Small Business Is America w/ Tiffany Cianci |EP423
The Big Mig ShowNovember 20, 2024
423
01:36:1488.11 MB

Small Business Is America w/ Tiffany Cianci |EP423

THE BIG MIG SHOW 

NOVEMBER 19, 2024 

EPISODE 423– 7PM

 

Tiffany Cianci, Former Children’s Special Needs Educator turned Small Business Advocate, “our next guest/Tiffany Cianci,” has spent the last four years fighting for small business protections in the Courts, Before the FTC & Congress and more recently On the Campaign Trail. She wants to ensure the new Trump administration protects and advocates for small businesses.

On Air Bio: She is a small business leader and expert whose story RFK Jr. called "the most egregious case of lawfare against a small business owner he's ever encountered." She is pushing hard to ensure that small businesses are genuinely represented in Trump’s economic team and agenda.

RFK Jr. called her "the poster child for the risk Private Equity poses to small businesses in America."

 

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00:00:00
All men are. Created equal that they are

00:00:02
endowed by their Creator. With certain unalienable rights

00:00:08
by liberty. If liberty means anything at

00:00:15
all, it means right to tell people what they do not want to

00:00:19
hear. And you know this show, if

00:00:50
liberty means anything at all, it means right to tell people

00:00:53
what they do not want to hear. Our plan is always to bring you

00:00:56
the facts, the sauce, the evidence, the truth, the

00:00:58
receipts, whatever you want to call it.

00:01:00
We don't care. We're going to bring you what

00:01:01
mainstream media does not. And we're going to focus on

00:01:04
making sure you know the stories that matter the most in the news

00:01:08
cycle. George Ballantine, my brother,

00:01:10
how are you, man? I'm good, I guess.

00:01:14
You know, hanging in there, another day, another dollar.

00:01:17
I don't know. You seem like you seem like you

00:01:18
had one of those days, man. Are you in the mood?

00:01:19
What's going on? In one of those like weeks, I

00:01:22
don't know what's going on. If I knew what was going on, I

00:01:24
would tell you, but I really don't.

00:01:25
Well. I want to start off like O ES.

00:01:28
We'll talk about that more. George, we get the show going,

00:01:30
but I want to start off by let's thank our sponsors, of course,

00:01:33
SAT 123.com, sat123.com. We appreciate the support.

00:01:37
SAT phones, just so we're clear, are not as expensive as people

00:01:41
think anymore. They're much cheaper than a cell

00:01:42
phone. Even the service has gotten

00:01:44
inexpensive and with World War 3, seems like we're on the cusp

00:01:48
of it. Seems like Biden is going to

00:01:49
leave us a parting gift or a parting shot before he leaves,

00:01:53
which isn't really that great. You might want to have a SAT

00:01:55
phone or a bivvy stick. That way you can communicate

00:01:57
with your loved ones. They've also got Faraday bags

00:01:59
and all kinds of other stuff. You may not know what a Faraday

00:02:02
bag is, but if there is EMP, you're going to need one because

00:02:05
otherwise your electronics are going to be fried.

00:02:07
Of course, Mike Sadler will be on this coming Monday.

00:02:10
Original Glory beer, American Pilsner, American Light and

00:02:14
their new product Cheer. You can see it in the small thin

00:02:17
cans over there. Flavored light beer products.

00:02:20
Pretty interesting. And obviously one of their big

00:02:22
pushes and they're still doing that crowdfunding for the

00:02:25
brewery, so they want to go national.

00:02:27
That's one of their big plans. So check it out in the chat and

00:02:30
let them know what they want to participate.

00:02:32
And of course, Genesis Gold Group, we're talking about the

00:02:35
prepper bar. Now, gold and silver may become

00:02:38
ever more important if there is a kinetic event like nuclear

00:02:42
war. I'm not saying that with humor.

00:02:45
I just can't even believe we're having to have this discussion.

00:02:47
This is the 62.2g Prepper bar. They come in gold and silver.

00:02:52
They're minted and made in the US incredible easily breakdown.

00:02:56
They're very thin. They'll fit in your wallet.

00:02:58
They're perforated into three different dominations fitting a

00:03:01
multitude of needs. And this is all about whether or

00:03:03
not your currency is going to be in a good.

00:03:04
Now of course, gold and silver, whenever there's instability, go

00:03:08
through the roof. There's lots of reasons the

00:03:11
military applications for silver are bigger than ever.

00:03:14
And of course, the Samsung EV technology, another one where

00:03:17
major amounts of silver are being used.

00:03:19
So head over to the bigmickbar.com.

00:03:21
That's right, thebigmickbar.com Holidays are right around the

00:03:24
corner. You definitely want to grab a

00:03:25
few of these for the stocking stuffers.

00:03:27
George would like them in gold only.

00:03:28
He's telling me he's restricting all his wants in gold.

00:03:33
And I'm sorry, George. And, of course, that QR code

00:03:35
that George put up there, Easy. Take a photo of it.

00:03:38
Save it for later, before the show.

00:03:39
We do not want you to go anywhere, that's for sure.

00:03:42
All right, wait, wait. Yeah.

00:03:44
Bring me off a piece of that prepper bar there.

00:03:47
We go, oh man, I'm telling you right now, we are we are angle

00:03:52
that George loves to bring every single show.

00:03:55
George, I think you better stick to your career as production.

00:03:57
I'm not sure music is in the. Future never said listen, I

00:04:00
never said I was a musician, a singer, nothing.

00:04:02
No. Are you sure?

00:04:03
But you know, I ain't got all the gadgets right now to make my

00:04:06
voice better. George, you ever do karaoke?

00:04:08
That's all I wanted to do. You ever do karaoke?

00:04:10
Yeah, I don't care. You think I care what people

00:04:11
think? No, I don't.

00:04:14
I actually don't. You think someone was going to

00:04:15
come up and actually make fun of me?

00:04:17
Good luck with that. Before we fire up our guest

00:04:20
tonight, I want to start with a couple of set the moves now

00:04:22
listen and we could bring, why don't we bring Tiffany on for

00:04:24
this? Let's you.

00:04:26
Want to bring her on for the of? Course I am.

00:04:28
Come on, you got to bring our paisana.

00:04:30
Fellow Italian, hold on, come on.

00:04:33
Welcome to the big big show. Tiffany Siante Case at each.

00:04:39
What's going on? So Tiff, her voices.

00:04:41
We obviously talked about it before.

00:04:43
I wanted to verify you were talent.

00:04:44
I thought you were. I didn't think there was any

00:04:46
chance you weren't. Of course the our she couldn't

00:04:48
have. Married to an Italian guy with

00:04:50
an Italian name and she's. Not our followers and

00:04:52
subscribers anointed themselves the big, big mafia.

00:04:55
That wasn't us. They've decided that that was

00:04:57
their moniker. So you know, not now you're one

00:05:01
of the one of your you're their friend of ours.

00:05:04
So and. Your grandmother would be proud.

00:05:06
It's it's exactly. But I'm not sure.

00:05:09
You know, my, my, my grandfather was the one of the he opened up

00:05:12
one of the first 3 Italian restaurants in New York.

00:05:15
They came there on Ellis Island. So they came in legally, unlike

00:05:18
many people now. Did your parents, did your

00:05:21
grandparents immigrate to here? So we actually came over.

00:05:24
My earliest ancestors that were from Italy were the Dominicis

00:05:27
and they came as prisoners in the 1568.

00:05:33
Wow, that's crazy. And when you were 1568, you

00:05:35
said? 1568 was the first landing we

00:05:38
have. Look at that.

00:05:39
Wow, you were way back there. You, you definitely beat us

00:05:42
here. All right, We have this thing we

00:05:44
brought you in just because you had a cake.

00:05:45
We have this thing called Set the Mood.

00:05:47
Some of them are motivational. Sometimes you're funny.

00:05:49
Today we've got a motivational 1 and we have one that is, I don't

00:05:53
know, it just cracked me up. Somebody did you know AI is out

00:05:56
of control. Somebody decided to make an AI

00:05:58
music video to a couple of guys, all their cats that rap.

00:06:02
Let's go ahead and fire it up, George.

00:06:04
No, no, we're going to do set mood 1st and then we'll do that.

00:06:06
We got the guy here. No matter what you do, you're

00:06:08
going to be judged. I've said this 10 times.

00:06:11
I'm going to say it 10 more. No matter what you do, you're

00:06:13
going to be judged. If you're fat, people are going

00:06:15
to say you're lazy piece of shit.

00:06:16
If you're jacked like me, oh it's just all steroids.

00:06:20
If you're rich, you're a snake oil salesman.

00:06:22
If you're poor, you're lazy, undisciplined.

00:06:25
Here's the thing man, No matter what the fuck you do in life,

00:06:28
people are going to judge you. If you drive a a Rolls Royce or

00:06:32
a Honda Accord, people are going to judge you no matter what you

00:06:34
do. So why don't you just do the

00:06:37
shit you want to do? Why don't you quit worrying

00:06:40
about what people are going to say and do the shit that you

00:06:42
want to do? God put ideas in here and

00:06:45
passion and here for you to execute on.

00:06:47
Man, people are going to judge you no matter what, so you might

00:06:52
as well do the shit that you want to do the things that make

00:06:55
you happy. I like that dude.

00:07:00
That's how that's how I live. What I said to you before you

00:07:03
think I care what people think. Well, you know, I think at the

00:07:06
end of the day, I think we're in that kind of a situation even

00:07:09
more than ever. I think people are so overly

00:07:11
critical. You know, we streamed an event

00:07:16
over on Rumble and all our other channels today, Tiffany, and it

00:07:19
was about human trafficking and child trafficking and a bunch of

00:07:21
people that have been on our show, JJ Carroll, Tara Rodas and

00:07:25
others testified in front of the subcommittee about it.

00:07:29
And what I thought was interesting is rather than being

00:07:31
focused on what's needed to help the people and the children, and

00:07:36
I think many of them lost their lives, whether to organ

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harvesting or sex trade or in route or they were handed off to

00:07:43
cartel members. And this is proven by

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whistleblowers. They came directly out of our

00:07:47
federal government. I was intrigued to watch

00:07:49
Congress and the Republicans wanted to talk about the facts

00:07:53
and the evidence, and they wanted to know what they thought

00:07:55
the solutions would be and who was responsible.

00:07:58
And, and again, you know, on this show, we go after both

00:08:00
sides of the aisle. Let me be clear.

00:08:01
In my opinion, we don't defend the Republicans if they're

00:08:04
wrong, and we won't defend the Democrats if they're wrong.

00:08:06
We go after everybody. But the Democrats were so busy

00:08:10
pointing out negativity about the whistleblowers trying to

00:08:13
collaterally attack them. And I just, I, I couldn't help

00:08:17
but sit there thinking, you know, what happened to

00:08:19
government, for the people, by the people.

00:08:21
And I know some of what we're going to cover today on the show

00:08:23
with you. I don't want to dig in yet, but

00:08:25
I know a lot of that's what we're talking about.

00:08:27
And I find it just incredible at this point.

00:08:29
And now we have this new administration coming in which I

00:08:31
believe they're putting together a dream team cabinet.

00:08:34
I don't love every single pick, but I probably love 8085 or 90%

00:08:37
and that's the most of a cabinet pick situation where I've ever

00:08:41
liked the people because we've had Cash Patel on the show,

00:08:44
we've had many others that are in his cabinet and I'm sure

00:08:47
we'll have many more on hopefully.

00:08:50
But I, I just always think it's, you know, he's right.

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At the end of the day, people are always going to critique

00:08:54
you. And the, the truth is, I think

00:08:55
what matters is what you do when nobody's watching.

00:08:58
And I wish our Congress members would focus on that versus

00:09:02
spending a bunch of time undermining each other and under

00:09:05
and, and lying to the American public.

00:09:07
It's just disgusting because when I listen to it, and again,

00:09:09
the only reason I point out the Democrats, not because I don't

00:09:11
think the Republicans are capable of this, it's because I,

00:09:14
I just saw the Republicans doing today, the Democrats doing it

00:09:17
today during this hearing, George, I don't know if you

00:09:19
watched any of that hearing, if you had time, because I know you

00:09:21
were busy, but it was disgusting.

00:09:23
And they're talking about children that have had their

00:09:25
organs removed and then and then people in the US have benefited

00:09:29
from it. They were on the organ list,

00:09:30
probably buying the organs on the black market or paying

00:09:33
somebody. And just man, it was a tough

00:09:36
listen. But it was also to watch these

00:09:38
people in Congress. They really anger me.

00:09:40
But before we fire up, I love AI and you know, I love rap.

00:09:45
I don't know if that's a good combination.

00:09:46
AI and rap might be a bad thing. I love both.

00:09:49
Now, the the guys rapping in this are a group that George and

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I listened to a while ago. He's too older guys.

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I think they're in their 60s. That rap in the UK, Terrible.

00:09:58
But they're serious. You know who they are, right?

00:10:00
OK. Who they are?

00:10:02
OK, everyone on TikTok knows who they are.

00:10:04
Man, are those guys dope. We got to admit they're.

00:10:06
Great. They are so great.

00:10:08
I want to have them on the show. I need to get a hold of those

00:10:09
guys. If you can reach out to them,

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you have a decent account on TikTok.

00:10:12
I'm not on TikTok. I need those guys on this show.

