency.
Yeah. And why do you say CIA? You never go the CIA? CIA, the Central Intelligence Agency. Yeah, and why do you say CIA?
You never go the CIA.
So the CIA is something that is commonly,
it's a misconception by the American public.
It's not called the CIA.
When you talk about it as an acronym,
it's just called CIA, Central Intelligence Agency.
Okay.
The CIA is, it's silly grammatical stuff,
but then it makes it sound like CIA itself is a word.
It's not.
It's an acronym.
So if you're trying to act like you're not part of the CIA, you call it the CIA.
Bingo.
But if you're casting with Slippin', then you know they're a fucking spy.
Correct.
And if you.
I'm fucking, I'm nice, dude.
I'm fucking nice.
If you want to know if somebody is part of the Brotherhood, then you call it the agency.
Oh.
Because there's only one.
Different Brotherhood. Different Brotherhood, then you call it the agency. Oh. Because there's only one. Different Brotherhood.
Different Brotherhood. So you just called the
agency. You're part of the agency. We call it the agency.
There's only one CIA, though, so it is the CIA.
I mean, I'm not going to
argue with you if you want to keep calling it the CIA.
Right? But I know... That was a good trick right there.
I know. When I talk to somebody
and I want to see if they actually know what they're
talking about, they say the agency.
Okay, so CIA, what is it?
CIA is the national security arm for the United States that collects foreign secrets.
Okay.
So we don't collect domestic secrets, which means secrets inside the United States.
We are charged with only foreign secrets.
The FBI, the Federal Bureau of Investigation, collects secrets inside the United States. Okay. Now, is it part of your jurisdiction when you're working for CIA to put holes in Kennedy's?
Because that doesn't feel international.
That feels like really national.
So you bring up a great point right out of the gate.
So first of all, we don't call them jurisdictions.
We call them authorities.
Yeah, yeah.
So inside.
Wow. That's what you're wrong. Wow. We call them authorities. Yeah, yeah. So inside. Wow.
That's what you're wrong.
Wow.
What a strong denial.
This is good.
This is good.
We don't call them Kennedys.
We call them jelly.
I have an issue with what you just said.
We have authorities, and authorities define what we can and can't do.
Okay.
Right?
That's what makes us different than, say, police jurisdictions.
What can you not do?
Because it feels like you guys can do...
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Central intelligence can do a lot
because the agency is charged with foreign secrets,
and foreign secrets don't violate American citizen rights,
which is why when you hear about, like,
oh, you guys sell drugs in the Middle East,
and you guys do this, and you guys do that,
and you run cocaine, like, fuck, yes,
we'll do whatever we need to do if it keeps Americans safe. Gotcha. But you can't do any of that stuff here.
Correct. Now, there's also an important divide that happened in 2001, 9-11. I mean, right here,
we're in New York. We all know, we all remember that day well. Prior to 9-11, you had a very
different CIA than what you had after 9-11. How so? Because of the 9-11 commission. Okay. Keep in
mind that 9-11 happened because CIA fucked up.
CIA and FBI dropped the ball.
You know what we're talking about, right?
Yes.
Why would he know?
Why would he know?
Yo, wait, wait, wait.
He knows.
Hold on.
He knows because he's saying yes.
Yeah.
Now I'm nervous.
Yeah, I thought that too.
I thought that too.
Did you know about it?
Yeah, well, I didn't know about it.
I wasn't in CIA.
But they had leads that there were people planning an attack on the World Trade Center.
They had information, and they just chose not to act on it.
Whether it was they didn't think it was serious or whether it was maybe this will help us get power.
Who knows?
Let your own theories run wild.
Exactly right.
But that is exactly right.
Yep, it's exactly right.
And he even said he's not smart.
He even said he's not smart.
He's a little too much on that.
He even said.
You can't be 100% right on that one. Yeah, yeah, yeah. What the on that. He even said it. You can't be 100% right on that one.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
What the hell?
It feels like you would need insider information to be 100% right on that one.
That's the inside information.
They knew it was happening.
I know CIA.
He looks like them, too.
All I'm saying.
Two is the three.
That's true, though.
But all I'm saying is you have now referenced CIA twice without using the.
I did that for you.
I appreciate you.
Okay. So the 9-11 Commission, the September 11th 9-11 Commission, which was published in 2003, was written at the behest of Congress.
And it was in that very public report where all of what you're saying was referenced.
That FBI and CIA, you read, power to you, man.
FBI and CIA separately had all the information they needed to prevent 9-11.
And?
They didn't share the information with each other, which meant that they couldn't put all the pieces in the right order.
But isn't that the CIA's fault?
Nope. That is a failure of what the 9-11 Commission identified as no overarching national intelligence directive.
But I thought that's what the CIA is.
CIA, technically it's a central Intelligence Agency, which means it is
the hub of intelligence.
It was never
the hub of decision-making
for where intelligence goes.
Ah, so it collects
all the intelligence.
It collects from the FBI.
It collects from the NSA.
It collects from all
these other different organizations.
But it doesn't disseminate it
to the people that need to.
And it doesn't prior,
it used to prior to 9-11.
It did not prioritize
it correctly either.
So you're part of CIA.
You're part of FBI.
Who do you as CIA think has the best information?
You think you do.
So when he sends you a report that says some shit's going to happen, you're like, ah, shit's not going to happen.
I got my intel.
My intel's better.
I want to get into, that's something I want to get into.
But continue on this real quick.
Continue making this point.
Okay, so what changes after 9-11?
After 9-11, Congress basically comes in and says, CIA, the blood's on your hands. FBI,
the blood's on your hands. You both failed America because you are continuing to prosecute
intelligence like it's the Cold War. And you've ignored terrorism. You've ignored the development
of authoritarian regimes. You've dropped the ball. So now we are going to step in and force you to evolve.
So then from there, there was the birth of the National Director of Intelligence
and an overarching authority for all the intelligence community that now does have
the jurisdiction or the responsibility of saying, CIA, you must listen to FBI. You must prioritize
this. You must do that. So now instead of kicking information to each other and ignoring it, they have to go to
this overseeing board and the overseeing board dictates what actions.
Correct.
Who?
That's the national director of intelligence.
Who appoints that person?
Are they appointed?
The president.
And can the president appoint a new one?
Every new president?
Correct.
I don't believe it.
Okay. I don't believe that we are going to allow a new dude to come in, set up shop every four years, maybe every eight years, and expect that company to function properly.
That's not how companies function properly.
McDonald's wouldn't function like that.
Exxon wouldn't function like that.
He could be a figurehead.
Well, that's what I'm trying to say.
You need long-term vision.
This is what I hoped
the CIA was doing.
I hoped that the president
of the United States
was a figurehead
and that you guys
were actually keeping
the fucking train on the tracks.
So you're thinking about CIA
as a company.
CIA is a federal...
I'm going to get you
to call it the CIA today.
Then I win.
Then I'm the super spy.
CIA is a federal
government organization.
So stop thinking of them like Exxon and think of them more like the local DMV.
When was the last time you went to the DMV?
Yes.
That's terrifying.
That's what people need to understand, right?
It is a well-intentioned institution, but it is still a government organization.
It's run like the DMV.
It is not run like Chevrolet.
Because we think of them as not even having the best intentions, but incredibly effective, nefarious intentions, hoarding power.
And you're saying they're kind of just a bumbling government organization.
Look at the larger government overall right now.
See, I don't subscribe to this.
I'm really glad you don't subscribe to this.
I don't believe it.
Because could you imagine the chaos if Americans actually were like, what do you mean CIA is just like the presidential elections?
If people actually understood.
I don't think it would cause any more chaos.
To me, like the CIA, Americans watch Homeland.
They're like, yeah, that's what they do.
And then they stop terrorism.
I don't think they actually really care.
You are, you know, you're deep in.
You're entrenched.
So I think that you inflate its importance to the average American.
I think we think it's important, and then we check out.
No, but we need to feel safe.
We need to feel safe if we feel—
Yeah, I'm not saying it doesn't make us feel safe.
What I'm saying is we don't think about it.
No.
It's never on—the average American spends a point, 20 seconds of their years thinking about the CIA outside of a TV show.
A very powerful tool for any politician to be like, yo, you know you guys aren't safe.
Okay.
The CIA, CIA whatever, they're actually kind of bumbling idiots.
I can come fix that.
You have no idea how shoddy things are.
I've been there.
That is a super effect.
Do you really think they're bumbling idiots?
I mean, you work there.
No, no, no.
I don't think they're bumbling idiots.
I think they're a well-intentioned government organization.
I think that the challenge that CIA has is that it has a lot of very smart, very hardworking, very dedicated heroes who work as worker bees.
And then you have political appointees
and career-seeking govies who become the senior level managers.
So when you are in government, you only have one track to promotion,
and that is to further entrench yourself in government. When you're in the commercial sector, when you're like a corporate
executive, you actually want to broaden and challenge the status quo because you might work
for Shell this year, but then next year you might get hired by Exxon, and then next year you might
get hired by Amazon, and then next year you might get hired by Google, right? So you want to
constantly broaden and challenge the status quo, whereas in government, you have one way to
promotion, entrench yourself in the status quo. Whereas in government, you have one way to promotion.
Entrench yourself in the status quo.
Deeper and deeper.
And so bureaucracy inevitably just takes over and clogs it up.
Correct.
So that's what ends up happening.
And those are the people who are in charge.
And then you've got this whole workforce at the bottom that has to decide, what is my career path going to be?
Do I entrench to try to climb or do I bail the fuck out? And what you've seen ever since the Trump election in 2016 is a mass exodus of people
in the intelligence community because Trump challenged the intelligence community, just like
you said, right? And once he challenged it and said, you guys are a bunch of idiots. You keep
calling me a Russian spy. All of a sudden that called into question whether CIA even knew what they were doing. Okay. I want to talk about the Trump thing. Trump steps in and he chooses not
to use CIA for his intelligence. Right. He openly says that? Correct. And then who does he use?
He commercializes, he hires commercial intelligence. Wow. For example, like,
do you know James Baker? Yes. So James,
who used to work for the CIA,
like you,
used to work, and now he has his own
private intelligence firm. So would
Trump, I love James, by the way,
great guy, we called him for the Netflix show, 100%
still works for the CIA.
1000%. I love you, he's so
fucking talented, like he can host a comedy show,
he'll be on Fox News
hosting a show, but 100% still works for the CIA. And that's like the best position, which I think
you also do, but we'll get to that in a second. Now he would hire him and then get his intelligence
from him and his company. Right. So the reason that that works, the, the idea of commercialized
intelligence or private intelligence is what it's called on the inside.
Private intelligence is a successful business model because private intelligence can do things that national security governance can't do.
For example?
The war on drugs.
It's very difficult for you to get congressional funding to fight the war on drugs doing things as inefficiently as the federal government does them.
You've got to send troops.
You've got to get orders approved. There's a huge cost that comes with all the administrative stuff of getting the federal government does them. You got to send troops. You got to get orders approved.
Like there's a huge cost that comes with all the administrative stuff
of getting the government to do something.
In the commercial sector,
you basically write them a check for $2 million
and say, hey, we need secrets about cocaine drug lords.
And then the company does whatever they need to do
to get those secrets.
So maybe they hire five former SEALs,
two former Colombian special forces,
two former Mossad.
And they go in and maybe they do good things, maybe they do bad things, but they definitely deliver secrets.
Right?
Wow.
And that's where private intelligence becomes powerful.
And Donald Trump.
It's the efficiency of privatization.
Donald Trump knew that and took advantage of that.
And as a result of that, he essentially showed in four years that CIA was super powerful, but can be replaced by private intelligence.
Wow.
Okay, so then you, I think it was on Lex's pod, you were speaking about this a little bit.
And then he also limited something.
He limited security clearance for people who would leave CIA.
This is important.
This is important because this was one of the things that Trump did very well that he never got credit for.
The way that you make money when you're a federal government employee is not being a federal government employee.
Like 30 years and you're a senior ranking officer and you're making $160,000 a year.
Yeah.
Like that's not what people want to do with their life, right?
A junior salesperson can make 250.
So what ends up happening is you work those 30
years so that you can build a network. And so you can have very high level clearances. And those
clearances don't expire the day you resign. They expire with time. So when you have a top secret
clearance or a secret clearance, the thing that makes it expire is either you break a law and
they pull it from you, or you don't engage in activity. You don't engage in a job where you
have, where you use that access.
As long as you keep using that access, it keeps being valid.
The job is for the government or can it be any job?
It's a job for the government because the government is what defines classification.
Got it.
Right?
So now you're a senior intelligence officer making $160,000 a year.
You retire from government.
Well, now you have all the contacts of all the
other offices inside the agency, contacts with FBI, NSA, DIA, NGA, right? You're connected to
everybody. So then Booz Allen Hamilton or Khaki or Mantec or any one of the big national security
intelligence contractors, they can hire you, make you a executive vice president pay you four hundred thousand
dollars a year and they're essentially paying for your clearance and what they're paying for
is for your access to all these other agencies because of your network so trump shut that down
because he was there was like a brain drain if you will people were leaving the agency to go work in
the private sector and go make money and he was like you're not going to leave the agency and
take your clearance so you can either stay here or you could leave but you're not going to leave the agency and take your clearance. So you can either stay here or you can leave,
but you're not going to take that.
And there was a second reason to doing it.
The other reason he was doing it was because
he wanted to limit the competition
of private intelligence firms
outside of the firms that he was using.
Oh, so he was doing it to scratch their backs.
Oh, for sure.
So he was doing it to scratch their backs.
Oh my God.
This is next level shit.
Good reason. I was ready. I had was doing it to scratch their backs. Oh, my God. This is next level shit. And then good reason.
I was ready. I was like, finally.
OK, so he's scratching the backs of his friends.
His friends allegedly, let's just say, have these intelligence companies.
What would you call them? Firms?
Yeah, private intelligence, private intelligence firms.
And he's so they already have these employees that have clearance.
Yes. And he and there's these employees that have clearance? Yes.
And there's also employees that don't have clearance, right?
But it's all about, at the end of the day, I know this might shatter your trust in the federal government.
It's still a good old boys network.
It's still, who do you know?
Who do you trust?
And who's going to be loyal to you when people turn on you?
That's still very much how the government works.
Okay.
And that's just because it's hard for the government to evolve.
It's not like the commercial sector that can evolve
very quickly. It has to. You said there was a mass
exodus when Trump
came into office. Is it the older
people that are like
the younger generation?
They were leaving. The younger generation is leaving because
they're asking themselves the question.
What's my future? Wow. And my future is
in the private sector. I'm out of this.
I can make more money.
I'm not going to be able to take my clearance with me.
I'm going to make no money for 30 years and then not even have the balloon when I retire of private security.
And what does their career look like?
Their career looks like serving a federal government that can't tell its ass from its elbows.
Yeah.
Right?
And don't forget, too, that from 2016 to 2020, during that Trump administration, he didn't trust the CIA. So when he doesn't trust the CIA. Yeah. Right? And don't forget too that from 2016 to 2020 during that Trump administration,
he didn't trust the CIA.
So when he doesn't trust the CIA-
For good reason?
For mixed reasons.
Some were good,
some were bad,
but keep in mind
that the CIA
falls under the executive-
What'd you say?
The what?
Got him!
Got him!
Well done.
He's my asset now.
This is my asset now.
Is that how it works?
Let's go.
Keep going.
That's all it is. He's like a Pokemon? That's all it works? Let's go. Keep going. That's all it is.
He's like a Pokemon?
That's all it is, bro.
You slowly get them to, what does it get on board?
What does it do?
There you go.
Oh, fuck.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I got worn down.
I got worn down.
That's it.
But you keep in mind that CIA.
CIA.
Right?
CIA falls under the executive branch.
There's three branches of government, right?
The executive branch, the boss is the executive, the president.
So when the CIA,
when CIA isn't listening to the boss, the boss doesn't fund them. So when the boss says,
I don't need you, I'm going to cut your funding. Now, all of a sudden your operations get cut.
Everybody who's working there can't get those sexy operations that they need in order to get
their promotions. Now, is that system built? No, no. Because like in 20 years time, all the government agencies are going to be shit because we're not getting any of the best young talent.
But think about real quick, real quick.
The system then is set up not to bring forth the best data and intelligence.
It's built to satisfy the boss.
And satisfying the boss might not keep America its safest,
because sometimes what the boss wants to be true is not. If there's an imminent threat and the boss
doesn't care about it, but the CIA or CIA is like, yo, this is what it is and you need to fucking
listen and you need to fund this, this is a big problem. Now the CIA fucks up when you lose the
confidence of the boss. So this is a huge issue.
It's a massive issue. This is why you hear so many people, every election cycle, you will hear
people talk about intelligence reform. This is what they're talking about.
Question though, sorry. Can you just finish that idea,
the intelligence reform and what that means? So intelligence reform is the idea that we need to
reform the way that we do intelligence. Everything from our promotions process all the way through to our sharing process, to our analytical process.
Because what the American people trust to be a functioning, efficient vehicle, we actually call it a sandbox.
A sandbox.
Because when you put kids into a sandbox, the most important thing is that they play nice with each other.
It's more important than them being creative.
It's more important than them doing anything else.
And if you guys aren't getting along, then we get 9-11.
Right.
That's right.
And the whole getting along thing becomes a cultural challenge.
Because now if you're a 27-year-old go-getter and you don't
get along with the old guard, then they're going to start holding you back and then you never
develop until you just punch out. And that's good for them because they want more of the old guard.
Right. Real quick, on this reform, how would you reform it? And this might be a longer question,
but how do you create a system that puts forward the most efficacious data and intelligence
But how do you create a system that puts forward the most efficacious data and intelligence while at the same time doesn't alienate the boss of the organization, which is the president?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
So there has to be a – there's checks and balances already in place.
That's how the federal government – that's how our democracy works with checks and balances.
Being able to institute checks and balances where, let's say, you're a junior officer.
You make a recommendation.
Your senior officer doesn't accept your recommendation, but there is some kind of documented process that you made, what you said, what you said, right? Then no matter how the
intelligence plays out in the future, it can actually be audited back to what the junior
officer said. Then you end up having this thing, you have an incentive for junior officers to say,
this is what I'm assessing. And you have an incentive for junior officers to say, this is what I'm assessing.
And you have an incentive for senior officers to listen to them.
Because it's documented.
But what happens now instead is literally senior officers change junior officer reports.
Wow.
So I will write a report.
I will send it to my middle manager.
My middle manager will rewrite my report with what he thinks is important on top of what I did
before it goes to you.
And what's the justification
for that?
Because there must be.
Because the idea is that
the more touch points,
the more it will be refined
by people who have
more experience.
So they think it's refined,
but in reality,
it's a game of telephone.
And what happens
with the game of telephone
is the information changes
by the time it reaches them.
And there's no accountability
at the top.
And then you remember
there was the divide in culture.
Yeah.
So once you get to, like, a senior level officer, they were raised in the school of Cold War.
So now we're talking terrorist reports.
It gets passed to a middle manager who's got a little bit of terrorism experience, a little bit of Cold War experience.
But it ends up in the hands of a senior manager who's really only.
Can you tell us in 2000 when you're getting this information, we're not thinking terror is a real threat.
That's over there.
Can you tell us what Cold War?
But real quick, just Cold War? Sorry, I need to ask this.
But real quick, just Cold War, what does that mean?
Cold War. The difference between Cold War intelligence and terrorism intelligence.
When you remember the Soviet Union and you remember it was America versus Russia.
Of course.
That's Cold War.
No, no, I understand the period.
But like, why would there be a different way of interpreting intelligence for the Cold War versus terrorism?
Because people weren't dying in the Cold War.
In the Cold War, it was cold.
There was no conflict.
So there's not an imminent threat.
So you're learning about, hmm, got it, got it, got it, got it, got it, got it.
Imminent threat.
Those are the two words.
Yeah, so with terrorism, we're immediately reacting or 9-11.
We're immediately reacting, bomb goes off.
Whereas Cold War, these are nations jockeying for
position via
I guess you would say
economic and military
growth. That's it. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
It's economic growth. I guess and military
growth too. Ah, so you can be
a little bit more relaxed during a Cold War
because you're not protecting your
people in that
instance. We call it strategic, not relaxed.
You can be more strategic
because things don't happen at a tactical pace.
It's a little more chess.
It's more chess.
Yeah.
Got it. Okay, sorry, go.
My overarching question,
what I'm hearing is this is very scary.
To me, privatizing intelligence
probably will be a better solution in general.
And this ties back to what we had Vivek Ramaswamy on the podcast.
And he basically was like, I just want to cut a bunch of government jobs.
People who I think are small government, they might have distrust.
For me, it's just government has no incentive to be efficient.
There is no profit margin.
Whereas a private organization, we always got to be efficient.
We always got to be the best.
Our business is literally on the line.
We will go broke.
