Episode Transcript
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0:02
All right, welcome to Brighton Broadcast News
0:04
for Tuesday, November 21st, 2023. Mike
0:08
Adams here. Thank you for joining me today. I
0:10
will have another episode for you tomorrow as
0:12
well, but not on Thursday
0:15
because that's Thanksgiving Day in
0:17
the United States. Happy pre
0:19
Thanksgiving, everybody. And
0:21
then Friday I will have an episode for
0:23
you and probably some updates over the weekend. But
0:26
of course, if crazy
0:29
nukes start flying or whatever on Thanksgiving
0:31
or the day before,
0:32
I will definitely record
0:35
a Thanksgiving episode. So
0:38
I guess it's just determined by world events. Also
0:41
want to mention, I've got an interview coming up today
0:43
that I think you'll appreciate, especially those
0:45
of you who are women
0:47
listeners interested in self-defense.
0:51
There is a new court decision that
0:54
is a big deal.
0:55
It put a seemingly,
0:58
well, nearly permanent stay
1:01
on the ATF's arm brace rule. And
1:04
what this does is it allows gun
1:07
manufacturers all across America to now legally
1:09
sell arm
1:10
brace pistols. And
1:14
the company that I really
1:16
respect called Shield Arms that has
1:18
some very innovative products. They
1:21
just recently sent me for evaluation
1:23
a folding
1:25
nine millimeter AR
1:28
style pistol carbine with an arm
1:30
brace that is the
1:32
most amazing, the most compact
1:35
and usable self-defense system
1:38
for women.
1:40
I mean, you can't carry it as a sidearm. Obviously,
1:42
it's much larger than that. But for something in
1:45
your home or even in your vehicle
1:47
where legal, you know, check your local laws,
1:49
this is ideal. So I decided to invite
1:52
on Brandon from Shield Arms to
1:54
talk about this technology. They have a patented
1:56
folding system and, you know, with the
1:58
arm braces back in place.
1:59
now the ATF got smacked down these
2:03
systems are available right now and by the
2:06
way for those of you who have been waiting to
2:09
purchase firearms or
2:11
AR-15 pistols from like
2:13
Maxim defense let's say or I don't
2:16
know or Palmetto State Army or anywhere you
2:19
can do that now you can do that again
2:22
check your local laws you have to use an FFL but
2:25
that's all legal right now in fact
2:27
I just you know acquired not too
2:29
many days ago this folding
2:31
arm-braised AR style 9
2:34
millimeter pistol that I'm going to be talking about today so
2:37
it's a it's a really good self-defense tool we'll
2:39
be talking about that okay not
2:42
everybody was happy with my comments
2:44
on Trump yesterday I do
2:46
always appreciate your feedback and
2:49
it it's requiring me to clarify
2:52
so thank you for the opportunity
2:54
to let me clarify here look here
2:57
here's my assessment number
2:59
one you know me if you've listened to this for any period
3:01
of time I don't worship personalities
3:05
right I'm not into celebrity status
3:08
if I vote for Trump and I did
3:10
vote for Trump twice by the way if I were to vote for
3:12
him again it would be entirely
3:15
based on his principles
3:17
and what I believe to be his actions
3:20
and his his loyalties his morals and so
3:22
on right and same thing with other
3:24
candidates like Robert F Kennedy jr.
3:27
running as an independent if I vote
3:29
for anyone it's not because they're a famous
3:31
person or a big shot person or a big
3:33
name it's because I would
3:36
believe that they have the the closest match
3:39
to the values that that I
3:41
cherish that I think are really important for
3:43
our liberties our country our future
3:46
together so that's one thing I
3:48
want to state yes I'm
3:51
harsh on Trump right now but with
3:53
reason secondly
3:56
I am constantly reevaluating
3:58
my positions And I do
4:00
not hold grudges against any of
4:02
these candidates. Right now, I'm
4:05
very disillusioned about Robert F. Kennedy
4:07
Jr., because he has
4:09
not said, you know, stop bombing the children in
4:12
Gaza, for example. And as you
4:14
know, for many years, I've been very frustrated
4:16
with Trump and his ties to Big
4:18
Pharma and Pfizer. Those
4:21
are not grudges. I
4:24
can change my conclusion
4:27
at any time based on that person's behavior
4:29
or what they say. For example,
4:31
R.F.K. Jr. could come out tomorrow and
4:34
say, yeah, you know what? We need to seek peace. We
4:36
need a ceasefire. We need to have
4:38
maybe a two-state solution. We've got to stop
4:41
this endless war. And by the
4:43
way, Israel is carrying out acts of clear
4:45
genocide in Gaza. If
4:48
he said those things, I would be really impressed.
4:51
And it would change my analysis
4:54
and my view of R.F.K. Jr. for
4:56
the positive. If Trump came
4:58
out tomorrow and said, oh, hi,
5:01
I'm Donald J. Trump. I'm running for president.
5:03
And by the way, I want to end the Federal Reserve
5:06
and have an honest money system so that
5:08
the government can't just keep printing endless
5:10
money and weaponizing it against we the
5:12
people. If he said that,
5:15
I mean, he would be, number one, basically
5:18
channeling Ron Paul, which is
5:20
a good thing. Ron Paul
5:23
would be the perfect candidate right now. But
5:25
if he said that, I would
5:27
have a lot more respect for Trump and I would
5:30
reevaluate my position accordingly.
5:32
So that's two things to keep in mind. Just remember,
5:36
I don't hold in my heart hatred
5:38
or grudges to any of these candidates.
5:41
I'm constantly reevaluating them. And
5:44
that goes for Democrats, too. I
5:46
don't just inherently hate
5:49
all Democrats, although I've been very critical, obviously,
5:51
of Democrats over the years. But
5:53
if there is a Democrat out there that
5:56
I think is saying something really
5:58
important, We need to hear,
6:00
for example, I just interviewed Dennis Kucinich
6:03
and he's a Democrat
6:05
and his
6:06
voice right now at this moment in history,
6:08
I think is absolutely critical. And
6:11
that's why I interviewed him and was
6:14
really impressed with what he had to say because
6:17
he is a man of peace. He is a man of
6:20
a lot of wisdom actually. And
6:22
he and I probably do not agree
6:25
on many issues, maybe
6:27
second amendment, maybe climate change, I don't know.
6:30
We didn't even talk about those things. We
6:32
didn't even talk about RFK. We talked about
6:35
how can we stop the deaths
6:37
of women and children and civilians in Gaza. How
6:40
do we get to peace? How do we get to a world where
6:42
we can coexist with each other without bombing
6:44
and killing each other constantly? That
6:47
is the most important question right now in
6:50
this moment.
6:52
And so I
6:53
can welcome a conversation
6:56
with almost anyone if
6:59
I think that they have something valuable to
7:01
say and if we can find some areas
7:04
of common agreement, which frankly I
7:06
can usually find an area of common
7:08
agreement with almost anyone, almost.
7:11
Maybe not like crazy psycho
7:13
serial killers, but pretty
7:16
much anybody else. I can find some
7:19
common ground. But I can also
7:21
find areas of course of criticism with
7:23
almost anyone, including Trump, including
7:26
Trump, including RFK Jr. And
7:28
as far as I'm concerned, the more
7:31
powerful the position a person is
7:33
running for, the more stringent
7:37
the requirements should be for
7:39
how well they honor morals
7:42
and principles and ethics and so on. For
7:46
example, if there's some guy running a lemonade stand
7:48
on the corner of the street, if
7:52
he's not the most moral person,
7:55
so what? Somebody gets bad lemonade.
7:57
It's not the end of the world. Somebody gets
7:59
the wrong change. after buying them and yeah
8:01
somebody lost 50 cents okay not
8:04
the end of the world but if somebody's in the White House
8:06
and they are immoral or
8:08
their loyalties are with the
8:10
Pentagon rather than the people let's say as
8:13
an example that's a big problem that's a
8:15
problem that can affect the lives of many
8:17
many millions of people if not billions
8:19
of people around the world ultimately so we
8:22
must hold candidates for
8:24
US president to a much higher standard than
8:27
we would hold let's say even somebody running for
8:30
a local you know mayor position
8:33
or even a governor position although
8:35
governors are very important obviously but
8:37
the president you got
8:39
to hold them to a high high standard and
8:43
what I said yesterday about Trump I
8:46
stand by it because it's absolutely true I
8:49
said on the big three things that really
8:51
matter you know the big money makers in our society
8:53
which is disease debt and war right
8:56
big pharma big finance and
8:59
you know military industrial complex Trump
9:02
is all in on all three of those things
9:04
which means that the establishment is
9:07
okay with Trump and
9:09
yeah Trump might anger them with
9:11
the little things around the edges like
9:13
oh we're going to build a wall they don't really
9:15
care I want to say that the powers that
9:18
be the globalists they don't really care if you build
9:20
a wall they know that's just a decoration
9:22
you know it's just show-and-tell
9:25
time right yeah you build a wall so
9:27
what they don't care they're gonna fly people in you know
9:31
they're gonna have people coming in on boats they don't care if you
9:33
build a wall Trump build the wall but
9:35
he still approves big pharma
9:38
big finance and big war well
9:40
he's their man you see that's my point now
9:43
there's another thing that I'm noticing here
9:46
which is it's worth mentioning and
9:49
by the way if you disagree with anything I say you
9:52
are of course always welcome and even
9:54
encouraged to do your own analysis
9:56
and post it on brighton.com
10:00
which is the platform that we built for that purpose
10:02
or posted on rumble, you know, exercise
10:04
your free speech. I think the more voices that we have in
10:07
this space, in debates, you
10:09
know, the marketplace of ideas, I
10:12
think the more voices, the better. So
10:14
please consider doing that. But one thing I'm
10:16
noticing right now as Trump is,
10:21
he is achieving some pretty major
10:24
victories right now. This is why I'm
10:26
convinced that Trump is going
10:28
to be allowed to
10:30
win in 2024. Right.
10:33
Assuming we get to it. But Governor
10:36
Abbott, for example, just endorsed Trump. And
10:39
the courts in various
10:41
states, you know, are not allowing the
10:44
lawsuits to succeed that try to block Trump
10:46
from being on the ballot. OK, so.
10:49
And there are some other things as well. But Trump, as
10:51
much as he has been, you know, attacked
10:53
and unfairly vilified and
10:56
smeared and lied about and all that. He's
10:59
still being positioned to
11:02
be the next president. Because
11:05
again, like I said yesterday, I think the whole
11:07
Biden scheme has run its course
11:10
like they've worn out the Biden
11:12
ploy.
11:15
And the American people are just fed up
11:17
with it and they want somebody different. And a lot
11:19
of Americans will think that if Trump gets in, that's
11:21
a victory for us. We the people when
11:23
it's really not so much, you
11:25
know, it's a victory for the establishment, the
11:28
victory for big pharma, big banks and big war, obviously,
11:30
like I said, but it looked like
11:32
it's a victory for us, especially if he starts to build a wall.
11:34
Look, I can see the wall, you know, we
11:36
got a wall. Awesome. He kept kept
11:38
his campaign promise. Yay. Again,
11:41
doesn't matter. This is going to bring people across in
11:43
other ways. But what I'm
11:45
noticing is that a lot of talk about
11:48
Trump getting back into
11:50
office now, it's
11:52
it's so optimistic among
11:55
a lot of people in a lot of quarters. It's like, yeah,
11:58
Trump, he's going to get into office and he. He's gonna
12:00
clean out the deep state. You know? He's
12:04
gonna eliminate the FBI. He's
12:06
gonna get rid of the DOJ. And
12:09
I'm starting to think of, you know, President Comacho
12:12
from Idiocracy, right? Remember that scene?
12:15
And he's gonna make the crops grow. He's
12:19
gonna do it all in one
12:21
day. Remember that scene from Idiocracy?
12:24
It's starting to sound like this. And
12:27
as I'm hearing this, in
12:29
my mind, you know what this sounds like to me? Q 2.0.
12:35
Yeah. Remember the Q, the whole
12:37
Q movement? Which
12:39
really began with the 2020 election. And,
12:43
you know, the rigging of that election. And
12:45
the Q movement, which
12:48
I think in retrospect, most of us can agree
12:50
it was a complete PSYOP, probably a military
12:53
intelligence PSYOP. But the whole
12:55
Q narrative was that Trump
12:58
allowed the Democrats to
13:01
steal the election. And
13:03
it was all being documented,
13:05
but Trump was still in charge under
13:08
the continuity of government rules that had been put
13:10
in place beforehand. And
13:13
that he stepped back
13:15
to allow the Democrats to incriminate
13:18
themselves. And then at some point,
13:21
the Whitehats were gonna swoop in and
13:23
there were gonna be mass arrests, which
13:26
would be the end of the Democrat party forever.
