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The Patriots Prayer

TPP: Now What Zuckerberg

Mark Zuckerberg's apology does not amount to anything if his policies at Facebook remain as they are.Eddie and Maurice bring their unique perspectives to the table, combining Eddie's deep dive into political analysis with Maurice's insights into cultural and indigenous issues, offering listeners a robust discussion on how these leaders' actions have shaped the American landscape. From border policies to economic decisions, from cultural shifts to the impact on everyday Americans, this episode doesn't shy away from the tough questions. Expect a blend of factual analysis, personal anecdotes, and a touch of humor as they navigate through the complexities of modern governance, the implications of past decisions, and what it all means for the future of the United States. Whether you're a staunch conservative or just someone looking for an alternative viewpoint, "Obama, Harris, & Walz Oh My" is set to challenge your thoughts and provoke meaningful discussion. Join Eddie and Maurice for an episode that's not just about critique but about understanding the deeper implications of leadership in today's America. Tune in to The Patriots Prayer Podcast for a conversation that's as informative as it is engaging.Follow Us: X (Twitter): @PatriotsPrayerFacebook: The Patriots Prayer NetworkWebsite: www.thepatriotsprayer.comSponsored By: Smoking Gun Coffee: Visit smokingguncoffee.com and use code Native Patriot for a special discount.Operation Blackout https://internalblackout.com/?a=678&c=434&s1=Final Faminehttps://finalfoodprepper.com/?a=678&c=433&s1=Famine Fighterhttps://foodforthesoul.co/?a=678&c=407&s1= Devils Dollar https://dbhtrkg.com/?a=678&c=468&s1=We are crowdfunded @ https://patron.podbean.com/thepatriotsprayer Subscribe today and never miss an episode!Follow us on Spotify @ https://open.spotify.com/show/2TQKlyPUepSC9ro4011HOOFor a full list of our sponsors and partners, visit our website at www.thepatriotsprayer.com/sponsors.

Broadcast on:
31 Aug 2024
Audio Format:
other

Mark Zuckerberg's apology does not amount to anything if his policies at Facebook remain as they are.
Eddie and Maurice bring their unique perspectives to the table, combining Eddie's deep dive into political analysis with Maurice's insights into cultural and indigenous issues, offering listeners a robust discussion on how these leaders' actions have shaped the American landscape. From border policies to economic decisions, from cultural shifts to the impact on everyday Americans, this episode doesn't shy away from the tough questions.

Expect a blend of factual analysis, personal anecdotes, and a touch of humor as they navigate through the complexities of modern governance, the implications of past decisions, and what it all means for the future of the United States. Whether you're a staunch conservative or just someone looking for an alternative viewpoint, "Obama, Harris, & Walz Oh My" is set to challenge your thoughts and provoke meaningful discussion.

Join Eddie and Maurice for an episode that's not just about critique but about understanding the deeper implications of leadership in today's America. Tune in to The Patriots Prayer Podcast for a conversation that's as informative as it is engaging.
Follow Us:

X (Twitter): @PatriotsPrayer
Facebook: The Patriots Prayer Network
Website: www.thepatriotsprayer.com
Sponsored By:

Smoking Gun Coffee: Visit smokingguncoffee.com and use code Native Patriot for a special discount.
Operation Blackout https://internalblackout.com/?a=678&c=434&s1=
Final Famine
https://finalfoodprepper.com/?a=678&c=433&s1=
Famine Fighter
https://foodforthesoul.co/?a=678&c=407&s1= Devils Dollar https://dbhtrkg.com/?a=678&c=468&s1=
We are crowdfunded @ https://patron.podbean.com/thepatriotsprayer Subscribe today and never miss an episode!
Follow us on Spotify @ https://open.spotify.com/show/2TQKlyPUepSC9ro4011HOO
For a full list of our sponsors and partners, visit our website at www.thepatriotsprayer.com/sponsors.

(upbeat music) - This is the Patriots Prayer Podcast. It's a tremendous show. One of the greatest shows in the history of the world. - This is Bryson Gray, and you are watching The Patriots Prayer. - So on The Patriots Prayer Network, thank you all. (upbeat music) ♪ Oh, they all say ♪ ♪ Yeah, look faithful now and pray ♪ ♪ The Patriots Prayer ♪ ♪ The Patriots Prayer ♪ ♪ Always a trend ♪ ♪ Or those filled to the brand ♪ (upbeat music) ♪ I am a change in somehow ♪ ♪ I'm the radical now ♪ ♪ America's falling ♪ ♪ They all say ♪ ♪ Yeah, look faithful now and pray ♪ ♪ The Patriots Prayer ♪ (upbeat music) - What's going on Patriots? Back with another Patriot Prayer podcast for you guys. Now listen, I've seen you guys in the waiting room. I appreciate it. I know we're a few minutes late, but I'm just gonna put it all the way out there, Maurice had to pee. That's why, that's why, get him for it. Anyway, we are actually live right now, and we have an amazing guest here. Those guys have been extremely helpful to the network. All right, extremely helpful. Baker convicted Bella in 24. Hey, that's funny, check it out. So I'm voting for the outlaw. We got some similar, we got some similar taste here. So Baker, tell the people who you are, what you do, and let's kick it off, bud. - My name is, thanks for having me Eddie. My name is Baker Levitt. I'm a Director for Strategic Relations for Black Rifle Coffee. I've been with the company for nine years, something like eight years, nine years. Partner in a drink company called Kilklef, ProTekt, I have a consulting company called Digital Mongoose. We do social media and consulting for a couple dozen companies in the hunting and the outdoor firearms space, and then invest in small companies, raise money for small companies. But more importantly, I'm a political consultant in DC, and have been now going on about nine months, and we're seeing remarkable impact on with all the work that we're doing. And it's probably the hardest stuff work, the most stuff worked in 20 years, and it's also the most fun I've had. Because anytime you do something, and you can actually see the impact you're having on, what you're working on, that's rewarding. And people like being rewarded, whether it's monetarily or verbally, or confirmation bias is huge. So, you know, I don't know, I love it. It's awesome, it's fascinating. And just seeing what's going on in the political world, it blows my mind every day. - Yeah, I mean, it's amazing knowing that you did something that has an effect, or you're even in the conversation. - Oh, yeah. - And that's, I think that's what it is for me and Maurice as well. I mean, it was, I've been to a few rallies where I got an extreme and close, and then conversations with Vice Presidential, big for Trump, JD Vance. I've, you know, I've been there and we brought Maurice in for this last one. And we got, you know, he got super close to Trump, and he's just, he was in the moment, and it just, I've seen how it's super charged him. And I saw, you know, what we came away with that with, just, we were there when Trump got the phone call. I said it for you guys, I don't know. We got, we were there, got the phone call. RFK dropped out. We were like the first people to actually know. It was cool to be a part of the moment. It's cool to be a part of history right now. We're seeing history. This campaign, this election, and this is history, guys. This is gonna be talked about a hundred years from now. I guarantee you, this is still in the conversation. There's more craziness going on right now than ever in the United States history. We got a new indictment from Jack Smith, and they never give up, they never stop. He's filed the same pretty much charges in a different place and excluded some of the things that got his case thrown out in the other courts. And of course, he has no chance of winning. What do you think his motive is? - It's a superseding indictment. So what they did was they took based on the Fisher case, which is 1512C2, which is the enhancer that they charged all the J6 guys with. And they pulled that out. So they dropped down the number of charges. And then now they have to go before the judge in DC and argue what of those charges have married and which ones don't. Which ones are they gonna pursue? Which ones are they gonna drop? It's all political theater. The thing that no one's talking about that I think is completely insane is Jack Smith, who