The Culture War #83 Michael Franzese, Was Life Better Under Mafia Rule? w/ Michael Franzese & Shane Cashman
Host:
Tim Pool @Timcast (everywhere)
Guests:
Michael Franzese | https://michaelfranzese.com/ | https://franzesewine.com/
Shane Cashman @ShaneCashman (everywhere)
Producers:
Lisa Elizabeth @LisaElizabeth (X)
Kellen Leeson @KellenPDL (X)
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We're going to talk about what's the state of this country.
And, you know, my question was, There's this viral video from A Bronx Tale, which I'm sure... Michael, you've seen that movie, right?
So, I obviously want to ask you, you know, the story of how it all begins, but just right off the bat, you know what I was saying?
Do you think, you know, is it romanticizing this idea that when the mafia is in charge there's some order, or is it, you said, you call it a crime family.
I watch these videos of roving bands in Chicago ramming cars into department stores, running and taking whatever they wanted, and I kind of feel like when you see these old stories about when the mafia was much stronger a hundred years ago, or when you've got strong organized crime, that kind of stuff doesn't happen.
But maybe it does in other ways.
I don't know.
What do you think?
unidentified
You know, Tim, first of all, I slipped, you know, when I say crime family, even though obviously we were involved in criminal activity.
But, you know, I hear so many people say crime family.
We normally just call it the family.
But I guess I've been programmed lately.
But, you know, one thing I have to tell you, there was no crime in our neighborhood.
Nobody would ever get away with doing anything like that.
Never.
You know, we took care of our communities.
We took care of our neighborhoods.
People loved us.
I mean, look, if you see clips of John Gotti now, you know, the people in the neighborhood loved him because he took care of the neighborhood.
And all of us did the same thing.
So that would never happen.
There would never be rampant crime like that anywhere, you know, where we were.
You know, the way I think about it is, the family, mafia, whatever people want to refer to it as, because I'm sure people use different names for different organizations, whatever it may be.
I mean, they know outright if you piss off your neighborhood, your neighborhood's going to turn on you and they're going to work with other people to bring you down.
But more importantly, it's your neighbors.
It's what you're doing to improve your lives improves the lives of the people around you.
And I feel like what we see now with the crime in all these cities is just social disorder, no connections whatsoever.
And so the story I always love to bring up is that scene from A Bronx Tale where the mob boss hears the ruckus.
Motorcycles, he walks over and he sees the bikers and they're in the bar and he's like, hey, what's the problem?
The bartender says, these guys aren't dressed appropriately for the bar.
Biker turns around, he's like, look man, we just want to have one beer and then we'll go.
And he says, spoken like a gentleman, give the man a beer.
And I respect that tremendously.
That these guys don't fit in, they're not from the neighborhood, they're being noisy, but he was nice.
He says, okay, we're gonna get you a beer.
Then the biker shakes the beer up, they all spray the bartender down.
My boss says, okay.
He's like, now you gotta leave.
And then the guy turns around and says, F you.
Turns around, they start laughing.
He walks over, pulls the door closed, locks it and says, now you just can't leave.
And then the boys come in the back with guns and baseball bats and crowbars and beat the crap out of those guys.
You know, I'm not gonna, you know, in the real world, I'm not a big fan of going around and just getting into bar fights or anything like that.
But the idea of, The mob boss, he was being nice.
These guys weren't wearing suits, they weren't wearing college shirts, but he was nice to them.
And then they disrespected him, and then this is what you get.
And so that idea in my mind, I'm thinking, Were we not better off when you get a chance to be a gentleman, and they treat you with respect, and you can live your life?
unidentified
Well, let me tell you, Chaz Palmaterri is a very dear friend of mine, and I've seen that movie so many times.
There's so many iconic little, you know, points of wisdom that Chaz put in that.
And he, you know, he wasn't part of the life, but he knew the life well.
You know, he had a lot of, you know, relationships there, but that's exactly how it would have been handled.
You know, it's all about respect.
All right, we'll show you respect.
Just don't cross the line.
And when they did, you know, they paid the price for it.
But, you know, again, it's about respect.
In the neighborhood, you respect your neighborhood.
You respect the people around you.
You respect your family.
And, you know, we've lost that.
You know, people say to me all the time, you know, Michael, you guys must have hated the police.
And, you know, what do you think about this defunding the police?
I said, that's the most ridiculous idea that I've ever heard.
I said, you gotta have law and order.
You know, we didn't disrespect the police.
What we used to tell the FBI and the cops, listen, we understand you're on one side, we're on the other.
We get it, you have a job to do, fine.
You know, do your job.
If you do your job better than we do ours, and we go down, we go down.
When it stopped being hidden and they became so blatant with it in terms of the government and police?
unidentified
You know, for me, it seems like it happened in the last, you know, seven, eight, nine years.
I mean, you know, I don't recall being at this, this out in the open.
Right.
And it's, listen, for me, the most frightening thing you can have in government are two things.
Number one, when the party in power starts to weaponize the Department of Justice and their other agencies to go after their political enemies, problem.
Really problem.
And I think we're seeing that.
And secondly, when you have the media that's supposed to be non-biased and impartial start covering for that, you know, same party.
You said, initially you said, you know, people refer to it as the crime family.
You said maybe you're programmed, it's called the family.
What is the average day-to-day for the family?
What do they do?
unidentified
Well, you know, it all depends on who you were in that life.
You know, I would separate the guys in that life, the made guys, guys that actually took the oath.
There's two categories.
You had the racketeers and you had the gangsters.
Now, the racketeers, normally, they were the guys that brought the money in.
You know, they knew how to use that life to benefit them in business, and they were earning money.
In our family, Colombo family at that time, we had 115 made guys, guys that actually took the oath.
Out of that 115, maybe 20 of us were earners, the racketeers.
The other guys, they were the gangsters, they did a lot of the heavy work, and they just didn't have the ability to earn.
So maybe they had a no-show job, maybe they're doing a little gambling, little numbers, you know, whatever they could do to, you know, to grind out a living.
But the gangsters couldn't really be the racketeers because they didn't know how.
But the racketeers had to be a gangster also because you're going to get called upon to do certain things.
So, you know, it all depends on what your level was in that life.
Well, listen, I get asked this question all the time, and I'm not going to sugarcoat it.
And look, people got killed in that life.
There's no question about it.
You cross the line, you suffer the consequences.
So it could have been that.
Do you send people out to beat people up?
Not really, but it happens.
Sometimes guys get crazy and they do things they shouldn't be doing.
You know, look, and I want to set the record straight.
When we take the oath, we're told that there are certain things that we can't do.
You never, ever mess around with another made guy's wife, daughter, sister, mother.
That's death.
That could be very, very serious.