13:29
And they would arrest Hillary Clinton. They would arrest
13:32
Joe Biden. They would arrest Bill
13:34
Clinton, right? They would arrest them all. Probably
13:38
find Jeffrey Epstein arrest him again too. They
13:41
would arrest everybody. And then we would all cheer
13:44
because we were told you're watching a movie.
13:46
It's all a setup
13:49
to trap the Democrats. And
13:51
we have the Navy SEALs
13:53
on our side and we have the military
13:56
intelligence divisions on
13:58
our side. And we have... you know, secret
14:01
black robes people on our side and
14:03
all this. This was the Q movement, which
14:06
some people call QAnon, but that
14:08
was never actually a correct name because it
14:10
wasn't QAnon. It was just Q.
14:13
It was the Q movement. And to this day, there
14:15
are still some people that are advocating
14:17
that Q is still in play.
14:20
That's what they're saying. I'm not convinced
14:23
of that. There was a while actually, right
14:26
after the election in 2020, that November, December, January,
14:29
where my conclusions
14:32
did kind of run parallel to
14:34
Q, but it
14:37
became clear to me, especially after January 6th
14:39
and then January 20th, when
14:41
Biden was sworn into office, it became
14:43
clear to me that none
14:46
of that was going to happen. None of the Q
14:48
stuff was going to happen. It was just a pipe
14:50
dream. But a lot of people have stuck to
14:52
the Q narrative ever since. And I
14:54
understand if you're listening to this and
14:57
you still think the Q narrative is in play, look,
15:00
I understand it's convincing. It's
15:02
got, there's a lot of hope. It's a positive
15:05
ray of light to look forward to. I totally
15:08
get it. I understand. And there
15:10
are some weird things that
15:12
have happened out there that might point in that direction.
15:14
But at this point, I'm not convinced
15:17
that Q is in play at all. I
15:20
think it's a psyop, right? So
15:23
now I'm seeing Q 2.0
15:27
in this narrative that Trump's going to come back into
15:29
office and he's going to fix everything. And
15:31
you know the saying, right? Fool me once, shame
15:34
on you. Fool me twice, shame
15:36
on me. And I admit after
15:38
Trump won the election in 2016, I
15:41
almost felt like I'd been teleported to an alternate
15:44
dimension. And we defeated
15:47
the great satanic evil of Hillary Clinton,
15:50
who apparently smells like sulfur, according
15:52
to some people, if you can believe that. I
15:55
don't know. I've never been around Hillary Clinton. I don't know what she
15:57
smells like. I wouldn't be surprised,
15:59
but. The point is she's pure
16:01
evil. We defeated the evil
16:04
that was going to bring down America. We
16:06
had a new hope for
16:08
America in Donald Trump, the ultimate
16:11
outsider who'd
16:13
promised he was going to drain the swamp,
16:16
right? He was going to lock her up. That's
16:18
Hillary Clinton. And he was going to
16:20
build the wall. And of
16:22
course, as time went on and
16:25
the Democrats and the deep state establishment
16:27
launched every possible obstruction
16:30
against Trump, they came up with the Russian
16:32
dossier. They impeached him twice,
16:34
I think, right? They just lied and lied
16:36
and lied. The media, the CIA, everybody,
16:39
the FBI was actively working to
16:41
entrap Trump and to get Trump the whole time.
16:43
We all watched that in total
16:46
dismay at how dangerous
16:48
our country had become. And yet, and
16:51
yet there are so many things that
16:54
Trump could have done that he did not argue, that
16:57
in retrospect, we have to look back and say, why
16:59
didn't he fight back? Why
17:02
was Trump paralyzed? Why did
17:04
he appoint Jeff Sessions to
17:07
be the attorney general? And why didn't he back
17:09
Jeff Sessions? Why did Sessions recuse
17:11
himself for what, two years? Stand
17:14
back and let the DOJ and just run
17:17
roughshod over the president. What
17:19
the heck was that? Right?
17:23
And then Bill Burr after that, same thing.
17:25
Bill Burr working for the deep state. Why did
17:27
Trump appoint all these people who
17:29
were all deep state traitors again
17:32
and again and again? James Comey for the FBI
17:35
was kept there by Trump. Trump
17:37
kept Fauci in power. As
17:40
the executive commander in
17:42
chief, Trump could have fired all these people.
17:44
He could have fired Comey, he could have fired Fauci, he could have
17:47
fired Sessions, he could have
17:49
fired all these people. But
17:52
he didn't. And he didn't
17:54
build a wall and he didn't drain the swamp and he didn't lock
17:56
her up. He did manage
17:58
to get a nice tax. cut passed
18:01
which only passed the Congress
18:03
because so many members of Congress are
18:06
engaged in insider trading that
18:08
they have a lot of profits from
18:10
their stock trades. Again
18:12
just skimming off the system with
18:15
an unfair advantage that they needed a way to
18:17
pay less
18:20
taxes on that and so of course
18:22
they all agreed with that. So yeah we got a tax
18:24
cut under Trump a pretty nice
18:26
one but we didn't build
18:29
a wall we didn't drain the swamp we didn't lock her up
18:31
if anything everything
18:33
got so much worse not Trump's
18:36
fault in that case but because of the
18:38
left's reaction the establishment's reaction censorship
18:41
went insane during those years
18:44
and then of course the DoD
18:47
got so desperate to try to defeat Trump
18:50
that they actually conspired with
18:53
Communist China with the Wuhan lab and sent
18:55
over the samples for the SARS-CoV-2
18:58
bioweapon had it enhanced
19:00
with the funding through of course
19:02
Fauci and others at the NIAID and came
19:07
back and launched that to
19:10
destroy the Trump presidency and
19:13
it worked and then
19:15
somebody whispered in Trump's ear and
19:18
said hey Trump you want to beat this COVID
19:20
thing what you got to do is fast-track
19:23
a bunch of vaccines that's
19:25
right order the FDA to
19:29
bypass clinical trials
19:33
and order emergency use authorization
19:36
and in effect that's what happened Trump ordered
19:39
you know the CDC the
19:41
FDA everybody involved
19:43
in the big pharma hurry up fast-track
19:46
this so-called vaccine we don't care if it works
19:48
or doesn't work we don't care if it's safe or not safe
19:51
get it out there get it into everybody's
19:53
arms jab it into women and men
19:55
and pregnant women and elderly and children
19:58
eventually and we'll just We'll
20:00
just make it all happen. I mean, who cares about the
20:02
science? And they tricked Trump into
20:05
supporting all that. He
20:07
went along with that and
20:09
then became the Operation Warp Speed
20:11
president, which,
20:14
of course, has now killed, who
20:17
knows how many millions of people in the
20:19
United States alone, or not to mention disabling
20:22
and maiming, many millions of people that
20:24
take them out of the workforce. So the economic damage,
20:27
the depopulation effects have
20:29
been vast, in fact. And
20:31
I know I'm going to take some heat on this, but
20:34
this is absolutely true. This is just a true
20:37
statement that Trump's
20:40
pushing of Operation Warp Speed has
20:43
actually killed more civilians
20:47
than Netanyahu's bombing of Gaza.
20:49
It's true.
20:50
It's true. Look at the numbers. Yeah,
20:54
I know people are like, how dare you compare those
20:56
two things? And well, hey, it is what it is. You
20:58
look at how many Americans are dead because of Operation
21:01
Warp Speed, those deaths
21:03
go right back to Trump. It
21:05
was his decision to do that because
21:07
he thought it would beat
21:10
the pandemic and restore the
21:12
economy and keep him in power. And
21:15
it's very possible, by the way, that in the next
21:17
year, especially as it is
21:19
now apparent that Trump is the front runner
21:22
for the GOP, whether the GOP realizes
21:24
it or not, it's quite possible
21:26
that the mainstream media is
21:29
going to flip the script on
21:32
the early COVID vaccine, the
21:34
Trump vaccine, and
21:36
lay the blame for the side effects and deaths
21:38
and myocarditis at Trump's feet. Now,
21:42
the way the media will do this is they'll say, well,
21:44
the Trump vaccine was dangerous,
21:46
but the Biden boosters were
21:49
safe because the FDA had more
21:51
time to review the
21:55
data and the science and the
21:58
drug companies, the vaccine manufacturers. had
22:00
more time, so the Biden boosters were safe
22:02
and effective, but the Trump jabs
22:04
were dangerous because orange man bad. And
22:07
so they can lay that blame at Trump's feet. And
22:10
frankly, Trump deserves
22:12
some of that blame because he pushed
22:14
them. He pushed the agencies to push
22:16
emergency use authorization. And he pushed
22:19
the military, by the way, to
22:21
inject everybody in the United States military.
22:24
And let me be clear about the following
22:26
statement here. This
22:28
is not, you know, this is
22:30
not hatred towards Trump. This is
22:32
not anger
22:35
at Trump. This is not holding a grudge or anything.
22:37
This is a statement of fact that
22:41
in my analysis, in my conclusion,
22:44
ordering the entire United
22:46
States military to take the
22:49
experimental bioweapon
22:51
jab was an act
22:54
of treason against America
22:56
and against our men and women in uniform.
22:59
It was an act of treason because
23:02
it directly killed
23:04
and maimed who
23:06
knows how many service members. It
23:09
killed them and it maimed them. And
23:11
it wasn't rooted in good science. It
23:14
wasn't rooted in clinical
23:16
trials or testing. And even
23:19
the so-called pandemic itself, or
23:22
as we say, the plannedemic, it was never
23:24
a real threat to especially young,
23:26
healthy service members. It
23:29
was never a threat to them to
23:32
this day. I mean, it's
23:34
clear there are hundreds of thousands of service
23:36
members, either dead, injured, or maimed
23:39
or disabled because Trump
23:41
pushed Operation Warp Speed on the military.
23:45
And he needs to own up to that. And again, it's not,
23:47
I'm not saying
23:49
that out of spite or anger. It is a simple
23:52
matter of fact, because I
23:54
honor the lives of our service members. Even
23:57
as much as I criticize the leadership of the military,
23:59
I honor. are men and women in uniform.
24:02
And you know what? Here we are
24:04
now, what, three
24:06
years later, three and a half years later, and
24:09
the United States military has recruitment
24:12
posters out there that say, hey,
24:14
we want you back. If you quit the military
24:17
because of the vaccine requirement, guess
24:20
what? You don't need vaccines
24:22
anymore and you can come on
24:24
back. That's right. This is from the
24:27
department of the army. There's
24:29
a letter that's been going out from the department
24:31
of the army. Let me read it for you. It's unbelievable.
24:34
It says, we write to notify you of new
24:37
army guidance regarding the correction
24:39
of military records for former
24:41
members of the army following rescission
24:44
of the COVID-19 vaccination requirement.
24:48
As a result of the rescission
24:50
of all current COVID-19 vaccine requirements,
24:53
former soldiers who were involuntarily
24:57
separated for refusal
24:59
to receive the COVID-19 vaccination, funny
25:02
how they use the word separated. No, they were kicked
25:04
out of the military. They were given the boot.
25:07
But those people may request a correction
25:10
of their military records from
25:14
either or both the army
25:16
discharge review board or
25:18
the army board for correction of military
25:21
records. You understand what this letter
25:23
is saying? This letter should
25:27
have started out with, hey,
25:30
all y'all army people who said
25:32
no to the vaccines, we're
25:35
really, really freaking sorry.
25:37
We screwed up. We
25:39
shouldn't have booted you out of the army. You
25:42
were right. The vaccine
25:44
never should have been required. We
25:47
would love to offer you back pay
25:50
and your rank back and
25:53
your responsibilities back. Come on back. We'll
25:55
never do this to you again. PS. We need
25:58
a whole bunch. of white
26:00
soldiers that die for Israel, by the way, that's
26:02
what this is all about. But don't
26:05
talk about that. So
26:08
this letter is being distributed by the Department
26:10
of the Army. It goes on. I
26:12
mean, they're offering to correct the military records,
26:16
to correct them,
26:17
to go back to a person's military record and
26:20
to retroactively delete
26:23
that they were booted out of the Army for not
26:25
taking the vaccine. This is how much they
26:27
need recruits now. This is how wrong
26:30
they were to push the vaccine mandate. And Trump
26:32
is the one who pushed it. Trump
26:35
should be issuing a statement to
26:37
every member of the military right now. Trump should
26:39
be issuing a statement saying, as
26:42
president, I screwed up. I apologize.