I don't see a real problem. And you can tell me where I'm wrong. I don't see a
real problem with let's just privatize intelligence because that's probably going to run the most
efficiently. The real problem with privatizing intelligence is then you open intelligence up
to marketing. Marketing are promises with no meat. So really what needs to happen is checks and
balances,
like we were saying before,
where there's a government
held accountable
for the intelligence,
but the highest performing bidder
is the private intelligence firm.
Think of it like a plumber.
The reason you don't do
the plumbing in your house,
I assume,
is because you can send out
a request to five different plumbers.
You can get five different estimates.
You can have them come in
and make five different assessments.
And the one that you trust the most
is the one that you try.
And if he fucks up,
you never hire him again.
Yeah.
That's essentially how it should work
because you're the boss.
It's your house.
So we need an intelligence organization
that is federally controlled
to say the quality of intelligence
has to meet this standard.
And you think if we privatize,
it becomes more about marketing than quality?
If you go 100% privatized.
Yeah, look at news.
Like, you privatize news,
you're not getting the real news.
You're getting the most monetizable news.
And the exact same thing would happen with an intelligence.
They're like, what does the president want to hear?
Okay, we're going to go find it.
It's like WMDs.
We're going to find the WMDs.
It's like there's certain news organizations
that are like, hey, there's some racism out there.
Find it.
I don't want to harbor this too long,
but again, that is exactly what the government did.
The government said there's WMDs.
There were no WMDs.
I just don't think this is as scary as we're making it. Well, now I want to get into that point, which is how do you tell, or maybe the better question is, is it possible, because this is what you always hear, that there are corporations that are using the CIA almost as like a private military for their interests.
Is there any truth to that?
I wouldn't say that.
So the fact that private agencies are using CIA resources like a private army, there's no direct evidence that that is what's happening.
Hey, I got a banana factory in Nicaragua.
Go start a coup because the current administration is not letting me sell my bananas.
So that's not the corporation that makes that decision, but that is the lobbyists who can lobby the policymakers who are federally appointed or voted in.
They're the ones that can then direct the CIA.
And they're lobbying whom?
They're lobbying the director that was appointed by the president, or they're lobbying the president and the congressman.
And then, oh my God.
The president and the president's advisor panel.
Because here's the other thing to keep in mind.
So the CIA is getting all this shit, and they're just doing what they're told.
So it's really the politicians that should be getting the shit.
I thought the CIA was acting on their own.
Well, they did in certain circumstances. Pre-9-11,
pre-9-11, they had a lot more
autonomy than they do now because the
9-11 commission came out and said, you guys have way
too much autonomy. So going back to your whole
point about, did they shoot JFK?
Nobody really knows. Nobody really knows
because they had so much autonomy.
You fucking know, dude. Did they do it or what?
If I knew, I would be a lot richer
than I am right now.
Why?
What would you do
with that information
to make so much money?
I would find a way to prove it
and I'd be the first person
to ever expose the truth
with the proof.
What about Abraham Lincoln?
It's another president
that got shot.
You got a thing for this.
It's only a couple of them that got shot.
I'd like to figure it the fuck out.
Was the CIA around in 1864 or whatever?
It was OSS, dude.
Ooh, you know.
I got it from Pony Express.
Pony Express.
I'm not curious about
why he got shot. I want to know if he was gay.
You guys would know that stuff.
You guys had the intelligence. Was Abe Lincoln gay? I don't know. he was gay. You guys would know that stuff. You guys had the intelligence.
Was Abe Lincoln gay?
I don't know.
CIA didn't exist.
OSS didn't exist.
Back then, it was,
I don't even know if the federal marshal.
CIA doesn't have gaydar?
Yeah.
We need that, dude.
They have gaydar
because they're recruiting
for gay right now.
What does that mean?
They want to diversify
into LGBTQ+,
all the various.
They want that kind of diversity
because the government
is trying to bring back young people
because they lost all their young people from life too.
Yeah, young people are gay.
You can get in.
Yeah, young people are gay for sure.
But now, isn't there an advantage in having some gay operatives?
Yeah, some of the Middle East.
Exactly, yeah.
No, for real.
They can see if they can fly.
It turns out we can't fly.
It's a good experiment.
No, no, but maybe you could use them as,
I know that you say that in the CIA
you guys don't use the honeypot thing,
but that would be advantageous.
You go to the Middle East,
you're like, hey, I'm kind of half gay,
and if there is some shek out there
that is a little bit gay,
he might feel a little bit more safe
getting his cheeks rinsed by a guy who's not from there, who's not going to tell anybody.
Right. So here's the-
Now he's an asset.
Here's the interesting thing that people don't understand about CIA.
Yeah.
CIA has always been one of the most diverse workforces in America.
You need to.
Always, exactly.
Because you're getting intelligence from out there.
Yeah, you said that helped you get hired.
Correct. I'm a brown dude.
Yeah, you said that helped you get hired. Correct. I'm a brown dude. Yeah. You're, you could be, you're actually good. I'm, I'm, I'm ambiguously brown. Yeah. So nobody knows where
I'm from. I mean, I, I did not have good grades in college. I was, I was a bad officer in the
Air Force. Like I am not your Ivy League white guy that was pre 9-11, you know, CIA. And, and
that's just me. I mean, there are, there are thousands of people that were recruited with me, diverse in every possible way. The thing was, it wasn't front and center
CIA recruitment marketing that you have to be diverse. Right. So what ended up happening was
they would find people the way they find people. They would run them through
a psychological profiling as part of your recruitment. And then they would find out like,
oh, you're gay or you're straight
or you're this, you're that or whatever else, right?
You believe in two gods or whatever it might be.
But they would run you through a profile
and the profile would tell them
that you're crazy in a specific kind of way
that's very useful for collecting intelligence.
Like for example?
So the reason I'm here today
is because you were
referencing something I mentioned once about psychological high-performance trauma, right?
People who have a certain amount of trauma when they're kids become high performers later in life.
That, what that's really saying is that we're a little bit crazy, but we're crazy in a useful way
versus a person who has so much trauma that they end up being like PTSD.
in a useful way versus a person who has so much trauma that they end up being like PTSD.
Porn star, great at sex or whatever.
Well, I mean, even that's still useful crazy.
That is.
But I'm talking about the kind of crazy that ends up with somebody shooting to people,
like somebody who goes in and starts shooting up a grocery store.
That's too much crazy.
So they're trying to find the right amount of crazy.
Right.
Okay.
And that's useful.
So it used to be that they could bring in people who looked normal, right? Who looked like they blended in and then find the ones that were
useful, crazy. Now they're basically advertising like, Hey, we want you. If who's gay. Yeah.
Are you, are they, are they going, Hey, if you're gay, you had enough trauma in your life that you
might be crazy enough to be in the CIA. I mean, that's maybe that's the, that might be part of their strategy, but if you, if you see them, they are openly
advertising to diverse groups. I would assume that is the world is more openly, you're more
comfortable being openly gay, openly, whatever. So that person will fit in better with those
groups. Whereas before in the fifties, maybe being gay was something you probably hid from
the nineties, man, we hid from that stuff. But then there's also, don't forget it's a
federal organization.
So guess what federal organizations have to mandate?
Diversity hires.
So you have to have this many women.
You have to have this many gay people.
You have to have this many people who identify as females but are actually, have male sex organs.
And you have to, like, there's all these government regulations, especially in a democratically controlled executive that whenever you – they dictate the requirements to CIA.
Do you think it's a good thing or a bad thing for CIA?
What do you think?
I think it's a horrible thing for CIA.
I mean let CIA hire what they need to hire to execute the operations they need to execute for the threat of the day, right?
Because the threat of the day changes.
Okay.
I want to get back to this in a second,
but you met your wife on the job.
Correct.
How hard is it to sleep with a CIA operative?
I mean, are you talking about how to actually sleep with a CIA operative or like when we say sleep with a CIA?
No, I mean like she sees all your fucking tricks.
She's trained in the exact same way.
That makes it really easy.
What?
That makes it super easy because the hardest thing to do is lie and hide.
So that's like, I think about how much effort we all put into that.
In my marriage, that effort's gone.
There's no reason to even try.
And even worse than that is my wife can read my body language.
So she knows when you're lying.
So she knows when I'm uncomfortable.
She knows when I'm sad.
She knows when I'm stressed out.
She actually knows it because she can
actually read it. So it makes the fact that I'm like an open book to her super, super easy. And
the fact that she's an open book to me is no, it's not stressful. Do CIA marriages tend to last
longer? They last until the job starts to interfere with the marriage. CIA has one of the
highest divorce rates in all federal government because when cia officer
when they marry each other they reach that point in their career where it's like are you going to
choose career or marriage and that usually for those people they choose career yeah and then
if you're a cia officer who marries a non-cia officer you still reach the point in your career
where it's like why are you working all the time i can't really tell you and then oh you guys could
share what you were doing with each other or were there limitations? So my wife and I had the benefit of
meeting and marrying each other when we were in different offices. But then there was a change
in operational priorities that actually put us into a tandem. We operated together.
Wait a minute. You guys were partners on the job. So you were pretending to be married and married?
We didn't even have to pretend. We just actually
were married. But you were using pseudonyms,
I assume. We were using
a structure of
cover legend that was
more robust because
we had actual documentation behind it.
Who's the easiest
race to trick?
Why'd you look at that?
He drops his bombs under his breath.
Mr. and Mrs. Smith.
Who is the easiest race to trick?
So if you're talking about ethnic race,
so ethnic race is really difficult because it's based on education.
But when it comes to race as a subcontext of nationalistic pride, it's Americans.
We're the easiest ones to trick?
We're the most ignorant culture in the world.
That's fire.
Number one.
We're always number one.
Nobody can top us.
And that's a big part of the reason.
We're the best.
We're the best.
Tour announced.
Edmonton, Canada, July 12th.
Shane Gillis and I are coming up to do the Great Outdoors Fest.
It's going to be wild.
Tickets go on presale Thursday, March 14th, 10 a.m. local time.
So go scoop those up.
The code is outdoors.
Okay?
Go scoop those up before they're
gone. Get those immediately.
Edmonton is going to be fire. Also,
a bunch more dates for the Life Tour.
First of all, thank you guys so much
for selling out the shows in San Francisco.
It's been crazy. April
5th, Houston. Okay? We added
more seats. Go get those
immediately. April 13th,
Charlotte. We added a second show at the Belk Theater.
Go get those.
April 18th, Nashville.
The Opry House.
Go get those.
That's going to be wild.
And April 19th, the Moody Center in Austin.
Go get those.
April 20th, the second show in Phoenix.
Get that as well.
And June 9th, Vancouver. we are adding a fourth show. So keep your eyes and ears peeled for the announce for that one.
dandrusholtz.com for all the tickets. Go get them. Thank you guys so much. Let's get back to the show.
Guys, only real announcement. Gaslit, my full special, is on YouTube right now. Go watch it.
If you have already watched it, watch it again.
Tell your friends to watch it.
Shouts to PrizePix for helping me pay for this special.
Otherwise, it would have cost me an entire mortgage.
But we got to give them their views.
So please check it out.
Also, if you want Gaslit merch, it's available on my website.
Only dates this Saturday, Dania Beach in Miami, April 11th through 13th, Tempe.
But my merch, ticket dates, everything,
even the full special, akashsingh.com, or just go to YouTube. I love y'all. Thank you. Thank you.
Thank you. Thank you. And are you picking this up when you're on the job? Do they teach you
these things or these human behavior patterns that are like in a notebook that you're learning?
How do you get this kind of wisdom? So CIA trains through a method called just-in-time
learning, also known as experiential training or experiential learning. So they'll teach you a
concept. Academically, you'll learn a concept, slideshow or classroom or whatever else. And
then you'll go out and you'll practice that concept in a scenario. So with an actor, with a
role-player. Oh, okay. You're not just going to a coffee shop and doing it. And then once you have
shown that you understand the concept in a role- play, you're in the real world doing it.
And that's how you cement a skill before you come back. How much are these actors fucking with you
in these? Like how tricky are they making things? Do they even know? Oh yeah. But the actor's blind
in it. They're, they're not, they're not actors. Like you're thinking of actors, they're role
players, meaning they are CIA officers who have already been through the ringer, and now they're helping to train the next generation.
Is this at the farm?
Correct.
The farm is our training academy, and there are multiple schools that we have.
The farm is the most famous, but that's where we go through.
That's the most practical, real-world example of our full experiential learning cycle.
Could you give us an example of one of these exercises?
Sure. So there's a, one of my favorite exercises is a free cup of coffee exercise.
So you have to get a free cup of coffee, but there's certain stipulations. You can't ask
for a free cup of coffee. You can't trade somebody for a free cup of coffee. So,
but you have to get a free cup of coffee. Can you be a woman?
Many of them are born that way. Yes. So unfair. Okay, go on. So, so what you have to do is they,
they will teach you like, here's how you create reciprocity and here's how you create interest.
And here's how you create value for somebody in excess of what a cup of coffee costs. And then
here's how you put yourself in a position with somebody
where they connect on their own through some kind of,
what was the movie with Leonardo DiCaprio?
Inception.
Yeah.
The essentially real world version of Inception.
It's called neuro-linguistic programming or something like that.
That's what some people call it.
But you're basically planting an idea.
You're priming an idea.
Yeah.
So here's how you prime someone for an idea where they are like,
I just had a great conversation with you. I want to
buy you a cup of coffee.
What a fascinating way to break down human behavior.
If I want a free cup of coffee, I give him value
emotionally that is worth more than a free
cup of coffee. Or intellectually. You give me value
in the way that I care most about value. And then leave a
gap where they can fill it. Now,
the cup of coffee you're getting from
a stranger, not from
the person at the coffee shop?
Correct.
Okay.
I thought you have to charm the barista.
You can. If you find yourself selecting a coffee shop where you don't have other people in line,
being in line with somebody has the benefit because you got what we call time on target.
But when you go up to a barista, how long is a barista used to dealing with a customer?
It's 12 seconds.
How are you going to create value in 12 seconds?
How big is the farm?
Is it like Westworld where it's just like hundreds of people just living in a scenario?
Essentially, it's a base.
The farm is a giant retired military base.
Instructors live there.
Students live there.
Contract personnel stay there for long deployments.
It's a self-contained place and they have
total control over your entire student experience there which is how you can go through this kind
of training coffee shop is an actual coffee shop outside outside like in the movie the recruit like
you have to go and get a get someone from the bar and get them out what's the uh okay have you ever
had like a really awkward exchange when you're trying to practice something that you learned?
Yes.
We would call it in comedy bombing.
Have you bombed?
Okay, tell me about a bomb.
I've bombed a lot of times. Okay, tell me.
Well, hopefully not real.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
You can't say that.
No, I've bombed.
No, but yeah.
So, I mean, I've bombed at, in the real world, like with this coffee example, it took me six attempts before I got a free cup of coffee.
And what happens the first attempt?
What do you?
So I think the first time I went there, I tried to talk to a barista.
Okay.
And I tried to just show up and be like, hey, I've got this thing.
And I went looking for like a wallet, like, oh, I don't know where my wallet is.
And she was like, well, I can't give you any coffee.
Oh, you tried to guilt her.
Yeah, I was just trying to be like, oh, it's not very effective.
It's not part of the training.
I hadn't internalized the concept yet right so then i went another time and i was
like with a with a dude and trying to talk to a dude about stuff that i was not connecting with
what he cared about i was telling him about how cool i am okay how'd you open up to him what was
the first line this is this is this is awesome but what cup of coffee you're gonna get i don't
remember the details right but it's basically something along the lines like hey what are you
gonna get he's like oh i was gonna get an to get an Americano. And I was like,
oh, a latte is the best.
You started talking about you. Yeah, you were more interesting
than interested. Why? Yeah, yeah.
Why do you want an Americano? What is it?
It doesn't matter. What matters
is that the concept would fail because...
What I'm saying is, if you asked him why he likes
Americano, you're tapping into what
he's feeling. You seem like the kind of guy that has
lattes. And he'd be like, oh, what does that mean? Like, you're giving him something.'s feeling you seem like the kind of guy that has lattes and then be like oh what does that mean like you're giving him something correct yeah so
what what you learn from bombing yeah is you learn how other people actually think and how
they engage with the communication that you're sharing you guys know more than anybody right
yeah because when you start to engage with somebody about what they're interested in
now all of a sudden they don't see you as a threat or an outsider.
They see you as like a friend.
Yeah.
You make me feel good about me because you're asking me questions about me.
I like you.
Yes.
Right.
You,
I trust you because you're saying things about me that,
that I also believe.
And that's how you get to a place where after six minutes in line and you get
up to the front of the line,
they're like,
can I buy you a cup of coffee?
Do you,
do you remember the moment that you were asked?
Absolutely.
Okay, what happened?
How'd you do that?
So it was a much older lady.
It was like a lady in her 50s.
You son of a bitch.
Okay, good.
And we had been in line.
You just whipped it out.
You're like, you seen one of these lately?
I'm like, mocha latte.
Okay, good, good, good. So it was a much older lady and we were in line it became very clear to me that she liked to talk but nobody would talk to her so then i just kind of sat there and let her
talk and everything that she brought up her grandkids her kids her cats her job i just asked
a follow-up question. I was like,
oh, that's interesting. That's, I mean, how did your kids feel about when you retired from
accounting or how did your, you know, how do you take care of three cats? Do you feed them canned
food or do you feed them food that you make for them themselves? And it was just this natural
conversation, natural from her point of view, where I was just being nice to her and learning
about her, gave her a conversation, which she doesn't get because most people don't want to
listen to a 55-year-old woman talk right and then by the time we got to the
actual checkout at the register she was going to pay with a credit card anyways so she was just
like you can put his coffee on mine that's now and the hardest part yeah is all you want to do
is fucking celebrate and get the hell out of the coffee shop and go back and be like here's my free
cup of coffee you gotta say no no no please don't do it. Oh, you say, oh, that was very nice of you.
And then you sit down and you have another two or three minutes of coffee with her because
you've got to find an exit that is positive.
Now, now, now, now.
Okay.
You, you get this success.
You get this positive reward, right?
Like you said, you want to just run back to the office and be like, yo, I did it.
reward, right? Like you said, you want to just run back to the office and be like, yo, I did it.
Is there, is that ever met with a sense of guilt as I potentially manipulated another human being?
This, so I love that you're asking this question. I love that you're asking this question because to get to the place where you're going through that level of training, you've already been psychologically assessed in a realm of
antisocial behavior that makes it so that you know, and the people who are training, you know,
that you're not really wired to feel good about manipulating others.
My follow-up to that is this. Before you came here, I was ready to ask you a bunch of,
I don't want to even call them hard questions,
but I had less empathy for you. Now that we've spoken a bit and I like you, I have a little bit
more empathy. So I'm like, do I really want to ask him a question that he might get in trouble
for answering by the CIA? And I'm starting to feel these sensations. And I know the thing that
would make me feel that guilt is also the thing that I'm curious about.
But you've charmed me, I guess, or maybe I enjoy talking to you or arguing with you about Europeans being stupid, which is what we both agree, ultimately.
But I guess what I'm saying is that would be horrible for the CIA.
I would be, because I'd feel too bad.
Bad operative.
Yeah, horrible operative. He just said it right. Bad field. you also can't keep a secret ever yeah i'm not good at that
so i mean there's a couple of things there right so i'm already part of the ci and i'm tricking all
of you and that's even better disinformation so so the thing to keep in mind here is that
is that uh there's an element of predictable behavior that's wired into us cognitively
from childhood right right? So
especially people who have had experiences with significant trauma as children also have a higher
likelihood of developing antisocial disorders or antisocial conditions as adults, because as
children, we tried to fit in and we were rejected. So now as adults, we're like, fuck trying to fit
in, but maybe I should still try to fit in because it's just easier if people think I fit in. Right. So there's, there's an element of
that. Do you feel that way about yourself? Oh yeah, absolutely. Well, for me, I'm nice. Cause
I'm like, I'm like credible at socializing. It's all, but it's all, you think it's manufactured.
It's all kind of learned. No, it's, it's real. But the difference is what happens on the back
end, if you will. Right. Like having a conversation, like you were saying you'd feel guilty asking me questions.
I wouldn't feel guilty asking you questions because I've been conditioned through my childhood trauma to be kind of safe of feeling like I'm going to ask you a question.
It's your responsibility if you answer or not.
I was literally talking to my wife about this the other day because my wife is also a former CIA, so we have some very dark conversations.
We have some very dark conversations.
And the question was, if you were crossing a street and you were crossing a street at a time when you needed to cross the street to get away from some creepy dude who was standing at the street corner.
But when you crossed the street, you made another car swerve because you crossed when it wasn't a crosswalk and that car crashed.
Right?
So you just saved yourself from creepy dude who's standing at the edge of the sidewalk, but that car crashed.
Do you feel bad?
Yeah.
I mean.
My answer is no.
I don't feel bad.
What am I supposed to do?
I don't feel bad because I self-preserved, got myself off the X, the term that we say getting off the X.
The dude that crashed wasn't driving responsibly or else he wouldn't have crashed.
And it wasn't your intention.
And it wasn't my intention. You know what is a crazy coincidence? Maybe not.
