PBD Podcast - Jerah Hutchins | PBD Podcast | EP 14
Episode Date: September 25, 2020On this episode, Patrick Bet-David and Adam Sosnick sit down with Jerah Hutchins to discuss Firearms, Breanna Taylor, Operation Underground Railroad, Nike and more... The Patrick BetDavid Show Podcast... Episode 14 Text: PODCAST to 310.340.1132 to get added to the distribution list The BetDavid Podcast is a podcast that discusses, current events, trending topics, and politics as they relate to life and business. Stay tuned for new episodes and guest appearances. Connect with Patrick on social media: Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/patrickbetdavid/?hl=en Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/patrickbetdavid Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/PatrickBetDavid.Valuetainment Follow the guests in this episode: Jerah Hutchins https://bit.ly/362CkVm Adam Sosnick: https://bit.ly/2PqllTj To reach the Valuetainment team you can email: info@valuetainment.com About the host: Patrick is a successful startup entrepreneur, CEO of PHP Agency, Inc., emerging author, and Creator of Valuetainment on Youtube. As a natural critical thinker, Patrick takes complex leadership, management, and entrepreneurial ideas and converts them into simple life lessons for today and tomorrow’s entrepreneurs. Patrick is passionate about shaping the next generation of leaders by teaching thought-provoking perspectives on entrepreneurship and disrupting the traditional approach to a career. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/pbdpodcast/support
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Alright, we are live with episode number 14 of the podcast with our buddy here, Adam Sosnik and our new friend
Jera Hutchins aka J is what her friends call her
And our friend Sam here is learned in the last 24 hours how to pronounce far louder day. How do you can Sam say it now correctly?
He almost added by the way, no it again because he's Colombian,
say it again.
Yes.
Say it again.
Fourth, Lara Dail.
There you go.
OK, for all my party friends out there,
how also do you say Fort Lauderdale?
He forgot about it.
For Likertail?
For Likertail.
Is that what you say?
You get Likert up.
And the reason why he had to learn the reason why he had to learn how to say, for a lot
of the hell, because he's got a flight to for a lot of the hell today.
So, are you going to for the first time or no?
I'm fortunate we may not see you back here, because if he takes you to the wrong places,
you may stick around.
And now come back.
You're going to meet a Colombian from Colombia, even though you're from Colombia and all
of us son, you're not coming back to the hell.
And that's a whole different story of Colombia.
Anyways, okay, so why do we bring Jera today?
Let's talk about why we brought Jera
and what we're gonna talk about today.
So last week, not last week, two weeks ago.
Luis, one was the class that we took.
September 10th, yes.
September 10th, yes.
So the 10th, we decide, because I come in
and I'm talking to, it's not every day you talk to your HR person
and say, hey, I wanna have a license to carry class
at the home office. This is not every company wants to do things like this and say hey, I want to have a license to carry class at the home office
This is not every company wants to do things like this
But I said I want to do something here. If anybody wants to participate do it who'd recommend she was all on board
This was my okay, because when Aaron called me you know, you know Aaron Stanwix and I have known each other for a long time
Yeah, she told me yeah, so she I said listen
This is what I want to do and I said I think I want other people to get it as well, because I think that times are getting a little crazy.
So she says, I know the right person.
I said, who's the right person?
He says, this is my friend.
I said, okay, put it on.
No problem.
And I put too so many classes.
And I go to these classes and board out of my mind
when I hear some people teaching stuff.
And then you walk in.
15 of us are sitting there.
Just everybody knows our buddy here
Luis Luis Brot his mom his grandma his grandfather's brother
He had two-year-old
Everybody in this family's gonna
The all the family members didn't even fit in the
Luis why so many people in your family?
Why? Tell me why.
Just because I want them all to be safe.
And it's hard to get crazy.
It's crazy.
I like it.
And then Kai from Norway led the way.
We have to recognize Kai because Kai led the way
with the most questions.
I think Kai asked 50 questions.
And we're like, listen buddy, we want to keep this to four hours.
Kai dragged it out to four and a half hours.
He was also the first person to sign up.
Was he really?
Kai was like on it.
Wow.
So pro second amendment from Norway.
First one to sign up from Norway.
Norway.
And if we can get the right angle on Kai today,
from this camera, I would love for the audience
to compliment Kai on his hairdo today,
because he looks legit today.
To the 12% of our audience that are women, Kai single, just so you know.
That's a cloth man, I like it.
Kai single and he does swipe right.
So anyways, okay, so let's continue.
What we're gonna talk about today
since we have an expert on this topic.
What Jera does is she teaches,
she's an instructor, firearms instructor in Fort Hood
and helps people like us get a license to carry
in a state of Texas.
What she also does on top of that is human trafficking, which she'll tell some of the
stories.
Just so everybody knows, she went to sleep last night at six o'clock because she was
working last night.
So, she's going on fumes today.
Our body atom hasn't had any sleep all night last night.
Okay, he's got deep thoughts about his future of his life.
And then I haven't had a lot of sleep either. So we're going to talk about her since she's a personal, personal protection
officer level three, about to be a level four. So we're going to talk about firearm sales,
we're going to talk about Breander Taylor's tragic event that took place recently, censoring
of second amendment at corporate world, Operation'll talk railroad, we will talk about all this stuff
is weapon stuff, gun stuff, oh my gosh,
all three pages, Kai put out here.
We got Tesla and they're gonna talk about Tesla.
We do have Tesla, that's right, Elon Musk Tesla,
they want to sell a $25,000 Tesla,
and then American household collectively,
their net worth, climbed, seven percent in Q2, to $1 trillion dollars which is pretty good to see people's
and net worth increase in
Nike share has sought thirteen percent
uh... carvana share sword uh... uh... you know search thirty percent
bar announced a hundred million dollars more to combat human traffic in
and then uh... sending me came to apparently is not a fan of uh...
trump and she will be voting for Joe Biden, a Democrat.
She has, the last time she voted Democrat,
she was 18 years old.
It's a long time ago, the last time she voted Democrat.
And she said she's gonna be voting for Biden over Trump,
which we'll talk about that as well.
There was some intense meetings going on at the UN,
and obviously the most important topic today
that we have to talk about is,
Mike Tyson's voting for the first time.
If you didn't know, Mike Tyson will be voting for the first time. If you didn't know Mike Tyson will be voting for the first time
and everybody's wondering who he's going to be voting for
because prior to this, he couldn't vote due to his felony record.
Now he can finally vote and we can kind of talk about
who Mike Tyson's going to vote for.
But I think it's appropriate for us to take a quick moment here
and Jerro why don't you take a quick moment
and share what the rest of us
What why you know one thing?
I like the most when you opened up the class you talked about the importance of having a license to carry and
You shared this story about your experience what happened in Orlando that I think if anybody's listening to this whether you're married
Whether it's for you if you have a sister if you if you've got a daughter, if you've got a mother, if you've got anybody, has to hear the story that Jarrah shared
with the rest of us.
Jarrah, tell us what happened with you, why you decided to get a license to carry.
Well, I was in Orlando years and years ago and coming back from a vacation there and one
of the guys that was handling the baggage took a picture
of my luggage tag with his cell phone.
In Orlando.
So you're checking in your bag.
He takes a picture because your license is on it.
I mean, what do you call it?
Your address is on it.
Okay.
Address, name.
I mean, what do you put on there?
You know, you want, if you lose your bag,
you want, you want to be able to find it, you know?
You want, you know, so you're gonna just blindly put,
you know, all of that information on there, right?
You naturally put it, assuming you can, you know,
trust the airlines.
And you think about, you know, you know,
you think about who's working in baggage.
I'm not saying bad people working baggage.
I'm just saying like, you're thinking about like, like just random strangers are they got all your info right. They got your address,
they got your email address, they got your phone number, your name. I mean I'm not hard to find
anyway. I got a weird name but yeah so the you know the guy started reaching out to me and you know
kind of telling me that we were sort of destined to be together. Hold on
what the guy he was a baggage handler. At the airport and just started. He was actually
the guy that checked in the bags. He wasn't necessarily the baggage handler. He saw me.
He had a conversation with me while we were checking in my bag. So the person we go to
to give our bags to and get our flight to what he called it.
Your boarding pass.
Your boarding pass.
That's the person you're talking about.
That's a trip right there.
And he starts texting you, emailing you what?
Yeah.
Calling you what?
Yeah.
Fricking my space to me.
My, my, my, my bag in the news.
What year is that one?
Oh, four.
That's a long time ago.
And, uh, what year?
Uh, it was in.
It was in, uh, it was Picture for us. I was 23
2003 I was 20 no, I was 23 so it would have been
Don't date yourself
38 now. I've never seen a woman just announced her age like this. She said it on stage. She was so comfortable
I think it was 2004, 2005.
This is the height of my space.
Yeah.
Facebook isn't a thing yet.
Yeah, not cool.
Jared's traveling, doing her thing.
Yeah.
And some guys think she's destined to be with you.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And so it's, yeah, so it's interesting,
the kind of people that handle our personal information.
And another, you know, before I get to it,
another interesting thing to note is, you know,
a lot of airlines, you know, if you check your gun on your baggage, you know, you I get to it, another interesting thing to note is, you know, a lot of airlines,
you know, if you check your gun on your baggage, you know, you can do that.
You can do it in your check baggage.
We learned that in class.
And, you know, they, they used to want you to have a TSA lock on there, right?
So that they could look into your, you know, looking your stuff,
make sure you have it packed right, right?
Well, then TSA started stealing people's guns.
How did she do that?
So now, they, you know, a lot
of airlines want you to have, you got to, you got to declare it, they got to look at it,
right? And then they want you to lock it up and have the key, right? So the people that
were supposed to trust, you know, this, this organization that was, you know, brought
out of 9-11, right? Now that you're stealing people's guns. So it's like, who do you trust?
November 01, when they came out by the way TSA.
Only if you think about it TSA has only been around for 19 years.
Some people think TSA has been around for a long time.
It used to be a private organization that would do the security work.
Now it's TSA 19 years only.
You're saying November of 2001.
November of 2001.
Two months right after 9.11.
November 01 is when Bush came out with the TSA.
Got it.
Crazy.
So anyway, yeah, so he was reaching out.
And it wasn't welcome.
And I was living on my own.
And he showed up to the house.
It's not the night.
Not middle of the night, but at night.
At night.
Probably eight, nine o'clock.
And then what happened? He was greeted with the business end of a shotgun.
It was great, but now by you or by your boyfriend at the time.
No, I was home alone.
So by your shotgun, what was this reaction?
Fear.
As it should be.
As it should be.
Yeah, I can only imagine.
And it was, you know, and after that, here I started to think to myself, now another
another thing too, you know, but you know, I don't know if this is TMI, but this was kind
of the second, you know, really crappy thing to, you know, happen to me out.
So I was raped as a teenager.
And I didn't want it.
So, you know, after that, I started to think to myself, you know, I can't, the people
that I'm supposed to be able to trust to think to myself, you know, I can't, the people that I'm supposed
to be able to trust to keep me safe, right?
My parents, the police, the government,
and I'm not poo-pooing on any of those people.
I'm just saying that the people that we naturally
look to to keep us safe can't do it.
It's impossible.
And it's not necessarily that they don't want to.
It's that they cannot. It's
physics does not allow for it. Okay. And so we we have to, you know, it was kind of at that point
where I said, I've got to kind of maybe be a better ambassador for my safety, right? And a better
first responder to myself. And so I started to, you know, and I grew up around guns. I grew up in a family
that was about guns, but I didn't really have a lot of handgun experience. I was hunter,
you know, growing up. So I always kind of had the shotgun. Why can't I drop a shotgun in
my back and, you know, go where, you know, go get my nails done and go to the movies and
all that crap, you know. So I got to figure out, you know, what do I need to do about this?
And so I started kind of looking into what it would take
for me to get a handgun license in Texas
and, you know, that particular education
because I certainly didn't want to shoot my foot off.
But, you know, so I needed to get,
and they needed to get educated.
And so I did that, and it was a very painful,
brutal experience because I was being taught,
you know, no offense, but I was being taught by men
who didn't want to teach me.
They didn't, it was frustrating to teach me.
It wasn't cool to teach me, right?
Because I'm not a tactical Tommy person.
I don't have military experience.
I wasn't a police officer.
And so I'm literally starting from scratch.
I'm like, I don't even know, I don't know what that is.
I don't know how this works.
And so it was, you know, sometimes when you're at a certain level
and you've got to go back to the basics,
it can be frustrating and boring, right?
You want to keep going forward.
You don't necessarily want to go back.
And so when I finished that sort of education
and felt comfortable going to the range on my own
and carrying a gun, I started to the range on my own and you know
carrying a gun, I started to get some of my female friends were like, hey I saw you
were at the gun range, maybe you can take me, I'm kind of interested in this.
And so it started out me teaching my friends and then they would tell their friends that
I didn't know or whatever and then it kind of turned into a part-time gig and then I
said, you know what, I want to start teaching licensed to carry because I got a perspective on this. I got things to say
about this and so I went down I signed up to go down to the DPS class as a two day class
down in Florence right outside of Austin and 180 people came to this class to get licensed to carry
the only do it like once a year. Two women. Wow.
It was me and a gal that had just, Courtney, that had just retired from the Navy.
Now do you notice a trend with women who want to get a license to carry or know?
Is there a trend with a tragic event that took place where they said no one's ever going
to do this to me again?
Yeah, there's a lot of that.
There's a lot of that. Okay. There's a lot of that. And so, you know,
that when you take this class, the guys that teach it are actually a phenomenal class. I thought
it was going to be very boring. It kind of like you, right? And you thought he was going to be boring.
I thought she was going to be boring. And I said, you know. There's zero boringness going on. No, I was. I was.