26:45
I should never have forced this vaccine on you.
26:48
I should have honored your service to this country
26:50
and to its national defense. I
26:53
was wrong. I apologize. It
26:55
will never happen again. You will never be forced to take
26:57
a vaccine against your will in the military again. But
27:00
Trump will never do that. He
27:02
will never do that because
27:05
the military forces all kinds
27:07
of vaccines on service members. That's
27:10
the first thing that happens before they deploy you overseas
27:12
is they jab you full of all these shots
27:14
and all these cocktails of who knows what all at the
27:17
same time. And
27:19
then a lot of service members get sick when
27:21
that happens, by the way. And those of you in the service,
27:23
you know exactly what I'm talking about. They use
27:26
you as a freaking pin cushion before
27:28
they send you over to the sandbox. Right. That's exactly
27:30
what they do. All right. Continuing
27:33
with the letter. Individuals
27:36
may request a correction from military personnel
27:39
records, including records regarding the
27:41
characterization of discharge by
27:43
submitting a request to the ADRB
27:45
and so on and so forth in here, or you can mail
27:47
it form 293 to blah,
27:50
blah, blah, or you can download this
27:52
PDF form 149 application for correction military
27:56
records under the provisions of title 10
27:59
section 15. I mean, of course, it's
28:01
the Army, so there's going to be a lot of
28:03
forms involved. There's going to be a
28:05
lot of different numbers, different titles,
28:07
and codes, and forms, and signatures, and
28:10
procedures involved. But
28:12
it's the Army. And here's the best
28:14
part, okay? Here's the best part. Last paragraph.
28:18
Individuals who desire to apply to return
28:21
to service, we
28:23
want you back, should
28:25
contact a local Army, U.S. Army
28:28
Reserve, or Army National Guard recruiter,
28:32
who is probably fully jabbed, by the way, for
28:34
more information than
28:36
probably shedding at the Army Recruiting Office,
28:39
shedding spike protein all over you, by the way. Individuals
28:42
may locate an Army recruiter by visiting GoArmy.com,
28:47
or a USAR recruiter by visiting GoArmyReserve.com,
28:51
and so on and so forth. GoArmy.com. Sincerely,
28:55
Ra.. what
28:57
is this? Rampe.. Oh, Hope
28:59
C. Rampe, his name is Rampe. Brigadier
29:02
General, United States Army,
29:05
Director, Comma, Milliary
29:07
Personnel Management. It literally says
29:10
milliary personnel management
29:12
because he forgot the T.
29:15
He forgot the T.
29:18
There is a Brigadier General
29:20
of the United States Army who
29:22
can't spell the word military.
29:25
I kid you not. I kid you
29:27
not. That's in the letter.
29:32
So number one, those of you who were in
29:35
the military and you held your ground and you got discharged,
29:37
guess what? You were right. You are
29:39
owed an apology. And
29:42
of course, I was right, right? And
29:45
all of us were right who said the vaccine
29:47
is dangerous. You shouldn't have to take it. It shouldn't be forced
29:49
upon you. 8,000 plus
29:52
service members were discharged from the Army
29:54
over this policy, this vaccine mandate.
29:58
Guess how many of the 8,000? have
30:00
gone back into the surface. Now guess how many
30:03
out of 8,000? 43. That is like 0.05% I
30:10
think, something like that. That
30:13
is, I mean 43 out of 8,000. You know why?
30:15
Because you know 7,900
30:20
and almost 60, they told the US Army, go eff yourself, you
30:22
bleeping mother effers
30:29
who tried to kill me with a vaccine. That is what
30:31
those people are saying. That is exactly
30:34
what they are saying. And Trump
30:36
pushed this on people. Trump
30:39
pushed Operation Warp Speed. So for
30:41
anybody out there asking
30:43
me why are you being harsh on Trump? I am
30:45
not being harsh on Trump. Trump
30:48
did this himself. I did not tell him to do this.
30:51
Trump
30:52
proved
30:53
that Trump cannot be trusted with our military.
30:57
Trump caused the deaths
31:00
of who knows how many thousands
31:02
of military personnel. Trump
31:04
did that. That is not me.
31:07
I am not even judging Trump on that. I am just pointing
31:09
it out. Trump did it. He
31:12
was the commander in chief. He could have said no. He could
31:14
have said no vaccine mandates for
31:16
the military. No. It is not proven, he
31:18
could have said, but he did not. Is that man
31:20
qualified to lead the military again?
31:23
I ask you that question.
31:26
I mean in my mind the answer is obvious. I
31:29
would never encourage anyone
31:32
to join the United States military under these
31:34
conditions where you can
31:36
be forced to take a bioweapon
31:39
jab at any time against your will because
31:41
that is exactly what happened in 2021
31:44
and for a
31:46
couple of years since then. Trump
31:49
fundamentally does not believe in individual
31:52
liberty. That is clear. If he did, he
31:54
would have said to every service
31:56
member back in 2021, oh, it is up to you whether you
32:00
want to take the jab. He
32:03
didn't do that. And
32:05
furthermore, Trump has already promised that
32:08
if he's elected president, he's going
32:10
to send more of our soldiers to go fight in the Middle
32:12
East, by the way, because he's going to give Israel everything
32:14
they want. All the money they need.
32:16
Yeah. U.S. taxpayer supported money. All
32:19
the weapons they need, which means all the soldiers they
32:21
need. So, hey, all
32:23
of you who got discharged from
32:25
the army because you didn't take
32:28
the death jab that Trump tried to push
32:30
on you. How would you like to join up the army
32:32
under Trump and get sent to die for
32:35
the Zionists in Gaza, blown
32:38
up in a tunnel? Yeah.
32:41
Because, because, because Trump needs
32:43
you there to fight for the Zionists. How's
32:45
that sound? Oh, if you thought the jab was bad,
32:47
wait till you take an RPG in the shoulder, huh?
32:51
Yeah.
32:52
I don't know about you, but that sounds completely freaking
32:54
insane to join up and
32:56
be part of Trump's military. Are
32:59
you kidding me? Look, I know
33:02
a lot of soldiers, a lot of veterans have a lot of
33:04
respect for any
33:06
man or woman who served in uniform. I've
33:09
been consistent about that over all the years. I don't
33:12
know anybody that wants
33:14
to go die for the Zionists in Israel. Nobody,
33:18
except maybe some dual citizen
33:22
military people that are Israeli Americans.
33:24
Yeah, they, sure. Yeah. Go back to Israel. Go,
33:27
go on a bug hunt in your tunnel. See
33:30
how that works out for you. Like a real tunnel, not
33:33
the fake ones they keep filming for television.
33:35
Look, we found a tunnel and they go down in this
33:39
tunnel and it's so obvious that it was poured
33:41
concrete, like an industrial,
33:43
like concrete
33:46
rebar building foundation
33:49
pillar system. It's so obvious
33:51
it's not a Hamas tunnel, but they try to tell you, it's
33:53
a Hamas tunnel, I mean, this unedited
33:56
video, except for the part where we edited
33:58
it, is completely re-edited. You
34:00
know, it's so fake. It's such
34:02
theater It's just
34:05
pathetic. I'm watching these
34:07
these videos, you know, they're running
34:09
around like This IDF
34:12
soldier look at this calendar on the wall this calendar
34:14
in Arabic It's a name of all the targets
34:16
of the terrorists and turns out it's just
34:19
the names of Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday
34:21
in Arabic You know what? I mean? They they just made
34:24
it all up They can just point at
34:26
anything. Look at this. Look at this crack in
34:28
the floor This is a crack where they hide the RPGs.
34:31
This is where the weapons are hidden in the crack,
34:33
you know Look at the ceiling the
34:36
ceiling. This is where they hang the
34:38
prisoners, you know, they're just they're just
34:41
making it up Constantly every second.
34:43
It's it's almost bad SNL,
34:45
you know Saturday Night Live it's
34:48
it's like a bad skit bad comedy
34:51
Look at this hospital beaker
34:53
Look at this beaker. This is where they drain the
34:55
blood of the children before they baked him in the Hamas
34:58
ovens Yes, this is the beaker the
35:00
child blood beaker, you know, I like
35:02
you just make it that up
35:04
Usually it's just pathetic
35:06
and then Israeli television shows you the drone
35:09
overflight of hundreds
35:12
of Civilian vehicles that were clearly hit
35:14
by helicopter rockets Like
35:17
hellfire missiles also and
35:19
they tell you look at what Hamas did to all
35:21
these vehicles look at Hamas And
35:24
you're like, wait a second. How did Hamas
35:26
do that with ak-47s and a couple
35:28
of RPGs? No, those vehicles
35:31
are blown to bits Like,
35:33
you know rocket fire helicopter rocket
35:36
fire does Hamas have helicopters? Mmm
35:39
Turns out no Hamas does
35:42
not have helicopters. Oh By
35:44
the way, you know who does have helicopters The
35:48
Houthis they've got in
35:50
fact, I'm really impressed. I'm gonna play this video for
35:53
you. I'm so impressed I'm impressed at the helicopter
35:55
piloting skills of whoever
35:58
flew this helicopter this This
36:00
video you're about to see, this
36:02
is the hijacking of
36:04
the ship, what's it called? Galaxy Leader
36:06
in the Red Sea by the Houthis
36:09
from Yemen, who
36:11
some people say are funded by Iran. But
36:14
I want, I'm going to, in fact, I'm going to
36:16
narrate this video. You got to check this out. Watch
36:19
this. All right, here we are. Here we are. This
36:21
is the Houthis helicopter about
36:24
to hijack this galaxy leader.
36:26
You can see the ship name there. This
36:28
is some tough flying. I mean, number
36:30
one, the ship itself is pitching and rolling
36:33
because of the seas. So the ship,
36:36
and it's moving forward, right? The ship is not
36:38
a stationary target. So this helicopter
36:40
pilot is doing
36:43
some pretty amazing flying. That's all I've got
36:45
to say. I'm totally impressed with the helicopter
36:47
pilot here. Look how close the wheels are to the
36:50
fence there. I mean, you could get hung up on that. Not
36:53
a safe maneuver, man. You got to
36:55
have some balls to pull that off. Okay, here
36:57
come the Houthis unloading out of the helicopter.
37:01
And of course they're armed and they've got tactical
37:04
boots and they've got, it looks like, what are
37:06
those? Yeah, they've got AKs
37:08
and they've got backpacks
37:10
and goggles and
37:13
they look outfit. They got chest rigs and they've got
37:16
some gear.
37:17
Oh, this guy needs
37:19
to practice some
37:22
barrel sweep control, turns out. Then
37:24
they're going in. And they
37:27
are raiding the ship. Hey, the old
37:29
ship is now our ship, you know? And
37:33
there they are and everybody's of course surrendering.
37:35
You're not going to fight these guys
37:37
if you're just a ship captain or whatever. So
37:41
here they are. A lot of GoPro cameras
37:43
in this. Wonder why GoPro doesn't feature
37:45
this footage on their website for marketing their cameras
37:47
because this is pretty incredible stuff. First
37:50
person ship hijacking with the GoPro.
37:54
Here we go under the main
37:56
deck. Here is that second level
37:58
deck, deck nine. It's deck 9. This
38:01
is a big
38:03
ship, you know, it's a big cargo vessel. So
38:08
they've taken it over, you know, they're checking for any holdouts
38:10
and now it's their ship. And
38:13
of course the United States says, oh my gosh, this is an act
38:15
of terrorism, you can't hijack our ships. But
38:17
of course bombing hospitals in Gaza is perfectly
38:19
okay with the US. So
38:22
now this ship is in the hands
38:24
of the Houthis. So that's all it took was really
38:26
one really good helicopter
38:29
pilot and you know, a few dudes
38:31
with rifles, dudes that frankly
38:34
didn't even look like they were that
38:36
good at what they were doing. They're clearing
38:38
a ship can be done better than that. I've seen
38:40
better. That wasn't that
38:42
great. But anyway, it was effective.
38:45
So they got the ship. But
38:47
do you realize that most of these ships out
38:50
there in the ocean, they have no means
38:52
of self defense. They're not
38:54
armed, which always
38:57
boggled my mind, why wouldn't you just
38:59
put a couple of 50 cows,
39:02
you know, on on the corners of the ship? Why
39:05
not? You can carry a lot of ammo
39:08
with a ship obviously. There's not
39:10
a weight limit, you know. I mean,
39:12
on the ammo, there's not you
39:15
can, you can defend yourself. You can
39:18
easily shoot down a helicopter trying to land.