I grew up in Dallas,
born and raised. The spot where JFK is
killed, you know how it's marked on the road?
Yeah. With an X.
On the road? Yeah.
There's an X on the road. So off the X
really makes me think you guys killed
JFK.
They left their signs.
Now, you've studied people enough to know that like this guilt response is quite normal right right in a socially conditioned person and you're saying you just feel none of it
i don't feel none of it i just it's it doesn't hold me back all right so you feel it but it
doesn't stop you gotcha whereas like a sociopath example, might not feel it at all. Oh, so you're in a really advantageous situation
because you could act on that feeling if you think it's the socially responsible thing to do.
But if you need to get where you need to go, you won't. I act on the feeling when it is a
personal benefit. And that's the difference between a true sociopath, which is, remember how we were
talking about antisocial disorders? A true sociopath is actually clinically called antisocial
personality disorder, ASPD. So that's a clinical thing, just like a psychopath is a clinical thing
on the antisocial personality disorder spectrum. Whereas what I'm talking about is useful elements of sociopathy,
but still able to fit into a larger society.
Yeah, my cousin's a psychiatrist.
He always distinguishes between sociopath and having sociopathic tendencies.
And he's like, there's a lot of really successful people
who have sociopathic tendencies.
What if a true sociopath would make a bad agent?
Correct, because a true sociopathic tendencies. What an advantage. A true sociopath would make a bad agent. Correct, because a true sociopath lacks empathy.
Right.
A true sociopath.
Which you need to connect.
Now, follow-up question somewhat related.
To get the coffee.
Somewhat related.
Everybody, mental health is huge in every job.
In the CIA, they're like, no, you're not doing no fucking therapy.
We're not paying for anything.
I don't want you to work on this part of you, or is there very specific therapy?
How does that work?
Good question.
It's an abundance of therapy options because of exactly that reason so to your point about how some very
high-performing people have sociopathic tendencies what else do very high-performing people have
incredible vices substance abuse sex right pathological lying they really gotta find the
right operative wow this is a fascinating case. You need to find someone fucked up enough where they don't feel the guilt so they can go out there and do things that do induce guilt on the average person.
But not so fucked up that they're going to be doing cocaine, fucking girls nonstop to get over the guilt, to get over the guilt or to cope with these feelings that you have.
I mean, that is a small window.
And still have some level of remorse because a true sociopath, again, not a good agent.
And you need IQ. When you go to therapy, can you see a regular therapist or it has to be another CIA agent?
Yeah, it's a CIA therapist.
And then if you have conditions that are too significant or too severe for a staff psychologist,
then they have a group of cleared psychologists.
Do they test prospects on their vices?
Yes. Oh, great question. How do they do it? They, well, there's two parts. First,
there's a psychological battery that they put you through, like an actual psychological exam.
And then from that, they're able to assess. Is this what we see in the movies or TV shows where like they're asking you difficult questions and it's, it's, it's not the answer,
but how you react. That's a part of it. Can you give us an example of, do you remember anything you were asked?
Yeah.
Yeah.
So, well, I don't remember the questions in the, in the, in the actual exam.
Right.
But I remember there were questions in the exam where they're, they're giving you questions
and they're giving you answers and there's no good answer.
Like there's no safe answer.
Right.
Like, uh, have you ever, I remember this one.
Have you ever participated in sexual deviancy?
Yeah, that's a subjective experience.
Like, yes or no?
Yeah.
And I'm in like the last stages of applying for the CIA.
Is this the question that's going to get me kicked out?
All this pressure starts to build up.
So what did I answer?
Yep.
Right?
Better to say yes than to say no.
And then they find out you're lying.
And then they find out that I'm lying.
So I'm just going to say yes and hope for the best, right?
Now, I was also able to say no to ever using any kind of controlled substance because I have never, and still to this day, even though I dream of the day that I get to, use some kind of controlled substance.
Right.
So there are certain places where I get to answer yes and no throughout that whole exam.
And then after the exam, I had an in-person interview with a psychologist who was going through the exam results.
And that psychologist was like, can you please share with me your sexual deviancy?
And I imagine that part is even more important than what you actually put on the paper.
I don't know because I'm not – I never got the insight into how they recruited us exactly.
But now you're sitting here face-to-face with somebody and the one question that spiked you during the exam,
they're asking you to your face.
And again, you're like,
I'm not much closer to being a CIA officer.
So then you're like, well, I've always wanted to do this
and I did this and I've tried this and I've tried that.
And then at the end for me, the dude was like,
none of that's deviancy.
He's like, oh, sweet.
So like two girls at once and sex parties,
none of that's deviancy?
He's like, no.
And I was like, score.
How can you trust the intentions of the psychologist?
You have to trust that the intentions of the psychologist are to get enough people through the pipeline that they don't look like they're too harsh or too easy in their exam.
Now I'm talking about when you're already hired.
You're part of the CIA and you are seeking mental help.
I would imagine that the CIA is
looking out for its interests. So how, and you can only speak to their therapists. How can you
fully open up to somebody if you know that you're being assessed? So you've got, this is such a
powerful question, man, because this is the crux of why I left CIA. I left CIA when I was 34 years
old. I'm 43 now, you're 40 now, right?
When you're in your mid-30s,
whatever you're doing, you're all in.
Yeah.
You're all in.
If you've got producers producing you,
if you've got supervisors supervising you,
if you've got whatever,
you're like, everybody's in this together
when they're all actually in it for self-preservation.
So as a mid-30 year old,
it took the birth of my first child before I was like,
I asked myself that exact question. It's like, oh shit, why do I think that this person's out
for my best interest when they're just out for their own career? And, and I started to see that
the process we were trained to get a foreigner to betray their country, to give us secrets,
that same process was our professional development process.
But you knew this at an early age, I know. Well, I knew this
at 34 only because of the birth of my son.
But you knew it before. I mean, you're assessing
people all the time, right? But you're assessing
people through a state of conditioning where
you've been brainwashed to believe you're the best
of the best of the best. Right.
Wow. You believe their propaganda, so to speak.
Correct. You've been assessed. Really? You didn't see it at all?
There was no signs of it where you were like, I'm a little skeptical?
The signs are in hindsight, right?
Can you give me a sign?
When you're in it.
Yeah, when you're in it, you're in it.
So a sign of a sign is like, when you're in it, for example, when you're in it, people are always promising you the next best assignment, right?
So the carrot.
We need constant carrots, right?
We need you to go here.
We need you to go there. Oh, that dried up. Oh, that dried up. And you're the person. And you're carrot. Constant carrots, right? We need you to go here. We need you to go there.
Oh, that dried up.
Oh, that dried up.
And you're the person.
And you're always going.
You're like, I'm going to take it.
There were a lot of intelligent Nazis that thought they were the good guys.
Not to compare it, but like there are good people that are doing things that are outside
of what you could say are their interest or objectively true because they bought in.
Like I used to be in law enforcement and there were times where it's just like, ah, this
is just chain of command.
This is just the way things are. And it wasn't until you're outside of it where you're like,
that's a little fucked up. So if you have people that are extremely
motivated by reward, you can just throw a carrot in front of them and they
won't ask questions about anything else. If they're extremely
driven by reward, yes. However, if there's
four core motivations, i'm sure that's
kind of what you're referencing right now that cia teaches us yeah what is it the reward ideology
coercion and ego right we call it rice reward ideology coercion and ego four main reasons we
all do anything yeah reward is a strong one but it's not the strongest ideology yeah so what you
do is you recruit these people who are borderline sociopaths
who have an incredible amount of loyalty
and then you tell them,
America has to be the safest.
You're here to keep the homeland safe.
You're the future of our country.
Your children, your parents,
everyone's going to be safer
because of your humble service.
Is that how ISIS recruits?
The responsibility.
Same, same?
It's slightly different.
But it's ideology.
What ISIS does is they use something called a radicalization ladder because they're trying to create radicals.
What CIA is doing is creating practicals.
A little bit different.
And careerists.
Careerists don't end their career by strapping a bomb to their chest.
But that's how it radicalizes.
What is your greatest motivation, you think? for so for me my greatest motivation is ideological
but my ideology changed when you had that baby didn't it everything changed you know this man
it just happened to you too yep everything changes when you have that baby that makes sense so now
your ideology is i'm a family man i'm a father before that my ideology was always i'm protecting
america safe yeah now it's keep my baby safe.
It is.
And is it a liability to let operatives, to let operatives have families?
This becomes a big part of the challenge in any CIA officer's mid-career.
When you start having children or when your children are in that age where they're the magic age, like you're not in the magic you're still in like the puddle of of blood and guts i'm here i'm here smile give me anything yeah yeah but once like once you start tickling your baby and it's over oh fuck it's
over you're corruptible yeah yeah yeah once that happens you said that yeah jesus empath big empath
once that happens everything really does change and then you start
to see i have to protect this baby and then you also ask yourself oh shit the stuff i do if
somebody really wants to fuck with me they're gonna fuck with this oh fuck and then it just
gets and then it just gets worse okay and that's that's a big part of what contributes to people
in their mid-career making different choices in their mid-career.
Why they stopped competing to be at the top of the food chain.
And they're starting to be happy with being middle managers because middle managers get forgotten, get overlooked.
I can stay home most of the time.
I'm never going to be like in the cutting edge of stuff.
Okay.
Does the CIA, once they find out that you're about to have a family or even before that, maybe when you get married, they know what's coming next. Do they start adding protecting your children to the ideology
of what you're doing at work? So as an effort to maintain.
I wouldn't say they manipulate it that way. What ends up happening is you've got culturally,
your supervisor is older than you, right? Physically, they're older than you.
And they're a supervisor, which means they've been there longer.
So they've already made the compromises to stay in their career.
So then that person starts to feed their compromises on to you.
The person who chooses family over career has already left.
So they're not even there.
So there's nobody to even look towards.
So everybody within the institution.
Hey, this is what it is. This is what you do.
How did you see through that?
Status quo.
Same thing when you were in law enforcement, right?
A little man admits, status quo.
This is the way it is.
Just don't ruffle facts.
So it's very important that those people in those positions are enjoying their life.
Because if they're not, you're looking at what your life is going be and you're going, I gotta get the fuck out of here.
Well, it's not important that they are enjoying their life
as much as it's important that they are doubling down
on the ideology that keeps them there.
Or they're committed.
In other words, if they're starting to fray
in their commitment, everything else trickles down.
Ooh, that's scary.
The number one thing that you're looking for
in any kind of government service
is the idea of service before self.
Anybody watching this, anybody listening to this who's military, law enforcement, first responder, government,
we all agree, like it's indoctrinated into you from the day one. Service comes before yourself.
And what makes somebody, what is the character buildup or personality trait buildup to have
service before self? It's just a matter of commitment, like you said. It's understanding that your discomfort
and your opinions and your,
anything that makes you unhappy
is less important than servicing the mission.
But is there a trauma that you go through
that would induce this personality type?
Is there something that happens in your life
where you can predict this?
Sort of, yes.
So when we go back to that whole idea of childhood trauma,
what the outcome of childhood trauma
is that you need an invisible authority to approve of you. And as long as, and the challenge for us
all is growing up in that world, you never know who that invisible authority is. So you're always
seeking it. It's like, I got to get good grades. Somebody say it's good. All right. So I got to do
good on stage. And yeah, I got to do good. Yeah. Yeah. That when, when you get into a government
job and you have that same conditioning, the difference now is you know exactly what you have to do to do a good job.
To get that authority to approve of you, all you have to do is say yes to the next mission.
There's no guessing anymore.
Whereas most of the time we're like, how do I get my mom's approval?
How do I get my dad's approval?
How do I get?
So it's a pretty easy setup. It's a package. It's a nice package that you realize over time, the federal government
has learned how to do this well, intentionally or accidentally, because they've always been
vested in making sure they, the government itself, survives.
Is there a moment in your life where you felt, especially your professional life at CIA,
Was there a moment in your life where you felt, especially your professional life at CIA, where you felt completely validated and justified in your decision to spend all that time there?
Is there a mission that you succeeded in protecting America that you were like, this is everything I dreamed of and I did good?
So, yes, there is one.
And that one is the one I was actually referencing before we turned on any cameras.
So I'm trying to get a book published.
And it's been a two and a half year process because CIA was on board with the book and then changed their position as it got closer and closer to publish.
And why do you think?
I think geopolitical concerns around the world changed.
And then the mission that I was part of
became more sensitive to them publicly.
So now they're pushing back.
So I actually, after I leave this interview with you guys,
I head up to Washington, D.C. in just a few days
to sit with CIA to actually hash out
how much of this book are you going to keep pushing back on?
How much of this book are we going to be allowed to publish?
And will we need to involve a court to get this to move forward? Okay. Sorry, I have to pee. Go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go.
So the answer to your question is yes, there is absolutely a justifiable mission that I look at
and I'm saying it was all worth it. But you can't share it with us right now.
And that's very frustrating because the reason I want to share it, I don't want to. I love you guys.
I'd love to share it with you.
I want to share it with my kids and my grandkids and my great-grandkids who I'll never get to meet.
This is a part of your legacy.
This process must be difficult.
Is the book already written?
The book's already written.
So how do you have editors and people review it if there's information in it that's not supposed to be seen?
So this is the challenge because the geopolitical environment changed
We had everything approved and worked on and written out until that turning point in in
So it wasn't it was okay
One trying to get you jammed. No, no, it's okay. But that's how it works
I mean the the reason that so few CIA authors exist is because of the exact problem that you said like how do you get an
editor to look at something if cia has to look at it first and what if cia looks at it and they
take too long or whatever else publishers lose their interest and editors lose their interest
and whatever else whereas for us we took a different approach to it we took kind of like
a systematic approach where it's like hey here's what we want to write about it do you approve
here's our outline for what we're going to write. Do you approve?
Here's our summary for each chapter. Do you approve? And they approved every step of the way
until we came to a point where there was a book proposal that they had previously approved in all
previous versions, but change in national security priorities kind of changed the whole sequence.
How do you feel about whistleblowers i i have a very difficult time accepting
whistleblowers why because i think that whistleblowing let's name names okay so ask
ask what you really want i just wouldn't ask it really what i'm like julian we're talking about
any of these guys right snowden's one there's, right? So when a whistleblower blows a whistle because it is a true infraction of American freedoms and every other option hasn't worked, then a whistleblower, that's what a whistleblower is intended to be.
That's why the law protects whistleblowers.
When they can prove that they've tried every other official channel, they can't go to jail.
They're protected by law.
tried every other official channel, they can't go to jail. They're protected by law. What happens is people get either too afraid or too lazy to go through every other channel. So they go right to
the press. That's the wrong kind of whistleblowing because that whistleblowing results in more damage
than good, right? Snowden is one of those examples. He did not try every possible avenue internally
before he went to the press,
which is why the law can't protect him anymore.
Yeah.
And then he immediately ran to our enemies.
Which further proves...
It's like, what do you really want here, bro?
Correct.
And we've seen the same thing with UFOs,
and you see the same thing with national security,
you see the same thing in police departments
and educational departments.
Like, whenever anybody blows the whistle,
the law is there to protect them,
to show that they have gone through every formal option available before they have to
simply make it public. And that's basically what you're trying to do with the book, right? You're
like, I'm going to get permissions. If you don't give me permissions, then we can take it to a
court system. And if the court of law says no, then you don't publish that book. Correct. And
it is what it is. Correct. And you'll respect that. And that's the only way to show that you believe in the system that you're part of, is to exercise every
option in that system. And I do believe that while we are a democracy that is strong and healthy and
wealthy, we're not the perfect democracy, but we're a whole hell of a lot better than most of
the democracies out there and any of the autocracies out there. So if we execute
according to the system and the system deems at the end of the day that we can't publish,
you got to trust the system to a certain extent, right? Why do you want to leave America? I heard
you said you want to live someplace else. So there's two reasons. The first, and they're
interconnected, right? The first reason is I believe that the United States is in that,
I think we're going through our middle school phase.
Remember middle school?
Yeah.
Remember how miserable middle school was?
That's where we are as a country right now.
People forget we're less than 300 years old.
Yeah, we're young, baby.
We're young.
So that phase where you're used to wearing sweatpants, but then you start getting boners.
And you have to carry your math book in front of your pants to make sure nobody sees your boner, but you don't want to stop wearing sweatpants yet.
And you're damn sure not going to start wearing tighty-whities yet.
Yeah.
Right? That's where we are as a country. And it's ugly and it's fucked up but how long did middle school last yeah long time and it didn't
get any better in high school right like so we are we are going through a very awkward phase as a
country and it's going to be long and it's going to be slow and it's going to be painful you in
your estimation what is long 10 years oh it's 10 years. What is the pain that we'll endure?
Economic pain, the loss of public influence, of international influence. We're going to start
finding that we're friends with the wrong people, right? Like you're seeing that happen now in
Israel, Palestine. You're seeing that happen in Ukraine, Russia. Like you're seeing it happen in NATO.
Four years ago, if you were to ask anybody, they'd say NATO is strong.
America has all the right allies, right?
America is the best.
Well, now you've got NATO is fracturing.
The European countries are coming out and saying that the United States shouldn't be part of NATO.
And those are our closest allies, right?
France, Spain, Germany are coming out and saying we shouldn't listen to the United States anymore. Why do we listen to them? Right? You
can't get funding for Ukraine right now. You've got the president and you've got the vice president
and the head of national security inviting Israel's opposition leader to come to the United
States because they can't talk to Netanyahu, right? And that's Israel. I mean, Israel is one
of our closest allies in the world and right now
biden and netanyahu are at odds so you see this playing out and this is just within the last
like six months to two years so when you start to project that forward there's a presidential
election coming up in november there is no good outcome from that election yeah what do you think
happens in that election nothing good but give me example can you say that to say you don't like any
of the candidates or first of all i'm saying that to say nobody likes any of the candidates there's nobody
out there who's like trump is the right choice and there's nobody out there saying biden is the
right choice there's a lot of people saying trump is the best choice there's not a lot of people
saying trump is the right choice i mean that's yeah there's a lot of people who think trump is
the right choice fair you might not respect their.
But I hear what you're saying. Yeah. Yeah. You're talking about people with geopolitical expertise.
They might go, hey, this guy isn't right for the job. But he does have a lot of fans that are just incredibly fair. Fair point. So, yeah, I think what we're going to see either a Biden administration or Trump administration or some sort of emergency administration that happens because of something completely unforeseen on both
sides, right?
Like?
Like Biden's elected and then he has a heart attack and then there's an emergency administration
or Trump's elected and then some criminal conviction comes through that makes it so
his ability to serve as president is limited, right?
He's also 82, so it's not like...
There's all sorts of surprises that can happen.
So you have to leave space for surprises, right?
But in all three scenarios,
it doesn't make it easy for the average American.
And how is our quality of life impacted?
And why would you want to leave that?
So I want to leave in the next four years,
or in about four years,
because it's not my quality
of life that I'm concerned about. It's my children's opportunity. And whatever comes
next in our country, one way or the other, the, the generation that's going to pay the penalty
is our children. It's not us. Well, sorry. Here's where I'm stuck. I thought you said
it'd be about 10 years, the awkward phase. Right. What do you think comes after 10 years? Is it
not good? After 10 years, it not good after 10 years it's gonna
settle out it may settle out to be good it may settle out to be not good but a new normal will
emerge and then we'll be able to re i will reassess whether i want to come back and play out that new
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Now let's get back.
I want to tell you why I think you're still part of the CIA.
Okay.
One, I don't understand why they would let you leave.
Two, if I'm them,
and I want influence in the YouTube podcasting space, I want someone who is eloquent,
intelligent, knows the line. He's not going to publish a book about something that he knows is
illegal. He'll go through the proper procedure and maybe we give him permission. And if we don't,
you know what, maybe we'll string him along for a few years just to see if we would piss him off,
just to see how loyal he is. And then when he proves his loyalty, okay, maybe we'll put the book out there.
But we have someone in this YouTube space. The YouTube space is massive. This is where
information is existing. This is where intelligence is existing. And he'll go on all the biggest
podcasts, and he'll do what he does best, which is make friends and assets of all these different
people and imagine all the intelligence he can glean from that. We'll let him have his
consultation business where he can go and make millions of dollars.
He deserves to do it.
We can't restrict him because then he would totally leave.
But if we need to call on him for anything, if we need to call him for information, he
will be there for us.
Tell me why I'm wrong.
Because CIA would get all of that without me being on the payroll at all.
So they are getting it?
If they ask for it, but they don't
ask for it. So I'm not
part of CIA. Until when?
Until when? You're thinking of
CIA again like it's a corporation.
Corporation would take those steps because it would be
worth the investment. CIA is the DMV.
The DMV would not take those steps.
Right now, CIA
is a bureaucracy.
They are very confused about what to even do with me.
What do they think of you right now?
Have you spoken to them at all?
Yeah, it's a mixed bag.
It's a split decision there.
Can you give me both sides?
