THE BIG MIG SHOW
DECEMBER 31, 2025
EPISODE 735 – 11AM
Recap of 2025
Top 10 Biggest News Stories of 2025
Top 10 Dumbest/Ridiculous Stories of 2025
Top 10 Most Viral Moments of 2025
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_______________________________________________
SUPPORT US:
00:00:00
All men are created equal that they are endowed by their
00:00:04
Creator with certain unalienable rights by.
00:00:09
Liberty. If liberty means anything at
00:00:15
all, it means right to tell people what they do not want
00:00:43
Well, happy New year. Welcome back to the big mid
00:00:45
show. Of course I'm your host, Lance
00:00:46
Muliacho with my Co host George Ballantine.
00:00:50
It's edge of the knife, rise and grind, tip of the spear.
00:00:53
You know how we do it on this show.
00:00:54
It's all about educating and unifying the country.
00:00:57
We're still talking about Epstein.
00:00:59
We'll probably be talking about Epstein in the new year.
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Also 2026. I don't think anything's going
00:01:04
to change. You know, if you, if you've been
00:01:06
here the whole time throughout the year, I want to thank you
00:01:08
guys so very much for supporting us, for the financial support,
00:01:13
the rumble rant tips, the subscriptions, the views, the
00:01:17
reposts. I want to thank our mods for all
00:01:21
their support. You know, and, and hopefully you
00:01:23
guys had a good year. You've got great plans for the
00:01:27
new year for you and your family.
00:01:29
So we hope that we want to give you the best.
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Of course, 'cause you guys have been with us probably the
00:01:33
longest of anybody. And of course, all our
00:01:34
subscribers, all our listeners. You guys have really helped us
00:01:38
grow this year. We're looking forward to an
00:01:42
amazing year with you and lots of new people.
00:01:45
And of course, any kind of support doesn't mean it could be
00:01:47
as simple as just following us or reposting our content on
00:01:51
other channels. George is always doing short
00:01:54
form and long form, so on this show, feel free to take it.
00:01:56
We want you to use us to build your social media just as much
00:01:59
as we want to build our own social media.
00:02:01
So we want you guys to grow with us.
00:02:04
For any of the mods, if anybody, if there's anybody, we're not
00:02:07
following any of our paid subscribers, let us know in the
00:02:09
chat. We'd love to make sure we're
00:02:11
giving you a follow from our account over MX.
00:02:13
We have some pretty decent accounts over there there, so we
00:02:16
want to help you guys too when it comes to connecting.
00:02:19
And of course, we have our community over on it.
00:02:21
So don't forget to hit ask to join that community.
00:02:24
I always look at the people that want to join.
00:02:26
It's rare that I don't let somebody join.
00:02:28
I think there are some people I've turned down because they've
00:02:30
had really jacked up profiles with Ukraine flags and other
00:02:35
stuff that I don't agree with. So those are the only people
00:02:37
I've ever turned down. So anyway, all right, George B,
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what's up? George B.
00:02:44
Did we ever get did we ever get the e-mail from Doctor Schwartz?
00:02:48
We never got. We never got nothing.
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I. Look, I don't think I ever got
00:02:51
an e-mail. I just remembered that shit.
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Oops. Yep.
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Oops, I don't remember getting an e-mail.
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Yeah. Did we?
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I didn't. I checked.
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Oh, I don't think so. I'm looking right now.
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Yep. What?
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We'll have to apologize. No, I don't see.
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One I didn't, we didn't get one dude.
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I went through it. Yeah, I don't have one either.
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So it looks like we didn't. So we're safe there.
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All right. Well, look of course to.
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Come on. If you're joining us for this
00:03:26
first, go ahead, tell him, ask him to come on.
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We'd love to have Schwartz on, talk about the new year.
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He's great. See if he has time.
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Go ahead and connect. You can put me on solo if you
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want. What I'm doing, I got to do the
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prepper bar. We're going to do this now.
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Listen, if you'd like to sponsor the show in the upcoming new
00:03:38
year, we're looking for a few sponsors for this show, the
00:03:40
radio show, and of course the Crypto Power Hour, the number
00:03:43
one crypto show on Rumble. We were on this morning getting
00:03:47
amazing views on that show. So lots of opportunity there.
00:03:50
And of course, gold and silver. My prediction is it's going to
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continue to climb like crazy in 2026.
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That is not financial advice. I'm not a financial advisor.
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I'm just a guy that likes gold and silver, a guy that you come
00:04:04
and watch his show for course. What am I holding up?
00:04:09
Silver. Yeah, silver's on a tear.
00:04:11
It's continuing to blow up, and I think the shortage is going to
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become really apparent this coming year.
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So this bar, it's 62.2g, It's available in gold and silver.
00:04:22
It's called the Prepper bar. Now, if you take a look really
00:04:25
closely, I'm going to hold it up, you can see that it's
00:04:27
perforated. You can see those little lines.
00:04:29
There's three different denominations on here, so
00:04:31
they're easily broken down. You know, if it's a multitude of
00:04:34
needs, you can be for asset protection from inflation,
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economic turmoil, diversification, or of course,
00:04:41
in this case, it's very unique utility for barter and trade.
00:04:44
So if your cash isn't working, if your credit cards aren't
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working and you have one of these babies in your wallet,
00:04:51
assuming the person will accept it, you can snap off a small
00:04:54
piece to make a payment. Now, going into the new year,
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I'm going to recommend something.
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I'm going to go out on a limb, not financial advice.
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Buy some silver at a minimum. I know it's gotten pretty, it
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seems like it's gotten expensive, but I don't think
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it's even close to where it's going.
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Make an effort, buy some silver, stick it in your sock drawer,
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stick it in your underwear drawer.
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Save the deposit box. I don't care where.
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This is a perfect gift for everybody.
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Maybe give silver as a gift this year.
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Birthdays, Christmases, Hanukkah's I don't care.
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Memorial Day whenever you give gifts.
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Easter. These are mind and minted in the
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great US of A counterfeit gold bullion and silver bullion is
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blowing through the roof. Counterfeit's coming out like
00:05:35
crazy. So don't take a chance.
00:05:38
Buy from brokers you trust like Genesis Gold roof.
00:05:42
Head over to the big minkbar.com. 10% off on silver,
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5% off on gold just by using our promo code ALL caps prepper.
00:05:50
PREPPER. That's PREPPR.
00:05:54
Or you can call 8885267154888, 526-7154.
00:06:00
You can get it over the big bigbar.com.
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Remember what I said, We're not January 1 yet.
00:06:04
We will be tomorrow. Buy some silver.
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I think you'll thank me. If you'd listened to us two
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years ago, you'd be thinking we were geniuses right now.
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And again, never financial advice.
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All it is is educational advice. Make sure you talk to your own
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financial advisors. Very important.
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So, you know, of course, we were doing a bunch of research
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yesterday and we're calling this.
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Hold up, hold up, hold up, hold up, hold up.
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Yep. So Doc, Mike Schwartz
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apologized. He was running late this
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morning. So I'm like, I just got here.
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He was on the show while I was talking on the phone.
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I'm like, I'm like, we just started ours.
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You want to just come on ours? Then he's like, yeah, just shoot
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me over to link. So I emailed him the link.
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I'm going to set it up. But great to have Doc Schwartz
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join us. He's got a great show.
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If you're not following Doctor Schwartz's show or you're not
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following on social media, Very bright guy.
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He's an author. He's got a crazy number of
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degrees. He used to be in law
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enforcement. He's got a PhD, he's going to
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law school. This guy is so highly educated.
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He's kind of the ultimate resource now.
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Behind the scenes, we don't talk to a ton of shows.
00:07:07
We do interact with shows, but but the people that we really
00:07:10
talk to are are people like Doctor Schwartz.
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He's somebody that we connect with regularly.
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We connect with Rodger regularly and you know, Mike Flynn and
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others, you know, because they're friends of ours.
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Besides, we have discussions about what's going on or what we
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think, you know, Washington and DC is doing or trying to tell
00:07:26
us. Of course, sometimes it's just
00:07:27
guesswork. Sometimes it's really good
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Intel. I've got lots of good
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connections. George has less.
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So if you're not following Doctor Schwartz's show, give him
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a follow up today. Honest to God, he's got a great
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show, amazing guy and so well spoken.
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He and he is, he's at work in the rounds.
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He's on, you know, Newsmax and Owen and Fox News.
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This guy gets interviews all over the place because he's such
00:07:47
a great resource. I'm surprised one of the
00:07:49
networks hasn't snatched him up. He seems like a guy that a
00:07:54
network would want to have on. Because the networks can't
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handle the truth and what he says, bro, that's why.
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Are you kidding me? Fucking networks.
00:08:03
They suck. Yeah, they were smart.
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They would, right? But they ain't smart.
00:08:06
So that's. Why?
00:08:07
But we saw it in the news, right?
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You guys saw it this year more than ever, if anything,
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regardless of the decisions the administration is making, of
00:08:15
course, we all wanted more transparency and accountability
00:08:19
and consequences. But when you look at the regular
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news, it's been no surprise right as as we've gone through
00:08:25
this even what's going on in Minnesota and I guarantee you
00:08:29
forget just Minnesota. Here he is this.
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Is going to go crazy. All right, let's get him in
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here. No, no, no.
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I got to set up the shop, bro. Relax.
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Take it easy. What are you jumping the gun
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for? One of my Superman.
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I am Superman. Everybody says that, but, you
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know. Yeah.
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Give me a minute. So again, let me say this, all
00:08:44
you guys that are following this show, make sure you follow
00:08:46
Doctor Schwartz's show. He's got a great show and I'm
00:08:49
telling you, he's a resource you want to have for this upcoming
00:08:52
year because this guy really does the homework when I talk to
00:08:55
him. He's one of the few guys that I
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said to George yesterday, Jesus, he's doing so much more than us.
00:09:00
I feel like sometimes I'm dropping the ball.
00:09:02
So, you know, we're always working on plans to try to grow.
00:09:04
Our you know, it's funny like he started TikTok and I'm like, oh,
00:09:06
look me up. So daddy follow me.
00:09:08
I follow him back Now I see all his all his video shorts on
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TikTok hysterical. I'm like there he is my boy.
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All right, we're going to bring him on.
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He's you ready, Doc? Yeah, I'm ready.
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I'm. Ready.
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All right. Welcome to the big, big show.
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Happy New Year Doctor Michael Schwartz and the Swartz family.
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I screwed up this morning. I apologize.
00:09:27
I had some you guys were supposed to come on and tease
00:09:29
your show. We just rated your show.
00:09:31
So I see a lot of my people in here, but I screwed up.
00:09:33
My apologies. It'll never happen in the new
00:09:36
year. I promise you.
00:09:37
That's all right. I was having some sound issues
00:09:39
this morning and I got I got distracted big time.
00:09:42
So anyway, don't you? Just don't.
00:09:43
You just love audio. Audio is the bitch, man.
00:09:46
That's the worst thing when it comes to podcasting and stuff.
00:09:49
You know, we have that studio down in Florida, Mike.
00:09:52
And by the way, if you ever need a studio down there, let us
00:09:55
know. It's it's available for your use
00:09:56
if you ever want to use it. I appreciate it.
00:09:59
Yeah, you guys, you guys, you guys were down at Mar A Lago
00:10:02
doing some fun stuff down there. Yeah.
00:10:04
We were, yeah, it was great. We've got some great interviews
00:10:06
coming up this year because of Mar A Lago.
00:10:08
We're working on some big ones, Mike Tyson, Tyrese, Gary Brecca,
00:10:13
Rick Harrison from Pawn Stars. So we've got a bunch of them,
00:10:16
bunch of them signed up and hopefully they're going to do
00:10:19
it. You know how that is?
00:10:20
You get somebody at an event and they say, yes, yes, yes.
00:10:22
We had a great interview with Isaiah Washington, the actor.
00:10:25
He's a really interesting character.
00:10:27
And of course, he's one of those people that's figured out what
00:10:29
Hollywood's all about, which man, these Hollywood people,
00:10:33
they are in OverDrive reminding us all that if we're not good
00:10:37
little, little little followers and good little fans, that
00:10:39
they're all going to move out of the country.
00:10:42
And I have to tell you my watch list, you know, a lot of times I
00:10:45
watch, I have TV's or documentaries or other crap
00:10:47
women in the back around what I'm working.
00:10:50
And it's I'm, I'm finding myself having to turn more and more of
00:10:53
them off. Doc, you know, I won't watch De
00:10:55
Niro anymore. You know, now Clooney's telling
00:10:58
me that if we don't, you know, straighten up, we can't.
00:11:01
Donald Trump's going to ruin the country that he's now going to
00:11:04
be a French citizen. Of course, he made all his money
00:11:06
here. He didn't make his money in
00:11:07
France and now he's just going to run out of the country.
00:11:11
How do you feel about those? Hollywood celebrities, you know,
00:11:13
it reminds me of the saying never meet your heroes because,
00:11:16
you know, you think about like growing up watching all these,
00:11:18
oh, what a great actor, what a great flick, what a great movie.
00:11:20
Then you hear him speak in public when they start telling
00:11:23
you your business and you go, wow, man, you know, never meet
00:11:26
your heroes. You find out how bad.
00:11:27
I can't watch De Niro anymore. I don't watch Clooney anymore.
00:11:31
There's a few out there, though. You know, Kevin Sorbo's a friend
00:11:33
of mine and he's out there still making movies, but he's been
00:11:36
kind of ostracized from the Hollywood, you know, that
00:11:39
network, Sly Stallone. I mean, at least Sly, though,
00:11:42
Sly is Sly. So Sly can still do things no
00:11:45
matter what it seems, at least that.
00:11:47
But but who knows how many roles the guy has lost over the last
00:11:50
couple years. You know, that that he's been a
00:11:52
little bit more conservatively vocal.
00:11:54
It's kind of scary to think that an industry like that has such a
00:11:57
hold on on people like us. Well, listen, yeah, I want to
00:12:01
meet my hero, but I I'll patiently wait.
00:12:05
I'm not in a rush. Please.
00:12:07
I'm not in a rush. My hero's Jesus Christ.
00:12:09
Just letting everybody know. Yeah.
00:12:10
You don't want to rush that along.
00:12:12
I got to make, I got to make my announcement, I got to let
00:12:14
everybody know. So because live good people hope
00:12:16
so. Today I am celebrating 12 years
00:12:19
of sobriety, 12 years. So if I can do it, you can do
00:12:24
it. And if you need help, need
00:12:25
assistance, guidance, whatever, you can e-mail me at
00:12:28
info@thebigmig.com. Struggle is real.
00:12:32
I have inner peace and nobody take that away.
00:12:35
That's a big, that's a big, that's a big step.
00:12:37
Congratulations. Of course, you, you've, you.
00:12:39
I got to give it to you, man. You go out, you socialize.
00:12:42
Never even that. You're never even thinking about
00:12:45
it, at least not that I've seen. So not everybody does.
00:12:49
I would say let's drink to that, but that's probably the wrong
00:12:51
thing to say. No, you could drink to it.
00:12:52
I could drink water to it, or soda.
00:12:55
See, that's the thing people get people.
00:12:57
Say that was just sarcasm. No, I know, but people always
00:13:00
say you want to drink and you automatically think alcohol.
00:13:02
No, a drink is could be water, anything.
00:13:04
Yeah, here. Cheers.
00:13:05
Salute. Yeah.
00:13:06
Happy New Year. I've had my nicotine.
00:13:08
I'm on my third cup, you know I'm loading up because George
00:13:10
loves when I'm caffeinated. Wait, did you use the smelling
00:13:13
sauce this morning? Because now you got smelling
00:13:14
sauce. For you guys, I'm gonna take
00:13:17
another hit here. I'm taking a page out of Rogan's
00:13:19
book. Oh.
00:13:21
Yeah, I've been putting on the show.
00:13:23
So I get in trouble. I mean, I got yelled at for
00:13:25
this, but I quit smoking. I don't know, 5 1/2 years ago,
00:13:28
George. So I know big step man.
00:13:30
I but, you know, I use this is a lot healthy.
00:13:32
Yeah. Now, do you use nicotine?
00:13:34
Because, you know, of course we get a lot of I also.
00:13:36
Got these docs like the pouches. A lot of times I'm vaping less I
00:13:39
just throw a pouch in. Yeah, I got the pouches.
00:13:42
George, what did you sneak those into the mix?
00:13:44
I've had them, I just never really started using them
00:13:47
instead of using the vape as much.
00:13:50
Yeah, well, I, I'm not sure about vaping.
00:13:52
I always worry about the chemicals, but the nicotine,
00:13:55
after doing a lot of the research, you know, it's another
00:13:57
one of those things that I wonder for the people in the
00:13:59
health world, how much of that they covered up, Doc, what was
00:14:02
the reasoning behind it? Because it seems like nicotine
00:14:05
has a lot of positive side effects.
00:14:07
I I don't want to put you on the edge.
00:14:08
What are you? What are your thoughts on that?
00:14:09
Well, you know, I'm a research doctor.
00:14:10
I don't want to give medical advice, but I will tell you that
00:14:13
I've learned nicotine is not that harmful, believe it or not.
00:14:16
So this is just nicotine salt and propylene glycol so that it
00:14:19
can vaporize. So there are other vapes out
00:14:22
there that have multiple chemicals in it.
00:14:24
I've narrowed it down to one that really just.
00:14:26
Which one you use? This is called the flair and
00:14:29
this was thanks to my brother-in-law, Donnie.
