Shawn Ryan Show - #177 Captain Brad Geary - The Sinister Games the Military Plays in Hiding the Truth
Episode Date: February 28, 2025Captain Bradley Geary is a Navy SEAL officer with a distinguished 24-year career in Naval Special Warfare. He graduated from the United States Naval Academy in 2000 with a Bachelor's degree in Mathema...tics and completed SEAL Qualification Training with class 234. Geary has served in various leadership roles, including at SEAL Delivery Vehicle Team TWO, SEAL Team FOUR, and as Commanding Officer of Naval Special Warfare Basic Training Command. In 2022, Geary faced controversy following the death of SEAL candidate Kyle Mullen during "Hell Week" training. He was accused of dereliction of duty and negligent command supervision, leading to a board of inquiry scheduled for November 2024. Geary defended the SEAL training process, arguing its effectiveness in preparing warfighters, while acknowledging the need for refinement. As of December 2024, disciplinary efforts against Geary were dropped by the Navy. Shawn Ryan Show Sponsors: https://ShawnLikesGold.com | 855-936-GOLD #goldcopartner https://americanfinancing.net/srs NMLS 182334, nmlsconsumeraccess.org Brad Geary Links: LinkedIn - https://www.linkedin.com/in/bradley-geary Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/bradleyandamy/ X - https://x.com/bradleydgeary Civilian Military Defense Fund - https://www.cmdf-inc.org Stand with Warriors - https://standwithwarriors.org 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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Captain Brad Geary, welcome back. Thanks, Sean.
Again.
Appreciate you having us again.
Yeah, my pleasure, my pleasure.
It's good to see you and Jason. Nice to see you Again. Appreciate you having us again. Yeah, my pleasure, my pleasure. It's good to see you and Jason.
Nice to see you again.
Good to see you again.
So just a little recap.
You guys were on about, what, six, eight months ago.
Sounds about right.
I think we determined.
And so in a nutshell, just real quick snapshot.
Basically, big debacle at Buds.
Kyle Mullins, Buds candidate died in training, died of
what we believe to be performance enhancing drugs, a lot of evidence and basically the
US Navy kept re-investigating this until the performance enhancing drugs disappeared
and then they basically pinned it on you,
the commanding officer of Naval Special Warfare Training Center
or whatever they're calling it today.
Yeah, yeah, me and Eric Ramey, that's right.
And so I wanted to bring you back on.
We got a lot of exposure.
You came on, Jason, you came on,
and your other attorney.
Yep, David Z. Allen's from the Stanford Warriors Foundation.
Yep, we're still with him as well.
Got a lot of exposure.
I know my personal friend and attorney, Tim Parlatori,
jumped on board.
We got a ton of congressmen, senators, a lot of attention,
and the case was ultimately dismissed but I know
they're still coming at you for some stuff and I wanted to I just kind of
wanted to do an update with you you interviewed with Secretary Head Seth
and and and Director Gabbard and I want to talk to you about what that is and if
you do have a place in the new administration and and so yeah it's great it's good to have you back good to be back thanks for
having us it means a lot to us my pleasure to start we have to do the
disclaimer that that obviously all everything I say here today is my own
opinion Brad Geary's not representative of the Navy or Naval Special Warfare or
the Department of Defense in general these are all my opinions and my understandings
of the facts as I understand them in our entire case
and everything that's happened
since our last show for sure.
And to that point, big win with them dropping the case,
as you released on social media,
the signed document dated 13 December 24,
where Amy and I basically both signed it saying,
"'Sean, the lies
finally crumbled under the weight of truth. Thank you for being a pivotal voice for truth.
Blessed are the peacemakers, Brad and Amy Gary.
Oh man.
Thanks.
It's huge. Man, your show was a pivot point.
This is awesome.
Yeah.
Changed the whole thing.
Everything.
I love, I love this. So be hanging here in the studio along with all the other stuff from guests.
I appreciate it man.
This is an honor.
Thank you.
Our honor too and we thank you.
Thank you for being a continual voice for truth for me and so many others.
Alright so let's get into it.
So he came on what, I guess it was about what six months ago?
I think, I think eight.
A little longer.
Somewhere around there? Yeah.
And got a lot of attention, real fast.
What happened?
What happened?
So like I alluded to, what we hoped and what we expected.
Before I get into that real quick,
I do want to highlight something I think we've seen here.
It's interesting because it all plays back
toward leadership, which we talked a lot about
in the last episode.
Years ago, when I first took command of SDV Team One,
one of my tasking commanders sent us an article
called Power Causes Brain Damage.
The Atlantic published it, I want to say 2014 to 17
timeframe, I think.
Really, really interesting.
And it's not a new idea, right?
I think it was Lord Acton said,
power corrupts, absolute power corrupts, absolutely.
But now in the modern day,
we've been able to study that psychologically
and actually do magnetic brain mapping
and see what happens in the brains
of those who have authority for long periods of time.
And it turns out it's not great.
So this article lays that out
and it talks about how it creates hubris, a bit of cognitive
dissonance and what I think a lot of lower folk would look up the chain of command and
say that guy drinks his own Kool-Aid.
And so it's very dangerous.
Now the hard part about this, the study is it identified that knowing it's a psychological
problem and by the way, this isn't like unique to a few people.
This is everything, this is everybody.
This happens to anyone who's in a position of power
for a long period of time.
Even knowing that it's a problem,
it's a psychological condition,
I think they dubbed it the power paradox,
or someone did, or the Huber syndrome,
or maybe those are two separate but similar things.
But either way, even knowing it's an issue
isn't enough to counteract it.
You actually have to take deliberate steps
to counter this as a leader in order to stay humble,
grounded, and kind of in sync with the force
and who's entrusted to your care,
the organization you're leading,
whatever entity that is.
I bring that up because it was important for me
in my development as a leader,
certainly as a commanding officer,
and then getting to do that second one at Bud's.
Did they talk about this in Navy leadership?
So, great question.
They don't talk about it enough.
When I went to CEO school,
they talk about the Bathsheba syndrome,
which is where you study David
as this king from the Old Testament,
who, you know, the classic story is,
he sees Bathsheba bathing on the neighboring roof,
takes her, impregnates her,
and then he has her husband killed.
And so they talk about how being in position
of authority and power for a long time,
the rules don't seem to apply to people
and how that can be a dangerous slope.
So it's good that they talk a little bit about it, but they don't take it far enough
Because they don't really say other anything other than be careful that doesn't turn into you
Well, okay not helpful and what this article does is breaks it down even further into how to stop that from happening
There's ways the point is you have to have a mechanism in place to stay humbled stay grounded some examples from the article
Franklin Roosevelt
had an advisor that he made call him by his first name all the time.
So he wasn't allowed to call him Mr. President
or anything else.
And the reason is the minute we established
a hierarchical order, you and I both know,
no one ever tells the boss the truth.
We sugarcoat it, we write it in our sit reps
And we massage it so that it doesn't sound as bad as it was, you know back at the beginning
And so he knew that if I have an advisor they're never gonna tell me the full truth whether they mean to or not and
Over time that creates a gap in my understanding of what's actually going on with the organization
I'm leading and how I'm being perceived as a leader
of what's actually going on with the organization I'm leading and how I'm being perceived as a leader.
So the point is we all need people in our lives
who are willing to look us eye to eye as an equal,
as a peer, not in a hierarchical status
and basically call us on our BS.
That's one example.
The article gives a bunch of other ways
on how to do this, how to stay grounded.
Another one I can't remember the name,
but she was some big wig in some organization
and she comes home to tell her mom,
she's excited about getting selected to this huge board
and she's all proud of herself
and her mom's like, hey, before you get to that,
go to the grocery store and get me some milk.
And so her mom did it deliberately
and she said something like,
leave that damn crown in the garage.
So when you come home, you're not a big wig anymore,
you're not super important, you're not puffed up on your ego,
you are my daughter or my son or you are Franklin in that case.
But it's very interesting and it takes a deliberate approach.
We do not talk about that in the military.
Not only do we not talk about it, this is super interesting.
They teach these leadership concepts before your first commanding officer tour.
And prior to that, there's a lot of leadership development stuff.
Here's what's super, I think, backwards is,
once you're done with your Commanding Officer Tour,
there's no more real big leadership development that you do,
especially prior to major command.
There's like a one-week course that's just very surfacey.
Well, ironically, from this article,
that is precisely when we should be doubling down
on our leadership development
and making sure we have checks and balances
as these people are continuing in positions of authority
climbing that chain of command.
So right when we should do more,
what we know from science, we're actually doing less.
So we're mixing this up and we're putting it backwards.
And I think there's some problems I've seen,
certainly with Enable Special Warfare,
with some of my peers,
as I've watched this take place in real time.
Well, what was the,
I mean, when you came on last time,
we had talked about your interactions
with different admirals,
people that you had considered friends,
that you had considered,
you had respect for these guys.
Yeah.
And then as the Kyle Mullins case kind of unraveled longer,
or it just kept unraveling and you started fighting back,
it was like, I can't remember exactly what the term was.
It was like trust the process or something like that.
I mean, did you ever hear from any of those admirals again
after he came on the show?
Oh yeah, absolutely.
So there were three, potentially four,
three that were willing to write me letters of recommendation
for any kind of board of inquiry thing I had.
So a total change of heart.
Well, so, but a lot of them went the other way too.
But here's the funny thing, Sean.
Even though, and so one of them, two of them said this,
but I'll tell you the story about one.
After we won, called me up, old friend of mine,
mentor of mine, phenomenal seal officer.
Brad, I'm so proud of you.
Like you just, you crushed this.
You did all the right things.
You handled it the right way.
You didn't let it turn into an angry, bitter man.
I'm just so proud of how you handled this whole thing.
Congratulations on the win.
This is huge.
And then he paused and he says, but I've got to,
I've got to say, I've just got to say it.
The process worked.
You got to be fucking kidding.
No.
And I- The process worked. And I love this dude. I know kidding. No. And I love this dude.
I know, I know.
And I love this dude.
So I said, hey, no, sir, no.
Like we won because I subverted the process.
We won because the process showed itself
to be untrustworthy.
And so I raised this issue and then finally went around
and obliterated the process.
And he was quiet for a second.
He goes, you're right.
And here's the thing that's interesting about that to me,
and this is one of the things we learned
in this three-year process,
is even the great admirals out there,
which there's some great ones,
and the great generals out there,
have become so institutionalized
that they're in many ways incapable
of even criticizing the process
when they see it acting unjustly.
They just can't do it.
It seems like these guys are imprisoned by their own power.
Does that make sense?
Yes.
Like they imprison themselves in their own power
because they're so scared of losing it.
Nothing's more important to them than holding power.
We were talking about this at breakfast, right?
Mm-hmm.
Yeah.
We were having a conversation
about Gen Z just jetting out the door.
Yeah.
In special operations.
Yeah.
And it's like, man, you guys,
you guys are gonna have to make some changes.
If you wanna stay on that soap box, great,
but there's not gonna be anybody to look up on that soap box
because they're all jetting.
You're gonna be a leader of nobody.
Yeah, yeah, for sure.
So is that what happens?
Is that what, they just, they get imprisoned
by their own hunger of power?
I think it's, well, I don't wanna speak too generally,
right, I think there are some absolute altruists
out there who want to keep leading,
because they love the organization, they love the nation.
What I've noticed though is it's an interesting pattern.
When something goes wrong, and I have a theory on it, when something goes wrong, commanding
officers are kind of hung out to dry, right?
Well, you were in command, we have to have total responsibility and accountability, so
you see CEOs getting fired all the time for lack of trust and confidence.
Yet if you pull the thread on like root cause analysis on a lot of these ones,
what you'll find is they probably or might be working under some other Commodore
or some other Admiral who is somewhat of a toxic leader or not a good leader,
and that trickled down to that CO.
But you never ever see or very rarely do you see a Commodore or an Admiral fired.
And I think it's because at the command level,
you represent that command.
Everything above that, you now represent the institution.
And if you're going to fire someone
who represents the institution,
that is a criticism against the institution.
And they view that as their chief goal,
preserving the institution.
And I think that's where we see gradually what happened
is a bit of a misplacement of loyalties
where I think is what we saw in our case was,
well, the institution decided
we're going to go with this narrative.
Doesn't matter whether it's true or not.
Now we have to defend the institution's decision
and we're going to follow this through all the way
to the end, even when it made no more rational sense.
Even when we exposed to the end, even when it made no more rational sense. Even when we exposed, to quote Congress, I think it was, quote, was grossly unethical
practices and I'm quoting them now, it's words to that effect, and a lack of investigative
integrity from a congressional letterhead.
Because, well, we can't criticize the institution.
Because the public trusts the institution. What I think happens subliminally with a lot of these guys is not they're so power-hungry
It's that over time their loyalty flips and instead of remembering that they made an oath to the Constitution
They somehow start placing the institution above that
I'm not sure you know decision-making. Yeah, and I can be a little more specific on that point
I think your concept of being imprisoned in their own power,
it's also imprisoned by their own ego.