I think is a complete piece of human garbage, he's a dirty diaper of a human. His wife is the person that produced the Netflix documentary on the Obama's. Like, I don't get into the conspiracies. I don't like, I don't gaslight and I don't look for things to upset me. Like, I'm not the guy running around like, "Oh my God, with my hair on fire." But I read that and I just thought, come on, man, like God, it's like the one Rashaun, the judge in the New York trial. - I was gonna bring him up next 'cause you're the way you frame that, yeah. - Yeah, so now his daughter, her company, has raised tens of millions of dollars for the Biden hair campaign and worked with Adam Schiff, worked with Goldman, that dirty diaper of a human being in New York who prepped Michael Cohen on his before his testimony. And now Jim Jordan's dragging her and her company before Congress. - As he should. - I just saw that a couple of hours ago. So things like that, I pay a lot of attention to. The stuff with Jack Smith, I think what you have there is like, those career prosecutors, they're obsessed with like convictions and they just become a target rich, I mean, target focused on one item and I think Jack Smith, whether he has, as long as he has a 1% chance of winning, I don't think he'll stop. And I think that is, I know people like that, they're like obsessive compulsive about things and they're dangerous because I think he's a borderline, maybe a complete sociopath and doesn't understand how his drive, why anyone would be mad at him for that? Like, he's like, I don't understand like, I'm trying to convict this guy. You know, but you're not looking at like the rules and the law and that's what we are as a keeper, we have rules, you have to power the rules. - Wasn't he never confirmed? Wasn't there an argument whether or not he even had the power to be doing the things that he's actually doing? And how did that ever shake out? Because as far as I understood it at the end of that, he wasn't confirmed so how in the hell is he still bringing indictments against Donald Trump at all? - Well, so that is when Clarence Thomas threw that zinger in his dissent on whatever, in his, when Clarence Thomas' opinion on the Fisher case, he even said like, is Jack Smith even allowed to be, is he an actual special prosecutor? Because you can't just wave a magic wand and say, oh, you're a special prosecutor. - Exactly. - There's rules, like, and there's a pro, there's a systems and a process to be coming at, and I'm not in the turn. - Like there was for Mueller, like there was for Starr back in the day and so forth. - Yeah. So you have to have like a Senator congressional confirmation. - Correct. - It's not an unlimited budget. Like you can't just spend as much money as you want. Like there's rules and they've violated all that. Like it, so the thing that's like super depressing, man, is like when I was a kid growing up in Georgia, is where I'm from, I always thought that like the Jimin and like, you know, with the FBI and the DOJ and like those guys were just career, they were just air quotes nerds, and all they ever wanted to do was get to the truth and serve their country. And like that was the light that everyone looked up to. Like these are the pure guys that are out there good versus evil, they're not corrupt, well, they're not about money. Or was I wrong? What a bunch of dirty diapers, man. Like that's all those guys are is a nasty, shit-filled diaper and a parking lot of the dinnies. That is how I think, when I think of that, that's what I think of those people, that nasty, waterlogged, do-do-asked diaper. That's what those people ought to mean. - Well, it's really unfortunate that they've been in that way, it's really unfortunate, it's unfortunate that they've been that way for a long time too. One of the realizations that I had to come to grips with when I first started really questioning the narrative, so I was being told, was that these people that are in power are not only out for themselves, but they do not care about you at all. And they'll say anything and everything to achieve their goals. - Yeah, it's Jack Smith's power, yeah. - With Jack Smith, I believe that he received his marching orders. I can't say for sure that if they have blackmail or something on him, that's always something that lingers in the back of my mind, ever since Epstein was prosecuted. Well, actually, he wasn't really prosecuted. Ever since the whole Epstein thing happened, that's always in the back of my mind. But it sure seems like he received his marching orders and that whatever he's doing right now, and what he's been doing, is because he's more scared of what will be done to him if he doesn't. - It's like Oprah Winfrey. Why did Oprah Winfrey donate $150 million to Kamala Harris's campaign? Someone explained to me, why would Oprah do that? And here's my thing, here's my thing. So I have a very, very close friend of mine that ran a hedge fund for many, many years in New York. And he's a very, very wealthy guy, and he runs in the biggest, richest circles in the country. And he said that he has a theory that a lot of the people like that, they're allowed to become that wealthy. You don't get that wealthy just by hooking, by working hard, like you're allowed to become that wealthy. And he thinks that, you know, you're cruising along and all of a sudden the phone rings one day and he's like, "Hey man, you're up. "We need you to do something." And that's why I think people like Reed Hoffman, who funded the Eugene Carroll lawsuit, he funded the Dominion Voting Rights lawsuit against Fox. You see the Oprahs of the world come up and make a $150 million donation. Like I get it, like if it were Obama, I could see Oprah making a massive donation because what we thought we knew about Obama in the very beginning is now is obviously not true. But like Kamala is a dipshit. Like she doesn't have independent thoughts. She's not able to express thoughts. She doesn't have, like I honestly, I don't think she has an internal monologue in her head. - There's your thing. - I also. - There's your thing, Maurice. He nailed it. Maurice is always on about the internal monologue and about how he believes the left are people that are easily brainwashed or those that are not capable of critical thought because they don't have an inner monologue. - Well, there's like 40% of the population doesn't have an internal monologue, which when I read that within like the past year and like my head on this rolled off my body, I was like... - I tell you what, it's like blessing in a career 'cause I wish I could shut it off sometimes. - Oh dude, 10 o'clock at night, man, wouldn't life get easy? - Yeah. - I'm telling you, wouldn't life get a lot easier. - But then we'd be Democrats. - Yeah, Maurice, I think that's great, exactly. Maurice, I think people are allowed to become super wealthy because if you look at the political leanings and the actions of the super wealthy, minus Elon Musk and a few others, it just doesn't make sense to me. Like it's, I don't, why would Oprah Winfrey give her 100? I got, well, why? - Well, again, for what? - Back in the 90s, when she was, I would think, more genuine, more filled with hope for the future. She actually was interviewing Donald Trump. I'm sure you can... - She wanted to be a VP. - You've probably seen this. - Yeah. - Well, you guys have probably seen her interviewing Trump and saying this sounds presidential, are you going to run as president? And that was back when she was actually investigating, well, maybe not investigating, but interviewing in a more genuine fashion. Now, she is completely compromised and so separated from the general populace. I mean, if you compare her donation to Kamala Harris from the fundraiser that her and the Rock started for Maui, like if she actually cared about the American people, right? The fundraiser that her and the Rock started for Maui, it ended up being like $5 million. Yet she donated 30 times the total amount that was fundraised for Maui to Kamala Harris. If she cared about the American people, she would have donated that money to Maui to help rebuild it. But she's part of a different class now. She does not see herself as an equal to me. She looks at me in disgust. She looks at me as a lesser. - I don't know that she looks at you in disgust. I don't think that she acknowledges that you're like, you're alive. - Yeah. - Like, I don't think she has-- - Yeah, you're not conferred personhood. - Yeah, I