00:14:31
I was because I had the same thing Lance flareflarevape.com
00:14:36
and now I'm doing an advertisement, but I was sitting
00:14:38
there smoking still a couple years ago and my brother-in-law
00:14:41
says you should try this. And I said, well, I don't want
00:14:43
to get into the vaping and all the chemicals goes no, no, no,
00:14:46
no, no, you got to look into this one because it just has the
00:14:48
two chemicals in it and it it delivers a nicotine.
00:14:50
I said, all right, so I I literally went to the store,
00:14:53
bought five of them. I still have the one last
00:14:56
cigarette in my packets in my desk drawer in my office.
00:14:59
It's just sitting there as a reminder from the 30 years or
00:15:02
whatever that I smoked. Now.
00:15:05
Did you smoke? Some people smoke because it's
00:15:07
the process. They get hooked on the process.
00:15:08
Some people smoke because of course they were getting all the
00:15:11
chemicals and the nicotine. They they was it the process or
00:15:14
was it just that you would just come to a a habit?
00:15:17
It was a habit formed over decades.
00:15:19
I blame it on Joey Mulligan. I was 12 years old and Joey
00:15:23
Mulligan was one of my neighbors, you know, one of the
00:15:25
cool kids in the neighborhood and you know, they would all,
00:15:27
all smoke. And the next thing you know, I
00:15:29
tried 1 and I got, I got addicted.
00:15:31
So I guess it's a nicotine addiction.
00:15:33
Nicotine's highly addictive. You know that.
00:15:36
But you know, if for me, it and it, I guess it calms me down.
00:15:40
I don't know if it's an oral fixation or what it is, but
00:15:43
look, I'm, I'm happier now. My car doesn't smell.
00:15:45
There's no ashes. The 7000 chemicals that are in
00:15:48
cigarettes. You know, I was killing myself
00:15:50
for all these years. Now I, I, I breathe great.
00:15:52
I still play baseball. I'm going down to Yankee camp in
00:15:55
two weeks. I run with no problem.
00:15:56
I actually went through the police.
00:15:58
No, I want to talk about when you get done with this, I want
00:16:00
to talk about the Yankee camp. You mentioned that yesterday and
00:16:02
I was intrigued. Of course I'm a Yankee fan.
00:16:05
You can't help but be in New York.
00:16:06
I I miss those glorious days of drunk New Yorkers on bat day
00:16:10
when they would get the mini catfish bats.
00:16:13
I always wondered about the logic behind that.
00:16:15
But of course, as we grew up, they had glove day and bat day
00:16:17
and ball day and our families would all go out there in the
00:16:21
Bronx. In New York.
00:16:22
If you weren't a Yankee fan, you were a total piece of shit
00:16:25
Yankee camp. Let's talk about that for a
00:16:27
minute, but finish your point on the nicotine and the rest.
00:16:29
No, I was just saying, you know what, this is a lot healthier
00:16:31
than smoking, that's all. So for me, I smoked the entire
00:16:35
time that I was in the police Academy and you'd notice it, you
00:16:38
know, when you're running and stuff.
00:16:39
But this, I want to say this saved my life.
00:16:41
I want to thank Donnie, my brother-in-law, who really
00:16:43
turned me on to this. And and it helps me play ball.
00:16:45
I've been doing Yankee camp for oh God, I don't know.
00:16:48
I'm in like my dozen, I think, my 12th camp, I think.
00:16:51
But I are. We you going to take me to the
00:16:53
Yankees game, bro? To the Yankee game I get I'll
00:16:56
tell you what you're better off coming down to Tampa and hanging
00:16:59
out down there and spring training because I got the hook
00:17:02
up down there because that's where we do all of our stuff
00:17:04
down in Tampa. So if you want to go to the.
00:17:06
Game. What do you exactly do?
00:17:07
What do you mean we do all our stuff?
00:17:09
What are you doing? So I I participate in all the
00:17:11
fantasy camps and I run the tournament team for the New York
00:17:14
Yankees down in Tampa. So my coaches, we have about a a
00:17:17
dozen or more, sometimes 24 coaches depending on how many
00:17:20
teams. My coaches are usually Mike
00:17:22
Torres from the 77 team and Charlie Hayes.
00:17:24
You know, Charlie caught the last out 96 World Series this
00:17:28
year in two weeks. When I go down, I have Charlie
00:17:30
Hayes, Ramiro Mendoza is is another one of my good friends
00:17:34
and our coaches. And then all the guys like Jesse
00:17:36
Barfield, Roy White, Mickey Rivers.
00:17:39
I'm just trying to think of our coaches.
00:17:40
Jimmy Leyritz, who was just in my event.
00:17:42
Are you telling me I got to? I should come down and hang out
00:17:44
with you? We live stream live what we're
00:17:46
doing, what you're doing. You could if you want.
00:17:48
I mean, that's. I think people are, I think
00:17:51
people are interested in things like that.
00:17:52
They don't know how to necessarily get connected.
00:17:54
But of course you're already in the game.
00:17:57
You got to be a hell of a player after all that coaching.
00:17:59
Wait, Lance, hold up. I got to get back to this.
00:18:01
What do you Why can't you get Yankee tickets to go to some of
00:18:04
the games? You you're asking me?
00:18:06
No, I'm asking Lance. Yeah, I'm asking you.
00:18:11
I can get tickets. I mean, I can get tickets, but
00:18:13
like, look, you got to, you got to realize like it's a different
00:18:16
world between the, you know, Tampa and New York.
00:18:19
It's almost like two different organizations, even though it's
00:18:21
the same organization. So when you come down spring
00:18:24
training, it's a totally different staff.
00:18:26
I'm very connected with them because I do everything with
00:18:28
that staff. When you go to New York in the
00:18:29
Bronx, I mean, yeah, we can get tickets, but you're not going to
00:18:32
get any special treatment in the Bronx.
00:18:34
I'm. Looking for special treatment?
00:18:35
Just tickets to go to the game. What special treatment?
00:18:37
You know you, you're you're, you know you're George Ballotine.
00:18:40
You need special. I can't not take you up without
00:18:44
taking you into a suite. So the next.
00:18:46
Time. I don't need a suite, I'd rather
00:18:48
be behind home plate somewhere. That's a bet.
00:18:49
I always used to sit by home plate when I get when I gotten
00:18:52
tickets. So do I, George.
00:18:53
I only get to sit behind home plate.
00:18:55
Tampa, New York is you. Know if I go to Tampa, I bet you
00:18:59
I will make sure that I get tickets for games in New York.
00:19:02
All right, well, if you want to come down.
00:19:04
Don't make me outshine you bro. I will you'll get the you'll
00:19:07
have a better experience at in spring training than you will up
00:19:10
in New York, hands down. I mean the last, I'll tell you
00:19:13
what, I'll give you a little secret only for your show that
00:19:16
most people don't know the last practice that they do before
00:19:19
their first game. It's spring training.
00:19:21
It's open to the public. Like 200 people show up.
00:19:23
That's it. Because nobody knows about it.
00:19:25
And you can walk in. You'll see everybody from Willie
00:19:27
Randolph to, you know, Andy Pettitte throwing batting
00:19:30
practice to the new guys. You can watch.
00:19:32
You'll have the best experience of your of your life if you just
00:19:34
take the time to go down a Tampa and see them versus going up to
00:19:38
the Bronx. Yeah, that, that sounds like it.
00:19:40
Only 200 people. It's interesting though, how
00:19:43
intertwined and and how many times have you gone out of this
00:19:45
camp? I'm about, I'm about 12 camps in
00:19:49
and then I I go down 3 * a year. I go November camp, January
00:19:51
camp, and then I the tournament runs usually in April, sometimes
00:19:55
May depending on the Tarpon schedule.
00:19:57
And last year we had to cancel it because the Rays bought our
00:20:00
stadium, as you remember, down in in Tampa.
00:20:02
I remember that. So now they're now that the Rays
00:20:05
are back to the Trop for a little while until they get
00:20:07
their new stadium built, if that even happens.
00:20:09
We finally got our stadium back. The good news is, Lance, the
00:20:12
Rays gave us 15 bucks. So the complex down in Tampa has
00:20:15
been, you know, redesigned. We got.
00:20:17
It's just gorgeous. I bet it's.
00:20:19
Absolutely incredible. I mean, we got a new weight
00:20:21
room, we got a new training room, we got tubs, new cafeteria
00:20:25
that that field 2 now has a wall and lights.
00:20:27
They put lights on, so now we can do 2 game simultaneously
00:20:30
besides beans. Dope.
00:20:32
It's it's incredible. It really is.
00:20:34
And I'll tell you what, the guys that go down, it's about
00:20:37
January's the big one. It's probably about 130 guys.
00:20:40
The networking that you do down there, if anybody's ever
00:20:42
interested in going, everybody owns a business, everybody's
00:20:45
somebody down there. We we wound up, we had an
00:20:48
influencer from what's that, Dave Portnoy's Barstool.
00:20:52
Barstool. Everybody knew who he was.
00:20:54
I didn't know because I just don't pay attention to that
00:20:55
crap. But there's there's always
00:20:57
somebody down there to network with if you want to have a good
00:20:59
time to play ball for a week. And look, if you're worried
00:21:01
about playing ball, I think the average age is probably about
00:21:04
50, which is what I am. But we got guys who are 75 years
00:21:08
old who wind up playing ball or, you know, just playing a couple
00:21:11
and hanging out on the team. It's great.
00:21:12
Hey, doc, somebody's saying that's cool.
00:21:14
Ask Mike. Ask Mike about his honeymoon.
00:21:20
All right, that's, you know, see, this is the problem.
00:21:22
I got people in my chat who are in your chat 'cause they know we
00:21:24
haven't been on one yet, but we're working on we've.
00:21:27
Been on honeymoon? No, we got married.
00:21:29
We got married twice, George. So we got married.
00:21:32
What did we get married? We got married.
00:21:33
Got married twice. Anniversary 12.
00:21:36
Yes. We got married on Christmas Eve
00:21:38
of 23. And we did that on purpose.
00:21:41
Kelly wanted to do the vows at the house.
00:21:43
My friend Ken, who's the Superior Court judge, he.
00:21:46
I called him up. Hey, Kenny, can you come over
00:21:48
and marry us on Christmas Eve? He's like, what?
00:21:50
And then he's like, yeah, for you, I'll do it.
00:21:52
So my mom, who was alive at the time, was able to witness our
00:21:56
vows and sign off trauma forms. And then she very nice in June.
00:22:01
No, no, no, it happens. You know, I get it people.
00:22:03
My mom was getting up there and you know, we got married.
00:22:06
We got married again in August. That was the party.
00:22:09
So it is what it is. But no, we have not been on.
00:22:12
What year did you get married? 23, We're in.
00:22:15
What? We're going in 26 and still no.
00:22:17
You know, it's interesting. Your wife is OK with that.
00:22:20
The honeymoon phase is over anyway, so it's over.
00:22:22
Miss Schwartz? Forget about it.
00:22:24
She's not OK with it, so thanks for the chat.
00:22:26
Thanks for stirring that pot, George, and let me say
00:22:29
something, Mike. George loves to do that.
00:22:31
He loves to stir the friggin pot on here.
00:22:34
I'm not either. A problem in the audience, a
00:22:36
problem with maybe somebody in the administration he loves to.
00:22:39
That's George Ballantine, the pot stirrer of 2025 and 2026.
00:22:44
Stop. Listen, we got the people in the
00:22:45
chat, They ask questions, you know, I want to, you know, help
00:22:48
the family out in the chat. Come on.
00:22:50
Thank. Thankfully my my wife's not
00:22:51
watching. You know, it's interesting,
00:22:52
Mike, you and I have a similar experience.
00:22:55
I got married on New Year's Eve and we did that intentionally
00:23:00
because we felt like often the New Year's Eve experience was
00:23:04
over hyped. And we've been all over the
00:23:05
world. My wife and I've been friends
00:23:07
and, and I've been in a relationship for a long period
00:23:10
of time before we got married. And we've gone to like Punta de
00:23:12
les Day on New Year's Eve. We've been in Monaco, we've been
00:23:15
to parties and Hong Kong and everywhere else all over the
00:23:18
world. We got invited to by people and
00:23:21
we, we just finally decided we thought, well, let's get married
00:23:23
on New Year's Eve. You know, it'll be, it'll be a
00:23:25
way to celebrate New Year's Eve together.
00:23:27
We can go to dinners and it'll be an actual real reason to
00:23:30
celebrate. Because there are times when you
00:23:31
go out on New Year's Eve and the hype is there, but it ends up
00:23:34
not being what you think it's going to be.
00:23:36
It ends up under delivering on the hype.
00:23:38
And we thought that was a great way.
00:23:40
So we invited all our friends and family and we rented out
00:23:43
Ruth Chris because we didn't want to do the normal rehearsal
00:23:46
dinners or the the wedding dinners.
00:23:47
We rented out a Ruth Chris and had everybody be able to order
00:23:51
off the menu. And it was a great wedding.
00:23:53
But the same thing we had a friend of ours who had actually
00:23:56
gotten ordained and he he actually married us.
00:23:58
So similar experience. My mom is still alive.
00:24:01
My father had already passed away at that point so she was
00:24:04
able to enjoy that with us. And my daughter was there from a
00:24:07
previous relationship. I wasn't married previously.
00:24:10
This is my one time marriage. Let's let's help Mike plan a
00:24:14
honeymoon here, you know? We can get some rumble rant
00:24:18
that's. A nice shirt.
00:24:19
Too. I like that shirt tips.
00:24:20
I got. What?
00:24:21
You got to give me your sizes? I gave you some shirts.
00:24:24
How about that? You got all right.
00:24:27
I got a shirt for you. Are you guys ready to dig in
00:24:30
here? Wait.
00:24:30
Wait, hold on. He was saying something about
00:24:32
shirts. Lance, come on.
00:24:33
You know, shirt George will grip for his shirt like the best.
00:24:36
He said he got a shirt for you too.
00:24:38
I'll get you shirts. You got one that you like.
00:24:41
It's called the No Woke Zone shirt.
00:24:42
So it says the no Woke Zone and then it says the Mike Schwarzer.
00:24:45
You like that one gets a. George, you should just exchange
00:24:47
shirts. You got to give him some big MIG
00:24:48
shirts we can cross. I was working on it Lansing, and
00:24:51
you start talking. OK, well, I think it's a great
00:24:54
idea. You're you're the swag master.
00:24:56
George is known as the swag master.
00:24:58
This guy's got more freaking shirts.
00:24:59
He swagged out of people. And you know, the shirt grift is
00:25:03
real here on the big Mig, you know.
00:25:06
But listen, of course, you know, we've always been magnificent
00:25:09
chaos monkeys on this show, and it's.
00:25:12
A group honeymoon? No, no group honeymoon miss.
00:25:14
Schwartz No honeymoon, that's not.
00:25:16
What's your wife's first name, Doc?
00:25:18
Kelly. Kelly Kelly does not want a
00:25:20
group honeymoon. So I mean, let's why don't you
00:25:23
plan? Let's plan something out for you
00:25:24
and her. Come on, we're.
00:25:25
We're talking. We just.
00:25:27
We just don't talk. Be about it, bro.
00:25:29
The woman wants a honeymoon do. You know how busy I am, George.
00:25:32
We, I it is. We're both she.
00:25:33
Doesn't want to hear that. He's a nurse practitioner, You
00:25:36
know, we want. I guarantee you if you say you
00:25:40
say Kelly, I may. Here's the date for a honeymoon.
00:25:42
This is where we're going to go. She will put all whatever she's
00:25:46
got put aside and go on that honeymoon.
00:25:48
Every day is a honeymoon for me with Kelly, so I'm I'm good.
00:25:51
Answer. No, but you want to know
00:25:53
something? I get that, Mike.
00:25:55
My wife. Does she?
00:25:56
Feel that way though. My my wife has a non invasive
00:25:59
clinic here and she's also an IFBB pro, so she's working with
00:26:02
competitors and athletes all over the country.
00:26:04
She does a lot of stuff with Haifu and M Sculpt and all kinds
00:26:08
of other stuff. I don't even know what the hell
00:26:09
she's got down there. She's got, I don't know, so many
00:26:11
machines now. I don't even know what they all
00:26:13
do. But you know, at the end of the
00:26:16
day, you end up being so busy and that's the tough part.
00:26:18
You end up being so busy. And you know, Mike, I want you
00:26:20
to even share with the audience. Yesterday, I was kind of blown
00:26:23
away. We had a discussion with Mike
00:26:24
just about business and life and talking about the future of
00:26:28
podcasting and maybe where the market's going, different things
00:26:31
like that. And Mike, I came off the phone
00:26:33
call and thought, I'm a piece of shit.
00:26:36
I'm not doing enough. I've got to do more.
00:26:38
Mike Schwartz is making me want to do more.
00:26:41
Because I think the same about you guys when I see what you're
00:26:43
doing. You guys put on a great show.
00:26:45
You know, you you got you get it, you understand it.
00:26:48
There's so many look and I rumbles an interesting world.
00:26:50
I know we're on different platforms and you know, I got
00:26:53
banned from YouTube. You did as well.
00:26:55
You're you're back on everybody's, everybody's trying
00:26:57
to fight for the same audience, but at the same time, you know,
00:26:59
there are people that produce shows really well and give good
00:27:02
content. You guys are one of them.
00:27:04
So I I think the same thing. Sometimes when I look at shows
00:27:06
like yours, I'm like, what can I do to better myself?