Yeah.
There's a lot of action going on.
And so, but they tell you over and over again, you know, when you take this class, they
say to you, you're never going to make a full-time living doing this.
This has to be, it's a side hustle, it's a passion project, it's a community effort,
and it is all of those things, okay?
But I'm sitting there and I'm listening to this guy and I'm like, you know, I'm like 17 rows up in the stadium
See, and I'm going hold my beer
You don't call my beer buddy. I'm show you what's going on things I know
Like you haven't seen what I've seen you don't have the perspective that I have because I'm gonna get this license
And I'm gonna go into an underserved
market because you're not digging in this market.
You're not going out and you're not hearing what women are dealing with in their own
safety and they don't feel empowered to do it.
They learn different than men.
Guys are like, guns, I just want to pull a trigger.
And women are like, I need a checklist, okay?
I need, this is, this is where I want, you know,
how do I know where to start,
and how do I know when I'm done?
Like, they need to know that.
They want that structure,
because there's a fear factor there, right?
Jared, good deep run that.
Like, what the mindset of a man
getting a gun license versus a female,
I'd love to hear more about that.
You know, a lot of men are, they're not, you know,
they're not necessarily in the mindset of, I need a formal education.
They're like, just show me how to do it.
You know what I mean?
And women want to know, like, what's the statistics of me ever having to do this?
Or, you know, or and or, with a lot of women,
it's the question has never been posed.
So when I teach introduction handgun, for instance,
and I do a lot of ladies' only classes for that,
and I teach men too, but the first question that I ask
when I sit down is I go, listen,
how many of you in here are moms?
Okay, and it's most of the people that take that class.
And I say to them, do you think in reality,
because we talk a lot, we talk a lot of shit, right?
We talk, we say, you know, mama bear, you know,
don't mess with me, there's a lot of water cooler talk
between the mamas about what they would do
if somebody ever mess with a kid.
But I say in reality, would you really be able
to pull it off with a physical altercation
when your kids' lives are at stake?
What would you do?
And could you do it? Okay? I'm not saying,
would you have that? You asked this from mom.
Oh, yeah. And I'm like, I'm not asking you
if you would have the gumption to do it.
I'm asking you, could you pull it off?
I'm asking you, can a girl, can a woman my size take down a man your size?
And the answer is always no.
Because the question's never been posed to them that way.
Nobody goes up to a pregnant one and says, hey, when you have that baby, do you think
you're ever going to be able to physically defend it?
Nobody ever asked that question.
And it's a question that needs to be asked.
And it doesn't need, and we don't need to wait until we're about to start a family.
We need to start asking our daughters this
when they're little, when they're younger, okay?
When they get to be teenagers
and they start doing stuff on their own,
we need to start training our kids,
not necessarily to be, you know, warriors and fighter,
you know, but we need to say,
look, you need to start paying attention
to what's going on around you.
And we need to be good examples of that as parents,
you know, and as adults in their life, you know,
like I don't have any biological kids,
but I have a lot of kids in my life.
And this is the question that Antjera
is posing to them all the time,
is pay attention to what you're doing.
Pay attention to what's going on around you
assess your environment often,
not to the point of paranoia,
but to the point of preparedness.
And so I have, I have literally Built a business a viable business on
teaching people
How to not die
And that's insane to me. That's that isn't same. By the way, there's a little bit of static on to speak
I don't know if you're getting it or not. There's that that that that's a lot now. Yeah
I don't know where it's coming from we've never had this
This is a first Now, I don't know where it's coming from. We've never had this.
This is a first.
So, okay.
You're going to do what?
You're going to, I'm going to, this one.
Okay.
Going with another one.
Is it mine?
No.
So, I put that.
Okay, let's see.
Can you, still a lot of static?
Guys, can you hear us?
What's okay?
I don't know what? Somebody set out in?
Okay, so it's not this.
It's Adams.
What about it?
I don't why you screw and run at him.
Seriously.
Okay, I'm not hearing anything now.
Put the thing on.
Mario, are you hearing stuff or no?
I think that's China China to be honest with you
Jaros bringing too much fire to the show
The audio system can't handle it. We are we are so if you if you can hear us better now
We'll get back to it if you can't hear it. Just say yes. We're good to go all right. You kill me
Someone says you're killing me. All right, so they got it. Can everyone hear us? Okay.
Guys, give a like, give a thumbs up and let us know
if you have any questions for Jero over here
and give a thumbs up if you're feeling Jero.
So here's a question for you.
Is how many women teach license to carry classes?
Not many.
Not many.
And for somebody that's listening to this,
here's a couple of things I'll tell you.
Okay, from a perspective of somebody I talk to where I,
you know, we have the license to carry conversation.
One, the conversation is, first of all,
I don't like having guns in my house.
People, there are people that don't even want to have a
conversation, forget about license to carry.
It starts off with screw guns.
I don't want any guns in my house.
Number two is, if there's guns in my house,
what if something happens to my kids get a hold of it and got forbid, you know, you hear about all these accidents
that happen with kids and guns, right?
And then it's licensed to carry, right?
Why do I need to have a license to carry?
What's the benefit of me having a license to carry?
Like who's gonna come and do anything to me, right?
So, you know, especially with all the stuff
that's going on right now with Black Lives Matter,
with, you know, defunding the police,
with Brianna Taylor,
which we're gonna get into here in a minute.
Riot.
Riot's protesting, election, all of the stuff that's going on.
Why do you think it's important for somebody
to have a gun and let alone have a license to carry?
Because physics dictates that the only people
that are going to be able to purposefully respond
to a situation of duress or the people
that are already there.
I mean, that's it, and that's science. It's indisputable.
It's very important what you just said. Can you say that one more time what you just said?
Because physics dictates that the only people that are going to be able to purposefully respond to a situation of duress
are the people that are already there. And so nobody's going to show up. And you know how many things do you see on
social media where you know somebody's getting their ass whipped in the middle
of the street and people are just filming it nobody's helping. Yeah all the time.
You know so people are you know people are more about the drama. Now you know
than anything. And I think that there's a fear factor
about defending oneself that needs to go away, right?
And the only way that that goes away
is with education.
It's always has to be education before legislation.
Because you're never going to legislate out hate.
You're never going to legislate out crime.
You're never going to legislate somebody into an opinion.
So you got to change hearts and minds.
That's the only way to do it.
And the only way that you do that is through education.
And so what's been an interesting thing for me
to see over the last sort of 10 years
that I've been teaching this in about three years full time
is the mindset of women when they first get to me
and the mindset of women when they leave get to me and the mindset of women when they leave.
When they leave my class, it's literally, it's between, it's either one hour, three
hours or like five hours that they spend with me at a time, right?
And the mindset when they, when they leave is, it's incredible to see the transformation,
you know, and they get to the point where they're looking at me and it's toward into class
and I can see it in their face that they're going, I can do this.
I can, I can think this way.
I can manage my time this way because a lot of women, especially, don't understand that
your, your time management directly affects your safety.
So if your life is in disarray, if you're constantly late, if you don't have a plan, if you can't
keep a calendar, that is that right there is the beginning of the end of your safety.
That's powerful what you're saying because what I did when she said this, this is the
first thing I did when you talk about physics.
The reason why I had you repeated it is because of my mind, the first place I went to
is what is the average response time to cop showing up when an event is taking place?
Okay, could you guess what the average response time is in America?
And I'll go through the top states.
Depends on the neighborhood though, right?
But give me, give me average response time in America from the moment you dial 911, I have
somebody in my house, they just robbed me, I just said somebody, pulled a gun on me, how
long do you think it is average response time?
Five minutes.
Twenty seven. Three time? Five minutes. 27.
Three minutes.
Three minutes.
U.S. Now watch this.
Watch what happens here.
That's U.S. right, three minutes.
LA is 5.7 minutes.
Seattle, seven minutes.
Dallas, eight minutes.
We live in Dallas.
Miami, eight minutes.
New York City, 13.3 minutes.
Atlanta, nine minutes and 35 seconds, Houston, 10 minutes,
Detroit, 12 minutes, Denver, 15 minutes.
Okay, there used to be 15 minutes, now they're at 13 minutes.
What can you do in three minutes?
Oh, but here's the thing.
Think about that.
Think about that.
That's if they have somebody to send you.
That's if somebody's available.
So I have a quick story about this.
Yeah. That's if somebody's available. So I have a quick story about this. So I dated a guy a few years ago whose kids were teenagers.
And his ex-wife, they had 50-50 custody.
He had taught his kids how to shoot.
And at the time, his daughter was the oldest and she was about 17.
And they lived actually not far from me in the historic district of Fort
Worth Fairmount.
And it's right by the hospital district and on the 10th floor of JPS is the psych ward.
Wow.
Okay.
And so, you know, I had a schizophrenia caroan addict break into my house when I lived there
while I was home last October.
Okay.
That's a different story.
We'll tell that in a minute. I was gonna say, you got a lot of that.
So I get a lot of that.
I got a lot to you, Jerry.
You got a lot going on here, okay?
But.
You got like catnet for crazy going on over here.
Yeah, pre-disposed, I guess.
Just sprinkling Jared, Jared does everywhere.
The kids can't help themselves.
Come get it, okay?
Bye, relax buddy, all right?
There was a, they were, you know, so,
so she was home with her mom.
It was like 11 o'clock at night.
Some guy just walks up the driveway and starts trying to break into house.
Starts trying to break into garage.
Okay.
Now, my ex had given his daughter or his wife really, his ex wife, a 30-A special.
And he was like, look, we're not together anymore. anymore we're not living together anymore but you need to be able to
protect yourself and she did she was not
and can you tell Adam what a 38 special it's not like a special gift on your
38 bird he was thinking like a birthday suit
he's getting a bird they said
there's a repolver
can you can you search and show it all know what it's 38 special.
I don't know.
I mean, I think it's good to show what a 38 special is.
Does our audience know what a 38 special is?
I'm more concerned about you know what a 38 special is.
There's a pink one right there too.
Oh, nice.
So it's a typical, I mean, you probably saw these a lot
in like 80s cop show.
Yeah, I used to watch Dragnet.
I know that.
Yeah.
Dan Acroix.
Very impressed.
Yeah.
Go ahead, Jare.
So she has this 38 special.
So she's, yeah.
So, you know, and she wasn't, you know,
super big into guns, but, you know, he says,
hey, you know, A.G.
you know, how to use it, okay?
Who's A.G.?
The daughter.
Oh.
And, you know, nobody ever thought anything of it.
Well, you know, so this guy's breaking in the house, right?
So the mom, she's calling 911. She's like, hey, somebody's breaking in my house, like
right now.
And the Fort Worth Police Department says, I'm sorry, man, we're not having anybody to
send you.
That's what they tell her, okay?
So she's in the fetal position in the kitchen.
She's like, you know, hiding in the kitchen, right?
A.G. walks right up the stairs and goes and gets the 38th special and comes down.
She takes the tactical position by the door, waits.
It doesn't go out and it doesn't leave the tactical advantage of the home.
We talked about in class.
It doesn't leave the tactical advantage of the home to go confront the thread.
She waits and she was like, and mom's crying.
A.G. is how old?
17.
She's trained for this. Yeah, she's learned from us, right?
And she she looks at her mom and she's like, I'm just I'm just telling you mom if he comes to the door
I'm gonna shoot him and you need to be ready for that. Okay, it never happened
He couldn't he couldn't figure his way into the garage took about 15 minutes. He leaves, okay?
The cops show up an hour and a half later.
There you go.
Okay.
And they make a statement.
And so, A.G. comes to brunch with us like a few days later
and she's telling us this and she said it.
And out of a 17 year old's mouth, she was like,
Dad, I'm so glad that you taught me how to do that.
Because I was scared, but I knew what to do.
Okay, and that's the thing.
So you have a 17 year old that came that close
to having to do what we never imagine
we would ever have to do.
What do you think about having a license to carry out them?
I mean, you know, night clubs by me,
you know, you're selling insurance policies,
life-subdomin.
I'm gonna bring a gun into a club, that's for sure.
Okay.
Something that comes to mind, we had the gentleman come, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I Chaffer. Stutt, Stutt, the guy, right?
And he said there's what,
8 billion people on this planet,
and a million people on this planet.
7.8, okay.
7, who's counting them?
Pat knows.
He said 95% of people are good,
decent, normal, great people.
5% of people are just straight up,
lunatics, psychos,
homicidal maniacs will kill you.
So you're taking well, 95% of people is great, right?
It's awesome, 5%, okay, that's not so much.
Pat, I know your math wizard,
what's 5% of 7.8 billion?
Small number, 3.5.
3.5 million.
5% 3.78, 3.8 million.
Okay, million.
So basically, it's our population. No, no, five percent. 380 3.78 million. Okay. Million. So basically entire population.
No, no.
5% of a hundred.
380 million.
Yeah.
So essentially how many people are in America?
328.
Okay.
So basically that's the equivalent of United States and Canada that are straight up maniacs
out there.
That's the great statistic.
Okay.
So there you go.
Feel free to use that.
So extrapolate that all over the world.
So yeah.
But that's what I-
If you're a single female. That's what I tell my students though.
This is what I tell my students,
and it's mind-boggling,
because when I say it,
it's like a light goes off in their head.
I say, look, there's no safe places.
Yeah.
There's only safe people.
And one person can come
and change the dynamic of an environment immediately.
And the environment is changed
for the duration of their time in that environment.
Yeah, so I got a question for you.
I got a quote last night,
I pulled up a bunch of stats about guns, okay?
Cause I wanted no stats about guns.
What percentage of gun ownership in the world
do you think is in US?
Out of all the guns in the world,
what percentage you think is US?