00:10:14
I really want to have them come on.

00:10:15
But somebody took one of their songs and they made this

00:10:18
incredible AI and I have to say, it put a smile on my face.

00:10:22
Maybe for all the wrong reasons. Everybody knows I have an effed

00:10:25
up sense of humor. It's probably a little bit

00:10:28
corrupted in its own way. George, let's fire this up.

00:10:31
I'm laughing already 'cause I already know it's coming.

00:10:33
Real quick, before we do that, you were talking about the

00:10:35
hearing. Did they mention a big, big show

00:10:37
today in a hearing? You know, man, I didn't get to

00:10:39
watch all of it. I watched pieces of it.

00:10:42
But I would listen to Tara Rodas.

00:10:43
And then I had to hear these Democrats attack her, her, her

00:10:47
and JJ Carroll. And they're 2 great Americans

00:10:50
that have come out. JJ Carroll served in our our

00:10:52
Border Patrol for 25 years and he left because he just couldn't

00:10:56
do what they wanted him to do. He couldn't become a criminal

00:10:58
and just allow all these criminals in the country said I

00:11:01
can't Beaver for this. I can't do it.

00:11:03
Tara Rhodes, the same thing. She became a whistleblower told

00:11:06
them that like there were homes where a cartel was operating the

00:11:10
home and they were literally dropping off 100 kids and

00:11:13
supposedly these are supposed to be their significant family

00:11:15
members getting these kids who has 100 kids getting dropped off

00:11:18
and went home. She pointed that out and all

00:11:21
they could do was talk about the the Democrats can only do talk

00:11:24
about them negatively instead of saying we really appreciate, you

00:11:27
know, you guys being honest and we're going to get on top of

00:11:29
this. It was all just garbage.

00:11:31
And I I'm so sick of those sons of a bitches in Congress.

00:11:34
I really am. I'm sick of them.

00:11:35
And, you know, I believe that every day they're committing

00:11:38
treason and seditious conspiracy against United States citizens

00:11:41
in that country. I don't mean to cut you off, but

00:11:43
I it just has if they mentioned the show and we're going to go

00:11:45
to this. Yeah, you know, man, I might be

00:11:47
a little emotional about that today.

00:11:48
If you might have not. Bring it up again because I'm

00:11:51
pissed off because I feel about human trafficking and child

00:11:53
trafficking. I know.

00:11:54
Me too. Yeah, here we go.

00:11:55
I'm. Swinging quicker than Federer, I

00:11:58
serve packing the bass bang on the regular and I'm going to

00:12:00
tell her she sing for me. Sing bang.

00:12:02
Your mother's hooked on the packs.

00:12:03
I'll be selling her. I'm not saying I feel instead

00:12:07
with the lead like a mukbang. The magazine made me lean when I

00:12:10
walk in the drumstick making that bang like a company popping

00:12:13
the camera banging me crossword up and in the western I'm

00:12:16
banging the push further couple of cans in the puff of me.

00:12:21
The big bucks I'll be looking big distressed to kill Mama got

00:12:33
me I'll be. The bigger the bigger, the

00:12:40
bigger the. Penguin.

00:13:21
The big bucks I'll be looking to kill Mama got me up in a realist

00:13:38
pole position at the fella running the distance I'll be.

00:13:40
Banging up, banging the giving a trip.

00:13:42
The bigger the bigger the bigger the and I'll be with me.

00:13:51
The word puffing the Benson pushing her back the full stack

00:13:54
like a benching, giving the fish scale that's like a Penguin

00:13:57
flipping the chicken. My pills.

00:13:59
Why fucking benches? Oh my wishing.

00:14:00
I've been puffing the peace puffs on the free fires to the

00:14:03
things for the seaside on my tail lines, in the seams of my

00:14:05
levers, with a stick figure and a Nicki Minaj.

00:14:20
That's funny. You know, AI is a trip.

00:14:23
I mean, it's just going to get better and better and better.

00:14:25
At some point we won't know the difference.

00:14:27
So Tiffany, you know, you sent me over by I just want to talk

00:14:30
about. So just for the audience, so

00:14:31
they know who you are. Former children's special needs

00:14:33
educator turned small business advocate.

00:14:37
And of course, you spent the last four years fighting for

00:14:39
small business protections and the courts before the FTC in

00:14:43
Congress and more recently on the campaign trail.

00:14:46
I I know your plan is to ensure that new Trump administration

00:14:49
protects and advocates for small businesses.

00:14:52
You know, you got connected with RFK, I'm not sure exactly how.

00:14:56
And obviously developed a close, close relationship here.

00:14:58
And he gets it. I watched some of your interview

00:15:01
with him and he really doesn't understand some of the most

00:15:05
egregious cases of law fair that are against small business

00:15:07
owners, against, you know, Americans.

00:15:10
If anybody knows big pharma, it's him.

00:15:12
And you know, you're the poster child.

00:15:14
His exact quote was that you are the poster child for the risk

00:15:17
privity equity poses to small businesses in America.

00:15:22
You're an expert in many fields. I don't know your real

00:15:26
background. What got you started?

00:15:28
Right now you've got a big account over on TikTok, 200

00:15:32
across all platforms, 175 on TikTok, and it looks like you

00:15:36
get 2 to 500 views for your broadcast interviews of

00:15:39
political candidates in your series.

00:15:41
So good views. I mean, we're all, we're all

00:15:43
fighting for that. You know, right now you're

00:15:46
streaming to George. What are we streaming now?

00:15:47
Because I know we changed recently.

00:15:48
Why are we doing streaming to 8 now or 9?

00:15:53
Minus the two twitters form, I don't know.

00:15:59
Yeah, that's not like 7:00 or 8:00 right now, 6.

00:16:03
Yeah, we're using. Combination.

00:16:04
I should have my TikTok stream to TikTok right?

00:16:06
Yeah, Restream support's been kind of iffy for George and I,

00:16:09
so we've made some changes, but we'll be translating this into

00:16:13
25 different languages. Closed caption.

00:16:15
So what got you started? Everybody has an epiphany moment

00:16:18
or just said enough of this bullshit.

00:16:20
I can't sit on the sidelines. I've got to make a difference.

00:16:23
Mine was. They made a monster of me.

00:16:26
I didn't. I didn't wake up one day and

00:16:28
say, wow, I really don't want to work with the babies I work

00:16:31
with. I really don't want to just be

00:16:33
here with the special needs kids that I teach.

00:16:36
I was a small business franchise.

00:16:39
Before that, I had worked for a senator for years and my husband

00:16:42
was going through law school and he got a job with the feds and

00:16:45
told me I could stop traveling all the time and I could go back

00:16:48
to my roots working with kids and I could stop working so

00:16:52
much. And so I went and bought a

00:16:53
franchise working with kids thinking I can settle down, be

00:16:57
with my children. This will be amazing.

00:16:59
And no sooner did I finally get my business successful that

00:17:04
COVID hit and I was in the county with the second longest

00:17:08
closures for children's recreation in the United States,

00:17:12
which was awful. My business was shuttered by

00:17:14
force for over 17 months and right when we went to open, our

00:17:21
entire franchisor had suffered greatly because businesses were

00:17:24
shut down and they were acquired by private equity and hostile

00:17:28
takeover. What kind of business was it?

00:17:31
It was a a brand called the Little Gym.

00:17:32
I taught it. It was a kids gymnastics.

00:17:34
Oh, the little gym, Yeah. Where we specialized in babies

00:17:37
and toddlers specifically I worked, I was an automatic

00:17:41
referral for the infants and toddlers program for kids with

00:17:43
delays in my county. So that was really what we

00:17:46
focused on. That was where about 80% of our

00:17:47
referrals came from, where kids that were having challenges and

00:17:52
so. You're a good soul with a good

00:17:53
heart then. Nobody gets into this business

00:17:56
because we want to make money. You get into this business

00:17:58
because you want to make a difference.

00:17:59
And when the private equity firm that took over at that point was

00:18:05
most of the stake held by them was the Ross Perot backed equity

00:18:09
firm. And then immediately they did

00:18:13
what private equity always says, which today is a really

00:18:15
prescient day for us to be having this conversation because

00:18:18
today, one of the last bastions of franchising that was holding

00:18:22
out against private equity, Cave and Jersey Mike's sold to

00:18:26
Blackstone. Wow, that's one.

00:18:30
Of the. Last franchisors that was

00:18:32
protecting their franchise. Jersey Mike's great Subs.

00:18:35
They've got one here, George. They've got a couple of them

00:18:37
here. They're really, they're very

00:18:38
popular here in Colorado. Jersey, Mike.

00:18:43
That's a problem. Private equity goes into

00:18:45
businesses that were established in the right way and the amount

00:18:48
of leverage they have. And then the other thing is what

00:18:52
I don't like is that they use different forces in media to

00:18:56
undermine somebody. Now you ended up on the cover of

00:18:59
the New York Times, New York Post, you on Robert RFK Podcast,

00:19:04
Washington Magazine, Breaking Points, The Dallas Morning News,

00:19:08
BBC, Fox News, New Nation, ABC, and I mean the list just goes on

00:19:12
and on and on. The The funny thing is, I'm sure

00:19:15
prior to the to the stuff where you were really exposing them

00:19:18
for what they're doing, How much did you get attacked?

00:19:21
Because I know that's one of their strategies where they have

00:19:22
to go and they have to attack you, whether it's name calling

00:19:26
or act like you're something that you aren't, whether they

00:19:29
say you're a bad person or you're a drug trafficker or

00:19:32
you're a Christian nationalist or you're manga you.

00:19:34
Should mention that. Oh, let me hear it, Let me hear

00:19:37
it. Let me guess that I hit one on

00:19:38
the head. I was the president of our

00:19:40
franchise association union, so all the small business owners

00:19:44
had a union to protect our interests in negotiations with

00:19:47
our corporate office. When they took over, they wanted

00:19:49
to break up our union. They had done it at multiple

00:19:52
organizations before ours when they took over, and their method

00:19:56
had always been consistently to target leadership.

00:19:59
I was the elected president of our union and they immediately

00:20:02
targeted me. The day that we notified them

00:20:06
via attorneys that we would not sign the new contracts, they

00:20:08
were demanding that we would not capitulate to giving them more

00:20:11
money than our contracts allowed. 24 hours after they

00:20:14
found out, they terminated my contract and then immediately

00:20:18
set to work trying to discredit me.

00:20:19
They sent letters to every member of our union saying that

00:20:22
I was abusing children, that I was abusing my employees, that I

00:20:26
was abusing my customers. They sent 6 letters to the New

00:20:30
York Times saying I was running a drug trafficking ring from my

00:20:33
baby gym. I ended up winning my defamation

00:20:37
case against them, but not before they destroyed our union

00:20:42
because they had their chief legal officer, a man named

00:20:44
Steven Polizzola, send the first round of letters.

00:20:47
And most of these people that own these little gyms, they're

00:20:50
humble people. They come from a background as

00:20:53
high school athletes or as former gymnasts.

00:20:55
Most of them don't have advanced degrees.

00:20:58
They don't know much about the legal world.

00:21:00
I happen to be married to a federal attorney, so I know a

00:21:03
lot. But when a lawyer sent those

00:21:05
letters to them, many of them thought a lawyer couldn't lie to

00:21:08
them. Lawyers can lie to you all they

00:21:10
want. They just can't lie to the

00:21:11
judge. They can say whatever they want,

00:21:15
as long as they're willing to. Be our legal system is tricky.

00:21:18
It's a slippery slope. I'm sorry.

00:21:19
George no, that's OK. So just from people understand

00:21:22
their statement that lawyers can lie, Most your politicians are

00:21:25
lawyers. Enough said.

00:21:27
That's it, you know. The legal system for the

00:21:30
unsophisticated are people that haven't been through the system,

00:21:33
good or bad. It's a complicated playing

00:21:37
field, and the truth is that people are very confused by what

00:21:43
they believe their attorneys are doing, especially if you're

00:21:47
dealing with federal criminal prosecution.

00:21:50
Defense counsels, in my opinion, are.

00:21:54
The difficulty comes if they're in a market they're in, let's

00:21:56
say a market in New York or New Jersey or anywhere.

00:21:59
They normally have half a dozen or six or seven or eight cases

00:22:03
going at the same time. And these people all play poker

00:22:06
together, They all go golfing together, they all go to events

00:22:09
together. And behind the scenes.

00:22:11
The truth is, is that the negotiation doesn't necessarily

00:22:15
have to do with good law. It has to do with how many cases

00:22:19
you're going to negotiate because you're going to plea

00:22:21
them out because the truth, most of these, these defense counsels

00:22:24
that go in, they file a bunch of what I would call cookie cutter

00:22:28
motions. And then the prosecutors filed

00:22:31
their motions for their replies. And the truth is often in those

00:22:34
replies, the majority of the law that's quoted is misquoted,

00:22:38
altered, manipulated or otherwise.

00:22:40
So when you think about small business owners, they are ill

00:22:43
prepared for slandering libel cases, which obviously they

00:22:47
committed both against you. I can't imagine they should have

00:22:50
paid. You know, you should have been

00:22:52
able to put them out of business is what should have happened.

00:22:54
That's the kind of relief you should have relieved.