00:27:09
And look, we're all scrambling. I just want to find the right
00:27:11
formula and that's been really tough.
00:27:13
You know, it would rumble. They seem to kind of like, you
00:27:15
know, gravitate toward, and I'm going to say this on their
00:27:18
platform, but they gravitate toward the bigger, the heavier
00:27:20
hitters, you know, the Russell Brands of the world, the Dan
00:27:22
Bongino's or whatever that they don't kind of care about the mid
00:27:25
levels. And I get the model.
00:27:27
Like if we're not, we don't come with a huge built in audience.
00:27:30
It's hard, but I have a hard time doing it even with three
00:27:32
bucks. I have a hard time doing it even
00:27:34
with the national TV interviews I do.
00:27:36
I feel like I've had a boot on my neck with social media for
00:27:40
the last five years. I mean every time.
00:27:43
Yeah, we struggle with that. I still feel the suppression
00:27:46
over on X, no matter whether I'm replying to people, whether I'm
00:27:49
fresh posting, whether it's long form content, whether it's
00:27:53
greatly researched articles or breaking stories that have
00:27:56
nothing to do with anybody else. I feel like they turn on the
00:27:59
valve when they want and they turn the valve off.
00:28:00
And I think the thing that's short sighted about a lot of the
00:28:03
platforms, we also got suspended on YouTube.
00:28:05
And for the audience, we just got to prove to go back on
00:28:07
YouTube. So you're going to find us on
00:28:09
YouTube, Locals, Rumble. We don't stream to a lot of the
00:28:12
other platforms anymore because there wasn't any reason to
00:28:15
there. There was never a pay model over
00:28:17
on X, so when we streamed over there getting thousands of
00:28:20
views, it didn't benefit us. There wasn't any way to make any
00:28:23
money that really mattered. That was significant.
00:28:25
And of course you have to make money because these shows have a
00:28:29
lot of odor head. It doesn't matter whether you're
00:28:30
paying people to promote, doesn't matter whether you're
00:28:32
paying a manager or an agent or there's things that go along
00:28:35
with that. We have a manager working for us
00:28:37
now that's working on lots of stuff behind the scenes and
00:28:40
that's the deal. But you're always trying to find
00:28:41
that next deal for the audience to the struggle is real.
00:28:46
Yeah, you and you tell them to take the live link and you say
00:28:49
share the live link. It's we want them to build their
00:28:52
social media on our backs. Also.
00:28:54
We want them to take the short form, the long form and
00:28:56
hopefully grow their own social media because the stronger they
00:28:58
are, the stronger we are as a group.
00:29:00
But it is a struggle because you don't see these platforms
00:29:03
saying, hey, Mike Schwartz, highly educated, he's well
00:29:09
spoken, he's well researched, he's well read, He knows all the
00:29:13
material. He comes on that the quality of
00:29:16
his podcast, the commitment of his audience, this is a guy that
00:29:21
I believe has a much bigger future with us.
00:29:23
And they don't embrace you and say, well, we're going to make
00:29:25
an investment in you. But for that, we want this from
00:29:28
you. We want so many shows a week.
00:29:30
You know, they want to see consistency, authenticity.
00:29:33
But I think that's short sighted and I'm going to tell you why.
00:29:36
I think what happens is we wouldn't be back on YouTube, we
00:29:39
wouldn't do it if we thought we had that kind of real full time
00:29:42
support. And I'm not bad mouthing
00:29:44
Rumble's amazing locals is amazing.
00:29:46
I, I, I'm thankful that we've had those platforms for true for
00:29:50
free speech, but the sometimes they don't recognize the amount
00:29:54
of time these shows take. And for the audience, hopefully
00:29:57
we're not boring you because this is one of those
00:29:58
conversations we have with Mike. Even beyond the scenes, the
00:30:01
effort to create 1 show is incredible because you have to
00:30:05
constantly be skimming social media.
00:30:07
Now. That's what I was blown away by
00:30:08
our discussion yesterday. I always know how busy you are
00:30:11
and I always know how much how focused you are on your craft.
00:30:15
And when I say your craft, I don't mean just podcasting.
00:30:18
You're a doctor and now you're in law school.
00:30:20
That that I was kind of, and I do know some of the people that
00:30:23
have done that, but that is a serious amount of effort.
00:30:25
And, and the law is for people that have studied the law.
00:30:30
I'm an amateur, I have 4 paralegal degrees but only
00:30:33
because I took the time to take the exams and in certain genres
00:30:37
I had interest in. But it takes thousands of hours
00:30:40
and the law is not what people think it is when you start
00:30:44
getting. There was a study by MIT, I
00:30:46
think it's about two years now and ago.
00:30:48
And I mentioned this yesterday on our show.
00:30:50
They were talking about legalese and why is legalese so
00:30:55
complicated? Why haven't they simplified the
00:30:58
jargon and the process of the legal system?
00:31:00
And you know what MI TS conclusion was that it was
00:31:04
intentional. They did it intentional, Mike to
00:31:08
as a barrier to entry so that the average person and of
00:31:11
course, MIT wasn't even analyzing the effect of AI on
00:31:15
the legal system. Now you're doing it to get a
00:31:18
further education. It's not because you want to
00:31:19
practice the law. You want it for your own
00:31:21
businesses. He wanted, of course, in the, in
00:31:23
the, in the medical world, malpractice is such a colossal
00:31:28
problem here in the United States, So many ambulance
00:31:30
chasers stopping doctors from doing good work, in my opinion.
00:31:34
And mistakes happen. It's complicated when you throw
00:31:36
somebody under the knife or you're giving somebody medical
00:31:38
advice, which, you know, of course I knew I, I was
00:31:41
immediately sensitive when you said this is a medical advice.
00:31:44
And you have to have that disclaimer because of the nature
00:31:47
of the, you know, the, the legal system here in the United States
00:31:51
and the way it's been created. But I studied the law out of
00:31:54
personal reasons, and then I got kind of hooked.
00:31:58
I mean, I must be a crackhead, because why anybody would get
00:32:00
hooked on the law, I have no idea.
00:32:02
But I got intrigued by jurisdiction and subject matter.
00:32:06
And trying to say Mike's a crackhead because now he's going
00:32:08
to law school. Well, he, I want to say.
00:32:10
Something to MMM, he's a. Little bit of a crackhead when
00:32:13
you become. I think he's addicted.
00:32:16
Because he's taking it very well.
00:32:18
No, but he is because he's, are you not, are you not addicted to
00:32:22
the process of education, Mike? Because only a guy that's as
00:32:25
highly educated as you are, you have to admit there's some truth
00:32:28
in that. Yeah, I mean, look, I, I didn't
00:32:30
start college till I was 20. I, I, I had an interesting life.
00:32:33
So I moved out when I was 15 and I started, I started my first
00:32:36
company when I was 17. So I've been in business for 30
00:32:38
some years. I'm 50 now, 33 years.
00:32:41
And, and I started as an entrepreneur.
00:32:42
I then I became a, a private pilot.
00:32:44
I got my, my, my, my private pilot's license.
00:32:48
Then I then I didn't start college.
00:32:49
I was at college at 26. I got my business degree, then I
00:32:52
got my MBA, then I got my DBA. I'm not a medical doctor.
00:32:55
I own medical clinics. That's where it gets confusing
00:32:57
for people. Kelly is the medical
00:32:58
practitioner in the family. She's the nurse practitioner.
00:33:01
So there's, you know, there's four.
00:33:02
I always explain this too, 'cause there's four people that
00:33:04
can write a script in in the country, right?
00:33:06
You got an MDADO, an MP or APA and Kelly's, Kelly's there.
00:33:09
They call them mid levels. But she's usually training the
00:33:12
doctors. But I own medical clinics with
00:33:14
her. So it's confusing to people,
00:33:16
even though I'm a research doctor and she is a, a medical
00:33:19
practitioner. We collaborate on a lot of
00:33:21
things and you know, the two of us are brains.
00:33:23
It's kind of scary actually, when we have a lot of patients,
00:33:26
you know, who have issues. We can figure their stuff out.
00:33:29
But yeah, I got addicted to education.
00:33:31
I went to the police Academy at 29, became a police officer.
00:33:34
I had a little bit of criminal law there when I got my MBA and
00:33:37
then my DBA. I'm like, all right, what's I
00:33:38
thought I was done. And then I said, you know, to
00:33:40
Kelly, I've always wanted to go to law school.
00:33:42
She thought I was a crackhead. She's what are you nuts?
00:33:45
And she didn't really understand it until I started studying it.
00:33:48
And then she's, you know, she's doing terms with me and she's
00:33:51
iracking things with me every night because I'm doing
00:33:53
different essays and she's like, oh, wow, this is kind of
00:33:56
interesting, you know, not in her realm.
00:33:58
But for me, it's just about it's about, I don't know, becoming a
00:34:01
better person, understanding things better.
00:34:03
Look, I've run about 45 different campaigns in my
00:34:05
lifetime. I've worked on three
00:34:07
presidential campaigns. I've had a lot of business
00:34:09
experience, a lot of experience outside the realm of business,
00:34:12
whether it's in politics. I've sat on two different zoning
00:34:15
boards. They're quasi, quasi judicial
00:34:17
boards. As you know, I've, you know, I
00:34:19
do the Yankee stuff. I'm just, I don't know, I like
00:34:21
to, I'm bored. So I like to be well-rounded
00:34:24
amongst my, myself. I couldn't do the same job.
00:34:26
If I had to go to an office and sit at a desk for 30 years, I
00:34:29
think I, I wouldn't be alive today because I just couldn't
00:34:32
handle that in, in my, you know, my personality.
00:34:34
I probably would suck a bullet if that was my life, going into
00:34:37
a nine to five and clocking in with the oversight I've been.
00:34:41
An entrepreneur you made. You made time for all that stuff
00:34:43
but not time for a honeymoon bro.
00:34:46
Oh man, I'm telling you, hold on, George is George is just
00:34:50
bringing the pain. Shots fired.
00:34:52
Man down who all that George in. One day that was a 33 year
00:34:56
career of, you know, holy crap. So many times to do it.
00:35:00
Let me ask you about the pilot's license.
00:35:01
Turbo single engine twin. What?
00:35:04
What are you certified in now? I'm rated for single engine
00:35:06
land. I usually fly Cessna 172.
00:35:08
I got a lot of time at a Piper Archer.
00:35:10
I got some Hilo time too. So I was working on my
00:35:13
rotorcraft. I got about 20 hours in
00:35:15
rotorcraft. I got to, I got to finish that
00:35:17
and then sit for my for my test. But I've been flying VFR single
00:35:21
engine for years, 20, you know, 23 years now and and you know,
00:35:26
you got a ton of instrument training, you get a ton of
00:35:28
instrument time. I started my instrument, never
00:35:30
finished, started my commercial. And actually, I actually have
00:35:33
all of the criteria done for my commercial.
00:35:37
All I've got to do left is my long cross country, which we
00:35:40
were trying to plan somewhere fun.
00:35:42
And then once I do that, I can sit for my commercial.
00:35:44
So yeah, pilot's license is the same thing.
00:35:47
At some point I'd like to get my my CFI, which is my certified
00:35:50
flight instructor. But you know, these things take,
00:35:52
you know, a back burner to other things.
00:35:54
Law school is kind of overwhelming right now.
00:35:56
COVID, COVID interrupted everything.
00:35:59
When I when I think of where I was when COVID started.
00:36:02
Now, did you have a show during COVID?
00:36:04
No. And I and Kelly and I were
00:36:05
talking about this last. What a regret, I wish I we'd
00:36:07
started our show earlier. I wish I did too.
00:36:10
We were a little busy. We had 19 patients, did
00:36:13
44 tests. I had an office in Key West.
00:36:16
We had an office here in New Jersey.
00:36:17
Then I moved. I had an office in Tampa.
00:36:19
So we were a little busy. But if I started the show during
00:36:22
COVID, I look at people like what's that one guy, Doctor
00:36:24
Sullivan or I can't remember his name, the English guy, he's got
00:36:28
like 500 followers. And I don't know how a guy like
00:36:30
that didn't get band. You know, I would go on and do I
00:36:33
I started doing media way years and years and years ago with my
00:36:38
charity Hometown Heroes. I was on the radio constantly
00:36:40
doing interviews for that EV appearances.
00:36:43
But it wasn't until my book came out that I started doing
00:36:46
national media, you know, to promote the book.
00:36:49
And then you realize, wow, I should have started this a lot
00:36:51
earlier because I didn't have the fan base.
00:36:53
And all the sudden you're getting, you know, kicked off
00:36:55
interviews. If I would do an interview in
00:36:56
the UK, as soon as you mentioned COVID or the shots, that's it.
00:37:00
They pulled it offline. Same thing with.
00:37:02
Yeah, it happened to us on YouTube.
00:37:03
We got banned for medical disinformation that had to do
00:37:05
with CDC and Bears information. We weren't even putting out the
00:37:09
stuff we were putting on our regular show because we had
00:37:11
Doctor Tenny Penny and McCullough and, you know, Stella
00:37:15
Manuel. We were really well connected.
00:37:16
We were trying to put out the truthful information.
00:37:19
George and I were lucky enough to have those people around us
00:37:21
as friends. Of course, we didn't take the
00:37:22
vaccine. And we were trying to tell
00:37:24
people they're all alternatives. And we weren't even really
00:37:26
putting out anything that hadn't been proven somewhere.
00:37:29
We weren't, you know, we weren't, you know, putting out
00:37:32
hypotheseses. We'd have a doctor say, well,
00:37:34
here's what the this report says right now about remdesivir.
00:37:38
And, you know, we might have had something smart Alec you like
00:37:40
would say, well, you know, we like to call it Run Death is
00:37:42
Near on this show. But of course, YouTube.
00:37:45
Oh, yeah, we were done. We got fried.
00:37:47
We lost a really pretty decent account.
00:37:49
It was growing rapidly. We had thousands and thousands
00:37:51
of subscribers. They won't give us that account
00:37:53
back. We've had to start from scratch.
00:37:55
But that's the nature of it, right?
00:37:56
The more educated, I'm going to warn you about the law, I'm
00:37:59
going to give you a warning here.
00:38:02
It is intriguing and it will suck you into the rabbit hole.
00:38:06
I, I actually taught myself to go back and read French so I
00:38:11
could read French common law because as I started to
00:38:13
understand subject matter jurisdiction and the, it which
00:38:17
of course for the audience has the equal, that's the equitable,
00:38:21
you know, it's a legal equitable maritime right to impose a duty
00:38:23
or a liability on an individual, at least in the criminal
00:38:26
division of defendant. I didn't understand how how they
00:38:30
were working here in the United States.
00:38:32
I was trying to figure out how we'd gone from 17 subject
00:38:35
matters which are in the Constitution to going to this
00:38:39
extra constitutional, somewhat unconstitutional, unlimited
00:38:43
jurisdiction of all crimes in any manner that mattered.
00:38:47
And that wasn't with the founders and framers.
00:38:49
And I found myself having to go all the way back to an Admiralty
00:38:52
maritime started, which it was started on the in Italy.
00:38:55
And I knew how to read some Italian, you know, I can read it
00:38:58
probably better than I can speak it.
00:39:00
And then I had to read, learn some French.
00:39:02
So I started learning some French so I could read the law
00:39:04
books from back then. Of course, common law.
00:39:06
Speak French, Lance como Telugu. It's not that I really speak at
00:39:10
George, but it's interesting enough that as you start to read
00:39:12
it, because I'm not going to say my pronunciation, you can take
00:39:14
the boy out of the Bronx. You can't take the Bronx out of
00:39:16
the boy. And I did that so I could go
00:39:21
back and read a bunch of the original law because I knew that
00:39:24
they were still practicing common law.
00:39:25
I think in Louisiana, which is odd, they still had it.
00:39:28
But I looked at the system and I didn't understand it.
00:39:31
The law is a dark and dirty rabbit hole.
00:39:34
Do. You know.
00:39:34
As as you start, let me finish this thought.
00:39:37
I got to get this out because I think that Doctor Schwartz is
00:39:40
shaking his head and I think he knows where I'm heading with
00:39:42
this. As you really understand the
00:39:45
legal system, you realize how fully corrupted it is.
00:39:51
They like to tell us that we have a Department of Justice.
00:39:53
I call it the Department of Injustice.
00:39:56
Because when I started really digging in, I recognize that
00:40:01
what they were doing was beyond the scope of anything they
00:40:04
should have been authorized to do.
00:40:06
And these judges, these rulings they were making from the bench,
00:40:09
it didn't matter whether it was civil or criminal law.
00:40:12
We're so extra constitutional. And I don't want to say
00:40:14
unconstitutional because of course.
00:40:16
They have lifetime appointment and absolute immunity, which
00:40:19
which the the public has been bullied into believing that that
00:40:24
gives them this ultimate power. And you know, the saying goes,
00:40:28
ultimate power corrupts. As you get deeper into the law
00:40:31
and you start to really understand it, especially in the
00:40:33
criminal area, you are going to find that the, that there's an
00:40:39
epiphany moment that happened for me and I'm like, Oh my God,
00:40:43
this is really awful. This is really terrible.
00:40:48
I mean, I learned something recently that I didn't even know
00:40:50
existed. I learned it about four weeks
00:40:52
ago and I was shocked that I didn't already know it.
00:40:54
That even if you get a case overturned on appeal in the
00:40:57
federal system, they have put this thing called a certificate
00:41:00
of innocence and I think it's titled 2825, thirteen, I think,
00:41:05
or 2513, I can't remember it, so don't quote me on that.