Very high.
Give me a note.
You want to give us a multiple choice,
or you want us to just a guess.
No, I just want you to guess.
So imagine out of all the gun owners in the world,
okay, there is 857 million gun owners in the world.
What percentage is US?
A quarter.
Okay, you're saying quarter.
What do you think it is?
I'm curious, Luis.
Out of all the registered gun owners,
what percentage is US?
I'm gonna say 15%. I'm gonna go lower, 20 the registered gun owners what percentage is US
20% 20% what are you gonna say 30% Kai?
You said 50% you said half Stick to it. Well, okay sure 46% she wins, okay?
46% of gun owners in the world are in the US think about that. Okay think about that
That's a big number but But that count multiple guns.
Like we know people that have 50 guns in there. No, no, no, no. This is just your gun owner.
You're one guy. It doesn't matter how many you own. Yeah, you own at least one. Right.
I'm sorry. 46% of civilian guns owned. Okay. You're right. Multiple guns guns. Oh,
we have some people in America that have now watch dozen guns in their watch. Watch this.
Who do you think is number two country? Who do you think is number two country who do you think is number two country Australia you will never guess number two country
We know it's not Venezuela. Okay, so I'm in as well. It's not Australia. Who do you think number two?
By the way if you're listening today's who do you think's number two country that has the most guns owned number two?
Switzerland no India India number two India how I would have never
guessed India of course what do you mean there's a billion people that you get
the math is what you did of course seventy one point one bill one million guns are
registered on you know in India yeah seventy one point one now watch what
happens here okay then I went in and and I looked at different stats okay
uh... on gun ownership statistic, okay, 42% of households
own a gun in America, 42% of households.
That's a big number by the way, 42%.
30% of individuals own a gun, that means three out of 10.
So in this room, two, four, six,
out of six, two of us own guns.
Do you own one, do you own one, do you own one?
You own one.
You own one.
He doesn't, he doesn't. Two of us do. That makes
about sense. I have enough for all of you. Yeah. There's plenty in that
safe. Someone comes in there to value tame it. So 47% of male men own a gun. Only 13%
women. 47% to 13% one think about it. Who actually needs it? Who doesn't need it?
It's the other way around of ownership. my good buddy Sean Lowry shout out to him. He says what's number three?
What's number three? I only have top two right now, okay?
Sean I do it's a favor. I do
Golden still rot on good bronze, but you
Wants to run Sean Lowry find that off like Sweden. I think it's probably Sweden
So I sweet it so watch this I think it's either sweetener Switzerland that makes you do like be in the military
Kai our guns like a thing in Norway is that allowed is it a guys these stats are about to get more interesting
This is I'm getting to a question here. Oh, okay watch these stats check this out. Let's go down the deal
Gone right so we have male 47 female 13%
Whites 33% non-white me 18% okay
You're considered white just so you know that me not me come on man Republicans
Surprisingly 41% yeah Democrats 23% if there was a fight between a civil war broke
Let's not even go there. Let's not even go there. That's all of Brandt independent
27% good by the way, I actually Republicans have nearly twice as much guns. They own as Democrats shout out to my Republican friends out there
Buddy, I'm on your side when we going down to a war now come on now. Okay, so now here's here's some other stats
civilians defend themselves with a gun and estimated
990 thousand times a year
civilians
Defend themselves with a gun and estimated
990,000 times,
that's a lot of times, by the way.
Million times a year.
Yeah, that's exactly.
Americans use guns to frighten away intruders,
498,000 times.
You coming to my house?
Chacha, guy.
Oh shit.
Something's gonna go down if I go on.
Like Chera, and that crazy bag handle.
Okay.
40% of felons decided not to commit crime
because they knew or believed the victim was carrying a gun.
That's a very... going back to what she was talking about.
40% but we're about to get to a question here that kind of threw me off a little bit.
I got two stats I'm going to bring up. I want to ask your thoughts on this.
And obviously our expert gunman here at home.
27 years, you know, he's been watching people with guns but never owned it.
But education level of gun owners. You ready?
Education level of gun owners.
This is a very weird statkite.
And I have my assumptions why this is,
but I want to hear your thoughts.
College post graduates is the lowest percentage of gun owners.
30%.
So if you've got an MBA, it's the lowest percentage of gun owners.
Yeah. Then it's college graduates
37% some college
41% high school grad or less
42% so the more the education the less gun owners
That's the exact same. Let's have that conversation
I want to have because I knew you were gonna love this with your peers on your community
So educated people yeah, if you have an MBA on the wall, there's a chance,
there's a lower chance of you having a gun than a person
that barely has a high school diploma.
Why is that?
Go for it.
I think that's just part of culture, right?
United States, the more that you're in college,
you're working in a high level career,
you're a lawyer, you're a doctor,
you're working as a white collar business,
you're probably the less likely you're gonna be using a gun.
I don't know.
Jared.
I think that it's because you feel safer where you are.
There we go.
Because you're educated, you're probably typically making more money.
Probably feel like you live in a safe place.
Okay.
Okay, or you have gated security or you have. You're living in a safe place. Okay. Okay, or you have gated security, or you have...
You're living in a good community,
you're making more money.
You may not have a lot of car on it.
You can afford a...
A butler with a gun.
Just because you got an enemy,
you can afford a butler.
But what are you living in the back cave?
Or something like that?
Oh, my butler's got guns, guys.
Oh, my God.
Come on.
Okay, Alfred
Why else Jerry you could be my Alfred
Let's go so so why else still why else do people with degrees?
I would love to hear your opinion on this you get an angle on this
I don't want to step the PVD's trap. No, no, no
I'm asking you guys. I'm just giving I'm just I think it's part of culture and I don't want to like
stereotype but you know,
you know, the first thing, ooh.
Ooh.
I think that's a sign that I'm just not gonna,
Jared, what are you taking me here?
I'll give you a couple thoughts.
I'll give you a couple thoughts here.
When Adam gets nervous, his suit drops,
it just reads him well.
I just realized that Jared has a gun
and I'm trying to combat her. Are you right now? Yes, you are.
That's right. Yeah, she is right now.
She's chair. I apologize for anything I may or may not have
said already. Yeah, sure.
Audience, you know, I can only can imagine like a if a soy
boy were to date a Jera if a soy boy were to date a Jera.
Now, soy boy is what a guy who is that was actually going to be
my next question. What is a soy boy?
Yeah, so I found I found that out
So a soy boy is the chat by lit right by the way
I would love to see who actually came up with that nickname first. Yeah, who came up with that nickname first?
I think it was a girl that there was like somebody's soy boy. So boy is a
Pajorative term often used in online communities to describe men perceived
as lacking masculine characteristics.
Oh, I miss kidding.
The term bearers many similarities
and has been compared to the slang term of
how do you pronounce that?
Cuck.
Cuck, cuck.
Another term popular used as an insult
for male femininity by online communities.
Soy boy.
I don't know if you're a soy boy. But if a soy boy would a date a-
I'm not a soy boy, but I play one on a podcast.
Yeah, but you're definitely not a soy boy.
If one of the stats that a soy boy is a guy
who marries his first girlfriend,
it's definitely not gonna be you.
Because you've been on the earth 200 when he's still not married.
So if a soy boy would a date a-
Jera, and they're at a bar, and a guy comes and talks smack to the soy boy would a date, a Jera. And they're at a bar.
And a guy comes and talks smack to the soy boy.
This is a soy boy gonna say,
I swear to God, you say one more thing.
Jera's gonna walk you around.
But you say one more thing.
Jera, you wanna have a conversation?
Say one more thing right now.
She's gonna put you in your place.
I feel like, if a soy boy ends up with Jera
and they say you may kiss the bride,
Jera's gonna pick me up and like walk me out.
I'm gonna like take you over the threshold.
Is that what I'm going with it?
I'm working my-
But let me give you my theory why I think
the more common-
I've never dated a girl like Jared.
I mean every girl I've ever dated.
He's not me hitting on you right now.
Are you scared of this?
Every girl I've ever dated has been like more of like a feminine,
you know, like a feminine model type.
You know, you've got a lot of childhood with your language right and our feminist is gonna come, you know, like a feminine model type, you know,
a child with your language right now.
Our feminist is going to come after you.
We got a big feminist community.
Good.
Great.
I enjoy.
Welcome to the party, y'all.
But I've never dated a girl that's like, all right, buddy.
I got this from here.
So, boy, you know, it's not that you talk like that.
You're very feminine yourself.
Not that you're not feminine, Jared.
The only, you're saying the same thing.
The moment you went there, you couldn't come back.
You're committed.
I just, we need more Jared.
The only reason I would do it for you is because I'm less
likely to be convicted by jury.
OK, I don't know what that means, but.
Why are you less likely to be?
Because I'm a woman.
OK.
I'm a woman that defended myself with a firearm.
So, you know, statistically, I'm probably
less likely to be convicted by jury so you should use that to your fully
What type of guys do you typically date Jared? You said you're single. No, no she's got a boyfriend
No, I do have a boyfriend. Okay, cool. Tell us about your boyfriend
He's big. He's very large person. It's a big dude. Yes. How big is big? He's about six five probably
4250 and are you more like I want a manly, big, burly,
gun-carry and kind of guy?
We met at the gun range.
That's so...
I mean, so it's not gonna happen at your comedy club.
No, 99% of the girls I've dated have been in a club
and live in South Beach.
Like, she's meeting dudes at a gun range.
Kind of meets girls at the library,
say to meet girls at a salsa club.
At the self-made yoga lounge.
Yoga place he goes to.
It's the self, what do you call it?
It's a part of it.
Do it yourself, yoga.
It's a nice place.
So is that typically the kind of guys you date,
like the bigger gun range type of guys?
No, I mean, I dated a non-trapron Europe before that.
I mean, he was a gun owner, but it's not like he went all the time.
Gotcha.
I don't know that I have a type, honestly.
Would you ever date a guy that does not own a gun?
That would be tough.
Straight up.
So that's like, let me check the boxes here.
All right, cool, good looking. Makes money, funny, doesn't own a gun. Get this guy. By the way, you know, let me check the boxes here. All right cool good looking
You know makes money funny doesn't own a gun get this guy. No, I didn't you're making you're making people uncomfortable Yeah, I did I did it a comedian from New York one time and
That was that was interesting and he he wasn't really super like pro guns. So he wasn't no
So I can only imagine how that day goes. So would be very... You give a hug and after you give a hug, you feel something very, you know,
hard over here and it's a gun.
You're like, wait a minute, what is that all about?
Oh, it's my gun.
Yeah.
Do you have a gun?
That's better than whatever the alternative would be.
Ah!
Ah!
Ah!
Please tell me that's a gun.
Well, he's so good. That's happened before as well, but anyways.
So let me go back to the theory.
Let me go back to the theory here.
On why the percentage is that?
Yeah, sorry.
Our audience is not wanting me asking
Jared questions.
Our audience is very offended that I would
delve into her personal life.
Are you okay talking to your personal life?
I mean, well, I mean, I'm armed.
So, you're good.
Yeah.
You know what?
For our audience.
And I love you guys, I'm being so sensitive.
So, boy's getting knocked out.
Listen.
We're good, guys.
Take a lesson from me.
You take punches, you keep coming back.
Use that in your own life. So, so, so, so,. The less the gun ownership. I think absolutely I agree the fact that
the more income you make, the more money you make,
you're gonna live in a better community.
So obviously you're not gonna have a need for guns.
Okay, that totally makes sense to me.
But what also makes sense to me is
how long does it take to get an MBA?
What's the timeline of getting an MBA guy?
Give me a timeline, six to eight years.
Is that about a good timeline?
You mean, when you start college?
From the day you're 18 years old, you go to college to get new MBA.
How long does that?
Yeah, 68 years.
Six to eight years.
Of course.
Is it fair to say that the people who are instructors in school that we call them professors?
Yes.
That they probably don't like guns.
Yes, and I know you were going to have to be more liberal.
They tend to be more liberal.
Well, one out of 10 professors in school are conservative.
Nine out of 10 are liberal.
This is a statistic you can see from Washington Post.
This isn't something new.
So I don't know how many times a professor is going to say,
I drove to school today and I had a gun on me
and I left it in the car or it's just not going to happen.
So the people that are also most people,
the people they're spending most time with,
they're not, you know, pro-secondum,
they're not saying, hey, let me go by,
you should buy a gun to protect yourself.
So I think it's also having to do with who you're around
a lot to have a lot of influence on you,
not only the gun.
I think there's a part of it that's also being influenced
by the system that they have,
because for it to be 41%, 42% to 31% high school degree you barely
graduate high school 41 42% on a gun MBA it's 30 31% there is influence going on there
is there a correlation between education and guns just from a brain capacity that's the
other side because also you know I'll give you the other side as well.
The other side as well is atheists, atheists,
or agnostics, or those that don't believe in God,
the more degrees they get, many of them that end up saying,
I just don't believe in a God,
they typically are the ones that have had more degrees.
So what is that?
Is it because they've been able to figure it out for themselves?
And they're literally less naive?
Is it because they're surroundings?
Is it because the universities and colleges don't
pray anymore?
What is it?
So there's a two ways you can look at this with influence.
But anyways, how about we go to the Breonna Taylor
officer yesterday?
You heard about the riots.
You heard about the protesting.
There's a part of it.
You were dealing with last night a little bit having
to do with that in Dallas that you
were telling me about earlier.
There's a lot of things going on right now, I'll just kind of read some of this stuff
here right now and I want to turn it over to you guys to kind of tell me what your thoughts
are with the Breonna Taylor officer charts.