Yeah, so there is the one camp, which is the older school camp, which believes that anything we do that capitalizes on our service and our time at CIA,
using the term CIA is just us shilling out
our background to try to make a buck. So that's the negative side. But then there's another side
that's like somebody out there needs to be saying good things about CIA because everybody else who
comes out and talks about CIA says shitty things about CIA. So we've got a foot in both.
There's a PR war going on here. and i don't necessarily think that you do bad pr for the cia like i'm kind of uh like if you saw homeland which i assume the cia
signs off on on some level or it's it's because it's it's not written or authored by a cia officer
yeah there's no requirement for cia to chop off on it oh wow well that shit is exciting
you know i'm not saying how accurate it is.
No, it might not be accurate, but still like you coming and you talking about this.
Right.
I would imagine there are young, talented people out there that would listen to this or watch this and then go, wow, I wonder if my skill set would lend itself to the CIA.
And that might be something exciting to do.
I don't necessarily see you as somebody who is painting the CIA as this horrible organization. It doesn't even seem like you
dislike them. It seems like you think there's a lack of efficiency and that could be restructured.
But as far as an organization, I believe you feel like it's important.
Absolutely. Everything you're saying is accurate, right? And everything you're saying is the work that I put into my public message about CIA.
Because I personally, as an American and as a father and as a former CIA officer, I want the next generation of high-performing, hardworking, talented people to join the agency.
Whether they join for two years, six years, or ten years, all of us benefit from them joining the agency instead of joining the sales department
at, you know, whatever. But here's an issue though. You're an intelligent dude. You have
found a way to, I would imagine, make 10x, 20x what you were making at the CIA almost immediately
after leaving. Right. The people with the level of intelligence to work at the CIA, and I'm assuming
that there needs to be some IQ requirement, right? You could have all this stuff where you don't feel guilt,
but if you're dumb, that's not going to work, right? You need to have an aptitude. You need
to be able to learn these things. You need to be able to learn them quickly, and you need to put
them out in the field. Somebody with that level of intellect and that lack of, do we call it empathy
or lack of the feeling of guilt, that's a huge advantage in the
regular workplace. It is. You would rise quickly and make so much more money. So how do we
incentivize these people? How do we incentivize smart people in the same way that we can't get
smart people to be politicians anymore? How do we get them to be in government agencies at all?
Well, that's the question. You guys are all going to be hedge fund dudes,
like people in your position. That's the million dollar question. That's why you see,
so that's why you see there's a military recruiting crisis, if you guys weren't aware of that.
Military hasn't hit recruitment numbers in two years.
Federal government can't recruit people fast enough, right?
There's a dearth of interested candidates in supporting the federal government because they see the federal government.
And put yourself in the shoes of a a, of a 14 year old back in 2009 or 2005,
that 14 year old who is now whatever the age is, 18, 21, 23, right? That, that child then
has watched utter chaos in government. And now they're deciding, do I want to work for
Google or do I want to work for the federal government? It's an easy answer.
There's also like, is there been a war that we feel has been justified that we want to support?
So if you're a young kid seeing that, and that's the ideology, you know what I mean? That's the
ideology that you have. I mean, getting people to, uh, you know, getting people to join the army
around like world war two might've been one of the easier things to do. You're like, I want to go
defend my nation. Even after nine 11, there are people who are like, I want to go defend my nation. Even after 9-11, there are people who are like, I want to go. Let's get this get back.
Nobody can fuck with America.
Not while we're here.
So I guess it is up to America and the powers that be to make sure that whatever wars we're engaging in are just enough to sacrifice our lives.
And if there is waning military support, that's on you.
Correct.
Do you know what I mean?
Correct.
Yeah, it's not on the people
for understanding what the fuck is going on.
If you look at
veterans now, it's shocking
how many veterans exist right now
that do not want their children to join the military.
When it used to be
a... Oh, I didn't even know
it used to be like that. It makes sense.
Completely logical sense.
But the only veterans I know are like, I would never. Never. But that wasn't the case. It makes sense. Completely logical sense. But the only veterans I know
are like,
I would never,
never.
But that wasn't the case.
It was my grandfather
was a captain.
A big part of the reason
I was military.
My uncle was in the military.
My mom was in the military.
My stepdad was in the military.
My aunt was in the military.
That's what you do.
So because it was so easy
to recruit,
did that make them lazy
when it came to
supplying services
for vets?
And then now they're in the opposite
situation i think yes and no i think it was easy for them to recruit so they didn't pay attention
to what you do on the tail end of that person's career so yes i think there's validity there but
i think the larger thing that happened there is as the information age also took over 20 years in
the military between 1990 and 2010 is a massive 20 year transformation in
technology. So then we all woke up to the fact that the reason that there is a veterans affair,
there's a reason, the reason you get lifetime medical benefits is because when you serve for
the U S military, they don't care about your health and your wellbeing and your mental health.
Like you're there to be a cog in a war wheel and some cogs in the war wheels die and get medals but many many more cogs in
the war wheel get traumatized get hurt and then they need medical care for the rest of their lives
and they don't have adequate medical psychological whatever care and aren't they starting to strip a
lot of the bonuses or incentives away like schooling and the housing and things like that
that were easier to get.
And now it's like they're stripping some of that away.
And that's because of cost structure, right?
So now with a recruitment crisis, it's hard for the federal government to fund recruitment
operations.
So then budgets start to shrink.
Where do they save?
Where do they find money to get more recruits?
They take benefits away.
And then you have more people who stay for four or five or eight years and less people
who stay for 20 years. So the whole and less people who stay for 20 years.
So the whole economics of military and government start to shift.
Can you explain to us what the military-industrial complex is and how the CIA plays a part in it?
it? So the short, hard-hitting answer is that the military industrial complex is our economic security blanket. That's what it is. The reason that the United States loves war is because war
ends recessions. And the reason that war ends recessions is because the military industrial
complex spins up tens of
thousands of jobs are made massive government spending is made people make a whole hell of a
lot more money more taxes is taken and then all that military industrial produce all the production
isn't just for us it can be sold to the uk it can be sold to france can be sold to germany
sold to israel so now you have money coming in yeah and you have money coming in and the people who are when foreign countries buy american goods what
denomination do they use what currency do they use american so then how do they get american dollars
they gotta buy them american dollars and then as you buy american dollars it takes american dollars
off the market which does what to the value of your currency increases it's a net it's like a
triple threat it's like just Timberlake, man.
I mean, this is really well said.
So that's why the military-industrial complex was designed.
And it's a big part of the reason that Eisenhower warned against it.
Yeah, his speech when he left office.
Yep.
It was like, once we create this beast, you can never put this back in a box.
It's always going to be there.
And it has contributed to our wealth over time.
It is the thing that China is trying to do right now. The thing China is trying to replicate is its own
military industrial complex. So because it has watched us leverage it for economic and
international gain for the last 30 years. Now, doesn't it need war in order to properly
utilize it? It needs conflict. Exactly right. My understanding with China's foreign policy
that it wasn't conflict-based.
It was more like investment
and infrastructure-based.
That worked?
The Silk Road Initiative.
Belt and Road.
What is it called?
Belt and Road.
Belt and Road.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Okay.
So China's from 1990 to about,
or I'm sorry,
from 1980 to about 2010, China was primarily focused on Belt and Road Initiative, on diplomacy, economic diplomacy.
And that's why you saw what they call the China miracle, where China went from, I mean, speaking of per capita, China went from $537 annual income per capita to five thousand dollars.
Think about that.
I mean, a starving population to cities popping up everywhere.
Unbelievable.
So a 10x change in the average household income and the average person's income in just 30 years.
And we're talking about one point four billion people.
We're not talking about a country of a million people where you can get that change.
OK, so you're saying.
So they they were engaging in that.
Let's be the world's producer.
Let's be the world's warehouse and the world's workforce for a long time.
Yeah.
Well, when Xi Jinping took power, he started to say, well, what are we going to do for
the next 50 years?
Which is why he came up with a 50-year plan.
And when he started looking 50 years out, he started realizing that if you're the world's
manufacturer, then you're always manufacturing somebody else's goods.
Yeah.
And then looking at the United States, we used to be the world's manufacturer.
Yep.
And then we exported that and we took on tech jobs.
Yeah.
And we took on innovation and we took on innovation.
And that is now, what do we export to the world?
Yeah.
So now if anybody wants to import an American good, like yes, they
might get rice and strawberries sometimes,
but most of the time they're importing financial
structures, they're importing technology,
entertainment, big, big
stuff that has IP behind it.
Not actual tangible plastic goods.
Interesting.
On the military-industrial complex...
Real quick, I just want you to explain. So you're saying now China
is going to transition into military-industrial complex, which would mean that they would need conflict.
You've got to use the bombs, right?
So for the last five years or so, what we've seen is a really aggressive push for China to change its economic foundation away from being the world's manufacturer and into being the world's tech alternative to the United States.
That's Huawei. Once competition exists, you can't put that back in a box. and into being the world's tech alternative to the United States. At least Huawei got it.
And once competition exists,
you can't put that back in a box.
So what's different is the United States,
we like to win like a good football game.
We like to win where it's like,
you know, second quarter,
like last half of the game,
we're 15 points behind and then we win by one.
The Chiefs Super Bowl this year.
That's what we want, right? We want a huge finish, a huge dominant,
and everybody talks about it for decades.
What China wants is China wants to win like soccer, right?
Like small incremental gains until there's parity.
They will in the race.
Once the United States,
who is the world's economic superpower,
once we have parity with another country,
which is equality with another country,
guess what happens to us?
Our security status completely transforms. And why is that? Once we have parity with another country, which is equality with another country, guess what happens to us?
Our security status completely transforms.
And why is that?
Because we're no longer the dominant power.
Because there's another alternative you can go to.
If there's one restaurant in a neighborhood that's the only one that's serving the food, they could charge whatever they want.
It's like if you're playing poker.
The second there's another restaurant in that neighborhood, all of a sudden the price has got to come down.
We're about to start watching Chinese movies.
Yeah, right?
We already do.
Okay, okay, okay.
This is really interesting.
But you still haven't explained what's happening with their military industrial complex.
How will they engage in these?
I assume what happens with us right now is instead of us engaging in the hot war, and yeah, it does happen, there's a lot of proxy wars that we are funding with weapons.
And so the United States, I don't know if you guys are aware of this, the United States has 20 different special operations groups.
Okay.
That's a lot.
What is it?
Is that like Rangers, SEALs?
Those are special operations groups.
Got it.
Our nearest allies, with very few exceptions, like France, Germany, Spain, the UK, they have like four.
Got it.
So we have 20.
The next largest country or the next country with the most is Israel.
Israel has 18 different special operations groups.
Oh, wow.
The reason that you have these special operations groups is so that you can have a constant rotation of active training in real world conflict.
So we have people in Somalia and people in Mogadishu and people in Colombia and people in Peru. And we have people constantly fighting in support of joints forces,
in support of allied forces and peacekeeping missions, right? These are people who get real
time experience with real weapons, firing down range and shooting people for real without it
being a war. That's why we like proxy war uh so that we can keep them warm we
keep them warm constantly training constantly training china never had that i mean it's crazy
to call it training it's a real fucking war yeah yeah but we see it for its training value and then
you rotate people through that jesus christ now when you look at what's happened the last year
real quick on real quick on that knowing that need training, do we induce some of these conflicts so that we can have it?
Or do we kind of seek them out and then apply force?
It's more of the latter than the first.
We seek them out.
But once you have the biggest kid in the playground on your side, you're a whole hell of a lot more confident pushing the
conflict. You're saying the other countries knowing that the U.S. is going to come in
and we're not really mad at it because we need some training. So they go start.
Just our presence unintentionally will stoke more war.
Correct. It's like the way you would talk shit if you got a bodyguard.
Yeah, exactly. It has a very different energy than when you're with yourself okay go on go on
so now if you if you understand that uh china has been investing more in its military industrial
complex then uh it has been outpacing its investment in military industrial complex
than its own gdp growth wow for the last five years and it's already projecting next year to
do it again wow so that means that means it, GDP-wise,
economically, it should only be investing about 4%. But it's going hard.
But it's investing 9%.
So it's overspending on military development.
Combine that with the fact that in the last few months,
Taiwan actually just sent out a warning today
saying that they're concerned
because China has normalized,
meaning it's so common
that they have normalized military exercises in and around Taiwan,
including in Taiwan airspace and Taiwan naval space, littoral space. So the reason that China
is normalizing that type of military activity, because the first stage to military industrial
domination, the first stage is being able to protect the homeland. This is why the civil war
was so critical. I know people think the civil war was about slavery. protect the homeland. This is why the Civil War was so
critical. I know people think the Civil War was about slavery. It was not. The Civil War was about
being able to create one country where from coast to coast, we fell under one legal jurisdiction,
one country, because it's easier to defend a country when it's one country with two sea borders.
As soon as it's two countries with two sea borders and land borders.
Look at Russia.
Yep.
Right?
You got to worry about every single country around you
joining NATO
because then there might be a base
that's put right up on your borders.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Exactly.
So what China is doing now
is it's normalizing this military activity around Taiwan.
And it's doing that because it knows
that with the size of military it has
and with the modern military that it has
for any other foreign aggressor
to come to their home court
and beat them is going to be difficult.
Their plan for the next 10 years
is to grow their ability to extend
or reach their military out.
So first you protect yourself.
Once you can protect yourself,
now it's time to dominate abroad.
And do you think that they will start
engaging in proxy wars?
They're already engaging in proxy wars. Where? All over Southeast Asia, all over Africa.
What about South America? South America-
Are they involved in Venezuela? So South America is interesting. I can't speak
knowledgeably on it right now. Okay.
What the Chinese have found is that because of the rapid growth they had from the 1980s to the 2010s,
they had a surplus of revenue, surplus of money.
So they could throw that money around.
That's what the Belt and Road Initiative is.
The Belt and Road Initiative made it so that China could extend loans to impoverished countries at rates that no Western country could compete with.
They were beating the World Bank, right?
And the World Bank gives you the loan specifically low so they can put you in the debt and whatever.
So China basically followed that same model, learning from us.
So when it came to Latin America, they didn't have to engage in proxy wars because there were so many people there.
They were just willing to take loans in exchange for 100-year leases and property to land rights.
They basically just bought the Caribbean and they bought most of Central America and they bought parts of South America. They just own for like 99 year leases. We just let them do that. We tried
not to, but the United States is a capitalist country. We don't extend loans that are going
to default. We can't do that because of checks and balances. So then we rely on foreign aid to
do it. Well, guess what happens with foreign aid? Foreign aid is not reliable because if you're hot, you get lots of foreign aid.
If you're cold, you don't get lots of foreign aid.
So when you're the corrupt leader of Panama and you're like, which of these two choices do I take?
That one.
So you think China is the next superpower?
I would assume it's China or one of the Middle Eastern countries.
Yeah.
So China is the one that's the closest.
Economic experts believe that by 2030, China will have reached economic parity with the
United States, all things remaining the same.
So all things remain the same means we also have to remain the same.
If we don't change, we will see the rise of China to economic parity with the United States,
which in my opinion is just as bad as China being dominant.
Yeah.
Right?
Because the effects are the exact same.
The effects are the same.
Yeah.
Whether they're 1% better, 10% better, or 2% more. And that sounds far off. It's six years
from now. It's six years from now. Wait, so you never answered the question. So where are you
going to live? So I plan on moving to Europe. Where? Where? So Portugal, Spain, Italy. Those
are three of my top. Croatia. Fire options. Yeah. Those are all countries that have a number of things going for them.
I'm also looking at Sweden.
First of all, they're neutral countries.
Nobody sees those countries.
Spain is incredible.
I used to live in Spain.
It's the best.
Nobody sees those countries as a threat.
Yeah.
So as the economic superpowers of the world start to fight over everything, that fight's
not going to Poland or that fight's not going to Portugal. That fight's not going to Spain. Oh, you're worried
about hot war. I'm worried about hot war. I'm worried about economic war. I'm worried about
the forcing of policy, like domestic policy in foreign countries, because that's essentially
what both the United States and China do. The United States, we're no innocent country.
We force our
policies. We force domestic policies in other countries. That's why democracy grew was because
we forced it. We basically said, you have to have free and fair elections. If you want our money,
you have to do this. And who defined free and fair elections? We do. We did. We're also the
country that came up with gerrymandering. Right. So like it's, it's fucked up, but that's China has learned from that. That's what they do in Hong Kong. It's what they do
in Malaysia. It's what they do in the Philippines, right? They try to force foreign policy.
Andrew says this a lot. And I think it's true when America is not a superpower, let's say it's
China. And this is why I'm scared of China. You're going to miss the American superpower
because I don't know that they're going to be remotely friendly with how they try to exert their, or even like front-facing friendly with how they try to exert their control.
Is that something you think happens?
Are you afraid of that?
I wouldn't.
So fear is less of how I define it.
It's more like a series of probabilities.
Is that a probability you see?
That's absolutely a probability I see. And the
way that China executes on its ambitions is different than the way the United States executes
on their ambitions. That was my next question. Right? We try to incentivize people to do what
we want them to do. Hey, do it. And it might be a little bit bad for you, but it'll also be really
good for you. That's not Asian parenting. That's not the Asian way of doing things. The Asian way
of doing things is do it this way or you'll be punished. Or else. So I like the world of incentives because incentives always give you options,
but the world of enforcement is difficult. And so this is why 10 years will help to define kind of
what's going to happen to all of us. But the next 15 to 20 years after that is going to look like
this seahorse, right? Or this seesaw, this rocking back and forth of, you know, democracy becomes a little bit more in vogue.
Yeah. Authoritarian power becomes a little bit more in vogue as we're all kind of trapped in
this fact of which of these do we really choose? Can you speak about Chinese officers or operators operators in America right now? So what I can speak on that's allowed is the stuff that has
been making headlines more and more. We know that the Chinese have secret police stations in the
United States. And Canada. It really was a big deal in Canada. Yeah. Everything's a bigger deal
in Canada. Yeah. Maple syrup's a bigger deal in Canada. Yeah. Yeah. But, uh, so, and they do
that because, uh, at, at the core of the Chinese experience, like we talked about the American
experience at the core of the Chinese experience, you are Chinese first. That's ideology that we're
talking about. Right. So you, you have such a close tie to your family and you have such a
close tie to the homeland. And even if you are a Chinese immigrant, you're still fighting for your family and for the homeland, right? It's
still your first loyalty. It doesn't mean it's your first loyalty by like 99 to one. It could
be 60, 40, but it's still your first loyalty. And you are oftentimes responsible for caring for the
older generation. So your revenue, your money is actually going back to China to take care of your
parents until you can bring them to the United States.
Which is quite common for immigrants, though.
It is.
I don't think it's idiosyncratic to China.
But I think he's juxtaposing it to the U.S. ideology, which is self-first, I would assume.
Correct.
In the United States, mom and dad have a retirement fund and they have Social Security and they save their own 401k.
And if they didn't, well, why the hell didn't you do that, mom and dad?
That's on you.
their own 401k. And if they didn't, well, why the hell didn't you do that? Mom and dad, that's on you. Yeah. Like now you're draining on me. How does it feel that, you know, the, the grandkids
are eating ramen because you can't pay your diabetes bill or whatever it is, right? Like
that's a whole different mindset in the United States. Yeah. So stuff like secret police stations
that are not sanctioned, uh, the incredible amount of Chinese intelligence collection that happens here. In the last week
before coming here, we had a military person, a U.S. military officer, or sorry, U.S. military
enlisted person get arrested for Chinese espionage. We had Google, a technician at Google,
got arrested for Chinese espionage. Wow. Right? So the Chinese are actually actively recruiting
from our tech sector and from our military.
And that's just in the last seven days.
When you look at the prosecuted cases of Chinese espionage in the United States over the last five years, it's record-breaking.
More intelligence espionage case arrests, just arrests, than ever before.
Every time there's an arrest, our rule of thumb is for every one arrest, there's nine more operations that haven't been caught yet.
Whoa.
So it gives you an idea of how active the Chinese are against the United States.
I don't want to paint the Chinese out to be a bad guy.
They're just doing the same shit we do.
This is the game.
But we're the big dog.
They're trying to become the big dog.
They're a little meaner dog, though.
They're a very different breed.
What is their offer for espionage?
Is it just money?
So the offer for espionage,
when we talk about the offer,
we have to remember it goes back to those four, right?
Those four ideologies or those four motivations.
Reward, we usually associate with money,
but reward is not about money.
It's about what you will do with the money, right?
Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah.
You guys don't work for money.
You might think at surface level, of course I work for the money.
No, no, no.
You work for what you're going to do with the money.
Okay.
So what the Chinese have learned about our culture is that in our culture, we all brag
about the money and we keep secret what we're going to do with the money.
It's really there because I'm worried that my kids might not have enough money for college.
It's really there because I'm worried about when I get older and I get sick.
It's there because I'm worried about something or something else. So when they make a plea for us,
or when they make an offer to us for money, oftentimes it's because we're already in debt
and we've made bad financial choices because our culture is a debt-driven culture.