00:41:08
But I was shocked to realize that if you didn't get that
00:41:10
certificate of innocence, even if you got full vocatur with
00:41:13
prejudice, it didn't matter. You weren't going to get
00:41:16
financial relief for wrongful incarceration, prosecutorial
00:41:19
misconduct, obstruction of justice, civil rights
00:41:23
violations. They've created a second letter
00:41:25
that you a level, a layer that you have to fight for.
00:41:29
And the law is full of those pitfalls.
00:41:31
Are you already starting to see that?
00:41:33
Yeah, you got to remember like, so I'm in year 1.
00:41:36
There's, you know, I'm in a four year program and we're doing
00:41:38
this year we're doing criminal law towards contracts and
00:41:41
introduction of laws. But you learn a lot of this
00:41:43
stuff. One of the things you know, we
00:41:44
were just talking about common law.
00:41:45
Most people don't understand common law is made today.
00:41:48
Common law is not old. Everybody always thinks common
00:41:50
law. That must mean like old English
00:41:51
law. Common law is what's made by
00:41:53
judges in courts every day. That is the common law.
00:41:56
You have judicial law, which you were just talking about, and
00:41:59
that's part of the problem. We got all these legislators who
00:42:01
go to Congress and try to come up with new things.
00:42:04
Let's put something on the books and then you get all this crazy
00:42:07
legislative law. And until a judge then
00:42:09
interprets that in a courtroom for something, then you get
00:42:13
common law because they might overturn something like that or
00:42:15
they might take a different approach on that.
00:42:17
But you know, it's funny, I had this conversation on my show the
00:42:20
other day because people will always cite common law and go,
00:42:22
oh, somebody's common law marriage.
00:42:24
I go, that's not a thing. Like in New Jersey, they
00:42:26
outlawed it in 1939. They'll recognize that if you
00:42:28
are legally common law, married in another state.
00:42:30
But a lot of people think that if you live with somebody for
00:42:33
seven years, that's common law marriage.
00:42:34
That's not it. It their common law is what
00:42:37
happens in courtrooms right now. If a judge is looking at a case,
00:42:40
making it and, you know, sets a precedent, that becomes part of
00:42:44
the common law. So it's it's, it's interesting
00:42:47
when you learn some of the intricacies, you know, Lance,
00:42:49
that we're kind of getting into. There's a lot.
00:42:51
You know a girl made that up, right?
00:42:53
So if we live together 7 years, we're married anyway, Look, I
00:42:57
got to, I got to bring something to chat and I didn't know this
00:43:00
skunk 71, She's one of my mods. She's been married 25 years.
00:43:05
Then we have Sears B, who's a devoted big, big follower and
00:43:08
big, big mafia. 35 years married, and they both said they
00:43:11
had great honeymoons. I'm just saying.
00:43:14
Why can't I have a great honeymoon still?
00:43:15
Why can't you just have a honeymoon?
00:43:17
We, we're, we're going to. Kelly watches.
00:43:19
She's in the chat, she's watching, she's listening.
00:43:21
She's like. Are you going to come chaperone
00:43:23
to make sure we have a good honeymoon?
00:43:24
Is that? Hell no you need you still need
00:43:26
to be alone. I would just be 1/3 wheel unless
00:43:29
you have a date for me or something.
00:43:30
Kelly, you got any hot friends? She's coming to camp.
00:43:32
She's got Kelly's, got a lot of hot friends.
00:43:34
What's? Up Kelly.
00:43:35
Yeah, Kelly, please. I'm cooking you up right now,
00:43:39
girl. Lance, you got to take a break.
00:43:42
All right, let's take a short break here.
00:43:43
We've got so much to talk on. The show might go over.
00:43:46
I'm warning going over. Probably going to go over.
00:43:48
Mike, you're staying, right? Back George Ballantine, 26 Lance
00:43:53
Miliacho Dr. Schwartz. Stay tuned.
00:43:56
The good, the bad, the ugly. You know we're going to cover it
00:43:59
all on this show. And yeah, we'll probably get
00:44:01
ourselves in trouble. Hopefully we won't get banned on
00:44:03
Rumble. That would be a death blow.
00:44:05
All right, stay tuned if you like the show.
00:44:07
Thumbs up, comment, share, subscribe.
00:44:09
If you could do the paid subscription on Rumble, Rumble
00:44:11
Premium, help those guys out. Let's make Rumble have the
00:44:14
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00:44:17
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00:47:54
All right, welcome back to the big, big Show.
00:47:56
Here we host Lance Migliacho, George Balancing and our guest,
00:48:00
our buddy, our friend, he's a friend of ours, Doctor Michael
00:48:03
Schwartz. And believe it or not, he's
00:48:04
Italian with a Schwartz. The name Schwartz.
00:48:06
I asked him last night. I'm like, what do you mean
00:48:07
you're Italian? Long story, but he's Italian.
00:48:10
The Schwartz comes from like 5% family blood DNA.
00:48:13
So yeah, he's Italian. He's one of ours.
00:48:15
Don't forget to hit that thumbs up button, the like button.
00:48:18
Follow, share all in buttons. That red button, the big, big
00:48:21
mafia button and Kelly Schwartz, we're going to get you to
00:48:25
honeymoon. Don't worry.
00:48:27
I'm looking at your, I'm looking at your thumbnail from
00:48:29
yesterday. It's pretty funny.
00:48:30
Intentionally badly crafted. Mike just slapped the hair on
00:48:33
there. It's not supposed to.
00:48:34
Yeah. Did you see that?
00:48:36
Tim Waltz is Mugatu. You guys are funny.
00:48:40
So I don't even do I do the same thumbnail?
00:48:42
Yeah, that's funny. I do the same thumbnail every
00:48:44
day because I'm not see, that's where the creativity.
00:48:47
So you guys are extra creative than I am.
00:48:49
I'm just like I don't have time to do it.
00:48:51
Well shit, there's all the education you're.
00:48:53
You got just people, your social media people this, people that,
00:48:56
people find a person. I took the Jimmy Dore approach.
00:48:59
If you, if you're, you know, you're consistent and people get
00:49:01
used to seeing the same thumbnail every day and they're,
00:49:03
oh, what is that? So I I took that approach.
00:49:06
No, I think that and I think that's probably smart.
00:49:08
I don't know what approach is right.
00:49:09
You got a night show? You got a night show?
00:49:12
We do the well, that's see, that's the one we have guests on
00:49:15
and but the problem is you guys are on right after me in the
00:49:17
morning. So it's easy for us to, you
00:49:19
know, to raid you guys. The night show, though, Kelly's
00:49:21
on it's Monday, Wednesday and Friday.
00:49:23
We do the evening edition. That's more laid back and fun.
00:49:27
It's been compared to if if Fox and friends had a baby with
00:49:30
Gutfeld because we kind of play stories and just joke about it
00:49:33
and talk about it. So it's newsy, but at the same
00:49:36
time it's just more laid back and fun.
00:49:38
But you're saying it's obnoxious in Newsy is what you're trying
00:49:40
to say. Yes, exactly.
00:49:41
I love that. I love that about that show, all
00:49:43
right. George, wait, wait, wait, wait.
00:49:44
Hold on, hold on, hold on. No, I'm not even going to do it.
00:49:46
Fuck it. No, Kelly, just Kelly just said
00:49:49
you should saying I should come on a night show.
00:49:51
I will take you up on an invitation.
00:49:53
Kelly he. Comes to all right, so now
00:49:55
you're booked on Friday night, you're just booked yourself
00:49:57
Friday, Friday. You didn't ask me if I had
00:50:01
anything to do Friday night. I don't know if.
00:50:03
I already know We already know you don't.
00:50:04
We already know you don't. I got to look at my schedule.
00:50:06
We already know why you don't have a relationship, George.
00:50:08
We figured that out already. Thanks.
00:50:11
Seven, 7:00 PM. So guests come on at 7:15 and
00:50:14
you guys can spend the whole night if you want.
00:50:16
I don't care. Yeah, I mean, whatever you know,
00:50:19
it's we're always game for that. I'm always game for a good time
00:50:22
you. Are you sure you want to sign
00:50:24
with Kelly? Yeah, it might not be good.
00:50:26
You're going to meet Terry. Terry is Kelly is well, no,
00:50:30
Kelly's on with us. And then Terry is our other
00:50:32
cause. Terry is in Canada.
00:50:34
Terry, it's funny, everybody, nobody understands how Terry
00:50:37
came to to be. And you, you don't know who
00:50:38
Terry Condio is, I'm guessing. No, I don't.
00:50:40
But Terry, Terry read my book. He bought my book, somehow found
00:50:44
out about me, bought a copy of the first book, contacted me
00:50:47
through Instagram. We started chatting, becoming
00:50:49
friends. I realized this guy is the
00:50:51
smartest man in America and he lives in Canada, just so you
00:50:54
know. I bet you he's AI.
00:50:55
Bet you he's a tough mofo too. Because I've I've learned any
00:50:58
guys that have a girl's name growing up can fight because
00:51:01
I'll let. You, I'll let you be the judge
00:51:03
of that when you meet Terry. But he came on smart, smart guy.
00:51:06
He does a little Canada stuff, which is fun.
00:51:08
And then he's he's become a a regular Co host.
00:51:10
He's on the show with us every night now.
00:51:12
So it's great. All right, what about your steps
00:51:14
on Jayden here? He's a very bright kid.
00:51:17
Smart kid he's he's working for Congressman Smith.
00:51:19
He just got hired he's he's been working for me.
00:51:22
Was an intern then he was a paid intern, then he was a intern
00:51:25
again in the District office. He was in DC all summer.
00:51:28
Now he just got officially hired.
00:51:30
He's the youngest ever hire in the office of Chris Smith.
00:51:33
Chris Smith's, our congressman, has been there for 40-5 years
00:51:37
and Jaden is 20. Can I so?
00:51:38
Can I ask you a question? How many times has that
00:51:40
congressman been on your show? 0.
00:51:43
What the fuck, Jaden? I don't have, I don't have a lot
00:51:46
of, I don't do guests. My send them our way.
00:51:49
Jaden. I want him on the show.
00:51:51
I pick he's, he doesn't like to do a lot of interviews.
00:51:54
Chris man I I pick and choose what I want.
00:51:56
What does he want? He's a congressman.
00:51:58
He works for the people. He needs to do fucking
00:51:59
interviews and shit. Tell us what's going on.
00:52:01
Occasionally with Mark Levin, he'll be on, but he sticks.
00:52:04
Away from Mark Levin, I hate Mark Levin.
00:52:07
I've had Congressman Buddy Carter on the show a few times
00:52:10
because of that HR 25 he's proposing, and I'm a big
00:52:13
proponent of getting rid of the tax code and going to a fair
00:52:16
tax. So I've had Buddy come on the
00:52:17
show a few times but I pick and choose guests like that.
00:52:21
I'm shocked you're not a fan of the IRS.
00:52:22
I'm shocked, Mike. I mean God.
00:52:24
You don't. You don't like the collection
00:52:26
arm of the Federal Reserve. You don't feel good about the
00:52:28
fact that they're in the main offices in Puerto Rico and of
00:52:32
course, the tax code. You guys also written in a way
00:52:35
that none of us seem to understand it.
00:52:38
You guys don't, you don't watch my show and definitely haven't
00:52:41
read the book. That's Chapter 2.
00:52:42
I talk about it about no. I I don't have a signed.
00:52:45
Copy of the book. You got a signed copy of the
00:52:47
book. I don't.
00:52:49
Have one either. Yeah, fuck, what the fuck.
00:52:51
Yeah. But here's what I would say.
00:52:54
Of course, that doesn't really understand what the IRS is and
00:52:59
anybody doesn't really understand the criminal nature
00:53:01
of the IRS and the fact that, well, I would tell you to go out
00:53:05
and buy the book about Jekyll Island in the Federal Reserve.
00:53:08
That would be the starting point.
00:53:10
And even before you do that, you might want to read the entire
00:53:14
history of the Rothschilds and understand their involvement in
00:53:17
these financial systems. I think you have to go back to
00:53:20
come forward. Might take you longer than you
00:53:22
want, but I think if you really start to investigate how we have
00:53:26
a private institution controlling our money and that
00:53:28
the IRS is a collection arm for that institution.
00:53:31
I mean, let's face it. Why is their main office in
00:53:33
Puerto Rico, because it's a territory of the United States,
00:53:36
changes jurisdiction of actual claims through the Federal
00:53:39
Reserve and through the IRS. So, yeah, I don't like the
00:53:42
system. I'm not a fan of it.
00:53:44
Of course, I've never liked bullies, Mike.
00:53:46
And that's what I feel like a lot of times our government has
00:53:49
become. Is it is it is an agency of
00:53:51
bullies. It doesn't matter whether it's
00:53:53
the DOJ, the FBII mean, I have, I have, you know, I have a book
00:53:57
back here. I have government gangsters back
00:53:59
here to read that. I would have thought that Cash
00:54:01
Patel, who's a friend of ours, I would have thought it would have
00:54:04
been a different game plan. God forbid anybody gives me any
00:54:07
authority in Washington, DC and I get that letter of
00:54:10
presidential immunity. I you know, they've been they'll
00:54:13
just unsnap my collar and then they can just deny that they
00:54:17
knew what I was doing each time I do something.
00:54:19
But I this wouldn't be going like.
00:54:20
That only happens in movies. That letter of presidential
00:54:22
immunity, bro. No, actually it's legitimate.
00:54:25
I got to tell. You.
00:54:25
Then why not give it to us so we can get shit done?
00:54:28
Michael, help? Because because the politics,
00:54:31
the the UNI party is in full force and the deep state control
00:54:35
of even now. I know we've got Trump in there,
00:54:37
but I think there's AI think even he hasn't recognized the
00:54:41
complexity of what's running behind the scenes with him.
00:54:44
And I think our intelligence agencies are involved because
00:54:47
there's a government contractor. There were times when we got
00:54:50
governmental immunity for different operations that I was
00:54:53
on and and that that letter would come around.
00:54:55
And then of course you could not discuss anything that happened
00:54:58
during the operation. And these were just as
00:55:00
government contractors working for different governments, not
00:55:03
only the US government, not because the DoD, the DIA, D6 and
00:55:07
the CIA weren't involved at different times.
00:55:09
There was lots of what I would call international multi agency
00:55:12
task force teams that I participated in and people don't
00:55:16
really understand the nefarious nature of those teams and what's
00:55:20
really going on. It's not to spread democracy,
00:55:23
guys. It's not what it's about.
00:55:25
It's about the money. It's about the power and
00:55:27
control. All right, Lance, all right, I
00:55:28
want to show the thumbnail because you made one so.
00:55:30
Yeah, of course. Let's throw it in.
00:55:32
There you go. Look at that.
00:55:34
Yeah. Look at those two guys.
00:55:35
Yeah, yeah, Little tuxedo shot. That's a little shot from, from
00:55:40
our Mar a Lago trip. Of course, you know, you got to,
00:55:43
you got to, you got to bank it up.
00:55:44
You got to go. You got to go serious.
00:55:46
You got to roll deep if you go in Mar a Lago because you got
00:55:48
everything from the amazing people to pretentious assholes.
00:55:52
But it's a great experience when you go there with America First,
00:55:54
Martha Fein, Mike Flynn and Mary Flynn O'Neill they they put on a
00:55:59
great event. Food's amazing, people are
00:56:01
amazing. You got to love the bagpipes,
00:56:03
Mike. I'm assuming you've been to Mar
00:56:05
a Lago plenty of times. Have you been I?
00:56:06
Haven't I've been down to Trump International many, many times,
00:56:09
but not Mar a Lago? Well, we're going to work on
00:56:11
getting you there for the next one.
00:56:13
I'm going to make some phone calls.
00:56:14
I thought about that last night that we hadn't done that.
00:56:16
If you've never been. I don't know if you can Lance,
00:56:19
he might be going on his honeymoon.
00:56:21
Yeah, let's do it. I will work on trying to get you
00:56:25
and Kelly if you'd like to get invited as.
00:56:27
Press, we've been invited a few times, but it just hasn't worked
00:56:31
out in the schedule. And Trump does.
00:56:33
We do a couple events down at Trump International every year.
00:56:36
And it's funny, you know, I was just talking about this book.
00:56:39
This is the new one, the only way to save America.
00:56:41
And I was I was talking to Trump's staff about COVID.
00:56:46
They had wanted to pick my brain.
00:56:47
So Trump's got all, but he's got a copy of each one of my books.
00:56:50
They, they, they kept making me signed different copies.
00:56:52
I'm like, he has multiple copies, signed another one.
00:56:54
I'm like, all right. And I never knew what to write
00:56:56
to the guy. But this book, it's funny.
00:56:58
I was talking to his staff. I was talking to his golf pro,
00:57:00
John the port, who's one of his best friends.
00:57:02
And we started talking about COVID.
00:57:04
John. John was like, I don't know,
00:57:05
freaked out about COVID for the longest time.
00:57:07
And then when we got off COVID, we started getting on to other
00:57:10
issues. And this is before he won the
00:57:12
second term. And we started talking about
00:57:14
what we were just talking about the tax code.
00:57:17
And all of a sudden John's head went to the side like he was a
00:57:19
puppy dog listening to every single word coming out of my
00:57:22
mouth. And I was talking about
00:57:23
abolishing the tax code. It didn't exist till 1913.
00:57:27
You know, was never intended. This was the 16th amendment.
00:57:29
This is when the progressive amendment started.
