Shawn Ryan Show - #100 Tim Kennedy - Green Beret Sniper / UFC Fighter

Episode Date: March 11, 2024

Tim Kennedy is a Master Sergeant and Green Beret, New York Times Best Selling Author, and Retired UFC Fighter. He is the Founder of Sheepdog Response, a tactical training company dedicated to preservi...ng human life. He also helped create Save Our Allies in the wake of the Afghanistan withdrawal and successfully assisted in the evacuation of over 17,000 American allies. Today, Kennedy spends his time continuing to serve his country and community through his companies and ventures like Apogee Strong, an online mentorship program that has evolved into a brick and mortar academy that offers an alternative to traditional education. This release marks SRS's 100th episode. Shawn and the team are extremely grateful for the opportunity to engage, educate, and entertain you. Each episode has been an incredible journey and we appreciate all of your support along the way. Celebrate this milestone with us and enjoy the show. Shawn Ryan Show Sponsors: https://lairdsuperfood.com - USE CODE "SRS" https://shopify.com/shawn https://betterhelp.com/shawn https://ziprecruiter.com/srs https://hillsdale.edu/srs https://blackbuffalo.com https://ShawnLikesGold.com | 855-936-GOLD #goldcopartner Tim Kennedy Links: Website - https://timkennedy.com Stars and Stripes Book - https://sheepdogresponse.com/products/scars-stripes-book Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/TimKennedyMMA Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/timkennedymma YouTube - https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC-gO6d2N_MiG5wVuL14okbg  X - https://twitter.com/TimKennedyMMA  Sheepdog Response - https://sheepdogresponse.com Please leave us a review on Apple & Spotify Podcasts. Vigilance Elite/Shawn Ryan Links: Website | Patreon | TikTok | Instagram | Download Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:00:00 On March 29th something is coming Kong Godzilla. He can feel it fight together and teaming up or face extinction Godzilla Kong the new Empire only in theaters March 29th We are at episode 100 I can't believe it Took about four and a half years to get here. The truth be told, we're still in our infancy. A lot more to come. But you know, as I reflect through the past 100 episodes, I've thought a lot about what does this show mean to me?
Starting point is 00:00:43 What is the reoccurring message, the reoccurring theme? And for me, what I get out of this and what I hope you all get out of this is no matter how dark of a place you're in, no matter how bad it is, no matter how much you've messed up in life, there is always a way out. There is always a way to put that behind you and find redemption to become a better human being, a better dad, a better husband, a
Starting point is 00:01:28 better countryman, just a better person all around. And the guests that have been on here have proven that time and time again. Thank you for sticking around man that that chokes me up to to say that but um Our 100th guest Really needs no introduction, but I just want to say that I found him to be an incredible human being I'm proud to know him He's done a hell of a lot for the country in service and continues to out of service beyond what anybody's ever asked him. And he just still does it today.
Starting point is 00:02:15 He's a former UFC fighter. He's a former... He still is Gernie Brea actually. And I can't believe I hadn't met him until dinner before we actually recorded this show. But perfect guest for 100 and a new friend of mine. Ladies and gents, if you get anything out of this, please comment, like and subscribe to the YouTube channel. And if you're feeling extra generous, head over to Apple and Spotify, leave us a review, even if it's just one word that really helps
Starting point is 00:02:50 the show out. And I want you to know that no matter how you've supported us, whether you've been here from the beginning and the gun review days or you're just coming and this is your first episode, you're a patron. However it is, I appreciate it. My team appreciates it and we love you. And without further ado, I'd like to welcome Mr. Tim Kennedy to the Sean Ryan show. Here's to the next 100. God bless America. Tim Kennedy. Welcome to the show, man.
Starting point is 00:03:37 Oh, thanks for having me. Dude, long time coming. How have we not crossed paths before? I have no idea. I was, as I was throwing out names of good friends, former teammates, and you're like, you're doing this with them and I'm doing this with them. And we just, there was overlap, but I don't think any ever connection. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:03:56 And there are like circles. We probably have two, 300 people that we both know. But this is the first opportunity I've had to sit down with you. Well, it's an honor to have you here, man. It's an honor. It's an honor. I've been real excited to meet you. So thank you for making the trip. But so we're gonna do a live story on you. Okay.
Starting point is 00:04:16 It's gonna be super interesting. I know, I know. You think it might be boring. That's what you said in the text, but I guarantee you it's not. I can't wait to get this out and no pressure I didn't tell you last night at dinner, but you're gonna be episode 100. What? Oh, yeah, nice Pretty cool. Yeah, that's awesome. But let me kick this off with an introduction here. Okay. It's a long one introduction here. Okay, it's a long one. Tim Kennedy husband, father of three, three daughters, one son, your special forces, Green Beret, special forces, sniper, Ranger qualified,
Starting point is 00:04:52 infantrymen and airborne, former professional mixed martial arts fighter and two time title challenger, having fought in the largest organizations in the world to include the UFC, Strike Force, IFL, and WEC, Black Belts and Brazilian Jiu Jitsu, and US Army combatives. You're an author, New York Times bestseller of scars and stripes, and unapologetically American story of the fighting the Taliban. UFC warriors and myself, number one audio book in the world for more than 13 weeks. It's very impressive. It's wild. It's a mouthful.
Starting point is 00:05:33 Chapstick Connoisseur. Yup. Co-owner of Ranger Up. CEO of Sheepdog Response, which is a tactical training and self-defense company, co-founder and board member of Save Our Allies. Can't wait to get into that. Opened in Apogie Academy, that's K through 12 Charter School in 2020. And now you have more than how many schools?
Starting point is 00:05:59 We're gonna open 50 new schools in 2024. And we launched online mentorship this year, and we have thousands of mentors, what's the plural of, yeah, that are all on this like sovereignty, freedom, loving, American element that I think, I wish every single American embraced, which is what it means to be a good contributing citizen.
Starting point is 00:06:22 Man, I love the motto, or maybe it's not the motto of this. I don't know what it is, but it's your personal goal, which is to preserve and protect human life, empower people to provide for their families, and expand freedom. And take down the Department of Education. Oh yeah, the end state for Apigee is to abolish every useless form of education,
Starting point is 00:06:44 or whatever that word means, to truly give back sovereignty to the family so that children can be what they're destined to be, which is amazing individuals and critical thinkers and contributing members of society, not slaves, not lemmings, not consumers, not laborers. Tax mules. Yeah, yeah. Yeah, but I can't wait to dive into that too. That's been fun. Not lemmings, not consumers, not labor. Tax mules.
Starting point is 00:07:05 Yeah. Yeah. But I can't wait to dive into that too. That is, you know, I didn't realize, I knew you had started a school, I did not realize how much traction and how fast that took off until I started doing a little research on you. So, man, that's just, you get some super honorable things you're doing. Yeah, that's not me though. That honorable things you're doing and that's not me though I mean that's that Matt Boudreau my partner
Starting point is 00:07:27 You know Michelle Myers and Lauren that run the school like they're a hundred percent all credit goes to them and to God because if I was in charge of anything, you know, they'd be like There'd be swords on the walls and they'd be axing you see little kids running around with Tomahawk's like let's go You know fortunately they they they put me in a corner and limit my influence. And one of the few fighters to serve in the military and fight professionally at the same time. Yeah, I don't know if that was the best idea, but.
Starting point is 00:08:00 Well, part of your story now. Yeah. So, but yeah, man, I'm really excited to have you here. Everybody's pumped about this. We got a Patreon community. They're the reason I'm here. They're the reason you're here and that I'm able to do this. And so I give them an opportunity to ask questions.
Starting point is 00:08:18 Okay. And so this one is from Stephen Casey. In reference to the Hunting Hitler TV series that you did on the History Channel, are there any things that didn't make it into the episodes that are worth knowing? What got cut, if anything, from the series that would help us understand better?
Starting point is 00:08:38 Yeah, it's a great question. It's a hard question. About half of what we investigated ended up on the edit room floor. So I'd say we overshot 200% of the investigation that never went into, yes, it was real truthful storytelling, but they're also following like this narrative that of a story that they wanted to tell and the arc of that story was
Starting point is 00:09:05 did Hitler get out? The things that I cared about were around the idea of how did these Nazis get out and more importantly how did their ideas get ground and you know have legs into history moving forward. One of the hardest things that didn't make it into the show was us following some of the Nazis in the Middle East and North Africa. What are they doing in North Africa? Yeah, well, they were aligning with radical Muslim groups. And what are the Nazis and the Muslims have in common?
Starting point is 00:09:48 They were in Kioju. That's right. So, you know, the founding of the Mujahideen to the Grand Mufti when Israel was first going to become a nation in 1944, they, when it finally happened in 1946, the Grand Mufti was organizing every single neighboring country to attack.
Starting point is 00:10:10 The Grand Mufti was being advised by Nazis. And every one of those Muslim-based countries, the Grand Mufti, who was like the religious leader at the time over all of them, he was orchestrating and organizing strategically the connective advisors, which were Nazis that had been smuggled out of Germany and into North Africa. Anywhere that they could go that they were welcomed. So like in Argentina, for example, a gigantic Nazi population, huge German settlements that were there. Did Tex still see that down there? Oh yeah.
Starting point is 00:10:47 Yeah. Wow. This got cut. We went to this fight club as I was trying to find out about these legacy heritage family owners, landowners down in Argentina. Like, we'd go to these rural remote areas and you'd walk into a coffee shop and you'd be like Buenos Dias and they're like Guten Morgen. I'm like, all right.
Starting point is 00:11:10 I mean, you're in the middle of nowhere and there's this blonde six-year-old dude with blue eyes and he's correcting you, speaking Spanish and Argentina because he wants to speak German in his coffee shop. And I mean, it's rooted in there. Like, going to this fight club is us trying to find out who owns some of these pieces of property that we're getting on. They're dukes with SS tattoos on their necks,
Starting point is 00:11:30 swastikas on their arms, palm leaves on their sides, you know, and all the way back to the ground. What does the palm leaf mean? The German campaign of North Africa. Okay. You know, it's like a palm tree with a swastika at the base of it. Sure, I've not seen that. Wow.
Starting point is 00:11:49 I literally like see, and these are grandsons of men that escaped war criminal hearings to settle in Argentina, Brazil, Uruguay, Paraguay, North Africa, and the Middle East. Wow. Yeah. They got out. That didn't make it into the show. Go figure. One more question. This is actually from another patron, but I'm personally interested in this too. Her name's Amy Weaver. She wants to know, did we get Hitler or did he escape? Well, he died for sure.
Starting point is 00:12:27 Now, did he die in April in 1945 in the bunker or did he live a few more years? We know his health was deteriorating rapidly at the end of the war. Regardless of if he got out, we know his ideas got out. And the way that we did this investigation was we looked, as we're looking at patterns of life, as you know, as you hunt people, you first, every person has a fingerprint. And no matter where they go in the world,
Starting point is 00:12:58 that fingerprint is how they live. Like if you wanna find me, you're gonna find me in jujitsu gyms, you're gonna find me in good coffee shops, you're gonna find me in cold water, you're gonna find me at shooting're going to find me in Jujitsu gyms. You're going to find me in good coffee shops. You're going to find me in cold water. You're going to find me at shooting ranges. No matter where I go, I end up having this very similar pattern where I stay, the floor that I stay in, the room that I stay in.
Starting point is 00:13:14 So as we figured out the pattern of life of these Nazis, we looked two through 10 escaped. The Joseph Mengele's, the Skorzensky's, the Adolf Eichmann's, those guys got out. So if number two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, nine, 10, if all, Martin Borman, if all these guys got out, but Hitler then didn't and was left there to die, was he such a fanatic radical that he wanted to go down with the sinking ship? Or we know for a fact that the,
Starting point is 00:13:47 all of the things that they rehearsed and all of the escape routes that they had practiced were ultimately used by high ranking Nazis. Could it have been Hitler? Absolutely. Did we find the smoking gun of here is his body, here is his skull, here's the DNA proof? No, we did not.
Starting point is 00:14:07 Interesting. Yeah, frustrating. Yeah, man, that had to be a fascinating project to be on. It was a ton of fun. Getting a call when you're in a weird moment in your life, be like, oh, you can fly drones, you know how to use ground penetrating radar, or you can speak Spanish,
Starting point is 00:14:24 you got deployments in South America, do you wanna hunt Nazis? And I was like, yes, yes I do. First, I'm gonna hide this erection. Second, book me a flight, tell me where to go, I cannot wait. I've been hunting people my whole entire adult life, and now you're gonna tell me to hunt Nazis,
Starting point is 00:14:40 the only thing better would be like zombies. Like this is like a moral free, no guilt opportunity to hunt people I'm in. Very cool, very cool. Well, we're getting ready to get in your life story, but first everybody always gets a gift. All right. Any guesses?
Starting point is 00:15:01 Clemente, I already have it, no. How many times? Gummy bears! Those are legal in all 50 states. Yeah, so feel free to dive in at any moment. These are very nice packaging too. Thank you, thank you. And, uh, yeah, I don't know if you've heard of that book. Yeah, that's it.
Starting point is 00:15:26 It's a fascinating book. It'll be linked in the description if you want to pick up a copy. There's a really ugly dude on the front that needs to get a haircut. And that obviously is a range body armor. I mean, yeah. Stars and Stripes, ladies and gents. New York Times bestseller for 13 weeks on audiobook. And I don't know how long for the book, but.
Starting point is 00:15:49 That's crazy. But yeah, so you don't have to read that all now. Okay, little light reading material for the ride home. When I read the audiobook, you know, you're in a studio like this, it's completely silent, that it's like sensory deprivation, and you're reliving as you're reading your own book,
Starting point is 00:16:12 like the worst moments of your life. Like this is not a war story of like, here's all the awesome things I did. It's literally all the things that I failed at my whole entire life, failed title fights, failed as a teammate, failed as a green beret, like failed, failed, failed, failed, failed, fights, failed as a teammate, failed as a Green Beret, like failed, failed, failed, failed, failed, failed.
Starting point is 00:16:26 And you're like sitting there in shame and embarrassment and humiliation by yourself in a sound studio. And dude, it took me, it was so hard to read this book. Oh, but it was hard. How long did it take you to do that audio book? They said, you probably knocked this out in like five days. If you just like sat there, it took me a month. A month?
Starting point is 00:16:50 A month. Wow. You know, like the, I'm 15 years old, my best friend dies in a car crash and you know, like the youth, my childhood ends. And when you're sitting there reading, walking up to see my best friend's mom, who there's, she's not the same woman that she was two days ago, there's no life behind her eyes.
Starting point is 00:17:17 It's literally like a shark's eyes. There's just deadness behind there. And my best friend's older brother, Jordan, he couldn't even see me. Like he couldn't look at me because I was his brother's friend and so like now I'm isolated and I'm living all of that stuff as I'm reading this book but I'm remembering back to things that aren't even
Starting point is 00:17:35 in this book, you know, your mind just travels so fast, especially with emotions and memories. It was so hard to read this. You know, when you got blown up and I lost teammates when I, you know, like that brings you back to some hard moments. Well, I hope to cover a lot of that today. So, you're welcome.
Starting point is 00:17:55 The paperback just came out. Did it really? Yeah, this is like two weeks, two, three weeks release here. That's cool. Well, let's get into the interview now. So, where did you grow up? I was born in San Luis Bisco, California. And my dad was an narcotics officer and my mom was... They were like the opposites. She was a counselor at the church, she is a piano teacher, you know, she ultimately homeschooled us. And, you know, this is as a child that was born in the 80s and raised in the, or born in the 70s and raised in the 80s, you know, she'd walk around
Starting point is 00:18:35 with a wooden spoon in her back pocket. You know, I think my little sister's first memories were like in the movie Twister, where like chunks of wood were flying past her head, which were these spoons that my mom had just kept breaking. And so I was born in San Luis Bisco and raised in the central coast of California. Pastoral was atascadero, Cambria, that was like my, our hood.
Starting point is 00:19:03 Yeah, yeah.. Yeah. Yeah. Cool. Middle class. Yeah. Single income father of uh. My, my, your mom was all volunteer. Yeah. Oh wow.
Starting point is 00:19:15 Okay. Living off a cop salary. Off a single income of a police officer in California in the 80s. We were poor. Yous, we were poor. We did, we had one bathroom in the house. We always had somebody living in our house with us as well. Somebody from the church on hard times or like, I can't remember a single moment growing up where
Starting point is 00:19:41 my brother and I and my sister were sharing a room or that there's somebody else sleeping, if there was a girl that she was sleeping in the room with my sister, she was struggling with an eating disorder or whatever, or like abuse at the house, they come and live with us, because like the Kennedys were the safest place
Starting point is 00:19:59 you could possibly be. If you're in Mike Kennedy's house with Paula Kennedy, my parents, like, you're safe Mike Kennedy's house with Paula Kennedy, my parents, you're safe. That projection of my parents and that essence of being a protector and a provider obviously heavily influenced me and how we grew up. By the time my sister's in elementary school and my brother and I are eight, 10 years old, I'm already ready to throw down with somebody that sends a weird look towards my six year old sister. Like it was just, this is who we are as men
Starting point is 00:20:30 is where protectors first and foremost of our family. Man, that's great. You don't hear that a lot these days, you know? There are some. I wish it was a little bit more common. Yeah, me too. So you guys, you had a tight knit family. Very tight.
Starting point is 00:20:45 Still close with your dad? Incredibly close. And your mom? Yep. And your siblings? Yep. I'm flying. My brother's getting an award next week in,
Starting point is 00:20:55 his partner was in a really, really bad shooting. And my brother's just an epic hero. As my sister is brilliant, she's incredible. There's a photograph of my brother running, so like covering fire as he's moving his partner off the X from the shooting. And it's an incredible photo, but more importantly, in that moment, my brother is the ground force commander
Starting point is 00:21:21 of the shooting where a great community hero gets shot up by a criminal. And my brother's taking this dude, getting him to safety, to Medevac him out to save his life. So I'll fly to California so my brother can get his award next Friday. Oh, man. Yeah. Well, congratulations to him. That's him. That's he's amazing. Incredible. So what were you into growing up? Oh man. Yeah. Well, congratulations to him. That's him. That's amazing. So what were you into growing up? Fixing fences, fighting Mexicans. Like this is rural California. When people hear California, like, yeah, I surfed. I was not a surfer. Hollywood
Starting point is 00:22:00 was four hours south. San Francisco is four hours north. You know, there was avocado trees, there were the beginning of wineries, not a lot of wineries, so there's garlic, there's onions, there's strawberries, the orange trees are further south and inland. You know, I'm working on the Sclery Ranch. I did martial arts, I shot, I hunted, and I worked. We started working young.
Starting point is 00:22:31 What did you really, what do you think you really excelled at? Getting into trouble. I, then I started like throwing down early. You know, somebody would say something slick to my sister and I was like a pit bull that had been starved and locked in the cage for too long and I would just go. I just needed an excuse. The first time I heard my brother-in-law
Starting point is 00:23:00 who married my sister, he's Asian and his brother also adopted, he was black, and we're at the California Mid-State Fair in Pasarables, California. I heard two words that I'd never heard before. Did you just say your brother's adopted? My brother-in-law is Korean and adopted, and his other brother is also adopted. There are six white German kids, Konig, and then there were six adopted kids, a family of 12. And the races of the adopted kids were varying,
Starting point is 00:23:29 if black and Asian, or the California Mid-State Fair, which is like, again, really rural. And I hear two nasty racist words. I didn't even know what they meant, but I knew what they were intended to mean. And I was like, here we go. Like that's all I need.
Starting point is 00:23:49 So I'm like over here fighting three, four dudes, men, men. You know, like I'm a teenager with cowboy hats on and Levi's that are nice and pressed with good boots. And like, I don't care. I'm just, I'm just going for it. So it was really early when my dad recognized that I have to do something with that middle-born, second-born child,
Starting point is 00:24:10 because he's gonna go to prison forever if I don't figure out what to do with him. So he put me to martial arts, boxing, kickboxing, jiu-jitsu, and I really, really liked that. What age did you start that? Pfft. And I, I was probably six, seven, eight when I started the Shodakon Karate, then Taekwondo,
Starting point is 00:24:32 then Taekwondo to Japanese Jujitsu, Japanese Jujitsu to Hawaiian Kempo, Hawaiian Kempo to, like I just kept on playing with different styles. It wasn't until like Chuck Liddell and Jake Shields came into my gym and I was like the, I was 16 years old, big fish in a little pond where I could do really well against everybody in all styles of fighting, stand up and I was competing,
Starting point is 00:24:59 I was traveling around. So I thought that was a big deal until Chuck Liddell and Jake Shields came in and they mopped the match with me like I was a big deal until Chuck Liddell and Jake Shields came in and they mopped the match with me like I was a petulant useless child. And I was like, I don't know what just happened. But wherever they train at, I need to go train with them.
Starting point is 00:25:14 So I started training at the pit with John Hackleman and Chuck and Gann and Scott Adams. And that was Glover TuxKashara, the guys that became UFC champions. So you were a protector. I mean, it's carried on throughout your entire lifespan, obviously,
Starting point is 00:25:34 but it started protected your sister and your family and your friends and then special forces, save our allies, sheepdog response. I mean, there's an ongoing trend here. But what you had mentioned earlier in the interview about your best friend died in a car accident. And that was the end of your childhood. If you're 21 years or older and use nicotine or tobacco,
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Starting point is 00:27:24 When I first started this whole podcasting thing, an online store was about as far from my mind as you can get. And now most of you already know this, but I'm selling Vigilance Elite Gummy Bears Online. We actually have an entire merch collection that's coming soon. And let me tell you, it is so easy because I'm using a platform that is extremely user-friendly in that Shopify. Shopify is the global commerce platform that helps you sell at every stage of your business. What I really like about Shopify is it prompts you.
Starting point is 00:28:01 All the things that you want to do with your web store like connect your social media accounts, write blog posts, just have a blog in general. Shopify actually prompts you to do this. You want people to leave reviews under your items? You can do that on Shopify. It's very simple. Shopify helps you turn browsers into buyers with the internet's best converting checkout, 36% better on average compared to the other leading commerce platforms. Shopify is a global force for millions of entrepreneurs in over 175 countries and power 10% of all e-commerce platforms here in the United States.
Starting point is 00:28:43 You can sign up right now for $1 a month at Shopify.com slash Sean, that's all lowercase. Go to Shopify.com slash Sean now to grow your business no matter what stage you're in that Shopify.com slash Sean. Yeah, the, I don't know, you know, I had an amazing childhood, but it't know, you know, I went, I had an amazing childhood, but it was also wrought with disaster.
Starting point is 00:29:11 There was death in my life always, you know, like Christmas day, my grandma dying, watching my grandpa die slowly of emphysema. You know, he's a World War II greatest generation guy. So watching him slowly shrink and pass. My mom played the piano at church. Carol E. Stewart was the worship leader at that church. She died in a scuba diving accident.
Starting point is 00:29:37 Her son Nathan was my best friend through grade school. Her other daughter was my sister's best friend, so Nathan and I, and so when she died, I think I was maybe nine, 10 years old, and having somebody that was such a staple in your life, just gone. She was there every Sunday,
Starting point is 00:30:01 I'd see her three or four days a week as she's dropping Nathan off to our house, as she'd go run the errands in town because they kind of lived out a little bit. And then I don't see Nathan anymore. And then, you know, these are formative memories of like, okay, how do you, death is so prevalent and life is so finite.
Starting point is 00:30:22 And then when I was 15, we were, these are great kids. When I say they're going to parties, they're like going to Christian after Bible study parties. Like there was no drinking. There was no, there are young men behind a steering wheel, which is a very dangerous thing. And trying to pass one of their friends on, on turn and somebody came around the turn and they head to head collision with another car. You know, Jordan was giving his little brother Jared CPR and that was the last night I saw Jared obviously and I didn't see Jordan for a decade.
Starting point is 00:31:01 We couldn't see each other. I didn't want to see him. He didn't want to see me. It was literally just the end. Walking up, carrying that casket as a pole bearer and knowing that my childhood friend is here and pushing the back of that. Go take it up to the top of the Atascadero Cemetery. That dirt going on the top of that coffin, not just literally sealed him, but like sealed childhood, like the age of innocence is over.
Starting point is 00:31:33 And from that moment for the next 15 years, I was a force, a thing without purpose, and a thing without purpose, and a thing without direction, which is a really dangerous thing. Yeah. A young man without purpose, man. Yeah, we still have a lot to do today too now, in all aspects, but what got you interested?
Starting point is 00:31:59 I mean, your dad was a, sounds like he was a very good narcotics cop. Yeah. Well, a peak war on drugs. This is a Pablo Escobar and the cartels, the syndicated criminal organizations have finally like legitimacy in a way that we are just now understanding where they're bribing people. As lobbyists have influence over people, the cartels had influence over governments. They controlled Colombia up to Mexico, all through Central America, North, South America. In an operation very similar to Fast and Furious, my dad and his team, this narcotics task force,
Starting point is 00:32:43 steal an entire plane of cocaine from Pablo Escobar, Costa Rica. They bring it to the United States. They distribute the cocaine pallets. These are pallets of cocaine. And I remember walking into San Luis Bispo, my mom, my brother's sister and I went to Madonna Inn and grabbed some pies.
Starting point is 00:33:02 And we walk into this storage area and there's two pallets of cocaine. And my dad, who's a giant and all of his colleagues are giants. So they're all like six, five, six, six, three hundred pound dudes, they're sitting there with MP5 suppressed. You know, there's a portion of Lamborghini sitting in the storage facility.
Starting point is 00:33:20 And there's two pallets of cocaine. And I just hand off these pies and then we go back home. This is like all of my memories are like this growing up. They took that cocaine and they gave it to regional distributors. Those distributors then gave it to like street dealers and then in one week they went and arrested all of the distributors and all of the dealers. Like they arrested hundreds of these people on the whole entire West Coast. They didn't lose a single gram of cocaine. Wow.
Starting point is 00:33:51 You know, this is, they're good. Wow. And this is also when meth was starting to really explode on the West Coast. And my dad had a background in chemistry and he started recreating different ways to cook meth. Like we had like big, huge glass beakers, like a huge chemistry sets in my house.