Officer Brett Hankinson, who was fired in June, was indicted on three counts of wanton endangerment, which
wanton endangerment means blindly shooting without knowing what you're shooting
at. We'll get into that here in a second. So three counts on wanton endangerment,
the first degree of Jefferson County Grand jury decided Wednesday. Now that
the grand jury nor the presiding judge elaborated on the charges, authorities
found that the bullets fired by Hac, Hankis and traveling to the neighboring
apartment while three residents were home, a male, a pregnant female and a child.
Attorney General Daniel Cameron set out a press conference after the grand jury's announcement.
Hankinson was not charging Taylor's death, but rather for engaging in, in, in, in
danger, in her neighbor's lives.
Now, obviously, that's neighbor's lives now obviously that's
that's just that's going to create a frenzy right there with Hankinson not being
charged for Taylor's death rather for in danger in her neighbor's lives a
warrant was issued for his arrest and he was booked and released on fifteen
thousand dollars bail according to a local reports despite executing a no
knockout warrant,
Cameron's office said that the officer did announce themselves
before busting down the door of the apartment occupied by Taylor
and her boyfriend Kenneth Walker.
You know, I spent a lot of time watching a lot of videos on this topic.
I read a lot of articles.
New York Times is a great article apart, one part two.
I read Washington Post.
I read anything on the left, the right, the middle,
anything I can, but I want to hear your perspective.
You're in this world.
You've been following this story very closely.
What are your thoughts about what's happening right now
with this case?
I think that the information, the communication,
has been grossly mishandled in this.
We're seeing right now that they're saying,
yeah, well, it was a no-knock warrant,
but we did announce ourselves,
this is the first that we're hearing of it.
Yeah.
I even, I read an article at 6.15 this morning
that said that there was some sort of independent witness that can corroborate this.
This is the first that we're hearing of any of it.
And when you don't communicate effectively with the general public, all you do is galvanize them.
All you do is let them think the worst. And so now we have a situation where this is just one more,
just sort of notch in the belt of the general community,
not trusting law enforcement anymore.
Because it's like you people can't communicate with us.
You can't tell us the truth.
You can't give us information.
Now I understand when you're doing an investigation, there's only so much that you can give out.
But I don't see how telling us two months ago that you announced yourself, even though
it was a no-knock warrant, and you have a witness that can corroborate that.
How's that going to hurt anything?
Right?
I mean, that gives us a little bit of,
you know, if that was the case,
you know, that may have fundamentally changed things.
But because now you're not gonna indict,
or you're not, I'm sorry, you're not going to,
you know, move forward with charges,
and now you're releasing all this new information,
or this old information that's new to us,
I think that's super irresponsible
on the part of the police department. I think that's super irresponsible on the part of the police department.
I think that's super, super irresponsible.
And I think that, you know, that girl was innocent
for all we know.
I mean, all the information that we've been given,
you know, she was innocent, that was a huge tragedy.
And I think that something needs to be done about it.
I think she has probably the most unique voice
on this story being that she works side-by-side
with law enforcement, right?
I mean, you're considering after becoming a police officer.
I mean, I had the whole guns out last night.
Right. Okay.
She's gun instructor, female, has lived. Yeah has lived with the boyfriend. Sure
owns guns has dealt with police
You have a very unique situation a story on this, you know, I
Look this
The word that comes to mind is optics like what like you hear this you hear information like you said you read
There's so much going on here like last week we covered the fact that her family was
awarded $12 million, right, by the city of Louisville. Okay. People have been talking about
preion of Taylor. Not being viewed as a settlement, you know, because that's clearly as a, you know,
maybe that's not why. For sure. You know, then this word comes out, wanton endangerment.
Wanton endangerment.
What is wanton endangerment?
You have a dead female.
The boyfriend was arrested,
he's since been released.
I googled what wanton endangerment is.
I never heard that.
It's substantial danger of death or injury
to another person,
an extreme indifference to the value of human life,
reckless endangerment.
So that's what the officer Hankinson was charged with.
And that's another, but that's another,
and I don't mean in Ruchi, but that's another lack of communication,
is like, you come out and say,
this is what this person's being charged with,
but you don't explain, you know, what it is.
And so if you're in Texas, if you're watching the show in Texas,
that's the equivalent to Penal Code 9.05 in Texas,
which is reckless injury or death of an innocent third party.
And here's the craziest part of that, okay.
This wanting endangerment.
The charges were not even because of Miss Taylor's death, right?
It was because of the neighbors that were almost shot by the police officers.
So like if you're on one side of this, you're like, what the hell is going on here? So what comes to mind when I see all these riots and protests that are obviously people are outraged about this?
So Pat, what year did you come to America?
November 28, 1990.
November 20, 1990.
Two years before Rodney King.
Boom, that's where I was going with this.
So you were here for a Two years before Rodney King. Boom, that's where I was going with them. Yeah. So you were here for a few years, Rodney King.
Yeah.
If you guys don't remember Rodney King,
he was a black man pulled over the side of the road
and argument ensues with four police officers.
What's on PCP?
OK.
All right, sure.
But basically, they end up beating the living crap
out of this guy to
Near death experience recorded recorded pre cell phone cell phone. This is people. I mean, can you imagine how many things like this happened before?
Yeah cell phone and camera time. Yeah, but they filmed these guys beating the crap out of him with batons batons batons
Fast forward. What happens to these four police officers?
fast-forward what happens to these four police officers?
Nothing. Nothing happens. They get, they walk off and what happens in L.A. You were there for two years. What do you mean nothing happens?
So they don't charge with anything? They, they, they, could they go back to their jobs?
I know I'm not sure what happened with them. That's how I'm going. Okay. Okay. That's how I'm going.
Okay. Point is they didn't get in deep trouble. Yeah. Okay. I'm sure a couple of them lost their jobs. Right. It's protesting. That's where I'm going. this point is they didn't get in deep trouble. Yeah, I'm sure a couple of them lost their jobs right?
It's protesting that's where I'm going. Okay, okay, so the city of LA
This is when two-pock was running the show in LA. Yeah, he famously said we'll burn this mother
Down did he not yeah, and you were just in living in LA for the first time so I'm thinking and I was on his side at that time
Just you were on two-pock side of that time. Of course, I'm a lot. You were what? Willing to burn LA down, where was I?
I was on the side against anything to do with cops,
government, anything.
This is a 14-year-old, 13-year-old pad
that's just kind of like clueless
about what's going on with life.
Pre-Republican pad.
Not Republican, independent.
Pre-independent pad.
The difference between me and you is,
I have voted on both sides.
Okay.
That's the difference between me and you.
You only voted on one side. That's not true. For presidential, I've only both sides. Okay. That's the difference between me and you. You've only voted on one side.
That's not true for presidential.
I've only voted on one side.
That's the biggest level.
But I've also voted for Republicans.
On what?
And Senate for governor.
The property mayor level, like with six
thousand units.
Yeah, of course.
My property manager was a Republican.
A friend of mine.
Is that kind of what you mean?
Mayor Francis Suarez Republican in this city of Miami.
Can you order a box of cookies from the local cook store for this buddy here?
Here's my point. Tell your point. We've been waiting. You're your famous. We're gonna get pat a t-shirt that says what's your point?
That's gonna hundred percent. You got a good one as well. Miami. He shot out for one shot. I said about going
We just cracked two thousand viewers dead. Thank you. Two thousand people live listening are wondering what is Adam
Saustinx. Here's my point. The last thing that we want to see in America
are cities being burnt down.
The last thing we want to see are right.
Can we all agree upon that?
Yes.
OK.
So sometimes you have to reverse engineer what you're doing.
So if you're the city of Louisville in this case,
and we say, all right, guys, there we are, up to our eyeballs
and some bullshit right here.
If we know if we come out with this wanton endangerment, no charges against the police,
we know what's going to happen, not only in Louisville, not only in Kentucky, all over
America.
So when we make this decision, let's prepare for the worst case scenario.
I'm not sure they did that because number one, let's just back up.
Two police officers were shot yesterday.
I hope they are doing okay.
Like, that's the last thing that we want in America today.
But when you make this type of decision
and you charge one officer with wanting engagement,
which is like a slap on the wrist,
just expect the worst case scenario.
And that's the last thing we wanna see here.
He probably should have been charged
with wanting engagement anyway, right?
On top of, I think maybe one or two other things.
What do you think he should have been charged with?
Or any of these police officers should have been charged
with?
And you're a big danger.
I think at minimum he should have been charged
with involuntary manslaughter.
OK.
Because you can't.
Now, here's the thing though.
When we start critiquing the police,
we have to remember that you are not the police.
You've never been the police.
Have you ever had to clear an apartment for squatters?
Have you ever had to serve a no-knock warrant
or a warranted general?
At best, who cats?
Have you ever, yeah, huh?
At best, who cats?
Because he's got cats.
Yeah, two cats.
And I got to call another one.
A very intense.
Listen, cats can flip the switch on you real quick.
They can, yeah, so you know.
Not my cats, they're very well-behaved. But continue flip the switch on you real quick. I can't. Okay. So, you know, let's not very well be here.
But continue with the police, please, Joe.
You know, they, I, you know, I have worked side by side with the police. I have had to clear,
you know, apartments. I've had to, you know, I've kind of been taken by surprise a couple of times.
And I can, I can see it from both sides.
But what I, but I will say is that there's a stark difference.
There's a huge delta between justice and revenge.
And I think that what the protest community, not maybe not the protest community, but the
riot community wants blood.
They want revenge.
And that's where it's coming to.
Sure.
And so that's-
You have to know that when you're making the decision.
Yeah, exactly.
And I work overnight in the exact same communities
that are experiencing what's happening to Breonna Taylor.
And so we have to be, you know,
I think policing personally is more about sympathy,
empathy and leadership than it is about authority.
And I think that's what the policing,
that's what the policing needs to get back to.
But you have to understand that absolute power corrupts absolutely.
And so when you put somebody in a position of authority like that,
with a gun, power to arrest, whether they've seen it or not.
So like as a personal protection officer,
I can only arrest somebody if they committed felony in my purview.
I can't go find somebody that because somebody said, okay, it has to happen in front of me.
And I think that when you give a lot of power to, you know, and a lot of authority to the
police, and sometimes they need it, right, okay, but in generalities, that gets in your head. I know because I have to
remind myself all the time when I go out and work in these communities that these people
are my brothers and sisters, they're in humanity. Okay, I have to remember that.
Civilians.
It's civilians. No matter what, no matter what lifestyle they lead, no matter where they live, no matter what
they've done.
Okay, I have to understand that the only thing that I get to judge is what they're doing
right now.
So it's like when people say, well, George Floyd did that.
He held a gun to a pregnant lady's belly and he was high on this and he did that.
That's not for you.
Okay. Now, do I think he needs to be glorified on the back of an NFL helmet? he's belly and he was high on this and he did that. That's not for you.
Okay, now do I think he needs to be glorified
on the back of an NFL helmet?
Hell no.
But what he did before doesn't matter at that moment.
What matters is that-
I couldn't agree with you more on that topic,
but I will tell you a couple of things here.
I got a couple different perspectives on this year.
So one is we got three people involved in this situation.
We got Brianna Taylor, okay.
Then you have Kenneth Walker, who is the boyfriend
she's currently with.
Then you have Jamarq is Glover.
There's three people on the ex-boyfriend.
So when you sit there and you think about
her choice of picking men, she needs to read
the right books on picking the right
boyfriend because the history of the boyfriend. So she started off 2020 saying I
have a new job, new career, new this she was expecting 2020 to be a big year.
She blocked her ex boyfriend on Instagram, social, didn't want to deal with it.
And in the middle of the night at 12.30 when the cops came in saying we're entering
the current boyfriend thought it was the X coming in.
So he shoots and as a cop, you know, you got your team, you got to make sure you're protecting.
They didn't shoot first. He fired first. And then they shot, and obviously they shot Brianna Taylor,
which is tragic for that to be taken place. They're held accountable for that. That's the $1 million
loss that's been paid. And the Hankinson guy, he had issues in the past already. It's not like this was his first term.
He couldn't control his temper.
And I put that onus on the department not being able to see
when I see a switch of power, like I watch my guys,
I run a sales company.
I watch which one of my guys becomes power hungry.
It's very dangerous when that happens
because in a sales organization, what do you do?
You're the greatest, you're so amazing,
phenomenal talk, you're so special, I'm so proud of you.
It's so much of building people up
that unfortunately some people have no color to take that.
Some people take in and they start thinking they're what?
They're gonna be the man, I can do whatever.
There's no humility.
There's no humility, humility goes the way.
You can't tell me what to do.
Do you realize who I am?
Papa, Papa, Papa.
So cops going in tension, original intention is what? I
want to serve, I want to make a difference. Right. And sometimes when all of us
say go to a club, I got a gun, you kind of start seeing people looking at
you differently. You kind of go a little bit like this, a little bit like. And if
there is any sense of character issue on the inside with insecurities, you got
a problem with that cop. So I think the testing needs to change. People
need to hide the one thing we constantly are trying to get better at is hiring better.
Every time I fire somebody after I hire them in a four to eight weeks and it doesn't
work out, I always take full responsibility. Always because I'm like, why don't you hire
better? You should have known this wasn't going to work out. Why don't you ask those
additional nine questions? It's not the guys fault. It's your fault. You should have hired better. You can sit there and point at people as
much as you want. This cost me money. That guy cost me $6,000. This guy cost me. You should
have never hired a guy in the first place. You take the ownership. I have to take the
ownership because I'm the one to blame to not have asked the right questions because maybe
this wasn't a cultural fit. So when we're sitting there, we're going after hiring, you have to hiring, you have to hiring.
So number one, I think the department
needs to get a better predictive analytics questions
they ask to hire people that has to do with.
And PIs are important.
That has to do with ego and insecurities.