Because in the military, the nexus,
the origin of prosecutorial authority
is vested in the commander, right?
And so when a commander decides to do something
in that realm, they become incredibly over emotional
to that decision on average.
I'm summarizing 15 years, 16 years of seeing it.
They become rooted in this, if you're defying the system,
if you're defying my choice to prosecute you,
you're defying me.
And they take on this kind of insubordinate feel
and communication pattern even with me,
through their agents and SJAs,
often they cut me off from even being able
to go and talk to them, right?
No, you need to handle that through my SJA, right?
It becomes a very personal attack to them,
and some cannot separate us rebutting the facts,
pushing back on the prosecution, suing for innocence,
and not take that as a personal attack
on their decision making.
Which is an attack on the institution,
which we would defend.
Right.
Yeah.
Geez.
So one guy, one guy,
Well, another guy,
wrote a letter of recommendation and said,
I told you.
Well, three of them offered to the letter,
but even one of the other guys,
and this is one of the things I, I don't want to get too far ahead, we'll the other guys, and this is one of the things I,
I don't want to get too far ahead,
we'll talk about this,
but this is one of the things I talked to Secretary Hicks
at the ballot when I interviewed with him,
is one of the other guys, same thing,
we're going to write a letter for you,
you're a great dude, this is unfair, this is unjust,
I can't believe this, we should treat our teammates better,
I can't believe we've let this happen to you.
Pause, Brad, but what you really want to do is see this process through and go to the board of
inquiry because that's how you get vindicated in the end is by following this process.
To which I replied, sir, appreciate the letter. No, no. When I have a thousand data points showing
the process is untrustworthy, the answer isn't hope for the best and keep trusting it. I believe we have, back to our oath
to the Constitution of the United States,
as officers specifically, we have a moral obligation
when we see something like this happening
to stand up and say no, to stand up for the truth
and confront the injustice, confront the process
or the system that is acting in unethical ways
and in some cases illegal ways
and obliterate it, expose it at all costs.
And that's really what we've done here.
What we did with the episode with you.
And I tried to do it shy of that.
I wrote letters to admirals.
I wrote, I sent evidence directly to the CNO
where we talked about,
hey, here's the irrefutable evidence
showing admirals in your command lied, violated the oath of office, and produced deliberately
manipulative investigations.
Calm silent.
Geez.
It's our duty as officers, I think.
Throw it on the table.
How many times did they reinvestigate it to change everything?
Was it three times?
It was more than that at this point.
But trust the process?
Yeah, right.
Right.
Brad, why couldn't you have just trusted the process
and gone to MAST again?
Okay, well, I went to MAST.
A lot of folks would say, the critics out there,
which I've heard and have seen,
well, Brad's just been dodging accountability
through this whole thing, right?
Well, okay, let's rehash the last six hour episode
in about five sentences.
No, I was taken to NJP to MAST by Amal Howard.
We accepted MAST.
We submitted a rebuttal to what he understood the facts to be,
at which point he dismissed MAST
and wrote me a non-punitive letter of censure.
Case closed.
I was held accountable.
That should have been the end of it.
Then the Navy decided, no, we don't like that narrative.
We didn't like that investigation
that said drugs were a contributing factor.
So that's when from the top,
the direction came to change the investigation,
then start a new investigation based upon those changes
with a presupposition that drugs
had nothing to do with this
and then the lie, the press release,
and now created through this lie an entirely new need
to hold people accountable based upon lies.
So then they charged us with massed again
with all and all those lies.
Well, no.
And I even accepted massed earlier,
because I still had hope.
And we've laughed about this, how naive I was in like,
no, Jason, I kept trying to talk him into it.
No, trust me, like this is NSW,
we won't do the wrong thing, we're going to do the right thing here.
But over time, back to trust,
trusting the process, trusting the system,
well, man, I can only trust it for so long, so naively,
when all I see are data points,
which look like a trend line of abuse, of manipulation and of lies.
And so at some point in that process,
and we talked about that the last episode,
I won't rehash all of it, but no, I've got to deny a mast.
And in my denial of mast, we requested court martial.
Because that was our concern,
was we were seeing a manipulation of evidence
at a level that wouldn't stand in a court of law.
And so we requested that.
That was denied us as well.
Who went the other way?
What do you mean?
These guys were somewhat on your side.
Somewhat. Oh, the admirals, yeah.
Oh, quite a few went the other way.
You said they went two ways.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I mean, old friends and mentors of mine
have said openly, in forms of other people,
Brad's dodging accountability.
I don't like how Brad decided to go public.
He never should've gone public.
We talked about that.
I'll bet they didn't like that.
No, no, even guys that weren't involved in this case
who had nothing to lose by me going public.
And the sad part about that for me is like,
hey man, I got it.
Again, I crossed a threshold. The silent professional, I got it. Again, I crossed the threshold, the silent professional.
I get it.
But when you look at the splinter in my eye
by doing that, by making that deliberate choice
versus literally falsified testimony,
fabricated documents, which are illegal acts in some cases,
at best violated joint ethics regulations in plain sight.
At worst, you actually broke the law a little bit
here and there.
And the takeaway from all this is I shouldn't have gone
public?
No.
No.
They got a plank in their eye.
Don't criticize my splinter.
Yeah.
What was the backlash?
So it got worse after our show.
It got worse.
One of the things we mentioned in the show was
any charge against me at the time had nothing to do with Kyle Mullin's name.
And that was very specific and deliberate and they were doing that strategically because when I would bring up
Yeah, but this is a false investigation. You know it. You've told me. I mean my admiral said to my face
I know that this was a deliberately manipulative investigation.
But the way they would say is,
but the charges against you aren't related to Kyle,
so none of that matters.
It's inadmissible in a sense.
I was like, well, yeah, but you used that to get here,
so it doesn't really work.
And I know that you say that to me and Eric Raimi
and Biff Drexler, but in the other side of the equation,
you're telling the family
that you're gonna hold us accountable.
So you're saying both things.
So one of the things they did after our show,
right around the same time,
I can't remember exactly how it sequenced,
but they actually changed the charges against us
and ramped them up, alleging cause of death
against my leadership and Eric Raimi, alleging cause of death against my leadership
and Eric Ramey saying our failures to,
I don't know, oversight medical and conduct safe operations
were a direct, resulted directly in Kyle Mullen's death.
Eric Ramey was the doctor.
The doctor, yes, thank you.
So you actually, they actually made these sound
almost like homicide charges.
Like negligent homicide.
Negligent homicide charges, but all administratively
in what they say is a non-punitive environment.
And I was like, well, that stung, that stung.
And what's interesting about that too is technically
after non-judicial punishment doesn't happen
and you convene these administrative board of inquiries
which are supposed to be non-punitive,
they're supposed to just cut and paste
the same charges from before
and adjudicate those in an administrative fashion.
Very abnormal for them to decide on their own,
administrative, navpers, on their own,
infinite level of wisdom.
That's probably not the best way to say that.
Yeah, well.
I mean, okay, let me backtrack.
I mean no disrespect or disdain by saying that.
And we forgot my opening disclaimer. I can't believe we did it.
Everything I say here today,
obviously just like last time is my own personal opinion.
And based upon the facts as I perceive them
and understand them,
nothing I say represents the United States Navy
or Naval Special Warfare.
And in no way do I mean any disrespect
to any senior officers or disdain to any public officials
in anything we say here today.
I mean I think it's important to note that we don't actually know if it was NAVPERS who
changed the charges because it went up to Chief of Naval Personnel, Admiral Cheeseman.
He actually was the one to convene the board, to notice the board, his signature on there, just like the withdrawal letter, he was the one to start this process against
us.
Couple things to note there.
One, I talked to a ton of lawyers, including myself, I've never seen the Chief of Naval
—
Would you say the process against you, you're talking about upping the charges almost?
Yeah, new charges, board of inquiry, official notice of a BOI with the new charges.
But one, I've never seen the CMP be the person who convened a board.
Like I mean, pulling it up to his level is distinct in and of itself.
I had our military council that was assigned kind of reach out and see if anybody else
had seen that.
No one.
So what's interesting is Admiral Cheeseman was on the email list where they talked about
changing the press release and they issued a lie
to the American people.
So you put those two things together,
he pulls it up to his level,
he's got an interest in it, right?
He's got an interest in seeing this go bad
for Captain Geary and he's the one to promulgate
and start this process.
But the beauty was this was a massive strategic error.
Because by actually linking us to cause of death findings,
even allegedly, now it opened up the gates for us
to actually attack all of the false investigations
that had led us to that point.
And so now we're able to say, hey,
we demand access to investigations
that had been previously done and changed
to different pieces of evidence
that had been so far denied us.
We got full access to his phone
and had a digital forensic analysis rip that.
Turns out there was a lot more in there
that we even knew from the beginning.
What was in there?
Oh, just text threads with other candidates
who were actively conspiring to hide their symptoms
from our cadre, mask them with other drugs,
and Google searches and discussion threads
about we can mask this drug use
by adding this drug into it based off this data.
I mean, an active collaborative little pool of bodies
who are doing this pretty deliberately.
Wow.
With intent.
And they had that as part of the original
NCIS investigation.
That's where it came from.
That's the worst part.
They had this the whole time.
And they tried to resist discovery of this to us.
We got ahold of some judge advocates who were prosecuting
that at least understood their obligations.
But for the first time in two years,
we're getting this material that they've had
the entire time.
So I still don't, do we ever find out why,
why were they targeting you?
We never really came to that conclusion.
Why were they hiding this shit?
Because I mean, they could have just,
why didn't they just say, this guy was on PEDS?
That was the original plan.
It's big, maybe not a big,
but there's a little operation going on here
within this Buds class.
A bunch of candidates are on performance enhancing drugs.
This guy dies, all the symptoms are here.
This is what we found in the Boxer,
the cooler in his car.
Here's the text messages.
Case solved. That's what happened.
It'd be super nice.
Why did they go, why did they waste all this extra energy in hide shit and all this other stuff to pin it to you?
Well, that's what we're trying to find out. I've started a FOIA campaign to try to get the back end
communications and the records that would give us some
indication of their intent.
Why this happened in the first place?
And I can tell you, I filed multiple FOIA requests and
Privacy Act requests at all levels, Office of Legislative
Affairs, SECNAV, NSW.
I have yet to have one record produced.
And in fact, the most I've gotten is a total denial memo
from the current Chief of Staff for NSW,
guy named Captain Kurtz, who also is the guy
who we have reports is scouring regulations
to try to find something to stick to Brad.
So that's where we're at at this fight.
The next fight is the why.
And to get some freaking transparency on this issue
and find out what was going on.
But right now, I mean, what should be thousands of records,
I've got zero.
What's FOIA stand for?
Freedom of Information Act.
Well, I'll give you a great example.
So why aren't they giving up the records?
So I'll give you a great example. So why aren't they giving up the records? So I'll give you a great example on this one.
One of the foyers we know came from a press release at some point,
I think maybe it was the Times, I can't remember,
but they had requested access to that initial line of duty investigation,
which had been serialized, completed, done.
We talked about it last time.
Admiral Kitchener had independently verified it,
and then it got buried and changed once the Vice Chief No. at the time had said change it.
So someone got worried about this
and they were trying to get access to it.
I know from an insider who was sitting in a room
with a bunch of Jags and public affairs officers,
and they were trying to brainstorm ways
to say no to the FOIA request.
And at one point someone's idea was,
well, let's say that that was never completed investigation,
therefore by FOIA rules we don't have to release it.
At which point another person in the meeting said,
hey, you guys can't actually do that, that's illegal.
Like if you have a legitimate reason to say no, fine,
by the law, but you can't say that.
The response from one of the Jags in the room was,
yeah, but can you imagine how bad it would be
if this got out?
That's a problem.
And that's not a FOIA exemption.
That's a problem.
Here we are, it got out.
Yeah.
It comes back to, again, we don't know full intent yet,
but I do know that was the intent, like you said,
early on when Admiral Howard was still in command of WarCom.
That was his intent was, we're putting this behind us,
we know what happened, it's clear.
We're gonna do our best to preserve this guy's legacy
and not talk about all the bad stuff,
but we're done, we're moving on.
We also know that somewhere around there
is where the SecNav at the time had said,
no, this sounds like victim blaming, I don't like that.
That's when it started changing.
Back to some of the stuff Davis Yelts was saying
in our last episode here.
That's evidence of a problem within a culture
that's very similar to whatever you want to call it,
DEI, wokeness, whatever.
When you call someone a victim,
you're automatically placing them in an oppressor
and an oppressive relationship.
So now where's the oppressor?
If Kyle is the victim, where's the oppressor? We have to have an oppressor and an oppressor relationship. So now where's the oppressor? If Kyle is the victim, where's the oppressor?
We have to have an oppressor.
So that begins the hunt.
And as you talked about in the last episode,
as we all know in the military,
if you give the military a mission,
we'll get to the end state.