00:57:31
I was talking about what you said, weaponization, how you
00:57:34
know the government will come after you for a $600.00 Venmo
00:57:36
payment. We are, we are literally
00:57:38
policing our citizens over nothing.
00:57:40
And, and this tax code, the 75 page tax code is used
00:57:44
against us at every single level, whether it's politically,
00:57:48
I'll give you a $5000 credit, I'll do one better and give you
00:57:50
a $6000 credit. Like the system is flawed.
00:57:53
And John sat there and sucked up every word.
00:57:55
And then all of a sudden, like we started getting into, I wrote
00:57:58
this book, I gave him a copy of this book.
00:58:00
And then we started talking about changing the tax code.
00:58:02
And I'm like, wait a minute, maybe I made a dent.
00:58:04
Now I'm not going to take credit for it.
00:58:06
But when I tell you that I had a very long conversation with John
00:58:09
and his staff about this and then all of a sudden, like
00:58:11
things start, maybe I don't know if it's his inner circle that's
00:58:14
pushing him in certain directions.
00:58:16
Because I know Bessen and I know Lutnick really want to do what I
00:58:19
want to do and what you want to do and get rid of this
00:58:22
ridiculous system, go to a fair system, which is what HR 25
00:58:26
wants to do. By the way, HR 25 and I and
00:58:29
buddy said this on the show, this is in that bill.
00:58:31
The, the, that tax or value added tax or, or national sales
00:58:35
tax, whatever you want to call it would be right now 23
00:58:38
percent, OK, which seems high. But if you think about it, what
00:58:41
we're doing with the tariffs, the biggest, the biggest thing
00:58:43
that's going to come out in the history of this country, One of
00:58:46
the biggest things is this Supreme Court decision on
00:58:48
whether the tax, the tariffs are legal.
00:58:51
Because if we keep that in place, that then goes down the
00:58:54
road of showing how much money we could raise from that, how
00:58:57
much we could offset by getting rid of.
00:58:59
And I advocate for getting rid of 75% of the federal workforce,
00:59:03
then figuring out what that 0 baseline budget is to run the
00:59:06
country, then that that tax can come down to 12, ten, 8%,
00:59:10
whatever the numbers, 100%. But this is, we are going down
00:59:13
that road. I think it's going to take time.
00:59:15
And I'm going to say this, so for everybody out there,
00:59:17
historically there wasn't supposed to be income tax, what
00:59:21
was supposed to run the country. And, and this is what the
00:59:24
founders and framers wanted before there was ever a Federal
00:59:27
Reserve. If you go back to the anti
00:59:28
federalist in The Federalist Papers and you start to really
00:59:31
read what happened, the reason they decided to go down the road
00:59:35
in the manner that they did was because what was supposed to run
00:59:38
the country was the ports duties and tariffs.
00:59:42
It was never supposed to be about income tax.
00:59:44
That was a fabrication. But when you have a private
00:59:47
institution controlling your money and they're controlling a
00:59:50
Fiat currency that has literally no backing, that was fabricated
00:59:55
out of thin air. And that's what the Federal
00:59:56
Reserve is. You got a private institution
00:59:59
that's that is that's authorized by statute.
01:00:03
To do what they do. And they are printing a dollar
01:00:06
that has no backing and they are charging you not only to print
01:00:09
that money, which only cost pennies to print.
01:00:11
I think it's 678 cents to print a bill.
01:00:14
And and then they are charging you interest to give you that
01:00:17
money. It's the biggest grip in U.S.
01:00:20
history and it's private families and private banks that
01:00:22
own it at this point. My thing they're lucky I'm not
01:00:26
president. I would I would literally
01:00:28
overnight pass an executive order that I would probably do
01:00:31
clandestinely to begin with and I would arrest every family I
01:00:35
would shudder every bank and I would seize all the assets of
01:00:38
the Federal Reserve ownership. It would happen instantly and
01:00:41
swiftly. And honestly, I don't think
01:00:43
their DNA would survive because I think that is one of the most
01:00:47
criminal operations that's ever been allowed to perpetuate in
01:00:50
U.S. history. And that's what people, when
01:00:52
they people are like, oh, Trump's tariffs, it's ruining
01:00:54
the economy. No, it's genius.
01:00:56
And we've getting taken advantage on the world on the
01:00:59
international global tariff marketplace by being under
01:01:04
tariffs for way too long. The amount of money he's
01:01:06
collecting is, is fantastic. But you know, when I look at
01:01:10
what they're doing, I don't really want a refund.
01:01:12
Let me finish this last thought, George.
01:01:14
I don't want a refund to regular Americans.
01:01:16
What I want is I want him to, for example, pay back Social
01:01:18
Security. I think right now they, they
01:01:20
arguably owe about 2.8 trillion or so.
01:01:24
And I know they say we're in these treasuries and the rest of
01:01:27
it, but Social Security has been so under, let me let me think
01:01:32
how to word this. So under investigated, I mean,
01:01:35
so under invested, getting this nominal return back.
01:01:39
If they paid back the 2.9 trillion, they're talking about
01:01:42
running out of money. Well, they wouldn't be running
01:01:43
out of money if they paid back the $29 trillion.
01:01:47
And I know it fluctuates, George, go ahead.
01:01:49
You can take it from there. You know what's funny?
01:01:50
I just got an e-mail right from Rumble and it says wrapped up
01:01:54
this year. They broke the free feed top
01:01:56
creators and they got the Bongino Show.
01:01:58
But the Bongino show is not there anymore.
01:02:00
It's Vince just saying Rumble just saying.
01:02:02
Anyways, yeah. So but it but it's just Bongino
01:02:05
for the audience. Let me just do.
01:02:06
That him it's Vince shows. Bongino's a media company.
01:02:10
He never gave it, but it says. The damn Bongino show lands.
01:02:13
It's the Vince Show now until he comes.
01:02:14
Back yeah, that's. Let's not get nitty gritty.
01:02:17
Anyways, so Trump's been teasing about eliminating the income tax
01:02:23
and use tariffs. But here here's the problem.
01:02:27
We all know this. You have our our esteemed
01:02:30
politicians if why not put into law these tariffs.
01:02:34
But once again, you have them fighting.
01:02:36
They're trying to eliminate these tariffs.
01:02:39
Where'd they vote in the Senate to, to get rid of the tariffs
01:02:42
with Canada, but it didn't pass in the House.
01:02:44
But this is what they're doing. No other president.
01:02:47
Can't fire Jerome Powell. He works for a private
01:02:50
institution, but but. So why have you look at why
01:02:54
hasn't past presidents done this, put tariffs and actually
01:02:57
better make it easier for America, for the people only
01:03:01
Trump is doing it. But you can't get no law.
01:03:03
Like he's got all these executive orders, which are
01:03:05
great, but it's only executive orders.
01:03:08
You need to put them into law. And what the fuck is?
01:03:10
Congress do I do? What?
01:03:12
What has Congress done, really? What have they done?
01:03:17
I mean, they suck. They said they passed a big,
01:03:19
big, beautiful bill. OK.
01:03:22
Anything else stick out? I got a lot.
01:03:24
Mike. Mike's got plenty to say.
01:03:25
He's chomping at the bit, no? No, no, snap the.
01:03:27
Collar off, Mike. Go ahead.
01:03:29
I got problems. I got a lot of problems with the
01:03:30
big beautiful Bill and I, I had Buddy Carter on immediately
01:03:33
after we passed the big beautiful bill.
01:03:35
And I said, now that we went this direction, what's your hope
01:03:39
that we're going to go in your direction?
01:03:41
And he kind of just shrugged his shoulders and said, I don't
01:03:43
think we have the momentum. They had 68 Congress people sign
01:03:46
on to Buddy's proposal to get rid of the income tax.
01:03:49
But it's a game they're playing. And I mean, look, nobody wakes
01:03:52
up in the morning and says, you know what?
01:03:54
I think I want to pay more money in income taxes this year to
01:03:57
help the government. Nobody says that you have to
01:03:59
suspend logic. But we are we are fighting
01:04:02
against a more a bunch of idiots.
01:04:03
It was Glenn Beck's book, right? It was the title.
01:04:05
I always go back to arguing with idiots was the title of Glenn
01:04:08
Beck's book, which is what I think about every day with these
01:04:10
people who suspend logic. If Donald Trump invented a a a
01:04:15
cure for male pattern baldness, you would have guys shaving
01:04:18
their head in protest over the cure because they they just
01:04:21
suspend logic at every turn. But this is a big game.
01:04:25
This is. Don't you think the big game is
01:04:26
division in chaos? Isn't that what it's all about?
01:04:29
Absolutely. David Copperfield, They have to
01:04:31
redirect any intelligent banter, right?
01:04:34
They have to re control it and come out and say I can't believe
01:04:37
it now. You know the indignation.
01:04:39
We're going after Somalians as a people.
01:04:42
I spend time in Somalia. They're a bunch of scamming
01:04:44
scumbags. I got to be honest, I don't like
01:04:46
the Somalian people. I saw them up close in their own
01:04:49
world, their own environment. I saw their treatment of women.
01:04:52
I saw their treatment of children, I say.
01:04:54
Their Somal hold. On.
01:04:55
You got to say Somalian Muslims because you know not all
01:04:58
Somalians. Are I'm going to tell you that I
01:05:00
was on the ground in Somalia. I'm not going to go into details
01:05:03
of when or why I was on the ground there.
01:05:05
And I'm going to tell you this. I, I got a chance to observe a
01:05:08
lot of people in Northern Africa and I'm going to tell you that
01:05:11
if somebody said to me, hey, we want to import some people into
01:05:14
the United States, who do you should import?
01:05:17
I'm going to say Japanese is an example.
01:05:19
Anybody that's been to Japan, amazing country, beautiful,
01:05:21
clean. Yes, they're a different kind of
01:05:23
people. It's very awkward during the
01:05:25
day. They won't even look at you.
01:05:27
It's it's an odd process. And then at night they're
01:05:30
they're lunatics, you know, they're karaoke drinking, funny
01:05:33
people. I'm going to tell you this.
01:05:35
I'm going to pick them head and shoulders over going to Somalia
01:05:38
and saying, yeah, let's get these Somalians in.
01:05:40
And I'm going to say the same thing for Nigeria.
01:05:42
I'm going to say the same thing for Mauritania.
01:05:45
I mean, I can go on and on and on.
01:05:46
Chad, you know, Syria, I'm going to say something to you.
01:05:50
When you look at those people and you look at their lifestyle
01:05:54
and what the how they choose to live.
01:05:56
So my thing is when I see a politician come on and he and he
01:05:59
says, oh, you guys are being racist to the Somalians.
01:06:02
This is a guy that's never stepped foot in any one of these
01:06:04
countries. I've been on the ground there.
01:06:06
I would I would defy the fact that he is.
01:06:08
And I often think that about leadership.
01:06:10
The low level of IQ, the average IQ in Somalia is 68.
01:06:16
Does that seem like somebody that we want to bring into the
01:06:18
country? And and their plan over there is
01:06:21
grifting, is scamming Somalian pirates.
01:06:24
I've reserved him up close. These are not people that that
01:06:27
want to add to a society and they've come on and they've said
01:06:30
what they want to do. Go just go over to TikTok.
01:06:32
Why don't you just go over there, everybody in the audience
01:06:34
to hear some homework, Go do that.
01:06:36
So the chaos and division that's created by a call to deep state.
01:06:40
I don't think it's just the Democrats.
01:06:41
I don't think it's just the Republicans or the nonpartisans.
01:06:44
It is crafted and I believe that the money that when you take an
01:06:48
institution that's as powerful as the Federal Reserve, you take
01:06:50
an institution as powerful as the IRS.
01:06:52
They're powerful because the US has enabled them to be powerful
01:06:56
when you take political individuals.
01:06:58
And like I've always said this, I think that tomorrow I would
01:07:02
pass an executive order. And if you take any money from
01:07:04
an industry, military industrial complex, medical, you should
01:07:08
have to wear a NASCAR jacket and those patches should be equal.
01:07:12
And then when you get up to speak in front of Congress, you
01:07:14
should have to have a disclaimer, just like the
01:07:16
medical disclaimers might when they say may cause diarrhea,
01:07:19
vomiting, may cause rashes, sores, and that those are the
01:07:23
disclaimers that come with lots of, you know, pharmaceuticals,
01:07:27
right? I laugh sometimes I'm online.
01:07:29
And right when they give you all the disclaimers about may cause
01:07:32
incontinence, you may crap your pants.
01:07:34
I'm thinking, who the hell in their right mind wants to take
01:07:36
this drug? Sure, it might help you with,
01:07:38
you know, the fact that you got high blood pressure, but you
01:07:41
might be out in the public crapping yourself.
01:07:43
You might have to wear a diaper the rest of your life.
01:07:45
Doesn't make any sense. Lance, I wanted to disclaimer
01:07:48
for every politician to have their IQ next to the D or R
01:07:51
'cause that man. I love that.
01:07:52
I mean, Can you imagine? Jasmine Crockett -3 you know,
01:07:57
Nancy Pelosi, yeah, I think she's got a high acumen when it
01:07:59
comes to insider trading, but when it comes to lots of other
01:08:02
topics. Dianne Feinstein, $96 million
01:08:05
net worth, $63 million paid for jet on an on a total income of
01:08:10
$6 million. No, she is not as bright as
01:08:13
Warren Buffett. When Nancy Pelosi beats Warren
01:08:15
Buffett, she beats the S&P 500 and now she's going to come out
01:08:19
and, and tell me how I listen to her.
01:08:22
I really, I just want to slap the, the taste out of her mouth.
01:08:25
The, the problem is, is that that's the situation because the
01:08:28
majority of the American public, not your audience, not our
01:08:32
audience, and I give them credit.
01:08:33
I, I bet the IQ and our audience is very high and I would bet the
01:08:36
IQ and your audience is very high.
01:08:38
And I'll say that to the audience, but it, the division
01:08:41
in chaos is an intentional tool. And I don't want to just call it
01:08:44
the left of the people that want to maintain power.
01:08:48
They want to maintain their their worth.
01:08:51
Right? But eugenics isn't some strategy
01:08:53
when we talk about COVID or we talk about the reasoning behind
01:08:57
it. Because common sense.
01:08:59
Anybody that steps back from the forest, that can't see the
01:09:03
trees, when they step back with common sense, None of this makes
01:09:06
1 shred of fucking sense in any way.
01:09:10
Go ahead, Mike. Well, I mean, look, there's a
01:09:12
lot to unpack there. I mean, you were talking early.
01:09:15
I'd go back to you, talk about the confusion that they caused
01:09:17
in this country. Just keep everybody divided.
01:09:19
You mentioned three people you had on your show that I've also
01:09:22
had on my show, Doctor 10, Penny, Peter McCullough and
01:09:26
Doctor Emmanuel. I've had all three on my show
01:09:29
and I've had discussions and arguments with all three on my
01:09:31
show because everybody is kind of going in a different
01:09:34
direction, whether it's on COVID, whether it's on the
01:09:36
economy, whether it's on the Somalians.
01:09:38
Everybody's got a different opinion because they love this
01:09:41
chaos and division. They love that people are
01:09:43
misinformed and going in because if people got on the same page
01:09:46
and understood it the way we understand it.
01:09:48
You go back to IQI say that in my first book, the average IQ in
01:09:52
this country is 100. So think about that.
01:09:54
Half the country has an IQ of less than 100.
01:09:57
We are literally at the mercy of the morons.
01:10:00
So the inmates have been running the for the longest time.
01:10:03
I was just talking about this on my show this morning.
01:10:06
There's an old saying in politics, if you stick around
01:10:08
long enough, you'll eventually get the job.
01:10:09
You want these people that are there.
01:10:11
God like that is so. True, but they're not the best
01:10:14
and brightest. They've just waited in line.
01:10:16
You know, I look, I, somebody asked me yesterday, David
01:10:18
Richter, who I I was a senior advisor when he ran for
01:10:21
Congress. He called me yesterday and he
01:10:23
goes, he goes, I got to ask you a question.
01:10:24
He goes, how come you've never run?
01:10:26
I said I screamed twice when it when I was like 25 years old.
01:10:29
I said I screamed. Everybody said, oh, you should
01:10:31
do it for the experience, blah blah blah.
01:10:33
And I realized they already had their picks.
01:10:35
They knew the county chairman already knew who they were
01:10:38
picking for office. It's the same people who stayed
01:10:40
in line years before me licking envelopes, kissing ass, you
01:10:44
know, brown nosing. I wasn't going to get the spot.
01:10:47
They knew exactly who they were going to pick.
01:10:48
And I screamed twice for office. I said I lost my taste.
01:10:51
I figured I could do better here in a position of power like you
01:10:55
guys are versus sitting there being told what to do by people
01:10:59
who were, you know, in line and part of the program that is the
01:11:02
deep state. You don't realize it starts at a
01:11:04
local level. People think the deep state has
01:11:07
to be some guy at the FBI. That guy at the FBI who got
01:11:10
appointed, he sucked enough. You know what, for years on a
01:11:13
local level, worked his way up, you know, did this, worked with
01:11:16
the county chairman, got a job in the administration.
01:11:19
They figure out he's one of the good old boys.
01:11:20
We could trust him. He's going to tow the line.
01:11:23
Most people don't realize the deep state is so entrenched,
01:11:25
even in your local community. Go try to run for local office
01:11:29
and see what happens when you realize there are 20 other
01:11:32
people who've been vying for the same spot but have a you know in
01:11:37
there before you can get in it. You, you could be the best and
01:11:40
brightest with the best ideas. You could have the highest IQ in
01:11:43
the country, and if you're not part of the system, you're not
01:11:46
part of the game, you're never going to get there.