Starting point is 00:34:11 I'm like, if only people understood that my dad was cooking meth. And the laws that we know now about how much Nyquil you can buy all came from that era of law enforcement guys figuring out, well, if you have this much Nyquil you can buy all came from that era of law enforcement guys figuring out well if you have this much Nyquil and you have this much Like if you're using smurfs to go and buy all these different ingredients So they they added limitations as to how much you could buy of what type of chemicals to be able to produce or mass produce math
Starting point is 00:34:39 I was like my dad Wow, it's sick. Did you realize the significance of all that? Not at the time. No, no. I was, I am dumb and I was even more dumb back then. Man, that's really, that's interesting. I'll bet he's, I'll bet your dad's got some really good stories. You would love, did you use a wild man? Like we were just at shot show. You know, he's like the most gregarious.
Starting point is 00:35:02 This is not the dad that I grew up in the 80s. Right. Like the grandpa that he is to my son, where you know, he's like the most gregarious. This is not the dad that I grew up in the 80s. Right? Like the grandpa that he is to my son, where he's teaching my son how to shoot his precision rifle and my son puts his finger on the trigger a little bit early. Doesn't have a sight picture yet. And he's like, hey, hold on there, Rolo. You know, your middle name's Michael, you're my namesake.
Starting point is 00:35:23 We never put our finger on the trigger unless we're actively engaged in a target. I was like, wait a second, you kicked me in the head at this moment right here. I remember you kicking me. And he's like, it's different now. He was like, I got it, dad. But knock it off. Now he's just like the most, he and my mom are the sweetest, like spending time with
Starting point is 00:35:44 Mike and Paula is nobody comes away with that. Like if you go to their house, they're cooking for you a gigantic huge meal. You know, as you watch Tully out come under the property, you go under the back patio and shooting out precision rifle a few hundred meters. You're like, that is just the most inclusive family environment. And now they're just the sweetest people. You had mentioned also that you became pretty crafty because of your dad as a kid.
Starting point is 00:36:12 Breaking into cars, using slim gems. What age did that start? I mean, I had slim gems like in my room. I was probably 10 or 11 when I went into the church parking lot during a week Bible study and I opened up every single car in the parking lot. Just for the act of knowing that I could break into every car in there and I took things out of their glove box and I set it on the seat. So the pastor, Tom Gattis, he and Woody Shoemaker, who is the youth pastor,
Starting point is 00:36:48 they're like, everybody comes out, they see that all their cars are broken in two. And I'm just sitting here like, you know, like, I don't know what happened. He's like, I don't know what happened to these cars. Like a ghost broke in there. And Woody Shoemaker, who is a former Navy SEAL, he's like, my youth pastor, he's like, Tim, come over here. And I was like, yes, sir. He's like, you breaking these cars, like a ghost broke in there and Woody Shoemaker, who is a former Navy SEAL, he's like, my youth pastor, he's like,
Starting point is 00:37:06 Tim, come over here. I was like, yes, sir. He's like, you breaking these cars? Like, yeah, he's like, would you do that for him? Like, I just needed to know that I could. Like my dad taught me how to do it. Like this is 10. Me and my friend, Augie Gaw would take our repelling gear.
Starting point is 00:37:23 Like we're teenagers. We would cut holes into roofs of commercial buildings and rappel in there to figure out that we could steal stuff out of there. The statute of limitations I'm fairly certain has expired so I'm not breaking your laws. Now, just for the act of doing it, and my dad teaching us how to go up
Starting point is 00:37:43 and talk to anybody about anything and be able to like break down barriers of like how soon you can like, you know, make contact with somebody actually touch them to break down another barrier, like to find out things about them and to build rapport. Like he could walk up to a stranger and as an undercover police officer, convince that stranger to sell him drugs
Starting point is 00:38:04 that would send him to jail for forever, that's a skill that he taught all of us. And the skills of breaking into vehicles or breaking into houses or like how to get a warrant or how to like change a narrative to tell a certain story. Like these were things that we grew up. We're also a very Socratic household.
Starting point is 00:38:21 My mom called us living room lawyers. We would sit down, my dad would pick a topic and we'd argue. You'd force you to pick a side and then you'd have to defend and argue that side. Whether you agreed with it or not. You're a kid. This is us at like six, seven, eight, nine, 10 years old. Wow. So critical thinking was definitely celebrated in your house.
Starting point is 00:38:47 Very much so. And by the time you start figuring out kind of who you are at 18, I went to EMT school and the fire academy to become a firefighter. And dad is still shaping. My brother now is a police officer. He's 21. I'm 18. I am working at the task at our fire department. My brother's working, I think for his first one was San Luis Pismo PD and still being
Starting point is 00:39:21 shaped. Like we're not men yet. Like frontal lobe is not developed and my dad is, the first time that I came home from a mass casualty incident, you know, I'm covered in dirt and blood. I'm shaking and you know, he's like, hey, go hop in the shower before you talk to your mom. I'm like, I'm fine.
Starting point is 00:39:38 I'm just gonna go to bed. He's like, go take a shower. I didn't realize that I was covered in blood and shaking and crying and couldn't even talk. I didn't even remember any was covered in blood and shaken and crying and couldn't even talk. I didn't even remember any of this. I remember just walking through the door and my dad telling me to go take a shower. He had already seen everything.
Starting point is 00:39:54 He already knew what hell was like and he was preparing his family for a real world that he knew would ultimately have to experience. You know, you did know that 9-11 was gonna happen. So you became a firefighter at age 18? That's right. How long were you a firefighter for? Three years until I could go to the police academy. No, good.
Starting point is 00:40:17 Yeah. So you knew, did you know when you became a firefighter, was it gonna be temporary? Yeah. Did you enjoy it? I did. It was really hard work, not in the way that physically hard. I love that part of it. I loved being on a vehicle rescue and cutting doors open and building fires. I loved the violence of fire. I made a lot of mistakes because I was young and dumb.
Starting point is 00:40:51 I got some people hurt because I wanted to push more than I should have like melted, literally melted my helmet. My helmet, if you go to the task, there are fire, fire, fire, 42, that was me. You see, like I heard these pops and bubbles, and that was my helmet that was melting and popping the plastic on the top. The thing that was hard was going to a domestic violence
Starting point is 00:41:18 call and finding a kid in an oven, and not being able to, like, that guy did it. able to, like that guy did it. Like I know that guy did it. And like my job is not to be a witness to what's happening. My job is to provide medical aid to what's there. It's the police officer's job. So I always felt constrained and my hands tied as to what I should have been doing.
Starting point is 00:41:41 But similarly, had I been a police officer, my view of justice would be for me to beat that dude to death. So that probably wasn't an alignment either. I don't know. I still figure it out. There's a serial killer in San Luis Bisco, California named Rex Krebs. And I was growing up when he was kidnapping women and they were just disappearing.
Starting point is 00:42:01 And I was working at a bar called the library in San Luis Biscoe, like Chuck and Scott, they were running it. So you literally had the best fighters on the planet as bouncers and then this idiot like bar backing and carrying out trash. But I remember at the end of the night, these girls, like I could smell fear from them. They were so terrified to make that walk home from the bar back to their homes, not knowing if they were going to be the next girl that would just disappear.
Starting point is 00:42:37 And I thought that that was the, you know, there's that area of silence of the lambs where Jodie Foster is hunting this unknown murderer, that was the embodiment of evil. That is what evil really was. It wasn't until 9-11 that I saw what evil could be at scale. I wanted to hunt these type of serial killers. I wanted to hunt this type of evil because I thought it was the most evil thing that I could see that could exist and Then then I saw a girl in a polka dot dress look out a window of
Starting point is 00:43:12 A building that's on fire that she went into early Because she was a single mother and she wanted to get off early so she could pick up her kids from school and She's trying to make this decision about if she's gonna jump to her death or burn alive. And her last act of conscious thoughts is to hold her dress down and she jumps to her death. And I wanted to kill everyone that had anything to do with that. That changed everything.
Starting point is 00:43:43 Man, man. Remember that? Remember that falling man? That guy that just jumped out head first? Like he was a professional skydiver in a Delta position just tracking down towards the ground. Yeah, I do. So how old were you when 9-11 happened?
Starting point is 00:44:01 I was 21. 21, so you're just about to go into the police academy. I was in grad school and yep, going to the police academy. You were in it? So what happened then? Finished school and over the course of 18 months, I went to the recruiter's office on 9-11. And over the course of 18 months, I went to the recruiter's office on 9-11.
Starting point is 00:44:27 There were a thousand people in line. Thousand people standing there trying to talk to a recruiter. And nobody was there, you know, it was like, so I came back a few times. It took 18 months for me to ultimately get a 18X Ray contract to go and try to, it was a fast track to become a Special Forces guy. And looked at every branch, you know, is trying to figure out how to get to Marsauk, how to get to Buds, how do I get to Green Brays. It was what is the fastest route to get me
Starting point is 00:45:02 on a plane to the desert. So you picked special forces. Right. Yep. How long did it take for you to ship out? To training. Yeah. That 18 month timeline to finally get the 18Xray contract. So 2003 is when I left and then that pipeline, that year and a half pipeline
Starting point is 00:45:31 of basic training to infantry school, to airborne school, to this big huge of a Tritter called SOP-C and then to selection and then post-selection to small unit tactics. Another trigger called SOPSY 2, then to small unit tactics, then to Phase 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, to Sear School, to the Donning of the Green Beret. Then the day I graduated, I walked and another weird, rare anomaly. I had been, they had been tracking. I'd performed really well through training. And I also was a top 10 fighter on the planet when I enlisted.
Starting point is 00:46:16 You were already top 10 on the planet. Yeah. Oh, shit. I just won like the largest middleweight tournament on the planet, the extreme cage fighting championship that Dennis King, Mayhem Miller, Ryan Narte, me, it was like eight of the best fighters on the time. I was the lowest ranked guy in that whole entire tournament I won. That was just a few months before I enlisted. And so they had been following me and when I graduated, I went directly to the CRIF, which is something that should never happen.
Starting point is 00:46:52 What's supposed to happen is you go to an ODA, you spend two, three years at an ODA, you get a bunch of experience, you go to some schools, then you go to this selection course and a must requirement to go to the SIF and CRIF, which is Sephardic, and then from there you go to a selection to go to this unit. That's what should always happen. That's not what happened with me. So I was this young child that knew nothing about the military, that knew nothing about war, knew nothing about the army, that was then going to a special missions unit. Damn.
Starting point is 00:47:28 Bad plan. Well, let's rewind. Let's rewind. See, let's skip basic training. Let's skip everything up to selection. How was that? Was that a challenge for you? No.
Starting point is 00:47:42 It wasn't. No. You just breezed right through it. Yeah. That, I mean, that post 9-11, you would have had to walk in to the barracks in the middle of the night, like a ninja, with a lead pipe and smashed dude's knees in
Starting point is 00:48:03 to have them quit. We, in our selection class, there was not a single quit. There's not one voluntary withdrawal. So now if there's four or 500 people that go to selection, 300, 400 of them quit. And then of the remaining one to 200, maybe 20 or 30 end up getting selected Mm-hmm four to eight out of a hundred and
Starting point is 00:48:32 Then post 9-11 not one quitter Not one dude was like ringing a bell not one dude is is saying that he wants out Like you literally have to kill him to have them. Dude's feet were falling off and they were taking super glue and gluing the bottom of their feet back on to past team week. Where were the majorities guys from? Where they're coming from? That class, there were a ton of collegiate athletes.
Starting point is 00:49:03 They're from all over the world, a ton from Florida, a ton from Texas, and a ton of collegiate athletes. They're from all over the world, a ton from Florida, a ton from Texas, and a ton from California. Of the 90, I think there's 600 something dudes that went through the SOPSE and ultimately the 88 that were selected in our class to go forward. Once you pass Special forces assessment and selection, which is a 23, 28 day hard atrider,
Starting point is 00:49:33 then you get selected to go to the Q course. The Q course is a year to a year and a half long pipeline of training you how to be a green beret. And then when you finish that pipeline, then you get to don your green beret and go to a team. And then you get to your team, they tell you that you know nothing, you start all over again.
Starting point is 00:49:50 But that, you know, from that gigantic population of people that first were at SOPSEE to the 88 guys that ultimately got selected, the 88 came from, like they were high level athletes from all over the nation, but most of them, Florida, Texas and California. 88 people got selected that round. That's a lot. It's a ton. That's a lot.
Starting point is 00:50:23 The highest percentage that they've ever had. Is it still to this day? Man. So it wasn't that it was easy for me, it was easy for us. There's nothing that, it was the environment. And we'd also been together from, like this group of 18X race had been together from basic training day, from elementary school to airborne school through SOPSE. And we had learned, none of us had ever been in the military before.
Starting point is 00:50:46 So we didn't know how to do army. We just knew how to cheat. And we cheated at everything. And we figured out communication systems and how to tap codes and symbols. And we had watches for when the cadre were gonna be coming in to check you. So like the whole entire barracks asleep,
Starting point is 00:51:02 you're not allowed to be sleeping, but everybody's sleeping, but two people on either end at the two edges of the windows where the doors, where the doors are cracked out a little bit and they're looking out and they had like set up things that we could hear the guys walking. So the moment that we heard that sound, the whole entire barracks would get up and guys would start like fixing their rucksacks. Like we're breaking every single rule.
Starting point is 00:51:20 You're on a lot of roads, we ran every road. So with the 80, it's biggest class to ever graduate selection or to get selected. Highest percentage of graduates. Highest percentage. With that amount of motivated men to go and protect the country, what do you think, I mean, the criteria had to be upped. They had to level it up, right? From what it usually is with that amount of talents. No, the standard never changes.
Starting point is 00:51:53 The must pass gates, which are very close held, not secrets, but the things that you have to do to be selected, those don't change. Like you have to run this far for this fast. You have to run this sprint for this fast. You have to be able to carry this much weight for this long. Here's the grading criteria during team week. Here's like, so like of these variety of must pass events, when you get through those gates and you're like checking as you go, that doesn't change.
Starting point is 00:52:27 So like, you might have five people that graduate, 10 people that graduate, or 100 people that graduate, but everybody has to pass that those gates. But if you pass, I guess what I'm asking is if you pass, does that necessarily guarantee you a slot that you're going to be selected? No. So that's what kind of what I'm asking is usually there's... But this is peak war. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:52:49 So what year is this? 2004. Okay. So they're expanding at this point. They're expanding and guys are dying. And they're dying a lot. Okay. So they were needed.
Starting point is 00:53:04 That's what I was getting at. I was wondering if they had, if they had the slots to fill, 88. They knew they were going to. Yeah. That's dark, but this is war. And, you know, in 2004, when you're looking at Felu Gen Romadi in Sotter City,
Starting point is 00:53:23 this is the first 10 years of GWAT from 2002 to 2012. It was very dissimilar to the second 10 years of GWAT. Those first 10 years, that was war. Like those were battles, block by block, door by door, lots of killing on both sides sides and Green Berets were carrying a big burden of that because they were the first ones in Afghanistan. They were the first ones that were in the big gunfights. They're also the ones that were, you know, by, with and through advise, assist, and accompanying
Starting point is 00:53:58 these militant fighters because that's the special forces way, was to work with your aligned fighting force. So those guys were getting hemmed up and they needed help. Problem was 18 X-rays. We died way more than everyone else. Can you describe what an X-ray is? So normally to go to the green berets, you are in whatever, you're in the 82nd, you're in the 101st, you're in Ranger Regiment, and you are an E4, an E5,
Starting point is 00:54:39 and you put in your packet to go to selection. That has always been the way, they've only done the 18X Ray program one other time, which was during Vietnam, where you take a guy qualified off the street, so he has a high ASVAB score, he has a high GT score, he has a high PT score, and you put him into a special forces selection pipeline. And so they're SF babies.
Starting point is 00:55:05 They've never spent a day in the army, but they have on paper all of the coal vacations that they could potentially later be a green beret. All of the guys coming from the regular army, from combat arms, they have to have that same GT score, they have to have that same ASVAB score, they have to have the same PT score, but the most important thing is they have experience.
Starting point is 00:55:24 And that had always been the requirement. You had to have to spend three, four, five years in the army, then you could go to selection. The AT&T x-ray program bypassed that. So a college athlete, and that's why there are so many collegiate athletes in that class because you had to be smart. You had to have a high GT score and a high ASVAP score, and you had to have a very high PT score. You then got this contract that promised you
Starting point is 00:55:50 if you passed basic training, infantry school, airborne school, and SOP-C, which is the bigger Tritter, then you could go directly to selection. And, but we died, I think, at twice the rate of regular Army green berets. No kidding. Damn, man. Young and dumb.
Starting point is 00:56:08 Yeah. Not invincible. You know, going through the SF Baby program, you get through selection, you get to the Q-course, correct? How are you received there? Is a guy off the street who was pipelined right in? Yeah, they hated us. Did they?
Starting point is 00:56:32 Yeah. They got my... I know they hated you. Well, they told us they hated us. That was pretty direct. Like, I hate you. You don't deserve to be here. Um, and to their, to their credit,
Starting point is 00:56:53 they're doing a tour as instructors, like the, the NCO development, you'd go to a team for three to five years and then you would go to SWIC to the Special Warfare Training Group, and you would become an instructor teaching at one of the different phases, one of the different schools, Halo School, Sniper School, Scuba School, and you do your two-three-year tour as an instructor, and then you go back as a senior NCO back to the ODA. So now you have ODA time, you have instructor time, so you've really mastered a craft and it made a lot of sense during peacetime.
Starting point is 00:57:28 But these guys that are coming off these teams, you don't have a choice of when the timeline is for you to go to SWIC to teach. Maybe they just got back, maybe they were gonna miss a deployment because they got orders to go and teach. And now they're furious because they're missing the war. Now they're furious because their brothers are over there fighting and dying. They're sitting here looking at a 22-year-old kid that just came out of college that thinks
Starting point is 00:57:55 he knows everything and wants to go and be a warrior. That guy's been on an ODA for five, six years and has, during peacetime, and has done everything perfect so he can go and be a warfighter. And now we see them there talking to a snot-nosed brat. You know, like, I get it, man. Yeah, I think that was my generation too. I was right there with him. And yeah, that had to be,
Starting point is 00:58:22 I didn't really agree with it, you know? we're all here to protect the country, right? But I do understand it. And, you know, the period between Vietnam and 9-11, there were very few- Panama, Grenada, you know, Desert Storm One, which we didn't have a part in. There wasn't much to spread around. And so I get it, but what did you think of the Q-Course?
Starting point is 00:58:51 Was that a challenge for you? No, no shit. I loved it. I loved every second of it. I love Sierra School. We were chomping at the bit to get done. I took accelerated language school, I tested out early. We're chomping at the bit to get done. I took accelerated language school, I tested out early. I just wanted to, how fast can I get that green beret on,
Starting point is 00:59:12 get to a team, get on a plane? That was the only thing all of us wanted to do. All of us were fighting and positioning, or going down to the companies and asking, hey, do you guys have like your deployment orders? Do you know which day you guys are leaving? Because all of us, the day that we graduate, all of us would be requesting to go directly to that company
Starting point is 00:59:30 because they're the next one that are going to be bouncing. And so all of us are positioning and fighting for a chance to get into the fight. Yeah. So did you have any hang-ups? Did you fail anything? No. Nothing. No. Just plain.
Starting point is 00:59:45 First through everything, funny seer story, one of the guys that had been medically recycled was... Could you please describe what seer school is, what the purpose of it is? Every special operation and aviation unit sends their guys to this Sierra School, and there's different phases and levels of it. But the one that special operations goes to, it's a survival of Asian resistance and escape. And during this, we also included peacetime government detention, which is if you're captured by a non-state or state actor and you're being
Starting point is 01:00:28 held, how do you navigate? Which is different than if you're POW being held by a combatant. So during this school, they teach you survival, like how do I forge for food? How do I purify water? How do I set traps? And then on the evasion side, if somebody's chasing you, whether it's in a rural area or an urban area, how do you escape? The resistance portion is during interrogations and torture, how do you stay in the technique
Starting point is 01:01:01 is inside of your circle. So they tell you, these are the things that you're supposed to know and these are the that you're supposed to know and these are the things that you're supposed to say and these are the things that you're supposed to do. And how do you stay inside of that during, you know, really uncomfortable physical treatment? Which I think now they call torture, but you know, you're training people. I hate that people throw stones at training that is hard.
Starting point is 01:01:23 But how do you prepare people for war without it being like war? And the last portion is escape. That's Sierra School. And it's a couple of months. The guy that had been recycled, which was one of my friends and teammates that had gone through all these phases too, he was working with the cadre and was learning all the different escape and evasion routes. So there were lanes that were designated
Starting point is 01:01:48 to each of the teams. He told us which lane we were gonna be on and I went and I stole MRE boxes and I went out and I plotted a 10 digit grid coordinates and I buried boxes of MREs during my evasion lane. Totally cheating. Like this is not allowed and I'm not recommending anybody to do this,
Starting point is 01:02:06 but this is what we did. Cause we knew, like we see the guys that were, that were coming out of Sears school, you know, they'd lose 30, 40, 50 pounds during Sears school. Their cheeks are sunken in, their eyes are sunken in. Like, and they're about to go to a team. It's one of the very last things that you do and their bodies are broken.
Starting point is 01:02:21 We want to go to war. So not only did I want to graduate, but I wanted to graduate physically capable of going to a team to immediately hop on a plane to go overseas. So the motivation was kind of pure, but the route was very unethical. So we borrow, we'd borrow these MREs. There's 11 guys that are all 18 X-rays that I'm all friends with. And we have one Air Force crew guy that's on our team.
Starting point is 01:02:46 And we finish the survival portion, we get into the evasion, and you're very motivated to not get caught during evasion because the sooner you get caught, the sooner you go into the concentration camp. So if you survive a week, that is an extra week that you are not in the concentration camp. If you're caught on day one, you spend six days and however many hours that you are captured early in the concentration camp, getting beaten, getting water boarded, getting put in torture positions
Starting point is 01:03:16 and paying isometric positions, getting starved. But if you stay out, how long can you survive during that week with the limited food that you're going to have while you're running? And they're hunting you with thermals and dogs and all the things and they're trying to manipulate in this lane that you're training. So we buried MREs. We go to these 10 digit grid coordinates, we dig them up and I hand out these MREs
Starting point is 01:03:43 and the other guys are like, stick, this is so awesome. You know, way to go. Me and my friend Brian are the ones that went out and buried them. And this Air Force guy is like, where did you get these? Buried them. How'd they get you? Like, how'd you know that this was where we're going to be? I'm like, I was told by, you know, somebody that's working as support right now that this
Starting point is 01:04:03 is was going to be our lane. So we went and buried our food here. And they're like, that's cheating. I was like, is it? Like, I don't think it is. And to his credit, he stuck to what he thought was right, and he wouldn't eat any of them. And we helped, even though we are fed, we helped him forge for food. We're getting deer corn. We were finding turtles and snakes. That's why they call us snake eaters. The training area, it's very swampy and marshy, so there's not a lot of great food. We're eating pine nuts.
Starting point is 01:04:36 We're making pine needle tea for vitamin C. We're doing everything we can to help this dude, even though there's plenty of calories over there that he wants to do. Hold on. Let me finish my Sn Snickers bar roll coin. And again, his credit, he does that whole week and there's food for us all the time. And they bring us a roadkill. It was like a dead raccoon or a dead deer. And most people, after not eating for five days, they would just skin this thing, gut
Starting point is 01:05:04 this thing, throw it, stew it, and they'd be so pumped to have a little bit of protein. We're like, that's kind of icky. So the cadre were like, what's going on here, man? Like, what are you guys doing? Well, during endoc, which is the most dangerous portion, like when you're initially captured, it's where most casualties occur.
Starting point is 01:05:25 And if you look like Chugart and Gordon during Black Hawk Down, the thing that they were trying to save the crew from was that initial capture, that wave of emotion that happens on a battlefield, that's when people get killed and don't get moved into captivity. So like the longer and more peaceful that that transition can be, the higher the chance of survival So they make that that that endoc when they're taking you in to be very intense during serious school
Starting point is 01:05:52 There's lots of beatings happen. There's you know, people are getting knocked out and teeth and blood and all the things And when we finally at the end of that week we go to make our link up to get evacuated, which we're betrayed and we get captured by the adversary force. It's at the end of the week, they force you to go to this link up. And we all get black bagged, all 12 of us. And they're pulling your hood off, they're smacking you like, what's your name?
Starting point is 01:06:21 Where are you from? What unit are you? What are you doing here? And they're going down the line. The moment they pull up that air forces, that guy's hood, he get, all of us, we hear him start screaming. They had food buried. They had food buried.
Starting point is 01:06:34 They had food this whole entire time. This whole week they've been eating. And the crazy intense endoc phase where like this whole camp is just beats and screams and slaps you could hear a pin drop everything stops. The guy goes what did you say? He says my team had food buried on their lane and immediately they separate all 12 of us. They pull us from everybody and for a week during resistance, their interrogations were trying to find legitimate real information, which was where was the food, who had the
Starting point is 01:07:16 food, how did you get the food? And they had one guy telling all of the information that he knew and they had 11 guys That stayed in their circle damn At the end of this 11 dudes graduated and one guy failed for an integrity violation. He got recycled all 11 of us Stayed in our circle and didn't break For 11 for the whole entire time and at the very final moment I'm not gonna give away the the final day of school. It's like a big emotional event ID cards come out from the instructor's necks and you see like that
Starting point is 01:07:55 military DoD cack card and they're no longer they're not sitting there like Evil torturing pricks, they're now sergeant so-and-so, and you have graduated. And they, the whole entire cadre comes and gets the 11 of us and they're like, hey, we need to talk to you guys. The ID cards are hanging around their neck. And we're like, yeah.
