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March 23, 2025 - The Adam King Show
01:11:02
BREAKING INTERVIEW: OCT 7TH NOVA MUSIC FESTIVAL HEAD OF SECURITY SPEAKS OUT
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In this very exclusive special episode, I sit down with Din Tesler, head security guard for the Nova Music Festival, Survivor.
of the October 7th massacre in Israel who shares an insight into the situation that most of the public doesn't truly get to see.
Before we sat down and spoke, I wanted to take him to a place that represents America and share with him something great about our country.
I took him to the Ronald Reagan Library who famously Released the hostages from Iran as he came into office.
This was something intentional because I would like to see all 59 hostages be released.
Five of them are American citizens, still in captive in Gaza.
With 24 confirmed, still alive, we need to do whatever we can to release the hostages and free them now.
Come join me on this exclusive interview as Din Tesler gives us a unique perspective into the events surrounding October 7th.
He's just standing there, menacingly!
*outro music*
Alright, InfoWars, the extended internet world, all...
All my friends, all my fans, and all my foes.
We are here with a very exclusive interview today.
I have with me my friend, Din Tesler, who is a survivor of the October 7th massacre at the Nova Music Festival, right?
Yeah. Behind us, we see the Gipper, President Ronald Reagan, who famously freed the hostages from Iran.
God willing, we'll see in the coming days the release of the hostages alive.
But this is something that is on the minds of everybody for the last year and a half.
This has become the predominant issue on Earth, almost.
Especially in America.
And it's really polarized America.
So it's nice to have you on the show.
Welcome to the Adam King Show.
Thank you very much.
What brought you to America before?
So, as a survivor from the Nova, in November 23, I fly my first time to America.
And since then, till today, doing speeches all over, I brought experience from the Nova Music Festival.
Right. So before we get into Nova, I want to ask you tons of questions about Nova.
We're going to hold nothing back.
The audience here, some people believe that it was an inside job even, that NOVA was fake, that the Israeli government killed these people.
These are the kind of things that float around Infowars, that they were shooting down from helicopters and whatnot.
And I apologize in advance because I'm going to ask you tough questions.
No problem.
Because we want the truth.
We want to dispel all the lies.
We want the truth.
But first, before we get into any of that, before October 7th, who were you?
So my name is Dean Tester.
I'm going to be 23 next month.
A little bit about myself.
I grew up in Israel, Cholon.
It's 20 minutes from Tel Aviv, in the center.
I finish high school and go to the army.
I serve in the Special Forces, Seirat Nachal.
Wow. I released two years ago, and I started to build my life.
Actually, I started to work in sales.
If it's insurance, I sell insurance, health and life insurance.
And this was my job.
And on October 7th, I worked with my best friend, Bob Cooperstein, with both of us being security guards at the Nova Music Festival.
You were a security guard at the Nova Festival.
Were you armed?
No. Why did they not have...
Because it's kind of to be a bouncer.
You know, if people are fighting in the festival, our job is you going home, and you going home, and party's over for you.
So, police also being there, so we didn't need to be armed.
So, paper spray.
This was...
So, before we get into all of that, it's almost like I want to just jump right in.
You asked such pertinent things.
Were there police there with guns?
Yeah, of course.
They were?
Yeah. So, it's amazing that...
Even though there were police with guns at Nova, it still took the army seven hours to get there.
It's one of the mysteries that I think every person, especially the Jewish people, wonder about why this took place.
But before we get into that, I'm more about you as a human being.
Before you were a victim.
And I want to...
So, before we get into any of that, you're also a DJ, correct?
No. I saw you DJ in a picture once.
Not really a DJ.
You're just into electric music.
Yeah. And most Israelis your age are into electric music.
Yeah. So, tell me a little bit about that.
Where did your fascination with electric music come from?
So, about myself, honestly, before October 7th, my type was...
Reggaeton, Spanish music, was techno music.
And after October 7th, after I worked there all of the weekend, and after I survived, so I kind of became a fan and love electric music.
So you weren't into electric music before this?
Nope. It was only after October 7th?
Yeah. So you just were there as a security guard.
You're a big dude, too.
What are you, like 6'3"?
I don't know, something like that.
That's like unheard of for a Jewish person.
This guy can get any Jewish girl just because he's above 6'0".
It's like you don't even...
To get Jewish women, you either have to be rich or above six feet tall.
Anyways, that's irrelevant humor.
So you were a bouncer at the Nova Music Festival.
And how did you get that job?
So my best friend, Barr, Mark Hooperstein, so he worked for the company like a few months before October 7th.
He worked as a security guard with the company.
And a few weeks before, he just asked me...
Dean, it's a festival in the South.
You want to come and work with me?
And I say, we got permission from the IDF and from the police?
And he said yes.
So for me, it sounds good.
I'm going with my best friend, my buddy.
We're going to work.
Sounds good money.
It sounded harmless.
Yeah. It's just a music festival.
We're just bouncers.
Right. Now, I heard there was something that the music festival changed locations the day before.
Yeah, we'll explain about that also.
So that weekend, like Thursday night, it was the first festival.
It's called the Unity.
This is the festival.
It was in the same location.
Thursday night till Friday evening, 20 hours of a rave.
And then was a few hours of break.
And this kind of festival in Israel, so they don't publish the location.
Just in the last minute.
From safety.
So the Unity, the festival, was already ready.
Everything was set up, you know, and they say...
We have already the location, so why not?
Everything are ready for another festival.
So when people coming to the Nova on Friday night, they came to the same area that was the Unity.
So there was a Unity festival that took place, and Nova was a second festival that had nothing to do with the Unity festival.
Exactly. It's two different festivals, but the same location.
And you were working both.
Yeah. So when they announced Nova, It wasn't that Nova was at a different festival or at a different location.
It just wasn't announced.
Yeah, it's kind of the same music but different community, I will say.
Different community and the location just wasn't announced.
So this idea that it was moved at the last minute was not...
Now, did they take over the Unity Festival?
Like, did they try to just piggyback on it or...?
They just take the place because the Unity is done on Friday evening.
And so they say, why not?
So you got there, what, Thursday?
Thursday night, yeah.
And what was the Unity Festival like?
For me, I worked 20 hours as a bouncer, driving on my TV all over the party.
Just, you know, make sure that everything is okay and safe.
No one fighting, no one, you know, feel bad or something.
And this was the kind of festival.
Did you have any incidences before?
What is interesting?
Like a fight?
Was there any fights?
No. There wasn't a fight?
No. There wasn't a hungover person?