01:11:48
So we are letting the inmates run the.
01:11:50
The problem is, Lance, the system is flawed and you all
01:11:53
know that. But when you realize how flawed
01:11:56
the system is, when you work within it and you're part of it
01:11:59
and you see it around you, you know, guys like me, we got
01:12:02
ostracized. I don't want to say ostracized,
01:12:04
but we got kind of, you know, pushed out of this system
01:12:07
because after a while you say, I don't want to do this anymore.
01:12:09
You know, I've worked in in politics, I've run campaigns.
01:12:11
Like I said, I worked on three presidentials.
01:12:14
I work for John McCain, I work for Newt Gingrich, and I work
01:12:16
for Ted Cruz. And I saw Ted Cruz when I went
01:12:18
to Washington with Jayden. Jayden and I had dinner at the
01:12:22
Capital Grill and guess who's walking out?
01:12:24
Ted Cruz. So I go, hey, I go, you know, I
01:12:26
worked for oh, yeah, great, taking pictures and all that
01:12:29
stuff. And now I hear Ted Cruz wants to
01:12:31
run for president. Everybody's trying to position
01:12:33
themselves for something, even though Ted Cruz probably knows
01:12:36
he's not going to win because Vance has the, you know, the,
01:12:39
the, the inside track, he's going to announce because it's
01:12:42
going to get him some attention. But it's all about money and
01:12:44
power. It's not about doing the right
01:12:46
thing for the people. That's our mistake.
01:12:48
We always think, I want to ask you a question because you
01:12:50
brought up Cash Patel. And I was talking about Dan
01:12:52
Bongino on the show this morning.
01:12:54
I said it's a real shame when you send the best and brightest,
01:12:56
the people that think like us, people we think are going to do
01:12:59
the right thing, and then you leave after nine months because
01:13:02
you're so frustrated with the system.
01:13:03
What does that tell you? The system has to be that fucked
01:13:06
up that a guy like Dan Bongino says I could do more damage on
01:13:11
my podcast than I can from inside the system.
01:13:14
Do you think they've all just kind of towed the line because
01:13:18
of the deep state? Do you think they're all towing
01:13:19
the line because they've been bought off?
01:13:21
I think they just came to the realization that there's nothing
01:13:24
they can physically do. You know.
01:13:29
We need to abolish the government and start over.
01:13:31
That's the only way I've been saying that for a long time.
01:13:34
You know, I've always, I made a statement that always hasn't
01:13:36
been very popular. I've always said that the
01:13:38
majority in government are underpaid when I mean like that.
01:13:41
Congressional members, I won't talk about local or state, but
01:13:44
I'll talk about the Fed. I always thought that
01:13:46
congressional members were underpaid because the nature of
01:13:49
government is corruption. And here's the difficulty.
01:13:51
You take somebody that might be going into office for the right
01:13:54
reasons. I think Hope Shepleman here in
01:13:57
Colorado is running against one of, you know, of course, as an
01:14:01
incumbent and I think she wants to do the right thing.
01:14:05
But I think what happens, and again, I'm not talking about
01:14:07
Hope. I'm talking in general.
01:14:09
You take a person in DC and then you surround them with Uber
01:14:12
wealthy people, incredibly wealthy individuals, successful
01:14:16
people, You, you, you surround them with super PACs and NGOs
01:14:20
and foundations and you name it. And they're, you know, oh, come
01:14:23
to my house and they're going to these, you know, 10/15/20,
01:14:27
thirty $50 million mansions and they're being offered rides and
01:14:31
private jets. And you can't help but take
01:14:34
somebody that's making $174 a year.
01:14:36
And I want mine. Look at MTG, she went in, she
01:14:40
had a very low net worth. And now she's worth $25 million.
01:14:43
I believe she's already been offered a role, whether it'll be
01:14:46
the viewer somewhere else, she'll announce at some point
01:14:48
that she's got this role over at Fox News or CBS or something.
01:14:53
And it it's so a much higher pain than what she she got and
01:14:57
the insider trading and the corruption.
01:14:59
So I think they're making people that go then they're bright eyed
01:15:02
and bushy tailed and I think they get fully corrupted because
01:15:05
ultimate power corrupts, right? They see it, they want it now
01:15:08
there's there's the other side of it.
01:15:09
They're the people that, like you said, have clawed their way
01:15:12
up from, you know, taking ballots from underneath the
01:15:15
table and jamming those ballots into the machine over and over
01:15:18
again. And they've they've worked the
01:15:21
side of the corruption knowing that they're going to get
01:15:22
theirs. It doesn't matter whether it's a
01:15:25
Letitia James or it's somebody else that's clawing their way
01:15:29
up, up at the time. They're like, I can't wait till
01:15:31
I get in there. It's like Joe Biden, here's a
01:15:35
guy that one of the people that he hung out with an incredible
01:15:38
amount in the early years was the head of the Ku Klux Klan,
01:15:41
you know, and, and came out and said if you're not black, you
01:15:44
know, of course you're not voting for me.
01:15:46
If you're if you're not voting for me, you're not black.
01:15:49
Here's a guy that was a racist from the get go.
01:15:51
But here he is out there, you know, trying to perpetuate a
01:15:54
message because it was finally his turn, right.
01:15:56
Yeah, He his, he had a brain full of much.
01:15:58
Yeah. The dementia, Alzheimer's was
01:16:00
already in full swing. Any medical professional would
01:16:03
have looked at him in a matter of minutes, probably after a
01:16:06
short interview and said this guy's just he's already gone.
01:16:09
But they they that's what they want.
01:16:10
They want controllable puppets 'cause I also think these people
01:16:13
get compromised early on. If, if, if Mike Schwartz will
01:16:17
come in and he'll take some ballots from under the table for
01:16:20
Newt Gringrich. I'm not suggesting you did this.
01:16:22
And he'll feed those into the machine.
01:16:24
MM Schwartz, we got something on him now and now we can control
01:16:28
him. Let's face it, when you
01:16:30
investigate Epstein, the guy never made a legitimate dollar.
01:16:33
In fact, I believe his initial worth was part of the money that
01:16:37
was stolen from Maxwell. There's a lot of questions about
01:16:42
Maxwell's death. I'm talking about Gazian's
01:16:45
father, of course, very intertwined into the Mossad.
01:16:49
He was an intelligence operative.
01:16:51
You know about him in the media. You know, there's a lot of
01:16:53
questions about this missing pension fund of 400 and some odd
01:16:57
$1. And here is, you know, Epstein,
01:17:02
who, in my opinion, his entire operation was built on
01:17:05
compromising blackmail, extortion, and he was very good
01:17:10
at it. He used Mossad technology.
01:17:13
It was a system. And of course, this isn't a new
01:17:15
system. Aren't intelligence
01:17:17
organizations have been doing this, you know, all the way back
01:17:19
to the Revolutionary War. Like, you know, you know, a lot
01:17:23
of people talk about Ben Franklin, how he was a broke
01:17:27
member of the founders, and then all of a sudden his
01:17:30
relationships with Spain and France and he became fabulously
01:17:33
wealthy. And nobody could ever really
01:17:34
figure out how Ben Franklin made his money because, you know, the
01:17:38
people talk about his inventions.
01:17:40
Well, his inventions weren't making him a lot of money.
01:17:41
He made some great inventions, but he became a millionaire for
01:17:46
that time period. Corruption starts early.
01:17:48
And it's like this, George. I got to answer a question to
01:17:52
check if somebody directed this to the US three men saying do
01:17:56
you guys refuse to tolerate child sex trafficking and women
01:18:00
kept tosses to perverse men. So I'll answer for myself.
01:18:04
I know, I know you guys opinions wholeheartedly 100%.
01:18:08
I do not tolerate any kind of children trafficking of any
01:18:12
children, men or women, anybody. I actually used to be on a jump
01:18:15
team years ago. So as far as or keeping hostage
01:18:21
to perverse men, men about women, women shouldn't be kept
01:18:25
hostage from any man whether perverse or not.
01:18:29
I don't know why you asked us that question, but there you go,
01:18:32
there's your answer. What, what What from what we
01:18:34
said would make someone ask that question?
01:18:37
We're talking about, you know, but sometimes people, I think
01:18:39
people have something, you know, that's the thing I like about
01:18:41
chat. They will redirect a, a
01:18:44
dialogue. My dialogue is about corruption,
01:18:46
lack of transparency, accountability, and then the
01:18:48
fact that our government is not what it appears to be.
01:18:51
Doesn't matter whether it's the legal system or medical system
01:18:54
otherwise. But in the case of what she just
01:18:55
mentioned, you know, I'm probably the most extreme on the
01:18:58
show. Whatever they just said, thank
01:19:01
you for saying so. More men need to say it out
01:19:04
loud. So you just thanked us for
01:19:05
saying it. My.
01:19:05
Comment would be as an extremist probably.
01:19:08
Of the three of us, I probably got a much darker side than the
01:19:11
two of you. My history probably puts me in
01:19:15
in a in a small category when it comes to thought process.
01:19:18
I've often thought that many things can be solved with a
01:19:20
giant industrial wood chipper. I think I could solve it.
01:19:24
I don't think you can fix pedophiles.
01:19:25
I don't think you can fix men and, and, and I've seen this and
01:19:29
when I talked about Northern Africa, when you see the nature
01:19:32
of those people up close, they're savages and their
01:19:36
treatment of women is very clear.
01:19:38
I mean, whether it's stonings, rapes, they believe that a woman
01:19:43
is just a Suppository for any sexual activity they want
01:19:46
whenever they want it, whenever they need.
01:19:47
It doesn't matter whether it's a public raping or otherwise.
01:19:51
There's a lot of things I observed and had I been in a
01:19:53
different situation, I was on the end of a scope many times
01:19:58
because I, I did a lot of long range shooting years ago.
01:20:01
One of my one of my call signs was hand of God, which comes
01:20:07
from hog hunter of gunman. And I will tell you this, it was
01:20:10
often that I thought that the easiest solution would have just
01:20:13
been somebody should have just put a, you know, thousands of
01:20:15
rounds of ammunition next to me and I could have probably
01:20:17
cleaned up a lot of neighborhoods very rapidly.
01:20:20
But but again, that's the extreme version.
01:20:23
But you have to ask yourself. I think even from the audience,
01:20:26
and I'll say this to Mike, this could be solved.
01:20:29
There are ways to solve it, but you can't candy ass evil.
01:20:34
And I think that that's what we have in government.
01:20:36
We're we've been candy assing the evil of our own government,
01:20:39
the nature of men and women in government.
01:20:42
I personally think that Trump has gone in with the wrong
01:20:45
attitude. If we can't get swift and
01:20:47
decisive action with the staff that's there, go to the next
01:20:50
staff. If Pam Bondi isn't isn't able to
01:20:54
execute more rapidly, if Harmeet Dylan can't keep her ass off,
01:20:58
you know, talking about what she's knitting and if if Pam
01:21:02
can't stay off Fox News as the Fox News AGI think she's at 108
01:21:06
or 109 interviews now. I don't think it's necessary.
01:21:10
If that's not possible then then Donald Trump should make a
01:21:12
decision. I'm not sure why that is.
01:21:14
I don't know if it's Susie Wiles.
01:21:15
I don't know if he's gonna take it from there.
01:21:17
He's. Got bad advisors?
01:21:19
Yeah, Mike, you can take it from there.
01:21:20
Well, I said to my I had a frank discussion with my audience last
01:21:23
week about this exact topic and I said, you can't, you can't get
01:21:26
mad at Pam Bondi. You got to get mad at the man
01:21:29
who hired Pam Bondi because he's ultimately in control unless
01:21:32
he's not. But I mean, look, you get mad at
01:21:34
Pam Bondi all day for doing what she's doing.
01:21:36
He's in charge. It's a reflection on him.
01:21:38
Maybe it's a good cop, bad cop thing.
01:21:40
Maybe he's fine with her taking a little bit of Flack because
01:21:44
it's deflecting it off him. You got to think about the
01:21:46
opposite side of this because you got put yourself in his
01:21:49
position. You're MAGA base.
01:21:51
Everybody's talking about Pam Bondi.
01:21:53
I get it every day in my chat. Everybody can't stand Pam Bondi.
01:21:56
And there's a couple other ones here and there and then you
01:21:58
know, some of them get accolades.
01:21:59
But Pam Bondi is the number one target for my audience, which is
01:22:03
basically your audience if you think about it.
01:22:05
That's but why you get mad at her.
01:22:07
He's the boss. If he wants to replace her, he
01:22:09
can. And if he's not replacing her,
01:22:11
that should tell you that maybe she's toeing the line.
01:22:13
Maybe Trump. Maybe Trump is the guy you
01:22:15
should be a little bit mad at. Look, I say this all the time on
01:22:17
my audience. He is not MAGA.
01:22:20
We are MAGA. We are the ones that have been
01:22:21
sitting around for 3050 years, depending on how old you are.
01:22:24
But we're the descendants of listening to Rush Limbaugh
01:22:27
sitting around thinking there's more of us out there.
01:22:29
The Ditto heads. Wow, there's people calling in
01:22:31
that sound like me. We're MAGA, it's not Trump.
01:22:34
So if we're going to do anything, we got to hold our
01:22:36
elected officials feet to the fire.
01:22:38
And that includes Trump because Trump's not going to be here in
01:22:41
three more years. It's going to be somebody else,
01:22:43
whether it's Vance or that pendulum swings.
01:22:45
And we're going to, I always say, look, my biggest fear is
01:22:47
that I'm having the same exact show in 20 years.
01:22:50
Maybe I'm waiting for Newsmax 3 to come around and I'll be on
01:22:53
Newsmax 3 or 4 of 20 saying it at that point.
01:22:57
But we're going to have the same conversation.
01:22:59
We need to do a lot of big things to what you just said,
01:23:02
Lance, the wood chipper is the answer here.
01:23:05
It is. It is the nuclear option.
01:23:06
It is getting rid of the filibuster.
01:23:08
It is codifying these things. It is getting rid of the tax
01:23:11
code. Could you imagine a Democratic
01:23:13
Party in 1020 years who was trying to bring back the income
01:23:18
tax? Republicans, we would never lose
01:23:20
another election if we did certain things. 0 Baseline
01:23:23
budgeting. I talk about that in my book,
01:23:25
too. There's so many fundamental
01:23:26
things that we could do right now while we have the power, but
01:23:29
we're not doing it. So the answer isn't is be
01:23:31
sitting here pissed off at Pam Bondi.
01:23:33
There's one guy who could replace Pam Bondi if she's not
01:23:37
doing the job, and that's Donald Trump and if he's going to
01:23:39
agree. But yeah, but you know, the
01:23:41
process of then trying to get another one, get them confirmed,
01:23:44
it's just a shit show. We have the Senate though,
01:23:46
George. I mean what?
01:23:49
What, Mike? We have the Senate, but you see
01:23:52
how they operate. They suck.
01:23:54
Look how long it's taking to get stuff done.
01:23:56
Yeah, but I I want to. And then don't forget, some of
01:23:58
those senators are involved in some of that complicit behavior
01:24:02
that a Republican say. Something to both of you.
01:24:03
I'm going to say something to both of you.
01:24:05
So tomorrow you want to pay your bills and you think, God, you
01:24:08
know, these guys up in Minnesota, they really made a
01:24:10
lot of money. Fuck this.
01:24:12
I'm going to do something beyond that.
01:24:14
So you walk into a bank and you decide to rob it and you get
01:24:18
away with it. You walk out of there with
01:24:20
1 bucks. You're like, wow, that was easy.
01:24:22
I didn't, I can't believe I was able to walk in there and get
01:24:24
1 bucks. The thought process you would
01:24:26
have, assuming that you had this criminality, right, that the
01:24:29
Mens Rea of what had just happened just enabled and and
01:24:34
kind of supported you robbing a second bank.
01:24:38
Isn't that exactly where we're at?
01:24:40
Because the Democrats have really done one thing
01:24:43
exceptionally well, right? They have put the fear of and I
01:24:48
want to say God, but in a way it is the fear of God in us that
01:24:51
you can't peacefully protest. You don't want to be AJ Sixer.
01:24:54
You get yanked out of your house because you walked into the
01:24:56
rotund to use the bathroom and there are J Sixers that happened
01:24:59
to you. They walked in there.
01:25:00
The doors were open. How about that woman that was
01:25:03
handing out cookies and tuna fish sandwiches?
01:25:06
You know, I think she got six months.
01:25:07
Let me finish. This is important, what I'm
01:25:09
about to say here, but isn't that the problem, isn't it?
01:25:13
That the weakness of this administration and the alleged
01:25:16
Republicans that are supposed to be controlling the House and the
01:25:19
Senate, isn't this the problem that the AG because we haven't
01:25:23
put any fear in them. Fear is a powerful tool and in a
01:25:27
way, maybe I sound like a dictator.
01:25:29
Fear has been used in many governments over the years.
01:25:31
It doesn't matter. We can go all over the globe and
01:25:33
we can look at fear, how it was used.
01:25:35
The the Democrats weaponized fears.
01:25:38
They didn't weaponize it in a manner that's similar to a
01:25:41
Mugabe, right, or or another warlord or another leadership if
01:25:47
somebody wants to talk about Mao or otherwise.
01:25:49
They didn't weaponize it in that way, but they did it using the
01:25:51
legal system, using the judiciary, using our own
01:25:54
financial system, using COVID and using so many other things.
