Deployed and Discarded: The Price of Serving a Sleeping Nation | Stew Peters Network

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Summary

➡ The speaker discusses the challenges veterans face when transitioning from military to civilian life, attributing these difficulties to a lack of understanding and respect from the civilian population. They also touch on the reasons people join the military, such as patriotism or educational opportunities, and express frustration at the negative perceptions some hold towards veterans. The speaker encourages more respect and appreciation for veterans, who have made significant sacrifices for their country.

➡ Many people say they support the troops but not the war, which can be confusing. Being a soldier can lead to life-changing situations, injuries, and mental health issues due to the intense combat. Soldiers, often young, are asked to contemplate their own mortality and write their own obituaries, which can be a heavy burden. These experiences can change a soldier’s perspective on life and the world, making them see things differently than civilians.

➡ This text discusses the challenges faced by military veterans in adjusting to civilian life. It highlights how their military training, which emphasizes constant vigilance and security, can lead to behaviors like repeatedly checking doors and windows. The text also explores the emotional struggles veterans face, such as feelings of guilt or shame over actions taken during service, and suggests that understanding and accepting their unique experiences and perspectives could be beneficial. It ends by acknowledging the potential for both positive and negative outcomes in veterans’ post-service lives.

➡ The speaker, a veteran, discusses the sacrifices made by those in the military and the value they see in serving their country, despite the potential costs. They express frustration with criticisms of the military and argue that service members are not misguided, but are instead driven by a desire to protect their country and its ideals. The speaker also touches on current events, expressing concern over civil unrest and the deployment of the National Guard in response. They argue that the voices of law-abiding citizens in these areas are being overlooked, and suggest that many are grateful for the increased law enforcement presence.

➡ The text discusses the concerns of law-abiding citizens in communities affected by crime and violence, often ignored by the media. It criticizes the focus on political narratives rather than the real issues faced by these communities. The author supports the idea of increased law enforcement or even military presence to ensure safety. The text also highlights the negative impact of crime on small businesses and the potential loss of trust in law enforcement and the judicial system.

➡ The speaker believes that harsher punishments should be implemented to deter crime, and agrees with the President on this matter. They also express frustration about the financial support given to Israel, questioning its benefits. The speaker also mentions their dissatisfaction with the number of Jewish individuals in government. Lastly, they promote pet products from Pet Club 247 and hemp products from American Hemp Hub.

 

Transcript

Foreign I was approached on X or Twitter with some questions about veteran issues. And, and I thought that this might be a good time, a good time for us to, to maybe have these discussions. Maybe it’s a good time to talk about some things that maybe. And of course all of this is really just my experience and then my experience in my professional career in the past working in the veteran service industry. So my opinions and the things that I feel and think about, some of this stuff is not just keyboard warrior stuff, it’s actually lived life experience.

And the question that I was asked amongst many, but the one that stuck out or the one that kind of sums up all of it is why do veterans have seemingly such tall hurdles to get over when getting out of the military or coming home from war? And the question kind of surprised me because I feel like, I feel like these discussions have went on quite a bit over all the years. I mean, we just got out of the longest war in our country’s history. And so these types of things have been talked about publicly a lot.

But it made me realize that maybe there aren’t really all that many people that paid all that much attention or didn’t retain it or whatever the case may be. But these questions still come up and this individual wasn’t the first and only one to ask questions such as this. But I thought maybe this is something to talk about. Of course I have some views and opinions on it and I think maybe right now might be a good time to have these discussions. With all the polarizing shit going on in our country, maybe it’s time to talk about some of this stuff.

So that’s what we’re going to discuss this evening. So please sit back, relax and don’t go away. We start now. Hey everybody and welcome here to the next installment of the Richard Leonard Show. I would really love to thank you for being here. If you’re new here, thanks for checking us out. We really appreciate you stopping by. If you are returning viewer listener, as always, we really appreciate you, we appreciate your participation and also, excuse me, also, we appreciate feedback. So for those of you who give it, whether it’s negative or positive, it’s all good things to hear.

I don’t take any of it personal. After all, this show is mine. And secondly, all of this is really opinion based and information given to you from things that we find and also just lived life experience with these issues. So before we get started on today’s conversation, of course we need to talk about how the lights are afford, how we afford to Keep the lights on. And that’s Cortez Wealth Management. Get over to America first retirement plan.com there you can get all the information and all the details to get yourself a packet and a bunch of information about how to prepare yourself a tax free retirement plan.