don't think you're on a certain level. - I don't think she has animists to the common man. I just don't think that she has a thought about the common man, like, you know what I mean? But, I mean, Oprah's the least of our worries. Like, there's so much other crazy stuff going on out there. Like, Mark Zuckerberg coming out and writing that letter. - I was getting to that. I was getting to that. - It's so noble. It's not noble. It's not why he wrote that letter. He wrote that letter because Andrew Bailey is the attorney general of Missouri. He's a very good friend. Lit him up. Missouri's suing him, suing meta. And it was all discovered. It was all, they found all that during discovery. And it was going to come out. So he's trying to cut it off at the past. Don't think for a second that Mark Zuckerberg was like, you know what? By golly, USA, USA, no. Now, I will tell you this. He started surfing. He started spending a lot of time in Hawaii. Started surfing. - Building underground bunker out there for my understanding. - And then he started BJJ, okay? And then he started kind of messing with cattle. I'm raising his own beef. - He's got a 10 now too. - He's got a 10 now too. - Yeah, yeah, yeah. And so it's like, oh wait, so you're doing some kind of dude stuff, doing some bro stuff out there. And your political leanings are shifting. Color me surprised. You get away from all those tech nerds out in Silicon Valley. And you start doing manly stuff, dude stuff. And your leanings kind of start to shift a little bit. - Yeah, telling me surprised, but listen, don't think for a second that he did that out of the kindness of his heart or because of a vet told him to. - Well, there's a headline out right now that says, Trump said he could spend the rest of his life in prison for the election tampering that he did. - Well, I would say that that is, I'm gonna put that in the bucket of stupid shit that Trump says. I love Trump, Donald Trump his son is a very close friend of mine. Donald Trump says things that are stupid sometimes. And I would say that to his face. I didn't say to why. - So do I. - Yeah, so does Eddie. Eddie does it all the time. - Yeah, Eddie does it more than all of us. - Oh my God. - Jesus, give me a break here. - But if you, when he went after Brian Kemp, I live in Florida, I'm a Georgia boy, I'm from Georgia, I grew up in Georgia. - Now, just recently heard him go after Kemp when I was at the Atlanta rally. - I went to the University of Georgia. The Lieutenant Governor was in my fraternity, Bert Jones, he was a friend of mine. - I actually have Bert Jones' number. We were talking there at the rally. - That's awesome. So he goes up to Brian Kemp and I was like, "What a dumbass." Like, Brian Kemp is loved in the state of Georgia and you're attacking the governor. Like, what is wrong with you? Boy, was I wrong. Look what Brian Kemp's doing now. Brian Kemp is guess who's gonna have a very, very fair and transparent election in their state, Georgia. And it's 'cause he lit Brian Kemp up. So I'm gonna hold off on him on that comment about Zuckerberg and I just wanna see what happens. - Well, I'll tell you what, I think Zuckerberg is really good at hedging his bets. That's one of the reasons why he's become so successful. I mean, I agree with you that people are allowed to become successful, but he's also really good at hedging his bets. Back in 2020, he hedged his bet that Biden was going to win. He also helped influence it like crazy, but he was hedging his bet. If now he's doing this, it almost makes me feel like he's hedging his bet that Trump is going to win and that he wants to win favor for Trump. - So he's hedging his bet that Trump, go ahead. - Maurice, I agree with that, Maurice. No, I mean, I think that's a common sense approach, Maurice. I mean, yeah, I mean, for sure. But I do agree, but I think there was something that prompted that. Like, I think he was like, hmm, I think Trump's gonna win. I wanna be on, you know, in his favor. You know, I don't wanna deal with the next four years of my life getting sued every other week by the Department of Justice. But then I think that the thing with Andrew Bailey, the lawsuit, brought by the State of Missouri, was like, yeah, I'm gonna hedge now. I'm gonna speed up my hedge, you know what I mean? - Also, when you start working out and you get that testosterone flowing and you realize how hard it is to get good at grappling and to get good, to grow and muscle, it's harder to be on the left. It is, I mean, there was an article written a while ago that saying that working out is the pathway to right-wing extremism. And they're actually right about that. Because becoming a right-wing extremist means that you wanna take care of your health, that you want a family, that you want to be fruitful and prosper. - No, I'm sorry, I was gonna make off-color joke. Go ahead. - So the thing that's interesting about his two hobbies, so I've served all over the world. Surfing in big ways and he surfs in Hawaii. Like, there comes times, I don't care who you're surrounded by or how much money you have or whatever, I will tell you this, there will come times when you'll be held down and you will see your life flash before your eyes. And as you progress in surfing, that happens less frequently. But in the early days, you're not used to holding your breath. Like, your mammalian dive reflex hasn't kicked in. And like, there's moments of panic. It's, I think memories and experiences under trial and tribulation are far greater, you know? So the beta guys, like they're not out there doing things like that. And then BJJ, when I started BJJ, like 235 pound, you know, state record holder in Washington state and powerlifting. So I lived in Washington state and the guy that did my first-- - Oh, you're in my town, huh? - Yeah, I was in Mill Creek, went to the Gracie Baja place there. The guy is a brown belt and he was three months off neck surgery and he could have killed me 35 times in three minutes. Like, and the thing that was scary, it was like his heart rate never got above like 80 beats a minute and I was dying. Little is a little guy. So I think the thing with BJJ is like, you learn your mortality a little bit faster and just like kind of how don't read, don't judge books by their cover, things like that. All very, very important. And then also the thing with BJJ is like, when you get your ass beaten, like when you come home and your hands are sore and your grips shot and you're, there's, there's-- - Your hands look like that forever. - Yeah, you have like G-burn and stuff on your face and like you're just kind of sore and you have your spots on your face, you know. It just kind of does something to you. As opposed to like living in this little bubble that's provided by the US government or wherever it is that you live or whatever it is that you do and you have this domineering female that's in charge of everything and tells you what to do constantly and you're not, it's not traditional gender roles, which-- - Not you, mom. - No, I'm sorry, go ahead. (laughing) - Which is fine, but there's something to traditional gender roles, like-- - Yeah, absolutely. - My wife owns a CrossFit gym that she's owned, started herself before we met for 15 years, which I'm incredibly proud of her for. But like in our house, it is very much traditional gender roles. Like I'm the breadwinner and Melissa, the things that I hate doing, she actually really likes. Like I don't like-- - It's called harmony, it's called harmony. - I don't like washing dishes. I'll eat off paper plates so I can just throw them away. I don't wash dishes. I don't like folding clothes. Like there's just a lot of things I hate doing that she just enjoys. Like she can buy whatever she wants, but like Melissa's, we have five vacuums. We have five vacuums. I'm not scared to make that. Yes. - You said again? - Five vacuums. - Why? - I don't know. - One phrase room. - Maurice, I don't know. - I just got one really expensive one. Maurice has seen it. I got that damn rainbow vacuum. It costs like three grand. That thing is amazing. It fricking cleans the house, it cleans the air. I mean, I tell you, I'll go in your house if you think you got a clean rug and I hate to be a full-throated salesman for this company. But if I vacuum your rug that you think is clean, I guarantee you it's not. - Maurice, I mean, you know how long I've been in my rainbow? 