39:22
So how come these ships aren't armed? But the point is
39:24
that the Houthis can do this to any ship
39:26
they want. I mean, any, any non
39:29
military ship, you know, any cargo vessel, they
39:31
can do the same thing. They
39:33
don't even need to land the helicopter, they can just repel
39:35
out of the helicopter. They can just hover,
39:38
you know, a few meters above the ship
39:40
and they can do this. So I think we're going
39:42
to see more of this happening. And
39:44
we're going to see more Houthis taking over more
39:47
ships and not really
39:50
not holding them for ransom, but holding them probably
39:53
demanding, you know, ceasing
39:55
hostilities or releasing
39:58
maybe Hamas. that
40:00
are held in prisons in Israel perhaps,
40:02
or who knows what? But you're
40:04
gonna see a lot more of this, and that
40:06
turns out to be a very, very effective
40:10
insurgency type of technique right
40:12
there, landing a helicopter, taking over a ship. How
40:15
many millions of dollars worth of cargo and
40:18
ship assets did they just seize? I
40:21
don't know the answer to that, but I
40:23
guess it depends on what the cargo is, but it could be $100 million,
40:25
right? Pretty
40:28
easily. So you're
40:30
gonna see more of that. You know, and the
40:32
other thing that's very different about war right now
40:34
in 2023 versus war back in, even
40:37
let's say Desert Storm in the 1990s, is
40:39
everybody has a GoPro. No.
40:42
Everybody's got
40:43
helmet mounted cameras or chest rig mounted
40:46
cameras. You know, even the Hamas.
40:49
And everybody's filming themselves, shooting the
40:52
enemy, and then they're all uploading videos
40:54
and compiling videos. I mean, Hezbollah
40:57
has some kind of pretty
40:59
talented video editor put it together, all these
41:02
like Fatah videos or something, showing
41:05
them blowing up Israeli communications towers
41:07
in Northern Israel. Day
41:10
after day, it's like, we blew up this tower, we blew
41:12
up that tower, we blew up another tower,
41:14
you know? I'm thinking, I
41:18
don't know, I'm not that impressed with blowing up comms towers.
41:21
I'm not, sorry, I'm
41:24
really not that impressed with that.
41:26
I mean, that
41:28
doesn't get me
41:30
all excited about, you
41:32
know, fighting back against incursions
41:35
or anything blowing up comms towers. But
41:38
anyway, they're doing that and they're bragging about
41:40
it and everybody's got a GoPro now. And
41:43
by the way, I think we should force every
41:45
US senator and
41:47
congressman to wear a GoPro constantly,
41:51
every hour of the day, that is also
41:53
live streaming constantly. I think every
41:55
American should be able to watch
41:58
in real time what our... representatives
42:00
are doing with
42:03
our money. What do you think? Wouldn't
42:06
that be a good idea? Make
42:08
them wear GoPros. Have
42:11
all the footage accessible
42:13
to every American. Yeah, I want to see
42:15
Lindsey Graham's GoPro. Or actually, maybe
42:17
I don't come to think of it. Some
42:20
of that GoPro footage might
42:22
not be suitable for
42:26
showing anywhere, depending
42:28
on the age, I guess. Don't
42:31
even want to go there. Can you
42:33
imagine Hillary Clinton's GoPro? We
42:36
would call it the Clinton GoPro files if such
42:39
a thing ever were to exist. That
42:41
would be like the horrors of humanity. It
42:45
would be going from the
42:47
pizzeria to the
42:49
secret owls in the forest and the
42:54
adrenochrome rituals. Oh my god,
42:56
this is a tour of the worst parts of humanity.
42:59
No, it's a tour of hell. Anyway,
43:02
Hillary Clinton would never wear a GoPro. So
43:05
anyway, just to get back to the topic of just
43:07
wrapping up my discussion of Trump, that's
43:09
where I'm coming from on Trump. And I'm completely
43:11
open and changing my position. If Trump
43:13
were to come out and say, hey, we're
43:16
going to shut down the
43:18
FDA, the CDC, the NIH, or we're
43:20
going to radically reform them, we're going to stop spending
43:23
government money to pay off big pharma and buy
43:25
all their drugs at monopoly
43:27
prices. If Trump
43:29
says, hey, we're going to protect
43:32
individual freedoms, we're going to guarantee
43:34
protection of the Second Amendment, we're going to halt America's
43:36
wars around the world, we're going to bring our soldiers home,
43:39
and we're going to end
43:41
the Federal Reserve. Yeah, we're going to have honest money
43:43
so we can't have money for anything. If he would do those things,
43:46
hey, then two
43:48
thumbs up. But
43:51
then again, if he said all that, the
43:54
CIA would assassinate him like they did JFK.
43:57
So you know how that goes. All
43:59
right. By the way, since we're getting close, I'm changing
44:02
the subject, we're getting close to the Christmas
44:05
season and it's
44:07
time for Christmas carols or almost
44:09
time. I mean, I know Thanksgiving isn't quite
44:12
here yet, but it's time
44:14
for Christmas carols. And there's a very lovely
44:17
song that has been put
44:19
out by Israeli children that
44:22
is kind of a peacetime,
44:25
like a peace on earth and
44:27
brotherly love. And it's
44:29
sang by children, kind
44:32
of like a Christmas carol. And
44:34
I'd like to play this song for you. It's a little children's choir,
44:37
you know, just to uplift humanity.
44:40
And just to finally show you that the Israelis
44:42
are not bad
44:44
people, you know, they're not
44:47
all out for genocide. They're not trying
44:49
to kill everybody. You know, they're not trying
44:51
to exterminate or annihilate an entire ethnic
44:53
group in Gaza. No, not at all. Listen
44:55
to these children sing from their hearts with
44:58
love and genuine compassion.
45:00
Okay. And I'm going to, since they're
45:02
singing in Hebrew, I'm going to read
45:05
the translation, obviously
45:08
in English as they're singing. Okay.
45:11
So, so here we go. Enjoy this. All
45:13
right. Here's the Israeli children
45:16
singing. This was created by the Israeli public relations
45:18
firm Rosenbaum Communications. English
45:21
subtitles have been added. Here we go.
45:24
We are the children of the victory generation.
45:28
Autumn night falls over the beach of Gaza.
45:32
Planes are bombing destruction, destruction.
45:37
Look at the IDF. Look, the IDF is crossing
45:39
the line. To
45:41
annihilate the swastika bearers.
45:48
In another year, there
45:50
will be nothing there. And
45:53
we will safely return to our homes.
45:57
Within a year, we do not have
45:59
a place to go. We will annihilate everyone, and
46:02
then we will return to plow our fields.
46:09
And we will remember everyone, the
46:13
pretty and the pure. We
46:18
will never let our hearts forget
46:23
a friendship like that. We
46:27
are sanctified with blood. You
46:32
will return and bloom amongst us. We
46:43
have now run out of words. Our
46:48
soul still cries out. Our
46:53
soul not only sings. May
46:57
our soul also fight. One
47:04
people, the
47:06
people of forever, evermore,
47:08
we won't stop protecting our homes.
47:12
We won't be silent. We
47:15
will show the world how
47:18
today we destroy our enemy. And
47:24
we will remember everyone, the
47:29
pretty and the pure. We
47:38
will never let our hearts forget a friendship like
47:40
that. Love
47:43
sanctified with blood. Anyway, it goes
47:45
on from there, but I just thought that
47:47
that was such a loving song to speak
47:52
of, well, obviously I'm being satirical.
47:55
It's a horrifying song that talks about
47:57
annihilating an entire ethnic group. song
48:00
is being taught to Israeli children to
48:02
sing this with kind of the worst kind of brainwashing
48:05
that you can possibly imagine to turn children
48:08
into you know little
48:10
genocidal Nazis essentially. And
48:13
this is this is some sick twisted stuff. They've
48:15
taught these children to sing about mass
48:17
murder but
48:20
this will probably you
48:21
know
48:22
this will substitute for Christmas curls. Um
48:28
I know some of you like you can't say Christmas
48:30
man it's Israel it's Judaism it's not
48:32
Christmas. Hanukkah
48:35
carols okay I get it I get
48:37
it Hanukkah carol. Hanukkah
48:40
carols we will annihilate everyone we will
48:42
kill them all happy Hanukkah right so is
48:44
that what it's going to be then this Hanukkah
48:46
season? Yeah because this is what they're
48:48
doing in Israel right now. Pretty
48:51
sick twisted stuff and Trump says he
48:53
will support them just to be clear just to
48:55
be clear no judgment from me that's
48:57
Trump
48:58
he says it
49:00
these children they're singing
49:02
I mean I'm assuming the translation is accurate do any
49:04
of you speak Hebrew can you can
49:07
you confirm is that translation about right? I
49:10
don't speak Hebrew but if Israel
49:12
did have Christmas curls it would be something like dashing
49:14
through the snow in a one-horse
49:17
open sleigh over the hills
49:19
we go annihilating Gaza
49:21
all the way right that's how that's
49:23
how it would go jingle bell
49:26
jingle bell jingle all the
49:28
way oh what fun
49:30
it is to bomb your hospitals away
49:33
hey jingle bells that you you
49:35
would hear that or how about this Christmas
49:37
classic silent
49:40
night bombs
49:46
crashing buildings collapsing
49:49
body parts holy
49:52
night
49:54
baby screaming blood everywhere
49:56
hospitals exploding
50:01
All
50:01
is calm, right? Pshhh!
50:05
That's the Israeli version of Silent Night. Yeah,
50:08
I think they should do a whole album, the Israeli
50:10
Christmas carol album, with
50:12
a new single, like the Little Bomber
50:14
Boy. Have you heard that song, the Little Bomber Boy? Dun,
50:18
dun, dun, dun, dun, dun, dun, dun, dun, dun,
50:20
dun, dun, dun, dun, dun, dun, dun,
50:22
dun, dun,
50:25
dun, dun, dun, dun, dun, dun, dun,
50:27
dun, dun, dun, dun, dun, dun, dun, dun, dun, dun, dum, dun,
50:29
dun, dum, bum, bum, bum, dun, dun, dun,
50:32
dun, dun, dun, dun, dun, we
50:34
bomb the refugee
50:36
camps, run, bum, bum, bum, dun,
50:39
dun, dun, dun, dun, I mean, hey,
50:42
what's, what's not to like with the Israeli Christmas
50:44
carol album, huh? I
50:47
mean it's all love and peace, right? It's all love and peace.
50:49
That's what we've been told by Netanyahu
50:53
and all the other lunatics over there, the psychopaths,
50:55
it's all love and peace. Genocide
50:57
in the name of peace, yeah?
50:59
Piss the season.
51:01
Yeah, I'm not even going to sing all the songs
51:04
like, uh, Grandma Got Run Over by
51:06
an IDF Bulldozer. That's, that's another
51:08
classic, obviously. And then
51:10
of course the all-time, wartime Christmas
51:12
classic, Rydell the Red-Nosed Soldier
51:15
had a very shiny nose, you know how that goes,
51:17
yeah? Then one foggy Christmas
51:20
Eve, Santa came to say,
51:22
hey, Rydell with your
51:24
nose so bright, won't you raid
51:27
Hamas tunnel tonight? Yeah, and then
51:29
how the soldiers loved him. Well,
51:32
that's, that's an all-time, all-time favorite
51:35
among certain groups. Yeah,
51:38
don't miss it folks, it's the Hanukkah Christmas Carol Collection,
51:41
available exclusively from
51:43
HanukkahChristmasCarols.com.