And we're also worried about money in the future because we're already in debt.
culture. And we're also worried about money in the future because we're already in debt.
So it makes it very easy for them to come in with a monetary salvation. And we're like,
oh shit. Yeah. I mean, my secrets are worth that much to you because my own government doesn't think they're worth that much to them. 200K in student loan debt. Even though I work at Google,
I still have a lot of debt and I'm worried. Yeah. And then you've got the whole, the ideology of
the United States also includes cultural ideology that doesn't exist in Asia.
Like, for example, sex is still a taboo topic in the United States.
As open as it's become, it's still a very taboo topic.
Like the whole sexual deviancy thing I was just telling you guys about, right?
We don't really like to talk about what our particular kink is with just anyone.
We don't really like to talk about how often we have sex or don't have sex with our spouse or our girlfriend or whatever else.
We don't like talking about whether or not we explored homosexuality in college.
There's all sorts of stuff that we don't talk about that Europe talks about on the front page of the newspaper that they'll go out and have drinks and like cheers each other.
Is China way more comfortable with it?
No, but China.
I find it hard to believe, yeah.
They're not more comfortable with it, but they know we are uncomfortable with it.
So they know how to present us with what's known as in,
in colloquial terms, sex spionage.
They can feed our sexual interest because they don't have individual freedom.
It is what the, I guess the CIA accused Trump of doing with Russia.
Like, Oh, you got peed on you don't
want anybody to know that we got you get peed on now we hold this power over you china will do that
to someone in the that's that's the c in rice that's coercion blackmail is coercion the other
option of that is you get a chinese girlfriend a discreet quiet beautiful girlfriend that goes
where you need her to go when you need her to go there and she treats you like a king every time you arrive so every couple in williamsburg is just spies
it's not it's not a far-off accusation right but you want to know why all those i mean there's a
there's a real problem with american academics traveling to asia yeah the reason that it's such
a problem is because they land in kuala lumpur and they have their chinese girlfriend waiting
for them for four days that their spouse doesn't even know about. All taken care of by the academic
institution that invited them there. And those girls might not start as operatives. They might
just be actual hookers or mistresses or whatever. And then they become an asset of an operative.
Right. Yep. This is so interesting. And then you're saying that we can't do it in America
because we have individual freedoms.
In other words-
You can't force an American
to become, to prostitute their body.
Yeah.
Now, if they do it, they do it.
But we can't say this is what you should do.
Correct.
And if they do it,
so not only that,
but in the United States,
we've also gone for our actual trained agents,
our trained field operators,
we actively enforce
that they don't take that step.
Because when you take that step because
when you take that step it might be that any kind of romantic or physical anything yeah because of
our ideology in the united states sex is very difficult to separate from connection okay of
our control have you have has anybody ever tried to flip you we've all been attempted in different
ways and how did you know?
Could you tell they were an agent?
Yeah, and what were they doing? Where were you?
Can you say where you were? Yeah, so
my time at CIA,
I can't talk about that. Okay.
When I left CIA, one of my first big
jobs was in private intelligence. Okay.
I went to the United Arab Emirates,
UAE, to carry on
a private intelligence contract there.
Because they were pulling from the Trump school of thought.
And they were like, hey, we're going to privatize our intelligence also.
And it was a high-paying job in a foreign place.
I could take my family and write my own check, right?
So you had to go get intelligence on someone out there?
Can you speak on it?
It's an NDA contract.
But I was supporting private intelligence in Abu Dhabi.
Right.
Those are our peoples out there, you know what I mean?
Well, they're our allies, right?
Yeah.
So when you're out there, you're also presented to everybody else who's traveling through Dubai or traveling through Abu Dhabi.
So you've got the Russians and the Chinese and the North Koreans, the Iranians.
All of them can travel through the Middle East,
unlike they can in parts of Europe, right?
So you have everybody presented to you all the time.
So what oftentimes happens is
it's not like it is in the movies
where somebody walks up to you and they're like,
they hand you like a suitcase
and they're like, you're going to spy for us now, right?
It's not quite like that.
Instead, they try to build a relationship with you.
They try to find out what you do.
You know they're a foreigner.
You hear the foreign accent.
You know they're a foreigner because they have an ID,
a national ID in the Emirates that says what your nationality is, right?
But you still have to do business with all of them.
So you have to work with the Chinese and the Israelis and the Russians.
The difference is how do you determine which are doing a job and which are doing the other job? Yeah. What gave it away? Well, it doesn't get given away until they start asking
you to have like personal relationships where you keep secrets. Okay. And give me an example. Like,
was there anybody who was really good? And while it was happening, you're like,
oh, these motherfuckers, this is a new level. I didn't even.
So the Mossad is actually really good at this. Okay, so
tell me, tell me. So when Mossad... Mossad will work
with you. Mossad is the...
Is Israeli intelligence. Israeli foreign
collection. Yeah. Shin Bet... Is
their FBI. Is their FBI. Got it.
So Israeli Mossad will...
They'll work with you. They'll collaborate with you. They'll share
with you. Everything's a team fight. And it's
always in the workplace until you have a big victory.
And then when you have a big victory, then they're like, we should celebrate this at this nice hotel or at this nice bar or whatever else.
We've got a connection through the Israeli connections.
And now we're going to have a private room and all this other stuff.
And it's going to be this bang-up party.
bang a party.
Once, as a trained intelligence officer,
once someone takes you from a public setting into a private setting,
you know that you're now on what we call
a developmental path.
They're trying to develop you into...
So you're immediately hit to it.
You're immediately red flagged.
Okay.
Right?
Red flag me, you red flag them.
Correct.
Got it, got it, got it.
But at the same time,
there's lots of cultures that just want to party.
Yeah.
So you go to the party.
And then you have to assess.
You could go both ways, honestly.
Okay.
This is good.
This is good.
This is good.
So you have to assess then what happens at the party.
So you're at this party.
So now when you're at the party, again, a standard Mossad tactic is you're at the party
and then they'll start pulling you off of the main party to have like these sidebar
conversations about work stuff.
Like, hey, it was
incredible that you found that thing, that you found
that deepfake video and you were able to reverse engineer
who it came from. How did you do that?
Can you tell me how you did that?
This is why it's important that you don't use substances.
If you're a little loose with the drinks,
you might volunteer that information.
And you've already built a rapport with these people.
You guys just celebrated a victory. You're teammates.
It's hard enough sober to not talk.
Yeah, yeah.
Okay, okay.
So you can...
Any stroke in your ego, look what you did.
And exactly.
So you can see yourself going down this, what we also call it a slippery slope.
If you've ever climbed a tall mountain.
Of course.
You get past the tree line, you get into the rocks.
It's like a rock scramble.
We call that a slippery slope in espionage too.
Once you cross that tree line, it's very hard to keep from slipping.
How do you maintain your relationship with them while shutting down their questioning?
You have to, there has to be a point with a trained intelligence person where you use
a language that they understand to let them know that the development stops there.
Can you say what that is?
Fuck.
Yeah.
So you'll, you'll have to say something like,
I appreciate our work together,
but you're getting into a realm
that I'm not willing to share with you.
Oh, so you got it.
I thought it would be more subtle.
You basically just tell them no.
I mean, that's pretty subtle in our world.
Oh, really?
Right?
In our world, subtle is,
I have professional obligations
that prevent me from going down this road.
What's not subtle?
Shoot you in the fucking head.
Are you a fucking spy?
Are you trying to steal?
Yeah.
Slow-mo, must speak.
So you had to say that to him, and then does he
smile and go, ooh, you knew what I was doing?
Is there like a little gamesmanship?
There's some gamesmanship. Not with Masad.
Masad is business.
The Russians,
there's gamesmanship. Because the Russians are thinking this.
The Russians are thinking, you say no
today, But tomorrow.
Game on.
And also, we've been doing this for decades with the Russians, right?
It's a dance.
It is a dance.
Yeah.
Okay.
All right.
Now, I imagine you've also tried to do this with others.
Others.
And did you do the same tactic?
Do you guys have this victory, and then all of a sudden you pull them aside?
No.
So the American tactic is very different than a lot of other tactics.
Okay.
What's the American?
We are personal right out of the gate.
Meme share.
You just share memes.
All the time.
Dick pics.
Yeah.
Okay.
So wait, wait.
You're personal all the time.
What does that mean?
So that means right out of the...
Can you give us an example after CIA?
You can talk about it.
Yes.
After CIA, I can talk about it.
So same private contract in the Middle East.
I needed to bring over a reporting source for my contractor, for my contract holder.
A reporting source means an intelligence source in the private world.
So you need a private intelligence source from another contractor,
and you need to bring them over.
From a foreign country.
And they're professional.
This is what they do for a living, and you've got to break them.
Yes, exactly right.
Except oftentimes you're not trying to break anybody.
What does that mean?
Because you're not trying to, our way of doing things, right,
the best practice in the United States is that you're not trying to break someone's will.
You're not trying to trick them or dupe them.
How do we operate?
With incentives.
Scratch my back i
scratch yours is it yeah only my scratch is better yeah i got you right now now so they don't even
think that they have become a double agent they are you they are grasping with that they they
they are professionals so they know that's what they're being asked to do but at the same time
they're like i'm getting this information which my people might know that's what they're being asked to do. But at the same time, they're like, I'm getting this information, which my people might like.
Or more importantly, they're thinking,
I'm getting this other Benny
that my people don't even have to know about.
Oh, okay.
So take us through.
Okay, so you got your target.
Are there multiple and you lock in on one?
Or was it always one for the whole time?
So usually what it is, is you have a target,
but the target that you want is not reachable
because the target that you want is never reachable because the target that you want is
never going to convert. So you end up
pursuing that target to find out who
their network of close associates are. So then
you can peel off. It's like trying to get a mob boss
and then you just get the other guy to snitch.
Right. So that's more of how it actually
works. And then when you actually find your way to the associate,
ideally the associate has
the ear of the primary target.
So now by influencing the associate, you influence the primary target. Okay, so tell me how you did it. So then when you approach the associate, the associate has the ear of the primary target. So now by influencing the associate, you influence the primary target.
Okay, so tell me how you did it.
So then when you approach the associate, the associate is trained, but the associate also has their own challenges.
Can you give me the story? Can you give me the story of how it happened?
I can give you, it's still NDA, but I can give you some of it, right?
Okay.
So I approached my associate.
You guys are already, have a rapport, you're already working together. Well, I mean, day one. Day one, as soon as I know this is the person that I think is going to get
me connected to the main target, I'm not keeping it professional. I am making it personal. Different
than Mossad. Mossad wants to keep it professional until there's a reason to make it personal.
Our process is different because our process has to fit our culture and what people stereotypically think.
Okay, so what will you do?
What would you?
We've got to come over for dinner.
Come over for a barbecue.
Come meet my kids.
You'll use your family?
Your whole world is yours, man.
And there's no guilt in that?
There's no fear?
There's fear, but there's, I mean, you can control the fear.
You can control your security, but the guilt part isn't really there.
This is a foreigner.
Okay, okay. Keep going. Keep going.
Right. So then right away, you're like, hey, let's find a way to bond over something
easy and surface level. Basketball, football, golf, women, booze, whatever else. Especially
when you're talking to a foreigner, because foreigners have much less like-
Brain.
have much less like brain. They have less sensitivities than a lot of Americans do because we are a Christian culture, you know, at heart. So it's much easier to be like,
Hey, what do you like to do? And they're like, I like to gamble. I like to bet big and lose big.
And you're like, well, then let's go do the thing. Right. And then when you're there and they lose
their ass, then you step in and you're like, man, you've got better luck than me because I lost my ass two hours ago.
So let's put another 500 on you.
And then you start to show them that you're a good time.
You start to do all the same shit that you were saying earlier.
You were like, I like you now and I trust you now.
Also, if you're bringing them to your wife, to your family, your wife knows what time it is.
She's an operative too.
So y'all are firing on all cylinders.
Right.
So that's how you, and now remember,
we're talking about a trained professional on the other side.
Because they know.
So that trained professional on the other side knows who you are
and they know what you did, especially me.
When I left CIA, I've been overt ever since I left.
So they know I'm formerly trained CIA.
So they knew when I was in Abu Dhabi that that's what I was there to do.
I was there in an intelligence capacity.
I was there supporting a private contract.
How the fuck do you still get them?
Because they want something more.
You keep in mind,
secrets are a commodity.
What they want something more,
meaning it's a personal thing
or they representing their country
want something more?
They personally.
They want to gamble.
They want drugs.
They want women.
They have a vice.
They want money
because they've been busting their ass their whole life for a government wage.
They've got kids that have medical issues that can't be treated in their home country.
And you'll find out about all those things.
Yeah, because what happens is when we take it, when you make it personal right away,
when you make it personal right away, you break down all those contrived barriers of what we can and can't talk about.
And you just go to your employer and be like, yo, give me X amount of money and we can
get whatever you need. Sorry, real quick. It can't be, hey, here's money straight up. They have to
trust that you would give them money, no strings attached, right? It's not even just about money.
It's about that you are the solution provider, right? Their kid has an illness. I don't have
to give them money to have them treat
their kid's illness. I can make a call
to a buddy who's a doctor
in Dubai, and you just
have to take your kid's illness. It's to what you were saying. It's not about the money.
It's about what the money buys. What it does.
I've heard this with different operatives where it's like,
oh, they found out they're a huge football fan.
And they're like, dude, I actually have a jersey,
like a Patriots signed jersey.
You should have it. Or they'll give them something like that.
Hypothetically, let's say you found out someone was a huge fan of stand-up comedy.
Let's say they loved Andrew Schultz.
Let's say they loved Akash.
How could you leverage that into getting what you want?
So if I know they're a big fan, well, first of all, if they're a big fan of your types of comedy.
Yeah, they're good guys.
But I know a lot about them. You guys have a very unique style of comedy yeah they're good guys but i know a lot about them because you
guys have a very unique style of sexual deviance so right away yeah they're not going to see sin
bad you know yeah so that tells us a lot but then what i can that's interesting yeah so
it's super important yeah um what we can do is I can say that I have a client that has front row seats to Andrew's next show, but the client can't make it.
So I've got these three tickets that are burning a hole in my pocket.
Do you want to come?
I'll come.
And then do you want to bring your wife or do you want me to find like a cute lady to come with us?
Ooh.
Now, would you buy the tickets outright with the money or would you go to Schultz and be like, yo, can we get some tickets for the thing?
Maybe do a meet and greet?
Well, so the reason I wouldn't right now,
from today forward, from today forward.
That makes me a spy too.
Yes, the reason I wouldn't do that
is because now I put a bookmark in his mind.
Why did Andy want three free tickets, right?
Why do you want to be comped?
If I come to him and I'm like, I want two tickets,
he might be like, oh, it's for you and your wife.
And then he's going to look for me at the show the show but instead it's much easier to just go to fucking
ticket by office and buy three tickets on a throwaway credit card under somebody else's name
and then boom I've got three tickets he doesn't know to look for me that day I can put on some
lame disguise so he doesn't even see me we're good to go right but that's that's how it would work
to the target yeah if you ask me tickets, I would need information.
Yeah.
I'd be like, I want to know everything.
Wait, so you got the dude though?
You got the information from him?
So where I got is I got the guy to understand that he was selling his information
to my clients through the contractor
and that it was a discrete relationship
with the contractor and that I was going to leave.
And that's the ultimate goal for us.
In the intelligence world,
the ultimate goal is to get your target
to share its information directly with the institution
so that you can exit.
That's the ultimate, and that's the game worldwide.
So you don't even want to know the information?
You have to in the beginning,
but the most, everybody who knows the information is a
liability in the, what we call the chain of acquisition, the chain of acquisition of the
information. Can you explain why it would be a liability? Give me a worst case scenario with it.
Sure, sure. So the asset themselves give you a piece of information. Let's just say it's
whatever. They give you the can of information. Well, now they have to give me that same can. If I take a sip or if I spill it, it's different. And then if I give it to you,
you might take a sip or you might spill it. And then by the time it actually gets to the
organization, it's only half full. How often are guys like you doing corporate espionage in the
U.S.? That must be a massive thing because information is everything in business and
competition. So I want to be, I'm going to be very particular about words. Espionage is illegal. Okay. Everywhere in the world, espionage is
illegal. The only reason that clandestine CIA officers can participate in espionage is because
there's a carve out in the U.S. law that makes it so when you're trained by the U.S. government
and collecting secrets about foreign countries in support of the U.S. government and collecting secrets about foreign countries in support of
the U.S. government, you won't be prosecuted for espionage. Corporate espionage, industrial
espionage, always illegal. There's no carve out to protect those. So what do you call it?
So espionage, as you think of it, the definition of espionage is the stealing of secrets.
Corporate espionage shouldn't happen. Most stand-up professionals in the intelligence
world don't do that because the risk is too high, right? If I help Yahoo steal secrets from
DuckDuckGo, I'm going to jail for a long time. Got it. So people don't participate in that.
What they do participate in is private intelligence. Private intelligence means
finding legal methods in which to collect information that you can use to create an analysis or an assessment. So now, if I want to do an
analysis of Verizon in support of AT&T, I can find multiple legal ways to collect data about Verizon.
I can then compile it using proprietary methods that creates an assessment for AT&T.
Two very different things.
Why don't you just target the higher-ups at all, the Fortune 500s,
and then do insider trading, get rich, and sail off into the sunset?
That's a lot more work than you would think, first of all.
And secondly, the higher-ups in a lot of those organizations,
they don't actually carry the decision-making.
I mean, well, target someone
who would be the decision-maker and then trade like Nancy Pelosi. So that is essentially who
does that. It's the boards of directors in those large companies that usually have that kind of
insight because they're the ones that make the decision what doesn't get approved that the CEO
presents. But the people who have relationships with boards of directors are oftentimes politicians or other boards of other members of boards so
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the show. How do you trust anybody's intentions when you meet them? I trust nobody's intentions.
So do you think that I could potentially be working for some government organization?
I think anybody could be.
I think anybody could be.
You're definitely smart enough.
You're handsome enough.
Thanks.
Right?
So you could do it.
But the bigger concern with someone like you is not that you're doing it wittingly.
It's that you're doing it unwittingly.
That you are being used.
That's what I think is happening now with you.
Like, I think you got me.
Put that clip out there, right?
You responded to what we said on the pod.
And then I took the bait, but I knowingly took the bait.
I was like, this guy's baiting me.
And then I get him on the pod.
But then maybe I wanted him on the pod in the first place
you never know
so you're the master
I could be
what country do you think I would be working for?
judging by his nose, Masad
it's too obvious
it's too obvious
because I've been doing all this
Ravra America stuff
but maybe that's just to throw the scent off the trail.
That's true.
You could be really good Latvian intelligence.
Sick.
Yeah, he's got that.
He's like a Division III country dog.
Not even a basketball player.
Is there a country that's really small but has, outside of Israel, that you were surprised by their level of intelligence?
Really?
That makes sense in my state.
Yep.
Cuba's poor.
Cuba's small.
Cuba's ostracized.
Their intelligence is amazing.
And how are they getting their intelligence out there in the world?
I mean, how do they even get it?
Go.
Well, that's what's so impressive about it, right?
What we've learned to do in the United States
is leverage our economic incentive
to get people to spy for us.
Cuba leverages almost exclusively ideological motivations
where people feel bad for the plight of Cubans.
They feel like it's an injustice what's happened to the cubans and they feel like
that poverty is being forced by western democracy or whatever else so what they're able to do is
find sympathists and then cultivate those sympathists to either take positions of government
or they have found the sympathists already in positions in government and then they can
boost them up item montez, interestingly, Ana Montes.
Ana Montes.
Yeah.
Perfect example.
The Ana Montes case is really interesting because Ana Montes was working for DIA and recruited by the Cubans at the same time as another gentleman named William, might be William Burns, who was working for the Department of State and also recruited by the Cubans at the same period of time.
Who was working for the Department of State and also recruited by the Cubans at the same period of time. And this was during the Clinton administration when Clinton's all of his foreign policy about Cuba was being dictated by.
Two spies?
By two organizations, the State Department and the DIA.
They were already influenced by.
And those were the leading experts on Cuba.
What the fuck? Cuba. So the entire Clinton administration was being essentially directed by the Cubans because
of this
perfect conglomeration, this perfect triangle
of intelligence. And when do we find
that out?
I think she was convicted
in the early 2000s, actually. When was Ana Montes
convicted?
Let me find out.
Arrested in 2001.
Okay, now. So the damage had already been done Arrested in 2001. 2001. Okay, now.
Wow.
Yes, so the damage had already been done.
It couldn't be undone because he's already out of office.
It was years that she was involved.
All eight years, theoretically.
Now, that's really interesting.
You don't necessarily need to get your citizens in another country and then trick them into allowing them into government.
You can get the sympathies in those countries into government.