It's very, very difficult to give somebody
who is very insecure a lot of power.
It's very dangerous.
So that's one part. So this guy Hankinson, you know, he first of
all, he's got primes, he's had primes, his resume doesn't look good anyways. So we can go one by one by one. Don't we look at Brianna Taylor?
If Brianna Taylor is my daughter, 26 year old, okay, you got Brianna Taylor, EMT, she's trying to be a nurse.
She's involved in a conversation about $14,000. Let me go do this.
And she's given the car that she gets to the front of, you know, of Kenneth. And what
are you doing being involved in these types of situations? So sometimes I remember one
night, I never forget this. I come out of the military. My friend picks me up. And this
is a friend that I was good friends with, regular guy, very good guy. It was, you know,
guy that I hung out with all the time.
And he picks me up in his car and we go out to Hollywood.
We have a great time.
He says, let me tell you who I am now.
I said, who are you now?
He opens the trunk.
When he opens the trunk, the trunk is filled.
This is in 97.
It's filled, filled with pot.
He's got vikin' and pills.
He's got coke, whatever you wanna buy, he's got it all.
Now this is not what he did prior to me joining the military.
I come in, he goes from being a 3.54 point OGPA to now one of these guys, he's got all this stuff in the back of his truck, right?
So I'm sitting there and it even takes place that has to do with cops and all this other stuff.
I'm sitting there, all I'm thinking about is if he gets arrested tonight
I'm in the military. I'm going to military jail. If I go to military prison
I can't get my securities license. If I can't get my securities license
I can't work for Morgan Stanley Dean with I if I don't go to Morgan Stanley Dean with I don't get my series
If I don't get my series seven I'm probably not getting into insurance if I don't get into insurance
I don't know what I'm doing today. I may be selling a gym membership.
Were you thinking you're your next five, I went right there in my mind.
I'm like, if I get arrested today,
I go to military prison.
But who taught you how to think like that?
But, but, but that's mom and dad.
That's parenting parenting.
They told you that think about your,
my mom always said,
a lot of people in these communities don't have that.
I agree with you and again, going back to it,
I agree with you, but what I'm trying to say is,
but if she has enough thinking to go to EMT,
she's trying to be a nurse,
she's doing all this other stuff.
So look, something like one night,
I got arrested in LA, okay,
and I got arrested because I was accused of being
from MS-13, and I'm not MS-13, I'm Middle Eastern,
I'm not Marasavatruja.
So I got mistaken for MS-13,
and they came, they arrested me,
I got, it's me and my two bodies,
and one of my friends has a big scar going here
That he fell from a park and he broke his and they're you know
I'm like to the guys not in witties and we're like he's a gangster, but I'm not a gangster
He's like all freaking out. That on the pizza shop, but you were arrested. I got arrested helicopter's all this stuff
I'm on my Chevy S10 low profile, you know gold 145 spokes. It's real nice. What is them? I barely turned 16.
Wow.
Because I'm my birthdays on month off
from when I was born to weekend to the States.
One month off.
Anyways, we got arrested.
So I'm like, what are we doing getting arrested today?
And I'm like, you know, the situation here is,
okay, you bought a car from a guy that was an MS-13 guy.
You knew this guy was a leader.
You didn't get your car registered quickly
You kind of drove with his registration. Okay. I mean this makes sense. Why this is taking place. They understood
They let me go. It's good to go. What's the moral of the story? Look
You're gonna be guilty by association if you hang out with the wrong crowd
So the messaging goes to few different people because I sit there and every event that takes place,
I wanna take things away.
We made some comments about the Louisville deal the other day,
$12 million and we kinda skimmed through it quickly.
And I got a long message from somebody that I respect
and said, I think you need to go a little bit deeper
on this topic because I think you guys kinda went through
this topic like as if it was a business topic.
I said fair enough, I respect what you're saying
because I respect what this individual is.
So number one, association.
What can our kids take away from this?
If your kids are listening to this right now, 20 years from now, what do you want them to take away from this?
But he choose who you're hanging around with.
Every time I got in trouble, it was bad association.
Every time I wasn't, not just in a bad crowd doing something stupid.
We know when we're on a bad crowd.
And the honest is on us.
We can't say mom, dad, we can,
like you said something earlier that was so powerful
when you were a teenager, a tragic event happened to you.
Your mom and dad couldn't have protected you that day.
You said there's only one person
that could have protected you.
It's you.
And I didn't think about it that way.
And no wonder you want to have a license to carry
because if somebody happens and a cop
doesn't show up for three minutes, you have a way to protect yourself.
The moment you become 18 years old, you have to make the decisions and some of the
decisions you're going to make are going to be good or bad. Now let me go to the
other part. The other part with the situation that you look at is influencers,
Hollywood and celebrities. Okay, let me kind of take this. The day just see
Smolet came out and he told the story, do you remember how everybody reacted that day?
That's exactly.
Everyone was feeling juicy Smolett.
They were like, I totally believe them.
They even Trump.
They even Trump.
The day he came out, everybody defended who.
How could this happen?
No way, juicy Smolett.
This is why racism, protest, America's a racist nation.
The moment he got caught,
did those same celebrities retract their statements?
None of them.
Very little.
The only person that stayed quiet was who?
Shep Shep.
Because this just doesn't sound right.
You mean two Africans in the middle of the night
are gonna come together to do this.
You're telling me, two African guys in mega hats in Chicago.
He was so dude.
Yeah, so, but, he's a brilliant dude.
So, so you go to this and you say,
where is this to play with?
Hollywood and athletes and celebrities?
Do you really want to unite America?
Do you really? Do you really want to you know?
It is it is it the smarter thing to tell players and
Hollywood people to say folks I
Cannot believe what happened to Brianna, but we have to wait and get the information. Why do you jump to conclusion?
So when you jump to conclusion, what do you do?
It's kind of like this.
It's like assuming.
You, your girl, let's just say your girl
is, you know, somebody sent something about your girl
and you come down to the panel,
let me tell you what's going on,
blah, blah, blah, blah, blah,
I'm like, bro, how do you know?
I'm just telling you, and you have no proof,
nothing no but like it's not like you have pictures or anything or anything. You have no proof. So imagine I'm not next to you. Dude, I told you
she's a freaking bitch. You know, I told you, you know, this is why. So when a guy is married,
one of his divorce friends or single friends, a lot of single friends want to make you be single
because you want to go party together, marry people want to get people to be married, right? Okay.
So somebody go, oh my gosh, you shouldn't do this. You should leave. You should go party together, marry people want to get people to be married, right? Okay, so somebody go, oh my gosh,
you shouldn't do this, you should leave,
you should go.
No, rather the answer should be what?
Bro, I don't know.
I haven't heard her say, what's good?
So there is an element of that to take in place here
where we jump to conclusion, very quickly.
Then I'll give you the last one here,
and I'll turn it over to you guys to see what you think.
And we can change topics because we've been going
on guns for a while and probably some of the people
are gunned out and we can go talk about business next.
Here's the last one.
You know who gets a lot of credit and who I believe is going to make this the world a better
place when it comes on to crime?
Steve Jobs.
Steve Jobs.
Absolutely, Steve Jobs.
You know why Steve Jobs?
Can I answer that?
Yes.
Cameras.
Cameras.
Respect to Steve Jobs. Because citizen. Tim Apple. Journalism. Yes, cameras cameras cameras respect the job because
Citizen temple journalism, you know somebody that now is can go around recording videos now
We can see eight minutes and 46 seconds. You had your neon George Floyd doing
Now we can wait no, no, no as long as it's not edited what they want you see as if it's alive
It's not editing if it's live. It's not edited. If it's live, it's not edited, right? But also cameras that the cops wear.
I love accountability.
Can we win them?
I love all of that stuff.
But at the same time, you know, when military folks came back from Vietnam and they were
at hotels, people were spitting on them and all the stuff they were doing to military folks,
you have no idea what these guys went to.
You think these guys woke up in the morning saying,
I want to go to war?
No, these guys just serving their military, trying to bring
freedom to you, but everybody jumped to conclusion
because the media would say these military guys
are war mongers all the set this time.
We also don't know what good cops go through throughout the day.
You know, for every one bad story you tell here about what it
copped it, then once the last time you watch CNN,
or MSNBC, or ABC, orped it. Then once the last time you watch CNN or MSNBC or ABC
or any of the, when is actually the last time,
you saw them share stories of what cops do right.
When's the last time?
Yeah, I will say that you do see,
you do see some stories.
I'm not saying it's,
Perman 1, but it's not saying it's CNN or MSN.
Tell me one, I'm gonna tell you some stories.
On CNN and NBC, that's specifically who I'm asking for.
You see, you do see stories during the protest.
This is after George Floyd.
I'll give you a story in Fort Lauderdale.
There was an argument over a cop.
He pushed some guy out of what I do.
On social.
Again, I don't know where this was exactly.
But you do see cops coming up again.
On social because of Steve Jobs. On social, there's a big difference. But you do see yes cops coming up on social because of Steve Jobs okay on social
There's a big difference, but you do see stories of cops. I shared a video with a guy on my Instagram profile
This guy's like what are you doing? Why are you coming out of here?
You did that I did that. I'm 28 you're 41. What are you doing now my five year old son's gonna do this one
Why are we doing this to ourselves and I the guys crying saying this to a group of people?
I shared this.
Media is not going to share that kind of stuff.
Do you ever watch not CNN, but CNN headline news
with Robin Mead?
Do you know who that is?
Okay, so there's two CNNs.
There's CNN, the main channel.
And then kind of like, I have-
She's the fact that no one knows who Robin-
Robin Mead is-
The way she's-
The way she's-
I'm not saying she's huge or she's not here.
She's what she said.
Uh huh.
Kai pull up Robin me.
If I say right now, do you know who Rachel Maddows?
What would you say?
I do.
Do you know Anderson Cooper is?
Of course.
Do you know who morning Joe is?
Robin me is a very famous person.
Do you guarantee you this?
Do you know she says good morning sunshine.
Every morning she's famous.
She's beautiful.
She has her own show on CNN headline news.
All she does is give good news of the day
And all I'm saying is there are good news stories out there
You so do you tell me that people the main anchors on CNN and MSNB show reporting good things?
God you're saying this lady right? Yeah, you have one example unfortunately
She's not the main face I'm wondering if I'm you know, I'm wondering if the media isn't what we need to defend
You know, I mean I'm wondering if the media isn't what we need to define. You know what I mean?
I'm wondering if the media is divisive for sure.
So I have a good friend, a mage who runs an organization called Black Guns Matter.
And his kind of, you know, his stick is, you know, media is the most effective devil
in America.
I got you.
You see?
So it's, you know, and to your point, you know, about, you know, I'm going to say, I got you.
You see?
So, you know, into your point, you know, about that is, you know, that that's a huge part
of what's, you know, galvanizing, you know, these riots.
And I always tell my students, if you see a video on social media, don't comment on it.
Wait four days.
Wait three new cycles. Yeah.
Something else is gonna come out that could potentially
make you think differently.
That's a basic thing that I don't think we're doing enough of.
Where we're not waiting to see what is really taking place.
We're just jumping to conclusion and just kind of going
out there and these influencers are doing more of it
and they don't realize that their fans are young kids.
Fans of sports are how old. They're not older people. Young fans of, you know, athletes are younger people.
Like, more than they want to be like this guy, more than they want to be like that guy.
You're not uniting America. You're dividing America.
And they're going to do what you do.
And they're going to do what you do because they equate what you're doing with success.
They're actually not going to do what she do because what you do,
the athlete is going to go to their $7 million home.
What the other person is doing is going to their one bedroom apartment living with four
people and they're going to go do what you're not willing to do.
Meaning, the athlete is going to tell them go out their protests, but the athlete is not
going out their protesting.
The athlete is putting the responsibility on the 18-year-old kid not thinking that someone's
child and they don't think about the severity of what could happen to someone's kid.
This kid grew up in a family I was living with my mother.
My mom was a single mother raising us and I saw my dad twice a month.
I didn't have a day-to-day father.
My mom couldn't control me at 14 years old.
My mom hit me one time and I was looking at my mom, what are you doing?
She hit me one time and she held her arm.
I said, you got to stop hitting me.
I realized it doesn't hurt anymore. You got to stop and that was the last time she hit me one time and she held her arm. I said, you gotta stop hitting, man. I you realize it doesn't hurt anymore.
Like you gotta stop and that was the last time she hit me.
I was six, one at 14 years old.
What did you do?
Then it's telling me to do.
I'm like, dude, just stop.
So from that moment you couldn't control this kid.
What if one of my people I looked up to a Jordan said,
you better go out there and do this.
This is not fair.
I probably would have been capable of doing some stupid.
And I wouldn't be able to do what I've done
on my life now.
You know, you look at a story you think,
oh my gosh, this person was destined,
bullshit, bullshit.
Sometimes somebody else could have influenced
that person to ruin their lives,
these athletes and Hollywood celebrities.
I love sports more than words can describe.
I'm a stat guy, I love baseball. I love football.
I love basketball.
I love anything to do with competition,
but they gotta stop dividing.
They're not doing a, you're not doing a standup job.
They're not doing a standup job.
I was a really powerful boy and I don't think
I've ever thought of it that way.
Yeah, I don't think.
Let me say one thing to build upon your story
about who you were hanging out with in LA
and when you got arrested.
And this is something that I gravitate to
and I tell people all the time. your network is your net worth, right? Show me the five people you're hanging out with the most,
I'll show you your future. And you had to make a realization that whoever you were hanging out with,
when you were 14 or 16, or probably not the people you were going to get you to the next level.
Would you agree? 100%. Okay. Yeah. So your network at that time was not the equivalent of where your network could have been.