00:22:56
But it's hard enough to get a court to award, you know, legal

00:22:59
fees and court costs even when they're wrong, even when you

00:23:03
want to win on summary judgement.

00:23:04
It's it's disgusting. So go ahead from there because I

00:23:07
can't imagine what a bunch of bastards trying to act, you

00:23:11
know, and here's the other thing that the media allows them to

00:23:14
spoon feed them this garbage and they go ahead and push it out.

00:23:17
Oh, she's running a drug ring. It's a drug cartel.

00:23:20
It's the baby Jim drug cartel. You know, go ahead, Tiff.

00:23:23
I have to say, first of all, I would have given anything to

00:23:27
have been in a federal courtroom.

00:23:29
What most people don't understand is that almost every

00:23:31
franchise and well, every franchise in America has a

00:23:34
mandatory arbitration clause. And arbitration is a terrifying,

00:23:38
dark, horrifying place. Every American, every small

00:23:42
business owner, but every American is beholden to no less.

00:23:45
If you have a cell phone in your hand and 60 arbitration

00:23:48
agreements, 99% of people don't even know they've signed.

00:23:52
They don't know they've agreed to you, which is forfeiting your

00:23:54
right to a jury or a judge. And arbitration in the United

00:23:57
States is a cartel. There are two organizations that

00:24:01
handle 99% of the cases. And as a result, what you have

00:24:05
is this massive institution that is reliant on repeat business

00:24:11
and everyday small business owners are not repeat business.

00:24:14
The private equity firms and the franchisors are repeat business.

00:24:17
You know, just if I want to stop there for me, just for the

00:24:20
audience, because some of them might not, might not know what

00:24:22
binding arbitration means. Can you explain the dangers of

00:24:25
it just so the audience gets it 'cause there might be some that

00:24:27
know it, but I just want to make sure they understand what we're

00:24:29
talking about. There've been two very big cases

00:24:32
recently talking about arbitration that affects

00:24:34
everyday Americans. One man's wife died at Disney

00:24:37
Disney World due to an allergy. It was Disney World's neglect,

00:24:42
allegedly that caused it. And when he went to sue them in

00:24:45
court, Disney World and Disney Parks alleged that because he

00:24:50
had signed up for Disney Plus two years ago for a trial, he

00:24:54
had committed to arbitration, waiving his right to a jury or

00:24:58
judge, going to a secret mediation style courtroom where

00:25:03
no one can hear what's happening, where there's no

00:25:05
public record of it. And they went to court and

00:25:08
eventually Disney Parks due to massive public pressure,

00:25:12
withdrew. But they were going to win that

00:25:14
case. This just this month Uber was

00:25:19
getting sued because passengers were T boned in one of their

00:25:22
cars due to the fault of their driver, and Uber argued that

00:25:26
because their 12 year old daughter had ordered a pizza on

00:25:29
Uber Eats six years earlier, they were beholden to an

00:25:34
arbitration agreement. And Uber won their case.

00:25:38
And then there was an appeal. The appellate court is where

00:25:43
it's headed right now. But Uber won a case that a 12

00:25:46
year old could sign a contract forfeiting their parents rights

00:25:49
to a judge and jury as guaranteed by the Constitution

00:25:51
of the United States. Arbitration is a place where it

00:25:55
was It was created with the best of intentions and immediately

00:25:58
bastardized and manipulated by corporations where you go and

00:26:03
they tell you it's a cheaper way to get through a court case and

00:26:05
it's not as cumbersome. My case was over $10 million

00:26:09
between the two parties, so it's not cheaper, I promise.

00:26:15
I I have a question. Yeah, you're saying because

00:26:18
these people signed up for the subscription of Disney Plus for

00:26:22
TV and they went to actual the physical park, something

00:26:26
happened there and because they signed up for a subscription to

00:26:29
watch something on TV that correlates to Disney going there

00:26:33
physically? Not even a subscription.

00:26:36
He signed up for a two week trial and never signed a

00:26:38
contract described. Oh my God.

00:26:40
So wait, wait, wait, I'm laughing.

00:26:43
How does that? Ludicrous.

00:26:44
How does how does signing up for Disney Plus even the trial?

00:26:50
So in the United States, Roberts, particularly on the

00:26:53
Supreme Court, has been extremely pro arbitration

00:26:56
because the court systems are overburdened and arbitration

00:27:00
offloads millions of cases a year from their dockets.

00:27:03
And so what's happened is over the last 20 years, almost every

00:27:09
single case that has come up to the Supreme Court challenging

00:27:11
the validity of an arbitration agreement has been upheld and

00:27:14
the Federal Arbitration Act's been expanded.

00:27:17
It should never be that you sign up to watch TV and you are

00:27:21
waving your right to go to a park, which has very, very

00:27:25
different, like risk factors, very different things that you

00:27:30
would be agreeing to. It shouldn't happen.

00:27:32
But in the United States, it is happening right now.

00:27:36
Another great example, people signed up to go get a massage at

00:27:39
Massage Envy, another franchisor that's private equity owned

00:27:43
Massage Envy. There were 180 women that were

00:27:46
sexually assaulted or raped there.

00:27:48
And when they signed in on their app to sign in for their

00:27:51
massage, it had an arbitration agreement.

00:27:53
They never saw a confidentiality agreement.

00:27:55
They never read a non disparagement clause, they never

00:27:58
noticed, and they were not allowed to go to court over

00:28:02
being raped. And what ended up happening is 3

00:28:05
brave women broke their agreements, risked being sued by

00:28:10
this big private equity firm, went to the press, and a law was

00:28:13
just recently passed saying that now it's unlawful to enforce an

00:28:17
arbitration agreement in cases of sexual harassment or assault.

00:28:20
But when I you know. It's interesting.

00:28:22
I got to make a comment. First of all, for everybody out

00:28:25
there, Massage Envy is one of those places you pay one fee a

00:28:28
month for supposedly unlimited massages at different levels,

00:28:31
blah, blah, blah. So if you don't know the

00:28:32
business. But what I think is interesting

00:28:34
is that you would think that a contract entered unknowingly,

00:28:39
unintentionally and involuntarily would be a

00:28:42
contract that you could easily break because it's a contract

00:28:44
based on fraud number one. Number two, what I think is

00:28:48
intriguing is that if you're using in a case, especially a

00:28:52
case of assault and rape, if you're using a contract, knowing

00:28:57
that you had previous issues with that contract, meaning that

00:29:01
a rape occurred in 2019 and you knew that you'd use that

00:29:05
contract to hide A felony or hide the information.

00:29:10
By making sure these people are under NDA that they can't

00:29:13
disparage Massage Envy, you would think that that contract

00:29:17
would not only be void, but it would be considered a concurrent

00:29:19
criminal enterprise because you're committing misprisons of

00:29:22
a felony. So you're basically hot.

00:29:25
You're, you're basically doing a contract because you know some

00:29:28
people are getting assaulted. So you make sure you keep the

00:29:30
contract in force. It happens again in 2020.

00:29:33
The first one happened in 2019. I believe that a smart attorney

00:29:37
could make the Nexus to say this is an operation that's running a

00:29:41
concurrent criminal enterprise because they're running a

00:29:42
criminal entity that's committing crimes and they're

00:29:45
using contracts to manipulate the public and not allow the

00:29:48
public to know what's going on to their own benefit.

00:29:52
And obviously the proceeds would be criminal proceeds.

00:29:54
Again, it might be a stretch, but to me, you know, that's just

00:29:58
disgusting. I just, I, I, I don't know how

00:30:00
they could be any more offended by that, you know, you know, but

00:30:04
this is our system. To be honest with you, I think

00:30:07
our federal and state legal system needs such a major

00:30:10
overhaul. I'm not sure we can save the DOJ

00:30:13
at this point because of the way they're operating.

00:30:14
I agree with you, honestly. As I said, my husband's a

00:30:17
federal attorney. Federal.

00:30:20
Prosecutor of Federal Defence. No, no, no.

00:30:22
He works in intellectual property.

00:30:23
He does indications on like treaty stuff and not that kind

00:30:27
at all. But one of the hardest lessons

00:30:30
that my husband and I have learned in this, nobody else

00:30:32
could have fought the fight I fought.

00:30:34
Most people don't have the resources.

00:30:35
They don't have legal people surrounding them is that you

00:30:38
only get the justice in this country you can afford.

00:30:40
And let me tell you, for my husband, he believed in the

00:30:43
legal system. He went to law school because he

00:30:45
wanted to make a difference. He wanted to do good work.

00:30:47
Many, many have. And.

00:30:49
Found out the hard way, huh? And so horrifying to learn

00:30:52
there's a direct correlation of what you just said and small

00:30:55
business and how small businesses are being impacted by

00:30:58
private equity and arbitration because criminal enterprise

00:31:01
right now, the same private equity firm that I've been

00:31:03
fighting is called Unleash Brands.

00:31:05
They are owned by Seidler Private Equity which is the same

00:31:08
private equity firm that owns the pub the Padres.

00:31:11
They also own a brand called Premier Martial Arts.

00:31:15
Premier Martial Arts is a brand that created a fake business.

00:31:19
Fake financials, fake demographics, fake federal

00:31:24
disclosure documents. None of it was predicated on

00:31:27
real business models and they sold. 700 ish is the number I've

00:31:32
been given. 700 territories in a year that almost none of

00:31:36
actually opened. And of those that did, like 90%

00:31:39
have gone out of business. Almost all of these people were

00:31:42
veterans or moms. So, you know, moms and veterans,

00:31:46
OK, they were defrauded and almost all of them were

00:31:49
convinced to take out a type of a loan called a Robra.

00:31:52
Now, most people don't know this exists.

00:31:54
It's like a laundering scheme from the SBA to these private

00:31:57
equity firms. So they take these Robras out,

00:32:00
which is a loan from the SBA backed by their retirement.

00:32:04
Now, in a bankruptcy, the only things that are protected from

00:32:08
anybody touching them is your retirement accounts and some

00:32:11
equity in your home, unless you have a Robra.

00:32:14
So what happens is these private equity firms convince these

00:32:17
small business interested parties that they're going to

00:32:20
triple their money. They were promising 40% returns

00:32:22
in two years. You're over just astronomical

00:32:26
numbers in. The possible an impossible

00:32:29
number, especially for a business just starting out.

00:32:31
But they were federal. Documents and you say Robra,

00:32:33
it's ROBRA. That's the type of loan.

00:32:36
Yeah, or I'm. Completely unfamiliar with those

00:32:39
so let me guess, you sign the Robra and then your Social

00:32:43
Security, your IRA, your 401K are all vulnerable to paying

00:32:47
back the entire amount of the Robra?

00:32:49
Correct. And so in this instance my.

00:32:51
God. These people have nothing left

00:32:54
to go to bank bankruptcy to save.

00:32:56
They have no money left to hire lawyers.

00:32:58
They have no nest eggs. And so in this instance, right

00:33:01
now, there are like 200 franchisees, these small

00:33:04
businesses that are falling victim through vast amounts of

00:33:08
fraud from Unleashed Brands, the same company I've been fighting,

00:33:12
and they went and filed Rico charges.

00:33:14
They filed Rico charges in Tennessee State court, Tennessee

00:33:18
District Court, and they said, listen, this was a vast fraud

00:33:21
conspiracy. We have people recorded saying

00:33:23
we knew you weren't going to make any money and we sold it to

00:33:25
you anyway. We have recordings from people

00:33:27
at their corporate office saying we knew these were lies and we

00:33:30
did it anyway. Now, is that a state?

00:33:32
Is that a state racketeering case or federal?

00:33:34
So they went to a state racketeering case and we went to

00:33:37
the DOJ and the FTC. So there's civil and there's

00:33:39
criminal. So we took these Rico charges to

00:33:42
the state courts and we filed them and immediately, even

00:33:45
though these 240 ish people got together to try to pool their

00:33:49
resources because they've already lost every, they were

00:33:53
immediately said Nope, you got to go to arbitration, you have

00:33:55
to pay individually and the judges wouldn't even look at the

00:33:59
Rico charges. They're making them all right

00:34:02
alone. I believe that what you could do

00:34:04
at that moment would be to file against the judges as Co

00:34:07
conspirators because they have an obligation in a racketeering

00:34:10
case. Because if there's any belief

00:34:13
that a racketeering or a current criminal enterprise happened or

00:34:17
you know, or criminal conspiracy, of course,

00:34:19
concurrent criminal enterprise, if they in fact identify that

00:34:22
that's even a possibility, that means the entire institution and

00:34:27
everything they've ever done becomes vulnerable.

00:34:30
Because if they committed the first case, let's say they

00:34:32
committed their first case of racketeering in 2018.

00:34:35
And now this case is filed forward that you know that the

00:34:37
fruit of the prizes tree doctrine and and everything else

00:34:40
you could look along that path would prove that since all of it

00:34:43
was obtained through concurrent criminal enterprise, all the

00:34:46
proceeds are vulnerable. That means the entire company.

00:34:48
So the fact that the attorneys did that, now I could have seen

00:34:51
the state court saying you've got to go talk to the federal

00:34:53
court because it appears to us that you're correct about what

00:34:55
you're saying. And they're we're not the right

00:34:58
jurisdiction to hear this. We're not the right venue.

00:35:00
You have to go to federal because these people are in

00:35:02
multiple states, right? So that's when the commerce

00:35:04
cause comes into play and you have to look at it from a state

00:35:07
thing. Unfortunately, other contracts

00:35:08
have forums and it's all forumed in Tennessee.