Carlos Cortez and his staff want to help you build this plan. They want to help you build this plan with places to invest your money that are America first, that do adhere to or follow along with you in your beliefs, follow along with you in your views and your opinions about what should be going on with your money. After all, this is your nest egg, so to speak, to enjoy life, enjoy the fruits of your labor. When your time is done working for the man or for yourself or however it is you earn your income. So get on over to AmericaFirstRetirementPlan.com get all the info you need to prepare yourself a tax free retirement plan.

If you have any comments, questions or concerns after digesting all the information, please feel free to reach out to Carlos and or his staff. They want to help you. They want to answer those questions. They want to get you over these hurdles. So don’t hesitate. Do it now, check it out, ask the questions and get started anyway. AmericaFirstRetirementPlan.com is the place. Get there now. Okay, so why do, excuse me, why do soldiers, veterans of all branches, of all ethnic backgrounds, of all ages, of all sexes, of all genders, whatever it is, why do American soldiers in general have such a difficult time at times, and that’s not everybody, and it’s not all the time, have a difficult time reintegrating, getting out of the military and then leading what, I guess we don’t really know anymore what normal life is, but get back to something that’s recognizable to them, get back to something normal.

And I think that the answer to that is multifaceted. I think there’s a lot of, a lot of things at play. I think it also depends on the individual. But this also plays into the whole idea. I’ve always had, always had the idea that there is a massive gap, there’s a massive gap between the veteran culture, the warrior culture and civilian population and that culture. Now a lot of aspects of them seem to meld together, but there are significant things that do not. And a lot of it boils down to, in my opinion, a lack of understanding.

And I think that we’ve come to a place in our history that a lot of people just don’t give a shit. They don’t care. And to Me, that’s sad, because there are a lot of great things that America has to offer its people in the world. And all of that has been defended by men and women with weapons, with speed and violence of action. And they’ve paid for it in their blood, sweat and tears, and in many instances their lives. And so when we, when we see that that sacrifice or that decision to serve is kind of stomped on by the actions of others in the community or our leadership, anybody, anywhere for that matter, it’s extremely frustrating.

And I think that most veterans come from a place where it’s not necessarily about respect, or I shouldn’t say that because it is about respect, but it’s not necessarily about agreeing. It’s not necessarily about agreeing with the things that have happened or are going to happen or are happening now, but to just in some way, shape or form. And I’m not out here saying that people need to bow down to veterans and do all of these super extravagant things, but a little bit of respect would be nice for the people that have chose to sacrifice everything.

And there are many people that will say, well, you know, especially veterans of my era in the current era, you know, you guys have been led blindly into, into death, into battles, into altering the rest of your life in a negative fashion. You signed up for it and they took advantage of you. And there are many people that ask questions like, well, when our soldiers are going to turn the guns around on the people that are sending them to die. Well, I don’t know that that’s ever going to happen. I think that’s absolutely ridiculous question because, because people, people sign up.

In my opinion, people join the military mostly for a couple reasons. One, a sense of patriotism, a sense of love of country, a call to service. And some people just join to get an education paid for, which is fine, too. It is a great way to a college education if you come from a family or a place where college isn’t necessarily in the cards for you, but you really want to do it. So those types of things are great. And it’s not just college, but any kind of professional training, trade schools, truck driving school, whatever it is.

And so I think that veterans have problems reintegrating or coming home because they, they see and they feel that nobody cares. We talk a lot in many different circles in this country about America. First, we talk about the sense of national pride. There’s all kinds of things of a patriotic nature that we talk about in many different circles. Then when it all comes around full circle, then the veterans of this country or the soldiers in this country are told that they’re stupid and they’ve been duped and all these other things. And I don’t know that I agree with that sentiment.

I think that there are certainly things that have happened in this world that the US military has been involved in that aren’t the. They’re probably not the best thing to hang a hat on. I mean, people are human, they make mistakes and they send people to places. But there’s also treachery afoot. I think there are many instances in which people could point out and say, well, you know, we went there because these people are going to make money or they’re going to gain power or control. And those things that we talk about often. And even if all of that is true, why ostracize the men and women that have decided to strap up this uniform and have decided to try to defend this land by whatever means necessary? You know, back in the early 2000s when we went to war and then creeping up into 0506, you know, up to like 2010, there was this, this big push and you heard people say all the time, well, you know, we don’t have to support the war, but I support the troops.