51:47
Oh my goodness. It's
51:50
so twisted, I don't know what to say. I mean,
51:52
at some point, I mean, I've
51:54
spoken out against the violence again
51:56
and again and again. I've
51:58
called for peace. I've called for humanitarian
52:01
principles to prevail. And then the
52:04
insanity of what's going on today is
52:07
just so off the charts. At
52:09
some point, it just begs for
52:11
mockery to show the world how stupid this is,
52:14
how stupid it is to be bombing
52:16
people in the name of peace, which
52:19
is exactly what the IDF is doing this
52:21
one, Netanyahu is doing. So no
52:23
more bombing in the name of peace, you
52:26
sons of ... You're
52:28
not heroes of peace. You are villains
52:31
of death. All
52:33
right, moving on to some serious news,
52:36
and this is very serious stuff. UK Daily Mail
52:38
reporting today the following. Putin
52:41
plans to fly world's biggest nuclear missile,
52:43
the Satan-2,
52:46
as it's called. It's actually, I think in Russia, they
52:48
call it the Sarmat-2,
52:52
over the South Pole. Yeah,
52:54
yeah, South Pole. That's not a typo. You
52:56
would normally think North Pole, right? South
53:00
Pole. In test launch,
53:03
says Russian state media before
53:06
the report is censored. This
53:08
supposedly unstoppable missile is as tall as
53:10
a 14-story tower block. Putin
53:14
views this as his ultimate weapon against the West
53:16
in the event of a nuclear war. Now, here's
53:18
what you need to understand. This
53:21
is a 208-ton intercontinental
53:24
nuclear weapon, the RS-28 Sarmat.
53:31
It travels at 15,000 miles per hour. How
53:36
many Mach is that? I don't know. It's
53:38
a lot of Mach. It's the Doomsday
53:41
Missile Pass
53:43
reported. That's the Russian news
53:45
agency reported that even a truncated
53:48
flight development test, and assuming
53:50
all launches are successful, would require several
53:52
more launches, including via the South Pole.
53:56
All right. Why the South Pole?
53:59
Here's why. Why? Because America's
54:01
anti-ballistic monitoring and defense
54:04
systems are all assuming
54:06
a North Pole arrival from
54:09
Russia. Because of course, if you
54:11
look at the Earth, you know,
54:13
from the top down, from the North Pole, Russia,
54:18
the shortest distance to the United States, is
54:20
over the North Pole by far.
54:23
Right?
54:24
But Russia has these
54:27
missiles now that can go the other way
54:29
around. The long way, in other
54:31
words, launch them south
54:35
and they traverse the entire South Pole, then come back
54:37
up around and they can hit,
54:40
you know, they would hit the southern United States first. And
54:44
guess what? There are virtually no
54:46
systems that would be able to
54:48
intercept that. Not
54:50
that the US can intercept these hyperglide
54:52
vehicles anyway, and the Sarmat-2
54:56
missile system has this nose cone
54:58
that I've mentioned before that opens up and
55:00
it releases all these hyperglide vehicles, which
55:04
are like Mach 20 gliders that
55:06
contain nuclear warheads. And
55:09
we learned yesterday, those are two megaton warheads.
55:11
That's interesting to note. And
55:14
then they can have a two megaton warhead strike
55:16
every major US city, all
55:19
at about the same time, within, you know, less
55:22
than a minute of each other, basically. So
55:24
New York, Kablooey, Chicago
55:27
Kablooey, right? Houston Kablooey,
55:31
Denver, LA, you name it, Kablooey
55:34
Kablooey. And
55:36
there's nothing the US can do to stop that, because
55:39
the US doesn't have anti-air defense systems that
55:41
can intercept those. So the South
55:44
Pole is, in fact, a tactically advantageous
55:49
route for Russia to
55:52
exploit for the purpose of taking America
55:55
by surprise, in a sense. Essentially,
55:58
America has no defenses against this. I
56:00
haven't done the math on this, but we could.
56:03
You could do the math. If this thing
56:05
travels at 15,000
56:07
miles per hour, how many
56:10
minutes does it take from launch to
56:12
striking the United States? Well, it's
56:15
not that long. I mean,
56:17
what is the circumference of Earth?
56:20
It's around 25,000 miles.
56:24
So this missile could fly, what,
56:28
about three-fifths of the way around the entire
56:30
planet in one hour. So there you go. So
56:34
it doesn't have to go all the way around the planet. In
56:37
other words, it could, from launch to striking
56:39
the US, let's say less than an hour. There
56:41
you go.
56:43
All right. Hey, by the way, changing the subject,
56:45
let's talk about crypto for just a
56:48
second here. Kraken, the
56:50
platform that I recommend,
56:52
because it's the only platform that
56:55
I learned that I can trust, Kraken, that's K-R-A-K-E-N
56:59
dot com. Kraken has been sued
57:01
by the Securities and Exchange Commission
57:04
claiming that Kraken has
57:06
failed to register for
57:09
operating as a securities exchange. So
57:12
this is the SEC just trying
57:14
to, of course, try
57:16
to take down crypto. And
57:19
this is Gary Gensler going insane. Kraken
57:22
is going to defend itself, by the way. And Kraken
57:27
has said that the SEC
57:29
view of digital assets is, quote, incorrect
57:32
as a matter of law, false as
57:34
a matter of fact, and disastrous as
57:36
a matter of policy. So
57:39
Kraken has more than 10 million clients. It's based
57:41
out of San Francisco. I like Kraken, even
57:44
though it's based out of San Francisco. Kraken
57:47
is a pro-liberty platform, and
57:50
Kraken is one of the few exchanges
57:53
where you can buy the
57:55
privacy crypto Monero. And that's probably
57:57
why the SEC is not happy with Kraken.
58:00
because you know Kraken's doing a great job of
58:02
helping to onboard people into
58:05
privacy crypto, such as
58:07
Monero, again. So by
58:09
the way, if you want to use Kraken, just go
58:11
to kraken.com, K-R-A-K-E-N,
58:14
and there is a KYC process, you know, they'll
58:16
need your ID and everything, and
58:19
there's a process to go through to get onboarded, but once
58:21
you're onboarded, you can link your bank accounts and
58:23
everything, and you can purchase crypto
58:26
that way, and if
58:28
you do that, I recommend you pull crypto
58:30
off Kraken and self-custody your
58:32
own crypto. And if you want to know a lot
58:35
more about that, including our interview
58:37
with Kraken, which was a couple months ago,
58:40
you can watch my new show called
58:42
Decentralize TV, and
58:44
that's at the website decentralize.tv, and
58:48
we've got, I think, 22 episodes posted
58:50
there, and you're gonna really enjoy
58:52
that, you're gonna learn a lot about protecting your assets,
58:55
and also growing food for us, and
58:57
decentralizing your life, and all
58:59
kinds of amazing things, so be sure to check
59:01
out those episodes in your
59:04
spare time. Now, before we get
59:06
to the interview with Shield Arms, I've
59:09
got some Black
59:11
Friday discounts from some of our various
59:14
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59:17
number one, Shield Arms has
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by the way, for both of these, I don't earn, I don't get
1:00:13
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not an affiliate thing. It's just a discount
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to you, although both of these companies
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they do from time to time provide me
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for evaluation, which is of
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course very much appreciated. But it gives me the ability
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funny thing is I was a customer of these companies,
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was a customer first. So anyway, I have in
1:00:43
my hands right now, and we're about
1:00:45
to jump into the interview with Brandon from Shield Arms,
1:00:48
but I have a Shield Arms SA-9,
1:00:52
which I think is kind of a funny name if you speak Spanish,
1:00:55
because it's like SA-9. Get
1:00:58
it? SA-9. SA
1:01:01
Nueve. Yeah. I think
1:01:04
it's funny. But
1:01:06
for non-Spanish speakers, they
1:01:08
might think that's
1:01:09
stupid. No, no, I think it's hilarious.
1:01:11
But anyway, it's called the SA-9. Again,
1:01:14
I can't stop laughing. And it's an AR-15
1:01:18
style pistol. I
1:01:20
have mine set up with an arm
1:01:22
brace here. It has standard AR
1:01:25
controls. So it's an ambidextrous
1:01:27
safety, which I really appreciate. So
1:01:30
you've got, you know, your safety controls, you've got
1:01:32
your bolt carrier group released with
1:01:34
an oversized paddle, which I appreciate,
1:01:37
and your mag release right where it's supposed to be
1:01:39
right above the trigger. So you can hit that
1:01:41
with your right index finger. But most importantly,
1:01:43
this pistol shoots nine
1:01:46
millimeter rounds, and
1:01:48
it accepts standard Glock magazines.
1:01:51
Yes. So you can, you can go out and get yourself,
1:01:53
you know, Glock 17 mag, which
1:01:56
is a pretty good capacity. I forgot how
1:01:58
many that holds it like, I don't know, seven. 17 rounds or something
1:02:01
like that. Or you can go get your high capacity,
1:02:03
super fun, 40 round Glock mags
1:02:05
or 30 round Glock mags,
1:02:08
whatever you want, and you can run it that way.
1:02:11
The best part is this whole thing is folding.
1:02:14
So it folds right where
1:02:16
the bolt carrier group meets the
1:02:18
buffer, well, the
1:02:20
buffer spring and whatever this, I
1:02:23
guess, the buffer rod,
1:02:25
what do you call that? I forgot what you call that
1:02:27
part. Anyway, it folds right there
1:02:29
and then it folds back into place. Here it is. There
1:02:32
you go. Hear that click? It's folding back
1:02:34
into place, ready to rock, standard charging handle,
1:02:37
but it's very lightweight for this platform. It's
1:02:40
got a good solid feel to it. You
1:02:43
know, it cycles just like you would expect. And
1:02:46
it's got a trigger that I would estimate at 4.5
1:02:50
pounds, let's say. So
1:02:53
and it's got standard takedown pins and everything else.
1:02:57
It's a really nice setup. So
1:03:00
and of course, it's got a Picatinny rail on top so you can
1:03:02
put, you know, your standard optics
1:03:04
or whatever you want on top, all your
1:03:06
lights and all your lasers and all your beacons
1:03:09
and everything. You can load this thing up. No, there's
1:03:12
not that much room on it because it's pretty compact, but
1:03:15
you can put optics on top and you're good to
1:03:17
go. So I would just say, folks, keep
1:03:19
it legal, obviously. Know
1:03:21
your local laws. Make sure you get trained
1:03:24
and have experience with firearms. Make
1:03:27
sure you understand firearm
1:03:30
safety and keep them out of reach of children
1:03:32
and so on, especially those choir
1:03:34
singing children in Israel. Don't let them get their
1:03:36
hands on this stuff. But
1:03:39
you can check all this out at ShieldArms.com.
1:03:42
So here's the interview with
1:03:45
Brandon from Shield Arms. Enjoy,
1:03:47
and I'll be back with you tomorrow.
1:03:51
Yeah, one more episode before Thanksgiving.
1:03:53
So talk to you then. Oh, I almost
1:03:55
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those are two totally different sized pistols, right?
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that would be weird how
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so i break all the other holsters they
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well i've got some on the left side and some
1:07:00
of the right side because i like to practice offhand
1:07:03
shooting it's and when i had entered
1:07:05
my index finger earlier this year i did a lot
1:07:07
of left handed shooting so i was carrying
1:07:09
left handed in a way that's
1:07:12
why i've got a much different holsters from them but seventy
1:07:15
nine one gun leather dot com fifteen
1:07:18
percent discount unheard
1:07:20
of use discount code h
1:07:22
r r one five and again i don't earn
1:07:24
anything also that it's just a discount
1:07:27
pass along to you however
1:07:29
they did provide me at no charge
1:07:32
to me for evaluation they're
1:07:34
fanny pack a couple
1:07:36
of belts and a couple of other different size holsters
1:07:38
so they they do get me some gear for evaluation
1:07:42
of but i don't earn a missing off her purse just to be
1:07:45
fully transparent with whatever arrangements
1:07:47
he might be imagining it is pretty gear
1:07:50
companies is really simple i just if
1:07:52
i love their gear i help promote them sometimes
1:07:55
is some me more gear to check out sometimes i like
1:07:57
it sometimes i don't it's really that simple
1:08:00
And then I ask them for discount codes to
1:08:02
pass along to you, which is exactly what this
1:08:04
is because I want you to save money on their gear.
1:08:07
So take advantage of this while you
1:08:09
can. You will be happy with
1:08:12
your holster from 1791gunleather.com. I
1:08:17
have no doubt about that. You will love their holster. And
1:08:21
I have done so much ranch work with
1:08:24
this Glock 43X. The retention
1:08:26
is really, really great, even
1:08:29
in a leather holster. Yeah.
1:08:32
Okay. All right. Mike
1:08:35
Adams is joining you from my home studio today because
1:08:37
we're talking about gear today, preparedness
1:08:40
and survival gear. And my special guest
1:08:42
today is Brandon from ShieldArms.com.