Not that I saw, but probably yes.
It's making sense in this kind of festivals.
So your job was pretty easy up until NOVA?
Yeah. So that's Thursday?
Yeah. Friday?
You were working Friday or you had it off?
I worked Friday night.
You worked Friday night?
The NOVA, yeah.
And so Nova started Friday night, and it was supposed to go till Sunday, right?
Till Saturday evening.
Till Saturday evening.
So it was Friday night to Saturday night.
Yeah. So you worked Friday night, and what was Friday night like?
Actually, it was, I will say, perfect.
I will say the people, when they came to the party, beautiful people, I will say, you know?
And the music was amazing, and nothing was...
Suspicious, like everything was amazing.
It was insane how much it was perfect till 6:30 in the morning, of course.
But the people was peaceful, came for the festival just to enjoy, just having fun with their friends.
And for me, I was the commander of the gate at the Nova Festival.
So my job was just to drive all over on the ATV to see that everything is okay, everyone feels good.
And you were at the front gate?
Yeah, all of the gates, basically.
Did they have one of those sliding orange gates?
You know, the yellow gates for the Yeshuvim?
They're like a million tons?
No, it's more like regular gates.
They set up on Thursday.
Regular gate around the party that people cannot sneak in.
Regular gate.
Emergency exit from every different place in the gates.
And my job is to see that everything is okay.
I just wanted to check that the film was running.
I lost an interview once.
I had an amazing interview that I was doing once.
It was totally not running.
This is such good information.
I want to make sure that it's being recorded.
You were at the gate.
Were you on a 24 hour shift?
What was your first shift like on that Friday night?
What time did it start?
What time did it end?
Friday night, people started to come in 9pm.
Something like that.
And they're supposed to leave around 5-6pm of Saturday.
So for me, I know it's 20 hours of working.
And for me, all of the night, I just drive all over the party.
No breaks?
No break to sleep?
In the morning, it's supposed to be a break.
Yeah, around 7 in the morning.
So your break was supposed to be 30 minutes after?
The massacre began.
Yeah. Wow.
Okay, so we're on Friday night.
Beautiful festival.
People dancing.
Everybody's happy.
Everybody's joy, spreading love.
There were Jews there and Arabs or just Jews?
Jews and Arabs.
Security guards have been Arabs also.
Some of the security guards were Arabs too.
Yeah. So there was not like an apartheid thing.
It wasn't just a Jewish party.
No, it's for everyone.
It was for everybody.
Wow. And what would you say the percentage was, Jews to Arabs?
You don't feel it in the music, I will say honestly.
You don't even feel it.
You don't even know who's who.
Exactly. Unless they're wearing a yarmulke.
Was anybody dressed like in Muslim garb?
No. No.
So it was mostly like just secular Muslims, secular Jews, secular Arabs and secular Jews partying together, celebrating life.
Exactly. And you were on, like, no sleep.
Yeah. You worked through the whole night.
Yeah. So, like, five in the morning, let's say an hour and a half, two hours before everything took place.
What was going through your head?
I was waiting for seven to rest a little bit, honestly.
But for me, it was also enjoy from the music.
I'm outside of the gates, just driving all over and just listening to the music.
You were on the perimeter.
Yeah. You weren't inside the festival.
You were on the perimeter of the festival.
Yeah. All over the gate.
Just driving, listening to nice music, talking with my security guards because I was the commander of the gate, so I had a team.
Yeah. How many people were on your team?
Around 11. Now, was there like, for the security guards, like a weapons depository?
Like you weren't supposed to carry weapons, but maybe there was like a room where you could all go if there was a problem to arm yourself?
Not really, honestly.
That's really strange.
Yeah, because in these kind of festivals, when the police also come in, so we know that we have the police.
And you know, before October 7th, no one imagined to himself that something that can happen.
Right. So for us, it's just to be bouncers against violence if someone's fighting or don't feel good, so our job is to come in.
Now, how many police were there, would you estimate?
15, 20?
15 to 20 police.
Maybe even more.
Wow. That's crazy.
Alright, so 5 o'clock, you're sitting there driving around, waiting for your shift to end.
6:30 comes.
What's the first disruption you noticed?
The rockets in the sky.
The rockets in the sky.
Explain that.
What did you see?
So, as someone who grew up in Israel, we used to rockets in the sky that's coming from Gaza, from Hamas.
Like Katushas.
Katushas, rockets, it's missiles, I will say.
Yeah, I think for people who are listening, when you say rockets to an American, they think of like a firecracker on the 4th of July, like a little rocket this big.
No, rockets from Gaza.
A rocket is actually defined as a non-guided missile.
Yeah. So the Katushas that you're talking about are 9-foot missiles.
Yeah. They're like huge, giant missiles.
Yeah. So you see Katushas go off in the sky.
A lot.
A lot of it.
If not hundreds, I think thousands.
Wow. Yeah.
So this is left out of the story.
A lot of people don't talk about this.
So they started the invasion by launching thousands of missiles into Israel.
And where did they launch those missiles?
Into like Tel Aviv.
Yeah. And they were intercepted by the Iron Dome, I imagine.
So, okay.
So the missiles go off.
You see them in the sky.
What's your first thought?
In that moment they told us that the party is over and our job is to tell the people all of them to go home and to leave.
So my job as a commander I was driving all over the festival get inside and just I just screaming on the people the party is over you're going home come on do it like fast so it was really like stressful because you know 4,000
people that came to heaven fund the party and now they don't want to stop.
They don't want to stop.
And Israelis, you can't get them to do anything.
Yeah. Mama Tzav, we have the Ayan Dome, it's okay.
Exactly. Altidog, don't worry.
Exactly. No, seriously, exactly.
It was like that.
And in around 7 in the morning, I got a call from the police and they told me Dean opened the emergency exit.
For me, I know all of the emergency exit, of course.
Like I say, 4,000 people are trying to leave the festival.
And this was before or after the invasion began?
Before the terrorist coming.
Okay. Before.
And people start to leave the party to the main road, you know, and it was a huge traffic.
So when they told me didn't open the emergency exit, the back emergency exit, I start to take after me 100 if not 1,000 people.
I tell them follow me.
I take them from the back emergency exit, take them to the main road.
The police told me didn't tell them to go left.
Why? I didn't know why in that moment.
I just listened to the police on the main road.
Tell the people going left.
From the right, a woman coming.
She coming out from the car.
And she was bleeding from the head.
Like, a lot of blood.
Injured, of course.