Hopefully we won't compromise ethics to get there.
And that's, in this case, that's what happened.
The end state is find an oppressor.
Thus began the hunt.
Geez.
Look, it's worse.
As we're now getting ready for this board of inquiry,
we heard through the grapevine validated
that there was a separate Bureau of Navy Medicine
independent investigation into the medical part of all this.
And we found out that they determined that there was no medical malpractice.
That our medical professionals met the standard of care expected of them.
No licenses were at risk.
So what are they going to do?
Just reinvestigate it over and over until they get it like they did the last time?
We don't know.
That was probably their hope.
But we asked for access to that BUMED investigation to fight the charges because one of them was
that I failed to provide proper medical oversight.
But if my medical professionals met the standard of care,
how do you draw that line?
They denied us access to the BUMED investigation.
It's privileged information, you guys can't have it.
So you inflated a charge against us,
you know that there's evidence that vindicates us,
and you deny us access to that evidence
while you're charging and moving forward, even worse.
The second charge is that we failed to maintain
a safe command blah, blah, blah led to Kyle's death.
When we knew that there was a safety investigation
out there, because I was debriefed on it.
Again, the numbers of investigations are ludicrous here,
but for the public, the way to describe
a safety investigation,
it's actually usually one of the most
reputable investigations because they come in and say,
hey, everyone has anonymity
and there will be absolutely no punitive actions
taken by anything the safety investigation finds.
And the goal there is to have everyone tell
the complete raw truth and expose
where we might have been acting unsafely
so we can fix that and not have to worry about
getting punished because of it.
The air community does this really, really well.
Navy pilots have a very good safety standard
when it comes to these stage investigations.
So the safety investigation actually got wrapped up
before I even left for my next job.
And we remember getting debriefed
from the investigating officers who said,
hey, listen, it's pretty clear what happened here.
Nothing that happened was unsafe based off of BTC TTPs,
tactics, techniques, procedures,
and none of that was related to Kyle's death.
This was a safe command case closed.
So we said, all right, well, now that you've elevated
and said, I ran an unsafe command resulting in Kyle's death,
we want access to that investigation, denied.
And that's one reason why they wanted
to avoid court martial here, right?
Yes.
In court marshals, you would have a judge, right?
Order production of exculpatory material
in the possession of the government, right?
We don't have that in an administrative board.
That's one of the parts they get to end run.
And the only way to really compel them
is to file an independent federal lawsuit
for injunctive relief from a judge to get that.
So they know they can deny us all day
and the recourse is difficult.
Geez.
Yeah.
The administrative process,
and this is part of the problem with the system,
is that they say it's non-punitive,
but it really is punitive.
Because through that administrative process,
you can give me another honorable discharge,
all administratively.
You can demote me in retirement,
separately administrative, you can take my Trident,
all administratively.
Those are very punitive things.
And you and I both know,
and you, I think, all served active duty, you give I both know, and you, I think all served active duty,
you give someone another than honorable discharge,
you're ruining the rest of their life potentially.
Good luck getting a job.
And they can do that administratively,
no, no, that's not non-punitive, that's very punitive.
And being shy of a court of law or court martial,
they can subvert due process laws
because, well, this is non-punitive.
So it's a play on words and it allows them to basically hide information that they know would
vindicate you because they want to meet their own state objective. I mean, even when this board was
happening and we started fighting it and trying to get this access to information and I was going
public with a few outlets, one of the people from NAVPERS,
Ken Burris' name is a commander, goes on the record
with one of these publications and said something about
we will find Captain Gary accountable.
It's like hang on a minute, dude.
A board of inquiry is supposed to be an objective
fact-finding administrative board,
and you're already talking in the open press
about you will find me accountable?
Sounds like a predetermined outcome, huh?
Almost like it's consistent with the entire process
we've seen, there's been very manipulative.
Well, and to show you the general disdain
they have for discovering this process,
back in 2018, actually 2016, there was a federal case
out of the Eastern District of New York
where the entire case was remanded to a new BOI because there wasn't sufficient
discovery given, meaning sufficient evidence provided about unlawful command influence
specifically.
And the court ordered that the regulation actually had expanded discovery rights and
that they needed to provide these tangential discovery pieces of evidence, right?
What was the Navy's response?
They went and amended the regulation in 2019,
1920.6 D instead of C to reduce the discovery rights
based on that case.
And that's the one we're operating under now.
So they continually try to tell me
that's insufficiently directly related, right?
To circle back to your question also,
it's important to note, why would they want to do this?
Why would they want to get this big?
Well, they're not used to people fighting back.
And so when they do it, they can determine their outcome.
They can hunt for anything they want administratively,
hold anything they want administratively,
and still punish you, and then tell someone out there,
we held someone accountable.
We did our job, and most people can't fight back. They either don't have the legal representation to fight back. They don't have the fight in them. It's it's looking at Goliath
It's looking at Goliath and they have infinite resources. And so I don't think they anticipated
It's impossible to win. Well, it's impossible to win unless yeah, unless you get loud
Well, and you're just loud. The system is totally, it is completely corrupt.
It's impossible to win unless you happen to have
a way to get the word out in front of millions of people
and get the attention of lawmakers.
We had great lawyers from Jason from the beginning,
Davis Younce, Mark Jessup, Tim Peralatore,
fantastic lawyers.
We had insiders feeding us the emails and the evidence,
like big black and white guys, case closed.
And then we had you and a couple other people
who had helped us drop breadcrumbs along the way
leading up to this episode or our last episode.
And then congressmen started jumping on that.
And that's really what gave us the avenues to win.
I mean, from the beginning we had Nick La Lota
from New York, congressman,
Morgan LeTroll from Texas and Corey Mills from Florida.
Those were the three congressmen that jumped on this
from the beginning.
And Senator Mark Wynne Mullen from Oklahoma.
Those four dudes talk about breathing life into our fight.
But as much as they raised issues,
the Navy still ignored it.
They still kind of kept it off to the side.
So it wasn't until after our show
where we started seeing that increase in attention.
Eli Crane was the first one
that came on board after we talked.
I talked to him this morning at breakfast
about a contact of a contact,
put us in touch with the Speaker of the House. That was a huge one. I talked to him this morning at breakfast about a contact of a contact,
put us in touch with the Speaker of the House.
That was a huge one.
We met with him for half an hour.
What did he say?
How was that meeting?
He was shocked.
He was shocked.
And he's like, hey, I'm on your side.
I'm going to support you on this one.
It was fantastic.
And this guy that got us the meeting,
just an incredible American, just called me one day.
I told you, hey, Brad, can you get to Tucson?
I got us a meeting with the Speaker of the House
for half an hour if you can make it.
I'm like, what?
The Speaker of the House?
Oh yeah.
Then the big one in there too,
we started getting some more senators.
Senator Tom Cotton jumped on board.
He's a heavy hitter, he started helping.
Senator Tommy Tuberville, huge heavy hitter,
started helping.
I hope I said it right, Tuberville or Tuberville? Tuberville. Is it Tuberville? huge heavy hitter, started helping. I hope I said it right.
Tuberville or Tuberville?
Tuberville.
Tuberville?
I think.
I always mess it up.
I'm sorry, Senator.
I always mess it up.
Coach is what everyone calls him.
His now security advisor, David Jansen,
I've become very good friends.
But so all of that started growing.
And then the one that was really the big pivot point
was Congressman Brian Mast from South Florida.
Ironically, President Trump's personal congressman.
So his chief of staff, Steven Leighton,
links us up from another team guy after our show.
And he gives me the time of day,
listens to everything, he goes,
okay, here's what we're gonna do.
He had started this new Justice for Warriors caucus.
And so he said,
this is exactly what this thing exists for.
And so he partnered me with the chief of staff,
some of his other staff, James Langendorfer
and Derek Miller.
They said, we're gonna draft a letter
that'll be from Congress to the Secretary of Defense,
and then I want you to schedule a trip to come out to DC,
and we're gonna shop this ride
and try to get as many cosigners as possible.
They said, the key is,
you can't come to DC without a plan.
We're coming with an ask and all we're asking for
is your signature.
And so that was really the tipping point after our show
which drove success because that ended with that first
letter that I think we had over 30 senators and congressmen
co-sign it.
Wow.
It was powerful man.
And they were bringing up all the things that we talked about.
And it was basically saying, hey, Secretary of Defense, we don't like what we're seeing.
These quotes that I mentioned earlier, we're seeing gross ethical violations. We're seeing
lack of investigative process. We're seeing a lot of alarming things. They sent us the Secretary
in September, calm, silent from DOD for another little bit.
The Navy kept doing all the things we just talked about
and so then they sent a second letter
on I think December 9th
and that's when they were really mad
because they were like, hey, not only are you ignoring us,
you're showing contempt for Congress,
but you continue to deny them access to the evidence
that we all know vindicates them, what are we doing?
And through insiders, we knew that the prosecuting attorney
for that board of inquiry, who was doing his own questioning
and fact finding in preparation,
was openly discussing with people.
He's like, we have no case.
Who orchestrates all these congressmen and senators?
I mean, somebody's-
Dude, there is no master orchestrator.
Is it you guys, the attorneys?
We just flat-footed it.
We walked everywhere. You're driving blind. Yeah. And there's so much
that was really really interesting. I learned a lot about Congress and I
learned I never want to be a part of it. It's chaos.
Amen. It's chaos. But it was great because you saw that relationships matter and so
there was one where I'm with Senator Mark when Mullen in an elevator and in comes Senator Barrasso.
And Mullen's like, hey, I need you to take a look at this.
Listen to Brad, he's got an important story.
You can trust me.
He's like, I need you to be on this team.
He's like, sounds good, I'm in.
So like in an elevator,
all of a sudden you get another signature.
Or like Morgan Littrell and Eli Crane
and a couple of other guys, one of the nights,
they said, hey, there's a vote on the House floor tonight.
Here's what we're gonna do.
We're gonna bring you in with the Fire Mask Chief of Staff,
Steven Leighton, and we're gonna have the letter,
and then we're gonna be all shuttling dudes off the floor
into the cloakroom where you're gonna be standing there
in your whites and you're gonna give them
the five minute elevator speech about everything
that's happened and what we need and where we're going.
And we got, I think like 25 signatures that night
in about an hour period by people just coming in,
listening to the pitch.
Some of them were like,
hey, I know that dude, I trust him.
He signed it, I'm good.
So it was really interesting watching how these guys
interact, the relationships.
And it was incredible because it was,
I mean, it was frenzy.
It was a frenzy.
What was interesting is who didn't talk to us though, right?
Like that they made this partisan.
Right.
I mean nobody in the left would talk to us.
I mean, at all.
It was really interesting.
Here we are uncovering institutional corruption,
lying to the American people,
and not a single, to my recollection,
not a single Democrat returned our call.
And even-
You approached him?
You did approach him.
You called him.
Cold call to reach out.
I stopped by my own representative's offices
and said, hey, I'm here from Colorado.
Not a single response.
Why do you think that is?
I think, I mean, my opinion,
and I think what we're seeing is that
they generally support institutional corruption as long as it fits their ends, right?
And they didn't wanna do anything to embarrass
the administration in that time period
and didn't wanna do anything that could be at all
tracked back to an administration
that was going to an election.
And so they just ignored us, right?
It should be bipartisan issues.
Yeah, truth is bipartisan.
Everyone should care about this.
Yeah.
It's a big deal.
What a shame.
What a shame.
I mean, it's ironic now that obviously
this administration is doing some very interesting things.
And I've heard some of the criticisms is,
oh, you're politicizing roles
that are supposed to be apolitical.
And I have to laugh, because it's like, no,
the people that are being fired
allowed those roles to become politicized.
This is the correction measure.
This is the return to the politicization.
And the military should be apolitical.
We 100% should be.
But we've lost our way as a military
and I think we're seeing the correction come.
Great example, I mentioned Beef Drexler,
he was one of the other three wrapped into this thing with us.
He and I were great, but we were having coffee
and he was telling me how one of his kids,
I can't remember whether it was son or daughter,
but one of his kids, he was just talking to the kid
and said, hey, I'm curious what's going on
with all the recruitment challenges
and why people aren't joining the Navy
and the Marine Corps and the duty in general.
And his kid said, well, yeah, dad,
we all see it at high school level
and it's just become very politicized.
And Beef said, well, the military is apolitical though.
And his kid just looked at him eyebrow raised,
like really, you're going to say that
after what's happened to all of you guys?
And he had to shrug his shoulders and be like,
yeah, you're right.
I mean, the public saw this.
Kids were seen in high school.
You can't fool kids.
They saw the politicization of the military
and now finally were coming back to being,
focusing on lethality, focusing on war fighting.
Like, it was so needed, so needed.
So what was it that kind of turned the tides then?
Was it all the congressmen and senators?
It was, the two letters.
So that second letter, December 9th, they sent it,
and it was strongly worded.
It's out there, it's released.
I would encourage people to read it.
What did it say?