01:25:58
Isn't that one of the mistakes we're making?
01:25:59
I said yesterday that the midterms are ours to lose.
01:26:02
And the person that's losing the midterms for us is Pam Bondi.
01:26:05
It didn't mean Pam Bondi as an individual.
01:26:07
I meant as a department. Because if tomorrow,
01:26:10
theoretically we want to win the midterms.
01:26:12
If tomorrow the the J6 committee, let's say tomorrow
01:26:15
that Trump signed an executive order that 100% of Biden's auto
01:26:19
pen appeals were overturned, we get the legal argument they get
01:26:23
because we can argue that other presidents use the autopen.
01:26:26
And tomorrow, the following day after that executive order, the
01:26:30
DOJUS marshals walked into Congress and said, if your name
01:26:33
is on this list, we need to stand on the right side of the
01:26:36
room. Nancy Pelosi, Adam Schiff, Mitch
01:26:39
McConnell. Let's say we connected them or
01:26:42
we connected any of them to any manner of crimes they committed
01:26:45
and they went to the right side of the room and after that they
01:26:47
were cuffed up and drug out of there.
01:26:51
What do you think would happen to the people that had walked
01:26:53
into that bank and were stealing money?
01:26:54
The people that participated in the Medicaid and Medicare fraud,
01:26:57
the people that have participated in insider trading,
01:26:59
if all of a sudden they were incarcerated And rather than
01:27:02
doing what they've been doing, which so far we have very few
01:27:04
deep state arrests, right? I think I have more deep state
01:27:07
arrests and I I have the same number of deep state arrests
01:27:09
that Pam Bondi does. In my own opinion, my argument
01:27:13
would be if you did that, would that fear drive a stake into the
01:27:17
heart if tomorrow you shut down the Federal Reserve?
01:27:20
And I know it would throw our finances in a turmoil.
01:27:22
I'm just coming up with a, not that I'm saying this is the way
01:27:25
to handle this, but if tomorrow all the families that were
01:27:28
involved in the Federal Reserve were arrested and all their
01:27:30
assets were seized. If tomorrow The Dirty 51 + 8
01:27:34
were arrested, If there was a sweeping arrest and if any media
01:27:39
that that wanted to suppress that, the MSNBCS and the CNNS
01:27:42
and the people that have been paid by USAID.
01:27:44
If they were shut down Mike and all that happened swiftly,
01:27:48
wouldn't we get a dead stop? I know it wouldn't be all the
01:27:51
heads of the snakes if tomorrow we walked into George Soros's
01:27:55
home in upstate Buffalo, NY and we grabbed him and and Alexander
01:28:00
snatched them up. If Bill Gates was arrested for
01:28:03
his participation in the COVID, you know, scam Demick, if Mark
01:28:08
Zuckerberg was arrested for his Zuckerbucks and none of them
01:28:11
were allowed to get out because they're all flight risk, right?
01:28:14
They're well connected like they do to regular Americans.
01:28:16
We can't give them bond. They're going to have to sit it
01:28:18
out. Now, I know that would it would
01:28:21
it would necessitate having the right judge in place because of
01:28:24
course these judges are just weaponized.
01:28:27
Isn't fear a tool that we're not using in this administration?
01:28:30
Aren't we allowing these people to just continue on and because
01:28:34
they don't have any worries, Mike, tomorrow they can go in
01:28:37
and Mike Waltz isn't worried. I don't think any arrests are
01:28:39
going to anything's going to happen to Mike Waltz.
01:28:42
I don't think so. Tim Waltz.
01:28:43
I'm sorry. Tim Waltz, I don't think
01:28:44
anything's going to happen to him when it comes to this, this
01:28:46
Minnesota situation. You guys give me your thoughts
01:28:49
on that. I know it's a lot to unpack.
01:28:51
Well, you want my opinion, I'll, I'll tell you.
01:28:53
I think fear is transitory because look at look at what's
01:28:56
going on in Minnesota right now. You have everybody scared that
01:28:59
they uncovered this the next day.
01:29:00
They're starting to bust people into these daycares.
01:29:03
So then today I just played a news story where now the news is
01:29:06
showing up going. But there are kids here, yeah,
01:29:09
after they were in fear of getting because they were
01:29:11
caught. They're changing it.
01:29:12
But it's transitory if you think about it, because we could do
01:29:15
that now. But then of course, and I'm with
01:29:17
you, I'd say it's the right thing to do.
01:29:19
But the problem is the system is inherently flawed.
01:29:21
So the right thing doesn't stay the right thing.
01:29:24
It depends on who's interpretation of what the right
01:29:27
thing is. Because all the sudden they're
01:29:29
worried that the next time when that pendulum is going to swing
01:29:31
back, when they get into power, what they're already talking
01:29:33
about jailing all the people who are supportive of this
01:29:37
administration. They're already talking about
01:29:39
that now. And the left is cringe.
01:29:41
That left is clapping, saying, yeah, we got to do that.
01:29:44
We're going to less people like George and Lance and Mike
01:29:46
Schwartz. They're all going to jail
01:29:47
because they were complicit in this.
01:29:48
If you supported this, then you're guilty as hell.
01:29:51
So I, I, I, I, I agree with you. The problem is like the system
01:29:54
is so flawed that we don't understand what's right and
01:29:57
wrong anymore. It has to do with which way the
01:29:59
wind's blowing. It's again, I'll say transitory,
01:30:01
because we're sitting here thinking about it.
01:30:03
How does it, how does it affect us now is different than how it
01:30:07
affects us later. It depends on who's reporting on
01:30:09
it, depends on who's in power. The system itself is so flawed
01:30:13
that it doesn't understand right from wrong anymore.
01:30:15
George, what do you think? We need to disband the
01:30:21
government. Start over.
01:30:22
I want to play a clip from Carrie Lake yesterday.
01:30:25
Just listen to what she says, and it's pretty much what you
01:30:28
guys are saying. But listen, the corruption at my
01:30:30
agency, the corruption at agency after agency, and there's not a
01:30:33
damn person in handcuffs yet. They dragged Roger Stone out of
01:30:38
his house, they raided Mar a Lago, they attacked President
01:30:42
Trump. When are we going to see some
01:30:44
effing handcuffs on some effing criminals in this country?
01:30:49
The American people have had it up to here, and we want some
01:30:52
people locked up, prosecuted behind bars for the rest of
01:30:56
their lives. We're sick and tired of it.
01:31:01
Yeah, well, I hear you. I feel you.
01:31:03
I feel the exact same way. Hopefully every single American
01:31:05
watching feels the exact same way.
01:31:07
And that is the question. When are the handcuffs going to
01:31:09
come out? You know, ironically, Governor
01:31:11
Tim Walsh, he insists that he worked for years to crack down
01:31:14
on the fraud. And to think he was this close,
01:31:18
Carrie, this close to becoming our vice president.
01:31:23
All right, so back to now our discussion.
01:31:25
So I don't I don't want Trump getting involved with with Pam
01:31:29
Bondi saying that you need to arrest this one, that one,
01:31:31
because it'll just be a political fallout and no
01:31:35
president, you know, they should be separating themselves from
01:31:37
that point. That's why you have an attorney
01:31:39
general. We know that people have broken
01:31:41
laws. You've seen it with the 2020
01:31:43
election, Russiagate, all, I mean all this crap and up until
01:31:47
right now today there's more stuff coming out.
01:31:50
But what did they done? They came and get a fucking
01:31:52
indictment on shift or Latisha D James.
01:31:57
Two attempted indictments left left-leaning, and this is the
01:32:00
look at. Solwell, look at Solwell that
01:32:02
he's go back to the hold on, let me finish.
01:32:05
Solwell is the California congressman.
01:32:08
Yeah. He has no living.
01:32:09
He has no house in California. He lives in DC.
01:32:12
His home address is in DC. He doesn't have any residence in
01:32:16
California. Why is he still on on a
01:32:19
California congressman right now?
01:32:21
That's something that should boom.
01:32:22
They should just get booty's ass out.
01:32:24
But yet the Republicans, they do nothing.
01:32:27
Trump should know. Listen, Trump was was attacked
01:32:31
before he even was elected president the first time, all
01:32:34
those four years of Russia, Russia, then after that being
01:32:37
arrested. He, he, him.
01:32:39
If anybody knows that, you know how they weaponize the system.
01:32:46
Well, we don't need to weaponize the system.
01:32:47
They there's laws broken in black and white.
01:32:52
Let me let me ask you guys a question.
01:32:53
If you're working for a company and you do a really shitty job,
01:32:58
I don't care what company, let's say tomorrow you have that job
01:33:00
that none of us want that 9:00 to 5:00 and you're doing a
01:33:03
really shitty job. And I'm not talking about
01:33:05
government because we know they can do a shitty job.
01:33:06
I'm talking about a company like Oracle, Microsoft, Google, and
01:33:10
you're doing a really shitty job.
01:33:13
Do you have a lifetime appointment there?
01:33:17
Were you able to continue to do that shitty job for those
01:33:19
institutions? Let me ask you a question.
01:33:22
Tomorrow you break the law and, and you, you clearly have
01:33:26
violated what the statutes say. Do you guys have absolute
01:33:30
immunity? Do you get to commit that crime
01:33:32
with absolute impunity? What about you, Mike?
01:33:34
Do you have those opportunities? Like let's say, yeah, if you're,
01:33:37
if you, if you go into your medical clinic and you do a
01:33:40
really, really shitty job at all your medical clinics, do you get
01:33:44
to do you get to keep the medical clinics or are they
01:33:45
going to RIP that medical license right out from
01:33:47
underneath you? Sure, I I get it, but you got to
01:33:50
Yeah, I'm thinking, I think a little deeper on this, right,
01:33:53
because you're talking about the federal government, you're
01:33:55
talking about some. We have some smart people in the
01:33:57
Trump administration. I'm not short changing, you know
01:33:59
who's there. You know, you look at, you know,
01:34:01
people like Besson and Heg Seth and and and Howard Luttner.
01:34:04
No. There's.
01:34:04
Some great picks. There's some smart people and
01:34:07
you got to think that they've all sat and gained this out and
01:34:10
they realized that half the population, as we mentioned
01:34:13
before, has an IQ of less than 100.
01:34:15
And they're trying to appeal to how they're going to interpret
01:34:18
things, not how it actually is, but how they interpret it.
01:34:22
And if they go hog wild and they go to the point of where it
01:34:25
looks like, well, it's proving the point where they kept
01:34:28
saying, oh, Donald Trump's a dictator.
01:34:30
That's going to make the populace go in the other
01:34:31
direction. We are already at a disadvantage
01:34:33
going into 2026 because we're the incumbents and we
01:34:37
traditionally lose a shit ton of seats in the midterms.
01:34:40
We're worried about losing in the next election in 2028.
01:34:42
That the big one that we need, but we need the House.
01:34:45
Otherwise, you're going to see more impeachment.
01:34:46
You're not going to see anything get passed.
01:34:48
And again, you and I are going to have the same show in 20
01:34:50
years. So you got to think they're
01:34:51
smart people gaming this out to try to tread lightly, to try to
01:34:55
figure out what's going to be the best way that we can get our
01:34:58
mission accomplished but stay in power.
01:35:00
Otherwise, we're going to just forgo everything we did in the
01:35:03
four years of the Trump presidency.
01:35:04
But doesn't doesn't shredded treading lightly just re enable
01:35:08
those bank robbers? Doesn't it just convince them
01:35:10
they can rob a second? Here I got good news for you
01:35:13
guys. Ready Congress subpoenas
01:35:16
Governor Tim Walsh in multi $1 Somali welfare
01:35:20
scandal Oh goody, so we get to have.
01:35:22
More. Clown show, more clown show
01:35:25
hearings get to say this isn't that.
01:35:28
Maybe we'll see the fraud. Maybe it'll be more of the hard
01:35:31
questions in the backroom hearings where they won't make
01:35:33
it public. Big fucking deal.
01:35:35
They're subpoenaed him How many times?
01:35:39
How many times Congress has given criminal referrals and
01:35:43
nothing's getting done? Yeah, so what's the point?
01:35:45
Why waste our time and taxpayer money?
01:35:48
I'm clenching my fists. I'm doing everything they're
01:35:50
going to get ready to do. Oh, we're going to do.
01:35:52
I don't need any more interviews.
01:35:53
I don't need any more subpoenas. I don't need any of that.
01:35:55
What I need are cold, vicious 3:00 AM arrest.
01:35:59
Just like that. What they did to Roger Stone.
01:36:01
What I need are indictments and what I need is no bond hearings.
01:36:06
You want refusal for bond for people that have international
01:36:09
contacts, they're wealthy, They're all flight risk.
01:36:12
I mean, no release bond hearings.
01:36:14
And I need a judge that understands the legal system and
01:36:17
is ready for swift justice because I'm going to tell you
01:36:20
this. Without doing that, the midterms
01:36:23
are lost. You want to win the midterms,
01:36:25
either make Pam Bondi do her job as president of the United
01:36:28
States or replace Pam Bondi immediately with somebody like
01:36:30
Sidney Powell that I believe could move decisively.
01:36:33
Maybe other people won't agree with me.
01:36:35
That's fine. And, and, and I, I think that if
01:36:37
you don't arrest these people for insider trading for the J6
01:36:42
committee, for the fraud, that they're the money they're
01:36:44
getting laundered through the Somalians.
01:36:47
And otherwise, if you don't make an example of Tim Waltz, if you
01:36:50
don't make an example of The Dirty 51 + 8, if you don't make
01:36:54
an example of Nancy Pelosi, if you don't make an example of
01:36:58
Hillary Clinton, Barack Obama, let's face it, we all know about
01:37:01
the birth certificate and the Social Security number.
01:37:04
Clearly he was an installed puppet.
01:37:06
If you don't make an example of those people, well, guess what?
01:37:09
Everybody in Congress is just going to be another round of
01:37:11
bank robbing. They robbed the bank the first
01:37:13
time, the second time, the third time, they're just going to rob
01:37:15
the bank again. And I'm using that of course
01:37:18
just as a comparison. I totally agree with you, Lance,
01:37:21
but and and maybe it's maybe it is his advisors.
01:37:23
Maybe it is people like Susie Wah, maybe they're the ones
01:37:25
being trepidatious because they're more worried about the
01:37:27
midterms in the next cycle. But you're right.
01:37:29
I mean, if we don't fix it now, we're just essentially kicking
01:37:31
the can down the road. We're we're enablers is what we
01:37:34
are, if you think about it, But most people don't.
01:37:36
Most people don't think the way you and George and I think they
01:37:38
don't have their finger on the pulse.
01:37:40
I I equate it to people like my wife.
01:37:42
My wife is, you know, look, she's on a political show, but
01:37:44
she doesn't live breathe politics.
01:37:46
She goes to work. She cares about her patients,
01:37:48
she cares about her son, she cares about me.
01:37:50
She cares about her household. And that's, you know, getting.
01:37:52
Into kind of care too much about you if you don't take her on a
01:37:54
honeymoon, I will say. That's true.
01:37:56
That is true, George. But you know, she does, she
01:37:58
doesn't have the time to to invest in like the
01:38:00
understanding, the deepness of what we're talking about here on
01:38:04
the show and a lot of people on Rumble do because they take the
01:38:06
time and they want to discuss it with us.
01:38:08
But the majority of people in this country are freaking, you
01:38:12
know, they're not the the best and brightest.
01:38:13
Again, they're, they're, they're pretty.
01:38:15
Look, I hate to say morons, imbeciles, I use those terms
01:38:19
lightly, but it's true. I mean, we used to go back to IQ
01:38:22
with those things. You know, we brought back the R
01:38:24
word for, for Walt. And that was just because we
01:38:26
wanted to make an example of them.
01:38:28
But these connotations have to do with IQ.
01:38:30
So we're not, we're, we're trying to appeal to people in
01:38:33
this country who vote. And this will probably go back
01:38:36
to the tax code for a reason. 40% of of Americans do not pay
01:38:40
federal income tax, but they vote.
01:38:42
So we're at the mercy of the morons who don't even pay a dime
01:38:46
in income tax telling us that they want more of our hard
01:38:49
earned money. It's the same thing when it
01:38:50
comes to voting. They don't understand, they
01:38:52
don't even know who Sidney Powell is.
01:38:54
They don't know who what Pam Bondi's job is, what her
01:38:56
capabilities are. They, they just care about the
01:38:58
optics. And that's the problem you're
01:39:00
dealing with people like us who realize you have to get it done
01:39:03
because look, they would do the exact same thing to us if they
01:39:06
were in power right now. So I agree with you 100%.
01:39:08
Lance, we need need to take the range.
01:39:09
We need to do it and we need to stop kicking the can down the
01:39:12
road and stop being the enablers that we've been in this country
01:39:15
for many, many years. But I think you have advisors at
01:39:18
the White House who are more trepidatious because they're
01:39:20
worried about where we're gonna be.
01:39:22
We might not. Have they're worried about
01:39:23
keeping their pay day? I think they're thinking about
01:39:25
what happens when Trump's out. Can I get a job with JD Vance?
01:39:29
Is Susie Wiles thinking about working for JD Vance?
01:39:31
Would he ever work for him? Listen, I have.
01:39:33
I have no idea. Right now, Donald Trump, hold on
01:39:37
80 Susan Wiles Marco Rubio. She's Marco Rubio is her boy.
01:39:43
That's where she came about. She's been working with Marco
01:39:46
Rubio for a long time. And Marco Rubio has grown on me.