Starting point is 01:08:18 Okay, seriously, what happened? You need to tell us what occurred during evasion week and now during Resistance Week where you guys, one, all had the same story the whole entire time. And like, it was fascinating because it proved the tech, the things that they were teaching actually worked in real interrogations. And they had real interrogators coming in to interrogate this class, the 11 of us, to get out real information.
Starting point is 01:08:48 And all of us knew that if we messed up, all of us are gonna go recycled at best, worst kicked out of the cue course. And all 11 of us, like we look at each other and we look back at them, we're like, Donnie the Green Beret is gonna be in five weeks. When I put on my Green Beret, you can be there. And the moment I get my Green Beret,
Starting point is 01:09:07 I will talk to you about what this looked like. Good call. And all of them were there. Sean, every single one of them. Yeah, it proved that their GTPs, their POIs, their points of instruction, their tactical training points were legitimate and truly worked in interrogation. And this was not.
Starting point is 01:09:24 This was not a case study turned into a case study. A perfect case study. Yep. Nice. Well, you know, don't rat your team out. It was a good lesson. Yeah, it's pretty straightforward. That might be the biggest integrity violation of all. Wow, no shit.
Starting point is 01:09:42 Well, what did they say when you told them? They changed rules where any student that was in a support role for the cadre was never, they siloed information that was relevant to the training so that the students, the trainees that were going through the course never had access to the cadre information. So like, you know, then hang outside of the cadre rooms. So they changed a bunch of rules to limit and silo information. But they were thrilled that this stuff worked. That's amazing. That's amazing. So, so you get done with Sierra School. Where are you going next? So I went to Charlie Company for 3rd Battalion 7th Special Forces Group. It was the, at the time was the SIF, the Commander's
Starting point is 01:10:37 In Extremis Force and every special... How did you wind up? Can you explain what the SIF is? Yeah. First, because not a lot of people know about that. No. The SIF, every Special Forces group takes an area, a region of the globe. So 7th group handles South America, 3rd and 5th group balance between Africa and the Middle East, 1st and 10th group between Europe and the Asian Pacific. So regionally, we always have forward deployed companies that are in that region.
Starting point is 01:11:14 So you have a special forces company that's in South America. You have a special forces company that's in Africa. You have a special forces company that's in the Philippines or in Japan or in Europe. And so that's, that is a crazy concentration of talent and firepower that's forward deployed all of the time. They were tasked with hostage rescue and counter terrorism.
Starting point is 01:11:41 So you would go to special schools and a special selection to be selected to go to the CRIF. At the time, the commander in Extremis Force, so you had the combatant commander, which was the four-star guy that was in charge of that region of the planet. He had his own special operations company that was his. So that was if the cartels ran into Bogota, Columbia, and took over the embassy, you had a company of special forces guys that were standing by.
Starting point is 01:12:20 And this is why like Benghazi was so infuriating to so many green braze is because when that was happening, there was a company of special forces guys that were sitting on a plane. Just imagine there was what 12 GRS dudes that were saving two different compounds, the department of state compound and the agency compound, what would have happened if you dropped 60 green berets into this fight? You're like, the whole thing's over. You take one ODA, the whole thing's over. But there's a lot of survivor guilt in that. But that was the SIF.
Starting point is 01:13:02 They were a hostage rescue for... Where were those guys sitting? They were to our flight. I think Glover was one of those guys. That's right. You know, take Mike Glover and a company of Mike Glovers and drop them into that firefight. Dude, completely different outcome. Yeah. If you're a phone gets ultimately somebody picks up a phone and says no those guys can't go Yep
Starting point is 01:13:32 That person burns an hell. I'm sure they will yeah me too Yeah, so that's the SIF and so how do you hold on, hold on, let's backtrack. Cause the SIF, so the SIF is basically, it's a hostage rescue team. Yep. Very advanced tactics. Very, I mean, just to get in the door over there, how did you get in the door of the SIF as a new guy? Yeah, I should have been there.
Starting point is 01:14:04 An SF baby new guy, nonetheless. John McPhee, former Delta Force operator, amazing war fighter, a storied career at the unit. He was my boss. He was my first team sergeant. And he had been kind of paying attention to some guys going through the Q course because he knew we're about to go to war. And he, this was also the SIF's first deployment to combat.
Starting point is 01:14:34 They had missed all the other rotations because the combatant commander hadn't released them to go into non-theater conflict. So he had kept them kind of unfairly saying, like, no, no, I need my SIF. You guys are under my control. Like you had this competition about who could control which units were gonna be in what battle space. And he didn't wanna release his elite fighting force
Starting point is 01:15:04 to go from you know, from South America and go fight. So they missed the first few rotations. Gotcha. And they were just like, they were ravenous to get into the fight. And, um, you can train tactics into young men preparing for war, but putting the will to fight and that dog in somebody,
Starting point is 01:15:34 some people have that, and it's really hard to artificially train that into somebody. I think the Marines do a really great job of planting that dog in somebody. I think the Marines do a really great job of planting that dog in somebody. The Special Forces Regiment, it's a group of intellectuals. Yes, they're warfighters, but they also are ambassadors and they work a lot with different governments and the embassy and it's a joint interagency multi-department. It's kind of a complex world that special forces works in. And John knew that we're gonna go to war
Starting point is 01:16:17 and he wanted a guy that had the dog on him. I think of hundreds of teammates that have it. And they were the guys that you wanted to be the first guy through the door. You know, if the Brian Hall, the Jeremy Haskell, the Ben Rios, like those guys kicking a door, anything on the other side of that door is gonna be melt with speed,
Starting point is 01:16:41 surprise, violence, faction, Helen Fury. And that's a hard thing to put into somebody. John knew my fighting background, knew my hunting background, knew my shooting background, and then had followed me through the Q-course. I was also moonlighting as a bouncer in bars in Fayetteville, North Carolina, where I was going to school. I was also fighting Moonlighting fighting like while I was going to the Q course. I was still training and fighting as a professional fighter. No shit Yeah, why were you doing that? I'm sorry. We're gonna go down this rabbit hole. Yeah, why would you put yourself? Yeah?
Starting point is 01:17:18 I'm just curious the dog. Why would you put yourself? Into a situation that could potentially take you out of your ultimate goal, which is fighting for the country? Because it would have been relatively easy for that to happen. Young men think that they are invincible and and the balance of me wanting to keep my sword sharp and keep that like ability to fight, you know, fighting gun fighting, knife fighting, brick fighting, fist fighting, it's all fighting.
Starting point is 01:17:55 You know, like you take some person that's good fighting at fighting and you give them a battle axe or you give them a club. Like that dude is still like really dangerous. What's because he's a fighter first? So like the heart of that warrior is, is a very powerful thing. And regardless of what tool he has, you know, like I am, you know, in this room, no more or less dangerous because I have a gun or I don't have a
Starting point is 01:18:20 gun, like, you know, kill him without anything. And I wanted one that- Pals, don't kill my camera, go ahead. I won't, no, I like him. That illusion that you are invincible as a young man, but you feel invincible. Like I remember feeling invincible. Like you can't, you can't hurt me.
Starting point is 01:18:43 You can't kill me. You can't stop me from graduating. you can't stop me from graduating, you can't stop me from making it to a war, you can't stop me from going to this unit, and you definitely can't stop me in a fight. Like to me, fighting was just plain. You know, I was making money on the side and I was keeping my sword sharp
Starting point is 01:18:59 and I was keeping the ability to do violence at an acute point. So I wanted to keep doing it. And I did it all the way through my whole entire career. Makes sense. I figured that's what you were gonna say. Would you do that again if you had the wisdom you had now? No.
Starting point is 01:19:20 So John McVeigh, he hand selected you to come into the stuff. Yep. And Sergeant Major Oquendo, who is the company Sergeant Major, when he brought me in, he pushed back real hard. And he was right, but man, John was a force. He's one of those guys in Garrison. He is not a fun human to work for. He is not a fun guy to be a subordinate to.
Starting point is 01:19:54 He's definitely not one that you want as your personal mentor about how to be a good human. But you put John McPhee in a case in glass that says break in case of war or violence and you break that, he is one of the greatest war fighters to like walk during GWAT. And the... We were a hammer in that first deployment. I bet. I don't want to get into that yet. But what year is this?
Starting point is 01:20:24 2005. Oh, shit. what year is this? 2005. Oh, shit. So this is like the height. This is peak. This is the height. So John- This is Americans hanging from bridges burnt alive. This is peak war.
Starting point is 01:20:37 Yeah, this is the height. So you get into the SIF. How are you received? Not well. You have to go to the school, this multi-month hostage rescue school that is a high atrider. So I go to this school, graduate, come back to the team, you know, I thought I'd be accepted. And where weeks, PDSS is the pre-deployment site survey team
Starting point is 01:21:14 has already launched, they've already set up where we're gonna be landing at, where we're gonna be working out of, they're starting to set up target packages, you know, they're getting, we're getting our TS briefs about what it's going to look like when we get into the operational environment. This is before we even wheels up, you know, and then I knew nothing, Sean.
Starting point is 01:21:34 I had no idea how to order ammo. I had no idea how to do a forecast. I had no idea how to pack a pallet. I had all the things that, while the Q-Course taught you the skills to be a green beret they didn't teach you how to be a good teammate of doing the things of your job. You know like how to do an inventory of our night vision how to they know how to zero a gun because I'm an 18 Bravo but like as I'm packing out the guns for this deployment, how many guns am
Starting point is 01:22:06 I supposed to take all of our guns? Like every single dude has 10 different guns. You know, am I taking 120 guns? Like I had no idea what to ask. I was too conceited or egotistical to ask in the right way, which was like, hey, can you teach me? I don't know how to do this or find a peer in the company that could explain how to do it. Because my senior, God bless his heart, Ben, was, he had to do everything because he had an idiot for a junior, me, that had no idea how to do anything.
Starting point is 01:22:50 And he didn't have the time as he's prepping to go to war to teach me how to do things because he had to do them. He had to palletize everything because I didn't know how to do it. He had to do, and he didn't have the time in war, pre-deployment, to teach the subordinate. So it just... And made it hard. Were you the only new guy? Yeah. They wound up on the stuff? Yeah. There's one other guy, Dave. That was same age, and but a little bit, maybe six months more experience than me. He and I were the only two guys there.
Starting point is 01:23:28 And the last two, they never did it again. Yeah, that's a steep learning curve. Wow. Yeah. When did you figure out what the significance of being on a SIF team was? I was pulling outside security in Iraq when a squadron Delta Force leadership, Dita Maso,
Starting point is 01:23:55 comes and takes a knee next to me. He goes, what are you doing? I'm wearing DCUs, like cool, fancy desert camo that we had altered You know, it's like we took our pockets and moved them up to our sleeves. We put like spandex shirts underneath our body armor Complete like unauthorized but Functional and I look over this news wearing multi cam and none of us had multi cam. I was like who the fuck are you? I can't, and I was like, who the fuck are you? He's like, I'm DiTamoso, and I was like,
Starting point is 01:24:27 I don't know who the fuck that is. He's like, you didn't answer my question. I'm like, I'm point security. He's like, where's your intersecting sector of fire? I turn on my laser, and like two seconds later, the guy on the right corner of the building turns on his lasers, and our lasers goes like that. He's like, all right, great, have a great night.
Starting point is 01:24:41 And he just gets up and walks away, and I was like, who the fuck was this guy? You know? And we're at a bomb maker's house for one of Zarkawi's lead henchmen, like this, the VBI IDs that were kind of plaguing Baghdad at the time. Like this was one of those houses. And this dude just like shows up on target and like walks up and starts talking to me. And it wasn't until afterwards when I was like, who is this dude?
Starting point is 01:25:05 And they tell me who this is. And I start understanding who the units are that are part of this task force. And then it like clicks. I was like, holy shit, this is the 18. This is like the most elite fighting force on the planet. All 100% focus focused on one kill capture thing of one person, the sharpest tool in the entire
Starting point is 01:25:28 Arsenal of the American military was being wielded towards one person and it was that there was that night that is like Holy crap like this is frightening Damn, that's when it started make sense. Very cool. Wow. I Still could grasp it because I'm dumb, but that was the first time where I was like, whoa. Yeah, yeah, lucky to be here. Yeah, didn't deserve to be there. How long were you at the SIF before you got kicked out the door on deployment?
Starting point is 01:26:04 Three months. That's it. That's it. three months. That's it. That's it. Three months. Yep, I got, I missed one month of our pre-mission train up because I was still in Sephardic. So I, like, I missed a portion of, so pre to, before a special operation unit goes, they, they, they look at their metal tasks, their mission, mission essential task list. These are all the skills that they're supposed to be able to have to go and do this mission
Starting point is 01:26:27 so they go and they rehearse and execute and they're graded on all of their core tasks before they go overseas. That's called your PMT, your pre-mission train up. I missed a month of that because I was in school. So, when I get there, I finish the last two months. We have two weeks off before we ultimately have to show back up. They give us like eight days permissive leave where we got to hang out with our families before we went overseas.
Starting point is 01:26:55 Are you married at this time? Uh-uh. Were you together? Yeah. How's she taking all this? She's such an amazing woman. And everybody that comes to her now, where it's like, how are you dealing with Tim and Afganistan right now,
Starting point is 01:27:19 or in Israel, or Ukraine? And she knew what she signed up for. She was at Fort Bragg, North Carolina in 2004, five and six. She saw her friends coming back without limbs. She saw her friends coming back without eyes. She had friends that deployed and never came back. She was there on the green ramp receiving her friends. She's such a good human.
Starting point is 01:27:47 When I say friends, like these weren't boyfriends, they were just her friends that she was there to support. She was so young. So she knew what, she actually probably knew better than I did what the cost of war was. got there before I did yeah, yeah So you guys okay, so how did you guys meet? super creepy
Starting point is 01:28:14 She uh, she was working a government contract and she was keeping inventory of these secret inventory of these secret devices. And every single one of them has a serial number and she was working for a government contracting company that kept the inventory of all those things and then reported it back to the army. And she shows up and I saw her and I was like,
Starting point is 01:28:40 that's the Russian spy. There's no way that that supermodel of a human exists in this world, which is like, butt sweat and ECT charges and pet and no nail lines and there's guns everywhere in Greece and we're covered in carbon from shooting all day. And there's just no possible way. So I figure out who she is.
Starting point is 01:29:08 I kind of like make friends with some of her friends. I go up and try to talk to her. As I'm standing in front of her like this, she just like starts turning without acknowledging that I'm talking to her. So I kept adjusting to try to stay in front of her as she kept turning. I was like, are you, do not see me right here?
Starting point is 01:29:25 I'm like, what's wrong with you? And then she just turns and walks away, doesn't say anything to me. And I see her stab a dude that grabs her leg with her stiletto, she balances on one foot and she's walking up this ramp. She stabs this guy that's trying to get her attention and I was like, that's the woman for me.
Starting point is 01:29:49 So I spend, I have to manipulate a date out of her. I tell all of her friends that we're going to be like meeting up at this time and I tell her a different time. She shows up early, although a little bit late, it's fine, but I had enough of a window that nobody else had arrived yet and the shoes she got there This is like the flip phone razor time So I preset text messages with all Recipients so I hit send and it goes out to all of them that dinners cancel and I take her out to dinner
Starting point is 01:30:18 And I go out to dinner with her every single day I go on a date with her every single night all the way up until I leave and that was my first trip with her and then when I was gone I had some ASAP guys some advanced special operations spy guys that literally followed her around Fort Bragg to make sure that she was a good girl and She was she was a good girl. And she was. She was. Yeah. And you guys have been married for 17 years now. Yeah. Congratulations. Wild. What in your opinion
Starting point is 01:30:56 is the secret to a successful marriage? You have to fight. Complacency kills. We know that in combat. Complacency kills in marriage, where you take things for granted about the person that you're with, this person that you chose to spend the rest of your life with, but now you let yourself go, you get a little bit the dad bod. You stop buying flowers, you stop lighting candles, you stop buying lingerie, you stop fighting for that person that you fought for, that you dated, that you courted, that you tried to sweep off their feet.
Starting point is 01:31:45 And now 10 years down the road, you're fat, and you're not sleeping, you're drinking a little bit, you care more about football game than you do her. Like shame on you. You don't deserve her. So like you sit down the sword, and when you sit down the sword, that sword's hard to pick up sometimes. You don't have the calluses anymore, you don't have the strength anymore, you don't have the condition anymore, and it's the same way with a marriage
Starting point is 01:32:07 where it's like constant vigilance and intentionality into your marriage. And the heart of a man is a hard thing. We can fall in love easy, we have these aspirations and these dreams. I have to choose between going overseas and doing something that I know I was put on this planet to do or to be present.
Starting point is 01:32:32 And I know I can't be present and look at that person, look at her or my kids in the face and the eyes without the things that I know that God put me on this planet to do. And trying to reconcile those two things, the only way that can happen is with intentionality and discipline. Well, I think that's great advice, man.
Starting point is 01:32:53 Thank you. Yeah, I'm still figuring out though. Hey, well, you're doing a hell of a good job. There's not too many people running around out there that could say they've been married for 17 years and through all the combat deployments and the time apart. Yeah, it's all her. Yeah, but last question, then we'll take a break.
Starting point is 01:33:14 So you're at the SIF and you find out you're going to Iraq. Did that hone in your mindset at all? I mean, that you're getting exactly what you asked for. You're going to war. It did, but I didn't appreciate it. Okay. And I didn't understand what that meant.
Starting point is 01:33:36 You know, like I still had John Wayne movies in my head. You know, I still had Mel Gibson and Bruce Willis. Like this is what I thought war was gonna look like. You know, it's like this barrel-chested freedom fighter as I'm like covered in the enemy's blood. As I'm standing there with an American flag behind me, you know, like this is, I don't know, the mind of a young man that knew nothing.
Starting point is 01:34:00 What I thought war was gonna be like and what war was like was very different. Those were the delta between those two things are indescribable. Yeah, yeah. All right, well on that note, let's take a break when we come back, we'll pick up and back, dad.
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Starting point is 01:36:37 to your schedule. Just fill out a brief questionnaire to get matched with a licensed therapist and switch therapist at any time for no additional charge. Learn to make time for what makes you happy with BetterHelp. Visit betterhelp.com slash Sean today to get 10% off your first month. That's betterhelp, H-E-L-P dot com slash Sean. All right, Tim, we're back from the break. We're getting ready to go into your first deployment with the SIF team under Shrek McPhee and Baghdad.
Starting point is 01:37:14 That's right. Yep. We first went to Al-Assad and we're there with the SEALs and we're logistically constrained with the amount of air that we had. Number of targets in this time period were plentiful and everybody fighting, doing a mobile, a vehicle assault was very difficult from that spot. So we relocated a few weeks later from Alasad into Baghdad.
Starting point is 01:37:48 And we're in the international, the green zone kind of on the row of the Joint Special Operations Command houses. And once we tied in with them, it went from you know two three targets a week to like 10 targets a night. So let's, what year is this? This is 2005, 2006. Oh, I was there then. So we're there at the same time. So everybody's there.
Starting point is 01:38:16 Yeah. So what I want to get at is Baghdad at that time was like the wild west. You're hearing car bombs all the time. You're hearing gunshots all throughout the day. It becomes very real. The smell, everything. You know, it's there. You'd hear at night when it's quiet,
Starting point is 01:38:38 you could hear five or six different units in gunfights. And like, is that us? No, that's not us. Who is that? Do they need are they good and like we're sharing QRFs and QRFs is running to you guys to provide support and then another QRF is coming to us. It's Madness the whole entire city, you know, Zarkawi's peak power right now all of his lieutenants are in hammer mode Al Qaeda is for the sole purpose of or in hammer mode, Al Qaeda is for the sole purpose of destroying and killing as many Americans
Starting point is 01:39:06 that are on their soil as they can and to destabilize the new Iraqi government that we were trying to put into place. So like this, it was a very volatile peak war. This is war. Yeah, yeah. Did it start to set in at all, hearing that, seeing it? It was, we never got this deployment
Starting point is 01:39:31 in comparison to my next deployment to Afghanistan could not have been more dissimilar. This, I'm part of an elite unit that's part of an elite joint special operations task force that is part of an elite coordinated strategic mission. That is a very different thing than you being in Afghanistan as a special forces sniper advisor to NATO allies. Like could not be further apart. We were the hammer every night. You know, if somebody from this task force is showing up at a door,
Starting point is 01:40:12 if you shot from that house, everybody dies. You know, if you were on target, you're gonna get bit, you're gonna get this battlefield interrogation that's pretty intense, the tactical questioning, as we're finding follow on targets, as we're continuing to build out this target set, Americans are hanging from bridges after they've been burnt alive and dragged through the street.
Starting point is 01:40:32 That's this era of war. This is black water dudes being tortured, football players being kidnapped and tortured, having anybody that was working for the American government is our cowies having his henchmen, they anybody that was working for the American government, Zarkawi's having his henchmen, you know, like they'd drill their hands to the wall, they'd cut off their eyelids,
Starting point is 01:40:49 and then they'd rape their family in front of them before they killed them, and you'd walk in, you'd find this raped and murdered family with this dude's hands drilled to the wall. Like this is fucking peak war. Did you see that? Yeah. You walked in on that.
Starting point is 01:41:02 We found Yeah. You walked in on that. We found every kind of imaginable horror that terrorists do to civilians. We found. Let's rewind. Let's rewind. I want to go right into that. First time you saw that.
Starting point is 01:41:23 What is the op? Just everything from the insertion to walking in that room. Yeah. It's funny. Full circle is in Israel just this recent October and we're in some of the Kaboots' adjacent Tegazza and seeing the same things that I saw back 18, 17 years earlier in Iraq. The inhumane barbaric things that these radical extremists do are just inhuman. I think that's the point is they want to show that anybody that does anything to support not Sharia law, not these radical ideas isn't human, right? They're infidels so they can do anything they want to them.
Starting point is 01:42:12 On, this is, God, what month is this? This is early 2006. We are going to what we thought was a VBID target we are going to what we thought was a VBIED target and Al Alvera was like the point guy. And we do a call out initially. So you set up like an L shape ambush on the outside of the house.
Starting point is 01:42:38 And this was early tactics of for 2006, 2005, 2006, not a lot of, only special operations units were still, combat arms were still doing hard knocks and there's no immediate dynamic entries. We're doing as deliberate as we possibly can after some houses get blown up and there's booby traps and bombs.
Starting point is 01:43:03 So we're trying to do call outs. And we're doing a call out of a target. And when we finally go to assault and clear the building, as we come in through the front door and you find a couple of kids that had been raped and murdered, your brain doesn't process it. You know, you can't, Your brain doesn't process it. You can't...
Starting point is 01:43:24 Nothing, you're planning what you're going to see, but the last thing you plan on seeing is dead kids in a corner. And I have a really good memory and I journaled the whole entire time that I was deployed and all my deployments. And I'll go back and I'll read some of these journals. And there's things I literally don't remember, but it's written down. You know, like I came back and I sat there with a pencil in one of my green notebooks and I wrote for hours everything that I experienced, my GRG is in there,
Starting point is 01:44:08 like the target packages in there, everything's in there. And I'm like, no way this happened. I don't remember this. And I'll go and I'll like, I'll ask teammates that were there at that same time. And they're like, dude, I barely remember that. The way the brain works, like the fog of war and then the- Compartmentalization.
Starting point is 01:44:29 Yep. The trauma. Like, I deny myself that, like, I saw some of the things that I saw, you know, but we saw them and it's sitting- Do you remember it now? Yeah. Do you remember seeing them now? Some of them.
Starting point is 01:44:42 Some of them, no. Some of them, yeah. But a lot of them, no. You remember the first time? No. And then confusing Afghanistan to Ukraine to Israel, the rooms look the same, the trauma looks the same, the date is different. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:45:09 But the journal is accurate. Yeah, I'm sure it is. Why did you start journaling? We had one of the very first kill capture missions, we do a dynamic entry of a house. And as we're approached in the front door, the front door is opened. And a man is standing, a military aged man is standing there.
Starting point is 01:45:38 There is an AK on the other side of, so there's a T intersection of a hallway that is from the main entry of the room. I'm stacked on the right hand side behind the owl and he and I are on the right hand side, the stack, the other side of the stack is on the left and we're kind of like have cross coverage inside of this door.
Starting point is 01:45:56 So like once the number of man goes, number one man goes, you kind of just follow taking opposing directions. And from the right hand side of the door, we could see the gun and we could see the guy. From the left hand side of the door, you could only see the guy but you couldn't see the gun. So Al and the translator, they're yelling to this guy to get on the ground, get on the ground, get on the ground, and the guy goes to grab the gun and the right stack shoots him. And military aged man on target
Starting point is 01:46:28 as he's trying to grab a weapon and he literally falls on top of the gun. You know, he has a stack of green tip rounds. He's wearing one of those bead prayer necklaces. It was really weird because it looked like a rosary but it's not because they're Muslim prayer beads. And I remember looking at those beads and being like, this is dude Catholic. What is this guy doing here?
Starting point is 01:46:51 Obviously, but these are the things that go through your mind in real time in a million thoughts per millisecond. And the guy falls over on top of this weapon and we flow through the house. Whether it's going to be a flash bang whether it's going to be a flashbang or it's going to be a dynamic breach and explosive breach of the door, the moment that goes off, just like a bullet, those bullets going, that overpressure from the barrels
Starting point is 01:47:13 and those bullets impacting, create a, in the Oodaloop, the, it resets everybody on the inside. So you always follow your rounds in. So, we shoot and we flow into the inside. So you always follow your rounds in. So we shoot and we flow into the target. After we secure the building and we're trying to find where the follow on target is, like move off to the next one. And I don't know who made the calls. So a 15-6 investigation is where the army goes into fact finding about information of possible criminal activity for a UCMG action.