Oh gosh, I mean, like I've quoted,
gross ethical violations. like this is absurd.
They said, we demand at this point,
you drop all charges against Brad Geary and Eric Raimi,
let him retire, and we want a new investigation
into the corruption that we have seen here,
the institutional corruption we've seen here.
As far as I know, they answered the first part,
they dropped the charges between me and Eric Raimi,
but they've not started an investigation into the institutional corruption.
But that was released on December 9th,
very, very strongly worded, and then December 12th
is when I got the phone call that they were dropping
all charges, finally.
Jason, what would the repercussions have been
had they dug their feet in?
Had they dug their feet in?
And not dropped the charges with a letter like that,
with all those signatures.
I mean, there's no direct repercussions.
I think that that was one of my more surprising
pieces of knowledge gained in this thing,
is that the military has a large ability
to ignore Congress if they want to.
Of course, you've got Tuberville
who's willing to freeze appointments, right?
So maybe you would have seen some downstream freezing on some promotions.
But as far as like direct consequences, unless called to a hearing under subpoena, there's
almost no direct consequences for just continuing to do what they want to do.
And why did they fold?
Well, I actually have a slightly different view.
I think it was a combined arms attack here
that got us there, but there were some key pieces
of evidence released to us.
One, the text messages from his phone.
Two, a great deal of photos that purport to be
of Seaman Mullen's car, and let me just say again,
this is our rational perception of the evidence,
but what they released to me was tons of photos of drugs,
black market performance enhancing drugs
with used syringes, all kinds of stuff,
I mean reams of stuff were finally produced to us.
Why were those produced to you?
Finally in discovery.
So by linking it to Brad's actions did cause grievous bodily injury or death, right?
Even the administrative prosecutor who admitted he didn't have a case despite rule 3.1 that requires him not to take frivolous actions forward.
But despite that, he still understood that they have a discovery obligation that minimally tracked to the NCIS investigation, right?
That they had yet to give us.
And this was the NCIS investigation
that was done like that day.
And all of this evidence had been in their hands.
And we asked, I asked a basic question.
I said, okay, so we've got a drug case now.
Where's the tox lab results
for all the drugs that were in his car, right?
And they came back and said, we didn't test them.
Now, this is where I start to have significant concerns
that when we get to our FOIA information,
that we're going to find that the SecNAB office
stopped the investigation because there has not been a single NCIS investigation
I've ever been associated with,
either prosecuting or defending,
where NCIS obtained and seized a drug
or something purporting to be a drug,
even half used syringes and did not test the substance.
So I think somebody hit the off switch
and I don't know why yet.
But that's the only thing that-
So what happens when you find out who it was
and why they did it?
I mean, we go public, right?
What does that do?
I mean, it's public humiliation.
Is that a career-ender?
Do you have any recourse for that?
If they're still active duty,
and we find that happened 100%,
I mean, now you've got them on,
that's unlawful command influence to like an end degree.
Yeah, I mean, I think the point is,
is that we've always been dedicated
to the objective truth record, right?
And the objective truth record, thanks to you,
has had to play out publicly.
And this is an extension of that,
that ultimately now we are litigating,
not just to fully restore Brad,
but to make the truth record unassailable.
So that all of this crap that they've been saying for years
gets cut through and we deal with facts.
So that's my interest.
My interest now is to not only vindicate
Cabanieri, Hiscadre and everyone else,
but to ensure that the American people
see that there is still processes
by which we are able to stick to
and expose objective truth.
Are there still processes to that?
Well, I mean, that's part of what we think needs to change.
I mean, this whole system has to be overhauled.
It's interesting, we referred to the,
what we're seeing
as criminal history.
I don't ever hear anything good happening.
I mean, it's not, and I think people-
They bury whoever they're, I mean, look.
Yeah, right.
Got this shit all over my wall over here.
We got the Blackwater guys, they hid the drone evidence,
we got the Eddie Gallagher charges, we got Jira stuff.
Just the other day I did this interview with Josh Mass.
You guys hear about that?
I haven't heard that one yet.
Adopted an Al-Qaeda baby, now they're trying to.
Well, that's the Marine?
Yeah, that's the Marine.
I'm tracking it.
It's just like, what are we doing here?
Right.
Is there anything?
I mean.
All the pardons come out
right before the administration change
yeah ton of them the way we just like those blanket pardons yeah I mean with
prospect is there any justice here anymore isn't serious I'm not fucking
around no is there yeah no you can get it you have to work hard at it you can't
stop and often you go 10x and you get 1X. You get something.
Epstein's short list, P-ditty list.
Bad.
What the fuck is going on, man?
Well, we're seeing, I mean,
we were just talking about this in the car.
I think what we're seeing with this election
is somewhat of a, it's a beautiful thing
because it's a peaceful revolution in a lot of ways.
It's the American public seeing all this happen for so long
in so many different forums saying like enough,
we want radical transparency and accountability.
And so you're seeing that,
you're seeing President Trump execute that
through Elon Musk with Doge,
you're seeing it through Secretary Hegset,
what he's doing right now,
radical transparency and accountability.
And I think the way we've done business in the past
is irrelevant because of the way,
the things you've talked about on this show,
the shift from legacy media to long-form podcasts,
the shift from trusting a news source
to give you the truth to,
let's actually find out from the source themselves
and stop trusting people to filter,
package it up into an executive narrative
and give it to me as they see fit based upon their bias and
So it's a massive revolution And I think we're seeing the same we're gonna need to see the same things in the Navy in the Department of Defense in
General is a shift to understanding that hey man the old days are gone from you being able to
Send a three-line public affairs officer narrative
Let that appease the public and the Navy all while you kind of say, don't look over here
while we administratively punish these people
on the namesake of good or in discipline and accountability.
Now, sailors are tired of it and you're gonna,
they're going to need to evolve back to Gen Z
to be relevant to what this generation expects
as they enter the workforce
and are the larger dominant part of it now.
We gotta change everything. got to change everything.
We got to change everything.
They're going to demand radical transparency,
just like the American public's demanding it now.
And I don't mean operationally.
We shouldn't tell off our top secret stuff,
but how we handle these types of things,
we have to be more radically transparent.
And if you don't, if they don't, if they fail to evolve,
you're going to have more guys like me
sit in this chair calling them out.
Yeah. Yeah. I mean, so the case got dismissed, but now they're, now they're,
they're coming after you again. Yeah. So how are they coming after you?
Yeah, it's, it's, it's good. Um, so there's another administrative instruction out there
that somebody signed at some point that probably we started for a very good reason.
Just like we talked about risk management last time,
great intentions turned into a military process,
oftentimes subvert the very intent behind
the idea from the beginning.
So they found this instruction that says basically,
if you submit for retirement within two years
of substantiated allegations
as part of investigation against you,
they can send you to a independent board
for a pay grade determination.
So in other words, they can demote me in retirement
all administratively simply because
we're within a two year window
from that NETZ investigation being finalized.
Now the problem here is that you could interpret
that instruction a couple different ways. The way I think you should interpret it is that you could interpret that instruction a couple of different ways.
The way I think you should interpret it is
that was not a credible investigation.
Congress's words, grossly unethical,
lacked investigative integrity.
So to say that that investigation represents credible
allegations against me and Eric Ramey, well, that's false.
That's the whole reason the whole thing got dropped.
But yet you're using that because I filed for retirement
and they said, well, we're gonna pursue this board anyway.
We're just, Brad, we're following the instruction
as we're supposed to and we're trusting the process.
So, okay.
It basically means a biased investigation
of biased investigators findings
that are unsupported by the objective record
can dictate whether or not you lose thousands in retirement.
And I know that they're subjectively targeting me
because one of my other peers was just part
of a whole nother investigation,
he just submitted retirement, got it approved.
So they're arbitrarily picking me,
which shows us that, okay,
you're making a deliberate choice here.
You clearly did not like what we've done and how we've handled this.
And you're intent on finding a way to get to me.
I just can't stop. It's like, help me help you, man.
Like, please, I mean...
Phil, I mean, why don't they just want it to end?
You think. You think.
Who's the lead on this?
Chief of Naval personnel. How long till Pete fires him? You think who's the lead on this chief enable personnel
How long till peace fires him
Can't get in a heart in my book can't be soon enough in my book
Chief enable personnel, what's his name Admiral Cheeseman? Oh
This is the cheese. Yeah, same guy who was in the email same guy who signed and
Less name notice the board.
Cheese.
I mean, so they're trying to pull,
so they're basically trying to take your retirement.
Well, they're trying to demote me in retirement,
which is basically, it's taken a large chunk
of your retirement.
Yeah, I'm not sure actually,
because you're supposed to get the higher three average
when you retire, so whatever pay averaged out
for the last three years.
So even if you demote me in rank,
I don't know if it affects the pay exactly.
So it could be a nothing burger, but it's still,
it's them.
It's a black eye.
It's a black eye, and they're trying to do it
at a spite, I think, when I know that they didn't have to,
and they don't have to.
You can choose to interpret that.
And there's no reason to.
Yeah.
And there's nothing that stops them from saying, I've determined that investigation's not credible
and you're not subject to this regulation.
Go ahead and retire.
Well, and the funny thing too is they've dragged this thing out for so long.
March 24th next month, we hit the two years from that investigation.
So all we did was say pull my retirement
Cancel it. I'm gonna resubmit it on March 25th that exceeds your statute of limitations. I get to retire as a captain
So there's a mechanism we're working through it But it it just exposes their intent that the fact that they can't let go and they just keep trying these things
So Admiral Cheeseman, hmm
can't let go and they just keep trying these things. So Admiral Cheeseman.
Junior to be specific.
Junior, Cheeseman Junior.
Nice.
Anything else?
Are they coming at you for anything else?
No, I mean.
Have you heard from,
has there been any response from Kyle Mullen's family?
So what we heard through the news
is that the Navy told Regina Mullin
that new information had come to light
and that's all they would tell her
on why they canceled our BOI.
We don't know what that new information is.
We have suspicions based on our demand
that they test the drugs, the vials of alleged drugs, right?
That who knows what was in them, what kind of contaminants,
who knows the purity, who knows what drugs were even in them
or not in them.
We suspect that might have been in the calculus there
in getting our whole thing dropped,
but we don't know for sure.
Other than that, we haven't heard too much.
Yeah, it was around the same time period they withdrew
that we were expecting the results back.
So there's some correlation there.
No good. Yeah.
No good.
What are we missing? I mean, that's the majority of. Okay. Yeah. Okay. What are we missing?
I mean, that's the majority of what they've done since then.
Did anybody ever apologize to you?
One guy did.
Yeah, because we talked about that at the end, right?
I said, I love, you know, we want to leave that open,
that forgiveness piece.
One guy has apologized since our show,
Master Chief, that I think very highly of.
And he said it well.
It was a powerful text, actually brought me to tears
because we had been very close friends
and I'm paraphrasing it now,
but he said basically, we should have stood by you.
We should not have let lies perpetuate
and we should have rallied around our teammate.
Instead, we didn't.
And he said, I'm sorry for that and will you forgive me?
So he and I have totally reconciled.
Good.
Yeah, there's some goodness in that.
And yeah, there's a lot of goodness in that.
I wish more had, I wish,
but back to our first discussion
about power causing brain damage.
I don't think a lot of people understand,
they legitimately think their actions are right because they're
defending the institution.
And so they justify this in some sort of a moral relativism and a misplacement of loyalty,
right?
It's like you're being, back to the splinter in the log, you're being willfully blind about
what's really going on right now, and you're misplacing your loyalty to the institution
above the
Constitution.
That's a very, very dangerous thing to do.
And those two in sequence like that is a very, very dangerous thing to do.
That's how you end up with institutional corruption.
That's how you end up with a Navy that no longer adheres to honor curging commitment.
We've got to see these changes.
How do you think, I mean, how do you think that this case affected Naval Special special warfare, the sentiment, the morale,
the guys that are actually out there doing the job,
not the Admiral Cheeseman's?
Yeah, I can tell you how it affected them.
How did it affect retention?
How did it affect the sentiment?
How did it affect morale?
I mean, you gotta have a lot,
I would assume that the the maybe I should make assumptions
But I mean if I was still in and I was you know a young operator still still
You know gung-ho about being a seal and going and doing the job up. It would it would cause a complete distrust
Yes, and then in the entire institution and I would I don't serve that kind of shit. I would have left
There is a growing trust gap and I mean I hear from the guys
The break is it about at my peer enough some of my peers are for me doing it this way
They saw all the actions I took before this to try to diffuse this
But but but some of them yeah, like we've talked about,
just no matter what my reasonings were,
they're gonna disapprove.
But the majority of the force that I've talked to,
the operators, the shooters,
there's a trust gap growing
in how they've seen this thing handled.
And what they would love to see right now, I think,
I still have coffee with some of my old buds candidates too.
So like we're still talking
and they're giving me the,
this is what the platoons are saying. What they would love to see is the community rally
and say, hey, we messed this up.
We should have stood by our teammate.