I, that moment, realized that it's not just rockets in the sky.
Like, how much we used to it in Israel.
I grow up to rockets, missiles every year.
All of these years.
But when I saw the lady, I started thinking to myself, why is she bleeding?
I tried to talk with her.
She don't really respond.
She just crying, catching my arm, telling me, please save me.
I start to be suspicious, like, what is going on?
I try to talk with her.
She don't really respond.
I take her on my ATV, try to calm her down, talk with her.
I put her in the ambulance, and she told me the terrorists attacked them.
What happened is that the people that left the party and take your right, terrorists after probably a mile, even less.
So the terrorists were on the right.
Yeah. Okay.
So you saved like a thousand people that day by taking them left?
I don't like to talk about it, but I did the best that I can, honestly.
I understand.
Yeah, and the paramedic told me and my best friend Bar that a lot of injured people in the road, we come in again, we see a bunch of injured people that get shot.
We start to take care of them with a tunicate.
We take off the shirt from the same person.
And you were administering the first aid yourself?
Yeah, me and my friend, yeah.
And Bar?
Yeah. And we take branches in the ground, and we're just doing tunicate after tunicate, trying to save how much life that we just can.
How many people do you think you saw injured that you were healing?
I think 20, if not more.
And we're just back and forth, back and forth, without time to even count, without time to think, honestly.
Just take care of them how much that you can.
And at some point, we open emergency exits.
You know the famous video that people are running in the open field?
Yeah. You know what I'm talking about?
Yeah. So they're running the only safe direction that people can run and to survive to a village that's called Patish.
Patish. If you hear about it.
That video that people are running, my job as a security guard was to tell them keep running straight.
So basically, Barry and I driving on the ATV, tell them keep running, keep running, back and forth many times, take with us injured people, take care of them.
Take them to the festival, and then we come in again to the main road at some point, and then we saw terrorists in front of us.
Right in front of you?
Yeah. With guns?
Shooting on us, yeah.
How far away were they?
I would say last than half a mile.
Less than half a mile?
Something like that.
And they were on the left?
They were from the left, basically.
They've been in front of us, we've been in the main road, but yeah, from the left.
So did you see them fly over on that makeshift?
At that point, not yet.
But if we were getting to all the stories at some point, yeah, I saw that.
Okay, so let's continue on the story from where you're at.
We're in the main road.
Make sure to talk into the mic.
I don't want to miss anything or get low audio because this is very important information.
In front of us, we see terrorists.
My best friend Barr screaming on me and told me he didn't get inside to the festival.
So I just listened to him.
So you went back inside?
Yeah. I running back inside and I was thinking that Barr, my friend, running after me.
But he decided to stay there and take care of injured people when they're shooting on them.
And then Hamas taking him hostage.
I didn't see that, but from that moment, I didn't see again my best friend.
Till today he's a hostage.
He's one of the 59 hostages still in Gaza.
Yeah. And from that moment, I start running into the festival.
From the festival, after a few minutes, when the gunshots start to come from everywhere, I take with me a small group, maybe 10 people.
I was the only security guard with them, so I tried to lead them with me.
As a security guard, as a sober, you know.
We're running into the woods for like one hour.
A lot of people were not sober.
Yeah. Unfortunately, because of the festival.
Yeah. I understand.
And one hour, one hour and a half of running.
Into the woods, from bush to bush, from hideout to hideout.
Unfortunately, after one hour and a half of terrorists, they saw us running and they're shooting on us.
And in that moment, most of my group just died in one second.
They died?
Yeah. They murdered, yeah, by the terrorists.
They were killed?
Yeah. In front of your face?
In front of my face.
And a few of them just running to the other side.
I just keep running by myself.
I remember that I'm running from that moment.
I just run in a zigzag.
Bullets like landing really from the left, from the right.
Yeah, like feel, see them landing next to me.
But it was insane.
I'm running a few minutes and I jumped into a cactus.
I was hiding in a huge cactus bush.
You can see over here.
I have the necrosis of the Nova, you can see.
And a little cactus.
And a cactus.
You can see over here.
And the cactus saved your life.
We got help.
God saved my life.
But, no, I was hiding in a cactus farm.
Because you thought that they wouldn't look there.
Because were you all caught up from the cactus?
All of me.
Bloody. All of me.
Not really bloody, but a little bit.
Just scraped up.
Yeah, all of me.
Okay. So I was hiding between 10.30am till 7pm.
In the cactus.
In the cactus.
By yourself?
By myself.
And the group that was with, they were all killed?
Most of them.
How many people do you think?
Six, seven maybe.
You were six or seven and they all got killed.
And then you were the last one, or did they run off?
Did anybody else survive from that?
I don't know.
From that moment when they killed and died in front of us, like, a few of them just running to the other sides, the other direction, I just keep running.
I don't know what happened to them.
What was going through your mind?
Run. Like, run.
When you saw the...
I even...
I even didn't...
I didn't give too much mention to them.
It was not like this, whoa.
No. Oh, shit.
No. Nothing like that.
No. I will say thank you to my background in the army.
It's helped me a lot in the day.
Thank God for that.
And for me, it just was kind of a robot.
You're doing what you need to do.
You do everything you need to do to survive.
Exactly. So when they died, I just realized that maybe less than a second, I just keep running.
You know, and like, jump into the cactus, send locations to my friends.
How far did you run until you found the cactus?
From that moment that's shooting on us, another 10-15 minutes maybe.
You ran for 10-15 minutes, you found a cactus.
Jumped into it.
What made you think the cactus was safe?
How big was the cactus?
It was huge.
It was like, really big.
Like, big.
I would say, like, if you imagine just all of here, maybe.
Got it.
A few tables over here.
A massive cactus.
Yeah. And you jumped in.
Yeah. For me, it was a lot of training in the army.
So we know how to fight from bushes and stuff.
So I was thinking, what's the chance that someone will get into the cactus, you know?
Yeah. Terrorist.
So I just jumped into it.
And I spent there nine hours, basically.
Wow. Holy shit.
That's so intense.
So you're in the cactus.
Can you see out of the cactus?
Not really, but I can hear everything, basically.
What are you hearing?
Screaming of Allah Akbar from the terrorists.
I'm hearing screaming in Arabic.
I'm hearing screaming of Israeli civilians' people that begging for mercy, basically.
And I don't have what to do except to hide into the cactus.
And war zone.
It's just shooting, shooting around me.
I understand I'm in the middle of war zone, basically.
You know, at some point in 1 p.m., I realized that many terrorists behind me because I'm hearing they're Arabic.