01:39:49
I think he's doing a good job. I mean, I was surprised.
01:39:51
I didn't think he was going to. But I have to be honest, I'd
01:39:54
shake his hand if I saw because I do think he's trying to do the
01:39:57
good work. Polly Marcus got it.
01:39:58
Where Democrats are going to win the House in 2026.
01:40:02
I think it's like a 7580% chance we're screwed.
01:40:06
You said it earlier, they're all they're going to do is more
01:40:08
here. They're going to be hearings
01:40:09
every day. They're going to impeach Donald
01:40:11
Trump. And mother fuckers, if if Pam
01:40:14
Bondi, you don't get on your shit and start doing something,
01:40:16
This is why we're going to be facing is it?
01:40:18
That's maybe what they want. Well, I I think.
01:40:21
Hold on, I think all of us pull some money, buy our island, buy
01:40:25
and make our own country and just invite people we want
01:40:28
there. What do you think?
01:40:29
You know, well, you're almost stuck with doing that.
01:40:31
But let me say this to you. Don't you guys think I'm going
01:40:33
to ask this? I'll even ask the people, I want
01:40:35
the people in the chat to participate in this.
01:40:37
If tomorrow morning you woke up and it turned out that Ray
01:40:44
Brennan, Clapper Comedy, Hillary Clinton, Barack Obama, The Dirty
01:40:47
51 + 8, the insider traders of DC on both sides of the aisle.
01:40:52
If you heard that there had been 23400, what we would consider
01:40:57
deep state arrests for multiple crimes on multiple multiple
01:41:00
areas, how do you think the midterms should go?
01:41:04
It's a great question. I mean, you, you got your MAGA
01:41:07
base who's going to sit here and vote the same way.
01:41:09
And then you've got all the people.
01:41:10
The problem is they're worried about the middle.
01:41:11
The middle is what determines elections, right?
01:41:13
You know, you've always got your 40% that are going to vote our
01:41:15
way and the 40% that are going to go their way.
01:41:17
They're worried about the middle.
01:41:18
Like my wife, who were, you know, fallible, not anymore.
01:41:20
She's smart enough to understand it now, but people like her who
01:41:23
were going to work, who are fallible, who don't understand,
01:41:25
who hear the headline and they get emotionally charged and then
01:41:28
they run out to the pulse. That's what they're worried
01:41:30
about. So I mean, I, I understand the
01:41:32
dichotomy that I think you, you really got to come down and fix
01:41:35
the vote. The vote is, is really what's
01:41:37
screwed up here. I mean, we're just looking at an
01:41:38
election in New Jersey where Mikey Cheryl won.
01:41:40
They're saying she won by numbers that no presidential
01:41:42
candidate has ever seen. Now, I've already gotten calls
01:41:45
from state senators, county chair people, and we're working
01:41:49
on trying to uncover where the nefarious activity is coming out
01:41:52
of New Jersey because as you said before, ultimate power
01:41:55
corrupts, you know, absolute power corrupts absolutely.
01:41:58
You got to fix a lot of things in this country.
01:41:59
I would love the deep state to get to get to get charged and,
01:42:04
and all that fun stuff. They're worried about the middle
01:42:07
and they're worried about the election not being quite secure
01:42:09
right now. If you can control elections by
01:42:12
throwing in extra votes whenever you want.
01:42:14
I mean what? What?
01:42:16
What election are we talking about?
01:42:18
Let's add to that. Let's say that tomorrow, along
01:42:20
with that, Donald Trump declared that no machines were going to
01:42:24
be used. We're going to paper ballots,
01:42:25
we're going to voter ID. Let's say he did an election.
01:42:27
Of course, we know what Congress would do because they don't want
01:42:30
it. But let's say he slammed it
01:42:31
through and let's say he successfully slammed it through
01:42:33
because all the naysayers, half of them were wrapped up, half of
01:42:36
them are sitting in jail cells. I don't care whether it's
01:42:39
Guantanamo, which I'm not sure about the legality of that, but
01:42:42
wherever it is and they're not being given bond.
01:42:44
And half the naysayers that are in there that are the ones that
01:42:46
have been perpetuating election fraud, supporting election
01:42:49
fraud. And I don't care whether it's
01:42:51
Skidel, smart magnetic Dominion. Let's say he's also shut that
01:42:54
down tomorrow morning. You wake up, we're at dead
01:42:57
start. We've got blockchain voting,
01:42:58
we've got voter ID, we've got paper ballots, no machines.
01:43:02
I know the impossibility of that, but let's just say I got
01:43:06
all my Christmas wishes and that was tomorrow morning.
01:43:08
What do you think the impact would be on the midterms then?
01:43:11
I, I honestly think you'd see a huge change.
01:43:13
I, I had what was it Doctor Jerome Corsi on the show and he
01:43:17
was talking about how there are certain states.
01:43:19
He was talking about New York and New Jersey in particular,
01:43:21
but there being some of the highest nefarious voting totals.
01:43:24
But there are, there are voters buried in the system that they
01:43:27
can pull the, the, the lever for at any time.
01:43:30
Now you listen to this stuff and you go, this kind of sounds far
01:43:33
fetched, but when you see it, like when I prepare the numbers
01:43:36
in New Jersey, we had gubernatorial elections in 13
01:43:39
and 17, right? And then 21 and 25.
01:43:43
And when you look at the trend leading up 1317, the data kind
01:43:46
of stays here. It has these little blips and
01:43:48
then all of a sudden you see in 21, the data does this.
01:43:51
That's an anomaly that shouldn't exist.
01:43:53
That's kind of stuff that we pick up on and go, oh, there's
01:43:56
something there. And then that same anomaly
01:43:58
happened in 2025, which tells me that there are probably voters
01:44:02
buried in the system from all the mail in nonsense they did
01:44:04
during COVID that they're using now.
01:44:06
And if that's the case, it doesn't matter what we do.
01:44:09
Lance, we had the midterms and we were gonna look, I think
01:44:11
we're, we're doomed to lose the midterms.
01:44:13
I'm not so worried about the Senate.
01:44:14
I'm worried about the House. But the House is where all the
01:44:16
power is. That's what who holds the power
01:44:18
of the purse strings. So I, I eventually think we're
01:44:21
going to be looking at, if you expound this out, the
01:44:24
impeachments we talked about the, the, the, the block, you
01:44:27
know, the blocking of everything we want to do.
01:44:28
You're just so you're right. We need to right now, stop
01:44:32
kicking the can down the road. As we said before, we need to
01:44:35
enact single. I don't know if the federal
01:44:37
government can do that. I got a call from one of Steve
01:44:39
Stern guys a couple of weeks ago and he wanted to talk to me
01:44:43
about what the president, he had inside information on what the
01:44:45
president was gonna do. And he said they were going to
01:44:48
try to pass this. They were going to try to push
01:44:50
this through because they thought there was a clause in
01:44:52
the Constitution that would support the federal government
01:44:57
changing the, the, the voting parameters to, to, to institute
01:45:01
one day paper ballot voting. I read the, the, the, the clause
01:45:04
in the Constitution that this guy pointed out.
01:45:06
I also read a 1995 Supreme Court decision that they pointed to
01:45:10
that they thought would hold this up that was actually
01:45:13
enacted by Democratic or democratically appointed Supreme
01:45:17
in Court justices. It was it was it was a them
01:45:20
decision, not an US decision. And I read that and thought it
01:45:22
was kind of veil. So I don't know what what the
01:45:25
president, I don't know how much power he has in actually it, you
01:45:28
know, getting the vote. What I did see though, this week
01:45:31
was he told the Justice Department stop focusing on
01:45:34
after this Epstein thing is done.
01:45:36
I want your focus to be on election fraud.
01:45:39
I want to expose that. I think if they go in that
01:45:42
direction and they get rid of, or at least they attempt to get
01:45:45
rid of the tax code, I think that's our best bet at keeping
01:45:49
2026. But you're going to have to
01:45:51
enact a nuclear option. You're going to have to go after
01:45:53
these nefarious actors, and you're going to have to do it
01:45:55
while we have the power. The fact is they're going to do
01:45:58
exactly that to us once they regain power, 100%.
01:46:01
So we got to codify as much as we can now to make it harder for
01:46:04
them later. Yeah, I agree with that George
01:46:07
comments. I hopefully we get past the
01:46:13
Epstein stuff and go to election integrity.
01:46:17
I mean, he's been posting all the election videos about, you
01:46:20
know, showing stuff where it's stolen.
01:46:22
And I mean, look at this stuff. Just, you know, where they
01:46:26
finally, we knew. We all knew this by the way, I
01:46:28
know you guys knew we all knew this about Arizona, about
01:46:31
Georgia. But yet, look, it's 2025.
01:46:34
That election was in 2020. If we don't get nothing fixed,
01:46:39
there's no next election trying to take something to court.
01:46:43
They'll just take so long to even get through the court
01:46:46
system, if it even allow it. But they didn't look at any 2020
01:46:51
case. They didn't allow anything to go
01:46:52
to court. They shot everything down based
01:46:54
on precedents. Well then.
01:46:56
Who's a large jurisdiction? So then who the fuck supposed to
01:46:59
fight it then? Yeah, it doesn't matter.
01:47:03
People don't. If you realize it, hold on.
01:47:05
If you realize it, when someone's voting for a Senate in
01:47:08
Georgia or Congressperson, yes, it affects us in New Jersey or
01:47:11
in Colorado, because whatever a person wins and whatever they
01:47:14
vote for can affect everybody as a whole in this whole country.
01:47:17
So yes, it matters. But.
01:47:20
Well, it's the plate there's. No.
01:47:22
If there's no election integrity, if nothing gets done,
01:47:24
Trump tried to do executive order.
01:47:26
And you know, of course, the Democrats brought the court and
01:47:29
you have a Democratic judge shoot it down this and that
01:47:31
voter Idi mean Christ, we need ID buy cigarettes, alcohol, get
01:47:35
on a plane. I don't even know what else what
01:47:38
else You need ID probably for some, but you don't need an ID
01:47:41
to vote. I mean how?
01:47:42
How dumb is that? Well, and then and then you've
01:47:46
got the Democrats issuing IDs and Social Security cards to
01:47:49
illegal immigrants that that didn't go through the process,
01:47:51
didn't come here legally through any manner.
01:47:53
You know it's ever been set up before.
01:47:55
If JD Vance's, if he is smart, him and Rubio and whoever, they
01:47:59
should be getting on Trump right now to get on the DOJ and start
01:48:02
getting shit done because it can affect them for 2028, it can no
01:48:08
matter what. You guys are on Editor's Picks,
01:48:10
by the way. You're on.
01:48:12
You're 4 rows down. I just noticed you're on
01:48:14
Editor's Picks. Yeah.
01:48:14
We're like, we're like in the first row earlier.
01:48:17
Yeah, You know that Editor's Picks, it's the, that's the
01:48:20
prime real estate they're talking about on Rumble for the
01:48:22
audience. If you guys don't know that,
01:48:23
that is the real estate course, the big, big window is the is
01:48:27
the beachfront real estate. That's the beachfront real
01:48:30
estate. And then there's the rest of us
01:48:31
that are living back in the suburbs.
01:48:34
But that is what matters. Of course, you've got to get the
01:48:36
views, you've got to get the impressions.
01:48:37
Well, listen, I know we ran way over first.
01:48:39
Mike, I wanted to thank you so much.
01:48:41
I'm sure we could have many of these discussions in the future.
01:48:44
Now, let me say this to the audience or our audience.
01:48:46
If you're not following Mike Schwartz, clearly, if you've
01:48:48
never seen him before, now you know why.
01:48:51
Now you know why I've told you to go over there and follow him
01:48:54
Because he's, he's one of the truth tellers out there, highly
01:48:57
intelligent and articulate guy that's well spoken and does his
01:49:01
homework, does his research. Even when he's too busy playing
01:49:03
baseball, he's still doing the time.
01:49:05
Even when he's not going on his honeymoon.
01:49:08
He's doing the work when nobody else.
01:49:10
He's doing the the heavy lifting when nobody else wants to do the
01:49:14
heavy lifting. And that's why I say you want to
01:49:16
support him. Get on social media, follow him.
01:49:19
So Mike, first of all, thanks for coming on the show.
01:49:21
I know it was last minute. We kind of broke we kind of
01:49:24
broke rank. I was going to go into all the
01:49:26
wildfires and you know, all the AI and the all the cringe videos
01:49:31
were fun yeah. But I but I really enjoyed this
01:49:34
conversation. I didn't mind.
01:49:35
And going off script with you is always very easy because you're
01:49:38
so well read. So first of all.
01:49:39
And I apologize for this morning, but you guys are coming
01:49:41
on Friday now you confirmed. I'll wait for that e-mail like
01:49:44
we got the e-mail this morning. Don't worry about.
01:49:46
It stop it. No, Friday's a little different.
01:49:48
The night show is very, very, very different.
01:49:50
It's laid back, kind of like this.
01:49:52
We can talk about whatever you want to talk about.
01:49:54
My morning show is very structured.
01:49:56
And then of course, we're. Trying to say we're not
01:49:58
structured here in a big main show.
01:50:00
No, I don't know I was saying compared to my night show, my
01:50:02
night show is like just like a free for all.
01:50:05
We can go in any direction that we can go, which that's what I
01:50:08
like about you guys, cuz you can you can talk about anything.
01:50:11
My my day show. I I plan out and I have a, a guy
01:50:14
in the chat, Hastusa and I haven't had any sound issues in
01:50:16
two weeks. So all of a sudden he says it in
01:50:18
the chat and jinxed me and all the sudden like 5 you.
01:50:22
Know it's funny people don't recognize sounds the toughest,
01:50:25
George, We're not. We had a sound issue down in
01:50:27
West Palm Beach it. Was just had to change because
01:50:31
it was different in a mixer and had to change different
01:50:33
settings. I didn't realize.
01:50:34
Road mixers, you would think it would be relatively easy.
01:50:36
We have the road Pro down there and we have the Road Duo up
01:50:39
here, you know, in New Jersey and over here.
01:50:42
I use a Zoom for my my audio interface.
01:50:45
I use a Zoom H8 so but you know, look at at the end of the day,
01:50:50
I'm, I'm looking forward to Friday.
01:50:52
If we get the link, of course we'll be there.
01:50:53
We love doing the stuff and, and I want to do more stuff.
01:50:56
We're talking about stuff for the audience.
01:50:57
Mike and I are trying to figure out a plan with George of how
01:51:00
we're going to do something that maybe is more, more an
01:51:04
opportunity to grow on Rumble and locals.
01:51:07
I don't know where that's going to lead us.
01:51:08
It's a, it's a work in progress. So I just want to tell you guys,
01:51:12
we, we want you to have an amazing night tonight, but be
01:51:14
safe. You never know.
01:51:16
Situational awareness. I'm going to say this.
01:51:18
There are a lot of nefarious actors here in the United States
01:51:21
right now. And my concern always when I go
01:51:23
out, I'm the one that's always the watcher.
01:51:25
I'm keeping eyes on everything because of my background.
01:51:27
And I'm always the one looking around because you never know.
01:51:29
Pay attention. You already saw a bunch of these
01:51:32
potential attacks getting stopped by the FBI.
01:51:35
If you see something that looks not Greg or your gut is telling
01:51:39
you, listen to your gut reported immediately.
01:51:42
Don't take any chances. So be safe tonight when you go
01:51:44
out or you're spending time wherever you're at.
01:51:47
So that's my number one set of homework.
01:51:50
And of course, don't forget to follow subscribe rumble rant
01:51:53
tips. Always appreciate paid
01:51:55
subscriptions. 5 bucks a month supports the show.
01:51:59
Those follows repost the short in the long form.
01:52:02
George is going to put out short form.
01:52:04
Find these guys on TikTok. I'm not on TikTok, but George is
01:52:08
Doctor Schwartz is. You can find us also on Gab,
01:52:12
Getter True Social and of course, our primary home base
01:52:16
where our biggest counts are over on X under Lance Miliaco, G
01:52:20
Valentin, the big Ming show. Mike, what's your handle on X?
01:52:23
At MJ Schwartz 1. Hey, so get over there and
01:52:26
follow Mike. You're going to want to do that.
01:52:28
He's got a lot of great stuff coming up this year and more,
01:52:31
more to come. George last words and then give
01:52:33
Doctor Schwartz a chance for his last words.
01:52:36
No, Mike, you go first. Last word.
01:52:39
Happy New Year. That's it.
01:52:40
Last words. All right, good one.
01:52:42
All right, all right, Doctor. I'm going on a honeymoon with
01:52:46
George. He's going to shop around.
01:52:48
God, that'll be. If Kelly's got a hot friend for
01:52:50
me, I'm going then that's all you got to say.
01:52:52
I already told her bring pictures for Friday's show
01:52:54
potential candidates. She's like, I need more info on
01:52:57
you. I'm like, what fucking more info
01:52:58
do you need? Look at me.
01:52:59
You see my views and stuff. Anyway, Mike, thanks for coming
01:53:03
on. It's always a pleasure.
01:53:05
Everybody have a safe happy new year.
01:53:08
Be vigilant if you're going out, stay safe, watch out for drunk
01:53:11
drivers and don't drive. If you're drinking, take an
01:53:13
Uber. It's easier.
01:53:15
It's cheaper in the long run. Cheaper, right?
01:53:17
A lot cheaper. Love you guys, I'll see you next
01:53:20
year. Peace I.
01:53:23
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