We should have been under the boat with him.
We should have defended our own by lies from the outside.
And we should have done that at all costs.
We used to be the shining example
of how to do this in Naval Special Warfare.
We used to do really, really good
at taking care of our people. We didn't do it in this case. And they would love to be the shining example of how to do this in naval special warfare. We used to do really, really good
at taking care of our people.
We didn't do it in this case.
And they would love to see the force come together
and say, we messed it up.
We're gonna AAR this and we're gonna figure out
how we did this, what we did wrong
and promise that we're never gonna let this happen again.
We're gonna take care of our people.
Soft truth number one,
humans are more important
than hardmare, show them, show them.
Right now we're never showing them.
And I don't want to over inflate my case.
It's not just about me, but my case is a symptom
of a larger problem that they are seeing crystal clear.
Back to Gen Z, they are incredibly intuitive,
this generation is very interesting.
I got to see a lot of them coming up through buds.
They're very intuitive, high EQ.
They're very mindful.
And they're not going to tolerate this.
They're not going to tolerate it.
They see the trend line.
They see that, hey, this is not the organization
I thought it was.
There's massive trust gaps.
One guy said it really well to me.
He was in E6 recently. He's like, hey sir, they criticize us at the platoons
for being a pirate culture.
He said, yet we are a pirate culture
because they drive us to be, because we don't trust them.
So they show themselves to be untrustworthy,
senior officers out there, not all of them,
I don't want to overgeneralize, but a couple of them.
And so we isolate ourselves,
which they interpret to be a pirate culture,. They're the ones that have caused that
Yeah, that's a tough one man our guys leaving no, yeah massive retention problems right now
And again, it's not not because of me
But they see the larger problems and massive attrition or retention problems across the force right now.
I mean, I don't think we've seen this many
05s and 06s getting out in a long time.
They're scratching their heads.
So what does that look like?
What is that gap?
So you've got a bunch of admirals
and you have massive retention problems
and you got what, like a bunch of E4s?
and he got what like a
Bunch of e4s Well, I mean like who's gonna fill that gap. That's the problem, right?
You have to replenish the force and so a lot of these admirals and stuff
They've never even been to combat so they didn't have any experience
so who's gonna
Who's gonna fill in the gap here and
So who's gonna fill in the gap here and teach the younger generation how to fight a war
when these guys have been sitting behind a fucking desk
their entire career?
Well, thankfully a lot of our emeralds
do have combat experience.
And even when they leave, guys in my generation
are still coming up through the ranks.
I'm looking at the guys right now
in command at the O5 level.
I'm very encouraged by what I'm seeing in some of these combat leaders.
So we still have that and that institutional knowledge will continue to get handed down.
What I'm more concerned about is that the majority of our base force is the E5s and
E6s, right?
That's the largest pool of bodies that comes out of BUDs and does one or two platoons.
And if we're driving them out of the teams
faster than we can replenish them,
that's a problem.
Because now we're going to degrade
what Naval Special Warfare can even resource
when it comes to what our nation asks us to do.
And the inevitable problem that comes from that usually
is if you're having a hard time replenishing the force,
well then they increase the pressure to produce more.
Well, if you're increasing the pressure to produce more, Well, if you're increasing the pressure to produce more,
that usually means you're reducing the standard
in order to get more.
And that's kind of what we talked about.
I mean, we just labeled the cartels terrorist organizations.
I would think people,
I think I would think guys would be excited to stay
in this exciting time.
We're potentially on the cusp of World War III,
you know, TBD to see how that plays out.
We've got China tapping at the door, you know, with Taiwan.
I mean, there's a lot of shit going on
and we have major retention problems,
not only in the US military,
but in Naval Special Warfare, which are the war fighters.
Yeah, man.
That's why we've said in this that truth and transparency
is a national security issue.
100%, all this is linked to that.
100%.
And yeah, man.
Plus all the COVID stuff, a bunch of things left.
We drove dudes out.
And who's left?
I mean, there's really good dudes left for sure.
But here we are, all-volunteer force
We took away the 20-year pension also by the way
So so you mean we took away the 20 so they no longer offer a 20-year pension for people to join the military
What yeah that went away a couple years ago, you know, it's now a
Contributed retirement plan for one. Yeah, they can go with you but
You got to be shitty. Oh, no, I went away, that was like 10 years ago, dude.
I didn't even know that.
Yeah, so that was a huge incentive
for a lot of people to stay is,
hey, I can keep serving, but I can guarantee myself
some financial stability for the later parts of life,
knowing that I'm losing marketability on the outside, right?
Every day we stay and then we get older,
like you're missing opportunities out there.
But you don't do it for the money,
we do it for the service.
But yeah, that's still a big carrot
that used to be there to dangle, so now that's gone.
I mean, what incentives are you providing people
to stay in the military these days
when you've taken away some of them?
Back to what we talked about last time as leaders,
all of our decisions have to be either incentivizing or disincentivizing
a particular behavior.
What are we hoping to achieve here?
I don't see us providing a lot of incentives
to our young troops to want to serve.
When they see the administrative system
and the NJP system abusing their own,
doing things like they did with us,
and I've lost count of the people that hit me up
on LinkedIn after our show, same thing happened to me, same thing happened to me.
I mean, thousands of people.
And you start connecting dots and talking to other people
who know of other thousands in the Army
and in the Marines and whatever.
This is a really, really alarming trend
and we are driving people out of the military
because we punish so severely, sometimes unjustly,
sometimes even when a guy does something right, the
punishment is so disproportionate that it's driving them out too.
I'll give you a great example.
One of my candidates when I was at BTC hurt himself and then he goes home for Christmas
break and his mom gives him some CBD pills and she's like, hey, this will help your healing.
There's a lot of science on it.
This doesn't have THC, don't worry about it.
And he's like, okay, so he does it.
Now he violated a Navy instruction.
You're not supposed to take CBD, whether it has THC or not.
But he ended up, it did have THC,
so he popped positive on a test.
So we did the investigation.
He confessed immediately.
He was a really, really sharp young man,
totally honest and forthcoming. So we said, all right, let he was a really, really sharp young man,
totally honest and forthcoming. So we said, all right, let's find a way
to help this guy fall forward.
We took him to mass and I found him not guilty
of knowingly ingesting a controlled substance
because he didn't knowingly ingest THC,
but I did have to find him guilty
for knowingly violating US policy,
but it was a much lower offense
than knowingly taking a controlled substance.
I thought, this is the way to help him fall forward, great.
I still had to job him from the program,
but wrote a huge letter on his behalf.
This is a man of honor, he has integrity, he confessed.
Let's go, he's going to be a phenomenal leader
in the Navy somewhere else.
So we catapulted him off to success.
I get a call from him, hey sir, having some hangups.
They're asking for an admiral letter.
So I ask Admiral Howard, he writes a letter on his behalf.
Okay, we'll get him to another community.
Another year later he calls me,
hey sir, I'm up for my security clearance review
because I have a guilty mass to my record.
I need you to write another letter for me
if you're willing and able to convince them
to renew my security clearance
that I'm still trustworthy.
Okay, another year goes by.
Hey sir, I'm up for promotion.
They're stalling my promotion because of our masks
two and a half years ago now.
Can you write me another letter?
Sure, I'll write you another letter.
And so what we saw is that administrative,
bureaucratic machine just take over
and continually punish this guy
because well these are our processes
and these are in our instructions.
And so we just kept beating him down.
Years after he should have been able to fall forward
and recover from what was a bad mistake,
but like should be survivable.
And that's what we see, that's a micro example,
but I think that's what sailors, soldiers, and airmen
are seeing at a macro level consistently with their friends.
Like why would I keep serving?
When I make one small mistake,
that would cost me nothing as a civilian.
Not even a blip on the radar.
But look what happened to me,
and look what happened to my buddy over here for the next
four years he's dealing with this.
Zero defect mentality and then disproportionate punishment.
Yeah.
I mean, that's what we're seeing across the board.
Geez.
It's demoralizing.
The human toll is huge. It's huge. Yeah. The human toll is huge.
It's huge.
Yeah.
Let's take a quick break.
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All right, we're back from the break. Where were we? I think we were talking about Gen Z.
That's right.
I'm actually interested. How is Gen Z in Naval Special Warfare, other than just pissed off,
rightly so, and leaving in droves?
Yeah. I like them. I like them a lot.
What is that generation like?
So every generation...
In combat and in the community.
Yeah, I don't know in combat yet, I guess,
because these guys are just getting into the workforce
right now, right?
So, I think the last ones that saw combat
were probably millennials,
but we're making that shift right now,
and I think it's an important shift.
It's interesting, Simon Sinek wrote a book,
he's written a few, but Leaders Eat Last
is one of my favorites,
and he talks about these generational differences
and how important it is as leaders to evolve
to be relevant to these next generations.
So my observations with Gen Z,
we talked a little bit, very high EQ, very impressive.
They have a low tolerance for abusive authority.
They're unimpressed.
It's interesting.
Some people look at them as you're too disrespectful.
Like you don't value the hierarchical structure
that we put in place.
I don't see it as that actually.
I think it's that they've got a lot more courage
to stand up to authority than any of us ever did.
Let me give you an example.
We had this young guy in Buds
and he had a mistake out in town.
And so he was gonna come before me as the CEO board,
that whole process we talked about last time
where I was gonna determine whether he was gonna stay
or go in our system.
And like we talked about, every candidate writes a letter.
It's their last appeal.
I read it before we bring them in
and then question them and make our decisions,
but the title of his letter was Fear No Man.
Right, that's interesting.
That sticks out, that's a little different.
So already I was like, what's this guy's deal?
So my CMC Dave Hanson's like, hey, yo,
let me put some rounds across this guy's bow.
Let's try to rattle him.
Let's find out what this is all about.
Is this ego?
Is this guy have an ego here?
So dude comes in, sits down,
and my CMC's just letting him have it.
I mean, like yelling, like,
if you've ever been on the receiving end of Dave Hanson,
you know, giving it to you, not a great place to be.
And I'm watching this guy's body language the whole time.
Just like you and I are sitting here right now,
dude, if we had a pulse oximeter on him, whatever it is,
I don't think his pulse would have jumped one beat.
Dude just sat there and took it.
He was so secure in himself.
And he was like, hey, I don't think I made a mistake.
Here's what I did.
Here are the facts of my case.
I stand by it.
I regret that we're in this room
and we found ourselves here,
but I stand by my decisions and what I did and my choices.
And we're sitting there and so we're like,
this guy's impressive.
And so I hit him up on the last question
I asked him I said a man. I have a question for you wrote fear no man
Right now I've got all the authority in the world
To let you continue on in your dream and becoming a Navy SEAL or end your career right now moving on to something else
Do you fear me and?
Without skipping a beat this dude leans forward. He goes, no sir, but I respect you.
That's Gen Z in a nutshell.
I was so impressed.
Not only was I impressed,
having gone through what now I've gone through,
I can tell you, I thought of him probably every single day
I was going through this struggle,
because I'm like, how do I get what that dude has?
As a 22 year old man, to look an 06 in the eyes
and have no fear, he did not fear me.
He respected me.
How do I do that?
Because I was very afraid when I started this journey
and started pushing back against authority
and saying, this is wrong.
I think we're having a problem here, guys.
I was very afraid to do that.
I was very afraid to confront people
with higher rank than me.
So I'm looking to this Gen Z guy,
20-something years younger than me,
I'm like, I'm inspired by this guy.
I gotta learn from him.
Wow.
They're impressive, man.
Like, that takes big balls.
And you don't just fake that.
That was genuine.
Other things I saw with this generation, man.
Some of them.
So you would say that's a common alibi throughout Gen Z.
I saw a lot of that in Gen Z, yes, yeah.
That's one story, but I saw things like that.
So it's a good one to use to kind of, I think,
use an example to say that this is pretty consistent
what I saw across this generation. We always like to pick on, I think, use an example to say that this is pretty consistent with what I saw across this generation.
We always like to pick on the next generations,
make fun of them, obviously,
because they're different from ours.
Some of the things I did notice that are negatives,
they don't, to quote an Italian soft guy,
they don't bruise well.
And what I mean is some of them were helicopter parented,
I think, growing up, and so they can't handle,
they don't handle failure well.
When they fail at something,
sometimes they emotionally crumble.
And we saw candidates do that.
We saw candidates do that.
One guy, this guy was a total stud.
Class leader, class OIC.
I mean, he looked like he was chiseled
out of the, like the granite of Oklahoma.
Like this guy was just quintessential,
what you think of as you want as a potential seal officer.
Great dude, showed a lot of great leadership attributes.
Class loved him, very charismatic.
Everyone was running with this guy.
And then on day one of first phase,
he failed his first four mile time run and he quit.
Failed it by like two seconds and he quit.
We're like, what?
You almost want to like,
how do you rewind the clock sometimes and say,
no, no, no, don't say that.
But he said it and you know how that is.
You don't unring that bell.
And so our country like, why did you do that, dude?