You know, you don't betray the family, obviously.
You don't become an informant, obviously.
You gotta be honest in business.
If you're caught stealing and you shouldn't be, that could be, you could suffer serious consequences.
But the thing is, we all understand that going in.
And you're told straight out, you violate the life and you could pay for it and it might be your best friend that's called upon to do it because the life comes first.
What would you say is the primary purpose of the family?
I mean, was it just you guys were, you were in this together to work together to better each other's lives or was there a stated goal of we're going to rack it, we're going to be gangsters?
unidentified
Well, listen, we wanted to make money.
At the end of the day, it's about money.
You know, we had a lot of power and influence.
I always say the golden years of Cosa Nostra, mafia in this country, really from the late 40s, early 50s, right through to the mid 80s.
Yeah, but now I look at things and I'm like, if a couple of mobsters came in your place and said you're gonna pay us protection money or else, and they paid it, and then a day later a roving band of youths started smashing everything up, the mob is gonna come in and actually protect who's paying the bills.
Michael's got a great example in your book in Mafia Democracy about how all these politicians were saying in the news, it's going to be fine during COVID and lockdowns.
Meanwhile, they're doing insider trading, making all this money because they see what's coming down the pike.
unidentified
100%.
You know what gets me?
You take a Pelosi.
You know, the woman is 80 something years old.
She's made hundreds of millions of dollars.
Don't you want to go home and be with your husband and your kids and your grandkids?
No.
She wants to stay in power until she's gone, until it's over for her.
Okay, let me take, because this is a pet peeve of mine.
Joe Biden, probably the worst president ever, certainly in my lifetime, no question about it.
But I will tell you this, the information that they have against him with respect to his influence peddling as vice president through his son and his brother, okay, between the suspicious bank accounts, The $27 million plus that went into 18 or 21 shell companies.
These shell companies did nothing, okay, but exist to collect money.
There was no brick and mortar.
They had no service.
Nothing.
They did nothing.
How do I know this?
I had 18 shell companies when I was defrauding the government out of tax on every gallon of gasoline.
All we did was use those companies to set up a bank account to collect the money.
They did nothing else.
They have all that information on the laptop that they said was false, and then they used it as evidence against his son in trial.
The same Justice Department that said it was phony at one time used it to prosecute his son.
They've got whistleblowers.
They've got text messages.
They've got emails.
This is a racketeering indictment 1000%.
I know that statute.
Now whether he's innocent or guilty, prove it at trial, but he should have been indicted 100%.
And I believe until this moment that Hunter Biden took a plea because all this stuff would have came out at that trial and it would have buried Joe Biden.
Wow.
So he takes a plea.
Joe Biden is a pathological liar.
He's going to either commute a sentence or he's going to Do you think Biden's always been that way?
It's funny that this all comes back to politics, but it sounds to me like The real issue may be a loss of competition between crime families.
That when you've got the mobsters at the height of their power and the government, it's effectively two mobs going at each other, playing this game cat and mouse.
Now there's just one unchecked, can do whatever it wants.
You know, when I look at these people, I describe them as...
We're on the Titanic, we hit the iceberg, they saw it happen, and instead of announcing it to the ship, they're running around taking as many valuables as they can and rushing for the lifeboats.
So all this crime running rampant through our cities, the human waste, the homelessness, the poverty, everything that's causing this decay, and they say it's not happening, everybody shut your eyes, go back to bed.
Meanwhile, those of us who are paying attention, we're watching Joe Biden run off with the silverware, and they're telling us, nah, it's fine, nothing's going on.
And no one's gonna stop him either because The DOJ, it works for him.
He's not the boss, but he's one of them.
So that's just it.
We sit back and we watch them do all these things.
I don't know.
I don't know where we go from there.
unidentified
You know, Tim, I have to say this, you know, people sometimes, oh, you're getting into too many political issues.
This is not politics.
When you have people coming over the border that are swarming into your neighborhood and creating havoc and crime on taxpayer dollars, OK, when you have inflation the way it is, when you have All of this stuff going on, these are issues that are affecting our life.
Unfortunately, it's politics that control these issues.
But I try to make people aware of the issues, and you can't let this happen again for another four years.
You know, I say this too.
You can't trust these people.
They've lied to us about Biden.
They lie to us continuously every single day.
They don't even care.
They lie on video.
It doesn't even matter anymore.
If you have a friend or, you know, a companion, a partner, he lies to you once, all right, you know, stuff happens.
Second time, you start to get a little unnerved about it.
Third, fourth, fifth time, hey, I'm done.
It's over.
So when these people are lying to you consistently, how could you trust them for another three or four years after the destruction that they've caused and the dishonesty that they bring forward?
And you know, that's my whole thing.
I do not think, I know we're getting into politics here, I don't think America is going to survive another four years of this administration.
How do you think the mafia or the families that you knew from the '70s, '80s would have dealt with the collapsing border crisis now?
'Cause fentanyl's coming over, you know, well, you said your family wasn't dealing with drugs, but others were, you know, would they have kept, would they have like used that and be happy about the border failing 'cause they could get access to the drugs easier?
- No. - But then it would be hurting their neighborhoods, right?
unidentified
We wouldn't have any crime in our neighborhood.
Absolutely not.
If we had to shoot people, we would have done it.
Nobody's going to come into our neighborhood and cry.
Look, you know, I grew up, we never locked our doors.
We never shut our windows.
If my sisters would come home 12, 1 o'clock at night, if they were walking alone, guys would walk aside them and bring them home.
You know, there was no crime in our neighborhoods and we would not allow it.
And if we had to go to war with those committing it, They'd know that, you know, here's the border, don't come here.
When they bring the guys in the back who are cheating and they deal with it, you know, I'm not gonna pretend like these are good things, but there's something about where we are today with a lack of any kind of accountability or justice for criminals, where you watch a movie like that and you're like, the cheaters got caught, they messed them up a little bit and threw them out and said don't come back or else, and it's like,
You know, it's sad to say, because again, I'm not saying that we should have a system like that, but some accountability, it feels like, would be better than what's going on now, and that's kind of terrifying.
You watch these videos of these people going, there was a, during the riots, a small family shop gets ransacked by just a roving band.
And no accountability, no arrest, nothing happens.
You hear these stories now.
In Jersey, for instance, when I lived there, someone tried to break in, the cops told me, well, a lawyer told me this, if you defended yourself with a firearm, you'd be in prison.
Someone can break into your house with the intent to kill you, and you can't do anything to protect yourself, and then you look back at these old movies, which I'm sure kind of gloss over the nastier elements, sure, but at least the idea of your neighborhood's going to be safe, you can leave your door unlocked, and You know, as long as you're not being disrespectful or causing problems, then you are good.