00:35:12
Wow. They, they, so that's another

00:35:15
thing that these large corporations are doing to

00:35:17
exploit small businesses is that they form the law in all of

00:35:20
their contracts in one of three or four states where there are 0

00:35:23
protections for small businesses.

00:35:25
Arizona, Texas, Tennessee, Arkansas, everything is housed

00:35:30
in those four states because they favor big business and

00:35:33
private equity. And they absolutely demolish

00:35:35
small businesses in the court system right now in the United

00:35:38
States. It is a fact that you are more

00:35:41
likely to be struck by lightning than you are to succeed in any

00:35:47
forced arbitration against a major corporation.

00:35:49
That is a factual statistic. Less than 1% in a court case,

00:35:53
you'd be almost 40%. Man.

00:35:58
It's a cartel. It, it, it is a cartel and it's

00:36:01
a criminal cartel because they're, they, they, they

00:36:03
knowingly are putting you into a business that they are, they are

00:36:07
confirming and like you said, you have audio phone calls that

00:36:10
they know you're not going to make money.

00:36:13
So that, that, that's completely against what the franchise

00:36:15
company is supposed to represent.

00:36:17
Obviously they're supposed to have a proven business model

00:36:19
with proven advertising and proven assets.

00:36:21
And they're going to put so much money into the campaign to

00:36:24
advertise you nationally. And that's the benefit of being

00:36:27
a franchisee because otherwise, what would the benefit be if

00:36:30
that company isn't going to support you from beginning to

00:36:32
growth to maturity, you know there isn't any value.

00:36:36
So you know your thoughts here and and, and I want to watch

00:36:39
because I know George, you want to take a short break.

00:36:41
I know we ran over there on the break there's.

00:36:44
Break happens when I say happens when.

00:36:46
We come back, we're going to talk about maybe what the

00:36:49
solutions are. What do you think the new

00:36:53
obviously administration and cabinet have in mind for this?

00:36:56
Hopefully this is one of the places it's going to take a real

00:36:58
beating. I'm not a big fan of the SBA.

00:37:00
We'll talk about when we come back here with Tiffany Yate

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00:39:12
They would run up to the bamboo fence and they would be shooting

00:39:16
between the bamboo at the buildings, you know, just

00:39:18
shooting inside. The Wanted man is Joseph Kony,

00:39:22
charged with abducting huge numbers of children, forcing

00:39:26
them to kill and mutilate innocent victims.

00:39:29
Somebody had to pay the price. Sam did that.

00:39:32
Sam Childers never stopped because the.

00:39:35
Bad things never stop. There is only one Sam, children.

00:39:38
There is no one else like him in the world.

00:39:41
And I said to him, I said, would you go now to get Kony in the

00:39:45
Congo? He says, without a doubt, in a

00:39:47
second. Now it's the DRC.

00:39:48
Tell us what's happening to children in the DRC.

00:39:51
You have ISIS there, you have Islamic State and you have ADF.

00:39:55
Hey, Sandy. Joseph Kony's still alive.

00:39:57
He's in the Congo. And now God has me in the Congo,

00:40:01
you know, So hopefully we'll meet up one day.

00:40:04
But maybe I can lead him to the Lord or send him there, One or

00:40:08
the other. Huh.

00:40:23
All right, welcome back to the Big Big Show here with your host

00:40:27
George Balancing, Lance Migliacho and our special guest

00:40:31
Tiffany Ciante. Now, normally I do with my

00:40:34
Genesis Gold read, but I'm not going to do it because I can't

00:40:37
believe what my ears just heard what Tiffany the story she's

00:40:41
telling me and I'm truthfully, I I'm having a hard time how to

00:40:46
react with this. It's it's effing pissing me off.

00:40:50
I just can't. I can't believe it, Tiff, I

00:40:52
mean. And Tiff, before you jump in, I

00:40:55
just, I just want to tell the audience, I want to make sure

00:40:57
you guys, I know, I know we kind of jumped in and I want to make

00:41:00
sure this story is tracking well.

00:41:01
You have to really grasp what we're talking about.

00:41:04
Anybody in small business, we're talking about our own

00:41:07
government, state governments not helping small businesses and

00:41:11
putting things in place that I believe are part of the whole

00:41:15
money laundering dirty business operation that is our state and

00:41:19
federal government at this point.

00:41:21
Meaning that they're setting you up for failure so these big

00:41:24
equity firms can clean up. And of course, what do they do

00:41:27
then? They paid campaign

00:41:29
contributions, they joined lobbyings, they create super

00:41:33
PACs to assist the politician they know is friendly to them to

00:41:37
help. So Tiff, I'm going to let you

00:41:39
jump in from what? Just to make sure the audience

00:41:41
understands how really miserable these people are.

00:41:46
When we were on the break, I mentioned that one of my biggest

00:41:50
goals in the new administration is to get a law passed that

00:41:54
makes it so that arbitrators, which are the substitute judges

00:41:58
people are forced in front of, have to follow the law.

00:42:01
Because right now they don't have to follow the law.

00:42:03
Right now, arbitration is a bastion of dirty politics,

00:42:07
disgusting like backroom deals and repeat business.

00:42:11
It is biased in its nature because arbitrators are judges

00:42:15
you have to pay for. My arbitrator, I had to pay

00:42:18
$27 a week to be in front of.

00:42:20
And if you can't afford that, you don't get your case heard.

00:42:22
Whereas if you were in a courtroom, you'd, you'd get to

00:42:25
go for free. And because of that, they rely

00:42:28
on the repeat business of these big private equity firms,

00:42:31
bringing the small businesses in there one after another after

00:42:33
another. And in an effort to keep them

00:42:37
coming, they let them get away with just about anything,

00:42:40
anything abusive they want to, anything miserable.

00:42:43
In my case, I ended up on the cover of the New York Times.

00:42:47
And in retaliation for that, five days later, while I was

00:42:50
going through a very difficult pregnancy and I was on bed rest

00:42:53
in the process of a possible miscarriage, they filed motions

00:42:58
demanding that the judge order me to schedule an abortion I did

00:43:02
not want, that was Catholic, I didn't want an abortion.

00:43:06
And they filed a motion demanding that not only that I

00:43:08
be required to schedule it, but that I be required to schedule

00:43:12
the fastest abortion available in the state of Maryland.

00:43:16
And they even went so far as to call my lawyer and say they had

00:43:18
checked with Johns Hopkins and made sure there was

00:43:20
availability. And our arbitrator did nothing.

00:43:27
They asked while I was in labor and refusing to go if they could

00:43:30
come and depose me bedside while I was in active labor.

00:43:35
And then they threatened me and my lawyer and stopped copying

00:43:39
our arbitrator and said if I didn't schedule the abortion by

00:43:42
7:00 PM, that they would file a $20 sanctions motion against

00:43:47
me and that I could not afford to fight.

00:43:54
Yeah. And our arbitrator took no

00:43:57
punitive action to their conduct.

00:43:59
I did. To me, in that case, seems to me

00:44:06
like they're responsible for a homicide and it seems like they

00:44:13
should be charged for that. Now they filed in Arizona, which

00:44:16
is one of the only states in the United States that has a law

00:44:20
preventing the coercion of an abortion.

00:44:22
It's criminal. And I went to Arizona, to their

00:44:25
commissioners and begged them to file charges against the lawyers

00:44:28
for the coercion of an abortion. And they said because I was a

00:44:32
Maryland resident, I was not entitled to do so, even though

00:44:36
they used an Arizona court proceeding to do so in the state

00:44:38
of Arizona, originating in the state of Arizona.

00:44:41
Maryland doesn't have that law. And I tried.

00:44:45
But again, Arizona's laws are tailored to favor big business.

00:44:50
They don't rock boats for big business.

00:44:52
They are the number one location for private equity to see their

00:44:56
low, their corporations. Texas is second.

00:45:01
And yeah, I agree it was criminal and I tried to get them

00:45:05
to press charges and they could not be bothered.

00:45:08
I mean, this is just horrific. It's it's, you know, if you

00:45:11
weren't sitting here and somebody told me that story, I

00:45:13
would think it's physically impossible that that occurs.

00:45:16
And in no way am I questioning your integrity.

00:45:19
I would just have to sit there and go under what, you know,

00:45:22
what planet are we under that some law firm is filing

00:45:27
documents, trying to force somebody to have an abortion

00:45:31
simply because they're fighting her.

00:45:33
And, you know, and of course, her case in court, the

00:45:36
consequences for that. You know, my opinion is that

00:45:39
people like that should have an expedited meeting with God and

00:45:42
let God sort them out. But it's hard for me because the

00:45:47
legal system is a dirty cesspool of cheating and lying.

00:45:51
And it doesn't matter whether you're involved with the

00:45:53
arbitrators. You know, I think we've got so

00:45:55
many flaws in this system. I think absolute immunity is one

00:45:59
of them. Qualified immunity is another

00:46:00
one. Lifetime appointments is another

00:46:02
one of them. And they operate so extra

00:46:05
constitutionally and unconstitutionally and above the

00:46:07
statute. You know, this should have been

00:46:10
something where you could have immediately noticed the court

00:46:12
that this arbitrator wasn't defending your position.

00:46:15
And in my opinion, jurisdictionally, Arizona didn't

00:46:19
have that right. It didn't matter whether you

00:46:20
weren't an Arizona resident. That corporation was operating

00:46:24
within Arizona jurisdictionally. And when they filed that

00:46:26
document, the jurisdiction of Arizona took over because,

00:46:31
again, you had supposedly agreed to arbitration, binding

00:46:34
arbitration, and that means you agreed to the jurisdiction of

00:46:37
Arizona. So in my opinion, Arizona's

00:46:40
ruling on that was incorrect. But it's too late.

00:46:42
A life was lost, and these people should pay the ultimate

00:46:46
price for that, in my opinion. If I was a judge in Arizona, I

00:46:50
would charge them with homicide, all of them.

00:46:53
And I would incarcerate them with lifetime sentences for

00:46:55
their egregious misuse of the legal system to attack somebody

00:47:00
on such a personal level. And you know, you've got a story

00:47:03
in here that goes on here that they hired a, a guy that had how

00:47:06
many felonies? 88 felony charges for forgery,

00:47:10
counterfeiting, assault, escaping police custody to

00:47:13
assault a witness in his case and.

00:47:16
What did he do for them? What was what was he hired to

00:47:18
do? He forged affidavits that they

00:47:21
submitted to a court. In it they they filed like 7

00:47:24
this. Is the law firm hired a guy with

00:47:26
88 felonies? Yep.

00:47:28
DLA Piper, the second largest law firm in the United States,

00:47:31
hired a man named Joseph Michael Horton, who has 88 felony

00:47:34
charges, 13 years hard prison time out on parole.

00:47:37
His charges were all for counterfeiting and forgery.

00:47:40
And they needed affidavits that said we had been served a new

00:47:43
court case they had filed that they strategically and

00:47:46
systematically changed my address on 44 documents in so

00:47:50
that they would get a default ruling against us for $2.3

00:47:52
million and the. Default judgment is one of the

00:47:57
worst things, right? Because those default judgments,

00:48:00
they act like they served you. You don't even know the case was

00:48:02
done. Some guy tries to come to the

00:48:05
house to collect his fee or to your business.

00:48:06
He can't find you. So he just says, oh, she wasn't

00:48:10
willing to take it. I just threw it in the door.

00:48:12
They don't have any proof that you were ever served, you know,

00:48:14
which was valid service, which for anybody that hasn't been

00:48:16
through that, they hire these process servers.

00:48:19
Most of them are scumbags. Some of them are OK.

00:48:22
And then, and then if they can't get you with that, then they

00:48:23
hire sheriffs in cities to serve people.

00:48:27
And then if they and a lot of times they'll act like they

00:48:29
served you when they didn't. And that's how they get the

00:48:31
default judgement. And then you have to prove to

00:48:33
the court that you were never served, correct?

00:48:35
And at the end of the day, in an arbitration case, I assume they

00:48:38
just ignore the fact that you say you were never served, I

00:48:41
assume correct? So in this case, this was the

00:48:44
third case they filed against me.

00:48:45
This was in a court in Arizona and they systematically changed

00:48:50
our address on 44 filings so we would never find out about it

00:48:54
and they got a $2.3 million default judgement against us for

00:48:57
attorneys fees. 43543 false address claims You know I if it

00:49:04
wasn't for George getting mad at me I I want to use the F bound

00:49:07
about go. Ahead.

00:49:08
I don't care. I, I mean, I literally, I know

00:49:11
he's going to have to go back and edit it.

00:49:13
I just, you know, these, these mother effers, you know, I

00:49:17
really, really feel like these are some of the worst of the

00:49:19
worst. And the scumbag law firms that

00:49:22
participate in this kind of behavior don't care who they

00:49:25
are. They should be taking a task and

00:49:27
be honest with you. If I, if I was a federal

00:49:29
prosecutor, I would go after these guys for racketeering,

00:49:32
concurrent criminalization, Rico, and I would take their law

00:49:34
licenses and I would make sure all of them face jail time.

00:49:37
But this is the this is the issue.

00:49:39
We have the American people, the American small business owner.