20 years. - Yeah, that thing's amazing. - It's nothing there. - Put a little bit of eucalyptus water in that thing, turning on as I vacuum, and the whole house smells brand-new. - I didn't even know a rainbow vacuum was a thing, okay? - It's more than a thing. Maurice is more than a thing. - There's a lot more than vacuum. - You don't, you know, it wasn't saying the Bible. They'll shock, bear no false witness before me. It will tempt you. It's that good at what it does. It'll be like, man, this is, it should make an idol out with this. This is, it's a break of this thing. It's one. - Actually, I have two of them. I have one that I use simply as the air freshener one that I turned it on a filter of the air, and I have one that I use the vacuum with that I keep them separate. So yeah, I mean, things are cool. - So Maurice, what it has, the reason it's so effective, it has a water basin. So the air comes in the tube and it dips over this water basin. And so anything that comes, that's sucked in, makes contact with the water, and it bonds with the water and it doesn't escape. So you have a water basin that will make you think that you're a pig when you go. - Oh my God. No, I'm looking at Robert's comment right here. Robert says I got, I got a white privilege 'cause he only, he only has one. You're dumbass dude. - I just, I want to do address the comments as well because somebody asked why I'm blurry. It's because I live out in the middle of the woods and there's bad internet out here. I don't know, like there's nothing I can do that's the best internet I can get apart from Starlink. But even that, even that one is bad because-- - We're getting him Starlink guys. We are getting him Starlink. It's not going to be like that much longer. - Yeah, I don't think-- - I promise. - Yeah, you need to get Starlink. So some other stuff that's going on, so if you look at like the polling, well, we can talk about, let's see, polling, that's something that irritates the hell out of me. A lot of these polls, like there was an independent poll that was D plus 15 that they're tied in, which means that Indipitronks kicking her butt in Independence in Michigan. So like people listening, when you see these polls, make sure you understand what the index on the poll is. Most of the polls, excuse me, most of the polls are D plus something. So-- - Explain the ratings, would you? - Yeah, so if we go to Los Angeles, or let's say Montana, okay? Trump won Montana by, you know, what, 20% or something like that? So anything in Montana is going to be an R plus whatever. So, or if you were to go to like LA, that's going to be a heavily blue, that's a very, very blue area. And let's say you did polling there. You have to look at like how many Democrats were polled, how many Republicans were polled, how many independents were polled. And then you figure out what the percentage is of Democrats. So if it's like, there's 13% more Democrats being polled, and then Kamala's tied in that poll, that's not good. She should be up by 13% because it's 13% more Democrats, if that makes any sense. - Right, right, right. - So, yeah, Democrats, they love over indexing that. They're trying to crop up and stand up this like artificial like movement behind the most unpopular vice president in the history of vice president, vice presidential polling. And they're, how did she flips from that to Obama 2.0? - Right. - 30 days, like get out of here. We're not, I mean, we don't always get along, but like, you know, the people on the other side, like they can't be that stupid, you know, like... - Never underestimate the stupidity of a liberal. - It's so true man, and the thing that's really unfortunate about that is that like my cousin Lizzie is a, she works at a massive, a global advertising company called Cargo, she's like the number three there. I mean, just very, very successful. Grew up in Savannah, Georgia with me, and then lived and built her career in New York, and then they moved out of New York because they couldn't afford it. And so she's down in Florida now, and she's just like, you know, I'm just really excited. I was like, about what? She's like, I just like her. I said, what does that mean? What do you mean, you just like her? She's like, I don't know, there's just something about her. I like her. That's like, what do you like? Like you can't vote. - See, that's where you can actually see the brainwashing because they feel something, it relates to them. They receive it somehow, and yet they can't explain how. It's like marketing, as you mentioned, advertising. There are certain colors that invoke hunger. There are certain phrases when they're put a certain way to evoke a certain or listen to certain emotion. They're masters at this. So these people that pick up on this and say, Trump is bad, Kamala good, and can't explain why, there's something that our brains, that our interpretation of that stimuli, doesn't react that way too. But then other people are just like, I hate him. I don't know why. He sucks, I don't know why. She's great, I don't know why. - If someone tells me to hate Trump, I can see why. Like I get it, like I'm not saying I agree with it, but like I can understand how certain people would really dislike him. He's brash, he's loud, he's boisterous, he takes credit for everything. Like he's got some narcissistic traits. But you know, that's fun. But if you tell me you love someone, well, why do you like him so much? Well, why do you like Trump so much, Baker? Well, policy, we got four years of data with him running the country with an ex-stack against him. - Right. - Imagine how effective he'll be this go round when he knows how the game's played. And he's not running for re-election, so he's gonna focus on his legacy. Or, you know, Kamala, why do you dislike Kamala? Well, I give you a hundred dollars, you can give me a reason to like her. Like just, I don't know of anything. Like what has she ever done? She's never had a job. - Right. - Her and Walt's have never had a real job outside of the government. They've never run a company, they've never run payroll, they have no idea how fun-- - Baker, your military, are you ex-military? - No, no. - Okay. What's your opinion though, on the Tim A. Walls lying about his rank, the whole situation? - So I've had two opinions on that. So one, what's from a human to human, like a human perspective, it's unfortunate that he felt the need to, one lie, to not check people when they would kind of give him credit or thanks for serving in Afghanistan. Like that's another thing. It's like, oh, thank you for your service. You're like, that happens to me all the time. You in the military? No, absolutely not. It's unfortunate like he lied, he felt the need to lie. He never felt the need to correct the record. His entire career is based on the casual relationship with the truth. And what's really unfortunate is that if he had never told one of those lies, he would still be in the same position he's in today. Because those were all meaningless lies. They didn't do anything. They didn't advance the ball. If you asked a thousand people that never, just a random thousand people say, what's the difference between an E8 and an E9? They'd look at you like you're crazy. Or if you were to say, hey, what's a command sergeant major? They'd be like, I don't know if they're, I don't know what that is. So it's one of those like really stupid pointless lies that just doesn't do anything. And then if you look at his, you know, state champion high school football coach, he was not a head coach ever. He was a volunteer defensive assistant coach. They didn't wanna state championship, which is cool. But he was not the defensive coach. That's another lie. And then he has on his website that he won some Chamber of Commerce Award in the state of Nebraska in 2006. And they just came out this week. They're like, remove this from your website immediately. We don't know who you are. You've never won this award. There's just this long, long list of, of. - So he has no integrity, right? We can all agree that he has zero integrity. - He's a compulsive liar. This is the same thing that Joe Biden did back when he was interviewed. And he was like, I graduated in top of my class. I graduated at three degrees. And he rattled off all those things. It is a compulsive liar that doesn't actually have the integrity. So Eddie, you are spot on with this in saying he has an agenda and he doesn't care how he gets to it. - But let me ask you, Maurice, does the integrity part bother