But I went down the wrong path.
I agree with you and I tell you there was a bit of luck.
It's very easy for us to kind of tooth our own home and say,
oh, let me tell you it's because of this.
No, like I got kids now, man.
I'm not like what she said.
I told you agree with her.
Today's my son's birthday.
It's Dylan's birthday.
No, that's not bad.
By the way, you never met Dylan.
I have not.
It's a little freaking stomachache. Let me tell you. I love that kid. And you know, I just wake him up. I've been birthday, Dylan, birthday. No, that's not right. That's not right. You never met Dylan. I have not. He's a little freaking stomach kid.
Let me tell you, let's kid.
And you know, I just wake him up one early.
I've been birthday Dylan, man.
I mean, what a guy.
Let me give you a tap up too, I'm just.
Dylan's an athlete.
He's got calves bigger than his daddy.
He's got the perfect bubble butt of my, you know,
a bone jackson.
And he's just, you know, such as every kid
has got a different kind of a soul about themselves.
He has said, I'm laying this kid down and I'm playing with his hair and I'm just looking
and he's knocked out.
And I'm just like, listen, you know, God, I so desperately need you to watch over my kids
because I'm not around all the time.
There's only so much I can do as they're that.
I'd love to protect them 24, so I can't do it.
You need someone to watch over them.
We have to understand that every but Brianna is someone's daughter, man. This is someone's daughter.
This is someone's family. This is someone's blood. You know, blood is painful when something happens
to them. And there comes a time that you either have to count on the man upstairs to protect your kids.
You have to count on the values and principles you pass to the kids or you have to count on the fact that the people they look up to set a good example
that they're worth modeling. You have to be relying on that. Anyways, let's shift.
Well, and if you're a Godforing person, you need to understand the Christian principles
of self-defense. But that might be for another podcast. I'm writing a book about it, though.
All right. There you go. There's a title of the book yet.
The Christian principles of self-defense. Wow. There we go. Do you have a title of the book yet? The Christian Principles of Self-Division. Wow, there we go.
Anyway, shout out to Dylan Bet, David, turning 76.
Yeah.
Dylan is seven today, man.
Seven today.
He's seven today.
Comment happy birthday to Dylan Bet, David.
A stud of a kid.
A daily boy, daily boy.
Thank you, our friends.
Like and give a thumbs up to our audience.
We just cracked 2.2 on Dylan's birthday.
He's the best.
I guess so.
Let's talk about something a little more, you know,
calm and a little bit more light.
Mike Tyson's gonna vote.
Who's he gonna vote for?
Is he gonna vote for Joe Jorgencent?
Is that who he's gonna vote for?
Oh, he's gonna vote for someone named Joe.
You think so?
I'll tell you, I used to hang out with Donald Trump
back in the day.
We used to go pick up ladies and you know, he never treated me fairly.
So I'm going with Joe Biden.
You think that's going to happen?
No, I can see him voting for Trump.
Tell me why.
I mean, Mike Dyson's been punching the face a couple of the 82 times.
I don't know where his mind is right now.
So he's going to go a little crazy.
Who knows?
Let's get our audience crazy over.
Who do you think he's voting for?
I think he's gonna write in the tiger on the ballot.
You think so?
Yeah, I think he's gonna vote for the tiger.
Wow.
For the hangover?
I like that.
I think he's gonna bring a whole new candidate.
By the way, I love the way that Mike Tyson
has reinvented himself.
He could have gone the way of the typical washed up, just like angry beat up, you know, boxer.
Yeah.
But he's, you know, become more lighthearted, playful.
He has a pretty incredible sense of humor about himself.
Yeah.
Within a split second, he can harm anybody in a room.
I mean, there's only a couple people in the world that can probably take this guy.
Okay.
You know, if you really wanted to in a room, he can do whatever he wants to do.
But, you know, he's trying to be a good dad.
He makes an effort.
He called that Mayweather.
He says, you think you're tough.
He says, tell me if you walk,
you can take your kids to school.
Tell me what you're doing.
Cause this is what I do.
Tyson's got his own identity right now.
And I like it.
And I think,
no one who is the underdog guy,
I think he's probably gonna lean,
leaning towards voting for Trump.
I just think.
And if nobody, if nobody that doesn't like you can beat you up,
then you kind of have the, you free them to have whatever kind
of system, but he is fine again, against one of the,
one of the greatest boxers.
I was on a fight with them.
I was on a fight with them.
Okay, can we Google when that fight is?
He's ridiculous.
Tyson Roy Jones Jr.
By the way, audience, who you got in this fight.
Mike Tyson versus Roy Jones Jr.
Mike Tyson, obviously one of the greatest
heavy weights of all time.
Roy Jones Jr.
one of the greatest middleweight of all time.
Who you got, PBD.
Here's my prediction.
If it ends in the first two rounds is Tyson.
If it goes past two rounds is Roy Jones.
Just stand on it.
Simple.
I don't know.
Speed versus those two. I don't know. Speed versus I don't know. I thought I lost his training videos. I'm telling you Tyson's man.
He looks good. He looks good. There's no. No question about it. He looks pretty good.
Two legends are here to square up an exhibition of recovery. Thanks. Giving weekend. Wow.
Are we going? Where's it going to be? I don't know. Are we going to check it out? I think we should go.
Where's it going to be? We got Mike. We got gonna check it out? I think we should go. Where's it gonna be?
We got Mike. We got Mike. We got. By the way, apparently they're gonna be fighting with social distancing. So it's gonna be
That's gonna be the last one. It's
Well, you got UFC people fighting these days. So I think these guys are gonna do. We'll see what's gonna happen with that. So who you're going with?
I'm telling you make a prediction though right now. I just say well. I think this I think I think Tyson's gonna take it into first two rounds. You think it's just an knock him out. Yeah, I think he's
gonna go in for the kill. You got to realize weight difference, right? I mean, he's heavy weight. It's
I picked my Mike Tyson to first two rounds. I got Roy Jones Jr. We're gonna have a bet. In what
round? I just think he's gonna win. Okay, so he says he says fans won't be allowed in California.
Is there really a market for? Dude bring it to Texas California. Is there really a market for, dude, bring it to Texas.
Yes, there is a market for paper,
people, Tyson, Rojo and Junior.
So you got Tyson.
Oh, yeah.
You got, you got Rojo.
I got Rojo and Junior.
Can you predict around?
I think it's gonna, I think tight, like you said,
I think Tyson's gonna get tired after three, four rounds.
I'm gonna say Junior.
I'm gonna say Tyson.
There's also an age difference.
I feel like Roy Jones Jr. is a few years younger.
Kyle, you wanna give me an answer on that?
It's but not by far, though.
It's by five, six years.
Five, six years is a big deal.
Oh no.
You're fighting when you're 50.
I don't know.
Yeah, Tyson's hungry.
Yeah, but Tyson's hungry.
He's hungry for another way of a fame, I think.
And he's not a loser.
Tyson.
Tat, press it. There you go.
55.
How old?
Roy Jones is 51.
He's re at Roy Jones is 51.
Tyson is 51.
So three years.
So three years apart.
Guys, never forget how good Roy Jones junior.
There was a time that he was the best fighter on the
planet.
He was better than Floyd.
No question about his.
No question about it.
Let's talk a business story.
Let's talk a business story.
I'm trying to see which business story I want going to get into here. We've been talking
the gun business. Oh, we've been talking a lot of gun business. Let's pick a business.
Jared, you haven't fun. Oh, man. Yeah. How about Tesla coming out with their $25,000
car? So, Tesla just announced during battery car meeting,
520 mile range on the car,
the new battery uses large cells
with a simplified design and lower cost materials
that can be manufactured faster
and 56% cheaper than the current technology.
What do you think about the Siloma's new car,
$25,000, driverless car within three years. Is he gonna deliver within three years?
No, okay, go ahead ladies first go ahead. Yeah, I don't you just saying no. He's not doing it. No, I don't think it's gonna happen
I mean, he's you know, I mean, I'm an Elon fan. I mean, I think friend of the show
We talked about all the time. He's we talk about him every episode
I think the guys brilliant, but I mean, you know if he keeps smoking weed with Joe Rogan
He might not get his dental time. I think it'll, that'll inspire him to get a done interest way sooner. So, so then he's got to be back and they got a smoke.
I think, um, is it again, Pat? They got to go back for part two. Yeah, I think so. I
think, look, what's happening in California these days? What do we talk about with Governor Newsom that he has basically delivered an executive order
banning all new car sales that are gas powered by 2035.
So in the next 15 years, no more new car sales in California
will run on gasoline.
That's even more wishful thinking.
Okay.
All right, I'm not saying that's gonna happen
or it's not gonna happen, but that's
the executive order that Gavin Newsom passed down.
So what does that, you know, just go down the slip.
You did as an executive order.
Executive order.
It's happened in California, cookie place, cookie place.
We just came back from California, it's cookie place.
So what do you think about it?
You're going to think about it.
I mean, look, what are we saying?
Governor Newsom, so who does that help?
What is the average cost of a Tesla right now?
70, 80, 90 grand, which is a total.
I don't think it's, like 50 to 60K.
Yeah, more than that.
It's 50 to 60K.
Is it?
Say it's 60K.
Okay, so all he has to do is make more
and make him cheaper, right?
I mean, he's, I mean, he's working on a super car right now
that's gonna go zero to 60 and less than two seconds.
I mean, less than two seconds,
and it's gonna go 200 plus miles an hour.
But that's a complete different story
on what he's building.
But who does this favor?
What Governor Newsom is doing?
It favors the electronic car.
I actually agree with you.
Kai, you were saying something.
No, the way, I mean, the way he's going at it
is he's just making cheaper batteries.
He's going back to the natural materials
and looking, okay, this is what's expensive.
This is why electric cars are more expensive.
And then they're trying to find new ways to create new batteries that are cheaper than
takes down the price.
And I think with innovation, and especially now with Gavin Newsom's order and where you're
having other companies also kind of lining up, that that is the way it's going.
And if we look at the innovation of computers and how it's grown over time,
I mean, I think there's no doubt that eventually we'll get to that point with cars too.
There we go. That's Kai, ladies and gentlemen.
Let's not forget there's the competitor to Tesla that we don't hear that much about this
Nikola, which is Tesla's first name ironically.
Yeah. This Nikola, yeah, they partnered up with, was it GM guy?
Yes. They partnered with GM and they're going to be making their own.
So I think the e, the electronic car, the Teslas, the Nikolas, that's a wave of the future,
whether it happens in the next three years, five years, ten years, we're on that path.
I have so many questions.
I have so many questions.
I mean, how long do these batteries last?
How do you dispose of them when do they need to be replaced?
Because we went through a very similar situation
with plastics.
And if you've watched the documentary on plastics,
and plastics was the way of the future,
it was supposed to save us and be reusable and all this stuff.
And now we have tons and tons of trash
that's not biodegradable.
I have questions about this.
I want to know about the impact to the environment in to, you know, the environment in the future.
And I don't think that he that's been addressed, you know, and I want to also know like, how can a government,
how can a governor put down an executive order like that? I mean, it could potentially just be overturned when the next governor's elected.
To Shay. We'll see. We'll see what's going to happen. I mean, I I can tell you if Newsom came up with that by 2035,
if there was a way for him to try to say Elon from leaving California that may have not been a bad strategy, by the way.
If it was a way for him to get Elon must to say, okay, you making this a law, I'll stay over here.
But again, Tesla is an international product. I don't think he's gonna sit there and just the the laws of california is going to say that that this is something that he could do to
sway elana stay in
i just don't see lons personality as a guy that belongs in california
cilana's a Texas guy cilana's a Florida guy cilana's a Tennessee guy
i don't see lana's a Texas guy as a california guy
yeah
bluepill and redpill in the you know california for a long time yes he has been
he has been i will newsam
what about him he was the you all salesperson of the of the month was it
was he was so he's going to be a very impressive
great that's pat pat give him that a lot of america city just announced two
dozen cities are announcing their own ubi five hundred dollars a month they
want to pay
to the low income families in LA.
Los Angeles, the country's second largest city.
Mayor Garcetti has pledged to a launch a program
that includes a mix of public and private money.
He hinted the program could also help immigrants
living in the country illegally
who have been written out of federal legislation
in Los Angeles, the county said,
okay, but so you wrote the same thing twice in copy paste, okay, got that.
So, you got $500, $500 a month, $500 a month, that he wants to pay out as his own form of UBI.
Two dozen cities are green to this.
Who does this help? Who does this hurt? Who should care, who shouldn't care.
The taxpayer should definitely care. And I think we, didn't we just do this experiment with with unemployment during COVID and stimulus checks? Didn't we
just do this experiment? And how many people didn't want to go back to work?
Yeah, because they made too much money on unemployment.
Two thirds of people were getting paid more to sit at home than they were when working.
I mean, it's companies, I think maybe a lot like yours that suffer, people don't want
to come back to work.
And you're going to go where the money is.
To me that seems very counterproductive.
And what is stimulating this decision? Who is he?
We already have a myriad of programs to help low income people.
I don't understand why we need to continue to add on top of that.
And I'm not saying that poor people are lazy.
That's not where I'm getting from.
That's where I'm getting at.
Circumstances happen.
I'm just wondering why these current programs that we have don't seem to be filling the void.
Yeah, you know, I'm not so how many other cities other than LA have 25 cities Patterson who Jersey has also pledged to follow a similar program
You're talking about Oakland
Mount Vernon some places in New York to Coma Washington, Patterson, Jersey, Long Beach,
some of the areas.
Okay, let's play a little game real quick
on where we are on UBI, universal basic income.
Yeah.
I'm like 70-30, meaning I'm 70%, no, 30%, okay,
let me, I see some benefits with this.