00:49:42
And you tell me if I'm wrong. Tiffany and George, we've

00:49:45
discussed this more than once. I don't feel like we have

00:49:48
anybody to turn to that we can trust.

00:49:50
We don't. We don't you.

00:49:52
Know I don't feel like we can trust this FBI.

00:49:54
Well, we have the FTC, and right now, I'm going to be frank.

00:49:57
Lena Khan has done a very good job trying to take up this

00:50:00
mantle, but she has no allies like that.

00:50:03
Lena. Khan, does she get, if she

00:50:04
doesn't have the DOJ to bring the prosecution, you know, she

00:50:08
can do all the investigation. You know, George, I got to get

00:50:10
your comments on this because we've talked about this so many

00:50:13
times on the show. It bothers me because they have

00:50:16
all these hearings, right? Kind of like that hearing we

00:50:17
were talking about earlier. They had these hearings and they

00:50:20
had these committees and they, some of the Republicans stomp

00:50:22
their feeds and the Democrats just attack people.

00:50:24
And we expose the Hunter Biden laptop, we expose Burisma, we

00:50:28
expose human trafficking, or we expose the corruption within the

00:50:33
SBA or the Department of Justice or the DoD.

00:50:37
And then absolutely nothing freaking happens.

00:50:41
They go around, they get some press, they get up there and

00:50:44
make a public, we're going to have a meeting and it's Oh my

00:50:46
God, you won't believe it. We just and then nothing

00:50:48
happens. George, am I wrong?

00:50:49
I mean, I am so tired of these, these people and having no

00:50:54
consequences. They don't get shackled up

00:50:56
because I guarantee if it was you, Tiffany or George, they'd

00:50:59
already be hitting our house with flash bangs.

00:51:01
We'd be down on the ground and we'd get in Taser.

00:51:02
They're kicking the pets, you know, telling us that they had

00:51:05
to kill a couple of our pets because our 3 LB dog went after

00:51:08
them. George.

00:51:09
Rest in peace, Peanut. I was just going to say justice

00:51:12
for Peanut. Peanut and Fred, I mean, what

00:51:14
the hell? So are you kidding me?

00:51:16
They could have given the guy a ticket.

00:51:17
They got to go in and exterminate Peanut and Fred and

00:51:20
they got to act like Nazi Discopa Discopa Gestapo agents.

00:51:23
I had to say that three times. Gestapo agents.

00:51:26
And they literally went in and wrecked the guy's house.

00:51:29
And the guy is running an animal sanctuary.

00:51:31
He's using the revenue that he's got from Peanut and Fred coming

00:51:34
in on social media. They could have just given the

00:51:36
guy a ticket and said, hey, here's a ticket, Please go get

00:51:38
the license. We don't want to come back and,

00:51:40
you know, euthanize your pets. Just get the license.

00:51:43
We'll give you 3 weeks or four weeks to get it.

00:51:44
Just please do it. The guy would have done it.

00:51:46
I mean, he was trying to do the right thing, but they got to go

00:51:48
and do something shitty. George, go ahead.

00:51:50
Yeah, you can't sidetrack Lance Tiffany.

00:51:52
See what happens. All that kind of shit, you know,

00:51:54
I'm an animal guy. I'm a child guy.

00:51:56
I. Want to mute him?

00:51:57
I just muted him. Right, because I don't like

00:51:58
innocent victims at the end. I don't like freaking bullies,

00:52:02
George. I can keep going as long as you

00:52:04
guys can. Go no, no, we keep going.

00:52:06
But no. SO it's just like, all right, so

00:52:09
we have all these hearings, Lance, we're talking about that.

00:52:12
They waste a lot of taxpayer money.

00:52:14
Talk. Everybody talks a good game and

00:52:16
we get nothing. Unless you're, unless you're

00:52:19
conservative, you'll get like thrown in, you know, camp for

00:52:23
six months for defying a court order or something or subpoena.

00:52:26
Navarro. Yeah, but so all these people

00:52:30
now that Trump's putting in office and not in office in

00:52:33
positions, they all spoke up all saying you know what needs to be

00:52:37
done. If they don't, if the

00:52:38
Republicans do not pull together unity and get shit done, we're

00:52:44
done. This is our last chance.

00:52:47
And and they have they actually have less than two years to get

00:52:50
this stuff done, get majority of major stuff done.

00:52:53
And if they if. They get enough started, people

00:52:56
will reward them with keeping them in power, so we have two

00:52:59
years to get a lot going. Less than two years.

00:53:02
Big ticket items. But I do believe we could make

00:53:04
this a four year program. And you know, a lot like when

00:53:08
you say we don't have anywhere to go, you're absolutely right.

00:53:10
Right now, if you go and talk to Siri on your phone and you ask

00:53:14
her how many, what percentage of businesses in the United States

00:53:16
are small businesses? 99.9% meet the federal

00:53:19
definition for small businesses. 99.9% of the businesses in the

00:53:23
US are small businesses. Now, big corporations have been

00:53:27
eliminating jobs over the last 30 years.

00:53:29
They have created 0 new jobs. 98% of all creative jobs in the

00:53:32
United States over the last decade were small business

00:53:35
created jobs. And when you go and look to

00:53:37
Washington and ask who they're listening to, they're listening

00:53:40
to the billionaires putting the small businesses out of

00:53:42
business. They take the Chamber of

00:53:44
Commerce and they take Fran Pack.

00:53:46
These are like packs that began with small business interests,

00:53:51
were quickly captured by billionaires and Fortune 500

00:53:54
companies, and are in the ear of every single politician.

00:53:56
They're paying off and it is everyone, everyone.

00:54:01
And So what happens is you have a these politicians that have

00:54:04
plausible deniability. They've given themselves where

00:54:06
they go. I'm working for the small

00:54:08
businesses. I'm doing stuff for the small

00:54:09
businesses. I just talked to the folks from

00:54:12
Frampac. They told me so.

00:54:14
Fran Pack is captured by billionaires.

00:54:16
They're owned by the billionaires that are acquiring

00:54:19
the brands these small businesses are in.

00:54:22
They're, they're the, the Chamber of Commerce is owned

00:54:24
almost entirely funded by Fortune 500 companies.

00:54:27
They have no vested interest in seeing a small business, no.

00:54:30
They don't care. None.

00:54:33
It's all about just, it's all about image and money for

00:54:35
themselves. But so listen, they're all full

00:54:38
of shit. I just got to ask though,

00:54:39
George, let me ask this really quick and you can jump in.

00:54:41
But you testified in front of the US House and Senate, you

00:54:45
know, investigating committees, more of those, you know, let's

00:54:47
have some more committees. Did you, did that do anything?

00:54:51
Is it doing anything? Is it, is it getting any kind of

00:54:54
action where some people are going to face consequences for

00:54:57
this bullshit? Actually thought we were making

00:55:00
good progress with the Small Business and Entrepreneurs

00:55:02
Investigative Committee and the Menendez got caught for bribery

00:55:05
and Ben Cardin was removed as the chair and sent a tip to

00:55:09
cover him in international affairs.

00:55:11
And as a result, we're starting over.

00:55:13
In Senator Mendez, yes. Oh yeah, he's from my state.

00:55:16
Yeah, well, Cardin was from my state and he was the chair of

00:55:20
the committee and unfortunately he had to leave the committee to

00:55:24
go and take over in the International Affairs committee.

00:55:27
So now you're starting from scratch.

00:55:29
Yeah, so we're starting over the FTC.

00:55:31
What state? Is still giving me a lot of

00:55:34
hope. Now, one of the appointments

00:55:37
that that Trump has not announced is who's going to be

00:55:40
an FTC. My hope is that he's going to

00:55:42
keep Lena Khan there. We know that Gates likes Khan.

00:55:46
We know that Josh Hawley is a very big fan of Khan.

00:55:49
We know JD Vance said Khan was the one thing that Biden got

00:55:52
right, advocating for the little guy, the everyday working

00:55:55
American and small businesses. I, I hope that we're not

00:55:58
starting from scratch there because we have no one in

00:56:01
government. There has not been an actual

00:56:03
small business advocate on the National Economic Council since

00:56:06
George senior and it's 99% of the businesses in our country,

00:56:13
98% of the created jobs in our country and there is nobody

00:56:17
speaking for them in our federal government, Nobody.

00:56:20
I hope I'm going to be that person.

00:56:23
Well, it sure would be nice if they, if you were the expert

00:56:26
they deferred to on every talk topic.

00:56:28
I don't know what that would mean.

00:56:30
That would mean assistant secretary to Small Business

00:56:32
Administration. I don't know exactly where that

00:56:34
would put you, but you know, we've got a dirty house.

00:56:37
Wait. And and the problem is cleaning

00:56:39
those people out. I'm sorry, George, go.

00:56:40
No. No.

00:56:41
So you just mentioned something about.

00:56:43
So are you going to be working in administration?

00:56:45
We, we nobody, Our listeners haven't heard anything.

00:56:48
I I'm interested in working the administration.

00:56:50
I've been saying since we didn't know who was going to win, that

00:56:52
I would answer either's call, either camp's call.

00:56:55
I have been asked to submit my paperwork.

00:56:59
I've been asked to submit my interest.

00:57:02
And so I'm in that process now. I am being ripped apart by

00:57:07
whether or not I want to target private equity or I want to

00:57:10
advocate small business. Advocacy matters the most, I

00:57:12
think, to the American people because I can advocate over at

00:57:16
the National Economic Council side, if we're able to get a

00:57:19
small business advocate on the National Economic Council, not

00:57:23
the Economic Advisory Council, that's three appointees and

00:57:26
they're all economists. But on the National Economic

00:57:28
Council, we have not seen an actual small business advocate

00:57:31
that wasn't a plant by a billionaire in decades.

00:57:34
And so I would really love to see that.

00:57:36
And I would really love to see, there's also a public affairs

00:57:39
liaison that is the voice between the administration and

00:57:43
small businesses back and forth. And that's another place I could

00:57:46
see doing good work. You got to do, we got to start

00:57:47
pushing, pushing her name and and what she's standing up for

00:57:50
on X, the Deutsche Dodge, whatever, you know.

00:57:55
Yeah, to the Department of Government efficiency.

00:57:57
You know, my take always is that regardless of people's

00:58:01
background, even people with felonies, in my opinion, I think

00:58:06
people that have been forged in fire are, are, are always the

00:58:09
best pick. The person that's already been

00:58:11
through hell and back is always going to be the best advocate

00:58:15
for people that maybe haven't had to head down that road.

00:58:18
You know, because people are naive to what's going on.

00:58:20
They really, they, they, they, what are their 7000 positions

00:58:24
that have to be filled under the Trump administration?

00:58:26
It isn't just cabinet positions. It's a major event.

00:58:29
They've got, you know, I, I was anonymously nominated to go into

00:58:33
the Trump admin. I don't know that anything will

00:58:34
come from it. But at the end of the day, I was

00:58:36
at least. I voted for it.

00:58:38
I feel, I appreciate that, George, thanks.

00:58:40
I felt, I appreciate the fact that somebody nominated me, that

00:58:43
they had confidence in me. I don't know that it'll go

00:58:44
anywhere, but I often think that it's so important to get people

00:58:48
that are on the ground. You've been in the fight from

00:58:50
top. You have suffered just some

00:58:52
awful consequences here, you know, and these people, you

00:58:56
know, they should face the consequences for their actions.

00:58:59
I don't care whether it's a law firm, a private equity firm.

00:59:02
I think the difficulty is, is that there's so much dirty money

00:59:07
funded from private equity firms through congressional members

00:59:10
that they're, there's so many ways with.

00:59:12
I just saw today that that rotten SLB Pence got a three to

00:59:17
$4 million two book deal. And I'm sure that's just to pay

00:59:21
him to keep his mouth shut. You know that Simon and Schuster

00:59:24
and also 36 of their brands. Yeah, the old, the old, the old

00:59:27
book deal, you know that and the and the obviously the lobbyists

00:59:31
and the foreign money and the dark money and the Super PAC

00:59:34
money. There is just so much bribery

00:59:38
and graph in there. And that's what my concern is.

00:59:41
You know, you're obviously would be a top pick for me to at least

00:59:44
run, you know, put somebody in there that's really going to

00:59:46
make a difference and then have you going, well, here's a big

00:59:48
problem. We better go after these people

00:59:50
because I always say this. I know there's lots of heads of

00:59:52
the snake. And people say to me, oh, well,

00:59:54
you know, you just chop off the head of the snake.

00:59:56
Another one will come up. Yeah.

00:59:57
But I'm going to tell you something that some of these

00:59:58
private equity guys got life for doing what they did to you with

01:00:02
this abortion. I guarantee some of those other

01:00:04
private equity guys will go, hell no, I'm not doing that.

01:00:07
I saw that guy just got a life sentence.

01:00:09
I think these guys need to really pay for this, what

01:00:12
they've done across the country, because I can't imagine how many

01:00:16
billions of dollars. Americans across the country who

01:00:20
got screwed by franchisees and got screwed by and what did you

01:00:24
call that COBRA? What is it called that loan?

01:00:26
Robra. Robra, I've never heard of that

01:00:29
before. I'm going to do some research on

01:00:31
it, but what a rotten, miserable type of a loan that it goes

01:00:35
after your retirement. And I just see the corruption in

01:00:38
these organizations. And I, I, I've never liked

01:00:40
franchising, to be honest with you.