Starting point is 01:47:51 And I've had a few 15-6s of these military investigations, and this was the first one where it should have been military age man on target. Co-operated statements from teammates that he was trying to grab a gun was shot on target, died on top of a gun, case closed, no investigation, totally fine. And this is peak war. When you say wild, wild west,
Starting point is 01:48:23 like you're shooting dudes squirting off targets, when they're trying to move, like if you do a deliberate assault on a house, so like a call out and you see guys start squirting out the back of the houses, we are set up to engage those guys that are leaving the target. But then we have a guy on a target that dies on a gun and this initiated an investigation. And it was at this moment where I was like, we're hunting the highest level dude in all of Iraq and the scrutiny of this task force post blackwater. You know, as now the press is looking for excuses and opportunities to hang, um, figuratively and literally and metaphorically special operations and contractors the that
Starting point is 01:49:09 In response to that scrutiny we we were I Don't know like putting ourselves Unnecessarily at risk. Mm-hmm. So I started journaling from that night forward. Every single target, this is why I was able to write that book with such clarity with Nick was because I had 15 years of journals from me in a variety of conflict zones. So starting that night after that investigation, Al was actually pulled
Starting point is 01:49:45 off of the assault team because of that shooting. Who initiated the investigation? Do you know? No. You know, and this is, I mean, I do, but, um... Was it a U.S. service member? Yep. I, uh, I'm never going to disparage this guy that was at war. I am an E5 at the time that just wants to get in gunfights. I was not in his shoes, I was not in his position, I was not in his position of authority or responsibility.
Starting point is 01:50:15 That's his name on documents. Those are his men that work for him. So like if I were in his position, I'm gonna say I'm of course gonna do something totally different, but I'm where I'm at now. I'm never gonna throw a stone. I didn't know what he knew at the time. Do I think it was wrong?
Starting point is 01:50:28 Of course. Dude, I would do anything to have Al in every single, to be the number one guy in every single room that I ever went into, because he was fast, he was dynamic, and he was violent. I mean, this happened a lot. It did. A lot and it just got worse and worse and worse. And I don't, I really don't want to
Starting point is 01:50:49 steer the interview this way, but I think it's important that people hear this type of stuff, you know? And how early in the deployment, I mean, that's your first deployment. Welcome to the world. That was my first weapon from select to fire and press the trigger.
Starting point is 01:51:06 Really? First time, right there. And initiated a 15-6 investigation. So you pulled the trigger? That whole right side of the stack did. And everybody stepped over. There's three people that shot that dude and there was a stack arounds like this right here.
Starting point is 01:51:24 Crazy, right at the intersection of that necklace. They have 15 bullets all touching each other. How did that investigation affect your mental state? Negatively, it made me second guess to everything that I was doing. It made me, in that that I was doing. It made me, you know, in that, in that observe-oriented decide act, what should be the gunfighter loop of how fast I can recognize that there's a problem, direct my attention towards that problem,
Starting point is 01:51:56 decide what the appropriate action is to take on that, and then, and then act on that. You know, that's milliseconds, and that's live or die. And then confusing all of that is, well, what should be the action might cause me to be investigated for a not righteous shooting that's gonna get me kicked out of country or even worse, you know, be arrested and sent to jail or kicked off the team. You know, that was the worst fear for me was to do something that would get me kicked off the team. You know, that was the worst fear for me
Starting point is 01:52:25 was to do something that would get me kicked off the team. And you should not have fear of fighting when you're in the middle of war. And there was all of the, just like the same moment that we started losing momentum in the Vietnam War when cameras started coming in there and you're supposed to be fighting and winning. Our job is to go and kill the enemy. We're supposed to be fighting and women winning. Our job is to go and kill the enemy.
Starting point is 01:52:47 We're supposed to be the most lethal fighting force on the planet. And I should not have to think about what some politician is going to be leveraging and positioning and some argument on the floor to try to demonize what the men and women that are wearing the flag on the shoulder forward are doing in combat. You sent us there, so let us do our job. And right now we've been seeing it for the past 10 years where every single opportunity is just a talking point for some politician. When you go all the way back to 2005 and 2006,
Starting point is 01:53:18 it was very similar. You had journalists looking for opportunities, you had politicians looking for opportunities, you had politicians looking for opportunities. It was just infuriating. Yeah. Yeah. What did... So that was the first time you pressed the sugar.
Starting point is 01:53:33 What did that feel like for you? Minimal recoil. The grain tip, it's a high energy, fast bullet that is very light in grains, you know, and stepping over a body that is shot afterwards. John, again, we get back to the hooch and it slaps on backs and pop in a bottle of whiskey. I didn't know what to think. I didn't know what to feel. He'd already been in a thousand gunfights.
Starting point is 01:54:13 I have no idea how many deployments he'd been in, but it was normalized in, this is the way, that you are a warrior, you are on a warrior team and you just had your first welcome. And for a man, for a young man searching for a purpose and for searching for a place, not knowing if he deserved or belonged to be like, deserved and belonged on that ODA, there was maybe for the first time a feeling of,
Starting point is 01:54:51 I deserved to be here. I wanted to be there, but I didn't know if I deserved to be there. Did you feel in a tremendous sense of accomplishment? A tremendous sense of accomplishment. Yes. I did the thing that I was trained to do. That night, in my journal,
Starting point is 01:55:21 I wrote, because there were two young boys in that house, and... Alive or dead. Alive. young boys in that house and alive or dead, alive. And I posed this question to myself that I couldn't answer at the time because I just remember the wife screaming and the boys screaming for their dead dad. And I just create a new revolution in this wheel
Starting point is 01:55:43 was I spoke that just continued to, I just killed one bad guy but just made two more. These are going to be forever men, future men that hate everything about me and us. Yes, I took out one but it created two more. Have I just perpetuated this endless saga that is good versus evil and I just created two more versions of evil. You know, I cut off the snake, the head of the snake and two more sprouted up in its place because of my actions.
Starting point is 01:56:14 Well, there's another way to look at that too. I mean, look at the example they had to follow. For sure. You know, so that's interesting that you were already thinking know. Yeah. So that's interesting that you were already thinking that. Yeah. Did it bother you at all? A little bit.
Starting point is 01:56:32 You know, the, uh, man, it would be so nice if war was against 30-year-old men with beards that are doing evil. Yeah, if you took the kids off the battlefield, if you took the women off the battlefield, men with beards that are doing evil. If you took the kids off the battlefield, if you took the women off the battlefield, if you took the confusing smells of the kitchen mixed with the smell of all the dust that's kicked up from the overpressure of a door charge, where you're like, I remember the smell of that dust, that fine moon-like dust that gets kicked up from our charges or from our flash bangs. And then you walk through the kitchen, you're smelling curries and spices and herbs that
Starting point is 01:57:11 are hanging on the wall. But then you also smell the lead smell of the blood from that's pulling on the floor. You know, like all of that is not what the brain's built to do. All the while there's a 28-year-old girl with two sons, all three of them are screaming for their dead dad. This is as good as it's going to get. It just gets worse after that. That's on the best case scenario. with a gun on target, you know, with legitimate intel.
Starting point is 01:57:55 You took out a top terrorist on your first deployment. Well, that you guys took it. That'd be really cool. Let me correct myself there. But let's get into that. I mean, that is a That's a huge piece of American history. Yeah, that not a lot of people have insight into so can you walk us through? The Zarkawi operation. Yeah, so there were actually let's start here. Let's who was Zarkawi. Yeah one of the embodiment of evil and like the personification of inhumane radical Islam. Zarqawi was the leader of al-Qaeda in Iraq.
Starting point is 01:58:34 You had bin Laden, if you like, you think kind of two separate but connected elements. You had bin Laden that was still on the run, but unknown since Torboyer, right? He's kind of disappeared, but he is the figurehead of this larger radical terrorist wing. But the man that is the ground force commander that is in charge of everything that's happening in Iraq is Zarqawi. Zarqawi and his lieutenants, you know, he was infamous for posing with dead American soldiers, battlefield recovery of their weapons. And if you saw him, he's sitting there with a 249 or a 240 or an M4 that he took off dead soldiers, dragging them through the streets.
Starting point is 01:59:18 Heaven forbid, somebody gets captured. He was infamous and notorious for torturing. So he would torture any American informant. So anybody that was giving information to the Americans, he would torture them. You know, Chris Kyle, American sniper, his, his book is following some of the enforcers from the Zarkawi network. And there were a few different special operations task forces that were tasked with eliminating support and strategic ground that he controlled while, the crescendo of that led to a single night where we had taken down
Starting point is 02:00:15 targets leading up to it week after week after week. When did you find out you were going after him? This would be March of, till a month before we finally found him and killed him. Damn. I mean, that's gotta be, that's gotta be motivating as hell. Yeah. To be out there after that guy.
Starting point is 02:00:41 Let's revisit that I am an E6 now, and brand new to the team. So the task force 100% knew who they're going after, and my team's leadership knew who they're going after. But the junior 18 Bravo that gets a GRG and is told where I'm gonna go and where I'm gonna attack and where my position is gonna be and where I am in the stack
Starting point is 02:01:08 and where my load plan is on the helicopter or where my position is on the vehicle that night. My level of understanding of what was happening in the battle space was, you know, like prepubescent at best. Got you. So like everybody maybe besides me knew what was happening. Because you know, it's difficult when you're stupid.
Starting point is 02:01:32 So. And that's where I was. Right on man. At least you're honest. Yeah. But well yeah, let's walk through the, just walk through everything. Dude, so much. You know,, so much. This is good.
Starting point is 02:01:50 Nobody's done this yet. Yeah. We didn't lose anything. That task force had the unit, Ranger Regiment, the CRIF, the SIF, had our QRF were Abrams and Bradley's, loaded with infantrymen. If we start getting scuffed up, Abram tanks and Bradley tanks came and just leveled blocks. This is, I always say we didn't lose, we're hitting a target that has maybe, you know, a bomb maker, an assistant, and a couple of security guys. So four guys on target, we're hitting them with a company.
Starting point is 02:02:35 You know, you're hitting them with six, like an entire troop of an assault force. And how victors and winners approach a gunfight is every single thing is in your favor. You know, you're in the dominant position, you have the dominant technology, you have the dominant men, you have every dominant speed, surprise, balance of action that you can execute on target
Starting point is 02:03:00 is being done in real time. That's what this entire deployment was. You know, the purple hearts that were given out to the guys in the task force were from, you know, shrapnel, like nobody got shot, nobody got killed. This was murder time. This is we are gonna find this guy and we're gonna kill him. So the target board or the murder board, right?
Starting point is 02:03:29 You have the guy at the top and then you have strings connecting to every single one of his lieutenants and then from his lieutenants every single one of their enablers and then from their enablers every single one of their advisors and you create this big huge target list, and then you attach physical locations to where these people could be or will be in real time. And you've seen hundreds of these boards. You have the people, and then you have the targets. Those targets aren't always exactly, like even though this is number three guys house, he's
Starting point is 02:04:09 only gonna be at this house at this specific time. So you have to figure out the pattern of life and where that person is gonna be for you to not just take down that target but also take out that person because what we're trying to do is limit the options available for where this where Zarkawi can squirt to and The targeters the the army and joint military Intel team They're amazing. They're just so good. They are the best that have ever been in the existence of this species, watching what JSOC can do is, and I'm watching, you know, like by no stretch of the imagination, do I deserve
Starting point is 02:05:03 to be there? I am at best a gun that is barely competent in how to use it. I'm just doing what I'm told. And getting to see the effectiveness of all of America's might, power, technology, and military prowess directed at an acute single thing is just the most impressive display maybe in history. Like I got it, we went to the moon. We found one dude that owned an entire country and we took out every single bit of ground and person
Starting point is 02:05:38 that that man knew until we ultimately dropped two bombs on top of him and he dies looking up at an American operator. That's freaking epic. It is. So we hit target, target, target, target weeks leading up to this final night. And this is my understanding of it is that we had hit enough targets and taken enough literal ground, enough of his safe houses where there were few enough for him to run to in one night.
Starting point is 02:06:07 You know, in some nights we'd have five, six, seven, eight, nine, ten, follow on targets. As we're doing a battlefield interrogation and during tactical questioning, the guy says, yeah, this is the other place that we go to. And limiting, as you look at like the physical places on the board, there's lines through them. Now there's like 10 or 15 left. We can do 10 or 15 at a night and they get prioritized. And of course, the highest priority targets, the ones that have the highest likelihood of finding numero uno dude get one through four.
Starting point is 02:06:43 The unit takes this one, these guys take this one down to us, and then he goes back through the list. And that night, we just hit him, house after house after house after house. And for those listening right now that are wondering what the unit is, that is Delta. Yeah.
Starting point is 02:07:04 And they're, you know, they're the leaders of the task force. They are the best, most capable fighting force on the planet and they're hitting all the houses, you know, the first time in seventh group history and to my knowledge, the first time in special forces history And to my knowledge, the first time in Special Forces history was during this deployment where the CRIF and Delta Force were on targets for the first time for gunfighting. It was kind of cool. Where are they at?
Starting point is 02:07:39 I was outside security. Just a real clear. That was not an house. Really wanted to be. I was outside security. Just a work layer. That was not an house. Really wanted to be, but I'll be wherever John told me to be at this moment of my career. And when it was wild leading up to these final nights where 160th soar, the Army Special Operations Aviation Group, they're flying guys to targets. We have panders, like armored personnel carriers that are really, really fast, zipping all over the town. The Iraqi counter-terrorism force is co-located
Starting point is 02:08:29 with another element of the SIF, and they're going and hitting all of these different targets, and they're the ones that are like really driving a ton of the information. You know, you hit a target, sometimes the guys from that target try to score, and that's the end of it. Sometimes they call for QRF, because they don't realize who they're in a gunfight with.
Starting point is 02:08:46 And the QRF that shows up is the Iraqi police that are supplied and trained by American military and they're pulling out guns that were given to them by the United States government. And you're picking up a Glock off target and being like, we gave you this, you're dead, but I wanna lecture you that you do not deserve to have this, you know, like trying to figure out
Starting point is 02:09:11 who the enemy was at this time is, because we're training some of the Iraqi military, we're training some of the Iraqi police, but then some of them are being controlled by Zarkawi, you know, he has some pretty long levers and he's able to manipulate via force and fear and power for them to do what he wants it. And we get some nights we're in a gunfight
Starting point is 02:09:31 and 160th got shot up so bad, they couldn't even come and pick us up. So our exfil, we're like at our exfil spot after a full night of gunfighting and we don't have a ride out to get back to Baghdad into the city proper, into the international, into the green zone. And we're like, well, where's the closest friendly force? And we find this little tiny marine fob. And we try to get them up on columns. You know, talk about one of the scariest moments of my life is walking up to a marine base
Starting point is 02:10:08 moments of my life is walking up to a marine base as a bunch of dudes blacked out in body armor and guns with dudes in drag bags and a couple of dudes that are zip tied as we're walking up and like don't shoot us you know like front link up of friendly forces in a battle space and like lasers start popping at us you know and we're like we're doing the Whirly Bird up in the sky with our lasers, be like, you know, no, no, don't, don't, don't murder us, please. We walk into this fire base, these guys have nothing. They have, you know, they're using M16s with ACOGs. They're getting mortared every single day. They're eating T-Rats.
Starting point is 02:10:39 The, their gym are buckets filled with sand and milk jugs filled with cement. That's what they're doing for shoulder press and bench press. They're training every single day. They're going outside the wire every single day. And I'm coming from a base where I have all the protein powder. We have stacks of energy drinks. We have this big, huge, nice gym with a jiu-jitsu mat.
Starting point is 02:11:02 We have our own shooting range. I get to go and I walk into this. And remember, I've never spent a day in the military. I've only been in special operations and my whole entire time on a team, I've only been at the SIF. So when I walk into this, I'm like, what, like you guys live here?
Starting point is 02:11:19 And they're on a 12 month deployment. Yeah, yeah. And they're getting hit every single day. It's wild. It is. And that led up to, you know, two weeks later, us being able to in one night hit every target, driving Zarkaue to his final last safe safe house where they drop two guided bombs, two munitions on top of him. Did you guys know he was on the run
Starting point is 02:11:45 while you were hitting these targets? Yeah, well, during the interrogation of people on target, you're starting to get this picture of the spider web and things were being cooperated from multiple targets where people were saying the same things. Like, yeah, this guy's going here, this guy's going there. Everybody's like this address, this house, this location are all like driving back to these limited, you know, like on the location killboard, there's only a few
Starting point is 02:12:16 left and we've now seen that they're all going back to those same places. And it wasn't, you know, I wasn't on target when he died, but when we get back, you know, we're unloading, we're pulling belts, we're, you know, open bolt machine guns from 240s and 249s, start stripping gear, start repackaging speed bags, you know, starting to change batteries and everything goes black.
Starting point is 02:12:41 Like all columns get shut down, all jammers get turned on, so sat phones aren't working. Nothing's working. All cell phones, all internet, all landlines, everything gets cut for the whole entire compound. That's when I was like, did this just happen? You know, only a couple of, that only happens for a couple of reasons. One, somebody messed up really bad and they have to shut down all calms out.
Starting point is 02:13:16 Two is something really good happened and you have to shut down all calms out. I was really hoping it was the latter and it ultimately ended up being the latter. When'd you get the news? When almost the same time that I heard that George Bush is gonna fly in to shake everybody's hand. No shit. Dude.
Starting point is 02:13:36 Yeah, nice. I know it's been leaked and there's photos that have been leaked, but that was Regiment, Delta Force, and 7th Group SIF, all standing there shaking hands as George Bush walked down. And he didn't do that for publicity. Nobody knew. He just hopped on a plane and flew over there
Starting point is 02:13:57 to shake the hands of the men that killed the guy that had been doing so many unspeakable acts to so many innocent people. Did it register at that point? No. Still didn't register? Still doesn't. It still doesn't.
Starting point is 02:14:15 Damn, Tim. I mean, there's a moment in history, and how do you know that you're there? I didn't deserve to be there. I was still an immature teammate not supporting in any way. So like there's a lot of like emotions of shame and regret. Like I would have wished so desperately to be the 2010 operator back in 2006.
Starting point is 02:14:44 Just four years, man. Just give me four years, couple of combat deployments, a couple more schools, a little bit more understanding of how to actually contribute. Instead, you know, like, I'm just looking at a door in front of me and if the guy, number one guy goes right, I'm gonna go left. Like that's where I was and that sucks.
Starting point is 02:15:04 Well, you were hand selected by a very seasoned operator for, I'm sure, a very good reason. Yeah. I bet if you asked John if he could go back and make that same decision, he'd make a different decision. Well, that doesn't matter. Yeah. It was pretty epic. It sounds like it. That is, did you know the guy that found him?
Starting point is 02:15:28 Yeah. And one of Matt Smith, who's the director of training for Sheepdog Response, retired Special Forces Sergeant Major. He's worked for a bunch of incredible units, special missions units, you know, he was longtime friends and so getting to like hear the stories and firsthand and you know, being there and getting to tie what happened at that target with where we were at the exact same time, you know, is,
Starting point is 02:16:00 you know, going back to my journals too and like re-looking at that night, which target we're at and which people we are questioning when that happened and we roll back in to the compound when they finally dropped those bombs and You know, we just been in another fight with a different QRF. So like the elevation and dronlin You know is it freaking out and then like wait what just happened? you know, is freaking out. And then like, wait, what just happened? Like, it's over?
Starting point is 02:16:27 Like, we got him? Damn. Do you want to talk about what happened when they found him or should we keep that offline? Totally up to you. I want everybody to know that this dude that Zarkawi, radical, murderous, raping, torturing, fanatic, burnt people alive, you know, dragged them through the street, tortured. I don't know.
Starting point is 02:16:59 If you're trying, how many do you think, Sean? Under his lieutenants, did he, how many people did he torture and murder? Specifically Iraqis. That tens of thousands? I can't answer that. You know, I don't know. Thousands, tens of thousands? It's gotta be.
Starting point is 02:17:16 I mean, I remember rolling up to locations where they would put people's heads on cinder blocks on huge blocks and then just launch cinder blocks straight down and pop people's heads like a grape. I've seen pregnant woman get hung on hooks just to bleed out with the fetus inside. And he was part of all that. Yeah. He's orchestrating all that.
Starting point is 02:17:51 The headings, all of the shit that you saw over there. He had a hand in. So his last breaths as he was dying from shrapnel and over pressure was an American commando with his foot on his chest. That's, I'm not sure Americans have the appetite or the tolerance for what it means to win a war. You know, in 1941, a day that I lived in infamy and we were attacked at Pearl Harbor,
Starting point is 02:18:27 it finished with us dropping two nuclear bombs on a people that wouldn't submit. You know, behind every blade of grass, when you come onto the motherland of Japan, you'll find somebody fighting to protect Japan. Like, fine. Hiroshima. You know, like, are you done? No, fine. You're not a kis You know, like, are you done? No, fine, here's Nakasaki.
Starting point is 02:18:48 You know, are you done? Then we won that war, right? In Europe, and as we pushed into Berlin, it was absolute destruction and carnage of everything. If you look at photographs from early 1945, late 1944, it is destruction in epic proportions. There's no moral equivalency when you're trying to win a war. There's winning and there's losing. That's it. We're looking for some moral justification about how we're going to be fighting these wars these days, and there's winning and there's losing. And so I realize that now people may not have the appetite
Starting point is 02:19:28 of what it looks like to have an American standing with his boot on the chest of one of the evilest men to walk the face of the planet in my lifetime. But that is a beautiful, glorious thing. And I hope they can understand why that's important. I think most people listening here are gonna understand why that's important. I think most people listening here are going to understand why that's important. But thank you for sharing that. America.
Starting point is 02:19:55 That's right. Greatest country in history. That's right. So what do you do? So you take out Zarkawi. You guys take out Zarkali, you guys take out Zarkali. How much longer do you have on this deployment? That was the point of the deployment.
Starting point is 02:20:13 So we come back, keeping the momentum and making sure that none of his lieutenants are promoted. So keeping that initiative where we continue to hit targets rapidly over the next few nights, we maybe had a 48-hour stand down as the president came, which is another one of the reasons why all the comms were shut down. And once you're told that President Bush is coming in. Everybody goes from the task force and is there, and they shake hands and a few pictures are taken and he bounces and then it was like, let's go back to work.
Starting point is 02:20:53 Every single bit of information that was taken off of every single one of those targets on that night is then reprioritized into a new target list as we taking this guy off, but moving, elevating these two guys that we haven't yet found and trying to keep that momentum to secure and stabilize that battle space. And then you go home.
Starting point is 02:21:18 How many top terrorists do you think were neutralized that deployment? 50. 50. Top. You know, like, I mean, there's a lot of... That's a whole deck of cards. That's right.
Starting point is 02:21:33 Yeah. I mean, in that deck of cards, I think there's three or four just in that specific 2004, five, six, seven deck of cards. I think there's like five or six dudes that were in that deck. Nice. In that one deployment. But then, you know, the lieutenants for every single one of them, respectively,
Starting point is 02:21:52 like those guys went to the dirt as well. So there was a 48 hour window of the guy she got like nine times. You gotta meet the president. I'm sorry, but we gotta slow down the ops cause you gotta meet the president. And then it's right back at it, right back to work. As it should be.
Starting point is 02:22:11 Yep. No time for celebration. Let's go get the rest of them. I think in that tactical pause and that battlefield patience, which is so important and often misunderstood, they were also processing all of the information taken off of all of those targets that night.
Starting point is 02:22:31 And then they had to reprioritize all new targets going forward. And that's hard. Even now, if I were tasked with that, how do you reorganize your whole entire target list with all information that's taken off of 25 targets in one night and then you move on to number one, two, five, and seven? And then all of the new ones that we didn't even know about.
Starting point is 02:23:04 Man, that's a hell even know about. Yeah. Man, that's a hell of a first deployment too. Yeah. Holy shit. Dude. I still get like part racing thinking back. That's deployment number one. My first combat deployment. Man.
Starting point is 02:23:25 Amazing. Yeah. Man. Amazing. Yeah. And things changed, Afghanistan. Yeah, so let's go home. Okay, let's say you get home, do you get married on this trip home? Yep. So you come back, you find out,
Starting point is 02:23:38 you talk to the spies, she's good. Yeah. And I know I'm gonna be going to Ranger School to Special Forces Sniper School and I'm already starting to position. I'm trying to find out which unit is the next unit going back to Afghanistan. And I start trying to manipulate position myself
Starting point is 02:24:01 to get on that hitch. So I'd like knock out to schools and then go on the next rotation. So you're not on the SIF? No, I'm still on the SIF. Then what are you looking at other units for? So once you spend a couple of deployments or a couple of years on the assault force, you can move to the recon Halo Sniper team. So I go to Ranger school, my team sergeant, John, says, hey, if you're gonna go to Ranger school, you can't come back to this team unless you're on a graduate.
Starting point is 02:24:36 And so you have no choice but to go to Ranger school because you're immature, you don't understand leadership, you don't understand the army. So go to Ranger school, and if you're not on our graduate, you can't come back to this team. So I go, I'm on our graduate. I come back to this team, but then like I still have the chip on my shoulder
Starting point is 02:24:52 because I'm a prick. And I still haven't learned humility, evidently. So I'm like, fuck this team then. I'm gonna, you know, I'll go to the Hello Sniper team. So then I, Alex Ortiz is the team sergeant for 796. And he offers me a spot to come to 796. So I go to sniper school after Ranger school. And I'm looking for when is the next combat deployment
Starting point is 02:25:19 for anyone in the Greater Special Forces Regiment. Cause now I wanted to deploy as a sniper. for anyone in the Greater Special Forces Regiment, because now I wanted to deploy as a sniper. So I'm still in the SIF, but I'm looking for jobs for Usisock, JSOC, for coalition soft forces that need a sniper, because I wanted to be an experienced sniper, not just a paper sniper. And that was, and especially as a special forces sniper,
Starting point is 02:25:52 in addition to being able to shoot far, far, far away, you come with the understanding of a battle space and how to call in nine lines and how to be the connective tissue between other special operations units and combat units in the theater with like as a softly like a special operations liaison. So a sniper is really useful in those roles because he can speak the languages of lots of different different types of units.