you more than, let's say, the clip of his wife smiling because the city was burning and she opened the windows so she could revel in the smell or him saying-- - Oh, he got to do that. - Oh, I seen the video. I seen the actual-- - It's the point. - Oh, you don't think she actually did it? - Of course not. - So she made the story up to seem relevant or what was the reason for her telling it. - And her to the initiative, to pander to like-- - That's even worse, that's even worse. That means you don't know anything. You're willing to make up that kind of a lie. There's no line you won't cross. - These are wholly, wholly, entirely unserious people. Like, so I started consulting back in DC in February. And so my background is consumer packaged goods. And if you take a marketing campaign for a consumer packaged goods company startup, there's no difference between that and a political campaign. They're the exact same thing. So I basically was taking my marketing background we're applying those same principles to political campaigns. And what I learned, and I don't care who hears this, anyone in DC listens to this, I'll say to their face. These people are not capable of holding a real job. You don't understand, man. - That's not on you. That's actually not in true at all. - They're politicians and they're staffers. But these people are incompetent. Like you look at them and they're all like, they're all sociopaths, neurotic deviance. I think most of them are demons. And then you have these staffers and they're like genetically defunct, deficient in some capacity. Like, I sat in a bunch of meetings and I looked at some of these people and I'd be like, how does this person like wipe their butt when they go to the bathroom? Like, how did Joe Biden's DEI picks that steal luggage from the airport or? - Yeah, that's a lot to me. - You know what I'm talking about? What's the guy out of Jersey, Nader, Nadler, Nadler? The little-- - Oh, Jerry Nadler? - Yeah, he's not little, he's big and-- - No, if this was like Greece, like in Sparta, we'd have thrown him off the cliff. - Mm-hmm. - The one that gets under my skin the most, and I think probably most people in the chat as well, it's Jamie Raskin. Jamie Raskin, I would have a hard time being in his proximity. I would, I would, I'm just being straight. I wouldn't be able to sit near the guy, I'd wanna shake shit out of him. I really would. He's a terrible person. He lies, everything that comes out of his mouth is a lie. It's inflammatory. - And you're describing most of the people in government, the problem that we've had-- - Not so much as it does with him. - Well, there's two things. Is that one, we assumed that our representatives in our government actually represent us. And two, we stopped judging them off of merit. So instead of looking at their actions rather than their words, we have now prioritized who has, well, I mean, I don't know if this is necessarily in our control. I would like the hope that it is. But the advertisements that they put out, like the reason people dumped so much money into advertisements is because it works. And instead of judging off of the policy or off of what they're actually doing, they're looking at what the, like the, it's like looking at the YouTube thumbnail instead of what's actually in the video, right? It is a low resolution outlook of what they want you to see, except for we don't get to see what's actually going on behind the scenes. So the people that are the best, yes, men, for the people working behind the scenes that are painting this picture for all of us to see, they paint this picture, this is the politician, right? Kamala Harris, she's this great woman. She is joy and hope and all of the stuff that they're painting for Kamala Harris. She is just a yesman. She is literally just a puppet. But the only thing that is winning people over right now is the picture that the people behind the scenes are painting for her. It has nothing to do with merit in any way, shape, or form. And that's why we can argue with these liberals and they don't give a shit because they're arguing about the thumbnail instead of the substance of the actual video or in the old adage, they're judging a book by the cover instead of actually reading through it, which is probably a better analogy because it takes work to read through something as opposed to sitting back and watching a video. - And they're very surface level. They're very surface level, that's for sure. - I have, the politicians that chat my ass on both sides are the ones that say things strictly to gas light. Like the ones that are seeking the truth and answers and give us a, for instance, let's see. - I think that Tom Cotton went on CNN the other morning and raised hell. I think Holly from Missouri, I think he's legit. - Oh, okay. I was like, wait a minute. - Oh, he's usually pretty good. They hate him, they call it a bully, but it's usually because they cannot defend against the things that he said. - It's fantastic. I really, truly enjoy when Ted Cruz gets ahold of people. - Ted Cruz is not, I know, arguing cases before the Supreme Court. Like he's no slouch, he's a legit, he's a brilliant legal mind. Who, what? - Who? - That's Merritt. - Oh, I thought you said Merritt. I was like, dude, I don't know about Merritt. - No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no. - No, no, I love how you're, like when you say somebody's name, you're also saying why, right? That's something that is drastically missing from the conversation that we have in general. It's that people just champion, they idolize these politicians as if they're going to rescue, even though 99% of government can only treat the symptom, it can never treat the cause, or 1% of the time it can treat the cause. 99% it's going to treat the symptom. So we need to stop idolizing these people and actually understand that, you know what, I don't want to go down this whole road. You were going down a point, go ahead. - I just realized that it was going to be a lot. In order to explain myself, I was like, shoot, this is going to be like a 10-minute thing. - So the politicians that are just trying to boost their name recognition, those drop me crazy. I could do without Marjorie Taylor Greene, even though I am-- - Oh, don't do that, don't do that, don't do that. - Now, listen, man, I'm going to-- - Yeah, that is my baby girl, man, you can't. - She-- - I love her. - No, I love her intentions. I don't like her delivery at all. Like going out-- - He's pissed off, man. She's mad. - No, no, she's, but what she's done is she's alienated herself and when you caught, there's, you know, the saying squeaky wheel gets the oil. - Sure, yeah. - A lot of times nowadays, the squeaky wheel gets replaced. Maurice, when tires squeak, you replace them. That's your job. But I think that Marjorie Taylor Greene, her heart's in the right place. I think her head's in the right place. I just think her delivery needs to be tightened up. - Mm-hmm. - Because ultimately, I think if she was a little bit more of a statesman, I think she could accomplish a lot more. You know what I mean? - You know what I mean, because-- - No, no, I mean, there's something to be said there, but she is on defense a lot. I mean, they attack her quite a bit. I mean, just like Trump. Trump is always inflammatory and whatnot like that, but Trump is usually just defending himself against the other things that people say. And even if you ask, like, let's say, like my Echo device right here, if I ask it about Marjorie Taylor Greene, it literally Amazon has designed these things to say she's a conspiracy theorist. Like this is how they build-- - She was a conspiracy theorist, and then they all came through when they're not conspiracies anymore. - Alexa, Alexa, who is Marjorie Taylor Greene? - Marjorie Taylor Greene. - I can't believe he has those things in there. - Her initials, MTG, is an American far right politician, businesswoman, and conspiracy theorist who has been the U.S. representative. - So Alexa, Paul, literally sent me against this theorist. - So, like, I think MTG could, I think she could tighten it up, and I think she could accomplish a lot more, because in DC, there's something to be said when people take you seriously in life, and I'm glad you mentioned the thing about Trump. Trump goes on the attack. Trump, if you read his book, "Art of the Deal," what he's doing today, he has been doing his entire life. He's been doing it his entire career. He