So at some point I just film myself.
I will send you the hand.
Just crying.
And then I start to do goodbye messages to my friends, my family.
I love you.
I'm going to die.
You had your phone?
Till 2.24.
And then it died?
And then my phone died.
But you were able to call your family and your friends?
Send messages.
It's a little bit dangerous to call.
Because you don't want to make noise.
Yeah. Did you actually call your parents?
I text.
You text.
Yeah, I did a voice message to my mom.
What did it say?
Mom, I love you.
Thank you about everything you've given me in my life.
I'm going to die.
This voice message didn't send.
It was a terrible connection.
And it didn't send?
No. And my phone died.
Yeah. Your poor family must have been so worried.
My mom actually got a heart attack in that day.
Because of...
Did she survive?
Yeah. Rok Hashem.
Rok Hashem.
And at some point, 3 p.m., I was except my death when terrorists walked into my cactus.
So they came into the cactus?
Yeah. They just came from the right, from here, and just leave from the left.
This pass really next to me.
So they passed the cactus, they didn't go inside the cactus?
They go inside.
They went inside the cactus?
Yeah. From one side to the other side.
But they didn't find your little pocket?
They didn't find me.
They just seem to look like left with the head and to see my legs.
So you saw them?
I closed my eyes, honestly.
How far away did you say Shema?
Shema Yisrael and with my heart, of course.
To all of you who aren't Jewish, that's what Jews say before they're about to die.
They try to say Shema and acknowledge God's unity, that God rules the world, and it's like things that Jews say right before they hear.
If they're going to get killed, or if they're going to die, or if they're on their deathbed, Jews say this.
So you said Shema.
Wait, myself?
How far from you, how many feet do you think he was?
Like, completely nothing.
I will say, we're here, maybe behind this chair.
So, three feet.
Four feet.
You could have reached out and touched him.
Yeah. I was on my back, closing my eyes, and just accept my death in that moment.
It was a miracle.
Yeah. A miracle.
Yeah. Wow.
This reminds me of a story that I had a similar situation in the Hidnadkut.
I was in Gush Katif.
Oh, really?
And I was in...
After Gush Katif, they dropped us off in the middle of the country and I went to Homish.
But to get into Homish, because you know Homish is in the Shamron, you had to sneak in.
Yeah. And I got caught by Arabs and I hid in a bush.
They were driving in a tractor, and they were right by me.
And I did a very similar thing.
I laid down, and I thought I was freaked out.
They were four feet.
There wasn't bullets flying, so I can't relate to your level, but I remember in that moment, there's a difference between fear and dread.
You know?
Fear, you're afraid.
Dread is like a nightmare.
Yeah. For me, it was a nightmare, basically.
So here in the cactus, around 3pm except my death, I saw my whole life in front of me.
You know, just memories from childhood and just like, memories of the family also, and just my whole life passed.
And after that, it was a quiet, and you know, the light that I saw from the sun is something incredible.
Like, I believe it was God in that moment that saved my life.
What did you see?
Light from the sun that I don't know, explain to you how was this light, but it was something special.
It came out of the sun?
No, just the light.
I was closing my eyes and it was like, put the sun in my eyes.
You saw the light through your closed eyes?
Yeah. Wow.
Yeah, it was insane.
And what was that moment like?
Honestly, I was thinking it's the dead.
Well, it's not even a bird.
That's a squirrel.
I don't know if the audience can hear this chirping, but this squirrel back here is just like...
Screaming his eyes out.
Hey! Knock it off!
I'm conducting an interview.
Anyways. So you're in the cactus.
The light was insane.
I just was thinking it's the end for me.
And then it was like one, two seconds of quiet.
And then I opened my eyes.
And the first thing I tell myself, then you're alive.
And then the time keeping running.
And then you ran?
No, the time running.
The time was running.
I'm there until 7pm.
Did you have a watch on?
No. You just had your phone?
Yeah. And my phone died until 24, so like, yeah, it was like five hours.
And you knew because you were probably watching it the whole time.
Yeah. So what were you thinking, like, from 7 or 6.30am when it started?
Till 2:24 is like eight hours.
Yeah. So you're sitting in for eight hours.
Were you thinking,"Oh, the Israeli army is about to come.
Oh, they're gonna save us." So that moment I was just, all of these hours, just waiting for the help.
You know Yehush?
Did you have like Yehush?
Never. And Yehush Ba'olam Klaw?
Never. Wow.
Yeah. Never, no, just waiting.
But today I can say that all of these hours when people ask me, like, where was the idea?
Where was the military?
So first of all, I would say, this is one of my best friends.
I will give you a gift.
It's the sticker of him.
You can see his name is Or Mizrahi.
And Mizrahi was fighting in the South on October 7th.
He was fighting in a base Kerem Shalom in the South.
He fought against many terrorists that came.
And he sacrificed his life to save many.
And also my personal commander died in that day from my unit.
So I know that when people asking where was the army, so first of all, the intelligence was failed.
This is for sure.
How actually 3,000 if not more terrorists came into Israel, it's a fact.
Failed. You know, this always wondered me because, you know, I was like 23 maybe, 22 when I went on birthright.
And every single American Jew that goes on birthright, they take you in that tower, and they're like, that's Gaza!
So what?
Yossi wasn't in the tower that day?
He didn't know?
How did the intelligence fail?
There's so many checks and balances for it to not...
It didn't just fail.
It failed, and then it failed again, and then it failed again, and then it failed again, and it kept failing for seven hours.
Yeah, but I can say that...
This attack, this surprise attack that they did to us, I will say about that, because army being there, like forces being there in the first line, but in this kind of situation that we had, that more than 3,000 terrorists come into Israel, and they were spread out.
Spread out.
As someone that's been soldiering in the past, I can say it's not that easy to take the control back from these terrorists in the Kibbutz team, I will say.
Because they came all over the gate, many different kibbutzim, and when reserving...
A kibbutz is a small community.
So when forces came to the south, it was a mess because the fighting was a mess.
But soldiers being there, my friend being there, half of my unit being there, and they fight, and they fight against hundreds, hundreds terrorists by themselves.
And when their soldiers came and tried to help...
So it was like, yeah, seven hours.
It was a lot, of course.
I met a former IDF soldier who was in his 50s with two kids on a vacation in Israel.
Lives in America.
Became a married American woman.
Was on a vacation and he was like special unit.
Something like Tzaret Makkal or something.
Some like really special unit.
I forget the...
The unit that he was in.
And he was just a tourist.