Starting point is 02:26:26 So I was trying to find a way to get to war as a sniper. And the SIF, having just returned, they weren't on the playbook to go back for like two more years. Okay. And I did not want to wait two more years. Gotcha, gotcha. How did you propose to your wife? Yeah, so I had, first we were
Starting point is 02:26:50 going to be going to a baseball game in Southern California and I was going to do that cringy seventh inning thing. I had that set and it's for a variety of reasons, a nephew that was sick, we ended up not going to the game, so I canceled that. Then I was gonna do it at Disneyland during the fireworks. But fog and weather came in and they canceled the fireworks that night. So then I was going to do it at the Beach House in California in Cambria,
Starting point is 02:27:27 and we're driving on the coast road over, and as soon as you crest the hill, and you see the ocean, I saw this gigantic layer of marine clouds. So I knew that once we got, it was gonna be a full moon that night, that once we got to the beach, to be a full moon that night, that once we got to the beach, you wouldn't be able to see anything besides the black
Starting point is 02:27:48 murkiness that is fog. And I have a bad relationship with fog, so I was like, I don't really want to propose to my wife on a dark beach in the middle of the fog. So as we're on top of this hill, looking, this mountain, looking out on the Pacific and the Pacific Ocean is like, it's my home. It's my, I love that water. I right there on the side of the road, I got down on a knee and was like, you're made for me. I don't deserve you. And I know that you fight for me. I'm not gonna tell you how I know, but. And she said, yeah. No, that was it. And I drove to my grandma's house in Cambria
Starting point is 02:28:34 and told her she was the first to hear that I was getting married. Oh man, that's cool. Very cool, very cool. Now marriage is tough. So you get married, you get engaged, and you get married on the same trip home. And find your new unit. Well I stay in the SIF, I find my new deployment.
Starting point is 02:28:59 So I was still at C37, I was still in the 7th group SIF. And I... Okay, so hold on. So there's multiple teams within the SIF, in each group? There are two troops, and each troop is comprised of an assault force of two ODAs and a recce team. And that recce team is broken into the Halo Sniper and then the tech human side of the recce team. Okay. And that Recky team is broken into like the Halo Sniper and then like the tech human side of the Recky team.
Starting point is 02:29:28 Got it. So each of those troops could kind of work independently, but as a squadron they can like work as a four team assault team with two Recky teams. You know, that's how we're organized. Got it. And this deployment, a new battalion was going into Afghanistan and the soft coalition, so the all of our NATO allies with all of their special operations teams that are four deployed, the British, the Canadian, Czech, the French, all of those teams are under the battle space commander of the American military. So the American kind of combatant commander of Afghanistan has all of these different
Starting point is 02:30:20 countries that are all allies that are all working under this kind of coordinated combatant wing. As a Special Forces sniper, I myself and my sniper partner volunteered to be Usasoc snipers for the Coalition SOF. So anytime that any one of our Allied Tier 1 units were going to be going to a target, one of us would, well the plan for both of us was to go, but as soon as we landed in Afghanistan, my sniper partner gets the Dear John letter that his bank account had been dumped that his wife had a dude on the side and she was just
Starting point is 02:31:05 waiting for him to fly overseas. She's like selling his guns, selling his motorcycle, dumping his bank account. So he was going to be combat ineffective. So they flew him home, which left me there by myself. So now I'm a USISOC Special Forces sniper assigned to the coalition and I'm like, I got nobody. So this whole entire deployment, I am just hopping from TST to TST, Time Sensitive Target or trip or mission with each of these different coalition units. Before we get into the actual deployment, you did another thing on your off time.
Starting point is 02:31:47 You started your first company, correct? That's right. Ranger Up. How did that come about? I, there's this fighting tournament called the Army Combatives Tournament. And all military branches could send their best fighters to this four day long, just violent tournament.
Starting point is 02:32:12 You'd weigh in, the first phase was fighting and grappling. The second phase was fighting in pancreas, limited striking rules. And the third phase was you fighting in real MMA fights for who is gonna be the Army combative champion. Ranger Up was like this apparel line that would make fun of all of the things about the military that you couldn't make fun of being in the military.
Starting point is 02:32:45 And it was awesome. And Nick Palmosiano and Toma Menta and Dave were like, hey, we want to sponsor you. So I went and fought in those Army combatives tournaments as a former professional fighter. So I'm the only guy in history to win them three times and you you fight anywhere from 10 to 20 times over the weekend. Obviously submission fights, pancrease fights, and then
Starting point is 02:33:13 finally MMA fights. What's a pancrease fight? So your bare knuckle that's closed fist to the body, kicks to the head, but you can't close fist punch somebody to the face. So it's grappling and kickboxing heavy. Gotcha. Um, and then, uh, it kind of like limits face damage so that you are able to fight, which would be your, your third phase and final phase, which is the championships fights, uh, in MMA rules. Um, when I won that, Nick and Tom and Dave were like, hey man, we also heard that you're
Starting point is 02:33:49 like fighting on the side. So they started sponsoring me. And I said, well, why don't instead of you sponsoring and paying me, like I would like some equity and I would like to help build Ranger up. So that was my first like business entrepreneurial step was getting equity of Ranger Up and then starting to help build that brand. Man, you guys had some great branding for the time. I remember this one video specifically and it was, I've never met Nick, but I think it was Nick.
Starting point is 02:34:25 And he was, he had this old special forces medic on there. And dude, that was hilarious. We were like so far ahead. Now there's tons of great military apparel lines. Yeah. You know, you had like 7.62, you have nine line, you have grunt style, and they're all great companies owned by great guys. We were the first.
Starting point is 02:34:51 We were the first ones to do it. Matt Best and Jared that went on to own Black Rifle Coffee, they had Article 15 with Rocco. But we were the first. We were the first ones in PXs. We were the first ones saying things that you couldn't say and putting them on shirts and having soldiers wear those things around. It was freaking awesome. Yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 02:35:12 That stuff really, I mean, that got legs fast. Yeah, it took off. It seemed like it. Yeah, it blew up. It was crazy to go from Nick and Tom and Dave printing shirts in a garage to them selling five million in shirts. Wow. An infantry officer, an SF officer,
Starting point is 02:35:32 a Ranger Battalion kid, and a Green Beret. Damn, damn. That is very cool. It's fun. Did you guys get a lot of shit for that? Did you? Yeah, we got like, oh, you're those guys. You know, like, and some people didn't get the jokes and military humor is not humor that is appreciated sometimes out of the military.
Starting point is 02:35:57 So non-service members would see some things and they'd be like, dude, that's not funny at all. They're like, no, it's absolutely hilarious. You're like, I'm sorry that you don't get it and I'm sorry that you're offended or whatever triggered word is now, but this is funny, you just don't get it. And that's your problem.
Starting point is 02:36:15 Yeah. How long did that run go on for? Like 10 years. 10 years? Yeah. Yeah, I mean, that carried me into, you know, I fought for IFL and Strike Force, UFC, I was wearing Ranger up on fight shorts and the success of that company and how to do it and
Starting point is 02:36:37 how to market really led into me opening new business ventures and how to organize business. There were a lot of mistakes that we made at Ranger Up, but like with all mistakes, ideally you learn from them. And I was just surrounded by really smart people that once we made a mistake and they learned from them, they would then tell me what to do. So I didn't make them again because I would make them again because I'm dumb,
Starting point is 02:37:01 but they would be like, ah, maybe if you learned from this, we'd do this differently. And it just kept kind of getting better. Interesting. Interesting. Yeah, that's, I mean, it essentially created an entire subculture out of the military
Starting point is 02:37:19 that brands have taken ideas from, learned from, developed new ideas. That was kind of the start, and it's very cool. Yeah, we're definitely proud of it. We didn't exit like the way that you'd want as you position yourself to sell a company at the right time. We did it in all the wrong ways, which is another hard lesson to learn, where you've been part of a brand for 10 years,
Starting point is 02:37:51 and then you kind of watch that brand die on the vine. Raindrop still exists. I still own a percentage of it, but the company which I don't control anymore and neither does Nick, is like a shell of what it once was. You know, that stings. Yeah.
Starting point is 02:38:07 Or like, man, why don't we sell it this moment? Or why didn't we position to exit at this moment? And we just didn't know any better. Yeah, yeah. Yeah. Well, plus was a, wasn't your primary focus, you know? So, all right. let's move into Afghanistan.
Starting point is 02:38:27 So your sniper for use of SOC. Yeah. So going from being on a JSOC task force, hunting the number one dude on the planet to being a single sniper in support of coalition units that do not get tier level targets. You get whatever's there in their battle space. There's no QRF. There's no support. There's not even another person on target that speaks English and sometimes.
Starting point is 02:39:05 Some instances, like I knew some of the guys on target spoke English. They just wouldn't talk to me in English. I don't speak French. I don't speak German. I fight to go with the Canadians or the British, but they weren't trying to get in the fights like the Czechs were. The Czechs wanted to get into fights like the Czechs were. Like the Czechs wanted to get into fights. So like me traveling and deploying and going with the Czechs off,
Starting point is 02:39:28 for example, into Firebase Anaconda, like they wanted to get into gunfights. No shit, I never even, I never worked with the Czechs. Dude, they're bad. Are they? Yeah, a bunch of Viking blooded dudes. Hey, I never got the opportunity. I've seen the Pollocks. I've seen the Pollocks seen the pollocks, seen the similar and those boys were hungry. Yeah. Yeah.
Starting point is 02:39:50 I never, yeah, never saw the checks kind of same vibe between the two of them. You know, they're like the like the the grew and and checks off both have that like something to prove Eastern block anxiety of post USSR, where like they got it, they have a chip on their shoulder. They want to know how to fight. They want to bring lessons learned from combat back to their homes. But you have to be in Eastern Europe when you have Russia knocking on your door often, um, and then making incursions into Crimea and Ukraine and for you to understand the permanent anxiety
Starting point is 02:40:30 that these special operations guys have because it's on them, right? Like you can say NATO all you want, but if Russia came to the Polish border, which they were trying to push through, you know, like when they got all the way to Kiev and they're looking at moving all the way up into Poland, Poland was positioned to find a line in the sand
Starting point is 02:40:56 and stand there and die on it. Like you'd have to step over the bodies of every single Polish special operations guy if you're a Russian soldier trying to invade Poland. And they have had that for 20 years. So then they get to go to war, but they haven't been in war, like real war, and now they want to prove their tactics, their procedures, they want to make sure that their equipment is right, they're using the right ammo, all the things that you learn from war, they're trying to perfect there.
Starting point is 02:41:29 The check in the polls or maybe the most hungry. Yeah. Yeah. Did you... So what's the like going out with those guys? They don't shoot at them. They also don't have the same scrutiny. This is 2008. Now we're peak Afghanistan war.
Starting point is 02:41:54 I went from like peak Iraq war to 2007, 8, 9 is peak Afghanistan war. And if you're on, you know, if we're moving, we're on a gaff, a ground assault force, we're in vehicles moving towards a target and that target starts shooting at the ground assault force, they're just going to level the target. You know, like this is the war that we're at now. It's not like Haley's continue to roll up and hit them in a dynamic entry. It's like, cool, let's stop.
Starting point is 02:42:31 And we're just going to drop bombs and mortars on top of these guys. And then we're going to cruise down as maneuver elements and pick up the bodies. You know, this is a. We got blown up. His valley and hers gone with with the Czechs and it was an IED initiated ambush and they had positioned a few hundred foreign fighters in Taliban in this valley with this intent of taking out the entire Czech special operations, the Special Forces ODA that was escorting them to Firebase Anaconda, and all of the resupply
Starting point is 02:43:09 that was gonna keep them at this fire base throughout the winter. So there's this gigantic caravan of Jingotrux and then the Czech Special Operations Forces and the American escorts to there. And I was the liaison to the Czech special forces. Okay. This is just an example of like the different types
Starting point is 02:43:30 of missions that I went on as that Yusosok sniper liaison. From the time that initiated, that IED initiated ambush kicks off, PKM machine guns start going off, RPGs are skipping off hoods and slamming into vehicles. That was the beginning of a three-day gunfight. If you're doing your battlefield damage assessment, you're looking at a few hundred dead foreign fighters.
Starting point is 02:44:03 Damn. The vehicle in front of me gets disintegrated. Everybody inside of it dies. You know, like purple hands, hearts were handed out to like, not handed out. That's not the right word. Everybody gets purple hearts from this mission. You know, shrapnel in the back and the necks. We're in villages as we're moving from there all the way to Firebase Anaconda. Every time that we moved to the next village, we're having to fight door to door, building
Starting point is 02:44:30 to building to get through this village. And you couldn't go around this village because around the outsides of these villages, they had put IEDs. Damn. So it was just like. And you're with the Czechs. Yeah. How are you communicating with them?
Starting point is 02:44:43 How are you integrating with their tactics? I would mostly talk to the Americans about where we were and where we're going. And I would just observe what the checks were doing or how they were maneuvering. And then I would communicate to the team sergeant of the Special Forces ODA about, hey, we're going to be heading, you know, like we're going north-west, our azimuth is this right now, we're going to be heading, we're going North-Rest, our azimuth is this right now. We're going to be moving to this position. And the company commander spoke broken English, but English enough where he would relay to his unit
Starting point is 02:45:13 that would be maneuvering to a new position. And then he'd give me like the bluff. He'd give me the wave tops. You know, like this is the bottom line up front. We're moving to this hill and we're going to be providing suppressive fire, uh, as the ODA is going to be moving to the south. So I'd call it the ODA, but I can't, we're moving up to this hill.
Starting point is 02:45:30 This is going to be the grid coordinates. Um, and, uh, and I'll give you intel from this position as we go. And that would be rapidly changing. And I'd always be struggling into finding, figure it out like what the heck is going on right now. Yeah. And so, I mean, I gotta be honest, this sounds like a pretty good mission set to me. I mean, so you're basically a strap hanger for anybody that's doing shit.
Starting point is 02:45:56 That's right. I got to... Was it hard to integrate in with these units and get them to say, yeah, we want them on the off. Now, I mean, you pass a sniff test, you go into the pre-emission briefing and you ask a few of the right questions and how am I gonna be an asset?
Starting point is 02:46:18 Where would you like me? How would you like me to communicate? What kind of information do you want me to relay to the Americans? Like here are some capabilities that I have in calling for fire. This is the equipment that I'm bringing with me. This is appropriate where I would be useful if I have the stuff, is there other stuff that you would like me to have that I do have that I can bring if you'd like?
Starting point is 02:46:39 Those type of things really build immediate rapport when you're having kind of an outsider come into your unit. They also recognized the value of having that American special operations lays on. If you want air support and you are French special operations and you're trying to call for American call for fire. That's hard. Right? But then you have a me there where I can just pick up my phone and be like,
Starting point is 02:47:14 I'm not figured a phone and be like, hey, this is where we're at. This is what we need. This is where I need it. Send it and it's done. So like they recognize the value in that. So with the right questions and the right kind of immediate rapport building, and I would also bounce each one of the different nationalities had their own bases. When you got to like Bagram or Kandahar, they were all
Starting point is 02:47:37 segregated into like the Italians were here, you know, the French were here, the British were here. Do you remember? I remember. So I would go and spend, I'd go have dinners with them. I would, if there's a soccer game happening, I would go and hang out with them. And I was able to go outside of the wire and acquire things that help build rapport with foreign units. So I'd bring a bottle of wine,
Starting point is 02:48:03 or things that are hard to come by in Afghanistan. I'd bring a bottle of wine or things that are hard to come by in Afghanistan. I'd bring and show up with some salted meats and for a soccer game. And then, I was at E6 with Combat Patch. Recently came from Afghanistan. I got a Ranger tab. Like they know that I'm the special forces sniper.
Starting point is 02:48:25 So there, there, it wasn't as hard to build that initial rapport. You know, I thinking back to my dad about like how to break down barriers. I came bearing gifts. I kept my mouth shut, asked questions when appropriate and looked for opportunities to contribute. How many different units did you operate with?
Starting point is 02:48:46 About a dozen. Wow. Over the course of eight months. Damn. Did you, so now you're a special forces sniper. If you had a whole new set of capabilities and skills, did you engage anybody as a sniper? Yeah, a lot. Did you kill anybody as a sniper? Yeah, a lot.
Starting point is 02:49:06 Did you kill anybody as a sniper? Yeah, a lot. Can we talk about the first one? Yeah, it's a bad one. It was sad, like all war is. I wish it was like, dude, I saw this dude squirting on the back of the target. You know, he had like, his head holding the head
Starting point is 02:49:22 of a baby on a shoulder, you know, and he's carrying an AK and I see that he's wearing a VBID vest and he's running towards an American unit. He was holding the head of a baby on a shoulder. He's carrying an AK and I see that he's wearing a VBID vest and he's running towards an American unit and I shot him. It was a child carrying a 1875 lever action British rifle and he was moving in resupply points between this Taliban machine gun position. I saw him move a couple of times. I didn't know how old he was. He's about five, 600 meters.
Starting point is 02:49:54 There's like hours of limited visibility. So like I see a guy with a gun moving from like the far side of a hill to a machine gun position. It does it a couple of times. So the next time that I see him moving, I shot him. Very rarely do you get to go and see the people you shoot as a sniper. And this was in our direction of travel.
Starting point is 02:50:19 So as the caravan starts to move in that direction, and I come and I see this 11, 12-year-old kid with a rifle, actually, have you ever come to my office in Texas in Austin? I have this gun hanging on my wall. Right underneath it is the sent-com permission from the JAG for me to bring. It's not a war trophy. They said it's not even functional. And I also have US Special Operations Command JAG
Starting point is 02:50:51 authorizing me and I have both of them, like the stamped approved, what were those like little squeeze things that put a permanent mark on the paper? Yeah. You know, with the JAG signature. We'll see. Yeah, with their little pressure seal.
Starting point is 02:51:04 Both of those things sitting right underneath there and it reminds me of two things One is every time I hear a politician say like why do you need a gun? Like what is the importance of the second amendment? We have F16s and F18s and M1 Abrams I think back to in a little boy a peasant a nomad that had been kicking The American special operations ass in this valley for three days. And he's running around with an 1875 musket, one man with a rifle protecting his own land, how powerful he is and the power of the Second Amendment and how this insurmountable force of one good guy with a gun, how powerful that is.
Starting point is 02:51:44 So that's one reason. And the second is to remind me the cost of war. It's never the way that you want it to be. It's never the way that it is in the movies. It is horrible. It is young. It is pain. And I don't want my son to ever have to shoot an 11-year-old kid
Starting point is 02:52:05 carrying a gun that doesn't even work. That's war. Everything else is for the movies. Does that still haunt you? Yeah. Yeah. I'm sorry. It's war.
Starting point is 02:52:23 Someday we'll have peace. We'll live together, but until then, this is what war looks like. You can have these ideals and dreams of grandeur, but it's eviscerated bodies and burnt smell of hair and flesh and children that are raped and tortured and die from over-pressure wounds and bad guys on the same, not but two days later from me shooting that kid, I threw a grenade through a window with a P-cam machine gun, Mike Goble, hero. One of the greatest
Starting point is 02:53:04 green braids to walk the face of the planet. Roy Benavida's level green braids. I walk up to a door and I don't know how he knew this. I don't know if he was pre-cog. Maybe he came from the future and came back in time. I walk up to this door, defined intervention. It's happened multiple times in my life. I walk up to this door.
Starting point is 02:53:22 We see bad guys move into this building. And as soon as I go to reach for the handle of the door, Mike and I, we always had like some friction. We had been in a couple of fights over some dumb stuff using a machine gun position. You had a pistol out. I was like, why aren't you on your machine gun? He's like, well, I want a pistol kill. Like you're stupid idiot.
Starting point is 02:53:42 And then we fist fight. So like fast forward to this. Tentacle in the androthal conversation. 100%. I put my hand on this door and he hits me so hard and shoves me and I stumble back and fall over as this door gets shredded with machine gun fire. And I don't know if he like heard a bolt drop or if he heard a selector switch.
Starting point is 02:54:09 There's no way, because I was at this door, right? Like I didn't hear anything. All I know is like, I just start falling back and I'm like trying to get my feet because I'm gonna come at him and knock his teeth through his face because he just shoved me because I thought he wanted to be
Starting point is 02:54:20 the number one guy through the door. And as soon as he shoves me, it pushes him back and this door just gets shredded with machine gun fire. And saves my life. No question had I been there like a half a second later and Mike Gould will not been there, I'd be dead. And I see as this door like kind of starts swinging that there's a machine gun sticking out of this window.
Starting point is 02:54:46 And I throw this frag grenade through this window. Again, it's not like the movies, right? There's not this flame, there's not this like, da-da-da. It's just this thud. And what you want to hear is silence. All I hear is women and children start screaming. This guy barricaded himself and surrounded himself with a bunch is women and children start screaming. This guy barricaded himself and surrounded himself with a bunch of women and children in this room.
Starting point is 02:55:11 And this is two days after coming off this kid. You got a lot of spartan stuff in here. Do you remember the plungers behind the line of the 300? So you'd have the guys in the front, the phalanx, right? The short stores and the spears, and they would move that line forward and then step over the bodies of the people that were fighting that would die against the shields.
Starting point is 02:55:32 The next row behind them were long spears. So they were guys that were stabbing through the shoulders and over the shoulders of the forces that were coming. So the wall would come that attack, they'd close the wall, spears would come. And as you'd step over these bodies, the third row would be a plunger. And he would have this metal spike,
Starting point is 02:55:48 and he'd just stab these guys as the Spartans would move forward. Every night, as we moved forward, I would sit there all night long with a thermal imager, and I would splash rounds into every heated body on the battlefield. Holy shit dude. And I did it every night for eight hours. A couple hundred rounds a night.
Starting point is 02:56:15 Shit. The only one that could shoot out. So the, with these RG33s with the Crows amazing targeting system, What we didn't have was a lot of ammo. The Crows has thermal. They'd be able to spot a target. I would lay and they'd give me an azimuth and a distance and direction. With a distance and direction, I'd kind of PID the body and then I would dump a couple of rounds in it. And then they'd move it five degrees. And then to give me a new distance and direction, I would adjust and I'd splash a couple of rounds.
Starting point is 02:56:51 Repeat every night. And that, uh... That's heavy. Yeah, it's heavy. And then you drive out and you just see these bodies that have, you know, your holes in them to go into the next village that a dude is fighting from a room that he surrounded women and children. This is war.
Starting point is 02:57:17 Fuck war. Man. How did that deployment end? With no elation or grandeur, with no celebration, with no time, you know, a redeployment date for me to go to another school. That was, I had that rifle, which I'd kept in my little tiny crappy plywood sleeping area. And I remember like getting in fight after fight, with an Air Force Jag guy with the redeployment
Starting point is 02:58:05 security clerk. He's like, you can't come back. I can. I literally can. This is paperwork with a stamp that outranks you, saying that I can. You can't. I'm like, this gun's coming with me.
Starting point is 02:58:16 So that fight to bring that gun back home was great. But ultimately, that deployment date ended. And I'm by myself. Like I didn't fly home with a team. I didn't like high five, like let's go back. My wife met me at the green ramp when I landed. There's nobody there. Damn.
Starting point is 02:58:38 Yeah. How was it coming home to your wife? Broken. Yeah, I was a broken dude. How was she? I didn't know her. It was eight months since I saw her. And in eight months, you know, I did the worst things that a person can do to another person. And she didn't, right? She's at home. She's working every day. She's working every day. She's taking care of our shepherd.
Starting point is 02:59:07 She's running marathons and she's finishing her MBA. She's developing as a human and I'm developing in a totally different way. Not better or worse, just different. So I was at a Best Buy. This guy in this BMW starts cruising by. And he's smoking cloves. There was an Indian restaurant that was like just a couple buildings away, but clearly it was like downwind from it because I could smell like the curry from the Indian restaurant. I could smell his clove and he was listening to some Arabic music. Then he was in a bad guy's car because that's what all of them drew. I was thinking about just smoking this dude in Fayetteville, North Carolina.
Starting point is 03:00:00 I've been home three days and I was like, I want to go back to my house for a few days. They had just had the UFC fight for the troops the same weekend that I got home. And I got home the day after it happened. So like Brock Lesnar's in town, Randy Couture's in town. Like these are all dudes that I knew and in my, and I love the brotherhood of combat arms, specifically special operations, Alex Ortiz and, no, this sucks, because I can't remember a couple of their names because they're dead now. Now, some of my teammates, that sucks, they knew and had heard what that deployment was like for me.
Starting point is 03:00:58 And, you know, when I call back to give them updates to my team sergeant, I call it Alex a big, hey boss, just want to give an update on back. I just got back from this hitch that I was with the British or the Canadians or whatever. He's like, hey, man, I heard, like I'm getting updates every single day on the red side. So first of all, I just want you to know that I'm super proud of you.
Starting point is 03:01:16 I want you to not feel any pressure to do anything, like, you know, be the best that you can be, but you're not proving anything to anybody. Like we're proud to have you. You know, be the best that you can be, but you're not proving anything to anybody. Like we're proud to have you. And like that really, that was the first time that I was like, I felt like I belonged there. It was because of Alex.
Starting point is 03:01:37 And even like my team leader was supportive. We're not highly developed on the emotional IQ scale. Yeah, no shit. So having, you know, a superior give you that affirmation was rare. And so when I came home, they were, they were there physically, you know, my wife was there like emotionally, like, I don't know what you need right now, but wife was there emotionally. I don't know what you need right now, but I'm here. Then the team was like, take whatever time you need, but we're not gonna let you get out of the saddle.
Starting point is 03:02:14 So we're gonna be sending you to another school immediately. So take a week, figure things out, and let's get you back on the horse. You had kids too. Yep, you had two daughters from pre-military. They were, they were born 10 months after 9-11. So I tried to recruit on 9-11
Starting point is 03:02:42 and in this kind of period of debauchery of me living as a broken man without purpose, because I was trying to get in the military, it took me 18 months trying to figure out what branch I'm going to, they had delayed enlistment things or trying to put me in this IRR thing and I had no idea how any of it worked. So I knew where I wanted to go but I had no purpose or direction. And young man without purpose is a very dangerous thing. So yeah, I was, got a few girls pregnant, felt I got AIDS, went for a swim in the Pacific Ocean,
Starting point is 03:03:23 butt ass naked, out into the fog with no plan about how to get back, just trying to figure things out. Re-opening to die out there? Not consciously. I was trying to get baptized. I was trying to wash away. At that moment, I literally thought I had AIDS. I had a girl that I had partied with after a cage fight, and she was a ring girl.