Like you were crushing this program.
Everyone loved you.
And he said, well, how can I lead men
if I can't hold the standard myself?
Now our point to him was that's admirable.
However, you missed the entire point of our program.
Nobody ever succeeds at everything.
How do you lead through adversity is a better question.
How do you lead when you don't succeed?
Because as we talked about, the enemy gets a vote.
Sometimes you can do all the right things on target
and still be caught on your heels.
How do you lead in those cases?
So that was a negative that I saw in their generation.
But that wasn't consistent with all of them,
but a lot of them.
And they are, they have an incredible sense of teammanship.
One more story and then we'll move on I think,
but this one time I was coming out of a couple months
of a boot, I had broken my foot.
And so I was not in the best shape.
I hadn't been in a boot for like three months.
And my first phase OIC, total stud, he's like,
hey sir, we're doing the Murph as a class.
We're gonna lead the Murph for one of these PT's.
It was, I think we were at the,
one of the anniversaries of Red Wings
or one of these things.
And are you in?
And in my mind, I'm thinking like,
dude, I'm not in shape to do a Murph
in front of candidates right now.
But how do you say no?
You know, he's the skipper, so yeah, of course I'll be there.
So me and my CMC show up and we're doing this,
and man I was sucking, like bad, bad.
And I'm so far behind everyone else,
they're like knocking out all their reps.
For those out there don't know what the Murph is,
you can look it up, but it's a mile run.
I think it's 100 pull-ups, 200 push-ups, and 300 squats.
Is that right?
And then another mile run?
I think that's right.
So I'm still cranking out my reps,
and these guys are already done with their reps,
and they've started their second run.
And it's just me and my CMC on the grinder now,
still doing the reps.
Like we're that far behind everybody
because I'm not out of shape.
And it was embarrassing.
I was humiliated as a CEO.
My CMC was a good teammate.
He was pretending that like he was hanging with me like,
oh no, it's not you dragging me back, but it totally was.
He was just being a good swim buddy.
So we start our run and now guys are actually coming back
from the last run.
And I'm so beat down and defeated and depressed
as I'm running through the sand.
I'm looking at my feet, I'm depressed,
I'm watching the sweat fall off my face.
And I'm thinking like, how do I salvage this moment
as the CEO here when I wasn't hanging with these dudes
and I've embarrassed myself.
And I get to the turnaround point, hit it,
turn around and start to run back and I've embarrassed myself. And I get to the turnaround point, hit it, turn around and start to run back
and I see something different.
I look up and I see my first phase O,
I see coming back to pick me up.
And as he comes around the corner,
a candidate's behind him, another candidate behind him,
another candidate behind him.
No one told him to do this.
They came back, filed in right behind me,
didn't say a word, just got in place,
marched with me to pick me up as a straggler.
There was no condemnation in their eyes.
There was no pity.
There was nothing other than we're here to be a teammate.
And as we're marching now, all of a sudden,
like another one files in, another whole class,
I start to get a little bit better.
My gait opens up, my breathing fixes,
I'm starting to get, okay, that surge of energy,
and my first phase OIC whispers behind me,
it's always nice knowing someone's coming back for you.
And this was this class, and they just did it.
And then we come around the corner,
they do their class chant, I'm joining in the chant,
dude, I got goosebumps, like,
man, these guys are incredible. Super inspirational.
Just one more, I can't stop.
One more.
We're at San Clemente Island.
Dave and I, and we hear this weird noise.
We come around the corner, sun's going down,
and the whole class is standing around the American flag
and they're doing colors.
And they're lowering it,
and they're singing the national anthem as a class.
So we stop, salute, do the thing.
And I look at the instructors, I said,
hey, do we mandate that?
Is that something like it we've forced them to do?
They're like, no, no, they just do it on their own.
They started it a couple of classes back to tradition
and they just kept passing it on.
These patriots just love their country
and they bring so much to the table.
Not to mention the fact that they're incredibly innovative.
Man, it's cool to hear.
Yeah, that's something I want to dive into a little bit.
Breakfast we were talking about, they are innovators.
And they're fast innovators and it sounds like
the military in general
is having a hell of a time.
It's impossible for them to keep up.
Right.
You were talking about that.
And so it sounds like the SEAL teams need their own science
and technology shop.
Well, I mean, you could just say Gen Z Run, you know, because they are the science and tech.
These guys, I mean, they grew up on cell phones.
They understand coding, they understand man machine pairing
in ways that we can't understand from our generation.
I didn't get my first smartphone
till what, like mid 30s or early 30s, maybe.
And so they are automatically looking at problems
through a different lens than we'll ever get to.
On top of that
You know while we did some great things in the war on terror and we evolved as a as a as a war fighting entity
I think that a lot of that is built scar tissue and is irrelevant in the fight to come and
So we're holding on to that is my generation a little bit like no no we were successful because we did it this way
Well, that's irrelevant and successful because we did it this way.
Well, that's irrelevant.
And Gen Z sees that it's irrelevant.
And in a sense, we're almost slowing them down
as a military, our acquisition process in general
is too slow.
It's a five, we talked about this,
it's a five year cycle.
And that's if you have a requirement written
to get something into the cycle and funded
in order to get it in the warfighters hands.
And what we're hearing from the front lines of Ukraine is that they're on a 30 day cycle
of evolution right now, where they come up with a new tactic, monster garage, 3D print,
whatever, implement and within 30 days the enemy can counter it.
And so now you're having to evolve to a new tactic, a new technique, a new procedure,
new piece of equipment that helps you exploit now what they're doing differently.
And so it's this constant 30-day loop,
but we're supposed to catch up with that
with a five-year cycle right now
to fund our troops with the next piece of gear?
Have you seen them, is there anything specific
you've seen them invent or innovate
that captured your interest?
I mean, yeah, yeah, yeah, for sure.
Let me think here.
I think you were talking about drones.
Yeah, I mean, there's a bunch of examples.
So I was going through my files
and then I'm wondering what can I say, what can I not?
But drones is a great example.
It was just last weekend, we were at a hotel
with some people and we had an E6 and then a contractor
who's helping them out and they literally brought
like a 3D printer and all this stuff
and they're like 3D printing parts of a drone
soldering wires together and making this like
mobile backpack with a drone with some glasses
that serve as an FPV, first person point of view with an overlay.
So it's almost like what Lucky was talking about with you
a few episodes ago, but the Monster Garage version,
low tech for sure.
But so you could see through the glasses normally,
but you'd have the overlay image of what the drone was doing.
And they were like, just in their off time,
came up with this.
Are you shitting me?
No, I'm just serious. They're, came up with this. Are you shitting me? No, I'm just serious.
They're just coming up with this and they're,
Yeah.
So what sparked that mini invention?
They just want the technology
and the SEAL teams doesn't have it,
so they're like, fuck it, we'll just make it?
I think so.
We could do this.
I mean, harness that kind of energy,
cut it off the leash, you know what I mean?
Like, hey dudes, here's your left and rights,
let's give you funding, authorities, and equipment
to just experiment and have fun with this stuff.
Boom, run, let's see what we come back with.
Compete by teams, see what rises to the top,
buy some off the shelf stuff, monster garage it.
We should just be giving these
limitless authorities and autonomy direction,
run this way, you can't cross these thresholds legally,
whatever, but right now, I mean, they're doing it
on their own because they're hungry and they see
that there's a need, but we're not evolving fast enough
as a military to, I think, scratch their itch as Gen Z,
and that's a problem because like we've talked about,
they're not going to sit around forever
and wait for us to do what needs to be done.
They're going to leave.
Because I can go make money somewhere else doing this.
Or if this isn't going to,
if you're not as innovative as I hoped you were
when I got here, I'm going to walk away.
You only have so much shelf life
before they're going to get impatient and walk away.
What would it take to do that?
To have an S&T shop set up with funding so they can innovate?
I did a couple years in the acquisition world.
There's a few laws mandated by Congress, and I can do this thing.
That's part of it. Those you can't bend.
But then there's tons of these policies that have happened over time
which have created these procedures,
which are just behemoths to get through.
And so I think what we need to do is,
and I know I've read Secretary Hegseth is talking about
overhauling the acquisition process within DOD.
So I think we're gonna get there.
That's why I keep telling these young guys,
like, hang on, dudes, like,
I think all the right change is coming.
That whole system needs to be overhauled, just like we've talked about with other things here, with the legal, hang on, dudes, I think all the right change is coming. That whole system needs to be overhauled,
just like we've talked about with other things here,
with the legal, the administrative,
to give those kinds of guys the autonomy
to actually innovate and show us what,
give us the solutions that we don't even know we need yet.
And I think they're ready and they're hungry for that.
We just have to empower them and get out of their way.
Use guys like me, well, I'm on the way out, but guys that are still in like me.
Let me use my authority and my top cover to support you.
Provide you a pot of money, you know,
you have a finite amount of money,
but this is your money and here's your authorities
to do whatever you want and figure out how this could work.
I guarantee you they're going to come back with
solution upon solution upon solution
that have boggled our minds for 20-30 years
I know for a fact they will because I saw that when I was the CEO of sdv team one
uh, I can't go into too many details, but
We had a couple undersea problems that had stumped our community for 30 years
30 years
I walked in the room young platoon lieutenant and chief running the show
Young gen zers, yo dudes. here's the problem, whiteboard.
Here's the case of beer.
See if you can solve this problem.
Solved it.
No shit.
Stuff that had stumped us for 20, 30 years.
They're like, oh, what if we do this?
Oh, no one's ever thought of that.
How come no one's ever thought of that?
I don't know, because we're old?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah. Because we're stuck in our ways?
We're like, holy cow, they literally changed the paradigm
in our underseeability, one platoon,
by trying something, having an idea,
and then trying it that nobody else had tried.
And then they're like,
well, what about this other problem that we have?
That stumped people for a long time as well.
Can you solve that?
Didn't know the case of beer.
Solve that.
These guys were delivering incredible results
in rapid success
that in a normal cycle you're talking about,
well, we submit this problem, this need,
commander's statement of needs or concerns or something, like we have this need,
like three to four years later,
some program office somewhere delivers something
that's like, okay, that would have been useful
three years ago when we highlighted that it was a need,
now it's almost irrelevant.
These guys were doing that within months.
One capability they thought of,
open source bot got waivers to dive it, and we implemented it,
we added some mods to it, because we got waivers to that,
and we implemented it on a real world op
in less than a year, from concept to execution,
proven and taken down range, and it was all them.
Wow.
All young dudes, in spite of the system,
in spite of us, who just hold that thing back sometimes.
Wow. How many leaders within Naval's... I mean, is this...
Are a lot of leaders like you and they're trying to empower these guys? Or is there a lot of pushback?
Probably both. It's hard to say. I mean, it in the old way. Probably both, probably both.
It's hard to say, I mean, it's hard to say.
We got some really good ones out there
that are like trying to jump, like run with these guys.
Like, let's go, you can do it.
But then I know that we have dinosaurs
who just can't let go of yesteryear's war.
I mean, yeah.
And I'll hit the dudes up, like,
yo, how did your training block go?
We spent four weeks doing mobility with MRAPs,
the big armored vehicles, right?
What?
You guys are still spending four weeks doing that
in your workup?
Why?
Those were useful in Iraq,
but we haven't been there for a while,
and I'm pretty sure we're not driving those in Beijing
next week or anything.
So why are we spending time doing that
when we could be doing drone warfare
as a common block of training?
I don't know.
Okay.
I mean, 2018 National Defense Strategy
shifted us to great power competition.
2018.
And this guy's a new team guy,
just finishing his first platoon,
was still doing an MRAP training block.
Okay guys, we have to evolve faster than that. That's a problem that it took that long.
Now I did hear recently, Fairly, they finally just cut it out, but that's a problem, man.
It should not take from 2018 to 2025 for us to fix that. Yeah. Yeah. We got to evolve faster.
What were you interviewing with Hex Death about?
Yeah, it's a funny one.
We hadn't won our fight yet.
We're still in the middle of it.
The week before Thanksgiving week,
I get a text from Cash and he said,
hey, check your email.
So I checked my email and it says,
hey, can you be in West Palm Beach, you know, within the next 36 hours for interviews? It said you have, quote, been nominated for and
are being considered for a senior position in this administration. I was like, well, that's
interesting. Yes, I can be there. So I flew out, caught a flight the last minute, went down there,
and I interviewed with now Secretary Hegseth and Director Gabbard, DNI,
both of which you've had here on the show actually.
So yeah, a couple days of interviews with them
and their staffs and it went really well.
We talked about a lot of the things that you and I
have just talked about here today
and my observations that even these good admirals out there,
even these good generals,
these great leaders are institutionalized.
And so it's not lost on me
that in the last Trump administration,
he put a lot of three and four star retired generals
and admirals in positions of politically appointed positions.
And yet he meant institutional resistance,
even though they were great leaders,
great leaders in the military,
but he meant institutional resistance because they though they were great leaders, great leaders in the military, but he met institutional resistance because
they're institutionalists. If you notice in this administration,
there's not a lot of three and four star retirees that he's nominating.