1:08:45
Now Shield Arms, I consider
1:08:48
them kind of a partner
1:08:51
with us because they've provided so much incredible
1:08:53
gear to so many people. And
1:08:55
they don't compensate me, they don't pay me to do
1:08:57
these interviews, but they do provide me gear for evaluation,
1:09:00
which I greatly appreciate. And I've had very positive
1:09:02
experiences with that gear. So
1:09:05
Brandon, welcome to the show today. Thank
1:09:07
you for joining me. I really look forward to what you have to
1:09:09
show us today. Well, thanks for having me, Mike.
1:09:13
It's great to have you here. And I also
1:09:15
want to thank you for providing the discount code
1:09:17
for our audience. The discount code is RANGER.
1:09:20
Good for everything at ShieldArms.com, correct?
1:09:23
Yes, sir. Okay. Fantastic.
1:09:26
So let's start with what actually got me initially
1:09:29
interested in Shield Arms was your folding
1:09:32
stocks, your patented folding stock
1:09:34
system for AR-15 pistols and
1:09:37
rifles. Can you talk a little bit about
1:09:39
that and the success you've had with that?
1:09:41
And we'll get to mags and things like that
1:09:43
later, but start with the folding stocks. Sure.
1:09:46
Yeah. I've got an example here. A
1:09:48
lot of folks are sort
1:09:50
of familiar with the adapter approach, right?
1:09:53
AR-15s do
1:09:54
not fold sort
1:09:56
of out of the box. And so some
1:09:58
companies came along, they made adapters.
1:09:59
that you would then
1:10:02
retrofit your gun in order
1:10:04
to allow the buttstock to fold.
1:10:07
We came along and said, look, we think there's a
1:10:09
better way of doing this. We
1:10:11
built the folding mechanism into
1:10:14
the lower receiver. And what we've
1:10:16
come up with is a sort of more low
1:10:18
profile, lighter
1:10:20
weight, and more cost effective approach.
1:10:23
And so that was our first sort of commercial
1:10:26
success, if you will, was
1:10:29
what we call the
1:10:29
folding lower receiver, which
1:10:32
this button here will allow the
1:10:35
buttstock to fold. And
1:10:38
you can see that I have the bolt retracted, so
1:10:40
that's not going to work. So send
1:10:42
the bolt forward, and then of course your
1:10:44
buttstock can then fold. I don't know how well that's showing
1:10:46
up on camera, but... Yeah, we can see it. Good.
1:10:50
So yeah, that was our first sort of commercial success.
1:10:53
And the product that kind of, I don't know, put us on the
1:10:55
map, if you will. Yeah. Okay.
1:10:59
And the reason I like that is because
1:11:01
it makes it
1:11:04
more portable. So of course, I always
1:11:06
encourage our viewers to respect your local laws.
1:11:08
Obviously, it's your responsibility to check your laws. But
1:11:11
here in Texas, it's very easy to
1:11:13
have a folding AR like that in
1:11:15
your vehicle, where it's legal, so
1:11:17
that you can defend yourself
1:11:20
against some road rager or something. And
1:11:23
it becomes much shorter, obviously, when
1:11:25
you fold it, than the full-size
1:11:28
rifle. So it's just easier to
1:11:30
maneuver in the vehicle. It's worth noting, however,
1:11:33
that it doesn't... I mean, technically,
1:11:35
you could fire one round from that
1:11:37
position, although I know you don't recommend that. I've
1:11:39
done that on camera before. I thought you'd do
1:11:41
it. Yeah, I did it just to see
1:11:43
if it could be done. But I wasn't putting my face behind
1:11:46
that, by the way. Just because
1:11:48
it's not my first rodeo with firearms. Technically,
1:11:52
I mean, you need to fold the stock
1:11:54
back into place before you begin
1:11:57
to put rounds down range, correct? Correct.
1:11:59
kind of a misconception with folding guns. I
1:12:02
think video games in Hollywood has
1:12:04
sort of led people astray. You really
1:12:06
don't, whether it's an AK, it doesn't matter what the gun is, you really
1:12:09
don't want to be firing guns from
1:12:11
the hip in this position. It's not
1:12:13
a very accurate, you know, you're responsible
1:12:15
for every round that comes out of this gun, right?
1:12:17
So you need to make sure that what you're
1:12:20
aiming at is what you're hitting at, you know. So
1:12:22
we tell people, even
1:12:25
if the gun didn't
1:12:26
require it to be folded, you should be
1:12:29
folding the gun out, shouldering the weapon
1:12:31
properly, and then making sure that the rounds
1:12:33
are going where they're designed to go.
1:12:35
Yeah, absolutely. I completely agree. Especially,
1:12:38
you know, those rounds, I mean, the
1:12:40
range of a 5.56 round, it's
1:12:42
a lot more than just 300 yards. If
1:12:45
you're angling it up, it can travel 800, 900 yards.
1:12:47
You don't know where that's going. So, you
1:12:50
know, firing from the hip is just a Hollywood, Hollywood
1:12:53
trope. Nobody does that. No. Yeah.
1:12:57
Nobody who wants to actually hit anything that is.
1:13:00
Okay. So,
1:13:02
you've got that available. Now, I do
1:13:05
have to ask you, the ATF
1:13:07
was recently smacked down a little bit by,
1:13:10
with its arm brace rule, at
1:13:12
least a temporary stay, but it's
1:13:14
a nationwide stay issued, I think, by a Texas
1:13:18
judge, if I'm not mistaken. How
1:13:20
does that affect your ability to retail
1:13:23
the AR-15
1:13:25
pistols with arm braces? Do you currently
1:13:27
have those available or you're waiting? No,
1:13:30
we do. We were cleared
1:13:32
by our attorneys to go ahead and resume
1:13:34
selling. So, yeah, pistol
1:13:36
braces are back on the menu
1:13:39
as of today. And from what we understand...
1:13:41
As of today? Wow. Well, it's, you know, a few
1:13:43
days ago, the time of recording, but yeah, we do
1:13:45
have them available today. Our
1:13:48
understanding is that
1:13:51
this is, it's a stay, but
1:13:53
it's nationwide
1:13:53
and it sounds like it's
1:13:56
not going to be temporary. I guess we'll all have
1:13:58
to just wait and see. but it
1:14:00
sounds like this one might
1:14:02
stick. So again, not a lawyer.
1:14:04
That's what we understand.
1:14:06
Yeah, again, I urge my viewers
1:14:08
check your local laws. It's your responsibility
1:14:11
to be in compliance. But
1:14:13
which arm braces do you use? Are you using SB
1:14:15
tactical arm braces? SB tactical. Yep,
1:14:18
those are the best. OK.
1:14:19
OK, great, great. And can
1:14:22
you show us one of the, do you happen to have one? I
1:14:24
don't. No, all the guns in
1:14:26
here are either SBRs
1:14:28
or rifles. So
1:14:31
OK. All right. I have any of those. They're
1:14:33
available on the website though. And the cool
1:14:35
thing about SB tactical, they really came along
1:14:37
and found
1:14:39
a niche, we'll call it. But they weren't
1:14:43
designed to be shoulder fired. But
1:14:45
if you were to shoulder fire them, they
1:14:48
do function much like a stock is. And so
1:14:50
that's the thing that the ATF is sort of upset
1:14:53
about, even though the SB tactical
1:14:55
didn't design them to
1:14:57
be shoulder fired, it was more
1:15:00
of a brace for the arm. You
1:15:03
certainly could. And that's sort
1:15:05
of the crux of the matter.
1:15:08
Well, let me chime in because quite
1:15:10
a bit of our audience here watching today are women. And
1:15:13
many women, because they typically
1:15:15
don't have the same upper body muscle
1:15:18
mass as men, I
1:15:21
found that a lot of women really need
1:15:23
an AR-15 pistol with a brace
1:15:26
in order to really effectively
1:15:29
use that in self-defense. Whereas a full length 16
1:15:32
inch rifle with a stock is
1:15:34
just too much for a lot of women, especially as they age.
1:15:37
Are you hearing that kind of feedback as well?
1:15:40
Yeah. I mean, I think they originally designed that
1:15:42
product for folks
1:15:44
who had injuries. I don't
1:15:46
know that they necessarily had women in mind. But
1:15:50
yeah, I can understand where you're coming
1:15:52
from on that. What
1:15:54
I will say is that the AR-15 is
1:15:57
a wonderful platform. And you can
1:15:59
pretty much. dress it up or
1:16:01
down to do just about anything you
1:16:03
need it to do. So whether that's long-range
1:16:06
shooting or that's a small
1:16:08
compact little 9mm gun
1:16:10
that fits in a bag, the AR-15
1:16:13
platform is very versatile and
1:16:15
you can outfit your
1:16:17
weapon system to suit
1:16:20
your need which is another reason why the folks
1:16:23
on the left want
1:16:25
to get rid of those because they are very effective.
1:16:28
Yeah, good point. Now you mentioned
1:16:31
9mm there so you also have 9mm carbines
1:16:35
and I assume you have them in pistol
1:16:37
format with arm braces as well now? Correct.
1:16:41
Alright, what's the model number on that? SA9.
1:16:45
SA9. Can you show us that? I
1:16:48
can in SBR format so we've got,
1:16:50
here's one that's painted
1:16:53
a little nicely but yeah
1:16:57
so this is 9mm obviously
1:16:59
when this thing folds down it gets pretty small
1:17:02
and this will fit you can have this thing in
1:17:04
just about any of your backpacks. Of course, obey
1:17:06
your local laws make sure that you guys are legal but
1:17:09
here in Montana there's nothing
1:17:12
wrong with having this in pistol format in
1:17:14
your backpack you know in Texas will be the same
1:17:17
so yeah that's
1:17:19
the beauty of the magazine. Yeah,
1:17:22
this is a Glock. It takes Glock mags? This
1:17:24
is a Glock compatible system but
1:17:26
yeah that's the beauty of these little 9mm guns you know
1:17:29
this is an 8 inch barrel you never
1:17:31
know as small as it is but yeah
1:17:33
they just take standard Glock mags.
1:17:36
Okay, so a question
1:17:38
I have for you then is in terms of
1:17:41
let's say the Glock 43X mags here which
1:17:45
you also have your mags do those work in
1:17:47
your SA9? Coming soon. We'll
1:17:50
have an SA9. Coming
1:17:53
soon we're gonna have an SA9 that's compatible with
1:17:55
our S15 magazines and
1:17:57
then there's longer versions of the SA9.
1:17:59
15 coming. So if you're
1:18:02
a fan of the stick mag,
1:18:04
stay tuned. Okay, all right.
1:18:06
Very cool. With that, actually,
1:18:08
let's talk about magazines because what
1:18:11
else your company is really famous for. And this
1:18:13
is, by the way, you got me back into
1:18:15
Glocks. It was it was Shield Arms
1:18:17
that converted me back to Glocks because I would, I
1:18:20
Oh, let me back up. I carried
1:18:22
a Glock 19 for many, many years. And
1:18:25
sometimes a Glock 17 around the ranch.
1:18:27
But
1:18:28
the polymer mags became a problem because
1:18:30
I carried every day, and I encourage everybody
1:18:32
to carry every day, that one
1:18:36
time when I had to use my firearm
1:18:38
against a snake, a rattlesnake, which
1:18:42
requires some pistol skills, by the way, to
1:18:46
hit a to hit a snake. I
1:18:48
fired one round and the magazine dropped out. Oh,
1:18:51
and it was a factory Glock mag. And what
1:18:53
had happened is that the retention indent
1:18:56
on the polymer mag had worn out over
1:18:58
time as it was rattling around on my
1:19:00
hip as I carried it for x number of years.
1:19:03
And that made me realize, oh my gosh, this
1:19:07
this could have been a disaster if I had needed it in
1:19:09
self defense, I would have had one round and that's it.