Starting point is 03:03:51 She comes and she is trying to find all of her partners because she test positive for HIV. One kudos to her is she's trying to track everybody down and be like, Hey, you know, so she walks into the gym. I have a few girls pregnant at this moment of my life. My grandpa is dying of emphysema and I can't do the thing that I want to do, which is going to the military. And you know, post 9-11, it's just chaos. Like this is, you're in basic training, which just blows my mind and going to buds like the same year that I'm walking into the ocean, butt ass naked and swimming into the fog.
Starting point is 03:04:29 Like I just wonder, I would have done anything to be where you were. Yeah. That is some heavy shit, man. But you find purpose. Well, let's talk about divine intervention. So you're a Christian. Yeah. You're a man of faith.
Starting point is 03:04:46 Very much so. We've talked, we just talked about something that happened. Now we're getting into this, which we had discussed either last night or this morning. Yeah. I mean, you didn't get plucked out of this water. Like I get naked. I swim a mile or two miles out into the fog. If you ever try to recover somebody from the fog,
Starting point is 03:05:05 it's nearly impossible. Just trying to recover somebody in the ocean at night. We just lost two seals at night that went into the drink as they're trying to board. Like we knew where they fell in. Like we're talking about an entire body of water where nobody saw me walking into this water. Supposedly some old woman
Starting point is 03:05:26 had a witness of me getting into the water. It's impossible. This is like pre-cell phone. Like there's a pager on the sand next to my wallet. There's no vantage point that any house with a phone can see me, so that doesn't make any sense. But ultimately, a Coast Guard boat, and I hate that I got rescued by the Coast Guard.
Starting point is 03:05:45 Ah! Ah! Oh my God. Ultimately, a Coast Guard boat with this dude, with his feet hanging off the front of this boat, cruises up, and he's like, hey, what are you doing? Tell him I'm swimming, and he makes fun of me. I give him a brief update of like,
Starting point is 03:06:04 what's happening in my life. And he's like, man, I was gonna offer you a ride back in, but maybe you just wanna stay in the water. And I was like, no, it's cold. And he leans forward and he like looks at my deck and he goes, I see it's cold. Like, but like lit a fire. You know, I was like, all right.
Starting point is 03:06:21 He's like, well, I'll give you an option. You can clam up onto the boat, but from this point forward, you're gonna treat your life with a little bit more respect than you do at this moment, or did at this moment. I said, all right.
Starting point is 03:06:37 And he threw that ladder down. Ah, man, it was so hard to climb up. I mean, that water maybe an hour, hour and a half to climb up that rope net with my hands that weren't even working right. In the Pacific Ocean, Marl Bay, I'm gonna guess it's 52, 53 degrees. I've been out there hour, hour and a half, you know, long enough to be in bad shape. And you put one of those wool Navy blankets on me, and it felt like a million needles or burning,
Starting point is 03:07:05 steel needles were like burning in my back. It was like the best feeling I've ever felt. I was alive. There's no way that my global herd, that bolt drop, had saved my life. There's no way that some woman saw me walk into the ocean. I was able to give a specific distance and direction as to where I was in the water.
Starting point is 03:07:27 It's impossible. And there's no way that in the fog, in the darkness, a boat would be able to come up and find somebody in the water. There's no way. Go forward to my wife and I had been married about 10 years and coming back from 20th something trip, burnt emotionally, raw, all the wires are exposed.
Starting point is 03:07:54 And I'm just gonna call it quits, or I'm done. And we're together and I don't know, we hadn't been to church. I hadn't been to church in 10 years. I couldn't reconcile what was happening in war and the things that we're seeing with that there's an existence of a loving God. So we walk into this church and the pastor is giving a sermon on the importance of marriage and why it is one of the most important things
Starting point is 03:08:37 that you can do in your whole entire life. And I was like, well, that's kind of awkward. We're kind of already in this let's be done moment. And she's not really looking at me. I'm not looking at her. And he's like, you know, and starting today, we have this new small group called Marriage Matters and there is room for everybody that wants to go. If there's a thousand people in here that want to start Marriage Matters, we will find
Starting point is 03:09:04 a thousand slots and come as you are. We don't care what you have going on in your life, just come. And like, she won't look at me. I won't look at her, you know, and I was like, oh, this is awkward. And she's like, yeah, like, what do you want to do? And the girl next to my wife that I've never met before, her name is Jen Ferguson. Jen Ferguson, she leans forward and she goes, well, I what do you want to do? And the girl next to my wife that I've never met before, her name is Jen Ferguson. Jen Ferguson, she leans forward and she goes, well I'll tell you guys what you want to do. So I'm a small group leader for this marriage matters thing. I was like, do you want Jen?
Starting point is 03:09:35 I need you to not talk for a little while. I don't know you and I just want you to pump the brakes of spinge. And like your awesome energy, he's like you're an 11, I need you at like a two and I knew you had a two over there. So, you know, on that day, my wife and I walk into a marriage matters class and saves our marriage. It's gonna give you even more weird
Starting point is 03:09:56 and you're this exact same time, one of my older daughters, Sabrina, there's a well, there's a hole. It's called the deep blue Well in Texas. It's called Jacob's Well. It's about an 80-foot straight down dive, but an entire river comes up from this spring. So you're swimming against this current and it's about 20 by 20 wide hole that goes deep into the water. You're not allowed to scoop a dive in it because a bunch of people have been lost and they died down there.
Starting point is 03:10:27 It's a very difficult free dive. And in the same time that I am trying to figure out what I'm supposed to do in this marriage, Sabrina and I go there and she's a great swimmer and she's hanging out on the top. I do a free dive down to the bottom, grab a rock, fight my way back up, set the rock there, go back through my free dive, pre-dive breath protocols, take the rock, slip off and go all the way down to the bottom.
Starting point is 03:11:00 I'm sitting down there maybe about two minutes. I'm just like, it's cold. This is like Texas spring aquifer water. And just in the darkness, and it's very eerie. A lot of people can't even like swim over it because it's literally just this straight down blue hole. And I see this glimmer of this ring, or of this metal,
Starting point is 03:11:26 and I swim over there and I fan it and I find a size 14 Irish band titanium wedding ring. And I grab it and I swim back up to the top and I'm like, Sabrina, look what I just found. She's like, where'd you find that? I was like, at the bottom. Are you kidding me? Clearly like somebody had jumped off and it had fallen off their finger.
Starting point is 03:11:50 And I have giant A-pans. It's my ring size. You can't resize titanium. And it's an Irish band. I'm Kennedy. I'm obviously Irish. I'd taken my ring off, my original ring, and I hadn't been wearing it. And then sitting here at the bottom of this deep blue hole is my new wedding band
Starting point is 03:12:14 at this exact same time of my life. Yeah, wow. I'm not saying confirmation bias that I could project that these things I wanted to happen, but they did happen. And they're so statistically impossible that I can't sit back objectively and be like, these were coincidences. There's no way I didn't die in that valley.
Starting point is 03:12:44 There's no way I didn't die at that door. There's no way I didn't die in that valley. There's no way I didn't die at that door. There's no way I didn't die in the water. There's no way that ring wasn't put there for me. Still have it? Yeah. Man. Wear it every day at home. I don't shoot, train or travel with rings. They cause extra problems. Does your faith continue to develop? Do you practice it?
Starting point is 03:13:18 I definitely practice it. I read the Bible. I do devotionals. I am a, I know God exists. I know a loving God exists. I know that there's divine purpose. I know that every single person was made for a purpose and finding that purpose. And I've found my purpose and I know why I'm here.
Starting point is 03:13:44 What is your purpose? It's literally the mission statement of our company. And everything that I do is tied back to preserving and protecting human life and enabling and empowering people to provide for their families and be able to expand freedom. Like, that is why I'm here. It's a damn good purpose. Yeah. I think on that note, let's take a quick break. Here's the situation. You've got China, Russia, Ukraine, the border. The banks seem to be collapsing, plus the Chinese just negotiated with Iran, Saudi Arabia,
Starting point is 03:14:19 and Brazil to drop the US dollar. And most Americans, including myself, feel that we're in a recession right now. But despite all the evidence, I can't tell you what's going to happen for sure. Nobody can. Yet when it comes to your money, you should understand what's at stake. That's why I partnered with GoldCo to possibly help at times like this. Go to www.SeanLikesGold.com or call 855936 Go to www.SeanLikesGold.com or call 855-936-Gold to get your free gold and silver kit. The kit shows you how to defend your money with precious metals and how listeners of the show could get up to $10,000 in bonus silver. Go to www.SeanLikesGold.com or call 855-936-Gold to get your free gold and silver kit.
Starting point is 03:15:04 I can't predict the future, but I can certainly prepare for it. How many guys out there are worried about brain health? All we hear about is fitness, everybody's getting ready for a bikini season because spring's right around the corner. I'm personally more concerned about my brain. You look around, you see all these brain diseases that are getting out of control. I'm going to take everything I can to improve the health of my brain. And I'm going to tell you about my five favorite supplements from Laird Superfoods that help with brain health. All right, the first thing I do every morning
Starting point is 03:15:51 is I have Laird Superfood Creamer. It's got adaptogens and functional mushrooms, which are great for brain health. I put this in my tea. Tastes amazing. Who likes vegetables? Cool, me neither. That's why I take Laird's Daily Greens. Just pour it a cup, shoot it real quick, you got your daily vegetable intake. Plus, guess what? Yep, that's right. Functional
Starting point is 03:16:16 mushroom extract. There's six different kinds in here. Once again, great for brain health. After greens, we got daily reds. This one doesn't actually have any functional mushrooms in it, but I can't stand beets. I think they taste like shit. And so I take one scoop of this, put it in my water, and I don't have to eat beets anymore. All right, we're winding down the day now. This is the next supplement I take every single night.
Starting point is 03:16:39 Laird Sleep and Recovery helps me sleep, helps me recover from my daily workout. And guess what? Yep, you're right. It has mushroom extract. Guess what's good for your brain. And I saved the best for last. Most of you know this. My favorite supplement at Laird's is performance mushrooms has a ton of mushroom extract. Super, super good for your brain. Take it every single day, sometimes multiple times a day.
Starting point is 03:17:07 These are my five favorite supplements from Laird Superfoods. You can go over to LairdSuperfoods.com, use the promo code SRS, save 20%. Ladies and gents, I would not have partnered with this company if I didn't believe in them. They take the cleanest ingredients, They try to source everything in America. Unless they find a better ingredient that's more quality somewhere else. I think we can all appreciate that. Once again, LairdSuperFoods.com use the promo code SRS. That'll save you 20%. I want to give a big thank you out right now to all the Vigilance Elite patrons out there that are watching the show right now.
Starting point is 03:17:49 I just want to say thank you guys. You are our top supporters and you're what makes this show actually happen. If you're not on Vigilance Elite Patreon, I want to tell you a little bit about what's going on in there. So we do a little bit of everything. There's plenty of behind the scenes content from the actual Sean Ryan show. On top of that, basically what I do is I take a lot of the questions that I get from you guys or the patrons and then I turn them into videos.
Starting point is 03:18:19 So we get, right now, there's a lot of concern about self-defense, home defense, crimes on the rise all throughout the country, actually all throughout the world. And so we talk about everything from how to prep your home, how to clear your home, how to get familiar with the firearm, both rifle and pistol. For beginners and advanced, we talk about mindset, we talk about defensive driving. We have an end of the month live chat that I'm on at the end of every month where we can talk about whatever topics you guys have. It's actually done on Zoom. You might enjoy it. Check it out. And if Zoom's not your thing,
Starting point is 03:18:58 or you don't like live chats, like I said, there's a library of well over 100 videos on where to start with prepping, all the firearm stuff, pretty much anything you can think of. Like I said, there's a library of well over a hundred videos on Where to start with prepping all the firearms stuff pretty much anything you can think of It's on there. So anyways go to www.patreon.com slash vigilance elite or Just go in the link in the description. It'll take you right there And if you don't want to and you just want to continue to watch the show that's fine, too I appreciate it either way. Love you all. Let's get back to the show. Thank you
Starting point is 03:19:36 All right, Tim back from the break whoo, I knew that break Yeah, it was getting pretty heavy there. And I appreciate you diving deep for that last segment there. But so now it's, you're leaving the SIF and UFC is about to pick you up. That's right. How does that even happen? So I was fighting the whole time
Starting point is 03:20:00 that when I'd come back from deployment, so I'd get back from a school, I fought five days after graduating from Ranger school. Most people don't walk for months. Like you don't have to take a PT test for a year after graduating from Ranger school. I graduated from Ranger school and I got a call from Leo Korolinski
Starting point is 03:20:17 who is one of the owners of one of the teams in the International Fight League, the IFL on Fox. And he said, hey, I have a fight this weekend. I lost my light heavyweight. Can you come in? I heard that you're a fighter and you're on some shows that you're just in. Can you come this weekend?
Starting point is 03:20:37 I was like, well, it's Monday. Like, Wayne's or Friday, fight Saturday. I was like, all right, so five days later, I weigh in on Friday and I go in a fight, Dante Rivera, incredible black belt professional fighter and beat the brakes off of him. And Leo Kroolinski is like, who are you? Like what is going on here?
Starting point is 03:21:01 And I'm trying to explain to him like everybody on Fort Bragg or on Coronado, all of us trained, all of us fought, all of us were like, it is just part of the, in every course that you'd go to, whether it's Sephardic or Sephauic or Sysic, every single morning you're fighting, you're grappling, you're on the CMS range, you're like, it's just fighting.
Starting point is 03:21:22 And they wanted to keep that warrior spirit healthy. And I was like, I hate to break this to you, but I literally know about a thousand guys that fight as well as I do. And they're at Fort Bragg currently, but I'm here if you want me to fight. So I kept on fighting and that went well. And it went unnoticed for a while until one night,
Starting point is 03:21:41 live on Fox, a couple of Sergeant majors were at a famous bar in Fort Bragg, North Carolina, and they see this kid with a shaved head walk out to the ring and it says a ranger from Fort Bragg, North Carolina. There are no rangers at Fort Bragg, North Carolina. And they're like, well, that's probably one of our guys, isn't it? And they see me go and knock this guy out in a main event fight. And so they go, Tim Kennedy, they get on the global and they search a staff Sergeant Tim Kennedy. It's signed a C37 and I get back, I'm on leave.
Starting point is 03:22:18 I haven't broken any rules. So I took permissive leave to travel, weighed in on Friday. So I took leave on Thursday and Friday, traveled Friday, weighed in, fought on Saturday, flew home on Sunday, and I get home Monday morning at six. I show up for PT and my team sergeant goes, hey, we have to go down to group headquarters.
Starting point is 03:22:43 I was like, like our group? They're like, no, no, no, special forces command. I was like, like our group? They're like, no, no, no, Special Forces Command. I was like, okay, you got a good uniform? I'm like, marginally, you know, so I go in there. The only thing that was good was my beret. I looked like a dumpster fire. We walk in and the command Sergeant Major of Special Forces Command of US Special Operations Command,
Starting point is 03:23:06 and of group are sitting there and they're like, so hey, how was your weekend? I was like, it was fantastic. We saw that you're fighting. And I was like, Roger, I do something wrong. And they're like, well, you can't do both. I was like, I've been doing both. I've literally done both for the past eight years.
Starting point is 03:23:26 You know, you just saw it as a main event fight, but like I've been fighting for the past eight years. I've, you know, a couple dozen fights in my duration of here at Special Forces. They said, you have to choose. You have to pick between the two. And I don't want to. I was like, no, like, make me. Like, we will make you. This is the army. This is how this works. You'll literally
Starting point is 03:23:52 have a choice. So you can do one or the other. So what was the rationale behind that? I don't know. Digital footprint, facial recognition. I don't know. It's, it's, I've always fought this like misconception about what I'm... I was 100% a company guy. They could have told me to do anything. I would have warned anything. I have always just wanted to support the regiment in the best way that I possibly could. Most people couldn't understand...
Starting point is 03:24:20 They couldn't control me, and that scared them. Even though they didn't need to control me because I would have done anything that they asked. You're already loyal. To the death. But they couldn't understand that because they couldn't control me doesn't mean that they can't control me
Starting point is 03:24:37 because I voluntarily would have done anything that they needed to do for the regiment. You want me to go on suicide prevention, you know, like recruiting, retention, I would have done any of that. Just let me fight. If you leave me alone and let me stay on my team and continue to deploy and go to specialty schools and develop as an NCO, and also win every single of the most prestigious fighting
Starting point is 03:24:58 tournaments within the military and bring that recognition and honor back to the regiment, which I was doing. Like that gigantic trophy on your wall. I brought that to you. All of those ribbons, those are mine. Like I got awards for those, like, oh, you don't care. Okay, got it. The Green Berets have two National Guard
Starting point is 03:25:18 Special Forces groups, 19th group and 20th group. So I was leaving active duty. The National Guard, they're part-time soldiers and full-time civilians. So you, as an M-day soldier, you work some weekends a month, a couple of weeks a year, and then deploy when called upon. And so when I was trying to figure out like, well, how do I do both?
Starting point is 03:25:44 Cause I'm to do both. You get a call from the Texas National Guard, 19th Special Forces group, and they're like, hey, come to us. You can fight. We'll use you as recruiting. And you get to go to an ODA. The day I got out, they just left me alone. Pay me as an E7, salary.
Starting point is 03:26:11 Nice. Pennies, right? Like I would have done anything that the Army wanted. They didn't. So then I go to the National Guard and the National Guard pays a contract to me as a marketing recruiting retention tool and they're paying me hundreds of thousands of dollars
Starting point is 03:26:24 to put Go Army on my butt. No way. I would have done it for free. You know, like that, I would just, just let me fight, man. Good for you, man. But so that was like the beginning of then the marketing and media was a forced position from the army saying you can't do both.
Starting point is 03:26:42 Damn. I mean, it turned out, you know, I, how do you feel about it? I don't know. Teammates gotten fights when I wasn't there. You know, deployments that didn't go perfect. And the what ifs, right? Like never go down that road,
Starting point is 03:27:00 cause that is, that is just one that leaves to despair. But like, had I been there, would this have gone different? Could I have been part of this operation? And you know, could I have been with Mike Goebel when he died? And one of his many deployments later into Afghanistan, he saved my life. I wasn't there when he died. Like would that be different? I don't know.
Starting point is 03:27:24 Andrew McKenna, like, I wasn't there when he died. Like, would that be different? I don't know. Andrew McKenna, like, I don't know. Got it. I understand that. But UFC. Yeah. I go for the title runs. So I commit to fighting. I'm a part-time soldier, full-time fighter.
Starting point is 03:27:43 And while I'm doing that, I am contracting for a bunch of different for-profit government contractors. And, you know, cause I still gotta put food on the table. So I'm, I have a skill set. And so my full-time job is like fighting and contracting. And then I'm like a part-time soldier. Shit.
Starting point is 03:28:04 I mean, food on the table. We're making hundreds of thousands for wearing army on your on your fight shorts Your contracting you got to be making at least Two three hundred thousand a year off that yeah 1500 bucks a day at the time and And you're you're in the National Guard Yeah, so fight purses what yeah, so what is how does it work? $100 a day at the time. And you're in the National Guard. Yeah. And then the fight purses. Yeah.
Starting point is 03:28:29 So how does it work? How does it work in there? So pre, I would say the Reebok deal. So the UFC controls all apparel now. So you wear what they want you to wear. And you get depending on how many fights you have, you get an apparel salary purse. But back then you could sell every inch of your shorts
Starting point is 03:28:53 and your fight banner. So I could take on like Trigicon or a firearm, a knife. I would never do it, but like Condom Depot or like you could have any sponsor that you want. And they would pay you to have their name on your banner and on your fight shorts. Then you would have your fight purse, and then you had kind of like the commercial marketing.
Starting point is 03:29:16 So, you know, as professional athletes, and with the military background, there were a bunch of different commercial entities that were like, hey, will you film this commercial for us? This is the very beginning of social media, like Facebook and MySpace. So social media influencing wasn't a thing, but television and radio and serious XM were.
Starting point is 03:29:40 So you could go on there, you could record like a 30 second Hampton Kennedy, I'm a UFC fighter, I'm also like a Green Bray, blah, blah, blah, insert all the cringy things and you get paid for those things. So I'd take my fight purse, I would take my banner, fight shorts, marketing purse, and then I'd take my commercial purse and break those down into these quarters where my wife and I would then reinvest those monies into businesses.
Starting point is 03:30:03 Because we're still just living off of one of our respective solid incomes. And she was at W-2 still as a government contractor. And as we were trying to like buy a house and continue to like grow our position, it was hard to go to a bank as a professional fighter and overseas contractor. It's like, no, no, I promise they're going to pay me.
Starting point is 03:30:25 Like I'm just going to find some more poachers or some pirates. I'm going to win. Yeah. Leave me alone. Give me the loan. But, um, I mean, how are you, how are you managing? So you're fighting at the number one. I mean, what did that mean to you to be fighting in the UFC at the, I mean, you just came from the apex of military special operations. You went to the SIF, then you had an extremely eventful deployment in Afghanistan. Now you're fighting at the apex of the US military. Now you're fighting at the apex and mixed martial arts. Yeah.
Starting point is 03:31:03 I mean, what's the sense of accomplishment? There's no, I haven't arrived. There's no feeling of like I've accomplished anything. I wanted, I wanted to be the world champion. That's what I wanted. I wanted that. Tim Kennedy is the world champion of the world. And, you know, fighting for the world title
Starting point is 03:31:26 a couple of times fought for the Strike Force, middleweight title against Chakray and LeGrochold. You know, when I go into my first fight in the UFC, I'm fighting Hodra Gracie, like the most accomplished, that one of the greatest grapplers in the history of pugilistic sports, my first fight in the UFC. A stay or go, winner stays, loser goes.
Starting point is 03:31:44 You know, to go to fight main events against like Michael Bisbing, and I was the last person to fight in a UFC fight for the troops. I fought Hafen Atal, I was supposed to fight Lidl Machida, but fought at Fort Carson in an aircraft hangar as the main event. Damn, that's cool.
Starting point is 03:32:03 For the UFC, surrounded by service members. Oh man, that's cool. For the UFC. That is. Surrounded by service members. Oh man, that's awesome. Dude, I mean the- Talk about full circle. Whoa. That's gotta be, I mean, that's gotta be a, just an awesome experience and adrenaline just pumping and I mean.
Starting point is 03:32:22 Again, like, I hadn't felt like I arrived and I didn't feel like I deserved to be there. And I had so much guilt, like I had abandoned all these men and women in uniform. And now I'm in there as a prize fighter, making hundreds of thousands of dollars and all these men and women in their uniform in an aircraft hanger for their first opportunity
Starting point is 03:32:41 to see a live UFC event. And it kind of stung a little bit. And Joe Rogan walks in to talk to me after, and I could barely formulate words. You know, it was, I'm sorry, I love you. I wish I was with you. I guess what I was able to get out. So you really felt a lot of guilt.
Starting point is 03:33:01 Yeah. Damn, man. Yeah. Damn, man. Yeah. Fighting. How were you able to, I mean, how are you able to compete at that level? I mean, I don't know a lot about mixed martial arts and I don't know a lot about the UFC,
Starting point is 03:33:18 but I do can appreciate the dedication that it must take to get to that level. And, you know, I hear about these guys fight camps and how much time blood, sweat, and tears goes into training for especially a title fight. But you don't have that kind of time because you're still a deployment, you're still in the National Guard.
Starting point is 03:33:41 And on top of that, you're doing, I'm, I guess I shouldn't assume anything, but probably combat deployments with US military contracting companies. That's right. So you're going to war, coming home, what? Doing a quick fight camp and then going right into the ring?
Starting point is 03:33:58 Yeah, you could stay in shape when you're overseas. I wrote this online, they're called Letters from a Foreign Land. It was talking about me doing snatches with 50 cows and running up hills with transmissions and filling them up in MO cans, like all of the unconventional training that I was doing while I was overseas to stay in shape. That would come back and I would immediately go into fight camp. I'd fly to Albuquerque, New Mexico with Jackson Winklejohn, best fight team on the planet at the time.
Starting point is 03:34:28 And we have John Jones, Rashad Evans, George St. Pierre, Carlos Conda, Demisio Page, Holly Holm, like the list just goes on and on of all of these incredible world champions. And I'm Brian Stan and I'm one of those guys there. So I could immediately walk into this room and the best in the world are all consolidated into this one place. There's only like three or four super camps on the planet
Starting point is 03:34:55 at the time and Jackson Winklejohn was one of them. And so I start doing my fight camps there. I'm an altitude and I'm training with the best in the world. So I come back in shape, arguably, had I taken a different approach. That little bio would not say two-time title challenger. That stings quite a bit because I never won the world title. I was a perennial contender. That was on three different title runs, fought for the title twice,
Starting point is 03:35:26 was positioned to fight for the third time, and never won. What could you have done differently? I was always torn. I don't think I could have done anything differently because like my heart was always in two different places. I wanted to be in Africa. I wanted to be in the Middle East.
Starting point is 03:35:51 I mean, desperately, like I could not be there. And then I wanted to be a world champion. You know, this is the worst thing about the ego. There's my ego that one of those two things. And I probably didn't need either of them. How about like being like the best teammates or the best employee or the best husband or the best father?
Starting point is 03:36:17 I argue that those are far superior to these other two once, but those were the things that were driving me was to be in war and to be a world champion. Are there any similarities between being on the battlefield and the thick of it and being in the ring and the thick of it? Physiologically, there's a ton of similarities. Like the exhaustion physically and putting all of who you are and everything that you have into this moment, you know, to not get knocked out or choked out.