All right, let's list the pros and cons
and I'd love to get your responses
So what are the cons right the cons are obviously it encourages laziness is encourages people not to go back to work
Disincentivizes work
Illegals maybe potential criminals just straight up losers would be getting money to sit at home
And obviously taxpayers fairs, socialism, big government,
there's a lot of bad on UBI.
What's the good?
What's the good?
So obviously people can avoid slipping into poverty,
homelessness.
Some people could potentially have that money
to pay their bills, maybe take more risks,
start more businesses.
That's an opportunity right there.
And then obviously the big thing that Andrew Yang talks about is automation and robots
are going to be coming for your jobs in the next 10, 20, 30, 40 years.
So there's pros and cons to this.
So I'm 70, 30 against UBI, but I'm not 100% against UBI.
What say you?
To me, a UBI screams, I can't compete in the world.
It's not encouraging people to go into the trades, which is so necessary right now.
We're doing this whole, I think when I was in high school, during my college years,
it was like, you got to go to college, you're a loser.
And then the trades suffered for it, right?
So, welders and gunsmithing and finding a good mechanic, God help us.
Can we find a good mechanic?
You know what I mean?
And so, all that stuff suffered, and now the trades are making it come back.
Totally agree.
And I think that, if we say if we say, you know, we're
going to give out this universal basic income, it's really just proving that all of your
programs that you've done before this have failed. Because they're out there, okay, and
you can take advantage of them. So why do we need this additional one? We're disincentivizing
people to either start businesses, you know, there's microloan programs and loan programs for people who want to start businesses.
And then, you know, we don't, we're not encouraging anybody to think for themselves, do for
themselves, or go into the much needed trades.
I mean, I'm in the trades.
I'm in gunsmen's school.
Where are you on the, are you 100% 80, 90, 50, like where are you on the, I'm 0% because 80 90 50 like where are you on the I'm zero percent
Because we already have we already have programs in place. You also zero percent. Oh, let me tell you what I love about
I love that I love that Garcetti announced his $500 to LA. You have no idea how much I love it tell ask me why I love it
Pat let me tell you why I don't ask you no, I'm asking
Why do you love it? Let me tell you why I love it, Jay.
I'm gonna tell you why I love it, Jay-la.
And it's gonna be a different perspective.
But I love the stupidity of what LA is about to do.
Do it, go for it, give people free money.
Here's what it's gonna do.
Look, you know, what I'm all about is the following, okay?
If you take an as well, I'm so sorry.
If you, if you, they say a very simple line says,
if you don't take care of your people, somebody else will.
Right? That's that simple.
Now, you know, you're gonna lose certain people culturally,
they fit in a different culture, et cetera, et cetera.
But if you don't take care of your people, somebody else will.
If you don't take care of your woman, somebody else will.
If you don't take care of your man, someone else will. If you don't take care of your man, someone else will.
There's always going to be somebody else that's willing to take care of what you currently have.
That's that simple, right?
Okay.
You know, LA has a choice to offer this UBI program to the people that they want.
Who's it going to track?
So imagine if you are in a different county and your county doesn't give you $500.
Okay.
Say I am the mayor of a complete different city.
I'm a mayor of a complete different county,
different city that I'm running it.
And LA announces they're giving $500, guess who's leaving my city?
I'm in love! I'm like mayor Garcetti, thank you!
Thank you! Because everybody that wants free money
and are moving to your county.
Thank you for cleaning out my county.
I'm all with it.
Because I'm not gonna lose my business owners to your county.
Oh, no.
I'm gonna lose the people that want free money
to your county.
I appreciate you.
Phenomenal job.
Thank you so much for doing this.
A guy came out a couple of years ago,
his story went viral.
He said, I don't believe I need to make more
than $70,000 a year income, guy who wants this company.
You know what the story is.
Oh yeah, of course.
So, he ends up giving everybody a salary.
Those who are making 10 bucks an hour,
he takes them up to what?
70.
And those who are making six figures,
he takes them down to what?
70.
He was making a million dollar
or income, guess what he does.
Takes them down to 70.
You kind of get this,
so people making less than 70, they're saying what?
That's a place to be.
Man, I'm loving this kind of a place.
Right, I want to go work for somebody
that's automatically going to give me 70,000 dollar income.
You know how long that beautiful story
that was shared by the media lasted less than two years.
You know why?
It's not sustainable.
It's not sustainable in companies.
It's not sustainable in families. It's not sustainable in companies. It's not
sustainable in families. It's not sustainable in cities. But I love if I am a
county next to LA, I am saying, please do it. I'm begging you do it. Let's clean the
house of my street. I will give you all the people that are low income. Let them
come to your city. It's up to you. You know, you know how this whole thing
conversation goes about taxes. We're sitting at Raffis place. We're having a friendly day. That's right. It's up to you. You know, you know how this whole thing conversation goes about taxes.
We're sitting at Raffi's place.
We're having a friendly day.
That's right.
That's right.
Guy real quick.
Pull up Dan Price gravity.
That's the guy.
Okay.
70 grand.
So, so, so we're sitting at Raffi's place.
And, and at Raffi's place, the conversation comes up about taxes.
And our good friend, Steve.
Oh.
There you go.
Dan Price is an American entrepreneur.
He's a CEO of an online credit processing company,
Gravity Payments, which he started
while a student in Seattle, Pacific University,
he gained recognition after he raised his company,
his minimum wage for $70,000,
and he slashed his wage to $1.1 million.
You got to read the whole story.
Minimum wage 70K.
I don't think he lowered...
Minimum wage 70K. Minimum wage 70K,
which...
Catastrophic, when he do something like that.
Catastrophic when you do something like that.
Let's talk more about Rafi's place and your friend Steve,
they got a debate over taxes like crazy.
We sit down, we start talking about taxes.
Okay.
Shout out to Steve if he's listening.
Yeah, Steve, I'm not gonna say who said what,
but one of the guys, if you want to come and defend it here,
it's a whole different conversation,
one of the guys says, I think we need to raise
the taxes on rich people.
I said, oh really?
He said, yes, I said, what's considered rich?
So do you know these people that make $100 million here?
I said, wait, wait, wait, wait, who's rich?
The people that make $100 million.
I said, I want you to look at that Indian couple
right behind us.
Remember that Indian couple center right behind us?
I said, what do you think they make?
They're looking couple.
I said, what do you think they make?
And he says, I don't know.
I said, what do you think the average person here makes? I said, I said, what'd you make last year? And he says, I don't know. I said, what do you think the average person here makes?
I said, what'd you make last year?
Watch out your friends about the drug.
I said, what'd you make last year?
He gives the number.
And I said, how many people in this room made your kind of money?
I said, if I told everybody in this room right now
that you made that kind of money,
what would they consider you?
Right, exactly.
I said, they think you need to be taxed a lot.
So who are you to determine who needs to be taxed? I think there's got to be a tax for talented people that don't use their talents
For me it's the other way around. I'm being that serious with you
If you're talented and you are not using your talent and you're sitting around
I think we need to tax you the highest Wow not the other way around because if a person is
Busting their butt going out the creating jobs using their talents to create an economy for other people
That person needs to pay less taxes if the person that's not using their
Talent that person needs to be tax more. I mean, isn't there a story about it with the guy and you know with five talents
Three talents one talent all this other stuff. You got to put your talents to use
I think too many time we you know We we like to demonize these guys that are going up and creating economy
and jobs and not the other way around the people that don't want to use their talents. I
know how many people you know, Adam, how many people you know that are more talented
than you that are broke? Oh, there's a lot. Why? Why are they broke and they're so talented?
I don't know. What's it? what they're just they can't get it together
I'll give you my favorite quote literally of all time. Let's hear it
So if you ever seen the movie the Bronx tale of course, okay, Chaz
Makey-Manor. Yes. Yeah, Mickey Manor Robert the hero. Yes, okay, Mickey Manor
The Robert Deere was a bunch of make you once the last time Mickey Manor paid your bills exactly yeah
The my favorite quote literally of all time
He says the saddest thing in life is wasted talent.
I remember, I wrote that quote down
because there was a time in my life
where I remember saying, I'm so talented.
It is, though.
I can do whatever I want to do.
I can literally become who I want to become.
But I'm wasting my time just doing nonsense,
parting and South Beach.
And I said, the saddest thing in life is wasted talent.
I heard that, I wrote that down.
I wrote that down and I read that every, I still have a thing in life is waste of talent. I heard that I wrote that down. Yeah, I wrote that down
And I read that every it's I still have a plaque. Yeah in my room with that saying so I I agree you know what I would do
If I was a governor or small state. Yeah, it just to do project eight years from a governor or small state at flip taxes
At flip I'd make it progressive but the other way around the less you make the more you get less you make the more you pay tax the mind blown the less you make the more
taxes you pay the more you make the less tax that's gonna get people that's
capital is the people are gonna be hustle that does yes what that does you know
what it does the people on the bottom are gonna say screw this guy I don't like
this guy no problem go to LA it's just gonna move Garcetti would love you but
the other people you like, shoot.
Let me just...
I come to your state.
You come to my state, the more jobs you create, the less tax...
Listen, compensation structures are tax company.
If you think about our tax plan as a comp plan, that's all it is.
At a sales company, their comp plan is a tax plan.
And I don't know a single company that grows in sales
where they charge the people that make more money and they pay them less commission.
Let me get to straight. So if I come to a company and I'm doing sales and the more value and revenues
I bring to the money, don't I make more commission instead of less commission? What sales organization
that grows says, the more money you make, we pay you less commission have you ever heard of it
Or is it but taxes do and all of these Americans have bought into this progressive tax system for what wow who said this because somebody said the more money
You make the more money you should pay no should be the other way around I say if you are able to create 50 jobs
If I'm running a city and I tell you you create 50 jobs and
If I'm running a city and I tell you, you create 50 jobs and average salary of $50,000 of your income, okay?
Does that help my city out?
Does it help your city out?
How hard is it to create 50 jobs for a city?
What, wait a minute.
Not easy.
Not easy.
It's very hard.
Yes.
I don't want you to pay taxes.
You'll have the lowest level of taxes you pay.
You create 50 jobs in my city
Are you kidding me? You're a hero. No, it's the other way around. You created 50 jobs
And you're making money off of these people and you make 2.2 million dollars last year shame on you you rich man
What do you mean shame on you? It's the other way around you you you are you have this degree
You are so smart you are so well read you know about philosophy
You've read all the books in the world and you are unemployed for nine straight months and you're blaming
Society for it. No, you're gonna be tax at the highest level
Wow, you don't like the city go to different taxing waste the talent. I've never heard that my life
Let me put it in ten stop. Let me put it to this way
You know what are the chance of somebody getting elected on that campaign?
Zero. Yeah. Yeah.
You're going to get elected on some like this.
But do you know how on point that message is?
My mind is so blown right now.
Boom. My mind is blown.
Guys, give a thumbs up if you like past point.
That was so powerful.
It'll never happen, folks.
I just want you to know this.
Give a thumbs up.
Not in a time where all these rich people are demonized
and everybody else who's unemployed, not getting a job
is a hero of America today. I can't understand that part.
Now what's the what's the percentage I heard this one time in that but I can't remember
it like how how much of like basically the total tax burden does the like top 1% carry.
Don't they pay like almost half of the actual nation's taxes?
Yes, most of it they of course they do of course they do
Oh, I pulled that up but look here's here's here's here's what I'm all about man. This is what I'm all about for me
You know When I see somebody like when you and I spoke perfect example
This is my wiring. I can't help myself. I'm wired like this.
When you and I spoke the first time,
how many years ago was this?
Eight years ago, nine years ago.
2012.
So I see Adam.
Okay, if you ever go to an event with Adam, okay.
When you go to an event with Adam,
if you go to the acting school with Adam,
within five minutes, Adam knows everybody. Okay, what's up? I don't know Adam, but Adam approached me. school with Adam. Within five minutes, Adam knows everybody.
Hey, what's up?
I don't know Adam, but Adam approached me.
I don't approach Adam.
I'm at the gym doing my regular back workout.
I'm doing Adam starts coming.
What's this?
What's up, man?
Your muscles, what do you do?
Tell me who's the winner.
And then every time Adam starts,
everywhere I go, at everybody knows Adam.
I'm like, how the hell does everybody know Adam?
How long have you been in the insurance?
Everyone, so I'm like, dude, listen, I pulled him
aside one day. I said, you are so flippant talent. You need to be on TV. You need to be on
camera. You're a camera guy. He says, what do you mean? I said, you don't need to write.
You don't need to start a podcast. You're handsome. You're good looking. You got a good voice.
You got a good sense of humor. You need to be on TV. He starts doing videos. Okay. This
is a talented guy. I mean, he's got a big upside. I'm like, this guy's
got to do something with this talent. Now him, Adam, is a cash millionaire now. You weren't
10 years ago. No. You're now a cash millionaire. You're a saver. You're very responsible.
Savering. You take care of two cats you got. Little weird. But it is what it is. Okay.
So now watch this. I watch Jera. Yeah. left watching Jera I couldn't help myself. I'm like this is talented human being. Oh my gosh
Her storytelling her sense of humor. I could not believe I'm sitting there
I would have normally checked my phone a hundred times listen to class. I didn't even check my phone for four hours
I'm just glued. I see which is a. When she's telling her story. I walked down and I said, dude, we got to get her on the podcast.
Now here's the thing with Jared. Jared's not an online personality. Jared's not an influencer,
meaning she's not like she has her own YouTube channel. She has her own podcast. After this,
I would love to see Jared be all over the place because I think Jared's a talented person.
Everything I see, I see, when I saw Sam the first time he took care of me three years ago,
I don't know what the time was.