And, wow, you probably even see that happening now right that's why
ideology is the most powerful of all the motors think about all the things that fall under like
religion ideology uh nationalism ideology academics ideology family ideology ideology
is a super powerful thing man has has any other countries done that to us as well
uh yes so the i mean the the russians that's right the
russians there was a what was that story there was a guy who's like he was the head of the
investigation unit uh i guess what was it in the fbi it was yeah yeah you tell the story yeah this
is this is i i mean i know why we haven't made a movie of it but this should be every one of their
movies robert hansen and aldrich ames, again, during the Cold War period.
One was FBI, one was CIA, and the Russians had recruited them both for upwards of a decade.
So they were able to collect information on what CIA operations were in Russia and what FBI operations were against Russia in the United States while simultaneously
being able to influence what...
The organizations were actually looking into
and on top of that, the people
within those organizations that were hired
to look for the mole
were them.
These two guys were
so senior that when the mole hunt
started... They're like, we'll take a look.
They hired the mole.
We are the mole.
We are the easiest. We are the easiest.
We got to the top level.
How did the fall then?
You would think that's such a powerful thing.
Good question.
How did that work?
How did the U.S. essentially win the Cold War?
At least that's what I understand happened.
The U.S. didn't win the Cold War.
Russia imploded.
If you remember, the fall of the Berlin Wall was the Soviet Union collapsing.
Is that because communism is sustainable?
I mean, the way the USSR was trying to run communism wasn't sustainable.
And then you think China's worked out those kinks?
I'm very worried about China, if you can't tell. Well, just to stay on this one real quick is, I think the CIA had implemented an economic deployment.
A block.
No, not even a block.
I think they were deploying resources to American, what was it, impressionist artist art no it was a post-modern post
modern art like they were deploying capital to bolster western i guess ideology and artistic
expression so there was like um there was a there was a move to i guess what supports certain
cultural institutions in america and make them seem more successful than they really were?
Correct.
So again, what you're getting at
is a lot of what defined the pre-911 CIA.
Got it.
Which was spaghetti on a wall.
Oh, just try anything.
Try anything.
Oh, yeah.
And it's very difficult to quantify
the value of any of those things, right?
Like pouring a bunch of money
into post-modernist art
done by Spanish artists
in Barcelona.
This is funny.
Right?
This is funny.
Let's try it.
In retrospect, we're like,
it was the most genius,
but yeah, it did nothing.
Not that we could measure.
Maybe it was the game changer.
MKUltra, same thing?
Same thing.
MKUltra is one of those things
where it's like,
hey, the bad guys are doing it.
We should do it too.
How do we measure the success?
I don't want to end before 9-11
with no oversight so you guys could just throw anything at the wall. Project doing it. We should do it too. How do we measure the success? I don't want to end before 9-11. You have no oversight.
So you guys could just throw anything at the wall.
Project Stargate, right?
Remote viewers and trying to use LSD
to be able to hack into people's brains.
The bad guys are doing it.
We should do it too.
How do we measure it?
I want to go into MKUltra and Project Stargate,
but also real quick, just back to CIA spending.
That's what some people say the space race was about, right?
Bankrupting Russia.
And did that lead to the implosion of Russia?
It was part of it.
The thing that backfired is that Russia beat us in the space race in two out of, I think, four categories.
Yeah, they got there at first.
They had the first spacewalk.
They did first spacewalk, but they didn't hit the moon.
Correct, but they didn't get to the moon.
That's right. And their spaceships
were fucking insane. Did you see the thing?
Like, it was a crapshoot.
The things that they were sending up
there, the
fact that any of them worked.
The first guy, I forget the guy's name, the
balls on this guy. Yuri,
what was it? Yuri, I forget
his last name right now i mean they're
literally just going we need to beat the americans send anything out anything trash cans with duct
tape dude yuri gagarin thank you very much so that i mean is that true that america was funding or
the cia was funding this space race uh in an effort to make russia economically unsustainable
i don't i mean it it's, it is a very plausible theory.
I wouldn't call that a conspiracy theory.
I would call that a very plausible theory
because it makes sense.
CIA maintains a black budget.
That's a covert budget.
And the way that that covert budget is appropriated
is through things that, where there's extra money.
There's extra money that the budget can't account for
that like your bean counters in Washington can't
account for, so they put it in the black budget so that
CIA can use it for national security reasons.
So you basically have a
big deep black check, a big
deep blank check to do
all sorts of crazy shit. That's the spaghetti
on the wall. Now do you think that was more
effective or less? Because I hear you say
the new CIA isn't that great
either. Right.
Or they're just elements of both.
What do you prefer?
The old pre 9-11 or post 9-11?
No, post 9-11.
I prefer much, much better because the post 9-11 one, you have checks and balances to confirm that what they're doing doesn't hurt Americans.
Okay.
Pre 9-11, all sorts of shit could happen.
Yeah.
And you wouldn't have any idea if it's affecting Americans or not.
Right.
So post 9-11, I think it's far better than that.
However, we've also lost our tolerance for risk.
And when you're asking, how do people in the CIA view me?
Like, it's a split decision because there's a lot of people at CIA who are trying their best to do a good job who know CIA is no longer taking risks.
They're afraid to take certain risks because they're afraid that some congressman or some senator is going to say no and someone's going to lose their job and then they're going to lose their pension.
So you've got a bunch of junior officers who are like, we need to try something new. And a bunch
of senior officers who are like, we need to fill the box with exactly what we know. But it is
tricky because you're operating in the most high stakes game. So the risk requires incredible accountability. Right. And the risks are not even
to you, right? Like in intelligence, I may take the risk to collect the secret, but the longer
that secret is protected, all of us are at risk. It's almost like America. Wait, wait, wait. What
did you mean by that? Because if somebody else is holding a secret that they know about us,
that I can't collect, to collect it, I put myself at risk us that I can't collect to collect it. I put myself
at risk. If I don't try to collect it, we put all of us. So you're saying you it's, it's more
beneficial. It would behoove us to take more recipes that actually keeps us all safe. The
risk. So what would a risk be that you would have to take that people are a little bit concerned
about doing? So, uh, uh, for example, right. If you had, uh, if you had a big negotiation coming up for agriculture, and I bring this up a lot because you'd be shocked how much espionage has to do with being able to anticipate agricultural trading.
If you think about what's happening in the Black Sea right now, it's all about agriculture.
I was just about to say, the idea of, let's say, Obama got egg on his face because the NSA was caught collecting secrets about agriculture on Angela Merkel in Germany.
That's right. I remember that.
And it was such a weird thing because we're like, why would we be collecting secrets from one of our allies?
Because Germany is not being transparent about their trade policy with a common third country so we
have to collect from germany and collect from our target third country to see if the two countries
are telling us the truth about each other and they weren't correct so he was right to do it correct so
he didn't really get fucking egg in his face this bitch was lying except that it did massive damage
to the german u.s pack but to me i'm like that's on you. Like if it, if it, go on, go on. I mean,
I understand what you're saying. Yeah, I understand. That's the American point of view.
To NATO, NATO was like, what the fuck, man? How dare you spy on an ally? Germany is the economic
engine of all of Europe. And now you just pissed them off. Okay, okay. So, but continue.
So that's, that's kind of how it works. So the, the, the kind of risks that you need to take are the risks that there's going
to be some kind of flap that makes a rift between the diplomatic relationships between two countries
that are supposed to be strong. And everybody's worried about losing their fucking job because
if it turns out that the intelligence doesn't really support anything, now we took this big
risk to piss off Great Britain or piss off Germany or piss off Canada, one of our allies, and we got nothing from it. You get canned.
Right. And that's Europe. When you're talking about Latin America or Africa,
now you're talking about like, we pissed off the warlord and now they're taking the BNI instead.
And now we've completely lost access to- And China's like, we're not going to do that to you.
Right. Yeah. We're going to play nice on like America.
Yeah. And then we lose all of our global influence.
And not to mention- So there's a big risk.
We force, I'm sorry, I just hit our mic.
Go, go.
And then not to mention, we force our ideology onto the countries.
So we're like, hey, Mogadishu, we'd love to help you.
You need to have free and fair elections.
You are not a democratically elected president, so you need to create a schedule of elections,
and you need to find a way to make sure that your voters can all vote equally.
And then meanwhile, that same warlord has the Chinese going up and being like, we and you need to find a way to make sure that your voters can all vote equally.
And then meanwhile, that same warlord has the Chinese going up and being like, we don't need you to change shit.
Fuck what you do to the port.
You just need to sign on the dotted line here that we have access for the next 99 years.
And why is that so important to us that we push our ideology?
Easier to control?
It is our post-World War II strategy. Coming out of World War II, remember, the United States was pretty much untouched
during World War II.
If anything, our economy exploded.
Germany, France, Poland.
Reeling.
Destroyed.
Yeah.
Like, industrially
and architecturally destroyed.
Yep.
So we went in there
and we were like,
hey, we have plenty of money
to give you loans.
We have plenty of infrastructure
to come in and start
building immediately. But in order to get access to that money and access to this, you have to give you loans. We have plenty of infrastructure to come in and start building immediately.
But in order to get access to that money
and access to this,
you have to follow these guidelines.
And then we became the leader of the democratic world, right?
But why did we feel like that was advantageous?
That intimidated Russia, maybe?
So we thought it was economically advantageous
because we knew that by rebuilding these countries...
Oh, no, that part makes sense.
But why pushing ideology?
Why was the ideology...
The rice thing?
Where ideology is the strongest.
Correct.
So if we can control your ideology,
we can control your country.
Everything, right.
Got it.
I see, I see.
And we're essentially programming
into the new economy
a reliance on the United States.
Yeah.
Ooh!
Brilliant.
Brilliant. Holy fuck. Yep. And guess who's following that model now? China. They are programming into these economies that they are putting money,
that they are now reliant on China. That's what we've been doing. And this is, I love my country.
I love the CIA. This is how it works. This is best practice. This is the game.
This is the game.
If you don't like it, that's fine.
It's still the game, whether you like it or not.
And it's the game that we mastered,
and it's the game that we have now been playing for so long
that somebody else has been watching our tape,
just like you watched the rival football team's tape,
and now they're like, I think we know how to do it better.
I'm listening to you talk.
It's almost like, you know, you talked it better i'm listening to you it's almost like
you know you talked about when you're young you have a big tolerance for risk and then as you get
older not so much it's almost like the u.s as a young country took on all the risks ca throw
spaghetti at the wall here's the money who gives a fuck as the u.s gets older more security now
we're like yo chill everybody let's just keep things the way they are i don't want to take
also when you're in to our detriment when you got the top spot there's only one place to go so everything
feels like risk it's true when you're coming up it's like yeah this was worth it we could get the
top spot so again so so democracy pushing democracy pushing ideology is a is a form of control
in that not only do we control what they believe in, but we can control the way that they operate commercially.
Is that the idea?
Yes.
I mean, how does the democracy create the reliance on the U.S. outside of the loan?
Because if we as America want a certain political power to win in an election,
we can come in and say, we believe in this person, not that other person.
Yeah, we've done that before.
We will give more foreign aid because this person is such a strong democratic leader.
But if you vote for that person, we're going to have to pull back our foreign aid, right?
It's exactly what we did with Hamas in Palestine, right?
We said we will support the Palestinian people in Gaza.
And then we reclassified Hamas as a terrorist group again, right? We declassified
them in 2019, reclassified them in 2024 as a terrorist group. And then once we reclassified
them, we pulled money out. Because we can't support a terrorist group. But we didn't define
them as terrorist group. No, what I'm saying is you do it in order to, and I imagine other
countries also are like, well, I can't be supporting a terrorist group.
That's what we, I think that's what our strategy in conjunction with Israel was hoping for.
But instead what happened is many of our closest European allies were like, that's fucked up, America.
We're going to double down and put more money in Turkey, France, Spain.
They kept it going.
And now that's why you see the Biden administration where they are now bound up.
Because now they're like, well, shit. We we took we called them terrorists. We took back money and people are still dying and Netanyahu still going crazy. So what do we do now? Now there's a split between Netanyahu and Biden.
Now they're talking to the opposition parties in Israel to see if they can find a way to make a ceasefire of some sort, right? I mean, today is the second day of Ramadan, which is one of the largest Muslim holidays.
And there was supposed to be a ceasefire that was orchestrated to help kind of honor this holiday.
And instead, it's not happening.
What do you think happens?
In Israel-Palestine?
So, I mean, for all the concerns that people had about putin being ousted during his war in ukraine
netanyahu is at way more risk than putin ever was really because israel is a functioning democracy
right right the people actually have a say yeah there's relative transparency there they already
have people calling for re-election they already have opposition leaders being welcomed and
acknowledged in the West.
Like Netanyahu's in a nasty place.
Really?
Is there not support for Bibi in Israel right now?
There is support, but it's a very narrow far right support.
Got it.
Where most of the country has taken a very moderate stance.
Oh, I thought that the war kind of unified the country behind him.
It did for the first.
Probably temporarily, similar to 9-11.
The protests are coming back. Oh, and now they're starting to come back interesting so he's what's remember
9-11 how we all got along and then eventually it's very quickly doing that what the fuck are
we doing we split further than ever so it's almost like you have a small window to get done what you
need to get done where you have full support and the longer that window lasts the riskier your
position is and we learned that lesson after 9-11,
which is why the Americans went out and said,
hey, you know, Israel, you have had an injustice done.
Don't do the air raids that you're planning.
Don't make the mistake that we made.
Interesting.
But it was a political opportunity for Netanyahu to-
Consolidate power.
In a time when there was already divisiveness about whether or not the country liked him or not.
And as a result, to your point, Hamas is now more popular with stronger support in both Gaza and the West Bank than ever before.
Because people, there is absolutely a difference between a Palestinian and a Hamas terrorist. They are
not the same thing. But because the media for so long has called them the same thing,
as you have used the two words interchangeably, now it's common knowledge. If you look at the news
a week after October 8th, when the attack happened, you would see the news say 11,000 people have been killed in Palestine, according to Hamas authorities.
And then you would see a little disclaimer at the bottom that says Hamas controls the Gaza.
So the health into the health, whatever comes from them.
Right. So basically saying, don't trust this information because it comes from Hamas.
When you look at the same thing now, it'll say 30,000 people have been killed according to the Palestinian health authority. Oh, wow. Wow. So we have just validated that Hamas,
who we are also calling a terrorist organization, is a valid government organization. Oh. And it's
tricky because they've always been the appointed political power in gaza since 2007 so they have been that but because
we've been so shitty with our vernacular and our terminology we've let the waters get foggy and now
it's very difficult to teach people the truth well i think we've questioned whether or not
they were actually democratically elected right that was my understanding yeah there's there's
very little evidence to say they were democratically elected.
But it's also because of the
apartheid that's been practiced in
Palestine territory for so long,
there's a question of whether or not
they could even have a democratic election.
But it's the
fact that they're growing in popularity on the West Bank
is the part that's so interesting, because the West Bank has always
been a U.S.-backed
coalition of the Fatah government. And and now even that is falling apart so what do you think happens do
you think bb gets ousted i don't i i would imagine in israel either a ceasefire is called that gets
prolonged while some new normal takes place and a two-state solution comes back on the table. That's the
most likely thing that's going to happen. Whether that happens soon or not, I don't know, whether
we're talking months or years. But for Netanyahu to remain in power, he's going to have to call a
ceasefire and then work through a ceasefire. Same thing is going to happen in Ukraine. Ukraine and
Israel are going to look very similar from this point forward. In what way? Because the aggressor or the US-backed country, Ukraine and Israel,
have both made promises that they can't maintain.
There's no way Zelensky is going to win this war to the point
where all of the pre-Soviet era boundaries of Ukraine are returned to Ukraine.
So now the decision is just how many people are going to die.
Yeah, this is the decision is how many people are going to die before you call a ceasefire
and basically cut the country in half according to the borders that are already there.
In Israel, Netanyahu's promised that he's going to occupy Palestinian lands
once they are done clearing, cleansing the people of Hamas.
Right.
That's not going to happen.
You're not going to cleanse them of Hamas.
You've created an injustice.
Hamas is always going to be there. And then if you do occupy Palestinian lands,
they're still Palestinian lands. And now you're going to have even more impetus for Palestinians to join Hamas and fight back against Israeli occupation. So both of those leaders are going
to find they can't fulfill their promise. The next best thing to fulfilling your promise is
essentially to find some kind of prolonged stalemate that gives the world a chance to reset with a different disaster that takes the attention off of you.
And then once that different disaster comes in, what do you do?
Then for those countries, they're off the X now.
Off the X, meaning not everybody's watching them.
And then while they're not watching them, do they try to find some sort of solution?
And then everybody's got their tail tucked between their legs, but it doesn't matter because nobody's looking.
Frankly, what I think is going to happen is Zelensky and Netanyahu are going to get political sanctuary asylum in the United States.
Wow.
Because think about it, the United States can't let Zelensky die.
They cannot do it.
He's the voice of democracy in Europe, and everybody knows Putin wants to kill him because that's going to be a fantastic win for Putin. Putin's killed at least two other opponents in the last three years, right? So Zelensky
already, if he hasn't already signed the deal, it's coming his way soon. He will get asylum in
the United States and he'll be a leader excommunicado, right? And that's-
And then who leads the country when he's gone?
It's going to be a shadow puppet government for Russia or it's going to be a puppet government
for NATO, one way or the other.
So Ukraine and Israel are begging China to invade Taiwan.
Correct.
They're like, do it tomorrow so that we could settle our ship without the X on our back.
And China's sitting here watching the whole thing.
Go in.
America's running out of money.
America's already out of ammunition.
NATO is torn on war in Europe. It's time to dance. Nobody cares about what's happening out of ammunition nato is torn on war in europe it's time to dance nobody
cares about what's happening out here in the south except one thing the company that is putting the
stock market on its back happens to be a taiwanese company and we will not let anything happen to
nvidia so what they gotta do is get nvidia the fuck out of Taiwan. If China was like, I'll take the entire company
and I'll just move it to Palo Alto,
I think that it might work.
So what's funny is NVIDIA
is the AI company,
but it's built on the back
of TMSC,
the semiconductor company.
That's in Taiwan.
So TMSC, it's the
semiconductors in Taiwan that are the key to the future.
And that's why we're protecting them.
Correct.
If China can find a way to get their hands on a functioning, working semiconductor industry,
then that's going to massively increase their ability to be a technological opponent, right?
A tech alternative to the United States.
And the first thing they do is cut off supply
of the united states or start to heavily tax it or or more you know put tariffs on it but taiwan
for some reason is just so far ahead of everyone else when it comes to the chip did they do that
on purpose yeah like how did this happen in the united states so we when we were doing these like
experiments with newly industrialized nations right it was taiwan there's a few others out
there in asia as well and what And that was our foreign policy to show,
hey, listen, if you're cozy with America,
look how good it can be.
And what was our strategy? Create something
that makes the industry of that country dependent
on America. Oh, on us.
Not on China, because that's
how we have some influence and control out there.
And at the time, who had
all the demand for semiconductors? We did.
Who was the only country creating high tech?
We were.
And what could we not do in our country?
Create like pollution and silk.
There it is.
So now we can do outsource all of your, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Outsource all of the issues Greta Thunberg is going to complain about.
Build up the industry of another country right next to one of your potential
adversaries at the time china was an ally oh wait a minute really yeah oh that's right because
they're they're making all the shit that we're buying correct so we didn't even foresee and we
do we have military bases in taiwan right now uh we don't have military bases in taiwan we have
military bases across the south pacific um but taiwanese military bases are uh they are they're
shared so like American
planes and jets can land on those bases
with Taiwanese permission
so unplanned unannounced kind of thing
I'm very impressed with your geopolitical knowledge
I don't know shit man
this is the smart guy
that's why Altman wants to raise a trillion dollars
to get the semiconductor production over here
so 2030 when
China is like at the same level as America,
and now that becomes...
Chill, chill, chill, chill, chill, chill.
When it happens, because it will happen.
Knock on wood.
When all of our attention is on China,
what do you think happens with the race relations here in America?
Because we have so many Chinese Americans,
and you said Chinese people are China first.
So what's going to happen here?
It's an interesting question.
Alex thinks every Chinatown
is a cell.
Yeah, you're right.
This man's a genius.
Son!
Inside. What the fuck?
How are you right about that?
Every once in a while.
You've been saying this for years.
Go on, go on, go on. He's been dying on this
cross, so this is going to be great to hear. I'm glad that you lived on that cross. Go on, go on, go on. Now, he's been dying on this cross, so this is going to be great to hear.
I'm glad that you lived on that cross.
You're totally right, man.
Wait, tell us, tell us, tell us.
So wait, you're right.
So essentially, the way that diaspora communities insulate intelligence collection is that the intelligence collection facilities or the intelligence collection agencies plant themselves in the diaspora.
So Chinatown is a diaspora
of Chinese immigrants in a foreign country.
So the intelligence community
just plants its own operatives inside that community.
It's not like the community is there
for intelligence purposes.
It's not even like the community knows
that there's intelligence there.
It's just a very convenient entry point.
It's what we call a beachhead.
It's a very convenient beachhead
for an opponent force to insulate itself from local law.
And do we have beachheads in other places?
It's tougher because, first of all, in the United States, we don't have to, we don't create diaspora communities.