I don’t necessarily support why we’re at war, but man, we gotta, we gotta at least give it up for the men and women who are fighting it. And sometimes I think that idea is kind of screwy, right? Like if we’re going to support the men and women fighting the war, but we don’t support the war, does that mean we just feel sorry for the men and women that are fighting the war? Maybe that is the case. So I’ve never quite understood that, and maybe it’s just because I’m a simple infantryman, but the idea that we have all been led blindly to our death or to life altering situations and circumstances that will forever change our lives, and illnesses and burn pits and amputations and bullet wounds and blast exposures and chemical exposure and just all of this stuff, the impact on people’s mental health.

I mean, we all know now at this point in our nation’s history and the history of the world, what intense combat does to the human psyche and it does to the human body. Even if you never get hit, but you’re out there fighting, man, it takes a toll on people and it does creep up on you later. But I think that, that all of this is something that has never really been. And I think people have given it a good effort over the years. But I don’t know that it’s ever really been talked about and dissected in a room at a table with people on both sides, on the civilian side and on the side of military people, and talk about the questions, talk about what it was like, what the.

What the military experience is like. And I don’t mean the war experience necessarily. I don’t think that there. There needs to be all these discussions about how many people you killed and how did it go and blah, blah, blah, and was it hot over there. But there’s so many things about the military experience that I don’t know the civilian population will understand. And for example, we’ve talked about on the show before all these young men and women who are being deployed who are going to war. I mean, imagine being 20 years old, join the military and you’re getting deployed, and then they tell you, hey, man, here’s this form here.

Like, here’s this piece of paper. This is your obituary. Whatever you put on here, whatever you write down on this piece of paper is what we’re going to print in the papers at home. We’re going to put on the news. We’re going to do whatever. So make sure you write something good. And so we’re already, at this point, for many soldiers who are young and it’s their first experience, we’re already asking them to decide what it is they want their death to look like. What do you want life after you die to look like? Who are you leaving behind? What was important to you all? It’s almost like.

Almost like the things we write in our senior high school yearbook on our senior year when you have to, you know, you put your picture up and then you get to write a paragraph to that they publish in the yearbook and to talk about your memories and things of that nature. And then now, 25 or 30 years later, you look back if you still have your yearbook, and you read about what you wrote, what you liked. You read about what you liked, where you went, what your memories were, and then you get to your picture and you read that you wanted to marry the girl you were dating at the time, which maybe didn’t even last past the time the picture was taken very long.

And now, shit, now it’s in the yearbook. I mean, you don’t know what you don’t know, right? And so what I mean is that just this one activity alone is something that most people don’t think about having to do. Most people who are 20 years old, even 25 years old, I mean, I guess it doesn’t matter how old or young you are, of course, as you get old, you understand that that life is going to end someday. You need to be prepared so you don’t leave a mess. But these young kids, they never thought about it.

I would be. I would. I would go on a limb and say there’s probably many kids that are 20 to 23 years old that don’t quite know exactly what an obituary is and what you put in it and how to write it and things like that. People of that age don’t have to do that. Now we’re asking them because of the dangers of your job, we need you to write this obituary about yourself. And not that it’s a huge deal. I think most people knock it out, but it certainly is something that you think about after the fact.

It’s certainly something that you have conversations with other soldiers in your platoon or your unit or whatever. You have conversations about that, like, hey, man, what’d you write on your obituary? Who you leaving your dirty underwear to? And who you leaving, you know, your dog to? And blah, blah, blah. And so just putting that in the psyche, I think, changes things. I don’t know that it hurts anybody, especially initially, but those are experiences that change you. Because it’s inevitable that once you get deployed, even if you’re not in combat, that you’re going to have these thoughts about, man, this really sucks here.

Even if you’re at a place that never gets hit with mortars or rockets or V beds or anything like that, you still think about it like, this really sucks here, you know, and as you’re there and this experience is happening to you, your whole view on life changes. And not that it hasn’t already at that point, because I’m sure it has the whole experience as a whole. I mean, basic training is shocking to many people’s systems, or at least it was at one point. But all these little activities, they change you. For example, again, when we deployed, we had to get a smallpox vaccine.

Well, what the hell is smallpox? If you didn’t pay attention in history class in high school, or you didn’t really search out information on it if you weren’t interested to research it at all, you don’t really know what smallpox is. And they tell you what it is and how dangerous it was and this and that and the other thing and the reasons why you need to have the vaccine. And in order to be vaccinated, you actually have to be injected with the virus. And then there’s this scab on your arm, and if you Touch it, you’re going to infect the whole fucking county.