I know everybody out there has to be
just as frustrated as I am when it comes to the BS and the rhetoric that the
mainstream media continuously tries to force feed us.
And I also know how frustrating it can be
to try to find some type of a reliable news source.
It's getting really hard to find the truth
and what's going on in the country and in the world.
And so one thing we've done here at Sean Ryan Show
is we are developing our newsletter.
And the first contributor to the newsletter that we have
is a woman, former CIA targeter.
Some of you may know her as Sarah Adams,
call sign super bad.
She's made two different appearances
here on the Sean Ryan Show.
And some of the stuff that she has uncovered
and broke on this show
is just absolutely mind blowing.
And so I've asked her if she would contribute
to the newsletter and give us a weekly intelligence brief.
So it's gonna be all things terrorists,
how terrorists are coming up through the southern border,
how they're entering the country, how they're traveling,
what these different terrorist organizations throughout the world are up to. And here's the best border, how they're entering the country, how they're traveling, what these different terrorist organizations throughout the world are up to.
And here's the best part, the newsletter is actually free.
We're not going to spam you.
It's about one newsletter a week, maybe two if we release two shows.
The only other thing that's going to be in there besides the intel brief is if we have
a new product or something like that. But like I said, it's a free CIA intelligence brief.
Sign up.
Links in the description or in the comments.
We'll see you in the newsletter.
It's a lot of lower ranking, O5 and belows, who did a little bit of time in the military,
enough to gain a perspective of it?
But not enough time to where they're institutionalized. I said I've noticed that too and it's what I've noticed through my case
So I talked about all the change that's needed and I told them if you want change
I'm happy to be a change agent for you
I've seen a lot of things that need to be fixed need to be overhauled and I'm happy to run fast in that direction
and I would be very honored and happy to continue
to fulfill my oath to the Constitution,
wearing a suit instead of a uniform.
But I see the need to wear a suit instead of uniform.
I see the need now to have civilian oversight
that's gonna mandate change for the good.
And like we've talked about in our case,
I see the need for congressional oversight
because even the good meaning ones are institutionalized
and they won't always do the right thing.
So that's what it was all about.
I don't yet know what they're gonna do with me, if anything.
I keep hearing my name circulated up there
for some positions, but I know some of the positions
I was being considered for have already been nominated for.
So we really don't know now
if I'm still in the running for anything. But it't know now if I'm still not running for anything.
But it makes it tricky
because I'm still actively trying to retire as well.
And I understand that's a complexity.
What are some of the things you would immediately go after
and try to change?
I think, you know, in the civilian courts,
it's very important, our legal framework of innocent until proven guilty.
I think that has been bastardized in the military
over time, not any one person's fault,
just over time, like we've talked about,
and you're very much treated guilty
until proven innocent.
And that's crushed a lot of people's souls.
Or you're even innocent, but find yourself being abused by this system.
There's a very, there's a human cost
associated with this stuff.
Walk the Talk Foundation just put out a published
document the other day, I don't know if they published it,
but we've talked about it,
that of active duty suicides out there,
29% of them are related to UCMJ
or administrative investigations
like the one we went through.
Wow.
29%, I can't remember the actual numbers
of what that represents, but it's thousands.
And I see that, and I felt it.
It's the double edged sword
that is the SEAL teams in a lot of ways.
You know, for so many years, your value is defined by
does the team value you?
You know, are you under the boat with them?
Are you carrying your weight?
And are you choosing to carry more on a daily basis?
And that's great because that produces things that,
it's why they make movies and books about this stuff,
because it just produces these supernatural units
that go do things as a team
that you could never do individually.
It catalyzes teamwork.
It's amazing what you can do with that.
The double-edged sword part of it is,
over time, and the longer you do that,
your self-worth, my self-worth,
got wrapped into that.
And so when I get wrapped into now an investigation
based upon, like we've talked about, all the lies,
it doesn't matter, you're ostracized to some degree.
And you feel like you're no longer valued by the team anymore.
And that can shatter your self-worth.
Which is I think what attributes these suicides.
We did a suicide stand down about a year ago
and our prevention specialist said,
statistically, the highest number of suicide ideations
in our force come from people under investigation.
Whether you're innocent or guilty, doesn't matter.
Just the simple part of being under investigation and those leading the teams. And I was like,
oh yeah, I understand that. And then they start showing all the the psychological
reasons why, all the things that these things produce. And like we've talked
about, if we're disproportionately punishing people or putting them under
this kind of scrutiny for no reason, Man, 29% of suicides?
My father-in-law quotes this old
political satire cartoon, Pogo.
He says, we have met the enemy and he is us.
We should really care about that.
I didn't go this in depth with Secretary Hegset
and Director Gabbard, but that whole system
needs to be overhauled
because if we have a suicide epidemic, which we do,
we already have problems with this,
why are we contributing to that
by allowing a process to be involved
that disproportionately punishes people?
It's horrific, it's horrific.
And I've heard it from them. I've seen it.
I've seen it in their eyes.
And we lived it.
We lived it.
We talked about some of the things,
the suffering we endured through our career.
We hit on this journey, this three year journey,
we hit three really dark moments.
The first one was fear, fear-based,
and it was when they released this investigation
to the press without having let me even see it
and rebut it in any way.
And I saw that frenzy as everyone was frothing at the mouth
and it was just horrible to watch.
And we were actually scheduled to go and leave the next day,
so I went to the airport with my family,
and my mind just in a million places.
And as we're checking in all of our luggage,
I had that moment, you know, they take too long sometimes,
and you're just trying to figure it out,
and so you're just sitting there with nothing to do,
and it was the first moment I had nothing to do,
and I closed my eyes, and it was almost like
I'd been running in front of a wave,
and the wave just like collapsed into the back of me.
And it's the closest I've ever come to
a full blown panic attack.
And I'm pretty sure I was having a panic attack.
Heart starts racing, it was all fear based.
And I'm thinking in my mind like,
I got a kid about to go to college.
I got another one about to go to college.
This is all I've ever known.
What am I gonna do? Like what am I gonna do? This is all I've known.. What am I gonna do?
Like what am I gonna do? This is all I've known.
My mom signed a waiver at 17 years old to join the Navy
because I wasn't a legal adult yet.
This has been my entire adult life
that I've invested in this job and in this mission
and this sense of service.
And it's being, I can see it's,
the dream is being killed right in front of my eyes.
What am I gonna do? And I was so afraid, front of my eyes. What am I gonna do?
And I was so afraid, I closed my eyes
and just I was like, oh, and I prayed.
And I'm like, Lord, I am so afraid right now.
Like I don't even know.
I don't even know what I'm gonna do.
I need your help.
I need you to help me now.
And in that moment, it was really cool.
In my mind's eye, I saw myself, it was really interesting.
I saw myself on a desert road.
And it felt very much like many of the places
we deployed to with mountains on either side
and just winding nice flat path.
And I looked over to the right, all in my mind's eye,
and I see Jesus standing at a crossroads
on a smaller path that's going up the mountainside,
a very treacherous path, lots of rocks, I mean, unpleasant.
But he's looking back at me, he's holding out his hand
and he's got a smirk on his face,
and I heard in my mind him say, it's okay,
I'm gonna walk with you, I'm gonna show you each step,
and I'll be with you the whole time.
And so I reached out and took his hand,
and I'm back in the airport.
Now again, this is all my mindset
I don't want to make it sound like I don't make it sound like you know, it's like a full-up vision
But it happened and I've never felt I talked about the lucid dream last time. It was very similar to that
And I'm back, you know, it's like whoa and all of a sudden we're checking the luggage. I
Go sit down in the airplane again. I stopped and and I start thinking through, I'm like, did that happen?
And I start crying,
because I couldn't even control my emotions,
and my wife looks over, freaks out,
like, what do you, what's wrong with you?
You're crying on the airplane,
and I couldn't even speak it,
because it was so overwhelming, I had to text her.
And so he answered my prayer,
and he showed me, don't be afraid, I've got you.
So that was the first part, what this produced fear.
The second part, failure.
And in many ways, I think that's what many men fear
is failure, or failure to provide, or failure to succeed.
I felt that through all the criticism for sure,
but it manifested most as a dad in the middle of all this.
Obviously we were stressed.
Obviously we had hard moments.
I was impatient at times.
And I mentioned the last one that my youngest son
developed some sort of a brain injury
where basically his blood brain barrier got compromised.
And so when he gets sick, the antibodies from the sickness that his body's producing
jump over into his, I think the basal ganglia part
of his brain and it's like fireworks going off in his brain
and it produces irrational just spirals
or it was horrific to see as a dad
and it was like 24 hours, one of the,
he would, for instance,
brush his mouth accidentally and then freak out because there was dirt on his hand.
There wasn't, but he had imagined dirt.
And so he would now be so disgusted
that dirt was in his mouth,
he would start gagging and spitting.
And he would just spit all over himself and the floor
because he couldn't tolerate the dirt in his mouth.
He was taking like five baths a day.
It was really, really weird.
And we realized it was neurological,
but we were really trying to figure this out.
And so I was, as a typical dad and man,
trying to ration my way through it.
And so he's having a spiral one night.
And I said, hey buddy, just talk to me about it.
Let's just talk through this.
Like we can talk through it.
And he's crying.
He's in an absolute, he's irreconcilable.
And he said, dad, this is a nine year old,
he was eight at the time,
dad, I don't wanna tell you
because you're just gonna get mad at me.
And I said, dude, I love you,
I'm not gonna get mad at you.
Let's talk through it.
So we start talking through it.
I wasn't able to solve it.
And so at some point I get frustrated,
probably with myself, not with with him and I yelled and he starts crying and he said
dad you broke your promise. Oh man and dude every dad goes through this just
the feelings of failure like I stood, I could barely hold it together,
and I go to the garage,
and I collapsed on the garage floor and just wept.
And I couldn't press my face into the pavement far enough
in submission to God, and I was just like, enough.
Like all this other stuff we're dealing with,
and now this, like enough, please.
Like, take this from me.
I can't do this.
I cannot do this.
I don't have the strength, I don't have the knowledge,
I don't have the wisdom as a dad.
I can't do this, like, please, please, enough.
And he answered that.
We started getting answers.
Got him on a path to healing.
And, but the best part, the best part,
I walk in afterward, if I collected myself,
he's already in bed, Amy took care of that,
gets him in bed.
And I walk in and I knelt down and I said,
dude, dad's sorry.
Please forgive me.
Because you were right, I broke my promise.
Without skipping a beat, it's okay, dad, I love you.
Like, no, it's not okay, but I appreciate that.
I mean, the beauty of a kid, right?
I think this is why Jesus says like,
the kingdom of heaven is meant for these,
and we should have childlike faith.
This idea, this total idea that he's so quick to forgive,
so quick to love, when it's not okay, when I did fail.
That was a huge lesson for me to learn
through this process as well as just,
I am not capable as a man
to deal with these kinds of things.
The third and final one,
as we were fighting all this,
putting together documents with Jason,
just, I mean, I'm talking,
we put three separate documents together
that were like master's level theses
and just evidence upon evidence, irrefutable.
And I was so convinced that reason would prevail.
And as I submitted these, the Navy and NSW would be like,
ah, here's all the evidence in the world, you did it.
You know, dropping all charges, total vindication, facts matter.
Let's get back to work.
I was really convinced that this was gonna happen.
And the morning I submitted them all,
or the day I submitted them all,
it was like, yes, this huge weight off my shoulders.
So again, back to I think my self-worth
and how I was defining that.
That Friday morning, I get an email from our Admiral
who would say, hey, I've reviewed all the evidence.
I've still decided that you meet the criteria
to proceed with this board of inquiry.
I still find reason to believe you were negligent
and derelict in your duties.
And that one crushed my soul more than anything else
because back to my self-worth,
I had let this become defined by what man thinks of me,
what the teams think of me.
And here we have an admiral
who speaks on behalf of our community.
Like it or not, he represents us all.
And he's telling me, I'm not worthy.
And so when you've built 25 years of self-worth around that, and that's taken from you, And he's telling me I'm not worthy.
And so when you've built 25 years of self worth around that, and that's taken from you,
it took me to some really, really dark places.
And I was driving by myself actually up to
one of the foundations, the C4 foundation
up in the mountains near Julian.
So I was on the road by myself,
just spiraling into some darkness.
It's a hard thing as a man when your self-worth
is taken from you.
And I reached out to a few friends, you were one of them.
You answered, pulled me back out a little bit.
They say that in those darkest moments,
you need about eight minutes of someone's time.
And it helps you get out of it.
And so I've encouraged people,
hey, just in a text to somebody say,
I need eight minutes of your time.
And they'll know, okay, this is serious, we need to talk.
So you called me and another friend called me and helped pull me out. And it was like, okay, this is serious, we need to talk. So you called me and another friend called me
and helped pull me out and it was like, okay, okay.