01:00:41
Franchises have always kind of caught me as just too much of

01:00:45
it. It's kind of like the movie

01:00:45
business in Hollywood. Distribution is the big deal,

01:00:48
right? So paying the people for

01:00:49
distribution, they'll tell you, oh, we're going to need 3 or $4

01:00:51
million for advertising. And really they only spend 500

01:00:54
grand. That's the first 3 and a 2 1/2.

01:00:56
So when your movie starts to go, the first 3's got to go

01:00:59
back to pay the advertising, but yet they've never spent that

01:01:01
kind of money on advertising. They charge you $3 for

01:01:04
posters and the truth is they only spend 500 grand on posters.

01:01:07
That's how they get over on people that create movies.

01:01:09
They, they front load all kinds of expenses.

01:01:12
I know a guy that got into the movie industry that has a, a

01:01:14
crazy amount of money. He's a multi billionaire and he

01:01:17
just got screwed from end to end in the movie business.

01:01:20
And I and I, it's the same sense I have about these private

01:01:22
equity firms. They get away with so much and

01:01:25
the SEC has been so focused on trying to ruin the crypto

01:01:29
market. You know, Gary Gensler and he

01:01:31
doesn't pay attention to what's really going on in the actual

01:01:33
crimes and the FTC, I'll be honest, I, I just the FTC and

01:01:38
the FCCI just don't see them doing the work they should be

01:01:43
doing. They allow so much criminal

01:01:46
stuff to continue on. You know the.

01:01:48
FTC is overworked. They get like I, I, I hate to

01:01:51
like keep beating this drum, but they've called me into their

01:01:53
offices a dozen times. They have met with me over and

01:01:57
over and over again. And they have met with tons of

01:02:00
the victims at Premier Martial Arts.

01:02:02
They have met with Burger and victims, Burgerfi victims.

01:02:05
They are overextended because there is so much fraud, there is

01:02:08
so much corruption and they have a very limited budget, right?

01:02:12
But I will say that in this administration, for the first

01:02:16
time really in decades, we are seeing an FTC chair that is

01:02:21
actually putting, in my opinion, people first, everyday,

01:02:24
Americans 1st and small businesses 1st.

01:02:26
And we've not had that in a long time.

01:02:27
But I agree, there's so much more to be done.

01:02:29
That's why I hope her tenure doesn't get cut short.

01:02:32
I really. What do you think, George?

01:02:34
No, I got a question, 'cause we were talking about BlackRock

01:02:36
earlier. What about going after BlackRock

01:02:39
like for Monopoly? I would love to talk to you

01:02:42
about BlackRock. You want to know why we're never

01:02:43
going to go after BlackRock? And at Blackstone's we mentioned

01:02:46
earlier, but they were, they spawned Blackstone.

01:02:48
The reason we're never going to go after BlackRock is very

01:02:51
simple and it's absolutely corrupt, as corrupt as our

01:02:53
government gets. They own 82 percent, 82% them.

01:02:59
Vanguard and State Street own 82% of the S&P, 588% in some

01:03:04
cycles. And the reason we are never,

01:03:06
ever, ever going to go after them is because the people

01:03:09
tasked with governing them, with regulating them.

01:03:13
The entire federal pension, 81% of it is invested with

01:03:19
BlackRock. That means every single person

01:03:21
that has ever been a federal employee, every congressman,

01:03:25
every president, their pensions are all well, that.

01:03:32
That pretty much wraps that up with BlackRock, Larry, think of

01:03:35
them, have obviously the perfect situation.

01:03:37
Because if you did, you're putting at risk the future of

01:03:40
everyone who has ever worked for you and everyone who works for

01:03:43
you now as a legislator. And that is why they will never

01:03:46
be regulated unless we demand it.

01:03:49
And it would have to be a pretty, pretty united voice.

01:03:54
But that is wow. I mean, just, I think today was

01:03:56
it today, Lance said the DOJ wants Google to get rid of sell

01:04:02
Google Chrome I. Hope they do.

01:04:05
Well, Google's been manipulating everything from Chrome, all the

01:04:09
search engines stuff that you know, it's so obvious.

01:04:11
You go over to DuckDuckGo or Brave, and I'm not saying those

01:04:14
are perfect, but you go over there and you can see the

01:04:16
searches. When you type in a certain

01:04:18
search string, it's completely different.

01:04:20
And it's because the search strings over Google are

01:04:22
manipulated by what Google obviously only wants you to see.

01:04:26
With advertising revenue. Yeah, of course.

01:04:28
And the advertisers and the rest of it.

01:04:30
It's, you know, this is a tough situation.

01:04:32
So you you've been on RFK's show, you know, tell me.

01:04:36
I like RFKI, like him for a lot of things.

01:04:38
I like what Trump teaming up with him and Tulsi Gabbard and I

01:04:43
love Tom Holman. There's just lots of picks.

01:04:46
What's his position? You know, he's a smart guy.

01:04:49
He sees this for what it is. And I know he's got his own

01:04:51
fight with Fauci and Big Pharma. You know, what does he think the

01:04:54
solution is here is? Does he believe that Matt Gates

01:04:56
and others are prepared to go after these people in these

01:04:59
organizations and make them pay for what they're doing?

01:05:02
I think that he's very, very focused on HHS right now, which

01:05:07
I do know how he feels about private equity, which is that

01:05:09
it's abhorrent and he wants it regulated.

01:05:11
So I do believe that there's room at HHS to target private

01:05:13
equities acquisition and capture of healthcare.

01:05:17
But I know that if we're looking for an ally in this

01:05:20
administration that would help us to go after private equity

01:05:22
and lift up small businesses, RFK is absolutely that guy.

01:05:25
That's why I wanted it's. It's why I backed his campaign.

01:05:29
It's because I know for a fact he's the only one drawing

01:05:32
attention to these issues. He found me.

01:05:34
He read my articles. The New York Times called me one

01:05:36
night while I was doing dishes. Hey there.

01:05:39
It's Bobby Kennedy I'd really like to talk to.

01:05:40
You. Did.

01:05:42
You think it was him or some imposter?

01:05:44
At first, honestly, I, I had been at one of his rallies as a

01:05:48
member of the press, so I thought maybe it was like his

01:05:50
press office or something with my TikTok channel.

01:05:53
And that's how like I. Thought they were pranking you,

01:05:55
you know? You know, he's got a tough

01:05:57
voice. Although I did see a comedian

01:05:58
the other day do a really good impersonation of him.

01:06:01
But listen, Trump, like Trump said about RFK, as long as he

01:06:04
stays away from the oil, he can do what he needs to do.

01:06:09
Well, I really hope you know Matt Gaetz and Josh Hawley both

01:06:12
have big issues with with what's going on with private equity.

01:06:16
I can't say I know how JD Vance feels about private equity given

01:06:19
his relationship with Peter Thiel.

01:06:21
But what I do know is that he has supported what Lena Khan has

01:06:26
been doing, supporting small businesses and targeting the

01:06:28
tech giants. And so I do see a likelihood

01:06:32
that there is some alignment there and room to make a

01:06:35
difference in this administration.

01:06:36
One, in, in the regulation of private equity, 2IN advocacy and

01:06:41
giving small businesses an actual voice in Washington, DC

01:06:45
that they have not had for 30 years.

01:06:48
And three, hopefully in seeing a real change in, in making it so

01:06:53
at a minimum, forced arbitration has to follow the law.

01:06:56
I think there's, there's room in this administration to do an

01:07:00
immense amount of good with three directions.

01:07:02
I I can't say I can do all of it, but I believe that there's

01:07:05
room in this administration to do all of that.

01:07:07
You know, like we're talking about Gates.

01:07:09
Like those are big shoes to fill when he gets in.

01:07:13
He's got so much work to do. He's going to need to get some

01:07:17
heavy hitters helping him. Matt Whitaker.

01:07:22
Hear My husband's available for a transfer.

01:07:26
I like it. And he's probably, and he's

01:07:28
probably pissed off your husband, right?

01:07:30
The guy, your husband's fortune. I would say my husband is far

01:07:33
more than pissed off at this point, yeah.

01:07:36
Yeah, yeah. It's difficult, you know, you,

01:07:38
you look at this. But George, are they appointed?

01:07:40
Maybe I'm wrong here, but they haven't appointed the OIG yet,

01:07:44
have they? OIG and FBI?

01:07:46
Not yet. You know, so the Office of

01:07:48
Inspector General is going to be a big one because allegedly

01:07:53
they're the ones that are supposed to be overseeing a lot

01:07:55
of these organizations. And they're the ones that are

01:07:57
supposed to hold them to task when they find out they're not

01:08:01
doing what they're supposed to be, meaning that they're

01:08:03
breaking the law, operating unconstitutionally or violating

01:08:06
their charter or what their obligation is to, you know, keep

01:08:11
on top of the people that work for them.

01:08:13
And we've seen it over and over again.

01:08:14
I mean, the DOJ, these prosecutors are just rogue at

01:08:18
this point. The majority of them, I want to

01:08:19
say there's, I'm not saying there aren't any good ones.

01:08:21
I'm saying that many of them, I did this thing that I went into

01:08:25
PACER and I looked at criminal cases and I took replies from

01:08:31
prosecutors and I just did it across the country, just

01:08:34
randomly grabbed replies. And then I stuck them into a

01:08:36
couple of different AI analysis, you know, Chad, GBT and others,

01:08:41
and do legal analysis, LexisNexis, couple of them.

01:08:44
And I said once you review this reply from the prosecutor, the

01:08:48
federal prosecutor, I want you to tell me how many times the

01:08:50
law was misquoted, misapplied, misinterpreted.

01:08:54
Promotions, right? A judicial quote was changed.

01:08:57
How many times did they state a case and the case was not at all

01:09:02
what they said and how many times?

01:09:03
So I stuck like 20 cases in there and did that.

01:09:06
And in the 20 cases it. So in those cases, at least 30,

01:09:10
a minimum of 30% of the time the law was misquoted, and in some

01:09:14
cases 80% of the time. And then I went and looked to

01:09:17
see how the defence counsels replied because it was clear.

01:09:21
You could see they took a case. They even changed the judicial

01:09:24
quote or they just took EP search from the judicial quote,

01:09:27
making it seem like it said something that it didn't say.

01:09:31
And I asked how many times I took the defence.

01:09:33
They looked at the defence's replies and you know the defence

01:09:35
counsels never replied and attacked the prosecutors for

01:09:39
their misapplication and misquoting of the law.

01:09:42
Just too busy, Lance. Just too busy claims lawyering,

01:09:47
unethical lawyering. Let me let me say this, and I

01:09:50
say this really, really firmly. Big corporations, corrupt

01:09:55
agencies, corrupt regulatory bodies could not do bad things

01:10:00
without the assistance and the leadership of bad lawyers.

01:10:03
Unethical lawyers have paved the way through a hellscape of of a

01:10:08
corruption of our legal system. And that's actually me to say

01:10:11
married to one. But we do know it to be true.

01:10:15
Yeah, it's very well said. You know, Georgia, you can give

01:10:18
me your thoughts. I just, I think this system is

01:10:20
so, it's so broken that I'm not, I don't know if four years is

01:10:26
enough to fix it because the only way you're going to fix it

01:10:28
is, is literally just shut down certain organizations and then

01:10:32
recast the entire working staff. It doesn't mean that some of the

01:10:35
prosecutors can't reapply. I just don't know how you can

01:10:38
fix this. And especially maybe the FTC is

01:10:40
trying to do the work and maybe they don't have a big enough

01:10:42
budget. But when you're wasting so much

01:10:44
money back Ukraine and, you know, funding, you know what

01:10:48
both sides in Israel and Palestine.

01:10:50
And I just I'm tired of the kinetic events and I'm tired of

01:10:53
government waste. I do have high hopes like

01:10:55
George. George, what do you think?

01:10:57
Department of Government efficiency.

01:10:58
Can we fix this or is it too late and too much?

01:11:02
Government efficiency, well, they can definitely get rid of,

01:11:04
they can definitely get rid of a lot of stuff and, and save money

01:11:10
because there's just so much waste.

01:11:13
But as far as the FBI, the DOJ, the CIA, the NSA, that's a

01:11:19
battle. It's, it's going to take more

01:11:20
than four years to fix everything.

01:11:22
There's no doubt more than four years.

01:11:24
Amy K Nelson's case. Who?

01:11:27
Amy K Nelson. Never heard of her.

01:11:29
No, she was the CEO of a startup she founded.

01:11:32
Her husband was a real estate broker or like a real estate

01:11:38
brokerage negotiator that had a big contract with Amazon and

01:11:43
they had $100 million contract and the only way Amazon could

01:11:46
get out of the contract was if somebody in leadership at the

01:11:49
business was convicted of a felony.

01:11:51
Amazon hired like a dozen lobbyists that were former DOJ

01:11:57
prosecutors to go and lobby the DOJ to target the leadership at

01:12:01
this company and go after them and say they committed a felony.

01:12:06
Now, they didn't have any 'cause they didn't even give them any

01:12:08
evidence. They just said, hey, trust us,

01:12:10
trust us. The DOJ sent FBI agents into

01:12:15
this woman's house, guns drawn. Her four baby girls, one of them

01:12:19
two months old at the time, I think, were in the house, guns

01:12:22
drawn, raided their home, took her husband.