They make it seem like. Don’t touch it when it. Scabs. Do not touch it. If the scab breaks, everyone’s going to get smallpox. Well, shit. I mean, I didn’t really know what smallpox was, and now I learned how to infectious it is and how dangerous it can be and shit. You’re putting that in my body. Well, all right. Well, this is what I got to do to. To go to war and. Or continue my career or do whatever. This is what’s required. All right, well, I’ll do that. The same thing with the anthrax vaccines, the whole series of shots that many people were very uncomfortable taking, but it was mandatory.

If you’re gonna serve in this uniform, you gotta get this vaccine. And all of them. Well, shit, man, I don’t know about that. I don’t. You know, we would had. We had conversations about it. Well, what is. What’s in this stuff? And like, we knew that anthrax was a thing in the early 2000s. People were sending the mail and it was dangerous and all that other stuff and. Well, so wait a minute. Are we going to a place where they’re using anthrax? It’s possible, maybe. Well, should we take all these vaccines and nobody really knows what’s in it and I don’t know about all this.

Well, yeah, but you better take it or, you know, we. You can’t deploy and you can’t do this and that and the other thing, like it’s required of you. All right, all right. So, I mean, soldiers just did it. And so, like all of these little small minute activities and requirements, they change the way that you see the world. They change the way that you see life. They change the way that you see what’s important, what’s maybe not as important. What things can we live with? You know, like, do we really need to get up in arms about the price of eggs? And of course, a lot of these things have a lot deeper meaning outside of the cranium of veterans who are questioning it.

But these are again, are the experiences that change our perceptions. They change the way that we see the world, the way that we interact with people, the way that we just live out our lives, you know, like, it’s probably not an uncommon thing for people who are in the know about what’s going on in the world to lock their doors and windows at night, maybe even give it a second glance, you know, once you’re really gonna bed down for the evening and Go to bed. But even those people who do those things, which I would argue probably isn’t an overwhelming amount of the population, they don’t do them three times, they don’t do them incessantly.

They’re not constantly thinking about what’s gonna happen if someone kicks in my fucking door tonight. And I don’t even know that it takes an intense combat experience for somebody to start having those thoughts. But the way that you’re trained to walk through life in a uniform is just a, it’s a whole lot different. You’re constantly preached security, security, security of yourself, of your, of your, your battle buddies, your unit, your equipment, your sensitive items. The base is secure, Everything is secure. And so when people have these conversations and veterans start talking about, well, you know, I, I sweep my house for potential avenues of approach and egress and entrances and exits from my place.

I have to walk around and make sure all my windows are latched, my doors are locked, they install extra locks. And from the time they get home, maybe at 5:30 or 6:00 clock in the evening, till 10 or 11 when they go to bed, they’ve checked the doors five or six times. I mean, I’ve had veterans sit in my office and tell me like, this is my routine. And I don’t really question it. I get it. I understand. I don’t necessarily do those things either, not to that excess. But I think about things. For example, at my house, our living room windows are pretty low to the ground.

So if there’s nobody home or there’s nobody sitting in the living room and I notice that the windows are open, I instantly close them. And then I instantly talk to anybody in our house about leaving windows open when they’re out of this room. Because even though we live in a somewhat seemingly safe neighborhood, we’re not safe. We’re not exempt from bullshit happening. If somebody wants to walk up to our house, cut the screen and just step right in our window, they can do that. And so if you’re in the crapper or you’re upstairs or down in the basement and there’s nobody sitting in here and we’ve left the windows open, that’s a, that’s a potential threat.

And so again, this, this lifestyle of military service where they preach security even in the field, whenever you stop 360 security, everyone’s facing out, the leaders huddle in the middle. The rest of the unit pulls security. We have to be secure on all sides at all times. And they drill it into you. Because now in a combat situation, if you stop to reallocate ammo to make sure everyone gets some water, patch up some wounds, maybe whatever the case may be, and there’s somebody not looking out from the center of whatever is going on, well, that’s a threat.

There’s a hole in the perimeter. And so these things transfer over to our civilian lives quite easily because you can apply it to pretty simple stuff. The one thing about the military, I will say, is that there isn’t a whole lot of stuff that’s super advanced. I mean, you don’t have to be a rocket scientist to be able to understand what’s happening and how you need to do whatever task it is. All the basic stuff is pretty simple to understand and to carry out. And then, I mean, so those are just some examples of basic everyday military life, how that transfers into not necessarily what the rest of society is like, not the things that the rest of society really worries about or cares about as much.