I don't know, I can't explain that.
I don't think it came from within me,
I think it was something external.
And, but it came in my most vulnerable place
and I worked through that with God over the weekend
and I was so ashamed of the dark places I had gone
that it was hard for me to even tell Amy.
I was so ashamed.
And when I finally mustered the courage to, I'm crying
and she said, I know.
She said, I felt it.
And I was worried and I was praying.
She said, I'm glad you got through that moment.
I said, yeah, me too, me too.
And what I heard God say in that moment,
he's like, why did you give man this authority over you?
It's yours to give and take.
You don't have to care what this person thinks about you.
You don't have to care what this community thinks about you.
You gave that to them.
You can take that right back.
And what I heard him say in my mind was, give it to me.
I define your worth.
I value you.
You are worthy because I made you worthy.
I love you.
I have chosen you.
I have claimed you.
I bought you with a price.
See yourself through my eyes.
And I realized, oh man, I had to get to that dark moment
to even see the chains that I had forged around me
to define myself worth by what man thinks of me.
I didn't even know they existed.
I had no idea they were there.
And they were the strongest things I had to break
over this whole three year journey.
And so it was only until that moment
when I could give that self-worth back to God
that I was able to shadow those chains.
And it was then that I was truly free
to actually start making the decisions
that landed us in your studio last time.
Because if I no longer care what man thinks of me,
well, man offers me the world,
and man uses the world as leverage
to influence my decisions and shape
what they want me and don't want me to do.
If I no longer care about what man thinks of me,
well, now I'm free to make these decisions
based upon what I believe in, truth, principles.
You wrote the other day on social media,
we talked about it earlier.
I'll mess it up, but paraphrase it,
I think you said something to the effect of,
nobody ever regrets standing up for truth.
They only regret the moments they didn't.
Yeah.
But you're not free to do it
until you don't care what man thinks of you.
Because they'll use the word as leverage.
So I say all that because I know that there's people out there
that have been going through the same things we went through
and they need to hear that it happened to all of us
and it's okay and there's hope.
And we need to fix these processes
that put people through this because it is unjust
and it is disproportionate to anything
they might have done wrong, I do believe.
Yeah, all of this and supposedly a non-punitive system. Non-punitive system. Right. And he's not,
obviously I've had tons of clients like this. He's not the first to feel the way he's feeling.
This is what the military will do to you. You sign your life to that check, right? And then they tell you,
you can, we need to rip up that check, right?
It takes months to get clients to where
I'm not worried about their safety anymore.
I think that's why you called,
as you knew, you've seen this before.
Yeah.
And I've since had friends go through this stuff,
and I call them, like, hey man, how are you today?
How are you right now?
Not good, bro.
I understand.
Keep your head up, stay in the fight.
This too shall pass.
I tell them all now, like, I had a guy call me the other day.
He's like, I love how you guys dealt with this.
You know, I'm going through something similar.
How do I deal with it?
I'm like, bro, get in the Bible.
I mean, get in there.
There's refuge.
I love John Piper.
He's one of our modern day theologians,
but he said, cry out to God,
then ransack the Bible for his appointed promise.
We are fragile, he is not.
And I found such strength in that submission to him
and just like, yes, okay, Lord, take this from me.
I know you're doing something, I don't understand it,
but I know you're doing something and you are good,
so I'm gonna choose to trust you, I'm choosing to carry on,
I'm gonna choose to remain steadfast,
and we're gonna get up one more day
and we're gonna keep fighting this fight.
One dude recently probably gave me
the best compliment I've ever received.
And I'm so tempted to take it, but I can't.
But he is on social media, he's like,
you have more testicular fortitude
than any other man I've ever met.
I mean, it's like the best thing
you could ever hear is a dude, right?
It's awesome.
It's so awesome.
And I so am tempted to be like, yeah, bro.
You know, like, and people have said similar things,
like we just can't believe how strong you were through this.
And it's like, no, you're missing it.
You're missing it, man.
I don't have to succor before it, dude.
If you compliment me,
I've got to just point you right to Jesus.
I've got to do it because anything else is me claiming
that I was strong through this.
You may have seen moments of strength.
Those came between moments of absolute despair,
absolute weakness, absolute just brokenness.
And I just kept submitting to the Lord
and trusting that he was taking us somewhere special,
like we talked about to a season
that will be producing more fruit.
And he carried me through that.
So if you saw strength, you saw his strength through me.
It was not my strength.
Paul talks about this in the New Testament. When we are weak, his strength is manifested through me. It was not my strength. Paul talks about this in the New Testament.
When we are weak, His strength is manifested through us.
And that's glorifying to God.
So when we are weak, that's when we're actually strong.
Because when we lean on Him and His strength manifests.
It's a powerful message.
I hope they hear it.
I hope they hear it.
There's solidarity in it.
And I think it's important for them to hear.
And I struggled with how much to tell on that part of the story, but I think it's important
for them to know that, yeah, man, there's other people who have gone through this.
We can get through it together. Call me, reach out to me. And or, let's make changes.
Let's fix this. Let's stop this from happening to our teammates. Let's stop contributing to the
suicide epidemic by 29%. There's a better way to do business that takes better care of our teammates. Let's stop contributing to the suicide epidemic by 29%.
There's a better way to do business that takes
better care of our teammates.
Last thing, when do you guys expect to hear?
When do you think this is going to be done?
When are you going to be able to retire and move on with your
career as a voice actor?
I think...
Yeah.
Dude, it's so funny you said that.
I was never...
I never really thought much about my voice, but seeing all the comments from the last
episode about my dog Batman voice apparently, and now I got a head cold, so I don't know
how this is going to turn out. haven't really thought about my voice.
Yeah, yeah.
Come on.
Well, my old CEO, guy I loved,
I mentioned him last one,
whenever I told stories, I would drop into an octave.
And I didn't even know I did it,
but I used to call it the Marlowe Man voice.
He's like, did you just smoke a pack of cigarettes
before the story?
Like, what happened?
I'm like, I don't know, just, I don't know.
It just happened over the years.
But so yeah, next career, who knows. I'm like, I don't know, it just happened over the years.
So yeah, next career, who knows?
Hopefully I'm retired by the summer.
One June, one July timeframe is what we've been aiming for.
Assuming we can figure this out with the Navy
and just let me leave, guys, let me leave.
That's the hope, and then we'll see what's next.
Whether this administration decides to pick me up for a job, great.
I've told them I'd be happy to serve as long as I'm a change agent and able to actually
run in the directions that we need to run in and make the changes that'll protect our
teammates.
And if not, oh, that's fine.
Give me a call.
I'll consult with you for free.
I will tell you about all the things we saw and what needs to change and what needs to
be fixed.
And I know they already have smart people doing these things also, which is good. They weren't hearing this just for me
They heard it from a lot of sources. And so we're seeing that start to manifest now, which is very exciting
So I'm comfortable and confident that all the right change is gonna happen very very soon here and it's already starting
So, yeah, hopefully by the summer this season's behind us officially. Man, I hope so.
Yeah, I hope so.
Tell me about the number.
Yeah, thank you, appreciate that.
Part of that change, we were just brainstorming one day
about like, man, one of the things that prohibits you
from doing these things is we talked about the cost,
the financial piece.
People have been like, oh, he was an officer,
he was able to pay for this.
No, dude, we're up to about 200-something thousand dollars
in legal fees in totality for three years.
We couldn't afford that.
And one of the things the military prohibits you from doing
is fundraising for yourself for these types of things.
So it's like they pitch you up
as a David versus Goliath scenario,
but then they deny you access to the stones, Stephen fights.
We got to fix that problem too. If someone's allowed to be provided civilian counsel,
which they need because you need a mediator attorney,
and in my case, a team of mediator attorneys,
like we said, between you, Davis, Mark Jessup,
and Tim Parlett-Torre, who all still, we still collaborate.
We had a whole thread called Team Truth.
If that's what you need, well then we need to be able
to allow that person to solicit funds for that.
And so one of the reasons we started talking about this
was we had to search through nonprofits to get there.
We talked about the Cash Foundation.
We're still with Stand With Warriors.
Davis St. Alice was here last time, represented by them.
But he had thought of the idea of we should just start
our own 501C3, because what we found is even family members
and these people out there want to help people like us,
but they also want it to be a tax deductible thing
where they can get benefits from that,
and it makes it easier for them to throw money at that.
And so, on a whim, he's like,
well, why don't I just start a 501C3,
so if your parents want to help,
or friends of the family that ask want to help they can just go through that and it saves
Them some tax burdens. So we're in the process of starting that
Amy's gonna be a board member
School. Yeah, very cool. They can called the civilian military defense fund. Yeah, civilian military defense fund
Yeah, and it's uh, it's organized in Colorado right now
We're going through the fundraising registration and the state level, and then we'll submit
for 501c3 status.
But it's specific purpose, and the board's amazing.
I've been honored by those who have chosen
to serve on the board.
It's a mix of high-level civilian attorneys,
high-level criminal defense attorneys,
some military justice attorneys as well,
a public defender out of Washington state.
Like people see the problem and they wanna help.
And we wanna do things,
we wanna be able to give all service members
access to civilian council.
Because in this case,
Camp Geary wasn't eligible for military council
until Admiral Cheeseman served him the notice.
That's two years after this process started
He all of that is out of pocket, right?
And and on top of it judge advocates are restricted from filing in federal court
So around this administrative issue needing to seek injunctive relief if they get really out of whack
They have no access to that. It's civilian lawyers with with like that civil experience
especially that that can bring these kinds of weapons to bear
and military have no access to that.
And in fact, I want to inspire big law civilian lawyers
who haven't even been judge advocates.
I want to inspire their level of litigation
to be brought to the military
because I think that's the only way within that system
that we're going to elevate
our treatment of personnel and elevate the due process
is by bringing these inordinate experienced
civilian litigators in to fight the fight.
But we need to be able to pay them.
These guys are expensive for a reason, right?
And we need to be able to pay them.
Or we need to be able to get experts
when the military justice system refuses you an expert.
We need to be able, and finally,
I added a third prong as we talked about it.
We've got to find a way to support people
in this military justice process
from going to the dark places.
The military is not taking care of their own
for the minute an allegation is levied
You're on the outside and you're done, right? And we talk a big game about suicide prevention in the military
We do a lot of that
But we need to find ways where people can call and talk to somebody for those eight minutes that
Understands the system the problem have been through it themselves. And so, you know, through this, we're like,
you know what, let's do it.
We're good at operational management.
This is the best leader I've ever known.
We're going to create the Civilian Military Defense Fund
and we're going to push.
That's awesome, man.
That's awesome.
When do you think that'll be ready to roll?
I expect the Colorado registration to be back
in about eight days.
That will open donations.
It just won't be deductible until we get
the 501c3 certification, but, and I'm no tax professional,
my understanding is it will be retroactively deductible.
So we are gonna start accepting donations,
check with your tax providers, you know,
ahead of the 501c3 process,
because that does take a while,
but my understanding is we have a 27 month window
to get that done, and I will get it done. Perfect. Well thanks
again for coming on and man I just I know you're gonna get through this. Yeah.
Yeah. I just it's just it's enra you know, what the US Navy's doing and Admiral Cheeseman.
Cheeseman Jr.
Yeah, it's just, it makes no sense,
but I know you guys will get through it
and hopefully one day we'll see some repercussions
for this kind of bullshit.
And protections, you know, and I hope-
Protections. I hope you'd stick it out for this kind of bullshit. Yeah, and protections, you know, and I hope. Protections.
I hope you'd stick it out for the change to come.
Yeah.
I was teaching this class
and I keep reinforcing these young dudes,
like stick this out.
The teams are a great place and we need you to stick it out.
We need you to make it better.
We need you to take the baton from my generation
and start innovating and start pivoting fast
to keep the pace with the changes of war.
If I had any message for them, it would be,
these are your teams, your generation has it.
We did our duty, now it's your turn to do yours.
So make us proud.
I trust they will from what I saw coming up through the ranks. That sounds like it. They are gonna make us proud. I trust they will from what I saw coming up through the ranks.
Sounds like it.
They're going to make us proud.
So that's my message to them.
These are your teams. Own it.
You own the culture.
You own where we're going in the future.
To my peers and up, get out of their way.
Empower them.
Give them autonomy.
Let's give them authorities and let them innovate and, because we're falling behind if we don't.
Great message.
And on another note,
hope you do get picked up by this administration.
Yeah, we'll see, thanks.
I can't think of anybody better, frankly,
to be in this administration to get some shit done.
Yeah, very happy to help.
If they want it, it'd be fun.
Thank you.
Our pleasure.
All right.
Good job. Thank you, My pleasure. Alright. Good job.
Thank you.
You too, Kevin.
Bye.
Mic Drop.
Hosted by former Navy SEAL Mike Ridland.
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Any single time that you left the wire, you could lose four guys.
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That was the most horrible screaming I'd ever heard.
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It's tough talk from the top minds in their field.
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