1:19:11
So to me, that was a that was a real failure of
1:19:13
the polymer mags. So I went
1:19:16
to SIG at that time, and I carried SIGs
1:19:18
for a number of years, like the P320. And then I
1:19:21
got a little bit freaked out by the
1:19:23
fact that the P320 doesn't have a trigger safety
1:19:26
and it was having unintended
1:19:28
discharges, even among cops
1:19:31
who were just holstering it and then walking and then the gun
1:19:33
would go off and shoot them, you know,
1:19:35
in the leg or the foot or the butt. That
1:19:38
that didn't sound good. So when you came
1:19:40
along and recommended the Glock 43x with your
1:19:43
steel mags,
1:19:45
I switched over to that. And now I love
1:19:47
it. And that's what I carry every day. So that's
1:19:50
my story. Tell us about your steel mags. Yeah,
1:19:53
well, that's great to hear. Thank you for that. So
1:19:56
Glock came out with the
1:19:58
43x. the 48
1:20:01
pistols. Those guns
1:20:03
ship with a 10 round magazine, which
1:20:05
isn't great for the form factor. It's
1:20:08
certainly not bad, but it's not
1:20:10
as many rounds as we thought those guns
1:20:13
should hold. And so we developed
1:20:15
a 15 round magazine that
1:20:18
fits in the same footprint. It doesn't extend
1:20:20
out past the end of the gun. And
1:20:23
so it's still the same concealed
1:20:25
carry package you would get. You just get 50%
1:20:28
more ammo. And yeah, it's a steel
1:20:30
magazine. And
1:20:32
then that that does require what we recommend
1:20:34
as a steel mag catch. But that's the only modification
1:20:37
to the gun. You swap out your mag catch,
1:20:40
which is about a two minute job, and then you can
1:20:42
run steel mags. So
1:20:45
question, why wouldn't Glock
1:20:47
have a 15 round mag? If I
1:20:49
mean, you've been able to figure it out. How come
1:20:52
they didn't do it? Well, we used to tell
1:20:54
people is because we're just that smart, but people
1:20:56
kind of figured out we're not so that
1:20:58
joke kind of played itself out. But the
1:21:00
honest answer is Glock could if
1:21:03
they wanted to. The problem
1:21:05
is that they've invested heavily. This is a
1:21:07
guess I don't obviously know anybody at Glock,
1:21:09
but they've invested heavily
1:21:11
in the way that they make magazines, which is a steel
1:21:14
core with polymer over
1:21:16
molded. And they have
1:21:18
spent the last 3040 years
1:21:21
telling people that this is the
1:21:23
best way of making a magazine. If they
1:21:26
were to then switch for
1:21:28
just one of their guns, you
1:21:30
know, that probably wouldn't be the
1:21:32
best messaging from a product standpoint.
1:21:35
That's all a guess. I don't know Gaston, I
1:21:37
don't know anybody there. So I
1:21:39
don't know why they don't. But that's, that's my guess. But
1:21:42
so there's something about the way they make mags
1:21:45
that that prohibits 15 rounds? Yeah,
1:21:48
the geometry they have. Well, it is
1:21:50
for the form factor. So not the
1:21:52
geometry, the magazine itself. But if you're trying
1:21:54
to fit it in this mag well, there
1:21:56
isn't enough room to have a steel
1:21:59
magazine.
1:21:59
put polymer over it all the way
1:22:02
around and have it still hold 15 rounds.
1:22:04
That's why their magazine is a
1:22:06
single stack magazine where the
1:22:09
rounds in the magazine are essentially
1:22:11
stacked in a column, a single column. This
1:22:14
is a double stack magazine where
1:22:16
the rounds are staggered which allows
1:22:18
it to of course fit more. So when we
1:22:21
stripped off the polymer, we had more room
1:22:23
in the magwell, spreading
1:22:25
the magazine out this way helps
1:22:28
you because you can fit more rounds in there. Spreading
1:22:31
the magazine out this way actually hurts you
1:22:33
and so we've done some things with our patented
1:22:36
design that allows the
1:22:39
magazine to still function and to hold the same
1:22:41
position in the magwell
1:22:43
without it moving around and
1:22:46
still hold 15 rounds.
1:22:48
Now I call that
1:22:50
magazine which I have
1:22:52
here, I call this, I mean this is just my
1:22:55
nomenclature, I call it a one and a half stack mag.
1:22:58
Technically yes. Because it's staggered right?
1:23:01
Yeah. And it's very thin and the
1:23:03
thing I like about this Glock 43X and this also
1:23:05
applies to our women viewers here
1:23:07
today is that the Glock 43X is
1:23:10
much easier to grip if you have smaller
1:23:13
hands than big manly hands. I
1:23:17
even prefer it now over the Glock 19
1:23:19
because it's thinner and it prints
1:23:21
less, the Glock 43X, it's
1:23:23
easier to conceal and with your
1:23:26
mags Brandon from Shield Arms, now
1:23:28
it has the capacity that I'm used to. Now
1:23:31
Sig of course use the same
1:23:33
geometry that you're talking about with their magazines
1:23:36
on their P365 to give
1:23:38
it I think 10 plus one which is
1:23:40
quite remarkable for how small that firearm
1:23:43
is and I'm
1:23:45
a fan of that gun except again I don't
1:23:48
know when it's going to go off. But
1:23:52
back to Glock, it
1:23:54
seems like in this competitive marketplace,
1:23:57
I can't imagine how Glock could say 10...
1:24:00
is enough in the form factor when
1:24:02
there are SIGs and there's M&P and there
1:24:04
are other products out there that
1:24:06
can hold 15 like what you're doing
1:24:09
with your magazines. It seems like pretty big
1:24:11
oversight on Glock's part.
1:24:13
Yeah, I can't comment on that. We
1:24:16
agree with you, of course, because we
1:24:18
made the magazine. But what
1:24:20
I can tell you is that prior
1:24:22
to our magazine coming out, that gun
1:24:25
was pretty much dead on arrival. Nobody
1:24:27
was excited about it. Nobody was
1:24:29
gearing up for it. Today,
1:24:32
with our magazine on the market, that
1:24:35
gun is the number one selling pistol in America. So
1:24:37
you do the math. Yeah,
1:24:40
so we try not
1:24:42
to take all the credit because it is a good gun, but
1:24:45
we do feel like we had something to do with that.
1:24:47
Well that's really interesting. So
1:24:50
do you publicly talk about how many of these
1:24:52
magazines you've sold? We try
1:24:54
not to, no. A lot. We've
1:24:57
sold a bunch. Yeah. We'll leave
1:24:59
it at a bunch. I
1:25:01
also, I wasn't too happy, of course, with the stock
1:25:04
Glock trigger. And so far, I've
1:25:06
just replaced the trigger bar with the
1:25:08
ghost bar. And
1:25:11
that improved it a little bit. It's still not where
1:25:13
I want it. So I may have
1:25:15
to do something a little more dramatic. What do you recommend?
1:25:18
I mean, the stock trigger, even
1:25:20
the
1:25:21
way you sell it stock,
1:25:24
is too harsh for my taste, that's
1:25:26
for sure. Yeah. Without
1:25:29
getting into the geometries and the mechanical
1:25:31
engineering side of things, there is
1:25:33
some variance in Glock
1:25:35
pistols. You will pick up four or five,
1:25:38
and you'll have a different trigger pull between
1:25:40
those different guns. Some
1:25:44
of my favorite drop-in triggers are made
1:25:46
by Agency Arms, agencyarms.com.
1:25:50
You can get a trigger from them that has
1:25:53
the same sort of OEM
1:25:56
safety performance, but you get
1:25:58
a much cleaner... break
1:26:01
with way less of that grittiness
1:26:03
that you can sometimes feel with a Glock
1:26:05
trigger. My business partner Seth
1:26:08
would tell you, look, if your Glock
1:26:10
trigger isn't where you want
1:26:12
it, go out and shoot 10,000 more rounds and it'll
1:26:14
smooth right out. I
1:26:19
know that's a little bit expensive.
1:26:21
Yeah, that's the thing these days.
1:26:24
Ammo isn't what it used to be. I
1:26:27
used to go out and I would go through 500 rounds
1:26:29
of 9mm in one training session and these
1:26:32
days, can't really justify that. No,
1:26:34
it's hard for anyone.
1:26:36
We buy ammo by the pallet here for
1:26:39
our testing purposes and even
1:26:42
at that bulk pricing, it's crazy.
1:26:45
Yeah, absolutely. Alright,
1:26:47
so it's important for our viewers
1:26:49
to know then that magazines are not interchangeable
1:26:51
between the Glock 43x and
1:26:54
Glock 19s or 17s or other
1:26:56
fatter, wider Glock models.
1:26:59
Correct. If you buy one of our S15
1:27:01
magazines, these are compatible with the Glock
1:27:03
43x and the Glock 48.
1:27:07
There is also a Glock 43, which is a skinnier platform.
1:27:12
It's a true single
1:27:14
stack,
1:27:15
skinnier gun. We
1:27:17
do make a magazine for that gun as well, but
1:27:20
that one only holds 9 rounds because
1:27:22
the magwell is thinner.
1:27:26
I see, okay. Now, in addition
1:27:28
to your steel magazines, which again,
1:27:30
I'm a convert now, this is what
1:27:32
I carry. I
1:27:35
have full faith in your mags and
1:27:37
in the Glock 43x, I'm liking it a lot.
1:27:41
In addition to that and the folding stock ARs,
1:27:44
you also provide quite a bit of other gear.
1:27:47
You've got a Fanny Pack, can I call it
1:27:50
that? That's
1:27:52
designed for concealed carry. Can
1:27:56
you show us that? Yeah, I'd be happy to.
1:28:00
So Fanny Pack Carry
1:28:04
can be a little bit controversial. I
1:28:06
happen to be a fan especially in
1:28:08
the winter months though and you're depending
1:28:10
on how you're dressed. The problem
1:28:13
with your traditional
1:28:15
Fanny Pack Carry is that it's slow. You
1:28:17
know you put your gun inside of a bag and you
1:28:19
have to run a zipper and get a hold
1:28:22
of the gun in order to get it out. I'm
1:28:25
not the fastest guy in the world to begin with
1:28:27
so I don't need any sort of things slowing
1:28:29
me down right. And so what we did was
1:28:31
we came up with what we call our junk sack. It's
1:28:34
our take on a Fanny Pack that
1:28:36
is geared for concealed
1:28:38
carry. What we've done is
1:28:40
replace your traditional zippered
1:28:43
pouch with a set of
1:28:45
rare earth magnets in the top and
1:28:48
then hook and loop closure on the sides
1:28:51
so that when the gun is in here it's not
1:28:53
coming open when you don't want it to. You can go and
1:28:55
do burpees, you can go do a CrossFit workout.
1:28:58
This thing's not going to come open on you but
1:29:01
then when you want it to come open it's
1:29:03
got this big pull tab here and it's
1:29:06
got this top enclosure that's very
1:29:08
easy to catch with your hand and
1:29:10
it's on your body at this point and it's
1:29:12
sort of a grip it and rip it standpoint
1:29:14
where it will open up and expose
1:29:18
this hook and loop enclosure in here where
1:29:20
your firearm would go. Of course
1:29:22
use a proper holster but your firearm
1:29:25
would be sitting in here and give you the
1:29:27
same presentation that you
1:29:29
would have if it was an inside the waistband
1:29:32
or appendix style carry.
1:29:34
So we've got videos
1:29:37
of our guys running these and they
1:29:39
can go as fast or even faster
1:29:42
than clearing your cover garment, getting
1:29:45
your gun out. This is actually
1:29:47
faster because you're just grabbing this thing
1:29:49
in the front pulling down and then getting your gun
1:29:51
out. Okay,
1:29:52
all right that makes sense. So
1:29:55
do people typically
1:29:57
open it if they're a right-handed
1:29:59
shooter they
1:29:59
They open it with the left hand and then they
1:30:02
grab the pistol with the right hand. Okay. Yeah.
1:30:06
The translation works pretty well for training, right? Because
1:30:08
if you've been trained, Mike, you know that
1:30:11
if you're concealed carrying, you're clearing
1:30:13
a cover garment, whatever that cover garment is. So
1:30:15
the first thing you're going to do with your offhand is clear
1:30:17
that cover garment, get it out of the way
1:30:20
and then get your firearm out. It's the
1:30:22
same movement instead of pulling your shirt up
1:30:24
to get your gun out. You're
1:30:26
just grabbing the front of this and pulling it down to
1:30:28
get your gun out.
1:30:30
Great. And so this gives people
1:30:32
a lot of options too in the summer, right? When
1:30:35
it's very difficult to conceal a firearm
1:30:37
if you're dressed very lightly in
1:30:40
the summer and like
1:30:42
tight shirt and shorts or whatever. Yep.
1:30:46
Yep. And you know, fanny packs are back.
1:30:48
My daughter, she's 14. She tells me that
1:30:51
the 80s are back and I don't know what that means exactly.
1:30:54
Even though I was alive in the 80s, I'm not really sure what
1:30:56
that means, but apparently
1:30:59
fanny packs are back. So you know, we have
1:31:01
them at a bunch of different colors. They kind of blend
1:31:03
in, especially if you just get one of the plain
1:31:05
colored ones. You know, nobody knows that
1:31:07
you're carrying a gun up here in Montana.