Starting point is 03:36:52 And similarly, like putting everything that you are and everything that you have into this moment to not die. So like physically it's very similar. You know, and when a commentator is talking about like, man, these guys are going to battle, look at this war, man, it feels like it when you're in there. And like I would never castigate or disparage in one of the commentators or one of the athletes that are out there that describe what they're going through
Starting point is 03:37:17 as a war or battle. Because I mean, it's, you're out there completely raw and exposed. You're wearing shorts, a cup, tape, gloves and a mouthpiece. And you're going to go try to knock out another dude in a cage. It's, um, it's pretty, it's pretty gladiator. Yeah. Yeah. I mean, that's, that's as close as it gets, right?
Starting point is 03:37:42 Hmm. But, um, I mean, what mean, how would you prepare yourself mentally for the similarities between preparing yourself for going on an operation and going into the ring? They're really, really similar. You know, that preparation and that training and that skill development, you know, on the military side, those core metal tasks,
Starting point is 03:38:09 making sure that, you know, how to shoot move, communicate, medicate. You know, when you look at the fighter, making sure that I'm able to grapple both offensively and defensively, making sure I'm gonna have good offense and defense as a striker, being able to dictate range and execute my game plan over their game plan.
Starting point is 03:38:24 Those are the same things that I'm trying to do in combat. Then a big advantage that I had was the military discipline and this very clear approach to both business and being an athlete. I treated it like a business. I was 10 minutes early to every single training session. I had all of my gear. I was at the right place at the right time with the right equipment to the right training.
Starting point is 03:38:53 When Greg Jackson walked in for our first private and I was sitting there, I was already wrapped up and 10 minutes before our session was supposed to start. And he's like, I was about to start, and he's like, I was about to go and watch some tape for a little bit. I didn't even know that you were here. I was like, well, we started in 10 minutes, don't we? He's like, yeah, I mean,
Starting point is 03:39:13 I wouldn't have expected to see here for like 30 more minutes. I'm like, all right, well, moving forward, I'll be here 10 minutes early. Let me know if you want me to arrive later and then set that time accordingly. And that same with Winkle John, you know, with striking coach. And it was hilarious because I'm in the gym with John Jones, who's on the opposite of that spectrum, right? Like
Starting point is 03:39:35 he's out partying late and burning it down and showing up like hungover. Talking about the most talented athlete on the planet, man. That guy is the best to have ever done it. He could show up two hours late to practice, be there for five minutes and get more out of that practice than I would have been there, having been there the whole time. Damn. He's just such so superior. Is this a real training with people like that for the first time? Yeah, I mean like-
Starting point is 03:40:03 It's like, what the hell am I doing here? Rashad Evans was the champ at the time and like walk in like champs there, you know Brian Stan who is like What one of my favorite fighters? He's a Marine officer that uh We were in Iraq at the same time kind of cool, but Watching him just knock people out with his right hand and then being like to walk in and see him to George St. Pierre, you know, like one of the greatest welterweight champions in the history of the sport and like their door. Damn, it's rad. Cowboy Seroni. I think
Starting point is 03:40:38 you know, he's in the hall of fame now, but and he'll probably be inducted for a few things to include in his fight with war at McDonald, one of the best fights in UFC history. And that's one of my teammates. I'm training at his house, I'm going to his ranch, and yeah, it's weird. It's surreal, not even the right weird. Like it's indescribably weird. Again, like, do I belong here?
Starting point is 03:40:59 But I'm like thumping you up, like mauling you in the corner. I hit harder than you. You can't hit, I guess I've deserved to be here. Like when's my fight date? Damn, damn. How long would you, how long would it take you to prepare for any particular fight?
Starting point is 03:41:14 Six weeks. Six weeks. Mm hmm. Would you time your deployments? To where you had six weeks straight with them? Yep. I tried to set it where I'd come back from a hitch and I'd, you know, wife and I would pack up the car, drive to Albuquerque and do the fight camp,
Starting point is 03:41:31 go to the fight, come back, pump, do another pump. Had you experienced a lot of losses or failures up to this point? I mean, you blew through SF selection. You blew through the Q-Course, you said there was no challenge there, blew through Sears School, pumped out two crazy deployments. Sounds like you're crushing it as a kid, you know?
Starting point is 03:41:58 And then now you're fighting at the apex of, like I said, mixed martial arts. And I mean, is that the first time you've really experienced failure? Yeah, that's not like self-induced from choices. You know, standing there as a 21-year-old with a couple of girls pregnant and no source of income, that's failure.
Starting point is 03:42:24 It's a different kind of failure. But this one is like in your face, you're standing there, you're covered in your own blood, mostly naked. And the dude next to you gets his hand raised and he's called the champion. And you're just standing there. They have to go to your after party
Starting point is 03:42:39 because the sponsor's paid for you to go there. Your eyes swung shut, your hands are swung, you can barely hold a glass with them. And you gotta walk into this room of your fans that you just failed and let down. But I'm not gonna not show up, because they're there to see me, they love me, you're like win or lose.
Starting point is 03:43:00 Yeah, it sucks. How do you learn from it? What did you take from it? The long term? After the fight, you had a fun account to follow. It's the UFC fight doc. He's the guy that stitches most fighters up. He's a cosmetic guy.
Starting point is 03:43:16 And he'd put the little local painkillers on these. He's inject some lidocaine. And he'd come up to sew my face closed and Kayleigh down on the table had walked up with the the painkillers like now. I don't want that So you have to I could see your skull Tim. I need to like this is from Robbie Lawler this is from Jacarie Souza, you know like this was I think from Luke Rockhold. And I'm like, nah, just so me closed. And he would sit there and he'd pull out and he's talked about it a bunch of times on his pages.
Starting point is 03:43:53 He'd sit there and he'd sew my face closed. And I wanted to feel every bit of that pain because every single one of those things was like a mistake that I had made. And I would carry that. I would like breathe in this failure and I would carry that. I would like breathe in this failure and I would bring in this, I'd breathe in this pain and I would like exhale purpose.
Starting point is 03:44:10 And this embracing the suck, embracing failure as we kind of move into some of the darkest, most horrific moments of my life to include the Mexico border, Ukraine, Afghanistan, Israel, the same thing. Man, I would like suck in all of this failure, my failure, the failure of the situation, the pain that I see, and then I would like exhale purpose. Dan Holloway kind of coined that phrase and it doesn't more aptly describe the what I would feel and weaponize
Starting point is 03:44:48 all of that failure into purpose. Makes a whole lot of sense. All right, makes sense, it's hard to do. Yeah, like imagine. Because there's embarrassment and shame and ego and then the physical portion of it, like, okay, well, how do I then take this purpose and direct it into something meaningful and constructive?
Starting point is 03:45:11 Like motivation is failing, discipline and intentionality is permanent. So I have to take that purpose and turn it into what I'm doing in the gym, what I'm doing in my technique, what I'm doing in my businesses, what I'm doing overseas, how I'm planning in these AARs when we fail or do something unsuccessfully,
Starting point is 03:45:27 like how do I turn that too good? Yeah. Do you, did you ever, trying to think out a word this, did your coaches or your team or your opponents, anybody, the UFC commentators, did they see anything different in you coming from the background? I mean, this is a sport, extremely grueling, as close to being a gladiator as you get. Couple months earlier, you're putting hundreds of rounds in the bodies in the middle of the
Starting point is 03:46:05 night. Yeah. Do they see a difference in the way you carry yourself, the way you fight, the way you train, your discipline, your motivation, your dedication? Is there a difference between what you brought to the table with all that other life experience that nobody else in the UFC has compared to… Leo Kroolinski first was like, what is wrong with you? We're about to walk out to the fight, everybody's young.
Starting point is 03:46:38 Come on, let's go, let's go, let's do this. You know, like getting ready to go out and I'm sitting there. We haven't sushi after this fight? That sounds great. I have some real wasabi, not this fake paced stuff. You're about to fight. Can you focus on your fight? I was like, yeah, I got it, man.
Starting point is 03:47:00 Just relax. Then I went out there, picked this dude up, put him on his ear, knocked him out. And I come in the back after my fight with Robbie Lawler, barn burner, bathed in blood. And they come and stick a microphone and they're like, oh, man, how was that? That was one of the craziest, most brutal fights we've ever seen. Robbie comes on to become one of the greatest, like George St. Pierre, one of the greatest welterweight champions. I'm knocking everybody out.
Starting point is 03:47:26 He has the Cinderella story of an exit. He's in the, he's going to the, he is in the hall of fame and he'll go in as one of the permanent halls of fame. And, hey, how do you feel? I'm like, I feel good. You know, they're like doctors taking my pole. So I'm already back down to like a 55 heart rate. And like, what is, what is wrong with you?
Starting point is 03:47:46 You're like, well, there's nothing wrong with me. Just my experiences leading up to this have been vastly different. Like this is not the pinnacle of my life. This is a fight and this is a sport. Now I want to be world champion, but this is not the wildest thing that's happened to me in this past couple of months.
Starting point is 03:48:03 Yeah, yeah. Do you think that's scared your opponents? Yeah, I don't know if it's a good thing either. Why is that? You remember the first time walking into a shoot house and like it felt like you're looking through a straw and then the 500th time that you went in there and you could see everything, you could see that they glued a flashlight over the hand of the guy that originally held a gun because they're trying to have you shoot a no-shoot target
Starting point is 03:48:33 when which which was a shoot target. You know, but you saw it and you also saw like that was crappy glue and it was a bad paint job. And you realize that the door that you guys breached last time, they didn't change that door out. Now you can just swing it open. You don't even need to put an ECT charger. You see it all compared to like number one,
Starting point is 03:48:51 where like all you could see was like walk through the house like this. When I was walking out of the cage, I'd have to hide my wife in the audience because I could see everything. I could describe where every judge was. I could tell you where my, what my corner was wearing. Like I was, I was seen you what my corner was wearing. Like I was seeing too much, or like I should have just seen what was in front of me.
Starting point is 03:49:10 So I think there was like, there was some value to that. Like I never had the pre-fight butterflies, you know, like guys who were throwing up before they're walking out, you know, like I'm playing on my phone and figuring out what I'm gonna have for dinner. I mean, it's gotta be, there has to be a certain amount of fear
Starting point is 03:49:31 for somebody to walk into the ring with another man who has taken life, legitimately killed for survival. And this is a fucking sport. I mean, I can't think of anything that would be more intimidating for an athlete. Well, could do us to the dudes because I got beat. You know, the Grockold beat me, Jacare squeaked out a decision, Yohar Romero, although he cheated, he beat me. You know, so there's a couple of losses on there that those bad asses in light of standing across from a dude that's been to war a bunch of losses on there that those badasses in light of standing across
Starting point is 03:50:06 from a dude that's been to war a bunch of times. And it's like... But have you ever had that conversation with anybody? I'm friends with most of the athletes that I competed against with in my era. And we joke a lot about some of those things. Luke Rockhold, his credit, he's like, man, I had no idea what I was supposed to do with you. I just wanted to keep on the outside and pepper you
Starting point is 03:50:32 because I didn't want to let you near me. That's what he did. That's how he beat me. Literally that was his game plan. It's just interesting. I mean, it's a, It's interesting psychology to tap into. I've always thought about that ever since I've heard about you. It's fine.
Starting point is 03:50:58 Yeah, I'll bet it was. I'll bet that was a hell of a ride. What was it that, why'd you leave UFC? When my heart got broken in the fight with Yohara Romero and knock him out at the end of the second round, Michael Bisbing is the champion. Michael Bisbing's last loss was to me. I beat the breaks off of him for 25 minutes.
Starting point is 03:51:21 And so like this is my third title run. You know, I beat Yohara Romero. This is a title is my third title run. You know, I beat you all Romero. This is a title, a liminator fight. The winner of us is going to go on to fight for the title. And he threw a variety of mischievous and cheating mechanisms is able to, after I, he gets saved by the bell at the end of the second round, blow some big punches, end him up against the cage. John McCarthy pulls me off him. And, you know, like, did he get saved by the bell
Starting point is 03:51:57 or is that the end of the fight? You know, did John touch me after that? Because if John touches me before the bell, then I won. If he touched me after the bell, then, and I'm blasting him and he's, like, did John touch me after the, because if John touches me before the bell, then I won. If he touched me after the bell, then, and I'm blasting him and he's just like, he's out. He crumbles to the ground and I was like, oh, okay, that was the round. So I go back to my corner and I'm sitting there,
Starting point is 03:52:17 I'm pacing back and forth just looking at Uol Romero as he's just messed up. And his corner's in there, they're fixing his face. The bell sounds ding. And I take a couple of steps forward and John McCarthy grabs me and he's like, no Tim, go back to your corner. So the Athletic Commission rules are very matter of fact.
Starting point is 03:52:38 You have 10 seconds to answer the bell. If you don't answer the bell, it's disqualification. And as you can imagine, I'm a man that would know the rules. So 10 seconds passes and that's the end of the fight. I'm screaming, I'm still, I take my mouthpiece out, I chuck across the floor, I point at Dana White, I was like, you're fucking gonna pay me for that fight. You know, I'm looking for my wife,
Starting point is 03:52:58 put your red panties on, I'm coming. You know, and figure that out, after party, I also know I'm going straight to the title, I'm gonna be fighting Michael Bisping. I'm gonna destroy him. This is all happening in a matter of seconds, right? 10 seconds happens, 15 seconds happens, 20 seconds happen.
Starting point is 03:53:13 You know, like I'm talking with my corner, like, all right, hey, let's get these gloves off. Let's start getting things going. And John McCarthy is like, hey, we come back in, we're fighting. We're fighting. Like call it Stoolgate. It's a pretty, there is a calamity of errors
Starting point is 03:53:29 that John messed up big time. He got played by his corner. The corner spilled some ice. They put on too much Vaseline. They're pretending like they couldn't speak English. There's confusion about like when he had to get off the stool. Ultimately, they were able to buy him
Starting point is 03:53:44 an extra 40 40-something seconds. And so he sat there for almost two minutes while I'm leaving the cage mentally, he's with the sole focus of getting back into the fight. And a huge adrenaline dump, you know, that endocrine system is wild and I get knocked out a few seconds later. That's the end. That was like, man, I don't wanna do this all over again.
Starting point is 03:54:12 How do you recover from that? The, that was, I actually fought one more time against Calvin Gesslam. I shouldn't have. I was already done at the end of the UOL fight, but all of that propelled me into everything that I've done post-fighting, into starting these companies, into going overseas on rescue operations, you know, nonprofits, for-profits, like, like filling gaps, it gave me purpose. Gotcha.
Starting point is 03:54:56 And also ended the most selfish portion of my life. The, being a professional fighter, everything has to be about you. Your diet, your travel schedule, your sleep schedule, your training, like all of these things, you're trying to line up from this periodization so that you're peaking at the right moment. So everything is, and it's terrible. It's like the most selfish thing that you can, it's, and I wanted so to be done with it because I wanted to do something to contribute in a meaningful way back to the things that I care about. I couldn't when I was fighting.
Starting point is 03:55:36 I could like amplify because I had a big platform, you know, to talk about things, but I couldn't specifically contribute. to talk about things, but I couldn't specifically contribute. Gotcha. So this propels you into what you just said, the darkest portion of your life, which Tim, we got about an hour left before you gotta get to the airport.
Starting point is 03:55:58 So I'm gonna leave this up to you. We got a lot to cover. We could talk about the school. We could talk about sheepdog. We could talk about Sheepdog. We could talk about Ukraine, Israel, the border. Where do you want to go? I think they're all, well, kind of, I think maybe cover wavetops of them
Starting point is 03:56:14 because they're all very connected. When you take a step back, you know, like, you know, what I was doing in Ukraine was different than what I was doing in Israel, which was different than what I was doing in Afghanistan. What I was doing, and those were vastly different than what I was doing in Ukraine was different than what I was doing in Israel, which was different than what I was doing in Afghanistan. What I was doing, and those were vastly different than what I was doing in the military, part of Operation Lone Star, the Mexican border, fighting cartels and human traffickers and drug smugglers.
Starting point is 03:56:34 Sheepdog response where we're training under the soft model of empowering people to force multiplication. It's the special operations, the Green Bray soft model. We don't want to do all the fighting. I want to go and find a populace that supports our ideas, equip and train them to do the fighting with and for us. Sheepdog Response is fully embracing the soft approach where I'm trying to train as many Americans as I possibly can
Starting point is 03:57:03 in really basic good citizen skills of like being able to provide for your family, being able to preserve and protect human life. That's what all the shoot move, communicate, medicate. Like we're trying to give those skills to civilians. And after nearly 20 years from, well, 25 years as a EMT firefighter, a police officer, and then a special operations guy,
Starting point is 03:57:26 and then a government contractor. When I saw globally the frail edges of the canvas and how weak we were strategically, I knew that big problems were gonna be on the horizon. So in August of 2021, which is when we founded Save Our Allies, I was on the phone, I was actually writing Scars and Stripes, I was sitting on the couch with Nick Palmisciano and my phone rings and it was Chad Robichow. And Chad said, hey man, I have my translators in Afghanistan.
Starting point is 03:58:07 He's currently being hunted by the Taliban. They're gonna rape and murder his family and they're gonna kill him. I've been on multiple deployments with this guy. Can you get in there? And my phone had been burning down since Afghanistan started crumbling for contract jobs, like personal recovery, evacuations.
Starting point is 03:58:24 And I didn't want to be the, I wanted that chapter of my life to end of this like this profiteer. And I was like, yeah, I'll be on a plane tomorrow. And I look over at Nick and Nick's on the phone, Nick's talking to Sarah Verardo. Sarah Verardo is this incredible woman whose husband was horrifically wounded in Afghanistan and she's carried all that pain and suffering and directed it into purpose.
Starting point is 03:58:55 She started the Independence Fund, the first responders action group, a whole bunch of different military nonprofits, and she has a ton of connectivity at the Pentagon. military nonprofits, and she has a ton of connectivity at the Pentagon. So as I start trying to figure out how am I going to get into Afghanistan, Nick turns to me as like, you're not believable on the phone with right now, and she is saying that we got our way into Afghanistan. So like, divine intervention yet again. Like, I'm on the phone like, we're doing that spider-man thing, or it's like, wait, you got, you got, you got, let's go. So I booked a flight that same day, we had to fly into UAE and figure out other routes to smuggle us into Afghanistan.
Starting point is 03:59:32 And that was literally the four of us on the phone was the beginning of Save Our Allies. And it was identifying these gaps that the US military wasn't able to go outside the wire at H-Kaya to go and recover people that had been isolated and were unable to make it onto H-Kaya. So, Hamed Karzai Airport, which was the final NEO, the non-combatant evacuation operation,
Starting point is 04:00:00 which was being run by Department of State, which is a bad idea, but they're doing the best with what they had. Everybody that was flooding to H-Kaya was getting stuck at these choke points, and the people that controlled the outer perimeter was the Taliban. So nobody could make it past the Taliban
Starting point is 04:00:21 to even make it to the base to get onto a plane to be flown out. So all these people that fought with us for 20 years, you know, these were special forces commandos with a dozen deployments. You know, they have TS clearances and they, you know, they fly helicopters that we gave them. They stay, they're either going to be working for the Taliban or they're going to be killed by the Taliban. It's going to be one or the other. And then we have all of our legitimate allies to include Americans that were contractors,
Starting point is 04:00:50 that were plumbers and electricians, for KBR, Hal Burton, Raytheon, all those contractors were stuck in Afghanistan. So they had to be brought out, and for them to be brought out, they had to be escorted in. Well, this was the first identified gap, which was the military can move logistics-wise.
Starting point is 04:01:09 We could do anything. But how do you go and find three people, five people, seven people that are hiding in a warehouse out in the city and then be escort them past the Taliban and bring them onto the base past American lines and then put them on a plane. That's the gap. We had four guys on the ground and that's what we immediately went to work doing.
Starting point is 04:01:33 How did you do it? I have a picture of a target on the back of the target are three different con ops. So there's four of us. Dave was gonna be staying back as like comms for the three of us that went to do solo singleton missions. And on the back of a target is in permanent marker, like concept of the operation number one. This guy's going to Eagle Gate. He's linking up with the agency to go find this group
Starting point is 04:02:08 of people and they're gonna be bringing them through this guy. Number two, Tim is going to be going out this abigate. He's gonna be picking up so-and-so. Number three, we're gonna be going, and we would do this every 60 minutes for the entire time that we had left till ultimately the bombing that happened on the 26th
Starting point is 04:02:28 and they like locked down the base. Were you there for that? I was. What a mess. It was so bad. You know, we did really, those men and the team back in DC, they're so brilliant. They didn't sleep for weeks doing everything.
Starting point is 04:02:49 Again, like I was barely deserving to be there, being surrounded by so many capable operators that knew how to do so much so fast, so effectively and so efficiently. I'm just like trying to like contribute in the best way that I can. Not every mission went well. You know, we had, we were bringing in some buses
Starting point is 04:03:09 through Blackgate and there was a miscommunication and a commander at that gate wouldn't let those buses in. And everybody thought that it was me, like that Tim Kennedy was the one that had set all of these buses up. This was absolutely our operation. But guess who are the people that were making the calls to link up? This is at the highest level of government.
Starting point is 04:03:32 Where like the most elite commanders on the planet are saying who's getting on these things and trying to communicate that down to a ground captain or a ground light colonel that's coming from like a four star joint level is where wires get crossed, right? And so these buses get kicked back out into the city and all those people got tortured and killed by the Taliban. But you didn't have time to think about it because the moment that that
Starting point is 04:04:11 gate gets closed, I had nine other... I had to run over to the UN gate to clamber over that wall through Constantine Wire to run out to do another link-up with a commando that was bringing him and another aviator on and their entire families. You know, like, had minutes to like take a breath. Yeah, yeah. Damn. How long were you guys there?
Starting point is 04:04:34 I mean, Saviour Allies started working from the moment Taliban crossed the border and started taking Kandahar and Bagram as Kabul, like all the way until they're stuck at Kandahar. We had teams in DC that were doing logistics and building lists and de-conflicting lists to get rid of duplicate names and also verifying. If we brought in one wrong person,
Starting point is 04:05:07 the whole thing's for not, like the whole thing's a failure. I could have saved 1,000 people, but we bring in one terrorist, done. Yeah. Right, so like we had to be perfect. And so 10 days total on the ground all the way up to where outside the wire operations were, can't like, I would have had to fight my way against 82nd Airborne and Marines to go outside of H-KIA.
Starting point is 04:05:38 So that was the, the number. And you guys vacuated. How many people? Oh man. And you guys vacuated how many people? Oh, man If if you went into the talk that night they have we moved privately 12% of everybody that left anywhere from 6,000 to 15,000 people were moved by private NGOs and private contractors.
Starting point is 04:06:10 Pineapple Express, the Glen Beck and Mercury One, obviously save our allies, Mighty Oaks, like the dozens of veteran organizations all mobilized. And I'm never gonna take credit for us moving one because there's not one person that moved off that air base that was not coordinated, facilitated by 10 other groups. So like total 15 to 20,000. Man, you know, is tragic as that story is and is what a fucking complete disgrace our government is.
Starting point is 04:06:49 Like a complete, incompetent fucking nightmare. The fact that a few veteran organizations were able to come together and save 6,000 to 15,000 lives against... You're more effective than the US government. I don't think people fucking are hearing that. You're more effective than the US government. That's how... I mean, that's insane to me. You know, and man, you guys did amazing work there, man. I can't even say their names, you know, by like Kevin, Sean, Sean, Dave, Nick, Sarah,
Starting point is 04:07:49 like this group of people, again, divine. There's no way that you could, the connections that each of us brought and the experiences that each of us brought from all of the different things that we've been doing for the past 10 years made for the perfect recipe for success. Like had it not been us, it wouldn't have happened. You know, the, from, you know, Eric Prince and Glenn Beck and like the connections that they have, you know, Mark, these people were able to just move
Starting point is 04:08:24 little tiny nidgets and knobs to make this a possibility. And what a hellhole though. Those babies stuck in Constantine a wire executed women on the side of the road by the Taliban right in the face of the Marines in the 82nd. And we funded it. Yeah, we did. And we're continuing to fund them.
Starting point is 04:08:54 Yeah. It's... Yeah, when Iran... Are we... Are we a failed state? Not yet. We're close. We're knocking on the door to complete disaster.
Starting point is 04:09:09 We still have the best and brightest on the planet. We're the most prosperous nation in the world with the most elite fighting force to ever walk the face of this planet. So no. But man, we're close. Yeah. We're definitely riding the line. Yeah. Um, let's get into what you're doing in Ukraine.
Starting point is 04:09:35 So we recognized in Afghanistan that there is never going to be a single solution to a problem when you have a gigantic gorilla that is the American government and the bureaucratic approach to problem-solving, they're always going to be constrained by rules, authorities, and authorizations, funding permission. Like, the list of their constraints are seemingly endless, right? But if you're small, if you're like this small expeditionary ability, small digital footprint, small financial footprint, small risk,
Starting point is 04:10:15 we provide incredible asset to the large behemoth, right? We're cool. You have a problem. We too care about that problem, but we have a bunch of different opportunities or different approaches to solve this problem. You got all these constraints. We don't have any of these constraints. Whether I'm gonna go as a for-profit contracting company and not once ever has anyone ever profited
Starting point is 04:10:41 in any way, shape, or form off of anything that we've ever done in the humanitarian evacuation, neo-sense, everything that we've ever done always stays within the organization to advance abilities and capabilities so that then when the next crisis happens and fuck, there have been so many in the past three years where I can pick up the phone and be like, hey, sir,, just wanna give you an update. Here's some current capabilities that we have in the region. I have a team that's on the ground
Starting point is 04:11:10 or they're at the border or they've positioned themselves. They have this ground evacuation route. We've set up these rat lines. We have these evacuation and evasion lanes set. We have these boats, we have these planes, right? Like all I do is come with assets. Tell me how you want me to skin this for you. Like, because I can do it as an NGO,
Starting point is 04:11:31 I can come in the humanitarian aid and evacuate personal recovery. But ultimately, like with our mission, with our purpose, everything else is for the sole reason of being able to accomplish that. Mission first always. No paid salaries. You know, I've never, never taken a cent. Neither has anyone else that, that is part of that organization.