and Ed Koch fought in the newspapers for who's mayor in New York for 30 years. Like this is what Trump does. And when politicians try to emulate Trump, that's when they run into problems. Trump is one of one, okay? Look at Ron DeSantis, my governor who I adore. Ron DeSantis had no business running for throwing his hat in the ring this election cycle. - Thank you, thank you. - He really hurt himself, he hurt himself. - You know why? - 'Cause he was the heir apparent. - No, because he's campaign managers. He's how DC works, he's campaign managers. If he did not run, they wouldn't have made me money. You see what I'm saying? - I wonder who was in his ear. I always figured like there's some conversation that took place in some dark corner somewhere to say, "Hey, we need you to get in there, "you're the next popular one. "We need to dethrone Trump." And there was bad money behind him, whatever. I didn't know, I could only surmise, and it didn't make sense. - His campaign managers, if they set out this election cycle, they wouldn't have gotten paid. That's how they make money on running political campaigns. So they talked him into running. He took Trump's approach, being an attack dog. He was talking with his hands, he was trying to copy Trump. You will never, ever beat Donald Trump at anything, trying to be like Donald Trump, that's absurd. But if you listen to DeSantis now, he's the best, most clear, most concise, most presidential statesman in the political spectrum. He is amazing. There's a Twitter account that covers Florida politics and it does all of his speeches. He doesn't do the hand thing. He doesn't try to sound like Trump. He talks like himself and does his thing. And he is-- - Can you still listen? - Lifts in the shoes? - I'll never get over that. I will never get over that. That drives me crazy. But he said that DeSantis, you can't carry Lake out in Arizona. Like same thing, like endorsed by Trump. These people, they get endorsed by Trump and they feel like they have to behave a certain way to maintain his endorsement. And it's just not necessary in my opinion. - No, be you, be you. And there's definitely something to that. Kerry Lake has always been a fighter though. She's always been that-- - He's always been behind her. - She doesn't stand a chance. She doesn't have a chance of winning a team. - And when they have DeSantis-y? - Not a chance. - Really? - Not a team. - What is your home? - No wall's changed. Here's the unfortunate for him. That's the only candidate that could run against that guy and lose. You can say whatever-- - That's unfortunate. It's unfortunate. - People can say whatever they want. - Well, so no one wanted to go up against the Trump machine. So Kerry Lake, she lost the race for governor. She's, I mean, I hope she wins. I'm not saying I want her to win. I just, I don't-- - She's trailing by seven points. - Dude, she's trailing by four points on another one. - She's trailing by four to seven, call it five. We'll call it four. She's trailing by four points against a scumbag. - She's so bad in, I guess, in the eyes of Arizona, I don't know her, that the sheriff's office that endorsed Trump endorsed her opponent yesterday. - Well, here's the thing that I know about with women in politics or like as being like seen as a leader because I know that like Marjorie Taylor Greene, right? She, I don't think her, I don't think her issue is exactly what she does. Like I feel like she is the type of person that opens a door for a more articulate person with the same exact news. Like I don't really think that she necessarily has bad views or anything, but I honestly believe that people are more open to voting for a man. Like Kerry Lake is having a difficult time with this. I mean, I just, I feel like people don't take her seriously. I mean, she's smart. - There's the problem. She's smart. - She is, but here's the problem. Arizona politics are the most corrupt in the entire country, more corrupt than Chicago, more corrupt than any state in the entire-- - Oh, we've been into this. - It's the truth. It is the absolute truth. Whether there's cartel money, the things that Taylor and Harris absolutely proved, all the way to the ousting of Liz Harris, to the denial of all of the money that was received by the legislature there, the fact that Bentoma owned the election company, the run back election services and precision arrow, like you can't get, this is, and those are the Republicans. So that place is dirty. It's dirty and it needs to be cleaned up. - What, Arizona politics? - Yes. - Yeah. - Yeah. - Yes. - Back to Marjorie Taylor Greene. One thing I just remembered. So at Marjorie Taylor Greene, like when she goes into these committee hearings, like I just think she's looking for a sound bite. Like, you know, and maybe that's what the people in her district want. - That's definitely part of the problem. You're absolutely right about that. Is that a lot of our politics is about creating sound bites. And she does have-- - And stop a moment. - You got some agreement in the chat as you can see. I think, to a degree, I think everybody's looking for a sound bite. I mean, you're always running, right? I think as a politician, when you're in politics, you're always running. You're always campaigning. - It's name recognition. That's all I'm looking for is name recognition. - Yeah, she may do it a little more than most. She's challenged probably a little more than most, I think. But I love when she just uses an explanation when she's attacked by the left. You know, go F yourself, like right there. - Well, how about that? - You gotta love that. I absolutely love that. I absolutely love that. - Yeah, it's not in hominem. It's just like saying, "Hey, man, you can go screw yourself." - Yeah, exactly, exactly. - I don't mind that. I will tell you this, I'm excited about the whole unity party thing he's working on. Like, I think that's kind of cool with, you know, Elon, RFK Jr, Tulsi Gabbard. Gotta get Rogan on now. I think Rogan's gonna be the next guy next Domino to fall. - They were trying to make a problem between Trump and Rogan for a while. They were putting all these headlines on. - They're Rogan's dude in Ms. NBC or whoever made that video for $30 million, battle also against him. - And he shut it. He definitely shut it up. We're trying to say that he reeled against Trump and that he wasn't endorsing Trump. And he tried, and then all the other media companies jumped piled on and tried to make something out and nothing. And like, listen, I'm a straight constitutionalist. I don't believe in compromising. I believe things, there's a good and there's evil. There's no gray area, black, white, that's simple. And that's just me. But I also believe in a country that allows everyone to have their own belief system, their own things as long as they don't harm what the next person is or believes and we all have our liberty, that's what it's designed for. We just need to get back to a point, which is why I agree with your sentiment that I like this unity party thing to a degree because it brings things back to a point where we can disagree with someone and still have a conversation. And we've lost that ability. I mean, we have your whole family that don't go to Thanksgiving together anymore. - It's a collection of ideas. I will, there's some things I don't want RFK Jr. anywhere near. - Yeah, like the EPA. - I want him to have half the EPA. - Not, there's a 22 dollar gallon gas, any one of the legislation that would lock people up for climate crimes. Like I don't want him anywhere near that. - The EPA, you could, do you think, like listen, if you're a power plant and you're dumping your waste into it. - Okay, this much I agree with. This much I agree with. You're like the Atrazine, the Atrazine in the groundwater and all that, those studies that he brought up, I think they were very legitimate and it was funny how Google took the time to ban him for saying that. - I think he's got a point. - Not realizing that the NIH was the one who actually conducted the study. And now we wonder why people that can consider themselves a transgender, non-binary, whatever used to grow at a rate of one to 2% over a year or so. Now we're seeing growth in that same sector of people that demographic is growing upwards of 5% a year when that's never been the case. What's the difference between them and now? Part of it is social engineering and indoctrination at the grade school level, the college