It's kind of terrifying to say it again.
That's better than what we're seeing now in these cities.
I go to D.C.
I see tents everywhere.
I see homeless people.
I see drug addiction.
I went to California.
Some morbidly obese homeless woman pulled her pants off in the middle of the street and just started relieving herself in front of everybody.
Nobody does anything about it.
San Francisco's got the poop department.
Not a joke.
It's a poo department that goes around to clean up the human waste all over the streets.
And then you're like, Was the mafia really that bad?
It's like the government made the mafia to be out to be like these demonic figures that you were saying just to become it, right?
Like, you know, you think in the 50s they had those hearings with Costello and stuff and they're getting headlines then saying these are the dark, you know, these dark figures lurking in the shadows.
But then they become that and they let everything collapse around them.
I got a couple stories, but one is me and my brother were driving on 290.
For those that don't know, it's east to west.
It goes into the city.
And we are exiting at Independence to go to the north side.
Car driving past for no reason aims a gun and just shoots at our car.
And we're just like, why?
Why did that happen?
And fights would break out, people would have guns.
And so, you know, you say it would never happen.
I'm curious, were there ever any instances?
I mean, was the mafia roughing up innocent people and causing problems for innocent people?
Or were they left out of it as long as it's like they're taking care of their business with other, you know, other groups or what?
unidentified
Tim, I honestly can say that I only know of the 20 years that I spent in that life, I only know personally of one time when an innocent person got shot.
It was an accident.
Got shot.
No, I mean, we roughed up our own.
That's it.
You know, and people, we heard the expression, we only killed our own.
Well, to a great degree, that's true.
We didn't go after shooting people in stores and doing all that.
And you know what?
And that stuff did happen in the 20s and the 30s.
That was kind of the Wild West before there really was an organization.
The days of Al Capone, there were a bunch of gangs around.
I feel like the cities are going to have a breaking point, though, where people are going to realize we have to change the way we vote, perhaps.
Like, I don't know what's going on with Eric Adams yet, but it seemed like he was upset about immigration, the way it was hurting his city.
And the second he starts to say things that they don't like, the people on his side don't like, all of a sudden how, you know, everything's happening to him.
unidentified
All of a sudden he's indicted.
All of a sudden they investigate stuff that happened many, many years ago.
They bring it up on him because he said, rightfully so, why are we paying for this?
You're allowing it to happen at the border.
Why isn't the federal government paying for it?
And they didn't want to.
He went to the White House a couple of times.
They said, no, you're on your own.
These people are backstabbed.
They're the worst people.
And you're hearing that from an ex-mob guy.
I'm telling you, these are the worst people I've ever seen.
You know, I gotta tell you another thing.
I went to trial five times.
I was never even five minutes late for a trial.
Never missed.
I stood in front of five juries that could have put me away forever, right?
Never missed.
I get indicted on a white-collar crime, it was a racketeering case, defrauding the government.
I get no bail.
No bail.
This guy's been on, five times he stood in front of a jury that could have put him away forever.
This is a white collar crime, basically, defrauding the government out of tax on gasoline.
And because why?
Because I beat them so many times, they figured, you know, lock him up, it's harder to defend yourself and prepare a defense.
And now you go rob a store, you go hit somebody over the head, you shoot a cop and you're out the next day.
You know, and again, maybe I'm just romanticizing because maybe there never was and we just highlight these moments and we wish it was like that.
unidentified
But now it's just... Come on, I mean, first of all...
I mean, you got to look what they did to Trump.
The first time in 200 plus years that they go after a former president the way they did with such vindictiveness and such garbage.
Garbage.
I mean, what they're prosecuting for is garbage.
And then obviously what?
Two impeachments of, you know, baloney, you know, Mueller investigation with this stupid.
You know what they did to me with this Russian thing?
Listen to this.
During the Mueller investigation, when I was back in the day, myself and my Russian partner, I was in partners with Russia, we were doing gas business together, right?
We put up $6 million to buy condos in Trump Towers back then, right?
And we gave them cash.
Nothing wrong with that, right?
Well, do you know that during the Mueller investigation, the FBI came to me and they were asking me about that incident that happened in the early 80s?
And I said, wait a second, wait a second, because my partner, his brother-in-law or something, was a KGB agent.
I said, are you guys trying to make a Russian connection?
Because me and my partner, who was Russian, bought, you know, condos at Trump Towers.
And are you stretching to that?
I said, I'll tell you what, bring me in front of the Mueller investigation.
And you're told straight out, you know, this is the life, it comes before anything.
You know, they told me if your mother is sick and dying, you're at her deathbed, we call you to service, you leave your mother, you come and serve us.
From now on, we're number one before anything and everything.
And when and if we feel you deserve this privilege and honor to become a member, we'll let you know.
You know, when I got made in 75, For 20 years prior to that, they had an expression that the books were closed.
They weren't bringing in any new guys.
The only time, and this was among all five families in New York, the only time they can bring in a new guy is if somebody died in the family and they replaced him.
In the mid-'80s, I mean the mid-'70s, they opened the books and they started recruiting new guys.
So when I got made, there was guys waiting 20 years to become made members, you know?
You know, everybody says in order to become a member of that life, you got to kill somebody, you know, and all I can say is this.
There was a lot of guys that were being made at that point, and you just don't go around killing everybody.
You can't find somebody to kill and say, okay, I killed somebody.
Can I now, you know, get made?
But you have to be ready to do that if you're told to do it.
And, you know, here's another thing.
When you take the oath to become a MAID member, it's an oath of omerta.
It's not an oath.
Omerta means silence.
You're not even supposed to admit that the life exists.
You don't take an oath to lie, cheat, kill, murder.
That's not the oath.
Now, obviously, those things happen as part of that life, but the oath is to be silent, Never talk about the life, never admit that it even exists, and that's it.
So, um, and I want to get that clear because people think you take the oath, okay, now I'm taking an oath to kill somebody.
Yeah, when the Long Island serial killer was happening and they found his graveyard, supposedly the theory was that it could have also been a mafia dumping ground on Kilgo Beach.
And Sonny says, in my line of words, better to be feared.
All right?
So I talked to Chaz afterwards.
I said, Chaz, remember that line?
What do you think about that now?
I said, oh, Michael, you know, in your life, it's definitely better to be feared.
I said, you're wrong, Chaz.
He said, what do you mean?
I said, let me tell you why.
He said, yes, fear kept people in line.
There's no question about it.
But what happened in my life is that when the RICO statute came in, And they were going to guys that were in trouble, and they tell them straight out, listen, you cooperate with us, or you're going to get 50 or 100 years.
There's no more parole.
You're doing 85%.
We're going to lock you up someplace.
You're going away.