And then we can talk about the implications of combat and returning home. Because once you’ve tasted that, the game really changes. The way that you see problems and the way that you deal with people and their issues or their gripes or their bitches, or even their successes in happy times is different. And in some respects, depending on where you’re at and what you’re doing, the difference isn’t always welcomed and it isn’t always something that is just observed and ignored and we’ll move on. We don’t necessarily have to talk about it, we don’t have to roll our eyes, we don’t have to do a lot of these things.

We just see it, have our thoughts and then keep going. Sometimes they’re identified and that can be a problem for people. But that’s why I’m saying these roundtable sit downs or something of that nature would be helpful, I believe, to the civilian population in our country who don’t quite understand what it’s like. I mean, the, the, as we’ve discussed recently on the show, the veteran suicide problem is just that it’s a, it’s a big problem and there are implications of, from combat and otherwise, I believe of military service that help lead people to this clearly, or the numbers wouldn’t be so high.

But one of the biggest things that I think that doesn’t really get talked about a whole lot is this idea of moral injury, this idea that while we were wearing a uniform in the course of our actions, we had to do something that goes against my moral compass and the amount of shame that veterans feel, the embarrassment the idea that I can’t come back from this even if you did the right thing, I believe drives people to that point. It drives them to the point where there’s really no other option in their mind. They don’t deserve to live out the rest of their days in comfort and in peace.

And maybe this is just part of being that person. Maybe for people who put in long careers in the military, even short careers in the military, anybody who has put in some time, maybe at some point, we just have to identify that this is who we are. I mean, there’s a reason why less than like 3% or less than 2%, whatever that number is, choose to serve in the military. Well, maybe that’s just embedded in us. Some people would call it a gift, some people would just call it a God given trait. That we are going to accept that the line of work that we choose for ourselves is dangerous.

It is fast paced most of the time, depending on your job. It is dangerous and it will forever change who you are. Or some people would argue that it will help you to realize who you really are. And so maybe that’s part of the answer to this conundrum that veterans find themselves in to feel accepted or to feel like what they did mattered, like it made a difference. Maybe just accepting that this is who we are would help. Maybe we are just people who understand the sacrifice that we are going to or have made and why we did it.

Everybody has their reason, everybody does it for a different purpose. But maybe the answer isn’t to fight it, to try to change it. Maybe the answer isn’t to go and try to get all of these therapies, to get these thoughts out of our minds, to get these feelings off of our chest. Maybe a better answer is to learn how to understand and identify that I was born a warrior. I was born a gladiator. I was born a person that was meant to fight, to defend. Maybe that’s just who I was born to be. And maybe we just need to accept it, learn how to manage it, and learn how to keep the aggression and the violence and the intolerance and the frustration and all these things, learn to keep them at bay and just understand that we are less than 2% of the population of this country.

Maybe we just need to own it. Maybe we just need to be okay with the idea that we’re different. Maybe we just need to accept the fact that some days I just need to stay in this house because if I leave this house going to have a problem or someone else is Going to have a big problem. Maybe we just need to get used to the fact and accept the fact that there are people out there that think we’re brainwashed idiots and that we’ve given up and sacrificed our lives for some lie for someone else to make money on our backs.

But I think that it’s a double edged sword because either you accept it and you try to learn how to harness it, let it out when it needs to be out, and you miss out, you miss out on stuff. You miss out on relationships with people that might be great friends of yours that might have answers for you, but maybe you don’t. The problem is that you never really know what the outcome is going to be. But for most of us, probably, I think, well, for me anyway, I’m not frustrated with my military career, not pissed off about where I was asked to go.

Do I have some regrets? Do I have some issues? Do I have some turmoil in my life because of it? Yeah. Yeah, I do. And I just had to accept the fact that me wearing a uniform that said US army on my heart cost me some things and who knows what else it will cost me. But for the purposes of the greater good, to be part of something that was bigger than myself, I believe it was worth it. I’m willing to accept what it is I got right here and right now. Whatever illnesses or whatever injuries I may have incurred that may get worse, I understood that.

I understood that when I signed that paper and rose my hand. And I made the decision long ago that my family, my children, my friends, my community, the people I went to school with, the people that are close to me, everything that I hold dear, my dog Gus, all those things, they were all worth it. The relationships I made, the brotherhoods formed, the impact I got to make on other veterans doing the work that I’ve done and the impact I hope to make moving forward and work I’m doing and currently working on was all worth it.