Instead, we create expats who acculturate the local community, but they're still Americans.
acculturate to the local community, but they're still Americans.
And we don't really have to hide because we can just be like,
hey, we're coming in to party
and we're going to bring new business and American dollars
and everything else and everybody wants us there.
Much harder for a foreign country
to come in to another foreign country and be like,
could you imagine if the Chinese were like, we're here to party
and we're bringing Chinese Yuan with us.
And we're like, convert that into dollars.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Look at TikTok.
I gotta sell this
who who controls china has a 50-year policy right two questions does america have a 50-year policy
no oh so america has been you're saying for the last few hundred years been curating its policy
four years or eight years at a time? Correct.
Oh my God. I mean, it's mind
boggling that we've even been able to compete.
It's impressive that we got this far.
And then what does that speak to? Does that speak to the
power of capitalism or democracy?
It is unbelievable that
we've been able to compete at the highest level
with a new dude in
charge every four years. You have to think
back to the intentions of the
founding fathers. What the founding fathers put in place was brilliant. It was the reason that
they're called government servants is because you're supposed to sacrifice four years of your
life to go be a government servant because you were in industry or entertainment or business
or something else. Especially true in Congress.
I mean, and that's what it was up until like the 1950s.
And then they became these career politicians.
But you're right.
It was like it was some local person from the community was going to stop his job for two years.
I think that's why the what is it?
The House of Representatives is only a two year term, right?
It's because, dude, I can't step away from my farm for six
years and do this. Yeah, and
now that idea has completely
gone to the wayside. Now we have
congressmen in place for 13 years,
18 years, 24 years. Yeah.
And who sets the term limits for Congress?
Congress.
So it's not even in, like, that's
one of the places where there's a lack of checks and balances.
There's no check and balance there whatsoever.
They give themselves a raise.
Yep.
It's insane.
This legislative branch is the least checked branch of all of them.
And the idea is that the check is built within it, that not any one of them have this, you know, huge amount of power.
Of course, I get that.
Because it's a two-party system.
Yes.
But when they're acting as a collective
and they're all incentivized by the same thing there's no check on that so maybe that was the
one thing that they missed because i'm sure at the time when the founding fathers were creating
they're like who the fuck would want to be in government yes even george washington was like
dude just owning slaves is way better he's like fuck all this freedom shit. He said, no. I need some new teeth. Yeah.
So it's like, yeah.
Oh, wow.
That's so interesting.
They couldn't fathom that people in a free world would want to govern.
So they didn't even put the check into it.
Because it was always supposed to be a position for the most experienced, most elite people with the most to lose.
Because, again.
That's a fucking great point, too. If you had nothing, if you were not a land owner-
You couldn't even run for office.
Which sounds incredibly unfair,
but understand it was supposed
to be representative.
So the people that were most affected
by these laws were the people
that did own land.
Right.
So in our own,
this is why I call us,
like this is why I say that we're in the country, we're in middle school.
It sucks.
It's a childish problem to have.
You don't even realize it.
But we're not the youngest in terms of democracy.
No.
So there are other countries that are way older in terms of their culture, but their democracies are much younger.
Do they have the same problems?
They do, in large part because their democracies are modeled off of ours.
Yeah.
So Taiwan is one of those.
Because we were first, we didn't see this problem coming, I don't think.
Right.
Taiwan is a fantastic example.
January, Taiwan had elections.
The president that was elected was part of the opposition party, the separatist party from China.
And the whole world rejoiced, like, oh, the new Taiwanese president is in opposition to China. The Congress
of Taiwan is in favor of reunifying with China. Wait a minute. The dominant party in the Congress
is pro-China. The president is anti-China. Hold on, hold on, hold on. Is China influencing these
Is China influencing these elections?
So there is a way where China can get Taiwan without even having to invade.
That's China's way of doing it.
Look at what they did in Hong Kong in 2019.
Now, I would say that was a little more forceful.
The force happened at the end.
But you're saying the lead up was there was like in it was ingratiation.
Is that the China? China has some of the best legal capabilities in the world. That's why so many American law school graduates are actually Chinese citizens because people come to law school
here. Chinese people come here for law school and then they go practice law all over the world.
So they learn international law or American law? American law, democratic law school and then they go practice law all over the world. So they learn international law or American law?
American law, democratic law.
And then they apply that.
So in Hong Kong, what happened is over the course of maybe five years, China systematically
changed the legislative values of Hong Kong using very legal methods.
Fuck, it's really smart.
Until the time came when they pulled the dial and they were like, hey, Hong Kong, now all of your citizens
are held to Chinese laws.
And then the people were like,
that's not legal. And then China was like,
actually, yes, it is.
So this is really...
Just beating us at our own game.
It's just really smart. It's like how you
avoid hot war.
Wow. Because they know they don't have the
military to win a hot war. Well, I think they could win a hot war against Hong Kong. It's, wow. Because they know they don't have the military to win a hot war.
Well, I think they could win a hot war against Hong Kong.
Yeah, but maybe not against.
Superpower scale.
Right.
So the same thing is happening in Taiwan.
And we may be paying attention to it now.
It's been happening for the better part of a decade.
And if you just look at Chinese influence on Taiwanese elections,
if you just Google that and then put the word October in there, you'll see that the world woke up to it in October of 2023 for an election that happened in January of 2024.
That's hilarious.
That doesn't mean that the Chinese were building that pipeline for decades.
And it worked.
And it worked. And then now that the Congress of Taiwan is controlled by a pro-China team, it really doesn't matter what the head, the figurehead says.
Chinese are exercising more in the international waters.
The Chinese are, they've, in the most recent national Congress that just happened like four days ago, they stopped talking about a peaceful reunification, peaceful reunification with Taiwan.
What'd they say? They said, we must take a forceful or rigid,
they used a very different word, but it was like, it was something along those lines,
approach to our reunification with Taiwan. I mean, what an amazing advantage that they
would have on us. If we don't have time to build up a semiconductor business and they absorb Taiwan
peacefully, what if they don't even have to be rigid or forceful? That's their goal, man.
Their goal is they don't want to invade.
They want to, I mean, we're using the word peaceful
in American terms, just as little bloodshed as possible.
Cold war type shit.
Yeah, I mean, if you-
Manipulate the people into thinking it's what they want.
That's the next level to the game,
is you trick the people into asking for it,
and then you oblige them.
China goes, all right, if you really want it,
if the Congress really wants it
and you guys all want it, fine.
You get your cup of coffee.
What does that mean?
What does that mean?
Coffee, big man.
Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Wow.
Someone's paying attention.
Good.
That was good.
Wow, that's great.
So that is the game. That is the idea. That's paying attention. Good. That was good. Wow, that's great. Yeah. So that is the game.
That is the idea.
That's the game.
The game, and that is Sun Tzu's Art of War, if you just look at it.
Oh, fuck.
Yeah.
It's been published since the 11th year.
It's not even you.
Yeah.
This is thousands of years old or whatever.
This is the Xi Jinping guy.
First of all, there's no way the CIA lets you leave. You're out of your fucking mind. No, cause you're really good at this.
I appreciate you. You're really good at this. You're great at communicating. You're really
patient. Um, I mean, if we ask you, are you allowed to say like, are you a part of the CIA?
I am not a part of CIA. Yeah. The, the straight up truth. I am a former overt. My cover has been
rolled back. I am not a member of CIA. Do you have clearance still? Nope. My clearance expired
after two years, just like they're supposed to do. Right. Uh, I've had a private contractor re-up my
clearance. So I have a, I have a security clearance now under a private contractor, but not a federal
for security clearance. And I run a business that I'm planning
on scaling into the tens of millions. Like that's what I'm doing right now. I'm telling you without
a doubt. If the CIA calls me tomorrow and says, we need your help. You'll do it. Without a doubt.
Now, if they asked me to help introduce them to anybody that I'm on a podcast with, I'd say yes.
But the CIA is the DMV. They don't think that way.
They don't work that way.
They don't take risks.
The risk of me actually working for them
and then that becoming publicly known
is too great for them.
So that's on them, man.
I'm doing what I can do.
I guess what I meant by when I said
you still work for the CIA
is not that you get a check.
In the same way that like a Mark Zuckerberg
or whatever, like I think you reach a certain point
as a business owner in America
where like your business becomes,
what is a gas or electric?
What are those called?
Utilities.
Yeah, where it's almost like a utility, right?
And then once you're a utility,
if the government calls you for something,
you know, you kind of do it, right?
You help them.
And I wonder if people that are in your position,
because I imagine you're kind of unique.
I don't know if every CIA operative is like you.
Would you say that you have a set of skills
that also allows you to succeed
as in like, let's call this entertainment?
So I've-
Or infotainment, whatever you want to call it.
I've certainly developed this
because it takes a lot of punches
before you learn how to do this dance.
Gotcha.
Right?
And it just so happened that I was,
I had no other options except to take some punches for a while. Got it. And that's how I kind of found my to do this dance. Gotcha. Right? And it just so happened that I was, I had no other options
except to take some punches for a while.
Got it.
And that's how I kind of found my voice in this space.
Got it.
Okay.
Because, and I do want you to talk about your business
because I think it's, put it this way.
Maybe you should tell people what the business does.
Because I think it's, after listening to you,
incredibly effective.
Yeah. Thanks, man.
But I don't think CIA is letting you go.
I don't think they're paying you, but I think that you could be incredibly useful to them.
I honestly hope so.
And that's the same thing every former CIA officer says,
is we hope that one day CIA will wake up and realize that we can do a great deal
to bring the community back in support of the national security infrastructure.
Because when there's nothing that bridges the community with the national security infrastructure, conspiracy theory reigns and distrust reigns because we fear what we don't understand.
I'm not sharing any national security secrets here.
here. I'm just telling people like, hey, we're the DMV at CIA. It's staffed with a lot of hard working, dedicated people who are young, who are trying to make a career and abandoning that career
because of an old guard and old way of doing it. We're running like the DMV and China's running
like Apple. There we go. Like Apple sees they're always ahead of the game, it seems. And it's not
necessarily because of innovation at China, like it was at Apple. It's just because it's either
planning, play or get the fuck out of the way.
That's how they work, right?
Okay.
So my company, Everyday Spy, our mission is spy education to break barriers.
So I teach people real-world spy education, facts about CIA, facts about spy systems, spy frameworks, spy ways of thinking, spy's way of keeping yourself safe. If it has any grounding in real
world espionage or real world spy tactics, my mission is to teach that to the everyday person
so they can use it to keep their family safe, their business safe, and their body safe.
That's what we do. But specifically in business, incredibly effective.
It's incredibly effective in not just small business, but also in corporate business.
That's where I saw it.
And that's kind of how I assumed you were going to scale it.
I mean, on the mom and pop shop, it's awesome.
But like sitting down with these CEOs and learning how to effectively communicate with
the people that you might be going up against, how to pull them in as assets, how to extract
information for them.
I mean, yeah.
And that's what I love what you guys are getting at.
And there is value there.
But what I found where the value really demonstrates itself is because it's hard, just
like spaghetti on the wall, you know, postmodernist art funding in Europe during the cold war. It's
hard to, it's hard to measure that. Yeah. Companies have a hard time measuring the real value of
communication skills or negotiation skills. Yeah. So instead, what we often find is that our clients call us in for
very specific, discrete challenges. We had a CFO of one of our clients get deep faked on LinkedIn
and they didn't know who to turn to, but there's this deep fake video on LinkedIn
of a CFO. And they're like, what the fuck are we going to do? Because this is all lies that's been created.
So they call our company in.
We use our network of contacts, and we're saying, hey, guys, we've got to follow the money to find out where this deepfake came from, who's behind it, who's funding it, and how do we shut it down.
Sick.
I see.
Okay, so you're also problem solving.
That's like a crisis management thing, too.
That's where it all starts.
Because really, when it comes to adding value to people, just like that cup of coffee,
you have to add immediate value.
You can't add the promise of future value.
You have to add immediate value.
So when people are in their most,
the position where they're in the most need,
and they come to you and they say,
can you do this?
It's very helpful to have a set of skills where you can do things nobody else can do.
At what point do you tell them
you created the deepfake video so that they're not?
That's actually fucking genius.
Giving away CIA training, that's actually fucking genius giving away uh
cia training that's not going against like whistleblowing or giving away cia tricks so
the thing that cia protects is called their sources and their methods and what they mean
by sources and methods are sources of active current intelligence collection and methods
by which those sources are being collected against so when you teach a framework like understanding human psychology of reciprocity that's not a cia
it's not specific to them they're taking it from some book that uh oh the fuck is that guy
no well boss is a cia guy but there's a book called influence by chaldeen i think his name is
chaldeen how do you pronounce it but yeah so I imagine some of the tactics are coming from that.
Right, so some of these things exist in the ether, and these experts have written about it for years,
and the CIA have probably distilled it down to the most effective, like the sharpest tack.
Because they need to teach people fast, and they need to teach people to use these skills
in the real world under pressure. I mean, to me, I'm like, I'm looking at you,
let's say I have a business, right? I mean, we have a business here, but let's say I have a business with 100
employees and you need the management of those employees and the management with all those
assets, if you will. How do you instill loyalty in them? How do you get people to,
I guess, commit to the ideology of this brand that you're all working for?
It seems to me like it'd be incredibly effective to go to either military or to CIA training
to get the best out of your employees
and also make them feel like they're most committed
to this belief system or this business.
Like that's a no brainer.
Right, the place where, as much as I joke about CIA
being as efficient as the DMV,
which is not very efficient, that is true.
But what they have become very, very adept at is creating a hyper-loyal structure that keeps secrets.
And really, as a business, that's what a business owner wants, is a hyper-loyal group that keeps secrets.
We call that institutionalization.
And there's a model for institutionalization. It's a model that was developed by a psychologist, honed over decades of being applied at CIA,
that now, because I left CIA and learned these tools at CIA, I can now take what I learned at CIA,
the distilled version of what this psychologist put in academic terms, and I can speak about it in layman's terms.
Also, hiring. Just imagine the value in HR.
Yeah. I could see you guys having a lot of value outside of just like singular tasks and singular
problems that need to be solved, but really about building the infrastructure for the business.
Hiring specifically, like if you know that you need somebody, like let's say you're hiring a
manager or like an agent and that agent is going to have
to operate in some murky territory where that guilt complex is going to be an issue not speaking
about dove at all but like like for example for me like i couldn't do what some of these agents do
sometimes these agents try to poach me for my agents right and like it just feels kind of icky
but they don't have that feeling of ickiness. How can you screen for that?
Yeah. You could probably develop something very easily that would help you screen for that.
Right. And then that would distill the hiring process and make it so much more efficient.
Automate the whole thing. I mean, we boil it all down to personalities.
You could have them take a test. You don't even have to meet them until they pass all
the requirements and you're saving weeks of time. You can have them take a short battery that gives
you their personality. You can have an assessment for what type of personality you need for the
position. And then you can also automate a step where they have to demonstrate that they're good
for the position by carrying out a specific task that's even a profit generating task or revenue
generating task. So they're making money before they're hired. And that's before they're even
hired, right? Yeah. And then you can even pay them for accomplishing the task.
Of course.
And you can pay them a portion of the profit that they just earned, right?
So now you're indoctrinating them right at the very beginning that if you're going to
work for us, you must generate revenue and you will be rewarded based on a profit share
of the revenue that you earned.
Have you thought about trying to restructure the CIA like how it would look for you?
One of my, I have five-year goals and 10-year goals.
And one of my 10-year goals for our company is to have a formal contract with at least five members of the intelligence community where we are bringing best practices of corporate America into the-
Maybe we should make that a seven-year goal, 20, 30 goal.
Just throwing it out there.
It'd be nice.
But so essentially,
and what problem would that essentially solve?
So the big problem,
the lifetime problem,
the personal mission problem that I have
is I want to keep America
as the dominant democracy in the world.
We need to remain as the world's superpower.
If my kids are going to have kids
with American passports and American citizenship,
I need to do everything in my power
to make sure that the United States remains dominant, which means I need to make sure my
business makes as much money as possible to feed GDP. And I need to make sure every client I
service makes as much money as possible to feed GDP so we can keep this machine going, especially
if we're going through middle school and presidents are going to be fuck offs and Congress people are
going to be dick wads. We have to keep funding this train until the voting public can mature past that.
Yeah.
So that's my goal.
Money is not what I want.
Money is the tool that gets me what I want.
What you need.
But with the CIA and reforming it, do you have an idea of how the CIA could look?
I think it could look like a very beautiful thing, but that's intelligence reform, and that's the legislative branch and the executive branch working in concert, and that's them opening up to outside civilian consultants.
It's a huge culture change for them if they're going to go down that route.
But you do have an idea of it.
Oh, yeah.
Exactly. Just from sitting with you for a couple hours, I think you have it exactly.
I appreciate it. I mean, thank you for the vote of high confidence. I would give myself about
60% vision because you've got to leave space in there for the realities of how things and
how people work.
How likely is it any of this happens in your brain?
In... For things that you think need to happen i mean i think that in my lifetime before i die in my hopeful late 80s i mean there's there's a 20 chance that we see significant
intelligence reform without a disaster because we had disaster. 9-11 was what brought
intelligence reform the first time.
So you're saying we need another one.
Unfortunately, we are a country
that has a very short memory.
We're reactive.
And until an enemy presents itself loud and clear,
we don't unify. And China knows that,
which is why they don't present themselves
as a clear and present danger.
Yeah, because they don't want our unity.
They'll wait to the last possible moment.
They've read the playbook.
That's part of war.
That's our model.
Yeah, don't engage in war until you know you can win.
Wow.
So be besties, continue making all our shit.
Yeah, wow.
Because we already know that when you invade Taiwan,
it's only going to take about 12 weeks for everybody to forget anyways.
That is true.
We have a short memory.
Wow.
So they know they could invade Taiwan.
We probably wouldn't do anything.
It's like, are we really going to let American soldiers die for Taiwan?
It'd be really hard to get American support for that.
What's the public first response on that?
be really hard to get American support for that. What's the public first response on that? Are the ships that are in that area supposed to make a first day response if there was an invasion?
And that's the big question right there, is what is the military doctrine for engaging China?
Day one. Day one. Because that's the thing. If you have a destroyer off the coast of southern
China that launches cruise missiles onto mainland China.
We're at war, baby.
And that destroyer is going to be sunk because it's right at the gates of China.
Yeah.
So what does that destroyer do?
Does it just park itself in the Taiwan Strait?
Or you park yourself in the Taiwan port and now any attack on Taiwan is an attack on American soldiers.
As long as if you can prevent from attacking that port.
So they'll attack every port.
But so now you need to ship at every fucking port.
All you.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Possible because China knows that you don't piss off Americans unless you kill Americans.
And if you do, we just go crazy.
Yep.
So they will find every way possible to engage taiwan without killing an
american soldier and that's that's that's the way that's the way to keep america fat and lazy
is just don't don't hurt our people and we have a shocking level of forgiveness after that
so fucking true oh my god okay any any other questions before we get you out of here i had
all these but i
didn't i mean i just been writing on the back of this fucking paper i'm not sure what you can share
but i'm curious can you tell us any stories about extreme like near-death experiences on any
operations that you were on or anything that maybe you were almost exposed because obviously this is
high risk yeah yeah so so um with the one operation that I'm very proud of, the, that operation ended
with my near capture. Oh fuck. And I'm trying to get all of those details cleared so I can publish
them all. So that's, that's my personal example. Wife involved as well? No, my wife was geographically
separate at the time, so she was fine. Exactly. But, uh, but that's the story I'm trying to get
clearance to tell. Uh, and hopefully that'll clearance will come soon.. But but that's the story I'm trying to i swear to you the heroes of cia are still
at cia because they have chosen to sacrifice everything else to stay there i mean i feel like
i am proud to have been from there but i chose to leave right it's a if they are a different
kind of hero for choosing to stay give it up for those guys bro
yeah thanks um question of a question yes go um what like sort of movie or book or piece of
content do you think sort of like best represents either your experience of the cia or the cia and
it could be fiction or non-fiction but like, so yeah, it is a very good question.
So in the, in the book world, there's a, a very dry read called inside the CIA.
And it's one of those dry reads that is mandatory for every new candidate. So if you want to know
what it's actually like inside the CIA, read the book inside the sea, I was published in like the
nineties, I want to say. So it was pre 9-11 CIA,
but it's still fairly accurate
for how it's been reformatted since then, right?
So that's book-wise.
Film-wise, I would actually recommend
the first season of The Americans.
If you watch season one of The Americans,
you will see some of the most authentic trade crafts,
covert communications,
some of the real world stressors that they have,
trying to remain clandestinely engaged in operations
while also operating in a cover life.
You and your wife watch that together?
Are you like, no, this is too close to home?
It's too close to home.
It's like being a surgeon
and watching that like Grey's Anatomy or something, right?
Oh, wow.