And that's it.
Or you can cooperate with us.
We'll put you in the Witness Protection Program.
We'll give you some money.
We'll change your identity.
And don't worry about it.
The guy you testify against is going away forever.
Well, what happened, the fear of the life was transferred to the fear of the government.
And that's why so many guys flipped.
Don't let anybody tell you any different.
When these guys, most of them say, oh, you know what, the mob did me wrong and that's why, you know, I flipped.
Let me tell you something, we all know.
I mean, nobody's a saint in that life.
You know, you get involved in the street, you know, things are not going to go right all the time.
Guys don't want to go to jail.
So, but when you love somebody, you're not going to hurt them.
They're going to run, or they're going to seek protection somewhere else.
And that's what happened.
And look, I don't like the use of informants for the government.
I don't think it's good, you know?
I really don't.
You know, they give guys break.
Guys can murder five guys.
And because, you know, this guy has a bigger name, they'll give the guy that killed five guys a pass, and they'll want to get the guy with the bigger name.
You know what I never really understood is in all these movies when there's this like, and they do this in every show, there's always some guy with a gambling debt to the mafia and they beat the crap out of him and they're like, you got three days.
It's like, why did they lend money to a guy they knew couldn't pay it back?
You've got to make money, right?
unidentified
Yes.
First of all, the only time somebody's going to really get beat up is if they're just thumbing their nose in your face and they're saying, screw you.
Because why are you going to beat somebody up?
You want to get paid.
Right.
So you give the guy a break.
You know going in, you know that you're going to have a little issue.
Look, I had more money on the street than you can imagine, you know, back then, because I was making a lot of money.
And, you know, I knew sometimes guys couldn't pay.
You're not going to beat them up or put them in a hospital, because give them a break, let them continue paying you.
You know, the only time, like I said, that happened, and it's rare, you know, it's rare, is if somebody just was way out of hand and thumbing their nose in your face and just acting like a jackass, then maybe he's going to get hurt.
Were the terms of the loans that were given, like, really awful?
Because it's another trope.
It's like, you know, 20%, some ridiculous amount that's almost impossible to pay back.
unidentified
Normally between, I'll tell you what was common, one to five percent a week.
But you're not going to charge, yeah, you're not going to charge a guy five points that you knew he couldn't pay.
If somebody came to me at the time, and they were in business, and they were making money, and they needed money, they couldn't go to a bank, and I would kind of evaluate the situation, okay, you can pay me three percent a week.
What I always heard when I was young in Chicago is, uh, most the gangs.
They're, I don't know, tangentially organized.
They're moderately organized to some degree.
They've got rules, you know.
They would always say, when you're in the gangs, they're usually selling drugs.
And that's a principle way to make money, but you're not allowed to do them.
And if the gang catches you doing drugs, you're stealing product.
You're stealing product and you're putting them in legal jeopardy.
But it wasn't very sophisticated.
However, What I'd often hear from people is that the Latin Kings were much more like the crime families, that they were older guys with families that ran the show.
Me and my friends would always be concerned, but the way it usually happens on the South Side is somebody would pull up in a car next to you and say what you is.
And it's like, they're trying to figure out what gang you're in.
I remember my friends were walking down the street and a car pulled up and they were like, what you is?
And they were like, what?
It's like, what you is?
And the kid was like, skateboarders?
And they started laughing and they were like, man, and they drove off.
But they thought these kids were in a gang because that's what happens.
So we knew the gangs were Some of them, there was one gang that would just smoke pot all day, and they'd sit around and everybody was cool with them.
It was a gang.
If you wanted to get in the gang, they'd V you, they'd beat the crap out of you, and then you're in the gang.
And then what do you do when you're in the gang?
They sold pot, and then they smoked it, and everyone was like, nobody cares about those guys.
The cops didn't even care about those guys.
But then there was another faction.
related to that gang.
They weren't necessarily the same gang.
It's kind of weird, I don't know.
And those guys would rob you blind.
They'd act nice, then they'd find out where you live, come in and take everything you got.
And so when my friends were always talking about it, the one thing they always pointed out was the Latin kings will treat you with respect.
There's a 35-year-old guy who's a high-ranking dude in the gang.
He's got a family.
He doesn't want any trouble.
He doesn't want young kids coming around with guns and doing dumb things in his community.
And it was much, much more organized like the crime families were.
unidentified
I don't know if you ever had any experience with them, or... Yeah, I did have some experience with the Latin Kings, and I agree with you on that.
They were more organized than, you know, they were adults, let's put it that way, in crime.
But you know, these gangbangers, 90% of their income comes from drugs, as far as I saw, you know, from drugs.
And they weren't sophisticated in their criminal activities, you know?
They rob, they do what they do, and they're big in the drug business.
You know, again, we were not, and we had a level of sophistication about us.
We got around politicians.
We controlled the unions.
We were into contracting.
You know, we did a lot of things that were, you know, just different level than most of these street gangs.
Yeah, I mean, you know, basically we figured out we had a scheme to defraud the government out of tax on every gallon of gasoline.
And I ran that for about between seven and eight years.
I had the Russian mob guys with my partners.
And basically at the time, the tax on gasoline, state and local, was about 25 to 30 cents.
And the feds were nine cents.
So we had about 40 cents a gallon.
And at the height of my operation, we're selling a half a billion gallons of gas a month and we're taking down 20, 30, 40 cents a gallon, whatever, you know, whatever we want to do to, uh, whatever deal we wanted to make.
So one point in time, we're taking in eight to 10 million a week.
No, but as an aside, I mean, you know, with a profit like that general question, I mean, Well, are you allowed to say how much you got personally?
unidentified
Yeah.
Listen, it was basically my... I'll tell you what happened.
When I realized what I had, and I can get into the whole backstory, but when I realized what I had and that this was going to be a real deal, I went to my boss at the time, Carmine Persico.
He's dead now.
And I said, Junior, we called him Junior.
I said, Junior, look, I'm going to show you more money than you've ever seen before.
And he looked at me.
He said, we don't do drugs.
I said, Junior, come on.
You know I hate drugs.
Nothing to do with drugs.
He said, what is it?
I said, it's gas.
He said, gas?
I said, yes.
It's a tax scheme.
We're going to defraud the government out of tax on every gallon of gasoline.
I said, but here's what's going to happen.
He said, what?
I said, everybody's going to want to get involved in this.
Across the board, all five families, when they see the amount of money, is it going to be that much?
I said, trust me, when they see the amount of money, everybody's going to want a piece.
When that happens, we're going to blow it.
So what do you want me to do?
I says, every time I have an argument, I gotta win.
I said, I'm gonna be right.
I gotta win.
Play no politics, nothing like that.
I said, just make me win.