level, just in society in general. And then part of it may be something that we're eating, drinking or being exposed to. And that's just the reality of it. But we should ask the question, why? Why all of a sudden are these things occurring? And he got a lot of flack for asking the question and bringing legitimate scientific studies into the fray. And it just makes no sense to me why people don't even have these conversations. - You know, I'll tell you one thing I'm actually kind of disappointed about with this new power team that we've created is that all of them are 90s Democrats. And it worries me, I had this conversation years ago with my brother, 'cause he was saying that conservatism is just the democrats of 20 years ago. And I kind of knew that because like one of the arguments that I had against people was saying that like, "Well, Trump is literally a 90s Democrat." Like that's, his policies haven't changed. That's what he's always said. Like his rhetoric has been consistent since the 90s, his policies have been consistent since the 90s. See, that's the same- - I would say even further back, I've seen him have interviews in the 80s where he was saying the same thing. - Oh my God. (laughs) - You know, I'll tell you the 90s. - And Baker is so funny that I have these references to these things that I'll say. And he won't have any idea what I'm talking about at all. He just, it just goes right past him. I forget about the gap, the age difference sometimes. And I'm saying things that he just wasn't around for. - And Maurice, keep this in mind. - Things evolve and change over time in today's day and age, things are changing rapidly. So yeah, they had some 90s Democratic leanings to them, but like RFK cutting loose in HHS. Health and human services. - Yeah, yeah, yeah, agreed. - Let him go hog wild. - The FDA as well, FDA as well, I'd be good with that. I'd love to see Tulsi Gabbard in the VA, taken on the VA. - Yeah, you're not alone. - I'd love to see Elon Musk government efficiency. Like assigned, like Vivek said, assign a number to every government employee and flip a coin, heads positive, tails odds. And whatever it lands on say, hey, if your number is odd number, you're fired. If your number is an even number, you still have a job. (laughs) But I can't say a discrimination at that point, can they? - Exactly. I'd love to see, I want every ounce of DEI and ESG removed from all government offices. You got to get a lot of employees out of DC. And then I'd love to see Vivek get a hold of the border. God, I'd love to see him get over the border. - Vivek is, we didn't know how to receive that guy at first, but he's completely won me over. And I said the same thing to Maurice about Tulsi. I'm very skeptical at first when people switch parties, which he has completely gotten me won over. I believe her. - Ask yourself this, do you blame her? - No. - When people switch parties asks me like, well, I wouldn't they switch, you know? Also on Manchin, the Senator from Western-- - Joe Manchin, yeah, yeah. - I kind of like that guy. You know, who am I, but I would like to see-- - He murdered a few issues that I thought were like kind of wild. He was trying to play two ends against the middle. - Yeah, you went about that. He did do that. - Did the parent issue. And I mean, there was a few things that he did. We have one of our hosts, Nate Kane, that ran for Congress over there. He was the Uranium One whistleblower. He was endorsed by General Flynn in his race. And he's got a probably a much more interesting take on Manchin. I assume that this unity party thing that Trump was talking about, I assume that Joe Manchin is part of what he's talking about. I'm just assuming that was one of my guesses that Joe Manchin is involved there. - Well, they said another Democrat. It might be that Dean Phillips guy who was the only Democrat that was willing to run against Joe Biden, this election cycle, I think he's from Minnesota. - There was a man adjacent to something, I forget his last name, in America's Samoa, that ran against Biden and beat him in the caucus and never conceded the race. He actually won. I think there was the only place they couldn't throw him off the ticket was America's Samoa. Now, I don't know about anyone else. I know other people tried, but the DNC throw him off the ticket. - Yeah, so it's gonna be interesting. Like, one of my, I've working on two projects, one is smokeless vets, which is we wanna get, you know, a million veterans to quit smoking between now and 2030. And we-- - Maurice. - Maurice, you smoke? - I'm not a vet. (laughing) - So what we learned was that there's studies that show this is that nicotine gum doesn't do anything. Nicotine patches don't do anything. Laws and just don't do anything. And the only way to truly quit smoking is switching, transitioning off of smoke tobacco onto smokeless forms of nicotine. They pouches, things like that. Those actually work quite well. - Like what does Zinn, Zinn, or Velo? - Zinn or Velo. And because tobacco is what's bad for you. Nicotine is not bad for you at all. It's actually quite obviously. Nicotine is not bad for you. - I thought it was all-- - What are the effects they put in there? What are the effects of nicotine? Maurice, what did you say? - Like in cigarettes, I thought it was all the additives that they put in there. Like, I know that tobacco, like smoking it is technically bad for you, but the worst part of it is all the additives that they add into the cigarettes, like the rat poison and all the 900 other chemicals. - Judas, Zinn, and all those other things, yeah. - So it's the way that your body converts in and in and the liver into in and T, okay? So that's how tobacco and smoking are bad for you. Nicotine goes into the stomach. The stomach is below the liver. It cannot convert into anything carcinogenic at all. It's not possible. So find me a dentist and ask them if dipping causes mouth cancer. Pull them to the side. They're like, oh, you're a dentist. Hey man, can I ask you a question? Does dipping cause mouth cancer? I'm not gonna tell anyone, but just tell me the truth, they'll be like, no, it does not. There's no cases, there's no documented cases of that. - God, what's that? Luca Plakia? What do you-- - Yeah, there's no media for you. - So anyway-- - The effects I have in here it says that, and this is weird, 'cause I've never looked this up before, but increased alertness and euphoria, improved mood, increased heart rate and blood pressure, decreased appetite. I didn't know that it decreased your appetite. - Nicotine is actually the opposite of bad for you. Mental acuity, yeah, dude, I'm serious. Tobacco, smoking tobacco is not good for you. Nicotine. - Yeah, I agree, but-- - And listen, dude, I don't have a problem with cereal. I actually, to quote Tucker Carlson, I don't really think that there's anything better than this, that perfect whiff of a lit cigarette. Like, there's just something about it. - Yeah, he said that in his interview, I forget who he was being interviewed by, but yeah. They gave him, he showed up and he had his dip and his all the stuff that he needed just to be there and be comfortable, yeah. - Yeah, so in the other project, the other project I'm working on is vote for America.org, vote the number for America.org. And we're basically what we're doing is getting individuals to register to vote and confirm their registration. So, if you're actually reading some of these comments, yeah, nicotine's not bad for you. There's people in the-- - Oh, I was wondering. I was like-- - So, vote for America.org. We are getting people to register to vote and we're getting people to confirm their registration and it's not enough to vote. You have to take one, you have to, you got to connect with one person. It's the whole plus one model, okay? So, every single person that's listening to this, every person that's chatting, you guys have all interacted with multiple people today that have quit, that didn't vote in the last election. Every one of you, family member, co-worker, friend on social media, a person you play games with online, someone that goes to your church, your prayer group, all that stuff. So, you've got to connect with them because when people sit out the election, that's two votes for the other guy. Democrats aren't disenfranchised. It's the Republicans that are disenfranchised and we have to do a better job of getting to the polls and young males, we have to get our young males to vote. Our