And so, yeah, it might be true that we were led to our own slaughter and we’re dumb and we’ve been bamboozled and we’ve been brainwashed and we’ve been all these things. And when are we going to turn our guns on our leadership and tell them this is bullshit, we should be here defending our own borders only? Well, I think it’s easy to say for people who have never had the opportunity or the balls to put on a uniform and defend something. I mean, we can’t all be retarded, can we? We can’t all be wrong. We can’t all be stupid.

And maybe, maybe people joined and did it just for the sheer satisfaction of just trying to help. Just trying to be patriotic and provide something that has been fought for and bloodshed for years and years. This idea, this idea of America, this idea of the pursuit of happiness, the idea of this proverbial blanket of freedom that our soldiers provide us. And to me it’s not an idea. Yeah, we have corrupt politicians, we have corrupt people, we have assholes. We have people that mean to do us harm and we have do gooders. We have people who are just status quo and we have people that are over the top.

We have people in all gambits and all of them, all of them are afforded the same rights, the same freedom. They all get to relish in this idea of America and what it stands for and what it is because of men and women who chose to put on a uniform with the United States army or Marines or Air Force or Navy or Coast Guard or Space Force even to wear those words on their chest mean something to them and seemingly to a whole lot of other people in this country and across the world. I mean, I know that there’s some real polarizing shit going on right now in our, in our country.

And I know that there’s a whole bunch of politicians who are probably corrupt, who are pedophiles and, and scumbags. I get it. But maybe the wholesome, the wholesomeness America is still alive in the people that choose to serve. Maybe it’s still alive in the people who support. It’s not alive in the people who are, who are swarming law enforcement officers and swarming these cities and destroying property and hurting other people and destroying communities and all this other stuff, destroying lives because they don’t agree. We’ll get that. We’ll get into that in a minute. We gotta take a break.

We’ll be right back. Don’t go away. Hey folks, real quick. Before we get back to the show, it’s no secret that we have been experiencing a loss of sponsorships. Sponsors have been leaving the network or the network leaving sponsors due to our convictions. And so we have recently began to ask you, the viewer, for help. We need your help. You are the most important thing when it comes to this network. You are what you are the lifeblood, the Stu Peters Network. And so we are asking for your help once again. And in doing so, the way that you can help is to go down below on this video right here, you’ll see the red button that’s titled Stu Crew.

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But before the break we were starting to get into these people around the country that don’t agree with things that are happening. Probably the most obvious one that pertains to the military anyway is what’s going on in Chicago and what’s going on in Portland and the President sending National Guard soldiers to Chicago and this outrage that people are having because the President is sending the National Guard in, to assist, to assist in protecting ICE agents for doing their job, to assist local law enforcement to try to keep some, some resemblance of normalcy and peace. And I know that there’s laws and acts and all this other stuff that, that prevent the United States military from being used on its own people.

I get that. I understand. But some of this shit has just gone way too far. It’s gone way too far and it’s gotten way out of control. And my question is, and the thing that seems to be missing from this narrative is the voice of the members of these communities who are law abiding, who are doing the right thing, who are giving back, who are going to work every day and contributing to society in a positive way. What about what they want? What about what they are asking for? I think that if you scroll through X for example, or other platforms or start reading social media posts and things from people who live there or who are there, I think that we’ll see that there are quite a few people that are very grateful that there is an increased presence of law enforcement and there are soldiers that are ready, that are ready to deploy.

I know that some judge stopped Trump from sending the National Guard to the streets of Illinois, but last I heard they were there and waiting. At least at the time that we’re recording the show. They were there and waiting for the call to go to work. Why does nobody ever take into account the voice of the people who are asking for this? Because they live there and they see that their community is being snuffed out by crime and many times by other folks who don’t even live in that community, not even from there. When does their voice matter? Why does the voice of a bunch of blue haired fuckheads and the voices of a bunch of people that are just around to cause problems and chaos.

Why are their voices louder than the members of these communities who just want to go for a walk, go for a walk in their community and not be hassled and not be scared? What about them? No one ever seems to talk about that. The narrative is always focused on Donald Trump and the federal government and the administration and their overreach. And it’s illegal and it’s bullish and this and that. Well, I don’t know that it’s an overreach. I don’t know that he’s being a bully. Not to the people who have to deal with this shit. Not to the, not to the people who have children that are leaving their houses to go to the bus stop or walk to school or, or do whatever, go out and play.