1:31:10
That's not super important. But
1:31:12
I know in a lot of cities and a lot of places
1:31:14
in America, you don't want people to know that you're
1:31:16
carrying. This is a great option
1:31:19
for folks.
1:31:20
That's fantastic. Okay, great. And
1:31:22
by the way, according to my music collection, the
1:31:25
80s never left. Okay. We're
1:31:27
still in the 80s. I want to let her know that. Yeah,
1:31:30
that's what I tell myself. We're still in the 80s. Nothing
1:31:33
beats the 80s. You know, the 80s
1:31:35
were a much calmer time, I think.
1:31:38
Yeah, in fact, let's talk about that for a second. But
1:31:40
I mean, you also have you have belts. I mean,
1:31:42
really good heavy duty leather gun
1:31:45
belts.
1:31:46
And just quickly talk about some of the
1:31:48
other accessories that you offer. Sure. You
1:31:50
know, we do all kinds of stuff. We have a
1:31:53
great concealed carry belt. It's it's made
1:31:55
from a biofane material, which
1:31:57
is kind of a coated nylon
1:31:59
material. that's virtually
1:32:01
indestructible. The buckle itself
1:32:04
is a machined aluminum. We
1:32:06
make those right here in Montana. That
1:32:09
allows us to sell a belt that's, we
1:32:11
say it's the last belt you'll ever buy because it's a lifetime
1:32:13
warranty belt. Try that with
1:32:15
a leather belt or even a tactical nylon belt.
1:32:18
Eventually those will wear out and
1:32:21
so yeah I don't know we're
1:32:23
big fans of them. It's not a product that we're very well
1:32:25
known for but just to give you an example
1:32:27
you know we we are hunters up here
1:32:30
and we shoot elk every
1:32:32
year. We have hung
1:32:34
entire elk
1:32:36
with our belts. Now they're not climbing rated.
1:32:38
We don't go out there and pay for the test and get them to
1:32:41
get them climbing rated but if
1:32:43
they'll hold up an elk hanging from the
1:32:45
barn we know they'll hold
1:32:48
your pants up. Yeah yeah no question
1:32:52
about that. Okay and then again
1:32:54
to our viewers you can use discount code Ranger
1:32:58
to save 10% off of everything
1:33:00
that you offer
1:33:02
at Shieldarms.com and by
1:33:04
the way I don't earn anything
1:33:06
off of
1:33:07
anybody's use of that discount code. It's just
1:33:10
something that we pass along to
1:33:12
our viewers and we thank you Brandon
1:33:14
for making that available to give people a little bit
1:33:16
of a discount. Now
1:33:18
with that said let's talk about the state of
1:33:20
the world right now. We
1:33:23
know I mean our audience especially
1:33:25
is very well informed about the fact that police
1:33:28
have been defunded. There are more
1:33:30
looters than ever before in American cities.
1:33:33
We're watching you know FedEx trucks and UPS
1:33:35
trucks and Amazon vans get looted
1:33:37
on a regular basis. Shoplifting is through the roof. There
1:33:40
are violent assaults happening you
1:33:42
know especially across blue
1:33:45
cities let's be honest and then in addition
1:33:47
the world is becoming more and more dangerous as
1:33:49
well with what's happening in the Middle East especially and tempers
1:33:52
have flared and there's a lot of concern about
1:33:54
domestic terrorism in the
1:33:56
United States. So what are your thoughts
1:33:59
as a provider? of these
1:34:01
problem-solving pieces of equipment about
1:34:04
the safety of your customers and
1:34:07
the American people?
1:34:09
That's the sort of idea behind what
1:34:12
we do at Shell Arms, right? So we make life-protecting
1:34:16
gear, not just firearms.
1:34:19
We sell medical kits and
1:34:22
then we also really encourage
1:34:25
people to go out and seek out training. Know
1:34:27
how to use your firearm properly.
1:34:30
And then if you know how to make holes, then
1:34:32
you should also know how to plug those holes. So
1:34:35
seek out competent instruction
1:34:38
and we encourage people to carry tourniquets. We
1:34:41
sell EDC kits that start
1:34:43
out with a bag, a firearm,
1:34:46
and a medical kit and then there's plenty of space
1:34:49
for you to accessorize it and sort of
1:34:51
make it your own. We
1:34:53
do live in a crazy time and what we tell
1:34:55
people is that while we still have
1:34:58
some semblance of rule of law, which we do have
1:35:00
in most of America, not all of it, concealed
1:35:03
carry is wonderful. Make sure you
1:35:06
do it lawfully, but concealed carry is wonderful. When
1:35:09
things break down, I should say if,
1:35:11
but it's looking more like a win at this
1:35:13
point, you are going to want
1:35:16
a little bit more firepower than just a concealed
1:35:18
carry pistol. That's
1:35:20
why we encourage people, even if it's
1:35:23
not from us, make sure you get some
1:35:25
sort of a long gun and then the training on how
1:35:28
to use it.
1:35:29
Yeah, really good point. Sometimes
1:35:32
I've even told people start with
1:35:34
a long gun because it's much
1:35:36
easier to use than
1:35:39
a pistol. I mean, no doubt pistols throw people
1:35:41
for a loop. I mean, people freak out and
1:35:43
try which I, you know, why am I
1:35:45
seeing 12 versions of my iron sights
1:35:48
in my sight picture? But rifles are
1:35:50
just like easy. They are.
1:35:53
Way easier than pistols. Yeah,
1:35:56
it's smart to tell people to start with that. I have
1:35:58
to remember that.
1:35:59
Yeah, well, I mean, I think what's
1:36:02
the understand the principles of the rifle then
1:36:04
transitioning to a pistol they already have some kind of a
1:36:07
base and also Remember that
1:36:09
the the first time shooter is very scared
1:36:12
of the recoil of the pistol But
1:36:14
since the recoil of a rifle like an AR-15 is
1:36:16
so much less I mean to
1:36:19
you and I Brandon. It's like this is nothing.
1:36:21
I mean we barely noticed it these days, right?
1:36:24
But to a first-time shooter You know
1:36:26
a rifle is much easier to handle that recoil
1:36:29
than a pistol the pistol freaks everybody out
1:36:31
And that's why they always do the dipping down thing
1:36:33
right there. I was like dipping down in anticipation.
1:36:36
Yep. Yeah
1:36:38
Yeah, that makes a lot of sense But training
1:36:40
is key, you know whether you're gonna start with pistol or start
1:36:42
with a rifle or you know Hopefully eventually learn
1:36:44
both training is key. So we're big
1:36:46
proponents of that
1:36:48
Absolutely. Now. I'm really glad you sell
1:36:51
an EDC kit and medical packs
1:36:53
as well In my vehicle
1:36:55
my primary vehicle. I always travel
1:36:58
with multiple tourniquets and and You
1:37:01
know first aid kits that are pretty
1:37:03
well stocked by the way and blood stop gauze
1:37:06
and blood stop powders and things like that The
1:37:11
your kit is there anything that you want to
1:37:13
say about your medical kits?
1:37:15
It's your standard traumatic
1:37:17
bleeding. So tourniquet quick clots.
1:37:20
You've got combat gauze It
1:37:23
essentially things to stop a bad bleed.
1:37:26
It's not a kit. You're gonna want to rip open
1:37:28
if you cut your finger Right,
1:37:30
maybe throw some duct tape on that and then what
1:37:32
we'll tell people is you know supplement so
1:37:35
start with if
1:37:37
even if it's not our kit, that's fine just get some
1:37:39
sort of a traumatic
1:37:42
bleeding kit Some
1:37:44
and then the training to use it, you know, where do you put
1:37:46
a tourniquet? Where do you wear
1:37:49
on the body? Does it make sense to to use
1:37:51
quick clot? Where do you start packing wounds
1:37:53
and where do you not pack wounds? All
1:37:56
that stuff. So training please
1:37:58
seek that out. But then
1:39:35
through
1:40:00
you and through some of your designs. So true.
1:40:03
Yeah, those have been pretty cool to see.
1:40:05
Oh, good. Thanks. Thanks for
1:40:07
that feedback. Yeah, we, we
1:40:10
produced a batch of those escape from LA knives
1:40:12
and we couldn't keep them in stock. I bet not.
1:40:14
I bet not. There's it's pretty unique. It's pretty
1:40:16
cool design. I was pretty impressed. It's
1:40:19
yeah, well, this, this shows not
1:40:21
about my knives, but I
1:40:24
am going to release some video about using them on the ranch
1:40:26
in some very unique ways. Definitely. Looking
1:40:29
forward to that. Yeah. Yeah.
1:40:31
Okay. So bottom line
1:40:34
is Brandon, I mean, I
1:40:36
love the Glock 43X that
1:40:38
you provided me and thank you
1:40:40
for that. And that's become my carry
1:40:43
firearm. I love the folding
1:40:45
stock ARs that you have.
1:40:47
And I'm looking forward to trying out the nine millimeter
1:40:50
as well, the nine mill carbine
1:40:53
and your magazines are just
1:40:56
top notch. Again, your magazines brought
1:40:58
me back to Glock. Thank you. So that's how
1:41:00
good they are. Thank you. There's a whole bunch more
1:41:03
coming in that arena. We've
1:41:05
got for some folks, these,
1:41:09
even though they're not that big a gun, this Glock
1:41:11
43X is just too big for some folks to
1:41:14
reliably conceal. And so we've got
1:41:17
an even smaller version of this gun
1:41:19
coming soon. So stay
1:41:22
tuned. We'll make sure to get
1:41:24
one of those out to you when those are ready.
1:41:26
Okay, an even smaller version of a Glock
1:41:29
43X? Yeah, this is kind of a smaller
1:41:31
sneak preview. Oh,
1:41:34
so it's a shorter grip and a is
1:41:36
the barrel half inch shorter to same barrel,
1:41:38
the whole the same. Yeah, the whole top ends the same.
1:41:41
Okay, the magazine is
1:41:43
small. Wow. The 10 round version of the same
1:41:45
mag.
1:41:46
So
1:41:48
that reminds me that's kind of like a thinner Glock 26
1:41:51
almost you got it. That's exactly right.
1:41:54
Wow. Okay.
1:41:56
Well, very cool. Very useful. Okay,
1:41:58
yeah. That's That'd be great
1:42:00
as a backup firearm for your main carry
1:42:03
as well. Yep. All
1:42:05
right, Brandon, anything else you want to add or have we covered
1:42:07
everything? I think that's it. We
1:42:09
just really appreciate you and your audience and
1:42:11
thanks for having me on. I
1:42:14
appreciate your sort of common sense approach
1:42:17
to preparedness, so thank you for
1:42:19
that. Well, absolutely.
1:42:21
Thank you for providing the discount code for
1:42:23
our audience. Again, the code is RANGER, 10% off
1:42:26
everything, including the firearms, correct? Okay,
1:42:30
wow, that's a huge deal. And
1:42:32
then remember, folks, we always encourage you, you
1:42:34
need to follow your local laws. When you purchase
1:42:36
firearms from Shield Arms, of course, it has to go through
1:42:39
your FFL. And if you don't
1:42:41
have an FFL, you got to find one and then you
1:42:43
got to go through that and do the transfer there.
1:42:46
And hopefully you have a concealed carry so you don't have to wait
1:42:48
on the NICS background check
1:42:50
system. But, you know, obey
1:42:52
local laws. But most importantly,
1:42:54
as Brandon said, do your
1:42:56
training. And remember, you don't have to burn through ammo to
1:42:59
do a lot of training. You can do dry fire training,
1:43:02
practicing, you know, presenting
1:43:05
the firearm, practicing the motion of
1:43:07
it, practicing clearing jams, reloads,
1:43:10
all these things. You can do it in a dry fire
1:43:12
configuration. Just make sure that
1:43:14
you clear your firearm first and
1:43:16
you're not running live rounds accidentally in your
1:43:18
apartment complex or something. So dry
1:43:21
fire is, I mean, all the best shooters
1:43:23
I know practice dry fire. Absolutely.
1:43:28
All right, Brandon. Well, thank you for joining us today.
1:43:30
We appreciate you and absolutely. And
1:43:33
folks, the website again is ShieldArms.com
1:43:35
spelled just like it sounds. ShieldArms.com
1:43:38
and use discount code Ranger to save 10%.
1:43:41
Thank you for watching today. Take care. Today's
1:43:43
interview is brought to you by HealthRangerStore.com.
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And if you'd like to support us, check out what we
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1:45:48
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