I'll be right every time.
I says, and I'll show you more money than you've ever seen before.
So I'll never forget.
He sat back.
He said, show me.
I was bringing him $1.2 million a week.
That buys a lot of loyalty.
I never lost an argument.
And I'm telling you, everybody, Gotti and people came at me.
I'll tell you a funny story, I've said it before.
You know, the word gets out when you're doing that, right?
And I had a pretty big crew.
So Fat Tony was the boss of the Genovese family.
And do you know who Fat Tony was?
I heard the name, yeah.
You know who he is, Tim?
No.
Right out of Central Casting.
He was about 5'6", you know, a little bit chubby, wore a fedora, smoked a cigar, and had the gravelly voice, right?
Just like that.
Typical mob guy.
So he had a club in Harlem.
So he calls me, he sends for me, rather, to come and see him.
So I go put it on record.
Whenever you go see the boss of another family, you've got to put it on record with your guy that you're going there, right?
And I was a captain at the time.
So I'll never forget.
It was a summer day.
It was in August, I think.
So I go see him in Harlem.
And he's sittin' outside his social club with three or four guys, and he's sittin' there, hands on his belly, he's got the cigar and the fedora.
He comes up to me, he says, you know, we do all the nice things.
He says, Mike, let me ask you a question.
I said, what, Tony?
He said, you're doin' good, huh?
I said, yeah, Tony, I'm okay.
He says, you makin' money?
I said, Tony, no complaints.
He says, what do you got, gas or something?
I said, yeah, you know, we figured out a scheme.
We're doin' okay.
You robbin' the government?
I said, absolutely.
That's good, that's good.
So then he says to me, he says, I need a favor from you.
I said, Tony, anything you want.
You're the boss.
What could I do for you?
He says, just like this.
I got these five mama lukes around me.
They can't earn three cents.
He says, you give them a job?
I said, yeah, Tony, I can give them a job.
He said, what will they do?
I said, well, I had about 300 gas stations.
I either operated or leased at the time, right?
I said, Tony, how about I give them a job?
You know, they'll run a gas station for me.
It's easier to collect the money and they'll watch the guys.
I said, but Tony, don't let them rob me.
You know these guys, if they rob you, I'll cut off their hands, their ears, just like that, right?
I said, no, you don't have to do that.
He said, don't worry about it.
So I said, you got it, Tony.
He says, how much are they going to earn?
So now I'm thinking, I don't want to insult the boss, but I'm thinking for a minute.
I had 18 companies, they were shell companies, and it was a daisy chain.
You could get, the way we worked it, you could get about 10 months out of the government before they come down on you.
And come down on you, all we had was an office that this thing was operating at, so they'd come down at 10 Ten months, they rate it, we close it down, we jump onto the next license in a different part of town.
Cause the gas shortages, the lines in like the Bronx and Brooklyn, you had different plate numbers.
You can go get your gas.
It was a shootout sometimes.
unidentified
You know how it got, I bought a terminal off of British Petroleum.
We had, it was, I think it was 3 million gallons it would hold, but we were buying barges from all the major oil companies.
When the feds had an inkling, they were trying to figure out what we were doing.
Well, they went to all the majors and they said, you know, these guys are mob guys and they're buying gas from you and you're going to your gas station.
And they would say, oh, we're upset with them and we're going to watch for it.
They didn't care because we were buying the gas off of them and selling it back to their stations.
I'm thinking, like, I know people in the Hotel and Trades Union, and they've pretty much voted a certain way for a long time, but they're giving hotels up to immigrants now, to these illegal aliens coming in.
I know I have family who used to work in that hotel, and we're not working there anymore.
unidentified
Look, the only union that The real union that they have locked up is the teacher's union.
What's it like being in prison when you come from the family?
Like, are there people inside that help?
unidentified
I never had a problem in prison.
You know, my father, again, very smart guy, he says to me, son, when you go to prison, he said, remember these three words.
They're going to help you get by with no trouble.
Please, thank you, excuse me.
He said, because Mike, everybody in prison who never got respect on the street, they want all the respect in there.
So they want to prove something, right?
You know, you bunk into somebody, excuse me, you know, somebody you want to break in line with your friends in front on the child line, please do you mind if I get in?
That's okay.
You know, somebody hands you something, thank you.
Never had a problem.
You know, but I saw a lot of stuff go on in there.
And, you know, because I know people who grew up in nicer parts of the city or grew up in different places and they got a bone to pick because you don't dare disrespect me.
How dare you?
And I'm like, you bring that attitude to Chicago and you'll find a bullet.
If there's somebody, you don't even know if they're in a gang or not.
If you're at a bar and someone's getting aggressive with you, I'm so sorry about that, man.
But there's just too many stories where one guy's aggressive, he gets at it, he says, you don't know who you're effing with, he shows a gun.
Someone else pulls a gun and then there's a couple of dead guys and it's just for what?
I knew people, the one that always really bothered me was the road rage from people who don't understand the city and they're driving on the highway or whatever and someone cuts them off and they start screaming and flicking them off and then that car slams their brakes on and the guy steps out of the car and he's got a gun and it's a gangbanger and it's just like, dude, it's not worth it, man.
You got cut off, carry on with your day, go feed your family, get your job.
And, you know, so that I understand.
But what you're saying, people on the street, they want respect, they don't get it other places.
unidentified
They don't get it in there.
And I saw some, you know, it's stupid.
I mean, there's a lot of stupidity in there with guys.
But, you know, I did almost three years in solitary, they had me.
Oh, crap.
29 months and seven days, to be exact.
Feds were pretty upset with me.
They tried to get me to cooperate when I walked away.
And, you know, they got even with me in a lot of ways.
It was a medium security, but it was right on the water, you know, in sunny California.
It was great.
No, you gotta see what happened.
We were right on the water, right?
So, a lot of times we were out there, and girls used to come by in a boat, and they used to pull their tops down, and you'd see a wave of people running to the fence, right?
Even the cops would laugh at it, you know?
And they'd be on that fence, and these girls would come.
Especially now in the cities, like New York City's prisons seem so corrupt.
Like whatever they have Didion is, you know, that prison is not, does not have a good history.
unidentified
Let me tell you something.
I was in, this is a funny story.
When they locked me up, they had me in, I was in MDC in New York, and then they had taken me cross country to my designated spot, which was Terminal Island.
So on the way, they brought me to Lewisburg, right?
Penitentiary level six and at the time all the blacks in DC had rioted and they burnt their prison down So they were dispersing the blacks all over the system.
So they didn't have a place to put them.
So they open up the basement in in What I say in Pennsylvania and it was condemned they weren't allowed to open it, but they opened it up for this, right?