Why should any law abiding American have to be nervous about walking down the block to the corner store for a pack of smokes? Why should parents have to be nervous about letting their kids go to the corner store to get some candy and a pop or go to the park and play basketball? Why is that? Okay, but we get all wrapped around the axle about President Trump and as it relates to this particular situation and this particular topic of sanctuary cities and this and that and the other thing, well, furthermore, these people wouldn’t be in your community scooping up illegals.

There wouldn’t be an increased level of law enforcement, this overwhelming presence that people talk about seeing in their own communities. None of that would be happening. If we didn’t allow millions of illegals into this country over the last however many years. If that wouldn’t have happened, well, you would have just had normal police presence in a place where you guys all want to kill yourselves anyway. This fighting and violence and gang violence and all this other bullshit, eventually, hopefully all the idiots will kill each other and our streets won’t be as violent and chaotic. Let all these assholes kill each other.

But the problem with that is that in the course of all these idiots killing each other and taking each other out, innocent people are greatly affected. They’re hit by stray bullets, they’re robbed, their property is destroyed, Business owners are losing everything because folks decide that they don’t like, they don’t like something and go into these shops and start throwing shit off the shelves and destroying the property of these stores. Nobody ever talks about them. The folks that are affected by the violence, that are just trying to do the right thing. But most of us, most of us content creators and things of that nature.

We’re not going to talk about that. Right. Because that’s not what gets us views and that’s not what gets us clicks. That’s not the popular thing to talk about. It’s not controversial enough, it’s not extreme enough. But in our little circles, at our barbecues or at the gas pump or wherever the grocery store where you see your buddy or your neighbor or something like that, well, we’ll talk about it then. But there isn’t a whole lot of people amplifying the voice of the common man in these communities that’s getting their asses handed to them and all of their shit destroyed.

And then when law abiding citizens have had enough and they’ve completely lost trust in our judicial system, they’ve lost trust in our law enforcement, they’ve lost trust in all of the things that were put into place to help them to not have to deal with this shit when that time comes and they lose the trust and they decide to take matters into their own hands because they are nervous about the safety of their children or their family or their property. Now they are the monsters, they are the criminals because nobody else was talking about what’s happening to them.

Therefore no one is helping. And then when the President finally comes up with a plan to seemingly help these communities and help these people that I’m discussing, he’s a racist bigot and a large amount of people just go along with that narrative that the President is a piece of shit. And so all of these people should just be able to run amok in these cities and violate law abiding citizens. So what are they to do? What are they to do? Sit and watch their lives be destroyed and their, their children scared, their businesses burned down or vandalized so bad they can’t afford to keep the doors open and replace the shit that got damaged? Just, just think about it.

Think about everything that you’ve ever worked for. Every, everything, all the money you’ve ever made in your life, you have it sunk into this small little business and then it’s destroyed by some scumbags that disagree with the President or don’t want federal law enforcement to arrest people who have committed federal crimes and get them the fuck out of here. And now it’s gone. These, these vandals walk into your place and destroy your shop. They destroy your place of business, whatever it may be. And yeah, we got insurance, but insurance is pretty tough to come by for a lot of things nowadays because insurance companies are tapped.

Who knows they’ve probably gotten some bailout or some bullshit now to keep money in their pockets. And maybe that’s a good thing because all these law abiding people who are getting their shit destroyed deserve to have it, have it replaced. But for the people who can’t afford it or whatever the reason is and can’t keep their businesses open and thriving, well now they’re out. Now they’ve lost everything because of some political game. And then we have all these folks super up in arms that the President has said, well wait a minute. If you’re not gonna, if you’re, if you Governor Pritzker, if you’re not going to protect your people from the illegals that are here killing and raping and destroying property and all this other, as well as all the other crime.

It’s not like Chicago was a crime free city before illegal started flooding it. Chicago’s been a, a, a, a, a war zone for years. But again, we don’t ever hear those, those stories. We don’t hear the narrative of the law abiding person that just has to deal with it. And the easy answer is to tell folks, well you should remember this the next time an election comes around. And that’s true, that’s true. Remember the way you feel now. So when that dirtbag runs for re election that you don’t vote for him. And then you have people talking about, well it doesn’t really matter who you vote for.

It doesn’t matter. They’re going to put whoever they want in any way anyway. And there’s a lot of people that, that claim, well, there’s overwhelming evidence that elections are fake. Well, I don’t know, I don’t know that any of that’s really been presented on a, on a, on a grand stage for all to see. A lot of talk about it, a lot of people talking about what’s happening behind the scenes and what’s going on and they could be right. But the fact is that nobody really knows. It’s all conjecture. Yeah, there are folks out there that are really good at putting two and two together and coming up with a likely scenario.