But he called in on his unit as a civilian.
And he connected with his friends.
And they went and fought.
And they were fighting, engaged in Kibbutz Beri before the military even got there.
Hours before the military got there.
Hours. Yeah, people need to think it also was Saturday.
It was holiday.
In this kind of situation, when it's not war and everything is okay.
So in this kind of situation, because we're not in the war or something like that, so what the commanders want to do is to send how many soldiers that they want to the holiday, to send the soldiers back home.
So this is the reason that there was a lot of forces, because many of the forces have been home, and the forces that stay over there, they fight many hours.
Many of them they killed, including one of my best friends and my commander.
So, wow, this information is so heavy.
So let's get back to the cactus.
Yeah. It's 2:24.
Were you thinking, where is everybody?
Yeah. Where is Israel?
What's happening?
What was going through your mind?
What is going on?
After you realize that you're not dead.
So it's around 3 something p.m.
Yeah, I was waiting because my friends text me all that morning like the police will come for you and I sent many locations.
So I'm just waiting and waiting and waiting.
So they knew where you were?
Yeah, I sent locations.
There's one of the important thing that teach you in the army, like updates always, location.
And just hearing everything, shooting, I tell myself I will wait till like the sun will go down.
Till the dark.
And then you sneak out.
And then around 7 p.m., I was telling myself, like, okay, it's the night.
I cannot stay there anymore.
I had to do that in Gaza once.
What? When I was living in Gaza, I needed to, like, during the, like, when the engagement started, I needed to get back to my house.
But I had to go through an Arab village.
And I hid out for the whole day until nightfall came.
Yeah. And I literally crawled through the night back to my house.
In Shiratayam.
Did you ever go to Shiratayam?
No. No, this was before...
You're 23, so that was...
God, I'm old now, man.
That was 2005.
Yeah. So that was 20 years ago.
You were three years old.
Yeah. Something like that, yeah.
I had a beach house.
Really? Yeah, right on the ocean.
Right on the Mediterranean.
It was gorgeous.
I'm going to get it back.
Now that we've taken Gaza back, I'm going to go back and get my house.
I'm going to build it better, and to commemorate the Hidnat Kut, I'm going to build a dock on my property.
I don't even know if the building is still there.
I don't even know.
You know, when we were taken out, We were taken out by, like, Yehudim or low Yehudim?
Are they Jews or are they not Jews?
You know, like, they were the Russians.
They were, like, they all looked like the Indians.
They didn't look like Jews.
Yeah. The police that came, and there were thousands of them to come and take us away.
And the only reason why there's a problem today is because of that, the Hidnat Kut.
Yeah. You know, so when they removed us from our houses, They arrested us.
They actually, like, the whole community, you know, because they didn't...
The community got together and we all went to the synagogue.
We thought, they're not going to pull us out of the synagogue.
And that's where they arrested us, in the synagogue.
The Neved Knesset.
And then after that, in Shirat Hayam, it was so beautiful.
Neved Daniel, Shirat Hayam, they were really amazing yeshuvim there.
And... I remember that almost immediately after, they used our houses to launch the missiles, the locations to launch the missiles into Israel.
Yeah. Messed up.
And it sucks because Ariel Sharon was like, oh, we're going to have peace if we do this.
And we didn't.
We've had 20 years of war where we only went in a couple times.
To stop the missiles.
Yeah. And we didn't take territory.
We went in, we stopped the war, they made ceasefire, we left.
I think there was two times that we went in since the disengagement, the Hidnakut.
2012, I think?
2012. And 2014.
Yeah, do you remember?
Amudanan and Tsuketan.
Right. The two campaigns.
And... I remember there was a famous American, they call the American Jews who go and join the IDF,
they call them the Lone Rangers.
The Lone Rangers.
So there was a Lone Ranger that was killed in that battle, the 2012 one that was devastational to our community.
It came from our community.
It was devastational.
But we didn't go in.
And the end result was the massacre, October 7th.
That was when Israel said, Daino, enough.
We're done.
Right. We're done being passive.
People need to understand that we, as an assembly who grew up in Israel, we believe in the peace.
I believe in peace.
Always. I wanted that my kids will never need to go to the IDF and military.
We have to, because we have too much enemies around us.
But on October 7th, and all of the people that are hearing right now, I will say that we didn't choose the war.
We didn't choose to be slaughtered.
We didn't choose to die.
I didn't choose to run away from terrorists.
And right now, we have hostages.
You know, on October 7th, people, not people, terrorists.
Take hostages.
And the fighting right now, it's only because of the fact that we need to bring all of them home.
And the message is also that I will give to everyone.
It's that everyone needs to think that it's like their son is a hostage, their daughter, their father, their mother, their uncle.
Because it's not about even Jewish or not Jewish.
It's about humanity.
There's still Americans that are hostage right now.
Exactly. And that was what was so crazy with the Biden administration.
They didn't even care that there were Americans hostage.
That's why I wanted to do this interview at the grave of Ronald Reagan because he famously got the American hostages back from Iran.
Yeah. So Bezrat Hashem, Gipper, Ronald Reagan, one of the greatest American presidents that ever lived, only second to Donald Trump.
You know, maybe in his spirit.
It's not a shame.
We need to bring all of them.
And Israel just announced that for every hostage killed, Israel is going to annex more and more territory.
Yeah. So, which I don't even see why we don't just annex the whole thing.
I want my house back.
Yeah. You know, I want my house back.
Of course.
For me, it's very personal.
Of course.
And for you, it's very personal.
My best friend is there.
He's in Gaza right now.
Tell us about him.
Bakul Pristain is 22 years old.
He's going to be 23 in two weeks from now.
And we grew up together from 7th grade to 12th grade, the same class, same classes.
He's the kind of friend that will give you and help you with everything you help, honestly.
He's the kind of friend that will take care of everyone.
And only in the end will think about himself.
And this is what happened also on October 7th.
He stay, take off injured people, and then Hamas take him hostage.
And now, is there any proof of life?
Do we know if he's alive?
I just can say that he's alive.
You know.
You feel him.
You feel him.
You're going to be on my show.
Hold on one second.
I just want to make sure we're still rolling.
37 minutes.
So, Bar Cooperstein.
Do you know anything about where he was taken hostage?
In Gaza?
No. You don't know anything from the moment that your paths split?
Yeah. So, before we get into the hostages and Gaza and the whole thing, we're still at 224.
What happened from 2:24 to 9 o'clock when you were rescued?
I was waiting a cactus in around 7:00.