01:12:26
She, thank God, was a lawyer, just like I was married to a

01:12:30
lawyer. She was able to raise millions

01:12:32
of dollars to fight. She would not allow her husband

01:12:36
to take the many plea deals that were offered.

01:12:39
They ended up fighting in the DOJ and eventually said we never

01:12:42
had the evidence to charge. Nothing actually happened, but

01:12:45
not before seizing all of their assets, not before forfeiting

01:12:49
their home. Ruining their reputations.

01:12:52
And then to get their money back through the civil forfeiture, to

01:12:55
get it back, they had to give up 25% of it to the government for

01:12:58
handling the money. And like, this is just another

01:13:00
example of, like, our agencies are captured and the revolving

01:13:04
door of corruption that is taking people out of our

01:13:07
government, sending them to lobby groups and coming back in

01:13:09
is so toxic that if it is not stopped, yeah, it, it it's toxic

01:13:14
for small businesses. It is toxic for working

01:13:16
Americans. The only industries that are

01:13:18
being served are the 1% or even the 1% of the 1%.

01:13:22
And that is what Trump has promised to change.

01:13:24
That is what Bobby thought to change.

01:13:26
And I hope that we're actually going to see those changes being

01:13:28
made. You know, it's interesting

01:13:31
because 18 USC Code 241 and 242 deprivation of rights under

01:13:36
color of law. You, you would think that all

01:13:39
those DOJ members and all those people that were working that

01:13:43
brought the charges against Nelson and her family, they

01:13:46
would all face criminal charges. But there's where the old

01:13:49
absolute immunity kicks in. And there's why?

01:13:51
Because I always talk about this, the DOJ, the supervision

01:13:55
and the oversight, the OIGDOJ department, office of

01:13:59
Professional Responsibility, DOJ department, Penn publicly,

01:14:03
integrity Division, DOJ department, civil rights

01:14:05
division, DOJ department. And if you want to bring a

01:14:08
claim, you have to go file a tort claim and get approved for

01:14:12
the tort claim, even if you've been injured.

01:14:14
Let's say you've been unlawfully incarcerated.

01:14:16
Let's say they lied. They've committed Brady

01:14:18
violations, Giglio violations, constitutional violations,

01:14:21
misprisonage of felony, fraud on the courts.

01:14:24
They've done it all. You have to go ask if you can

01:14:27
bring a tort claim, which in itself is the most ridiculous

01:14:31
thing I've ever heard. And they don't file of, of all

01:14:34
these cases across the United States.

01:14:36
Like that one's egregious. You just told me there are so

01:14:38
many cases. Securus Technologies have been

01:14:41
eavesdropping on legal phone calls since 2006, and they've

01:14:44
been providing those phone calls to the DOJFBIDEAATF, lots of

01:14:50
cases all across the United States.

01:14:51
Your husband could go look this up.

01:14:52
Securus Technologies eavesdropping on legal phone

01:14:54
calls. But yet, because they're such a

01:14:57
big company and there's so much money involved, they're still

01:14:59
providing phone services for all pretrial detainees across the

01:15:03
country. And all these institutions,

01:15:06
these are people that haven't even been convicted yet and they

01:15:09
know that all these breaches have happened where the attorney

01:15:12
phone calls were turned over. And not once in literally

01:15:16
thousands and thousands of cases where those phone calls were

01:15:19
turned over. Have the Department of Justice

01:15:22
prosecutors ever notified the courts.

01:15:24
Hey, we have a problem. We received attorney-client

01:15:27
privileged communications. We got to stop here for a

01:15:28
minute. We have an issue.

01:15:30
Take these this back, clean them.

01:15:31
We need just we want to make sure there are not once have

01:15:33
they ever reported it, which in fact is a crime.

01:15:36
Not only are you committing wiretapping crimes, but my point

01:15:38
is in the case of Nelson's, all those people that said, oh, we

01:15:41
didn't have any evidence, they should all face criminal

01:15:44
charges. And that's my problem.

01:15:46
I think the prosecutor should be allowed to get their job.

01:15:49
But the only person in my book that gets absolute immunity is

01:15:51
God. That's it.

01:15:53
Qualified immunity. That's out the door.

01:15:55
If you want to do the job, if you want to work for the DOJ,

01:15:57
then follow the rule book because let's face it, 96 or 7%

01:16:02
conviction rate, any mathematician would tell you

01:16:05
that's physically impossible unless you're cheating.

01:16:07
I mean, if you walked in casino and said here's what I'm going

01:16:09
to do, I'm going to have a 96% percent or 7% win rate.

01:16:12
So just so you guys know, and they're going to tell you sorry,

01:16:15
when we're sure you're going to be cheating, you can't bet in

01:16:17
this casino. Yeah, it just this is the most

01:16:19
insane thing. And I hope that Matt Gaetz is

01:16:22
going to because look at what Tisha James is doing.

01:16:25
Look what she did in her case. Look what Judge Merchant did.

01:16:28
That was deprivation of rights under color of law.

01:16:31
We know that was fraudulently propelled by the Biden

01:16:33
administration. But where are the consequences?

01:16:35
What I want to hear from this, from this cabinet and from

01:16:39
Donald Trump. He made a comment the other day

01:16:41
and it made me uneasy when he said, oh, I'm not looking to get

01:16:44
even with people. I'm willing to give second and

01:16:45
third chances. No, there are no second and

01:16:48
third chances. It's time for these people to

01:16:50
face the consequences of their actions and I want to see that

01:16:54
this time. He said he was going to go after

01:16:55
Hillary Clinton. He said he was going to drain

01:16:56
the swamp Round 1. He didn't do shit.

01:16:59
So I'm looking for some answers this time.

01:17:01
I want to see these people face the same consequences that

01:17:04
American citizens would face if the roles were reversed.

01:17:07
I mean, George, your thought? And then we'll go to Tiffany.

01:17:09
Listen, I want to see action. I don't want to see no more

01:17:12
freaking clown show hearings, no more wasting our money.

01:17:15
I mean, let's go, let's start getting arrests.

01:17:18
Let's get accountability to get back to our Constitution.

01:17:21
It's it's simple. Let's not complicate it.

01:17:24
And you keep it freaking simple. Keep it simple, stupid.

01:17:27
That's what you got to tell him. But once again, no disrespect to

01:17:29
your your husband but lawyers always want to complicate shit.

01:17:33
I agree. They suck.

01:17:36
Yeah, they always want to, they always want to get the Evergreen

01:17:38
retainer. I don't know who came up with

01:17:40
that name. The Evergreen retainer maybe one

01:17:43
of the worst, you know, ideas in the practice of law.

01:17:47
And then they come up with these cookie cutter motions that are

01:17:50
valueless. They change the name, they put

01:17:52
Tiffany's name in and they send it.

01:17:54
I just filed 10 motions. Don't worry, we're working.

01:17:57
But I, I just want to warn you, you're going to have to.

01:17:59
Keep the retainer up because we're on the billing.

01:18:02
Yeah .15 walk to the water cooler .1 O called the client,

01:18:07
they didn't answer .05 made copies, sent copies.

01:18:11
I had to go to the post office. Point 2O.

01:18:14
My favorite in my case was one of the most people are shocked

01:18:18
when they say when I say that two of the lawyers in my

01:18:20
abortion filings were women, one of them a mother, and one of

01:18:25
them billed 26 1/2 hours in one day.

01:18:30
That's the thing, that's the thing with lawyers, because so I

01:18:33
got to, I have a lawsuit, I'm suing institutions and the

01:18:40
lawyers on the other side, they want to play games with, with

01:18:42
trying to go to arbitration and mediation, all that crap.

01:18:46
And I said to my lawyers, this is, listen, I said, don't take

01:18:49
this the wrong way, but you guys all suck.

01:18:51
I says they're going to try to keep going to court, going to

01:18:53
these meetings because they want to get paid.

01:18:56
Their their, their clients don't know what's going on and it is

01:19:00
what it is. You guys don't get paid unless

01:19:01
you win so. What I think is interesting is a

01:19:06
lawyer will be working 6 cases and he'll bill a client like you

01:19:10
said, 26 1/2 hours. But I guarantee if we saw the

01:19:13
billing for the other 6 cases, he would have built 26 and a

01:19:17
hours another 10 here, another 10 and you'd be like, well you

01:19:20
build 80 hours in one day. How is that possible?

01:19:24
What did you do? Were you working 6 documents

01:19:27
simultaneously? And that's my point, because

01:19:31
that kind of stuff, that's criminal, right?

01:19:33
I mean, it's, it's conversion. If you really want to get down

01:19:35
to it, if you start studying the law, you realize this.

01:19:37
But the, and I study the law all the time.

01:19:40
It's, it's, it's a screwed up hobby of mine that I developed

01:19:42
over years and years for a number of reasons 'cause I had

01:19:45
people come after me years ago. And, and, and the truth is there

01:19:48
were so many fraudulent things that happened and so many things

01:19:51
I was involved in that weren't true, but I saw the, their

01:19:54
fabrication of things. My point is this, that I think

01:19:57
this system needs some justice for the.

01:20:01
People, we need justice, and it's not just us.

01:20:05
We need justice for every American across the United

01:20:07
States because they want to talk about the weaponized systems of

01:20:10
the state and federal police forces.

01:20:11
I think there's a lot of good guys that want to do their jobs.

01:20:13
A lot of them have left. The good people have left

01:20:16
because they don't want to be in a George Floyd situation.

01:20:18
They don't want to be in a situation where they're getting

01:20:20
charged for something that they had nothing to do with.

01:20:23
I mean, a monument to George Floyd?

01:20:24
Are you freaking kidding me? This guy was a total scumbag,

01:20:28
but yet he's got a monument and and we've got a guy sitting in

01:20:32
jail because he suffocated because he had 11 different

01:20:34
drugs in his system. How about the Marine that was on

01:20:37
the subway that defended those people from a guy that had drugs

01:20:40
in his system, and now he's facing attempted homicide

01:20:43
charges for no reason at all because he protected people like

01:20:46
he was trained to do as a Marine.

01:20:48
This stuff just goes on and on and on, and I believe it's this.

01:20:50
Until this system is turned on its head and they have the fear

01:20:54
of God put in them that they have consequences for everything

01:20:57
they're doing and they have to face accountability at a

01:21:00
different level. Until that happens, I don't know

01:21:02
how we fix it. RFK has got his work cut out for

01:21:04
him. Matt Gaetz has his work out for

01:21:06
him. You're going to have to be a son

01:21:08
of a bitch. And I do not want our

01:21:11
administration this time to attempt to win a popularity

01:21:14
contest. This is not a popularity

01:21:15
contest. This is a time to fix this

01:21:17
government. And I think they have two and a

01:21:19
half, three years Max, because then the next campaigning will

01:21:22
happen and all the rest of garbage.

01:21:23
And here's what I'm concerned with, George, you can do this.

01:21:26
We'll flip to Tiffany and then we'll, I, I know you've stayed a

01:21:28
long time with this tiff. And I want to say thank you.

01:21:31
My concern is that Harris, Biden and the rest of the Democratic

01:21:39
administration and the far left, they're too quiet.

01:21:43
These sneaky bastards are up to something.

01:21:45
I don't know if it's maybe this is World War three play.

01:21:48
Maybe it's going to be a Black Swan event.

01:21:50
I don't trust these MF 1st and I don't know if you guys feel the

01:21:54
same way, but I might might. The hair on the back of my neck

01:21:56
is standing up because they're not talking the normal amount of

01:21:59
shit. They talk.

01:22:01
There's something in there. They're they're up to something.

01:22:04
George, you tell me if you think that.

01:22:06
I mean, I, I think that I also think they're in shock and

01:22:09
denial. I mean, they still don't know

01:22:12
how they lost. It was crazy because actually

01:22:14
polling came out today. We all, we all know what we

01:22:17
think about polls, Poll, right? Kamala Harris has a 48% chance

01:22:23
to win, to run for president in 2028.

01:22:27
Can you believe that? No, because they never pulled.

01:22:30
They didn't pull Tiff. They didn't pull you, George.

01:22:32
They didn't pull me pulled. Nobody ever pulls me.

01:22:34
And says Lance, what do you think?

01:22:36
They're not. Going to pull you for a

01:22:36
Democrat? They're only going to pull

01:22:38
Democrats. My entire lifetime, I've never

01:22:40
been pulled once for any political party or anything.

01:22:43
I've been I. Could tell you why I've never

01:22:44
been pulled 'cause I don't give out my number like that.

01:22:47
That's why I never been pulled and I don't want to.

01:22:49
What do you think? Are they up to suspicious shit?

01:22:51
So I'm gonna be honest, given that before I was a baby music

01:22:55
teacher, I worked on Capitol Hill and I worked for a senator

01:22:57
and that's sort of the world I played in right now.

01:23:00
They're licking their wounds, first of all.

01:23:01
But I would say that there's probably been a blanket post

01:23:04
mortem like gag sent out saying until we can tailor our

01:23:08
messaging, I need you guys to shut up.