But I do not know that we know for sure what is happening and we probably will never know. So conjecture might be all we have to go on. But at this point, Me Personally, I 1000% support having national Guard soldiers in these cities to protect law enforcement as they do their jobs. I understand that the military deck can’t, can’t have arrest authority. They can’t do that. It’s against the law unless all these acts are enacted and, and there’s all these levers that need to be turned on for that to happen. Yeah, I get that. But maybe just having them there walking the streets and Humvees on the street and soldiers with rifles walking through neighborhoods, conducting patrols, making sure people are not violating the law or violating innocent citizens in other places, maybe we are at a point in our country’s history where that is exactly what we need.

Maybe we need soldiers with rifles walking our streets, as sad as that may sound. Because if we do not, what is going to be the thing to change it? What are other ideas? How else do we stop this madness? We cannot just step up law enforcement. There are only so many of them. And if there is not law and order in our communities, innocent people are going to be affected the most. But those aren’t the people that we’re going to hear about. Those aren’t the folks who, who are going to get the attention that something needs to be done.

And if there’s one thing I do agree with President Trump on it is that these people in our communities that mean to do us harm, these folks all across this country that are siphoning and sucking money out of our system, that’s meant for American citizens who have paid taxes, who have contributed, who have woke their asses up every day and went to work and contributed something, a contributing member of our society, they are the ones that are going to go without. But yet we are too hung up on what Donald Trump is doing because we hate him so much.

Well, whether you love him or hate him, he is the president. And at some point, something needs to be done to bring order back to our communities. And there are people out there that need to be dealt with. Maybe the worst of the worst need to be dealt with in a public square for everybody to see. Maybe that shock of watching these dirt bags take their last breath because of the crimes that they’ve committed, maybe then other criminals will think about that for a long time before they commit other crimes against people. Maybe they’ll think about that before they snatch up some little kid in a park and then sell him to some pervert to ass rape.

Maybe they’ll think about that before they decide to walk up on some, on some elderly person on the street and sock them in the side of the head from behind and steal everything in their pockets or purse. These fucking people should swing in the public square. If we’re gonna get extreme, let’s get extreme. There’s a reason why in other places in this world, people don’t steal fucking pomegranates from the local market because when you do, they cut your hand off. There’s a reason why in other places in this world people are very, very careful about who they rape and kidnap and all this other stuff.

Because if you get caught, they cut your dick off and then send you home. And eventually either people are going to learn not to fuck around and find out or there’s going to be a whole lot of dickless and handless people around our communities. And then at least that way US law abiding citizens will know who the dirt bags are because all they’ll have is a nub. They don’t understand anything else but what they deal. That’s the one thing I, a thousand percent agree with the President on all the other stuff we could have conversation about.

But these folks do not understand anything but the extremes in which they operate. They’re desensitized to regular, regular consequences. They don’t give a shit. So anyway, I could probably go on for a whole lot, a whole lot longer about the whole thing, but we’ve run out of time, out of time for the day. Thanks for joining us. We’ll be back next week. Hopefully. Hopefully next week is a brighter week. Good night. As Christians in a Christian country, we have a right to be, at minimum agnostic about the leadership being all Jewishly occupied. We literally should be at war with Israel a hundred times over and instead we’re just sending them money and it’s craziness.

Look at the state of Israel, look at the state of Tel Aviv and look at the state of Philadelphia. You tell me where this money’s going. You tell me who’s benefiting from this. I am prepared to die in the battle fighting this monstrosity that would wish to enslave me and my family and steal away any rights to my property and to take away my God, go yourself. Will I submit to that? And if you’ve got a foreign state, you’ve got dual citizens in your government, who do you think they’re supporting? God right now? Would you protect the nation of Israel and protect those of us, not just our church, but every church in the world and in this nation that’s willing to put their neck on the line and say we stand with them, we stand with them.

You can look at Trump’s cabinet, you could find Biden’s cabinet. It’s full of Jews. I have a black friend in school. I have nothing against blacks. She has nothing against me. She understands where I’m coming from. Excuse me. I’m a Jew, and I just like to say that, you know, in our Bible it says that you’re. You’re like animals. The Jews crucified our God. There’s nothing we wouldn’t do for our pets. They’re like our children. Our friends at pet club 247 have developed natural products that contain the most potent strain of a mushroom that’s been used for thousands of years to help support the immune system.

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