Okay, two and a half years ago, wherever it was, I'm like, I feel safe around Sam.
Sam makes you feel safe.
And then I saw how Sam took charge of everything.
Sam wasn't working for me two and a half years because is there anything I can get you?
Are you okay?
Are these people bothering you?
Do I need you to do it?
I'm like, dude, I don't pay you.
Why are you doing this?
Then I told them what I said, listen,
if you ever want to run, you got a job with me.
You tell me when you want to do it.
And then he came.
He can't, we figured something out.
He came out here to Dallas.
But I saw the talent of him leading people.
First time I sat down with Kai, yesterday,
you did the interview with, what's the guys
in view interview yesterday?
Daryl Davis.
Daryl Davis, which is...
What an amazing guy, guys. I don't know who Drell Davis. Darrell Davis, which is what amazing guy.
I can't wait.
Darrell Davis is the new guy.
I'm supposed to do the interview.
And last minute, the only person I've ever given an interview
for my career is who?
To you.
I said, Adam, you can do this interview.
I'm not going to do the interview.
It's on you.
So Adam does the interview.
Yes, today.
Crushes it.
And hour and a half interview ends up being six hours.
It's a six hour interview.
That's the only problem.
We ran out of tape.
All our cameras are done with. We got to use old tape. Dar's the only problem. We ran out of tape. All our
cameras are done with. They're old school tape. I use old school tape on the tape. Okay.
Do you know what Darrell Davis is? KKK guy that converts people.
Black guy that converts KKK. They made a movie about amazing. But you know what happened
at 11 o'clock? I get a text at 11 o'clock. You know who it's from? Kai. What does Kai say?
Pat, don't worry he's going to be ready. We're going home right now. He's prepared for it tomorrow
He's gonna do fine. I didn't tell Kai to do that. Kai chose to do that. See
It's so attractive when people use their talents. It's the most unattractive thing for me
I cannot tell you how unattractive it is when somebody doesn't use their talents
It's so unattractive and we have When somebody doesn't use their talents, it's so unattractive.
And we have become the nation that wants to plot victims.
We have become the nation that wants to plot everything
that happens.
I was having anxiety.
I have a mental issue.
I'm in depression.
First of all, half the time we're depressed
and we have mental issues.
Life is freaking complicated.
Marriage is annoying half the time.
Raising kids, how many people want their kids
shitting on them all the time?
How many more diapers you want me to change?
How many times does a kid have to pee on me?
Changing the diapers, I'm checking the phone.
All of a sudden I'm sensing my cheek getting wet
and warm.
I don't have a clue why this is happening.
My son is peeing on me.
You're gonna have to have a wonderful life.
That's parenting.
Okay, you got pee over here.
I'm like, oh my gosh, pee and he's smiling at you peeing on you you know what do you do to this kids
I've ever they day man phenomenal job buddy you know life is complicated man life is
weird but you gotta use your talents so all this stuff about giving money away
you know what an ins you know how I perceive when somebody wants to give you
free money let me tell you how I look at free money so weird how I look at free
money I've such a hard time taking money from people. When
somebody gives you free money to me, it's like you think I can't do something.
It's a way of thinking like insulting. It's insulting. It's insulting if
somebody says here, no, man, I got it. Little bit, I get it a little bit. Maybe a
week, maybe two weeks. I got it. I don't want to sit down. Roll, I got it. Little bit, I get it a little bit. Maybe a week, maybe two weeks. I got it.
I don't want to sit down and roll.
I don't somebody for it.
It's like a hand up instead of a hand out situation.
So for me, man, listen, if it's not going to happen,
I have no desire of politics.
The more and more I think about it,
the more and more I just know it's not going to be something
I'm going to be entertaining.
But if I ever ran a state or if I have a rant a country,
you wouldn't like my tax system.
If you did love my tax system, it's because you're improvement.
If you didn't, I would send you to Mayor Garcetti City
or county or state that he's governing,
but you wouldn't like the state I'd be running
because I would want people that are using their talent.
And that's not a popular message today.
No, I've heard Pat say a lot of powerful things
that might have taken the cake right there.
Other than that synergy rant you went on that blew my mind on the earlier podcast, that was probably one of my favorites.
I don't know that I have any mind left at this point. I mean, it's what, you know, it's
almost 10 o'clock. I have to say that this whole thing has me, you know, thinking like the
way that you guys think in the way that you interact with each other and the things
that you said really kind of have got me just got me, just my wheels are turning up here because,
I don't do things like this.
You know what I mean?
People will have me on their podcast and they'll go,
like, we'll tell me about how you train women
and how they learn versus how I'm in learn.
But it's never been a conversation like this,
but I'll tell you what has happened is,
I didn't wanna be here. I didn't know, I didn't want to be here.
I didn't want to, you know, I don't want to sit on a podcast that has two million followers. You know, I never, I didn't get into this because I wanted to be the face of something, right?
But when enough people tell you, if not you, then who, like who else is going to talk about this?
And it's not that I'm the only one. I mean know Amy Robbins is doing a great job in Tony Okafore is doing a great job
there's a lot of women that are out there really speaking about two a but we need more
like we need more women because we're the ones that need it the most I think probably out of
almost anybody you know what I mean and and and that'sable, okay? But, you know, we are the weaker sex.
You know, the human traffickers aren't snatching the babies up from their daddies.
They're looking for the distracted mom that they're banking on is, you know, unprepared
unaware and unarmed, okay?
And human trafficking is a huge problem that we have right now.
And I think that's a whole podcast episode and end of itself.
But, the point is that I didn't want to be here. I didn't consider this
a talent. I didn't consider this. You know, I didn't I didn't look at my 23
year-old self, you know, when that had my 24 year-old self, when that happened to
me and go, you know what? I'm gonna go. I'm gonna start a company. Yep. I'm gonna
start teaching guns. That's what I'm gonna do for a living. I never thought that
in a million years, but the more that I started doing it and the more people
that were taking my classes,
it's not necessarily that I'm just this wonderful,
awesome instructor, it's just that I have a perspective
and I have a passion for it now,
and that's what you have to do is you have to
attach yourself to a purpose, and that's what makes you.
So, I never wanted to be here,
but I'm in Monard to be here,
and I think that the message needs to get out.
And if I'm the one who has to tell it.
I hope more people contact you.
I hope you get more people that are messaging you
and getting wanting to get you to get exposed
because, meaning sharing your story
because this message needs to be heard.
But let's do this.
I want to finish up with the Soros story.
Kai, can you pull up the Soros video?
I don't know if you guys saw what happened with Soros.
It's a little disturbing.
Okay, it's a little disturbing for me.
And if you have the video, go click on,
do you have it or you don't have a Kai?
I think you do have it somewhere there.
Is that true?
No, not that one, although that's a cool video.
I saw that.
It was good you added that video by the way, too.
I saw it last night.
Just Kai, if you can't can find it just go type in
yeah so i don't know if you guys saw what happened the other day
that luise did you see this and if you guys see what happened with soros and
newt gingrich the other day on fox
you can see it did you know who judge soros is
so you're going to find out right here legendary hockey player who played
for the case as the goalie.
Great defender.
Let me see move off of it because it's the video that's like minute.
Okay, go to minute 46, the 275,000.
Yeah, click on that one.
You open it up like that.
Interesting.
All right.
Fast forward a little bit.
Keep going.
Roy, by this line.
Keep going.
Keep going.
Keep going.
For us.
I don't think YouTube is allowing that.
Yeah, look, the number one problem in almost all these cities is George Sorrow selected.
Left wing anti- police, pro criminal,
district attorneys who refused to keep people locked up.
Just yesterday, they put somebody back on the street
who's wanted for two different murders in New York City.
You cannot solve this problem,
and both powers and Biden have talked very proudly
of what they call progressive
pro criminal and overwhelmingly elected with George sources.
Watch this.
And they're a major cause of the violence we're seeing.
Does they keep putting the violent criminals back on the street?
I'm not sure we need to bring George into this.
I'm not sure we need to bring George to watch.
Wow.
I was going to say he'd get the last word. He paid for it.
I mean, why can't we discuss the fact that millions of dollars?
I agree with the list that George Shars doesn't need to be a part of this conversation.
Who is she?
Okay.
So it's verbote.
All right, we're gonna.
Okay, pause it.
Who is she? First of all, that, that, that,
that's upset you deeply the other day. No, no, no, that's, by the way, this is not, this is not
about fuck. I've never seen this on CNN or MSNBC. That this is, this isn't, this is very uncomfortable
saying you can't talk about something. What, what, or someone, First of all, what was that all about?
What was that all about?
I mean, when you see this guy spending the kind of money to help people getting elected
in small communities and you're spending the money, you are doing all of this is proving
this, the stuff that this guy is doing. It's been proven many times by people
Regarding what Soros has done what newt gingrich all of a sudden you can't say that. Why can't you say that?
Why can't to yesterday? I was watching a Jimmy camel now Jimmy Fallon had somebody on who talked about what happened with Brianna Taylor
Okay, and the last four minutes of that interview if you watch would Brianna take it with the lady that spoke can you type in Jimmy Fallon and then go today, software today go Jimmy
Fallon and on the filters go to okay search then go to just go to his channel and
I'll take you to the video go to his channel actually right there that's the
lead right there yeah right there joy read go lower two more one more. Okay, right there.
If you watch this go to minutes eight
NBC and she isn't a guy. See for go to minute eight and
If you listen ever been surprised was in the Freddie Gray case in Baltimore when they were charged
The surprise is when there are charges and that's only because you will be. I highly recommend people watch this because when I watch the
last four minutes of what she says, first of all, she made it seem like all cops
are bad cops. She made it seem like we should get rid of all cops. I mean how
was the executive producer not jumping and saying wait a minute listen listen you
were escorted here by cops. We are protected by cops. What are we doing? It's not all of them.
It's a small percentage of you don't hear anybody stop and those talk, you can't say the
word soros is soros advertising a lot of money on Fox. What soros doing for Fox's producer
to say you can't mention the name? Newt Kingress, the man who had a 22% lead years ago when he
was running for office.
He was crushing on the debates and then he dropped off because of some stories came out
about him.
This is the same guy that worked with Clinton in 94 was a man of the year, time X, he
man of the year.
He was the one that helped with the economy, him and Clinton worked together.
Here's a guy that knows how to unite and work with a opposing side.
He can't say anything.
That guy cannot say anything. Executive producer comes and says, you can't say anything. That guy cannot say anything.
Executive Producer comes and says, you can't say that. It's verbodum. Very uncomfortable
when I saw that. Well, and the woman in the previous video who said that George
Soros doesn't need to but be a part of the conversation was actually former Obama
administrative administration state department staff from Marie Harf. She was. Yeah.
The blonde girl. The blonde girl.
The blonde girl was.
Adam, do you have anything to say on this?
Or you just kind of flabbergasted?
No, I mean, well.
OK, good.
No.
This is actually perfect timing.
The fact that I did this interview with Darryl Davis
yesterday.
Again, if you guys have not, in our audience,
have not seen anything with Darryl Davis,
please Google him, check out what he has done.
He's been on Rogan, he's been on CNN,
he's got documentaries, galore.
And he basically meets with KKK K landsmen,
and it convinces them, or sparks something in their mind,
to get them to leave the clan.
OK?
So one of the, I'll give you a few of his perspectives in quotes.
And he says, I may not agree with what you say,
but I defend your right to say it.
Cool, that's the first amendment.
And for sure, we need different perspectives.
There's nothing that we have, there's the first amendment.
I might not agree with what you're saying,
but you can say it, this is America, right?
And his keys.
And it's what makes America different than everywhere else.
Exactly, I don't get that part.
So you need to listen to other people
and respect other people's opinions.
Yeah, but listen and respect.
This is bigger than that, though.
This is bigger than that.
This is controlling the narrative with Fox.
This is Fox having, being afraid of somebody saying something,
the host is stopped and says wait
You can't say that that's not true. That's like in the middle of a debate when when you see
Hillary is debating Trump and Trump says something the moderator says you're wrong
Rather than asking a question, but doesn't say you're wrong to Hillary. Let them debate
and asking a question, but doesn't say you're wrong to Hillary. Let them debate.
Then you say you're wrong the next day.
You can't jump in and do this,
but the media's now doing this.
Very disturbing to me at the highest level.
I would like to see if there's anything more like that,
or if that's just a one-time incident.
The mission of journalism has become very diluted
in mutating the community.
It's a great time for a media company to get started.
I can tell you that for my point.
By the way, if you've enjoyed today's show,
I am putting Jarrah's Instagram account
right there in the comment section.
If you see not the comment section,
but on the chat section, go give her a follow,
send her some love, Jarrah's been great having you
on the podcast here.
Lots of crazy topics we've talked about.
And if you are still on with us,
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Remember, next Tuesday is gonna be the debate
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It's gonna get pretty hot.
So join us on that debate.
We'll watch it together.
I wanna hear your thoughts.
Let's have a party together watching the first debate
because some tells me if Trump and Biden
are gonna be involved,
it's gonna be entertaining, it's gonna be a blast.
And we wanna have you join us next Tuesday night to 29th.
I don't know the exact time.
We're gonna put the time up on what the debate's gonna be.
It's gonna be with us.
It's gonna be an all night thing.
We're gonna have a good time. Okay, take a break. You're sleeping bag, sleepy Joe. Be there, Don Trump will be there. We're gonna be the time up on what the debate's gonna be. It's gonna be all night thing. It's gonna be an all night thing. We're gonna have a good time.
Okay, take a sleep in bag.
Sleepy Joe will be there.
Don Trump will be there.
We're gonna be having a great week.
And everybody love you.
Bye bye, bye bye, bye bye.
Bye.