So like you watch it and you're like,
this is not entertaining because we were there
or it's
too fabricated to be real and that also loses our entertainment value so my wife is a much bigger
consumer of spy fiction than i am uh but periodically i'll watch something where i'm like
oh that was that was pretty solid right gray man why just season one for me it's so good gray man's
also pretty good i actually knew the creative consultant from cia for gray man and that's one of the reasons it was so good and the person who is the most
accurate in all of gray man still comically created is the private intel contractor that
character in gray man is is the most accurate of all the characters in gray man but you're to
answer your question yeah you said uh just season one of The Americans. Why?
After that, it became commercialized.
After that, they got more money and more popularity, so they had to ramp up the excitement and adventure.
Gotcha.
Season one is still very clandestine and sophisticated and grounded.
You said in an interview that you were talking about General Petraeus.
And you said that you're very complimentary of him and you're talking about your guy's relationship and the things that he shared with you.
And it was really beautiful.
But you said this sentence that caught my attention.
You go, you don't get to be that powerful without making mistakes.
And then you kind of just moved on.
What does that mean?
So I don't want to characterize my relationship with General Petraeus as being like a close
personal relationship. I was one of the few CIA officers that could keep up with his fitness
regiment when he was the director at CIA. So when he needed a workout buddy and I was within
a helicopter ride, I worked out with him, right? So he didn't have to work out, buddy. And I was within a helicopter ride. I worked out with him, right? So he didn't
have to work out alone. When we would work out, just like when you guys work out, you talk about
shit. And the thing that I was always the most interested in talking to him about was family.
Because, I mean, everybody knew he was a great general and, you know, he was a hardcore director
at CIA. But he had, I think he had two daughters, three children overall.
And then of course, everything happened after his mistress was outed. So I used to always ask him,
like, as these are the years in my time at CIA leading up to my child's birth. And I'm like,
how did you choose to like lead the Afghan forces versus be home with your newborn daughter.
And he was always very honest about the fact that when he looks back, he regrets the sacrifices that he made for his children because of a fight in Afghanistan that ultimately policymakers abandoned.
So now he's lost two legacies because he doesn't have the relationship with his children and he
doesn't have the legacy of Afghanistan. Right. But that that's what a soldier does and that's how you,
you know, serve and whatever else. Um, but I took that, like, it hit me heavy, man. Cause I'm like,
you know what, when you work for the federal government at the behest of the executive,
the executive changes every four years. If you're, if, if if you're lucky it doesn't happen earlier than
that so are you willing to dedicate a life and potentially lose everything you worked for because
of a change in american leadership so it was so that's what i meant by that quote like to become
as powerful as he did he had to he had to say yes to every operation presented to him no matter how
impossible the odds were or no matter how much sacrifice was required of him and his family.
I interpret that completely differently.
I interpret it as they knew he was having an affair and that's why he was put in a position
of power because he could be controlled.
No, it was at the end of his career as a 60-year-old man looking back, he made these massive mistakes.
He prioritized career over everything and that will be a mistake as you reflect.
He already is.
As he reflects, it is a mistake.
Yeah.
Interesting.
Because you know what you can't do?
That's interesting.
You can't win back your 18-year-old child that you didn't love when they were 10.
Yeah.
You can't win them back.
How often is it that you see this in the movies, there's like some young hacker kid or some
linguist or something. The CIA
reaches out to them
and gets them. Is this
fiction or does this actually happen?
So it's a mix. It does actually
happen. Super talented people
are plucked up by the agency all the time.
There are also super talented criminals
that are arrested by FBI
and plucked up by CIA. Is that right?
Because that's one of the ways CIA can always stay on the cutting edge of-
The prisoners run the asylum.
Of nefarious activity.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Right?
Is learn from the best.
And did you feel like they did that with you?
That they recruited you?
Were they aware of you?
I think that for me, I fell into an automated process, right?
You're in the Air Force.
I'm in the Air Force.
High clearance.
High clearance.
I have been in the Air Force since I was 18 years old. All I've ever known is military structure.
And I came from a military household before that. They knew my grades. They knew my health status.
They knew how many pushups I did for the physical fitness exam. They knew everything about me,
my languages. So when I applied for the Peace Corps, a federal government organization,
when I applied for the Peace Corps, a federal government organization, I just fell, I triggered some algorithm somewhere where they were like, oh, this person is something we should talk to.
Because if you think about it, what does somebody at the Peace Corps want? Adventure, travel,
high risk tolerance. They have no problem with discomfort. They want to change the world.
Well, what does a CIA officer want? All the same shit, right? And you must have checked the other boxes as well.
They already had character screening on you.
Physical fitness, all that shit.
Now, here's a question.
Did you have, they have all this information on you.
The interview process, is it even necessary?
It is.
It is because.
But you get what I'm getting at, right?
You got to keep in mind that information is always past tense.
Ah, so you could have changed.
So it's making sure that you're meeting up with the information that they have about you.
Right.
So they're not going, you're going to wow us.
They're going, we're wowed.
Let's see if you live up to it.
Also, sexual deviancy, all those questions that you have to answer, I assume is different than what we've seen.
Yeah.
This is like, I'm going to ask you about your past.
How are you going to answer this?
What are you going to tell me?
Yeah.
It's like a much more intimate thing than just what I can learn.
You've got a polygraph that you have to go through, right?
Like they have a lot of control as they ramp up the experience or the onboarding experience.
Would you have weapons training?
Did you get weapons?
I had weapons training from the military.
Of course.
And then you get more when you're at CIA. There's different types. Did you have weapons training? You get weapons. I had weapons training from the military. Of course. And then you get more when you're at
CIA. There's different types. Do you ever kill somebody?
I cannot answer that
question in great detail.
I can say that I've never intimately killed anybody.
Intimately killed anybody. What does that mean?
That means when you kill somebody in
personal range. Ah, but maybe
intelligence that you've given ended up getting
somebody. Or you've used some other kind of kinetic
strike that's not person-to-person.
Like a drone strike would fall into that category
of non-intimate.
Are there things that you...
I know that you don't necessarily
feel the guilt.
You feel it,
but it doesn't inhibit your actions.
Are there things that you regret?
Is there PTSD that you regret or is there a ptsd that you feel from really you know you hear all this stuff about people who have been in these environments that you've been in and it's pretty
awful yeah so i i am confident i do not have ptsd okay because i've worked with plenty of people who
have ptsd yeah i've been through some traumatic events, but a big part
of the reason I started a business, to learn about business, I started by writing a blog.
And all my blog was, was my feelings, my stories, my thoughts, and how I'm trying to make something
productive out of all these destructive skills. So it was in that process of kind of like a self-therapy. The blog turned into a podcast. The podcast turned into a product
offering. The product offering turned into kind of mastering the content, right? And that was all
2018 when it started. So fast forward to now in 2024, and it's much more evolved and it's much
more developed. And I have a much cleaner understanding
of my own thought process but that was essentially six years of therapy that i was able to put myself
through and do exactly what i wanted to do create something productive out of the destructive past
that i had before that did you use any of the skills you learned on raising your own children
all the time all the time and my children know it, uh, they don't know any alternative to it. So like our, our family
uses code words. So I don't know what you don't, your kids are too young. Do you have kids yet?
You're married now. So one of the biggest challenges that parents have is teaching their
kids when to open like a hotel room door, when the parents go downstairs to go get ice or something,
or when, when it's safe to open the door to a stranger,
especially because strangers
can say they're police officers
or say they're Amazon delivery people.
So our kids, we teach them code words.
So if a stranger comes to the door
and that stranger is sent by us,
they will know a specific code word.
So our children know to ask a question at the door,
they don't ask what's the code word.
They ask a very specific question.
Oh, wow. And they wait until they hear the response back. And if they don't get the code word back, they don't at the door. They don't ask, what's the code word? They ask a very specific question. Oh, wow.
And they wait until they hear the response back.
And if they don't get the code word back,
they don't answer the door.
Did you give them field tests?
Yeah.
I figured.
But you need that now for AI.
Everyone's going to need code words
because we can just AI anyone's voice.
Yeah, that's true.
Do you have any other CIA parenting tips?
Yeah, so another one is everybody wants control.
So one of the things that you learn about psychology is that we're all vying for control and feeling control isn't the same
thing as actually having control to your point about that gut feeling, right? So oftentimes
what we need to feel like we have control is we just need to feel like we have a say in the outcome.
So with my children,
they started brushing their teeth,
right?
So I would always,
and they never want to brush their teeth.
Every parent knows children never want to brush their teeth.
So we would say,
do you want to brush your teeth now or in two minutes?
And just having that say in the outcome completely changes their willingness to do it.
So we do have this like innate autonomy. We want to be the conductors.
Is that human or American?
It's human. Human beings want to believe that we have power over our future.
Yeah.
What we don't do a very good job of is defining what future we're talking about. So with my kids
now or in two minutes, they're like, oh, I have two more minutes if I say two minutes and then
I can go brush my teeth. Or if you're my daughter, I can say two minutes and then in two minutes negotiate again.
Yeah. But either way, like they feel like they have some sort of power. And oftentimes that's
what an employee wants. How many employees, I mean, I'll never forget. I went on a hiring surge
this year. I had somebody who I made an offer to, and I think it was $80,000. I made an offer to them to
come on as a junior level person in my company. And they hemmed and hawed about it for a couple
of days. And they asked to meet with me and my president so they could come up with a counter
offer. And they came back. And after a lot of like, I've got kids and I've got this and I've
got ambitions and I've got whatever, they came back with a counter offer of $85,000. And I was
like, like your counter offers $5,000. Like that's not a
counteroffer. That's sure. That's an easy yes for me. If you think like $5,000 spread over 12 months
of work over 2,080 hours of your talent, like that's easy. But to that person, they felt like
they were taking control over their future. So I was like, you know, I appreciate your counteroffer.
I think it's very reasonable.
Let's do it.
What was your initial offer lower
knowing that they would counteroffer?
Always.
That's a basic negotiation.
Is that person still at your company?
Because he's probably watching this right now.
He's like, fuck, should have came in at 90.
One of the wisest things I heard,
my friend got a job offer and then he goes,
I rejected it.
I go, what was it?
He goes, I don't know.
I just reject the first offer.
He didn't even look at it, he just rejected it.
Cause he knows they're gonna low ball.
There's a negotiation tactic called
always starting with no, right?
And it's something you'll hear some advanced negotiators
talk about, start with no.
Cause once a sales person or that other person
making the offer hears no, then they at least know
where the starting place is, right? Start with no, I think is a book actually. But no is the place that you want to
go for first. Is somebody listening to this podcast and that's their job at the CIA?
Not because you're on it, but like when we do it regularly, like, do we have a guy?
No, you probably don't have a guy. Here's what most likely happens.
Do we have a guy?
No, you probably don't have a guy.
Here's what most likely happens.
What most likely happens is there's a algorithm.
Yeah.
There's an AI and any YouTuber with probably over a million followers falls into that algorithms watch list.
And then that algorithm is looking for keywords.
Like what?
Terrorism.
Yeah.
Terrorism.
Al Akbar.
Terrorist attack.
Yeah.
You know, I mean, let's just list them out so that you make sure that you get flagged this time, right? That's what I'm saying. Yeah, terrorism. Allah Akbar. Terrorist attack.
Let's just list them out so that you make sure that you get flagged this time, right?
That's what I'm saying.
That'd be good.
Because then maybe if we say enough, a guy has to listen to it.
There's like a mandatory person.
There we go.
And then we get him a great day.
What an awesome day.
So I'm a Chinese sympathizer.
Yes, Chinese sympathizer.
They've heard that a couple of times.
They're listening.
We'll hit all those words right now.
I mean, just the idea to me sounds so funny that there's a dude who like he has to listen to podcasts.
Like surely Rogan has one, right?
There's somebody who has to listen to every Rogan. Oh, yeah.
Well, the reason that it's so valuable is because the guests that you guys have on the podcast are insight into your
network because they're connected to you right there are insights into the network that they
carry with them because once they've been with you you can basically follow the trail to see
what their network is next yeah and then you can see whether or not what they're talking about
could be twisted into propaganda for a foreign country you said said after 9-11, all the government agencies share information
now. Aliens, UFOs, real or not? So there's a fantastic article that was written, I think,
by the Wall Street Journal. The head of AERO, which is the DOD's UFO research wing, was a true scientist and engineer, just came out to basically say there is no truth, no grounds, no nothing that UFOs are real.
My stance on this is that UFOs are real, but they're not aliens.
98% of what happens in the sky will be able to rationalize
and describe without a problem
the 2% of what happens in the sky
that we don't know should scare us
a whole hell of a lot more than it does
because if it's not aliens
it's us
and it's some shit about us
that we don't even know
and that's scary
and why is that scary?
because that could be a next fleet of drones
developed by the russians that could be a hypersonic cruise missile by china yeah that
could be some weird sort of joint new thing that's being developed by syria and iran and north korea
and like it's being tested over montana like that is some scary shit when you take aliens out of it
we want to find comfort in aliens because maybe they're here for good reasons once you say it's a fucking bad guy there's no good reasons for it to be there you
mentioned something with uh ufos and earthquakes like what was that you so there's how they're
correlated yeah yeah there's something called earth lights which happen when certain gases
are released from an earthquake and then they light they they they have translucent appearances
in the sky so a lot of times people will see lights in the sky
they can't define.
Ball lightning is one of those very rare phenomenon.
Another is these earth lights.
So when there's an earthquake that releases gas,
it can create these earth lights.
And that's why a lot of times you see in the West,
people spot UFOs the most out West
where there's the most fault lines
and there's the most earthquake activity.
Some believe they're aliens. And aliens. I mean, there's some weird fault lines and there's the most earthquake activity. I still believe there's aliens.
And aliens.
Yeah.
I mean, there's some weird-ass people out there anyways, so.
China.
Don't talk about daddy like that, right?
Anything else for Andrew before he gets out of here?
No, this is awesome.
Oh, here's a question I have some self-interest in.
India, is that a threat to China?
Is that an emerging superpower? Because we get told that a lot. So I was actually wondering about this. How
close are you with your Indian ethnicity, your Indian family, your culture? I don't know enough.
I have a ton of family in India. I try to go back every year. I love India. I have been talking to
my wife about maybe splitting time there when we have kids half the year in India, half the year
somewhere else. So shameless plug. I want to go to India with you next time you go or one of the times that you go,
let's go. I, yes, because I'm getting secrets from you for this though. I need you. That's a good
train. That's a good train. Here's the truth about India. Uh, India has two of the best
intelligence services in the world. One of them is the research and analysis wing, which is their
foreign collection wing. The other is their internal wing.
The problem is that nobody knows about India's intelligence capabilities because 80% of their effort goes into Pakistan.
Pakistan also has a super powerful foreign intelligence collection wing called ISI.
So, R-A-W in India and ISI in Pakistan are spending almost all of their resources and time.
On each other.
On each other.
India is, I was just talking about it earlier today, I think, they are so powerfully pragmatic that they have found a way to be America's ally and China's ally and Russia's ally.
While they're increasing their GDP, increasing their consumption and increasing their population.
All three things that make for a very stellar future. Right. So India is doing right now,
India is doing everything right. Nobody really talks about them except the, when the U S press
talks about them, they talk about them in a negative way. Like we can't rely on India.
They can't, they don't back us anymore. it's like no india's backing india yeah which
is exactly how a country is supposed to operate right and as they become the manufacturing hub
of the world then that's going to make everybody that much more dependent on on them but they they
will also run into a challenge when they choose to modernize but they can put off that question
for 20 or 30 years easy i mean america would be incentivized to really cozy up to
india given proximity to china if nothing else right i mean i think all of them would be like
if china eventually isn't going to be manufacturing everything in the world and that passes over to
india india wants to be best friends with china if they're best friends with russia and then my
united states then perfect yeah let it rip yeah and not only that but then that makes it so that
russia russia china and the United States,
Russia's not really a player economically like the Chinese and the United States are,
but now China and the United States both are incentivized to push production to India
and try to lobby for tariffs against the other country. So India's in a position to have,
basically, people say, we want you to have this business and we'll pay you even more
if you'll increase your tariffs on them.
Which they're going to say yes to both, but they'll change the tariffs.
So steel tariff against the United States, plastic tariff against China.
Wow.
Based on who pays more for what?
Okay, one more.
Now that we have you.
This is a military industrial question that we were talking about a little bit before.
But if we need the military industrial complex, if we need war to get out of recessions, economically we need war.
Part of that industrial complex is human capital.
Do you believe that the United States keeps people in some state of desperation in order to feed that war machine?
No, I don't think so.
No, I don't think so. I do think that there is the part of the reason that economic disparity persists and that we don't attack that economic disparity. Right. And I'm talking about like average income in Alabama versus average income in New York. That's a huge economic disparity. Well, guess where most of your military recruits come from, right? Alabama, Texas, Arkansas.
So part of the reason that we don't prioritize fixing economic disparity
is because it's a convenience
for things like recruiting militarily.
We also have the benefit of knowing
that it really only takes one genius
to make a billion dollars worth in tech GDP or tech productivity.
But it takes a lot of high school graduates to make $100,000.
So there's a benefit efficiency-wise for us to find and cultivate the most talented people in our country because they will have exponentially higher impact at the end of the day economically than the lower talented people so we don't we could prior instead of
focusing on health care and you know whether your name tag says they or them we could focus on
closing the economic divide but that economic divide is way too convenient for the way our
structured system works so i don't't think they make it happen,
but they do let it happen.
They aid in a bit, in a way.
Okay, last one.
We mentioned
earlier MKUltra
and Stargate.
These programs
have existed.
Do you
know if they used them
to take out RFK's dad?
So I know nothing about RFK's dad.
Okay.
But here's what I will say.
RFK Jr.'s dad, so RFK.
Yeah, RFK.
So what I will say is
I have had firsthand experience
with remote viewing
with what they claimed
about Project Stargate.
And in every experience that I've had with remote viewing, with what they claimed about Project Stargate. And in every experience that I've had with remote viewing,
the end result cannot be separated from margins of error
leading up to the original start of the remote viewing.
So for those of you who don't know what remote viewing is,
remote viewing is like, we're all going to think about nothing,
and then I'm going to say a word and you start to tell me what you associate with that word. And I'm going to
hope that the word that you, the word that I'm going to prime you with is going to associate
with some piece of intelligence I'm trying to collect from somewhere else. So obviously it's
something that you do with trained remote viewers, not something to do with the average person.
So then when they're all sitting there thinking about nothing and I say orange, they start talking about roofs and chains.
And there's a person and there's three horses around that person.
And I see something in the mountains and I try to align that with intelligence that says, oh, this is happening in the Himalayas, right?
That's how remote viewing is supposed to work.
That's what Project Stargate was.
Right?
That's how remote viewing is supposed to work.
That's what Project Stargate was.
Everything that I've seen with remote viewing,
you can't associate the outcome with the input,
which means it's not reliable.
And to my knowledge,
there has never been a piece of actionable intelligence that came from remote viewing.
So there might be information that was useful
or there might not be information that was useful,
but for sure there was nothing that led
to a clear, systematic confirmation
that this tool works.
What about MKUltra?
MKUltra was when they started using psychedelic drugs
to try to unlock different parts of the brain.
Yeah.
Again, to my-
To control people, right?
To control people and to unlock
hidden cognitive abilities.
Right.
Right.
So in my knowledge, to my knowledge,
neither outcome was ever demonstrative for the input that they put in. cognitive abilities. Right. Right. So in my knowledge, to my knowledge, neither,
neither outcome
was ever demonstrative
for the input
that they put in.
So they did,
MKUltra's no secret.
It happened.
Yeah.
It was done to people
who were both
willing and unwilling.
Remote viewing
always happened
to people who were willing.
But these are two
pre-911 CIA activities
that were largely driven
because our opponents in the Cold War were doing
the same thing. And this is one major disadvantage we all have to accept as Americans, is that
because we have personal freedoms and individual rights, any authoritarian country will always
develop a weapon faster than we will, because they have fewer barriers and fewer hurdles to
develop that weapon. So they can just take someone off the street and torture them to see if that torture technique works.
They can just take somebody off the street and pump them full of drugs to see if they can read minds.
Where we have to have five forms and all sorts of approval and a legal chop off from an attorney, we are always going to be slower.
That's part of the power that our forefathers put into our democracy.
When we were talking about why it is that we are so far ahead of everybody else, part of it's because we have to slow down.
Sometimes slow is fast.
Andrew, thanks so much.
Appreciate you.
That was awesome.
Where can they find you?
What can they watch?
Give us all the details.
Absolutely. If anybody wants to learn more about me or my can they watch? Give us all the details. Absolutely.
If anybody wants to learn more about me or my company,
you can go to everydayspy.com.
I've also got a link down in the description
of this video below for people to follow.
Yes.
If you want to follow me on any social media,
I'm at Everyday Spy and I have my own podcast.
It's on YouTube, Spotify,
and everywhere else you look for podcasts
called the Everyday Spy Podcast.
Awesome.
Dude, thank you very much.
That was awesome.
Thank you.
Best of luck with everything.
I appreciate you guys.
Stay alive.
Peace.