So now the feds are mad at me They bring me there to Lewisburg, and they bring me to the basement, and it's 250 black guys and me, right?
And I'm a young guy, I'm 30-something years old at that time, and as I'm walking down, they got me shackled, and I'm walking through the tier down there, and these black guys are going, oh, Whitey, we're gonna get you, and I'm saying, man, I'm gonna have a tough time here.
I hope these guys figure out who I am.
That's what I'm saying to myself.
No, sooner than I say that, it was like God was shining down on me.
They had televisions on the tier, right?
So as I'm walking down, all of a sudden, newsflash.
Michael Francis, captain in the Colombo family, stole two million dollars.
And they're looking at the TV, and they're looking at me, and all of a sudden they start cheering.
These younger criminals, the people coming across the border, it's kind of wild because I suppose when I talk about, you know, the neighborhoods being safe under the Mafia, it's this idea that there was still some respect for life, and an understanding that, I don't want my family put at risk, so I'm gonna try and minimize these... It's almost like how in, you know, European countries have this idea of war crimes.
If we go to war, okay, fine, but you can't do this, because that crosses the line.
I don't want you gassing my people, I won't gas your people.
But now we're entering this territory of, all that matters is winning.
And so the gangs now in Chicago and other places, they literally don't care.
They'll hand a gun to a 13-year-old and say, go do what needs to be done, because the kid will go to juvie for five years.
unidentified
Yeah, or he gets out, he's got to be released at 25.
He gets indoctrinated while he's in there, and now he's a full-fledged member, he comes out.
I mean, I had some experiences with it, but you know, I have to say something.
You know, my YouTube platform is pretty big, and I built it on telling mob stories and crime stories, and I'm starting to get away from that.
There's only so many stories you can tell.
I'm not going to make things up.
And so I've been getting into a little bit more of the politics, and I got a big platform on Rumble now where you can speak freely.
But, you know, one of the things that's really bugging me, and I try to make people understand, you know, to me the sin of omission is as serious as the sin of commission, maybe even more serious.
When you know something's wrong and you have a platform, okay, to where you can try to make it right or at least educate people and you don't do it, that's wrong.
So what I'm saying is, you know, with Biden, one of the worst things, and maybe this is part of my upbringing, part of my life, when you're in a position of trust, And you violate that trust in such a way that it's dangerous and it's and it's hurting people in a bad way.
And I'm talking specifically about the border and this soft on crime policies when people are getting murdered and cities are getting destroyed and neighborhoods are getting destroyed.
And you're the president of the United States.
These people put their trust in you.
They nominated you.
They voted for you.
And you're destroying them.
There's nothing worse to me than that.
I mean, I think this is, and again, people say, Oh, Michael, you're a Trump lover.
I don't love Trump.
I love my wife.
I love my kids.
I love my God.
I love people, but I don't love Trump.
But you got to be honest.
The guy gave us four good years as president.
His policies were good.
That's all I care about.
You know, it could be Trump, could be anybody else, if you're doing the right thing for the country.
But this guy and this administration, to throw people to the dogs the way they're doing, it's just... We wouldn't do that on the street.
I don't think Biden's... We would not do... I'm telling you, we wouldn't do that on the street.
I wonder if a loss of religion as this country starts becoming more secular, and of the people who do claim to be Christian, they're not really practicing.
And I wonder if that was a component of why there was at least some degree of honor relative to what we see now.
The gangs that come in, they'll kill anybody they don't care.
The government, politicians, they'll insider trade, they'll strip the value, they'll pull the copper from the walls of the country while the cities burn down.
I wonder if it's just there's no fear of God.
unidentified
Tim, you nailed it, 100%, because they're trying to get God out of our institutions, out of our kids' psyche and their head, out of our schools.
I mean, it's—you know, look, I have seven kids, I have seven grandchildren, right?
I have to say this.
I saw something just today on the plane coming in that just got me sick.
Senator John Kennedy, I love that guy, he's from Louisiana, good old boy, right?
Straight shooter, just a great guy.
But he was talking to a woman, I think she was from Planned Parenthood, and he was describing in detail, with charts, everything, what an aborted baby, what happened to that baby at the age of 23 weeks, 23 weeks old.
And as he's describing it, I couldn't even watch it.
As they're tearing this baby apart and they're saying to the woman, the baby's feeling pain, right?
As they're pulling his legs apart and pulling his, how could you watch this?
And these people get up there and say, you know, I mean, abortion is okay because it's a woman's body to do what she pleases with it.
Well, it's not the woman's body anymore.
You know, and I say, I have seven kids, seven grandchildren.
My daughters and my daughter-in-laws, their body was never in trouble.
Now, I would say this, if there was a case where, you know, God forbid it's the mother or the baby, okay, you know, you're gonna pick the mother 99% of the time, we get that, we understand that.
If there's a situation, rape, okay, we get it.
There are certain instances where we get it.
But to try to say, you know, it's a woman's health issue, it's not a woman's health issue.
And if Christians would vote their morality, There would never be a progressive president.
We got out here in Charlestown, West Virginia—Charlestown and not Charleston.
Big mistake people make.
And, you know, they had this procession of like 2,000 Christians, Catholics—it was a Latin mass—Catholics marching through the streets in protest of a lot of what we're seeing.
Yet the city council is all progressive, or it's dominated by progressives.
And so I met a city councilman who is, I'd say, I wouldn't call him far right or anything like that.
He's a conservative guy, you know, moderate.
And I asked him, how is that possible?
That you've got a Latin mass in West Virginia, of all places, second most Trump-loving country, Trump-supporting state in the country.
When they show up to vote, they're tithing, they're worshiping, and when the Catholics and the Christians go to church, they think that's it.
And then they cast aside the rest.
unidentified
And that's exactly my point.
The sin of omission is as serious as the sin of commission, because if Christians, Catholics would vote scripturally, we'd never have a progressive president or a progressive administration, because they couldn't.
Yeah, and they go and vote based on these ideological beliefs and then criticize anybody who does otherwise.
There was this post that someone made from—Daniel Radcliffe had a comment where he said—you know, he's Harry Potter—he said that he was an atheist and he has no problem with religions, just people shouldn't be voting based on religion.
And he's a militant atheist who thinks that should be stopped.
And he's basically saying, my worldview is absolute and no one else should be able to influence government based on their worldview.
That's all he's really saying.
I think these people genuinely don't understand religion and morality.
They genuinely think they are morally superior for not having a religious view because they're smarter and better than everybody.
I never wanted to say this because this country is so divided right now.
It's horrible.
It really is terrible.
But I think people with knowledge now, if they can vote for Harris in this administration, I think I'm going to be really upset with them, you know?
And, you know, I think it was Megyn Kelly that said, all right, you know, you people go out and vote, but if you put this person in office, you're causing me to suffer.