In around 7:00, I told myself like it's too much.
I cannot wait anymore.
So I started running.
And it was dark yet?
It was dark.
So as soon as nightfall, you split.
Yeah. I started running.
Was it dusk or dark dark?
Dark. Dark.
Dark. Yeah.
And for me, I started running.
I don't know where to go without a phone, without every other direction, and I'm just running, open field, bodies around me, cars that explode completely on fire.
With that, I'm just running 30-40 minutes by myself, and then I saw lights from my car far away from me, and I tell myself, oh, it's a terrorist, or it's the IDF.
It's a 50-50.
I start screaming like a crazy, help me, help me, and Baruch Hashem, God sent me two soldiers.
Let's respond, it's the IDF, it's the IDF.
Wow. That's such a crazy story.
It parallels without the intensity.
When I told you that I was in the bush, out by Homish, in the Shamron, there was a car that drove by.
Remember how they always had the orange flag or the blue flag?
If they had the blue flag, they wanted to get rid of the territories.
If they had the orange flag, they wanted...
I saw the car coming, and I saw in this little thing, he had an orange thing.
I was like, this was my only chance to get out.
Yeah. So I ran out of the bush, and he just drove right by me.
And I was like, oh, fuck.
Because then I was outed, and the Arabs saw, and he was going, and then he was down the road, and the Arabs, one guy was in the tractor, another one on foot, and there was like five or six of them, and they saw me come out of the bush.
They found me, and they started running after me, and I started running after him, and he was...
Going and going.
And I thought it was over.
And I just kept running and running to the truck.
Yeah. And finally the truck stopped.
And he gets out and he opens his back door.
And I dove into the truck and he drove and took me all the way to the rest of Homish.
But your story, I know what that's like to be in that situation where you're like, this may or may not work.
But this might be my only shot.
To survive?
Yeah. And so, you didn't know it was IDF?
No. Just take the risk and running.
And Baruch Hashem, when God helped, He sent me two soldiers.
So you found the two soldiers.
What was it like the moment that you saw them?
I was in panic, honestly.
Full panic.
Yeah, panic, barely can't breathe.
I was...
Really into the trauma, you know?
Like, I don't know if it's really terrorist, but I'm hearing the Hebrew and screaming.
It's the idea of running to them and saying to God, please, we'll be soldiers.
It was two soldiers.
And I'm like, thank God.
And what did they say to you?
When I was hiding, I told them my story that I was hiding a cactus after they saw how most of my group died in front of me.
And we're trying to look for more survivors.
We don't found survivors.
And then he take me out of there around 8-something p.m., almost 9, to the gas station.
And then I got a call from Bar's brother.
He asked me, where is my brother?
You know where is Bar?
And I tell him, like, I don't know nothing.
And then he sent me the video that Hamas posted on October 7th.
Of Bar?
He's a hostage inside of Gaza, yeah.
You can send me that video?
I need to go.
You will find it.
At what point did you contact your family?
When the moment that I saw the soldiers, I asked for a call from the IDF soldiers phone, charge my phone, and call to my mom,"Mama, I'm alive.
Don't worry." And what did she say?
Screaming. She had a heart attack.
She was in the hospital?
She's waiting for me in the hospital.
She had a heart attack.
And she waited for me.
And she went to the hospital.
Yeah. And you called her.
And she was immediately relieved.
Were there tears?
Yeah. Lots of tears.
Yeah, of course.
And you have siblings?
I'm middle of five, yeah.
Two older, two younger.
And your father?
My father.
And what did the whole family say?
What was happening?
They all came to see you or they took you to the...
The IDF soldiers took you to the hospital?
From the gas station, take me to the hospital.
Some tzaddik they're doing back and forth.
Take me to the hospital.
I saw both of my parents.
My older brother, Emil, he'd been in Canada.
On October 8th, he already landed in Israel.
Reserving, military.
He'd been in Gaza a few months also fighting.
And my parents just take me out of there.
Take me home.
I got home really late.
What was it like collapsing in your bed?
I was hurt because all of me was turned from the cactus.
But no, it was insane.
I didn't realize everything happened.
But I remember the shower that I take for one hour.
They're just shaking in my shower.
Shaking. Everything happened just past in front of me.
That's crazy.
Yeah. Was it hard to go to sleep that night?
No. Actually, no.
You fell asleep in meetings.
I was tired.
I was worried.
You already did a 20-hour shift.
Yeah. And then you were surviving.
So you must have been up for 40 hours.
Something like that.
Do you remember?
Did you dream?
No. What was it like when you woke up the next day?
The news.
To open the news, to realize what happened, to go to the hospital to check myself again.
And I got a call from a really good friend of mine, one of my best, called me that he told me that we lose our friend.
And this was...
Make sure you're talking to Mike.
Oh, yeah.
So my friend called me and told me that we lose all Mizrahi.
All Mizrahi.
This is him.
Yeah. Our brother.
And opened the news and realized what is going on in the Kibbutzim.
And stuff, and all of the October 7th picture.
I've seen this picture before.
Yeah, it's a legend.
And the first day, it was insane.
Another day, another name, my commander, friends, friend of hostages.
I have a friend's son, David Yair, who was killed in Nova.
I'm so sorry to hear that.
My friend's son was killed in Nova.
Yeah, no, it's insane.
Of course.
He was the most cheerful, joyous.
I'm sure he still is deep inside, but there's a bitterness.
So after he woke up the next morning, it was in the news,
you.
Did you enlist?
I just want to make sure your mic is on.
Did you enlist to go into Gaza?
I cannot, unfortunately.
I have colitis, if you know what it is.
Stomach issues, so I cannot.
But I started to do really fast interviews.
I started to speak about what happened.
Three days after, I already spoke to the NBC.
You can rule up my name.
And five days I've been in the Israeli news.
And then I start to do many interviews to all of the world.
And November 23, I fly my first time to the state.
I stay over here two months by myself.
Start to do speeches.
Another two months, February to April.
Another two months, June to August.
Another three months between September to December.
And now one month in health.
And this is my mission right now.
You know, educate people.
And it's been crazy.
This has been our longest war.
Israel's longest war.
And a lot of people in my world, the Infowars world, they like to say Israel's been doing airstrikes and bombing from the sky.
It's not true.
The campaign was block by block on foot.
Anytime they demolished buildings, they leafleted little notes saying in 48 hours...
Leave because this whole neighborhood is not going to be here.
Yeah. And you know, I will say to all of these people that don't believe us or hate us or anti-Semitism, I will give the best example.