01:23:10
That's my guesstimation. Now, the one person I've been

01:23:13
seeing on the left that's actually responding the way they

01:23:16
should be responding, shockingly enough, is AOCAOC went to XA

01:23:22
place. She originally said she was

01:23:23
leaving. And she said that she found out

01:23:27
that a huge percentage of the people that voted for her voted

01:23:30
for Trump. And she went to X and said,

01:23:32
guys, why would you vote for me and Trump?

01:23:37
And she got thousands of responses.

01:23:40
And she has been posting, if you guys go look at her X right now

01:23:43
and her Instagram, she's been posting the responses about what

01:23:46
they did wrong. And she says we can't we, we

01:23:49
have to change everything. We're wrong.

01:23:52
Conspicuously, and I don't know if it's related, she removed her

01:23:54
pronouns from her BIOS that day. Who is this AOC?

01:23:57
Oh yeah, she did. Ocasio Cortez.

01:23:59
So I'm curious to know about AOC because she's pregnant and I'm

01:24:04
curious if she's going to now is she having a boy or girl and if

01:24:06
so how can she know she's having a boy or girl?

01:24:09
How does she know it's not a they or an it exactly?

01:24:11
Yeah, you know, but like. Haven't decided yet.

01:24:13
She's doing what they should all and I think right now there's a

01:24:16
blanket. Fetterman's doing the same

01:24:18
thing. I think Fetterman's been kind of

01:24:19
telling him, look, it is what it is, let's move on and get things

01:24:22
fixed. Fetterman's, like, I would have

01:24:24
never guessed Fetterman to be operating the way he, he's kind

01:24:28
of surprised me, to be honest with you in a way that I can't

01:24:30
really say that he's, you know, he's doing some stuff that I

01:24:33
think is the right thing. Yeah, Fetterman, I think his

01:24:37
response is correct. And I'm going to say.

01:24:39
Because they're. Going to do everything they can

01:24:42
to, I think there's going to be a, a rush of things they're

01:24:44
going to try to squeeze through in the regulatory agencies.

01:24:48
Some of it's not bad, some of it's not good, right?

01:24:51
But I think there's, they're going to try to do things

01:24:53
quietly to not draw attention. And I think right now they're

01:24:56
licking their wounds. They have no clear leader in the

01:24:58
party. Biden, we don't even know what

01:25:01
Biden's doing. And he's still in the Amazon

01:25:03
jungle. I think he got lost.

01:25:05
He's hanging out with the monkeys.

01:25:07
Owes $20 million and spent $1.2 billion in 12 weeks, $100

01:25:13
million a week is shocking. Yeah, and.

01:25:16
Sounds cheap. Sounds a good deal of the party.

01:25:19
So listen. Right now I think they've been

01:25:21
told to shut up. I really do.

01:25:22
So Fetterman, AKA Lurch, he's saying that because he's going

01:25:27
to want to try to rerun in Pennsylvania and win.

01:25:29
And he's and he's looking at how how the Republicans took over

01:25:33
PA. So he knows.

01:25:35
How they took the populism and the work so.

01:25:37
He's so he's kind he's playing both sides.

01:25:41
You know he's he's a switch hitter right now, whatever he's

01:25:44
a switch hitter. Listen, AOCI, don't you know I

01:25:47
don't know what her race, when how how close she I.

01:25:52
Think she won like 79% of her district.

01:25:54
She she handedly won. Yeah.

01:25:57
Yeah, but a huge percentage of her 79% voted for Trump.

01:26:00
Maybe it's her, maybe it's her hormones.

01:26:02
You know she's pregnant. They can, right?

01:26:04
Women, how can I happen? No, I'm being serious.

01:26:07
I. Think maybe she's just got some

01:26:11
common sense because. She no, no, she's dumb as

01:26:14
bricks, bro. No, she's dumb as bricks.

01:26:16
Common sense is not so common. She don't got.

01:26:19
It end of the day you have to see things for what they are.

01:26:21
Who knows, you know? Maybe I'm going with the

01:26:23
hormones because she's. Pregnant and stuff.

01:26:25
Maybe it's fear, you know, you never know what really a lot of

01:26:28
them should be afraid for the way they operated.

01:26:30
All right, listen, Tiffany, first of all, I want to say

01:26:32
thanks so much for, you know, coming on the show.

01:26:35
Really enlightening. I am really, and I'm sure the

01:26:38
audience feels the same way. I'm very sorry for what happened

01:26:41
to you. Trust me, if it was up to me, I

01:26:43
could think of some really horrendous things to do those

01:26:45
people, but it probably not not legal by any means, but it's,

01:26:50
it's sometimes those dark thoughts come into my head.

01:26:52
I can't help myself because I just, I can't stand bullies and

01:26:55
I can't stand malicious people and I can't stand people that

01:26:59
have used the legal system to manipulate things in such a

01:27:02
horrible way against, you know, regular Americans across the

01:27:06
country. And I see it over and over

01:27:07
again. We we track it pretty closely.

01:27:09
So first of all, sorry for what you've gone through, although

01:27:12
you've been forged in fire. And I hope this administration

01:27:15
identifies you as a person that can be trusted and should be in

01:27:19
a position of power and responsibility to try to fix

01:27:23
things. So I don't know if that'll

01:27:24
happen, if there's an opportunity for us to help

01:27:26
promote that message or anything we can do to try to help you to

01:27:29
get there, 'cause I, I would, you know what we're trying to

01:27:31
get behind. Like people like Tara Rodas and

01:27:33
JJ Carroll and Dan Bongino and you know, Steve Friend and Kyle

01:27:38
Serafin, these are the people that I want back in the

01:27:40
administration 'cause I want to see them make the difference

01:27:43
that needs to be made, 'cause I think they're the kind of people

01:27:46
that can't be compromised. And I feel like you're one of

01:27:48
those people too. I know we just got to know each

01:27:49
other so I want. To change I'm not for sale and

01:27:52
there's not a great example of not for sale.

01:27:54
I was offered more than $60 by the DNC to endorse Kamala on

01:27:58
TikTok this round. And I yeah.

01:28:01
Let me ask you a question. George.

01:28:03
Hold on, do they pay you first? Like can you take the money and

01:28:05
then just not do the endorsement or like mess it?

01:28:07
Up the contract and I was sent offer after offer after offer

01:28:11
from the DNC and you. Know, George and I were offered

01:28:14
an agreement about 10 months ago, maybe it's maybe it's 11

01:28:18
months ago now. We were offered an agreement

01:28:20
that came out of it, an agency in Chicago, I'm not going to say

01:28:23
the name. And they offered US $25 a

01:28:27
month. But we couldn't talk about

01:28:29
election integrity. We couldn't talk about vaccines,

01:28:32
vaccine hesitancy. We couldn't talk positively

01:28:35
about Muslims, couldn't talk negatively about Jews.

01:28:38
And it came with a long list, not because we do, but at least

01:28:41
the last two, we don't get involved in that.

01:28:44
But, but we definitely expose, we have, you know, medical

01:28:46
professionals come on and expose what we think happened in the,

01:28:49
the obviously the pandemic. But my point is we did the same

01:28:52
thing. We turned it down.

01:28:53
And for the stage we were, we've grown a lot since then.

01:28:55
But for the stage we were in, that was a great offer.

01:28:58
You know, 25, that was, you know, three, 300 a year.

01:29:00
But when I looked at the list of things we were not allowed to

01:29:03
discuss, George and I looked at each other and we were like,

01:29:06
fuck no, they're not freaking doing this, No.

01:29:09
You know what, it just came to my mind when we're talking about

01:29:11
the Republicans right right now in the freaking Senate, none of

01:29:16
the Republicans are coming to vote to stop these judgeships.

01:29:20
The nominations, if they actually showed up, they could

01:29:23
have stopped so many of them, but they're not.

01:29:25
So everybody call your senators and tell them get their asses

01:29:28
there and and stop this shenanigans.

01:29:31
Yeah, they want, they want to try to stack it with some more

01:29:33
lifetime shitty appointments. We have to deal.

01:29:36
At one point I heard they were going to give Harrison

01:29:38
appointment within the Supreme Court.

01:29:39
Can you imagine those verdict? Can you imagine reading her

01:29:42
opinions? I can't imagine her reading an

01:29:46
opinion. The law that hasn't been that

01:29:49
will be, that can't be. But I came from a middle class

01:29:52
family and that's why I know the law.

01:29:54
OK, Well, listen. So Tiff, so if you guys,

01:29:57
Tiffany, we want to give you the shameless plug period.

01:29:59
We do for everybody, you know, plug your social media, plug

01:30:03
your TikTok, plug anything you're working on, go for it.

01:30:06
Anything where people can support you and what you're

01:30:08
doing. Sure.

01:30:09
On TikTok, I'm Tiffany Cianci. I'm Tiffany Cianci.

01:30:12
Over on YouTube where I post most of my interviews with

01:30:14
politicians and my podcast stuff and everywhere else, I'm the

01:30:19
vino mom. Because Once Upon a time I

01:30:21
really liked wine and I was mom. On X, I'm the vino mom.

01:30:24
On Instagram, I'm the vino mom. Come on, Leila I I interview

01:30:29
great candidates. I interview people from both

01:30:32
sides of the aisle and we advocate for small businesses.

01:30:35
Small businesses. They are 99% of the businesses

01:30:39
in this country. They have created 98% of the

01:30:42
jobs in this country. And if this administration truly

01:30:45
wants to represent the people, wants to be the populist unity

01:30:48
government, then they need to care about small businesses and

01:30:51
not the charlatans that claim they support small businesses

01:30:54
while actually Schilling for billionaires.

01:30:56
They have to change and I hope I can help them do that truly.

01:31:01
Well, listen, thank you very much.

01:31:02
Now listen obviously in the audience subscribers, Baby

01:31:04
Mafia. If you guys liked what you saw

01:31:06
here. Now take the short form, the

01:31:07
long form. George will be doing some short

01:31:09
form like you know he does in every episode.

01:31:11
When you see it up on social media, feel free to take it, put

01:31:14
it on TikTok, put it anywhere you want.

01:31:16
We're never going to come after you because the idea is to

01:31:18
expand the message in our voice, educate and unify the country

01:31:21
one episode at a time. That's always a plan.

01:31:23
Follow G Ballantine on X, the Big big show and of of course,

01:31:26
Lance Miliacho on other platforms.

01:31:28
George gets the extra letters, so it's George Ballantine, Lance

01:31:31
Miliacho on the big Mink show. If you're not subscribing to us

01:31:34
on Rumble, please hit that subscribe button.

01:31:36
Comment, share, thumbs up. If you like the show, if you

01:31:39
have any recommendations for interviews, throw it in the

01:31:41
chat. Lots of that.

01:31:42
We'd like to take a look at who you'd like to see us have on the

01:31:45
show. We're always motivated.

01:31:46
We're trying to get lots. We have great interviews to

01:31:48
people. From that by the way.

01:31:50
Oh, that's good. I'd love to hear that.

01:31:52
Now let's go over who we've got coming on really quickly.

01:31:55
Of course, tomorrow night. She goes by BX.

01:31:59
She doesn't use a real name for a number of reasons.

01:32:01
She's a satanic cult investigative journalist.

01:32:03
She's looking into what's going on across the country.

01:32:06
Who's involved. You're going to want to hear

01:32:08
who's involved because it's not good and she is an expert.

01:32:12
So we're excited to have her on. She goes by BX.

01:32:15
We'll ever cover all our social media.

01:32:17
And of course, John Spencer, if you don't know who he is, I

01:32:21
recommend you do go take a look. He's on X Very, very interesting

01:32:26
guy, background in special forces investigative journalism.

01:32:29
He knows a lot of what's going on that the mainstream media

01:32:32
will not talk about. We're excited to have him on the

01:32:34
show that's on Friday and of course, Global Finance Forum on

01:32:38
Friday. So we're pumped up.

01:32:39
That's what's going on for the week, George.

01:32:43
Last words for the audience, buddy.

01:32:46
Have a good night. We'll see you guys tomorrow.

01:32:47
Tiffany. Thank you so much.

01:32:48
Tiff, don't go nowhere. Just stay for a few minutes.

01:32:50
If. We.

01:32:51
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maximum utility, all while fitting in your wallet.

01:34:47
The smart choice for savvy investors and preppers alike.

01:34:51
With Silver Pepper Bars, you're ready for whatever tomorrow

01:34:55
brings. They would run up to the bamboo

01:34:57
fence and they would be shooting between the bamboo at the

01:35:00
buildings, you know, just shooting inside.

01:35:03
The Wanted man is Joseph Kony, charged with abducting huge

01:35:07
numbers of children, forcing them to kill and mutilate

01:35:11
innocent victims. Somebody had to pay the price.

01:35:14
Sam. Did that Sam Childers never

01:35:16
stopped because the. Bad things never stop.

01:35:19
There is only one Sam Childer. There is no one else like him in

01:35:23
the world. And I said to him, I said, would

01:35:25
you go now to get Kony in the Congo?

01:35:29
He says, without a doubt, in a second.

01:35:30
Now it's the DRC. Tell us what's happening to

01:35:33
children in the DRC. Do you have ISIS there?

01:35:35
You have Islamic State and you have ADF?

01:35:38
Hey, Sandy. Joseph Kony's still alive.

01:35:40
He's in the Congo, and now God has me in the Congo, you know,

01:35:44
So hopefully we'll meet up one day, but maybe I can lead him to

01:35:49
the Lord or send him there. One or the other, huh?