How To Make Money In Tech, China Taking Ove, Education Scam, Beef w/ YouTubers, & Israeli War!
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Thank you.
Thank you.
What's up, guys?
Welcome to Fresher Podcast, man.
We are here with Marquette, a.k.a.
The Saint, the center, man.
We're going to get right into it, man.
Real quick, guys.
Rumble.com slash Fresher Fit.
We got the sign back, as you guys know.
And I brought the table in a little bit.
I know you guys said, hey, make it a little bit of a tighter shot for the main angle.
So hopefully you guys like this one better.
Look at that view, man.
Yeah, man.
And we're trying to.
And it's cold in here, guys, which is why it's a little blurry like that.
It's, you know, I keep the AC up because the camera's But also, guys, CastleClub.tv.
We're live on Rumble, YouTube, Twitch, Facebook, all the platforms, man.
So make sure to watch us on YouTube and or Rumble predominantly.
Like the video and subscribe to the channel if you haven't already.
And yeah, man, without further ado, we got a special guest in the house.
We've been here plenty of times.
It's been a while.
Happy to have you back, man.
Yes.
We got the Santa Center in the house.
So, we know who you are, but the audience might not.
Can you introduce yourself to the people, please?
Flex Luther, the idol of James Bond, Marquette Devon Burton.
I'm the happiest man in the world.
Background in technology, education, University of California, Berkeley, Johns Hopkins University.
At this point, I've had my hands in a number of businesses.
Started off in software, moved into hardware as well.
Created a number of consumer technologies, but I started in B2B, which I don't recommend.
It's a tough game.
And now I got a couple different businesses consulting and spend most of my time traveling, enjoying YouTube, building community, and that's about it.
I remember we were in Vegas for an event.
Marquette hit us up, took his day off just for us, man.
Showed us around.
So thank you, brother.
Appreciate that.
Absolutely.
That was much love to you in Vegas.
Shout out to you, man.
And you know what?
We're established in St.
City, so we want to make sure that when dignitaries such as yourselves come through, we give you a warm welcome.
And, you know, the reason that I do YouTube...
For me, it's how I can make a positive influence on culture, global culture.
And you guys right now, as I'm sure you know, you guys have reach around the world.
And you guys are today's celebrity, but you're also today's culture creator, today's political leader.
And you affect how young people think.
So, you know, I'm getting in that mix too.
And that's kind of always been in my heart now that I'm in a strong position financially.
I'm enjoying having the freedom to do this.
Yeah, and you know, it's interesting because people call you a YouTuber and I'm like, he's not a YouTuber at all.
Like, you know, you were vastly successful way before YouTube and it's kind of something that you do to give back to the people.
Can you take us back to like your upbringing and what led you to become the man that you are today?
Sure.
So I was born in San Diego, raised in Los Angeles, went to pretty crummy schools.
I actually found out I later joined Teach for America and I found out that the schools I actually went to had Teach for America teachers, which is really cool when you see things come full circle.
You realize what it is to give back.
But anyways, went to crummy schools, born to a mother on crack cocaine, a father in prison for selling crack cocaine.
You know, obvious how they met.
But I was basically a screw-up and a criminal in high school.
I ended up testing out of high school at age 16.
Went to the University of California, Berkeley.
Completed a four-year degree in three years.
Took a master's at- What's your majoring at Cal?
Political science.
Political science, okay.
Which I don't recommend.
Okay.
It's a total waste.
And that's the Bears, right?
From what I'm sticking?
Yeah, that's right.
That's the Bears.
Golden Bears.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Took a master's at Johns Hopkins.
Did that full-time while teaching full-time.
Teach for America in Baltimore City.
Also founded a non-profit at that time and then after that went into my first tech job.
Did that for a little bit and then created my first tech company and first one was no good because I didn't understand revenue models.
So that was kind of like my practice.
Second one I was able to make it take off and you know while I had the second one taking off it was a investor backed company.
I founded another company at the same time, and at that time I was creating offices throughout the United States, created one in South Korea, created another office in Puerto Rico, was doing a deal in China.
But when I moved to South Korea, I'd created that second company.
Was this your third business now at this point?
It was my fourth.
The first one failed, second one...
Yeah.
Okay.
First failed, second one took a long time, maybe took about three years to become a real thing.
And what was the first business?
I think the people really learned from this.
Yeah, you know, the first ones at this stage is almost embarrassing, but it was called Hobby Buddy.
And the idea was that you could look at a map and you could list an activity and someone could join you and do whatever activity you like, whether it's golfing, pick up basketball, going to the gym, salsa dancing, just someone to join in on this activity that you like that you need someone else to do it with.
When did you release this one?
Man, that was in like, I think it was like 22, 23?
Okay, so in 2022?
No, I was 22 or 23 years old.
I was going to say, but what year did you release it?
Boy, give me a second.
So I graduated with my master's in 2011.
So I think it was maybe 2012, 2013, something like that.
Okay.
You have to forgive me, I still don't even remember my mother's birthday.
No, no, no, you're good.
I don't even know my mother's birthday.
And honestly, because I'm thinking here, if you release something like this Hobby Buddy thing, maybe nowadays, it probably might pick up some traction, because that's a really innovative thing to think back in 2011, 2012, before the explosion of social media.
Correct.
And you know what?