Every time I see someone that you don't like me and our country, I will say that, imagine to yourself, in California, over here right now, in one morning, one holiday, you have Thanksgiving, right?
In Thanksgiving of the morning, weekend.
3,000 terrorists coming from Mexico into California.
Raping, killing, destroying, shooting, destroying houses.
Women, you know what they did to us.
They coming into the festival and killing 10% of the festival.
10%. What will the United States of America will do to Mexico?
Will destroy.
Just completely destroy.
And it's a fact.
Without a doubt.
Without even thinking twice.
Without. So what is the difference?
Because we're Israel?
Or because we're Jewish?
So the message is that if you think again why the war started and why people are suffering in Gaza right now, it's because in Gaza, I will say that people choose Hamas as their leader.
So when you choose a leader and he's attacked a country like Israel and did the crazy thing that he did to us, what do you expect that we will do?
Of course we will fight.
Of course we will destroy.
Of course we will do exactly what we're doing in Gaza.
We need to bring all of the hostages back home.
You know that we offer five million dollars for every person that will say something about hostage.
No one say nothing.
You know, it's so crazy because even the Nazis, when the Nazis, there were Nazis that saved Jews.
Even the Nazis.
High-ranking soldiers.
We grew up, you're Ashkenazi, so like we've all grown up with these stories.
Yeah, yeah.
Where the woman was saved in the concentration camp and the guard pulled her out and it was wrong and he just had one moment of, you know, and there was so many like that.
Yeah, yeah.
But amongst the Gazans, not one.
Not one.
Not one person was like, maybe this baby, Kfir Bibas, maybe we shouldn't, maybe we could...
Save the baby.
Yeah. Instead, they killed the baby.
Yeah. You know, and I wanted to focus on the Bibas because the ceasefire just ended.
And the internet world, with all these talking heads that think that they know something, is blaming Israel.
Oh, Israel's genociding again the Palestinians.
There was a ceasefire that was negotiated by President Trump.
And then...
Adding insult to injury, the Bebas family.
That was such a pivotal moment.
And they did the autopsy on the baby.
The baby was strangled by hand.
And then the body parts were cut up.
So it wasn't recognizable.
And then they sent back the mother.
With not really her body.
And it wasn't even her.
It was some random Arab lady.
And then the world wants us to not fight back.
They want us to be like, okay, you insulted us.
It's like saying, fuck your mother.
Okay, you said fuck my mother.
And what am I supposed to do?
When everybody, if they say, fuck your mother, you punch them in the face.
You know what I'm saying?
But here, they killed children.
Rape woman.
And the crazy thing is, Israel vowed, and to get these bodies back, Israel gave like a thousand terrorists.
Yeah. They got like a thousand soldiers back.
And we got like these three deceased mangled bodies for a thousand soldiers.
And then they did it in a parade.
You saw the parade, obviously.
What was your thoughts when you saw that parade?
when you saw them line up and return the bodies?
What did you think?
This is terrorist.
I didn't have been surprised because they are terrorists.
They don't care about nothing.
They just want to do more and more for us.
It's sad.
Honestly, it's sad.
With that, I know that in our case, we don't have We cannot stop.
Like, we cannot.
We need to do everything we need to do to bring them home.
We vowed to bring back every single hostage.
Yeah. Alive or their bodies so that they can be properly buried.
Yeah. And I like what Bibi Netanyahu just said.
That if...
That they will lose territory for every...
He wants to keep them alive.
You will lose.
Your land.
Yeah. If you murder any more.
Correct. Dean, it's so heavy, man.
Yeah, it is my life, man.
For now.
For now, no, for sure.
And it will end.
And you will have your life back.
Yeah. This too shall pass.
And you will have a new life.
Yeah. When it's over.
Yeah. And you come to my house in Gaza.
Bezat Hashem.
So, what do you want to see now that everything has gone on?
It's a tragedy what happened to you in Nova.
Hashem irachem.
And I pray for your healing, brother.
Thank you.
I pray for your healing and I pray for Bar and I pray for all the nishamot, all the souls that are like you.
With the trauma and the images in your head.
I pray that you find peace.
Thank you.
And that you find comfort in the struggle.
Thank you.
But now that the war is raging on, what do you want to see?
I want to see that people take our side because they understand that it's about humanity and to be a human being, to be a person.
And we need to do everything we need to do to bring all of them.
It's not about Gaza, it's not about Palestine, not about Israel, not about Jewish, nothing of that.
It's about to end what they start.
They start on October 7th, and we need to finish that and bring all of them.
And I want to see the support, because a healthy person with his mind will think with himself, and he will say, we're right, because this is the truth.
We are the right over here.
We didn't choose this war.
And people need actually to learn.
People need to do research.
People need to read.
People need to see exactly what happened that day.
The biggest tragedy that happened to Israel.
people need to choose a side and to take our side.
Because we didn't choose it.
I like to say that even if they don't choose our side, it doesn't matter.
Yeah. Because I need to.
We're right.
And here's the thing about being a sovereign nation.
Sovereignty doesn't need permission or approval from anyone.
So we stand on our own.
But we would like others to stand with us.
And don't hate us.
If they can.
And if they can't, we're still going to do what we're going to do.
For sure.
We're going to save all the hostages.
We're going to bring everyone back.
What do you want to see happen in Gaza afterward?
I will say that if you want your house, I also would love to do a house on the beach over there.
In Gaza?
Yeah. On the beach at Colville Nova.
Yeah. Right at Nova.
You want to build something at Nova.
I want to call one of the beaches over there Nova Beach.
Nova Beach.
Yeah. Yeah.
So you don't want to see the Gazans go back to Gaza.
How? It's impossible because they're going to do it again.
And again and again.
Yeah. It's like we're the stupid ones if we allow it to go on again.
Yeah. And there's also like what I want to say that all of these Gazans people, Palestinians right now that are in Gaza, we're all of the Muslim countries.
How many Muslim countries do they have?
53. 53 Muslim countries that exist in the world.
No one opened a gate for them.
Egypt, that shared with us the same border, they don't open.
No one opened.
And we are, Israel, the size of New Jersey, something like that, right?
Yeah. We need to handle it with that.
The only Jewish continent we have in the world.
Right. It's nuts.
It's crazy.
They're talking about relocating them to Sudan or Syria right now.
Whenever. Yeah, this Rada Shem, they should all go.
Whenever. Complete deportation.
We tried many years and they just saw us in that morning that...
And what do you think about the West Bank and Fatah?