And I don't ever want to resent somebody because of their political views, but I think I'm going to be angry at this point.
Well, there was a I saw a story the other day that said a throuple of three gay men Had a baby through surrogacy, and they put all their names on the birth certificate.
unidentified
I haven't fact-checked this, so... But, you know, these days, things that are caricatures are so easily believable, it's insane.
But that's basically the premise here that I was bringing up.
Somebody shared that clip from the Bronx that went viral several times over the past year because people keep saying, That scene where they beat the crap out of the bikers is better than what we have now.
Not that we want any violence, but right now it's absolutely insane.
You've got, as I mentioned, the homelessness, the poverty, the drug abuse, camps all over these cities, and no accountability.
And now we're looking at in Seattle, after the police got defunded, they're saying they will not respond to emergency alarms anymore.
They don't have the resources.
So if an alarm goes off at a building, they just say, well, you know, good luck.
I wonder if something like this re-emerges then, if a family-type, mafia-type thing can re-emerge.
I don't see it happening from the legal aliens coming by, because I think they're probably loyal to stuff going on wherever they came from and to their day-to-day survival here.
Well, this, you know, I don't know, maybe Michael would know better, with the trend of Aragog coming in.
And with, you know, the Summer of Love riots we saw.
There was one video where some Antifa far-left guys were trying to riot in a small town, and a bunch of the men got up and just stood firm and started pushing them out as they were screaming, and they were like, get out.
Is it possible that With Tren de Aragua, you're gonna get a bunch of local guys coming together and just being like, maybe they're union working guys, being like, we gotta come together, we can't let Tren de Aragua come in.
And that turns into a family.
unidentified
Well, I read that some of the gangs in Chicago were now pulling together to say, we gotta go after these guys, so we're not gonna let this happen.
This is, the Tren de Aragua Chicago story is I think it's one of the more interesting and very worrying stories.
I remember a long time ago, I was at a police station when I was a teenager, and they have maps of gang territory.
The cops know who they're going, and they have to know the rules about what these gangs do.
Some gangs might shoot on sight.
I mean, no respect, they don't care, they give a 13-year-old kid a gun, and they say, don't let cops come in.
And they know that that kid, they tell them, like, don't worry, you'll get out when you're 18.
So now what we're hearing is, Rumors.
I don't know to what extent it's actually starting to develop, but one story of one of the local gangs, they were outside of some building and they said the Venezuelans have come in here and they're selling drugs on our turf.
You can't do that.
The other gangs know better.
I'm not going to start naming which gangs or anything because I know all of them, but gang one says, don't worry.
Gang number two, they know not to cross this street because this is where we do business.
And we have an agreement, because we don't want to go to war.
So we don't go over there.
Sometimes you get a young guy who's going to be like, I'm going to take this turf, and they can't do anything about it.
But you know, I feel like that's more rare, at least when I was growing up.
But the Venezuelans don't care about any of that.
They don't care about treaties.
They don't care about agreements.
And so now, Gang one goes to gang two and says, if we don't stop these Venezuelan cartels and drug dealers coming into our turf, they're coming for yours next.
So work with us.
If you see them, let's not let them.
The scary thing is what that turns into.
You see this video out of Aurora where they come and knock on the door and they're banging on it and then they start drilling through the door or whatever and they go inside.
If that were Chicago, They'd knock on that door, they'd pull out a drill, whatever, and then bullets would come flying right through that door.
And that's it.
unidentified
You know what?
It's going to come to that, I think.
It really is.
If they don't get hold of this, it's going to come to that.
Did you, uh, was there ever a circumstance where one of your guys on his own for whatever goes into another family's territory or businesses and causes problems?
Happened all the time.
I mean, but like, what's the remedy then?
Does like, you know, Fat Tony say, Hey, look, your guy came in here.
What are we going to do about this?
Like, how is that handled?
unidentified
Sit down and discuss it and, you know, hopefully you can resolve it without anybody getting hurt, you know, depending upon what the situation was.
But, you know, I had to sit down almost every other day, you know, over some of my guys doing something or somebody wanting a piece of business.
Yeah, when you're a captain, you're constantly doing that kind of business, you know.
I was talking to Michael Malice about private security.
He's an anarchist, so he views police as a private institution better than a governmental one.
I don't completely agree.
And I said, how would it work?
I mean, look, I live in this town.
I pay my private police department.
They keep me safe.
And if someone comes to rob me, they'll come and they'll arrest them.
Let's say there's two cities.
They each have their own private police force.
One guy comes to my house and robs me.
Gets chased by my private cops to this other city where he runs in his house and then calls his cops and says, these other cops are lying, they're coming to get me, come defend me.
And he said it'd be like the Mafia.
That's how things would be run.
And it was better then.
And, you know, I don't completely agree, but that did entertain the idea that things, that crimes could be resolved better.
But I'm curious, you know, if something like that were to happen, how do the families resolve that issue?
unidentified
Well again, they would sit down and make a decision.
If the guy at fault was really at fault and he had to be eliminated, it would happen.
How public was, you know, all of this stuff went, you know, from the 50s to the 80s.
Was it very common in the press?
Everybody knew the mob was out there.
They're doing stuff.
They're in the news every day.
You mentioned walking to the prison, you're on the TV.
unidentified
There wasn't, I'll be honest with you, you know, New York Times, Daily News, New York Post, during my era in that life, there wasn't a day or two that went by without a mob story.
About somebody.
Usually two or three of them.
Now, I read the New York Post every morning.
Maybe every six months you might read something.
And then you read, what do you read?
These guys got busted for the same old thing.
Gambling.
It's the same nonsense, silly things that they, you know.
You know, with the obsession over Donald Trump starting in 2015, CNN turned into the Trump News Network.
I remember, I used to watch CNN every day.
This is six, seven years ago.
I had a projector screen on my wall playing CNN, ten feet wide, and I would just leave it running, so for breaking news.
And then one day I'm watching it, and I see online that there's riots going on in Iran, and I'm like, what's happening in Iran?
And I look at the screen, and they're having a roundtable talking about Trump.
And I was like, I don't know, I gotta change channel.
Fox News, Iranian protests.
And I'm just like, they became obsessed talking about Trump.
I'm wondering if now the media stops writing about the families and their dealings and what's going on because they're not getting the traffic and the attention they used to get.
Maybe the story was just the American public was thirsty for news about what the families were doing.
They made movies about it.
Endless movies.
unidentified
To a degree, but I'll tell you what.
Back in my day, we had, among all five families, we had about 750 maid guys, guys that actually took the oath.
We had a lot of associates, but guys that actually took the oath.
Back then, the FBI had 1,200, 1,200 to 1,400 agents assigned to the five families.