young men are not voting and if our young men would vote, we could turn and our firearms owners and our outdoorsmen and our hunters and our gunners. - Christians. - Yeah, Christians, if they would all vote. - Veterans, I was surprised at how many veterans don't vote. You guys grew my mind with that one. - So veterans, when you're in the military, it's very easy, they make it easy for you to vote. 75, 77% of all active duty soldiers participate in elections. It's when they get out, that number drops to 33%. And a lot of them, they look underneath the skirt of the U.S. government, they don't like the way it smells, they've done their time, they don't trust the government and they're disenfranchised. So I don't trust them. - I will say this, I will say this. Back to the Tim Walz and the stolen valor, and his implied valor and all that stuff. And him just being a career pathological liar, like the dude's a sicko. Every person, I know personally that's been, that I've run into face to face over the past week or a couple of weeks. I've always been like, "Hey, man, "like what was your highest rank?" They're like, you know, E-46, whatever, whatever. And I was like, "Was there ever a time in your career "when you didn't know what your rank was?" And they look at me like, "I'm crazy." Like, absolutely not, no. - I got a cool story about this when you're done. - Never a day that I didn't know exactly what my rank was. And then you ask like, "Hey, did you ever have "like any gray area as to you or deployment "in a combat theater?" They're like, "What are you talking about?" No, I'm like, "Yeah, I'm just asking questions "like this Tim Walsh thing." They're like, "No, he's full of shit." So you wanna motivate veterans, let someone live out their service. They will eat their own faster than anything. - Well, here's the thing. When you retire, your benefits are paid out to you monthly based on the rank that you retire on. I've never been in the military, but I know this for a fact. So this guy has been receiving benefits monthly since the day he retired based on his rank when he left. So there was never any confusion about why he received that amount of money and what rank he had, he was reminded every month when he got a check. Every single month, this guy knew he intentionally lied. They tried to walk back the lie and it just, it doesn't make any sense, but it does go to his character. These guys have no integrity. They're not gonna be good leaders. Everything they're telling you now is the same shit they told you before. You're not gonna be taxed if you make less than $400,000. Does that sound familiar? Isn't that exactly what Biden said? It's exactly what Biden said. And he said, we're gonna raise taxes four times, but Trump actually said it during the debate. They're gonna end up hiking taxes more than four times what you're currently paying. And then everyone said that was a lie. The fact checkers all said that was a lie. And then here come this bombshell of unrealized capital gains taxes. And people don't understand how-- - Bad, that actually is. - So that's not constitutional. That'll never happen, it'll never pass. There's no effing way. - I wouldn't say that. Look at all the intrusions on our gun rights. I mean, they will ask me anything. The only reason, the only reason that, like when we say unconstitutional, we mean that people believe in the constitution enough that they won't let this happen. But that is changing and it's been changing. But they're to the point now where I believe that unconstitutional doesn't mean anything to them. And I'm not sure it will if they continue down this path. - I agree with that, Eddie. I mean, with Maurice, but keep this in mind. The president doesn't have the authority to tax. That comes from Congress. So they're in a congressman? - He doesn't have the ability to unilaterally wage war without congressional approval either, but he, they do. When's the last time Congress waged war? - Iraq. - Or two? - Iraq. - Yeah, they voted on it with George Bush was in office, but not since. And we've done a lot and it was just perception is power. And that's what I tell people all the time. If you believe someone has the power to do something, then they do, right? The constitution says there shall be no law made, when you're talking about the Second Amendment, no law made. That's, that's pretty damn black and white, no law made. How many gun laws are there? The constitution says there shall be no tax made upon your labor. How many taxes are there that you see when you get your paycheck, they're all right there. But the constitution says the exact opposite. - Yeah, but keep this in mind. There's 435 congressmen and 100 senators. What percentage-- - Increasing with the amount of legal immigration all the time, yeah. - What percent of them do you think would support tax from unrealized capital gains? - None of them, because I, again, yeah, none of them, because it would, it would, it would actually torpedo. - Unless they write out their own exemption, this is the thing that I'm worried about is like-- - You're poor. - They can write out their own exemption. - They did it. - Yep, and then what? And then what? It's like, it is so frustrating because they continuously will pass laws that infringe on our rights because they see themselves as a separate class. And this is like, there are so many things that in our society, that I think people are fundamentally misunderstanding, right? Like they say that back in 2020 with all the government lockdowns, Trump didn't do enough, right? Well, the problem is is that the change needs to come from the bottom up. And this is why a hammer so much on people needing to vote is because people have become so disenfranchised and they abdicate their responsibility to the politicians and they say, "Well, it was Obama's fault." Well, you know what some of it was, but most of it was our fault because we didn't do anything about it. We didn't vote 33% of veterans that aren't active duty, 33% do vote. That means that 67% doesn't. And how many Christians don't vote? And we wanna talk, like there's so many, I just, I have such a hard time with this and this is why a hammer this down so much is putting the responsibility on you and on me because it's our job to do this. It's our job to make this change. That's why this whole, this entire vote for America thing, I am 100% down for, because it is our responsibility. If you wanna make the change, then you have to embody the values that you wish to see in this world. And you have to get your ass off the couch and stop blaming Obama and stop blaming Trump or whoever the heck you wanna blame and you actually have to do something about it. And if all of the conservatives stopped saying that all my vote doesn't matter, it's only one, you don't know how far that ripple is going to go when you make that change. When you take that step forward to make a change for this country, you can, you have no idea how far that's gonna go out. So start today, make sure that you're registered to vote and that everybody in your circle is as well. - Yeah, absolutely. Jintz, I told you I'd do 30 minutes, it's an hour and eight minutes. - Oh, we appreciate your brother. We're closing out right now anyway. - And coming over here, my brain is starting to shut down. - Yeah, you're good. So I wanna give a shout out to McGrawing Nation, guys. Every one of you, we love you guys. We appreciate your support so much. Thank you for taking the time to join us today, Baker. It's excellent and we have to do it again sometime. Marty, do you wanna say anything before we get out of here? - God bless you guys. - All right, guys, have a good one. - And as usual, the silent majority, you need to stop being silent and stand your ground. Evil will never retreat willingly. It must be beaten back. We'll see you next time with "Patri's Prayer." - Right, guys. (upbeat music) - This is the "Patriates Prayer" podcast. It's a tremendous show. What are the greatest shows in the history of the world? - This is Bryson Gray and you are watching the "Patriates Prayer." - So on the "Patriates Prayer Network." Thank you all so much. ♪ America's falling, they all say ♪ ♪ Together the faithful now and pray ♪ ♪ The Patriots' prayers ♪ ♪ The Patriots' prayers ♪ ♪ Always a trail will build you the brand ♪ ♪ I am a change in sound ♪ ♪ I'm a radical now ♪ ♪ America's falling, they all say ♪ ♪ Together the faithful now and pray ♪ ♪ The Patriots' prayers ♪