Starting point is 04:11:52 All 100% program funded. Damn. We were talking last night, how much you, you hate NGOs and you're not wrong. When they get so big and they lose that, but when you look at a problem and you go, like, how do I, how do I get Americans out of Sudan? How do I get Americans out of Israel after the worst terrorist attack in their history and per capita in American, in any history,
Starting point is 04:12:15 10 times worse than Pearl Harbor, eight times worse than 9-11 per capita. And, but the difference was that everybody there was raped and murdered and tortured. times worse than 9-11 per capita. But the difference was that everybody there was raped and murdered and tortured. Big significant difference. All the Americans, 40,000 of them that are in Israel now have no flights to get out. They're also, some of them are old
Starting point is 04:12:39 and they went to see where Jesus was baptized, but they can't make it back to the airport or they're in Jerusalem, they have to get back to Tel Aviv, every Delta United American, all those flights are canceled, even though you've booked, you've tried to book three, four, five, six different times, and now your card has been charged every time. Now you have no money to book another flight
Starting point is 04:12:57 because your credit card's frozen and there's no airline that'll take you. So how do you get out? So then the Department of State says, hey, we're setting up these corridors and these timelines for us to fly these people out. We're gonna bring them back to Europe into a safe area to get them out.
Starting point is 04:13:11 But we can't go actually out and pick them up. Boom, new gap identified. Let's build rosters, let's start building manifests, let's start moving movement sheets and start escorting these people in. Insert the next conflict, you know. Man, you guys are effective, you know? And yes, I do hate a lot of nonprofits.
Starting point is 04:13:35 Me too. A lot of nonprofits start off with a very good mission statement and they wanna do good and then they explode and then greed kicks in and and then actually, you know, nobody gives a shit about what they were doing. And originally it's all about fucking money and taking out the competing nonprofit out rather than,
Starting point is 04:13:54 and you know, in the way the conversation went is when we started talking about keeping it small, keeping it grassroots, having specific investors that don't need name recognition and aren't trying to build a massive business. They want to affect the world in a positive manner. And so that's what I was getting at. Yeah. The other side of that coin that you're totally right about the NGOs, like how many times have you in your professional career, a missionary group, a non-profit doctors without
Starting point is 04:14:30 borders that gets hemmed up and they're stuck, now they're captives and they're being used as hostages or leverage for not just money, but also like positioning within the government. Like it happens time and time and time and time again. So like they, they, they are and have been historic, historically big problems. Um, we are organized in a way that we are small, we are maneuverable. And most of all that the talent, you know, if you look at, um, the group that was in Israel, um, JP, Ryan, um, Nate, these people are coming from tier one, the most elite special operations backgrounds in the world and then moved on to work for other groups that gave them even more skills.
Starting point is 04:15:17 And like, these are the guys that are, that are effectively doing the evacuations and the rescuing, like there's nobody more capable or competent on the planet. And they want to be there. Their heart is there to do the right thing. They've always wanted to be able to help in a meaningful way, but they've always had their hands tied. And sometimes by the government,
Starting point is 04:15:39 sometimes by bureau chiefs, sometimes by the like case officers, sometimes the list goes on of all of the ways that they've been constrained. Now they just get to do good. Yeah. And they have all the, well, not all the resources because we're small, but we have enough resources to do the job at the highest level.
Starting point is 04:16:01 Freakin' rad. Yeah, it is, man. You know? The, Dave Benjamin Hall. He was the Fox News correspondent that got blown up in Ukraine. Oh, okay. I'm not familiar with him. Kind of peak evasion.
Starting point is 04:16:17 Fox News correspondent is doing a segment and his car gets attacked. His cameraman dies, he gets horrifically wounded. Rad, right now, Ben Hall is in Israel covering the conflict there, full circle. Save Our Allies was mobilized by Fox to go and rescue him out of Ukraine. So we first find him in the middle of this invasion
Starting point is 04:16:45 and the entire conflict, like where is this one dude that got blown up? He's in some hospital somewhere and he's dying. And we had to evacuate him out of the country, get him into Poland and then get permission from the secretary of defense to fly him into the military combatant recovery. Like we brought him to Landstool to Ramstein and then he moved as if he was a combatant into the military hospital system.
Starting point is 04:17:12 And had that not happened, he'd be dead. So like when people are throwing stones, like the secretary of defense put his name on the bottom line that we can move this dude out of here. So like if you think that I am out there doing like some John Wayne shit, like it could not be further from the truth. Like I'm doing in whatever way we can contribute the best that we can with the assets and support that we have, we'll do that. But by no mean is anyone out there being like, hey, look where my name is. Like, look what I did. Well, thank you for setting the record straight. I'll fight some people sometimes.
Starting point is 04:17:45 You and me both, man. Throwing darts at my forehead, like trying to take a selfie. Hey, you know, everybody's tough on the internet, right? Yeah. But the border. Am I taking you down there? I would love to go down there.
Starting point is 04:18:05 Let's go. It is insanity. Yeah, that's what I keep hearing. It's hard to believe. It's very hard to believe. When you see numbers, when you see like 300,000 people a month, the Super Bowl had 60,000 people in it. Right?
Starting point is 04:18:24 This last couple of days ago. Yeah. 60,000 people, then you multiply that to 300,000 come across in a month. One month. Five times the Super Bowl, cross on our border, military age men from every single one of our enemies, state actors moving their people across our open border, Chinese, Russian, terrorists.
Starting point is 04:19:00 See, this is- Multi-time felons. This is where I get into, this is what really, I mean, everything else that's gone on, all of it. The Afghan withdrawal, Ukraine, Russia is like, it, like all of it, dude, all of it. This shit, when I just asked you, do you think we're in a failed state?
Starting point is 04:19:22 I don't know how you can answer that question and say no. Because we have become so fucking incompetent in this country. I don't understand how we could not be defeated. It would have to be a nation that is more incompetent than we are. And that's fucking hard to find right now. That is really hard to find. We don't have a fucking border.
Starting point is 04:19:53 We are the only free country left in the world, supposedly free, right? Yeah. And we have a wide open border that roughly, what last thing I read, six million plus people have crossed. We are broke, we are pruning our money, we have weaponized our dollar. We've destroyed the First Amendment by tech corporations. It's fake money.
Starting point is 04:20:24 I mean, in how could we possibly not already be defeated? That's a real fucking question. Yeah. What would you do if you were Russia? What would you do if you were China? What would you do if you were China? What would you do if you were one of these many terrorist organizations who, by the way, are all joining forces against a common enemy? You know who that common enemy is for those listening?
Starting point is 04:20:56 We're the fucking common enemy. Good job. Good fucking job letting this shit happen. I wouldn't have to do anything. I would continue to stoke and stock the flames and fires of dissent, of racism, of every form and fashion of divisive issue that Americans have right now to confuse and divide us further.
Starting point is 04:21:32 I would throw all of my money into TikTok, Instagram, Snapchat to make these kids sit there on those phones for as long as I could, which they are. I would show them that the nuclear family is not necessary, that freedom isn't really a thing that's given by God, but it's something that's given to us by the family, or by the government, which is another thing that they're paying for us to see on our phones often.
Starting point is 04:21:54 I would finance and support political opponents that would want to fight American values and put in other forms of governance that are wholly against the American ideals and the founding fathers would have imagined. I would try to support the expansion of the federal government. These are all the things that I would do if I was the adversary. And that's what they're doing. They don't have to do anything.
Starting point is 04:22:20 They just sit back and hang out and watch us just eat ourselves. That's what I'm getting at. You know, we, I just, I don't know how we pull out of this. I don't know. I mean, we talked about, we talked about at the beginning before the cameras got turned on, you know, people think something, people thought something was going to happen at the Super Bowl. People think, you know, how come something, people thought something was gonna happen at the Super Bowl. People think, you know, how come nothing's happened yet?
Starting point is 04:22:48 You hear one side of the aisle mocking people that are concerned that our borders wide open and mocking them because nothing's happened yet. We've had three years where there's not been any terrorist attack. Well, let me tell you about war games and simulations. They inject, they put these things through a simulation. It shows the probability and the percentage
Starting point is 04:23:17 that they're gonna have to come out on top. Maybe today they have a 65%, this is hypothetical. Maybe today in the simulation, they feed it all the information and the simulation says, hey, you got a 65% chance you're gonna come out on top against the US. Yeah.
Starting point is 04:23:35 But right now, we are a failed state. We are completely incompetent. And so why would they take that time to attack us right now? Why wouldn't they up the percentage? Okay, well, let's put a little more people in this way, put them up in this region. Let's infiltrate the power grid over here. It's weak.
Starting point is 04:23:59 There's no, you can't even arrest an immigrant right now. Even in this state. In Tennessee. A multi-times felon. Yeah, exactly. And so, it's all they're doing right now is strategy. They're just infiltrating, doing whatever they need to do to get that percentage up. And then when somebody strong comes in and the shit starts to get cleaned up, that's when it's going to happen.
Starting point is 04:24:28 Yeah. So how do you fight that? I argue for the Titanic, which was headed towards that iceberg had they known and they just made a slight adjustment, just a couple of degrees. They would have avoided that whole entire iceberg. right? None of those people. Is that what we need to do? Just the slightest of adjustments? Does that pendulum need to swing back once again towards sovereignty and freedom? The founding of Apigee, our school, was in that same vein. The founding of Savra Allies, the founding of Shoe Talk Response. Like all of these things, all it takes is this entrepreneurial American spirit for we as a collective to be like, man, we acknowledge that this is not right
Starting point is 04:25:13 and this is dangerous. And for us to combat, for us to have a strong America again is for the individual to be a strong, competent, capable individual, right? Not to be fat, not to be this gelatinous mass that can barely read, that just sits there and swipes on their phone and looks at porn all day long. Doesn't know how to use a rifle,
Starting point is 04:25:32 doesn't know how to purify water, doesn't know how to be an intentional, disciplined parent to their children or a loyal entrepreneur that's gonna be dedicated to his employees and his colleagues and his partners and the companies. Like this is when you look at the founding fathers, when you read that beautiful declaration of independence and the Bill of Rights, these were written by Americans that stood on the core
Starting point is 04:25:56 values of what it meant to be an American. They were not educated at some Ivy League University, but they wrote a document that will stand the test of time and God, I need Americans to recognize how vulnerable we are, everything that you just said right now can be fixed. We adjust just a couple of degrees and people take back their sovereignty. They start growing their own food, they start having their own chickens,
Starting point is 04:26:19 they start getting strong and body and in mind. They're an ungovernable force. The Americans, the essence of being an American is ungovernable. We are rebellious traders from our origin. Let's remember what that looked like. They told us to do something. We said no and we put their tea in the harbor.
Starting point is 04:26:39 Then they went to Boston and that shot that was heard around the world kicked off us killing every single one of them and kicking them off of this continent. That is what Americans can do. You mess with our dose of pro-harbor, we dropped two atomic bombs. Yeah. There's only so many Americans left. Yeah. Unfortunately. But you know, I think that kind of where I'm going with this, how do you fix it? I think you're doing it.
Starting point is 04:27:10 Trying it. The youth. That's right. Let's get into the school that you started and how that's developed. Yeah. So Apigee, the first school was Apigee Cedar Park and it was literally a brick and mortar Socratic school. And man, year one was hard.
Starting point is 04:27:26 Did everything wrong. Thought I knew how to run a business, having ran a bunch of businesses, and running a school is pretty different. Then year two, kind of like learn from our mistakes, like a phoenix rising from the ashes we adjusted. We also realized that we have to expand the influence. So, we went from just being a brick and mortar to online mentorship.
Starting point is 04:27:51 I partnered with Matt Boudreau and we started Apigee Strong and we brought in thousands of people in the online mentorship program, like how to be leaders in your community, what financial sovereignty, physical sovereignty looks like. And then from that mentorship program, we said, hey, we wanna expand this Apigee school idea. Who wants to open a school? And all of these owners stepped up and raised their hand, like, I want this in my community. So we have been training and mentoring
Starting point is 04:28:22 all of these school owners about in 2024, it will open another 50 schools and then all of, again, back to doing the right thing with money and being small enough to make sure that you're aligning with your purpose and direction and motivation, taking all of those funds and putting them back in to then help other schools launch and to build a larger campus to be able to mentor more people. So until we bring the department of education to its knees or completely abolish them,
Starting point is 04:28:54 we haven't produced something from public school. Yes, there's outliers and there's anomalies where like extraordinary kids are going to always rise, you know, but you take that same kid and put them anywhere, they're going to, they're also going to be wildly successful. It's the, the, the mass, it's the 95%. And they have just been turned to useless masses, the consumers, laborers, tax meals, that's it. And I don't need those. We're a bunch of tax meals. But I'm really interested in this school.
Starting point is 04:29:31 And so one question I have is this, this, how, when did you start that? Three years ago. Three years ago. And how many schools are there now? Well, 50 launching in 24. And how many are there right now? One. One, yeah.
Starting point is 04:29:47 Okay. So we went one year one, mentorship launched year two, and expansion happens year three, year five will be at 300 schools. Wow. So how do you filter who's coming in to the school without getting sued? Yeah. How do you filter who's coming in to the school without getting sued? Yeah.
Starting point is 04:30:09 Because this shit seems to just bleed in everywhere. Yeah. We have one, the people opening the schools, they are part of the mentorship program. So we've spent months and months and months that go into live events with them, training with them, talking to them, learning about their values,
Starting point is 04:30:28 making sure that their vision aligns with the vision of the school. So we have, you know, Matt has hundreds of hours with these new school owners on the, and then on the mentorship side, when we are advising about how they're gonna be accepting families. You know, we have this gigantic waiting list. We're accepting applications
Starting point is 04:30:49 for 24 school year for Apigee Cedar Park. So you can go to apigeecederpark.org and put an application right now. And when you put an application, you're going to be entered into this big huge funnel. And there's these gates that you have to go through. Here's a reading list of books. Here is you coming into tour of the academy where we get to do a face-to-face with you. Here is your hero, your kid, getting to go into one of the studios and spend time with the teachers and the other heroes.
Starting point is 04:31:17 I love kids and they're also innocent. They're not great liars. So when they're in there for a week, they're interviewing with the whole entire studio. That kid goes home. We get to ask all of the kids and these, these Socratic minds, these critical thinking minds, they know like they're amazing, brilliant, truly brilliant, genius little kids. And when we go like, Hey man, what do you, what were your impressions?
Starting point is 04:31:41 What did you think? And we have a bunch of series of questions. We have socratic conversations. Like, would he be a value added to the studio? What does he bring that would be useful and that you would benefit from, that you would learn from him? What are some things that you think would be kind of a detriment? And listening to an eight-year-old in a very clear way articulate
Starting point is 04:32:03 why that kid is good or bad for the studio. Man, like, wow. Wow, that's good. It's a learner driven environment. That means the leaders of that studio are the kids. You're also given these kids freedom of thought without any repercussions. What do you think about this?
Starting point is 04:32:25 All questions are open-ended. So there are guides, not teachers. In every single one of the studios, not classrooms, in studios like Socrates, he wasn't telling somebody how to do something. He was asking questions, open-ended questions for that person to think through their answers and critically devise the solution to the question
Starting point is 04:32:44 that was being posed by the leader, by the guide. So I'm not going to say, hey, we're going to add mulch to the playground. This is how much mulch we're going to add. I'm going to go to the kids and I'm going to say, hey, what mulch do you want? How much volume of mulch will you need to make this three inches deep? If the thickness of the mulch, like a sand compared to a gravel compared to a rock, is that going to change the amount of volume that we're going to have to order?
Starting point is 04:33:12 We have just done these kids so dirty because they're so capable. They're so much more capable and there's fascinating study done by NASA and MIT. They took a bunch of kids pre-school, they started tracking them saying, which ones could problem solve at a genius level? So take something, give them a problem, and you provide them with existing solutions. Which ones could use the non-existing solutions to solve the same problem?
Starting point is 04:33:40 And the longer, long story short, the longer that these kids were in school, the less capable and less genius they ever were in problem solving. Are you kidding? No, 100%. The Google list right now, it is the most mind blowing study.
Starting point is 04:33:53 The final conclusion was the longer these kids were in public school, the dumber they got. The less critical thinking and problem solving were they capable of. And MIT and NASA were like, all right, man, let's just kill this study. Yeah, let's sweep this one under the rug. When you go back to the origin of public education
Starting point is 04:34:14 with Rockefeller saying, man, I don't need anything. I don't need a critical thinker. I don't need a collaborator. I don't need an innovator. I don't need somebody that can create. I just need somebody that can work. I just need somebody that can work. I just need a laborer. I just need somebody smart enough to show up to my factory
Starting point is 04:34:30 and do the work to make me money. That is the origin of public education. And every day since then, it's just gotten worse. So you have two options right now. You open your own school or your home school, your kids. That's it. How do you, I'm really interested in this. I mean, I told you my idea last night.
Starting point is 04:34:49 I don't want to take any time up explaining my idea, but how do you vet the, I'm sorry, I know that. What are you, how do you, the teachers, what do you call them? Guides. How do you vet the guides? Yeah, in a really similar way. Yeah, of course, like the background check
Starting point is 04:35:08 and the social media scrap scrub, the drug test, all of those things. But most importantly, the people that are applying are when that first email comes across, hey, I'd really love to come work for your school. I am leaving, insert this place that I currently have been a guide or a teacher at for this
Starting point is 04:35:25 amount of time for these reasons, now I'm going to ask five very basic open-ended questions. These open-ended questions are very similar to that kid showing up to the studio and saying, as he's auditioning and interviewing against all of his peers, the last thing that we need is a teacher in there. How are you going to be at a peer by peer level, be able to guide these kids through, here's a problem. And they're open-ended narrative questions. And when we interview these guides, it's very evident which ones get it and which ones don't.
Starting point is 04:36:04 My first year, major mistake, I hired teachers. I went and I bought the highest, fanciest, you know, with the best resumes and like awards for this and this, but they weren't in a line with this vision and catastrophic failure. Really? Yeah. What are some of the things that you saw? When a critical thinker that can't sit at a desk that needs to move to problem solve and is gonna think in an atypical way, that teacher who can only do something linear, but then something that's kind of chaos and anarchy in an approach to a solution, they literally can't process.
Starting point is 04:36:53 So they've combated and it's stifled and it's stuff and it's stomp and it's stomp, where instead we're supposed to inspire and supposed to give resources. And if they fail, it's fine. Like if the kid fails, you will learn from that failure. And I don't need to have every kid passing in a session. I just need that kid to grow.
Starting point is 04:37:18 I just need that child to evolve and to continue down this road of becoming a critical thinker. They can do anything. Like if you can program, manage, and you can critical think, you can do anything. So like why don't, why aren't we, and we haven't been in education doing anything besides teaching kids how to take a test? I'm not, I'm fairly certain I've never been, teaching kids how to take a test. I'm fairly certain I've never been to war, and I've never walked into a ring, and I've never started a business,
Starting point is 04:37:50 that I was given anything that was useful that resembled a test that I ever took in school. Why don't we prepare them for what real life looks like? You were talking to me about some of the curriculum and you were talking about some type of an exercise that you had these kids doing where they were building their own business. What age group was it that? First, second, third, fourth grade.
Starting point is 04:38:18 Can you go through that exercise? Yeah, it is super simple. We had a business fair, a date set. So in two months from now, we're going to go to this business fair or we're going to go to a farmer's market. Everyone in the studio, you have to create a product. You have to create this product.
Starting point is 04:38:38 You have to market this product and you have to bring this product to market. Then at the end, you're gonna come back to the studio and you're going to give a brief about the performance of your product. So one little girl took a loan from her parents, bought mason jars, got kinetic sand, and then built themed environments
Starting point is 04:38:58 in every single one of these kinetic sands. So like one of them was like green and brown kinetic sands. She put all these little dinosaurs in there and she sold them for $25 a piece. The cost of her product, like her out of pocket cost was like $3. So she's making $22 for every single one of these sales. And she sold a whole bunch of them at the farmer's market.
Starting point is 04:39:18 And she paid her parents back, then she took her profit and gave her presentation. Here was what I spent. Here's how much my booth cost. Here's how much the cost of goods were. This is the loan that I took. This is the interest that I paid back. And here's my profit.
Starting point is 04:39:34 All right, and then we had another one that took, he went and collected all the sheds off his parents ranch. And he trimmed them and cut them with the skill saw, which is kind of cool. How many kids know how to use a skill saw? Put screws through them with like nice little fancy washers with this big, huge industrial screw and turn them into hardware.
Starting point is 04:39:51 So it was like a bolt that went through it. On the back, you could screw in the nut with another washer and you would have like this access handles for your cabin tree. He took those and built them and sold them as sets like six and eight and twelve depending on how many drawers you had for within your bedroom and sold dozens of sets and made a ton of money. He had almost no overhead besides some bolts and some nuts and some washers. So he was almost pure profit besides the cost of him renting one table to put at the farmer's market.
Starting point is 04:40:29 And so success, massive success. And then this other kid went and like took some sticks, some branches that he thought looked like guns and tried to sell them at the farmer's market and made no money because nobody bought them. I could think his uncle bought one and out of charity. And he went back and he had to brief everybody in his class and he was embarrassed.
Starting point is 04:40:50 And I remember being embarrassed. I remember failing. I remember not doing well in a spelling test. I remember all the times that I failed were the moments that I learned the most. And I will argue even though the two success stories, sure, they made some money and they learned a ton about how to do business.
Starting point is 04:41:08 Their parents were super involved, but that kid that sat there with shame and embarrassment learned the best lesson of them all. And everybody's walking out of the studio. Parents are mad because, you know, Tommy didn't do great in his presentation where he lost time, lost a little bit of money, and but most of all, it was embarrassed
Starting point is 04:41:32 because all of his friends were successful. And instead, being able to adjust to position, switch the perspective, it'd be like, but look at what he learned. And are you excited to see what he's gonna do in this next one? Yeah. But it's on you, parent.
Starting point is 04:41:48 Like there's no teacher that's going to sit here and hold their hand and do this work for them. And it's not your job, parent, to do all the work for them. It is your job to help them be able to learn how to do this. It's your responsibility. It's nobody else's responsibility. Governance is not going to teach your kids ethics, grit, integrity and hard work. That is your job. So rise. How many, how many kids are in the school roughly?
Starting point is 04:42:17 Apigee, sort of 24, I think will probably be around 3000. 3000? probably be around 3000. 3000. Between mentorship, physical locations, brick and mortar schools. That's incredible. So if I wanted to, John, we're not, we're like just getting started. I know, I know.
Starting point is 04:42:37 That's what, that's what's so exciting about it. I, I mean, we're literally like the second, the first year was our real rough start. We're in our, we're in're in our second year right now. We're three years into this, two years of actually doing it right. And we're going. It's, I mean, it's obviously spreading like wildfire. So, you know, I want to know if I want to bring this to Franklin, Tennessee.
Starting point is 04:43:03 What do I do? Where do I start? You go to appgstrong.com. We launched a documentary yesterday, like an hour long documentary talking about public education, talking about our purpose, talking about our vision, how Matt and I are approaching not education, not schooling about creating critical thinkers.
Starting point is 04:43:25 And so you're gonna go to appagiestrong.com. All the people that are gonna be opening schools are gonna come from within the mentorship program. There'll be very rare exceptions because we have to know everybody. Like if we don't know them personally and we haven't spent time with them, you're not gonna open a school.
Starting point is 04:43:42 So like we have to have the rapport and relationship and trust and faith that you're not gonna open a school. So like we have to have the rapport and relationship and trust and faith that you're gonna be doing the right thing to continue to spread this vision. So if you go to Apogee, you get out of the mentorship program and there's a lot, we demand your big reading list, you know, like your journaling, you're working out every single day,
Starting point is 04:44:02 we're asking questions about intentionality as you as a parent and you as a husband or wife in your family. And it's a full family approach. Like this isn't, hey, you leader of the household. It is you as a complete family, nuclear family, as a family unit. How are you approaching raising the most powerful
Starting point is 04:44:20 influential children that you possibly can? Ben, you are doing a lot of good stuff. Hope so. I'm playing. I'm trying. If not, I'm going to go crazy. No, man, I'm. We covered a lot of ground there. Yeah. And. I wish we had another six hours to dive into some of this stuff.
Starting point is 04:44:44 But as we're walking across Big Bend in Southwest Texas towards the Mexican border, well, we can talk more. Right on. Well, I'll meet you down there. But Tim, I just want to say, man, I'm really happy that our paths have crossed and it's an honor to know you. It's an honor to be able to get your story out.
Starting point is 04:45:06 And man, I'm just, I'm blown away at all of the good that you're injecting into this world because we sure as hell need it, man. So thank you. Thank you, man. Thanks for having a voice, dude. I'm proud to know you. So keep on killing it.
Starting point is 04:45:23 All right, brother. Thank you. So thank you. Keep on killing it. All right, brother. Thank you. How many of you have logged into your Netflix, Amazon, Hulu, whatever your streaming platform is only to find the same mind-numbing content over and over and over again. And then you wind up settling and you just watch that mind-numbing content. Maybe it's time to spend your time learning something that's inspiring and that could possibly improve your life. That's why I'm so excited that Hillsdale College is offering more than 40 free online courses in the most important and enduring subjects.
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Starting point is 04:46:48 the growth of an unaccountable deep state and the rise of globalist organizations. The course is self-paced so that you can start whenever and wherever you want. Start your free course, American Citizenship and it's decline with Victor Davis Hansen today. Go right now to Hillsdale.edu slash SRS to start. It's free and it's easy to get started.
Starting point is 04:47:11 That's Hillsdale.edu slash SRS to start. Hillsdale.edu slash SRS. This show is sponsored by BetterHelp. It's a simple truth. No matter who you are, mental health challenges can affect you, and how you manage them can make all the difference. That's why everyone should have access to mental health support that meets them where they are and helps them get through. BetterHelp provides online therapy on your schedule. It's flexible, simple to use, and more affordable than in-person therapy. Connect with a licensed therapist selected just for you. Learn more at betterhelp.com.
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