What I'm saying is, either it's a prime time for resurgence because the public doesn't care and the feds don't care, or they already have an operation going but they're keeping it under the radar.
unidentified
They are keeping it under the radar.
They're not going away.
That much I can tell you.
They're just, the feds are just not on them anymore.
They feel that they did the job to a great degree.
Let me... What surprised me is, like, knowing history, you know what happens, and it's bound to repeat itself, but it was just shock of people I knew overnight being brainwashed into being bloodthirsty.
For your neighbor, or for your loved one, and banishing your family if they had wrong think, you know?
Or seeing people donate money to arsonists, or marching down to the city and doing violence themselves.
But you've been around for a lot of presidential elections, and you agree with Jack?
It's usually pretty boring?
unidentified
Yeah, I mean, you know, first of all, it was great because one day, Okay, you went out and vote, by the next morning you know who the president is, or by later that night.
Yeah, man, to see the Magmile, Watertower, Gold Coast areas, what they're turning into, it's kind of, it's kind of, it's kind of, it's crazy.
The downtown storefronts just closed.
And I was there a couple of years ago and I couldn't believe how many businesses had shut down.
It's not just about the crime, it's the economy.
I think, you know, it's one thing when you look at the local level, defund the police, the political climate around policing, the cops can't do anything.
Not to mention, I mean, Chicago cops are corrupt.
Not all of them, but Chicago's got corrupt cops.
And I think now what we're looking at is, I guess the inverse of when things break down the other direction, and now it's just gang crime and theft and robberies, now there's no town at all.
Look, you know what's gonna happen is, I go back home and I'm shocked to see what the city's turned into.
But the people who never left, It's just the same, right?
So the younger people are like, what do you mean?
It's always been like this.
Older people are like, no, there used to be a hot dog stand over there.
There used to be a barber shop over there, an ice cream shop right there.
I think a lot of that is what breeds nihilism in the younger people who are doing this like petty violent crime day-to-day stuff because they have no meaning in their lives.
Going back to having no God and stuff like that.
unidentified
You know, people used to say, well, you guys corrupted the cops.
Yeah, OK.
So we had a card game, and they would come, and we'd pay them off and look the other way while guys are sitting down playing cards.
They're not shooting each other.
They're not robbing people in the street.
They're not selling drugs.
They're playing cards.
OK, sorry the government isn't getting their cut out of it.
OK, so the cops, they would look the other way.
We'd pay them.
They'd go away.
I mean, we're corrupting the cops?
That's corrupting the cops?
I mean, come on.
What else did we do with them?
Really, that was it.
They weren't hiding bodies for us or anything like that.
So, I mean, you were dealing with a lot of crazy stuff happening around you.
Did you find yourselves having to defend yourself against some of the dystopian things happening in the 70s and 80s, or were you just trying to stay out of it?
We were doing our own thing, and just don't bother us, and don't mess with our neighborhoods or anything like that, or stay away from our stuff, and we're all right.
It's a question of, will we like what it's become?
You know, there's always going to be people here, even if the apocalypse were to happen and the sun were to, you know, solar flare out, all the technology, whatever, the American people will figure it out, but a lot of people are going to be in really, really bad spots.
I think we got a lot of people in this country who don't know how to survive, don't know what it means to work hard.
There was a report out the other day, a survey found that Gen Z college graduate employees are getting fired At an extremely high rate, extremely quickly, and companies are reporting that when they bring in these, you know, 23-24 year olds, they make excuses, they don't dress properly, they talk weird, they're insulting, condescending, lazy, they call in sick all the time, they're quiet, quitting, and I fear for this next generation of where we're already at, because this is a problem of 20 years ago, that these things have been bubbling up, and I wonder if
This is kind of worrying.
The real issue is that 20 years ago, when the problems emerged, most people didn't realize that the roots of this nation, the next generation, were being poisoned.
And now, 20 years later, this generation set to take over has got some serious problems.
There are good and honest, intelligent Gen Z people.
I'm never saying that every generation is bad or whatever.
But there are a lot of, you know, there's a greater degree, as you get younger and younger, of people who don't understand work ethic, sacrifice.
And I think that even if we get Trump in and he tries to turn things around, we are going to be in some turbulence for a little bit.
But to be fair, I think the preferable alternative would be Trump, obviously.
I don't know that, you know, should Harris actually win.
I think that the tailspin that we're in turns into a crashing at sea and the survivors got to figure out how to stay afloat.
I think Donald Trump pulls us out of the nosedive.
We get real close.
Things get shaky and things get rough, but we make it through.
And the more they try to push God out of our institutions and out of our daily life and alienate our children from God, the worse this country is going to get, you know.
And listen, I'm praying.
I really am.
But I don't think we survive.
You know, one thing.
Being on the Rumble platform, it's a different platform than YouTube in that people are very angry.
I mean, I get messages like this, and they just go on and on and on.
They're very angry with what's going on now.
I think if Trump loses, this anger is going to spill over, because there's a lot of people that just can't take what's going on here anymore.
And I, you know, I'm only hoping that they're really paying attention.
You know, gosh, if I was a betting man, I wouldn't bet, but I want to have some confidence in the American people and say they're really seeing through all of this and that, you know, it's not popular to be a Trump supporter, but hopefully when they go in the booth, if it's legit, and I always say if it's legit, because these people are so underhanded, so sneaky, so shaky, You know, and they can get these voting machines and who knows what they can do with them.
You know, so who knows?
But I think if this election is legit that Trump will win.
He did something yesterday, you know, in preparation for Harris going to the border for the second time, right, in four years.
And she was going to make her whole play that it was Donald Trump's fault and all that lie that she's going to... He gave an excellent speech in New York yesterday.
He just stayed on the issues.
And he kept saying, Kamali, why didn't you do it for the past three and a half years?
He kept pounding that home, pounding that home.
And if enough people are listening to this, and they have any kind of sense, they're going to say, well, yeah, why didn't she?
Is there anything you want to shout out or final thoughts as we wrap up?
unidentified
No, you know, one thing I do want to talk about, you know, I get so many requests, I would say, you know, people are really struggling, really struggling.
And I get requests for mentorship and, you know, advice all the time, and a lot of personal things that people are going through right now.
So recently, I just started a platform And we got an influx of membership.
We only launched it a week ago.
And in that platform, it's michaelfrancis.com.
It's in my website.
We are offering a family and a community for people where like-minded people can get together, get some help, have some fellowship.
And you'd be surprised how people need this today.
They're looking for it.
They don't have it.
They don't have communities like they had before.
We have nobody.
So, you know, I just want to mention that, that that's something that we started and that I'm totally committed to try to get this country unified again and try to get people thinking the right way.