What's your thoughts?
My opinion is that if you want to live in a peaceful way, stay.
If you're not, and if you throw stones on soldiers or Israelis, your place is not here.
Get the fuck out.
Exactly. So there's an opportunity for peace.
You believe that there's an opportunity for peace.
My friend's name is Din.
It means judgment.
And I never judge.
And he never judges.
But if you had to judge, you would say, if you want to live in peace, stay.
And if you don't want to live in peace, go.
That's your judgment.
Yeah. Powerful.
And while I have you, what did you think about the situation in the north with Hezbollah?
We handle it with more shit, I will say.
If it's in the south, if it's in the north.
We need to handle it with Hezbollah also.
It's not easy.
You know, many forces that are fighting in the north.
It's crazy.
I think one of the greatest things that Israel did was take Har Harmon.
Did you ever go to the old Har Harmon?
No. Not yet.
So in the old Har Harmon, I went to the top.
And you can overlook into Syria and whatnot, but then you see the real heart hormone, you know, the peak in the distance.
Yeah. And that is the most important mountain in the entire Middle East.
Yeah. For peace.
To control the region so that people, and that's ours forever.
It's never going away.
Yeah. Now, a lot of people say Greater Israel.
Do you know about Greater Israel?
They say Greater Israel that the Jews want to control from the Nile to the Euphrates.
What do you say about that?
I think that for all of the world, I will say, it's good that Israel exists.
I will explain.
From the Nile to the Euphrates or just in the land of the Bible?
Where we are right now, in Israel.
Okay, for the record, he doesn't believe in Greater Israel.
He believes in the current Israel with the full boundaries of the land.
From the Bible.
The territories of the Bible.
Exactly. And I will say that people don't know that Israel is basically like mini-America.
Why? Because you can be whoever you want to be.
Christian, Muslim, Jewish.
20% of the population in Israel are Arabs, by the way.
We have Christian people.
And we have Ethiopian people.
We have all the colors.
You can be gay if you want in Israel.
And nothing will happen to you.
But if you put it in the Muslim countries, in Iran, in Lebanon, in kind of these countries, you can't.
You cannot be wherever you want to be.
There's real freedom in Israel.
Exactly. We are the only democracy in the Middle East.
And we kind of mini-America because here in America you can live wherever you want to be.
If it's gay, if it's righty, if it's a lefty, it doesn't matter who you are, right?
And Israel is the same.
So what do you think about America taking over the Gaza Strip?
Because I know that President Trump said that he was thinking about it.
What's your thoughts on that?
I would love to see that, honestly.
Like, I wish, really.
And I will say two words.
Good luck.
Like, seriously.
It's not as easy as people think it is.
And I believe that, yes, America can do that.
So please, do that.
It would be very stabilizing for the region because America's top allies are Israel.
Saudi Arabia and Egypt.
Yeah. And so if America is there, the border with Egypt will never have a fight again.
There will never be a fight between Egypt and Israel ever again.
Egypt doesn't want it.
Do you know about the Ben-Gurion Canal project?
The Ben-Gurion, right in Ashkelon, there's a project.
And this is one of the key reasons why a lot of people are, America is looking at Gaza right now.
They want to make a canal.
It's a very old...
It's called the Ben-Gurion Canal.
It goes from Ashkelon to Eilat.
It goes from Ashkelon out to the Dead Sea, and then from the Dead Sea it goes down to Eilat.
But you could fit two ships on each lane so they could pass each other.
Whereas in the Suez Canal, it only has one ship all the way through.
So the problem is it's very congested.
There's a lot of terrorists.
It's very difficult.
And Egypt controls all the trade from China, India, all the way into Europe.
It's controlled by a Muslim nation.
So, America has a vested interest in making sure that trade stays open.
Let's hope, you know?
That's why Egypt put their military on the border.
Because they want to go protect the Palestinians.
They don't care about the Palestinians at all.
They're afraid that Israel is going to take over the trade route.
And that's the real intelligence thing that's happening around Gaza.
That's why America wants to go there so that America can be the security guarantor.
Just like we took the Panama Canal.
Let's wait.
What's your thoughts on Bashar al-Assad in Syria while I got you?
I don't know really what to...
You don't know what to expect on the northern border?
Yeah. You know, at one point I was the director for Shari Tzedek Medical Center in Jerusalem.
I was one of the directors in America.
And we had a field hospital on the border of Syria and Israel.
And we would treat anyone.
Heal anyone.
Injured. If they're a terrorist, if they're not a terrorist.
Anybody who came, got free treatment.
In hopes that they would change and make peace.
And a lot of people gave up terrorism.
Because they were saved by Jews.
Syria is very interesting because you have the Druze of Syria now want to become a part of Israel.
They want Israel's protection.
And of course, they're suffering in Syria.
And the Christians are suffering in Syria.
Yeah. In your army, in your unit, did you have Druze?
Of course.
And Arabs?
Arabs, no, but Druze.
You had Druze?
Yeah. His name is Ghaz.
He's also a really good friend of mine.
One of the best also.
Kind of a brother for me.
And all his family is special forces.
Like all of them.
All of the Druze.
Yeah. I think we're about to get drowned out by this lawnmower cleaning up.
What's your last message to everybody?
I think they're gonna...
When he stops mowing, this guy in the background is like, we're...
My message is that appreciate your life because nothing is not obvious and be thankful about what you have.
And just that you know that everything can change in one second in your life.
So just be thankful about what you have.
I want to thank you guys all for tuning in today.
As I said earlier, I'm going to be making content when I have something to say, not just to speak, because that's ego, and Rosh Hashanah changed me this year.
I realized that I was exhibiting a lot of unnecessary ego, and I want to limit that, and I want to be able to come when I have something to give.
So, there's a million people that talk on the internet.
I want to be like everybody else.
I just only want to have something to say.
So I appreciate you guys all listening in and being patient with me.
I get a lot of your mail.
A lot of you guys want me to put out more content.
And it's nice that I hear that from you.
And I thank you guys all for staying tuned.
Where can people find you?
Are you on the internet?
Of course.
D-I-N-T-E-S-L-E-R Instagram.
Google, YouTube.
Are you on X?
Not yet.
Not yet.
Not on it.
It's basically the anti-semitism app.
I will work on it also.
Anyways, God bless you all, everybody.
Thank you for tuning in to The Adam King Show.
I am your host, Adam King, with my guest, Din Tesler.
Bring them home now.
Bring them home now.
We are signing off, and we will be here again soon with hostages released.
And peace on earth.
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