The other thing is that...
It's rarely about the idea being terrible.
It's more so about you not knowing what you're doing.
Gotcha.
It was my first tech company, and often people, everyone's like, oh, I have an idea for an app.
Oh, fantastic.
But do you have an idea for making money on an app?
Okay.
And every time people come to me for advice, I say, open up your phone.
How many apps do you have on there?
20, 30 apps, 40 apps if you're a female.
Do you pay for any of them?
Yeah.
It's hard to get people to pay for things that they can get for free or that they expect to be free.
And so my expertise is on that revenue model side.
Gotcha.
So the Hobby Buddy one didn't take off.
Great, fantastic idea.
It took off among consumers.
It never took off among investors.
And I didn't have a revenue model, so people were using it, but they weren't paying to use it.
And investors didn't know how they could get their money back if they were to hand me some money.
Gotcha.
You see what I'm saying?
Yeah.
And mind you, this is before things like Twitter were creating a precedence of like, oh, you can have users with no revenue and it's all good.
This was not during that era.
Yeah, I mean, was Twitter even, I think Twitter had just been created.
Instagram wasn't around.
I think maybe Vine was around at this point.
Maybe Vine?
Yeah, this was way back.
So the first business was the Hobby Buddy one.
And then the second one was, you said, what was the second one?
It evolved into Fletch.
Yeah.
And mind you, there's a lot of small projects that are largely irrelevant, but it evolved into Fletch.
It started off as a technology called Smarty Pants, which was a terrible name.
Eventually figured out how to better market things.
We went to the name of Fletch, brought people in on the team, brought in significant investment.
What did this app do specifically?
When Smarty Pants first started, it was to create study groups at university.
Which sounds reasonable, but students are broke and colleges usually don't want to pay for anything.
They're under the idea that they don't have a lot of money, which is a lie.
And they're funded by governments.
And the most important thing is that you have to consider path dependency.
Universities don't pay for mobile apps.
They pay for enterprise software that's usually deployed via web application to their employees, not to their students.
Unless you're talking about an LMS. Okay.
So this was like a study group type app.
That's how it started.
Okay.
And then it evolved into something totally different.
Okay.
And what did it evolve into?
So in the process of customer discovery, trying my best to sell this thing, I was talking with a president of University of Missouri, and I was trying to sell him, which is a bad thing to do.
Then eventually, he tells me what his problem is, which is what I really should have tried to figure out straight away.
And remember, when you're doing B2B, there's only really two ways to sell to a business.
Number one is, I can increase your revenue by doing this for you, or I can save you money by doing this for you.
And if you're talking about entities that interact with government, you should be saying, hey, I can help you meet this regulation that you have to abide by as well.
That's kind of the third piece.
Yeah.
He said, hey, Marquette, our biggest issue is that the students don't come to school.
So they don't show up.
So how are they going to join a study group if they don't even come to school?
And what's worse is we don't know who's not coming to class.
So if we could figure that out, that would help a lot.
He was actually just kind of venting.
He wasn't trying to give me an idea.
He was just venting.
But I was paying attention.
I was listening.
And I always remind people that leaders are great listeners.
And when he said that, thinking like a hustler, I said, well, how much would you pay for something like that?
He says, oh, I'd pay a lot.
To get kids in class?
Yes.
He said, for two reasons.
Reason number one, the kids who don't show up are the ones that fail.
And the ones that fail or are not counted as a student because they didn't show up enough times, we can't get paid from federal financial aid if they're not documented as a student.
We're not meeting Title IX or Title X, Y, and Z requirements.
Precisely.
So if FAFSA gave us this amount of money, we have to be able to document that those students attended.
And the way we currently do it is by showing that they took a midterm examination or they took X, Y, and Z exam, not by true attendance.
So if we were ever audited, we'd be in bad shape.
And also a kid might have actually attended 40% of the class, which is enough for us to get funding, but they didn't come for the midterm.
And so we got our funding taken away because we use that as a proxy for attendance.
I literally just had an epiphany moment.
So are you telling me that universities use the process of midterms and final exams, not necessarily to test their competence, rather a way for them to ensure attendance for funding?
Both.
Wow.
Both.
Clever.
Like, bro, that literally, I'm just like in the back of my life.
Like, I'm over here like, oh, do they really care about our competency and give you a midterm or a final?
But it's really, oh, wow.
Okay.
Okay.
Interesting.
I never thought about it from that angle of attendance.
To prove attendance, which then and there would give them the ability to request and or continue to get funding from the government.
Yeah, and even if the student was taking private loans, I mean, a student is worth, what, $30,000?
Yeah.
Right?
That's a lot of money.
And this is both private and public schools.
Yeah.
And the private schools are worth a lot more.
Okay.
And so that's why when we did our first big deal, we did it with DeVry, which is an enormous- Yeah.
And DeVry owns Carrington.
They own nursing schools.
They own a whole bunch of other colleges, mostly on the professional degree certificate side of things.
The trade side.
Precisely.
But those, that's- It's a lot of business.
So our first big deal we did with DeVry.
Okay.
So you shifted from helping create study groups to ensuring kids go to school.
We didn't even need to ensure that they went to school.
We just needed to be able to document attendance.
And then from there, the school could use the existing resources.
Because here was the issue.
So you have the head of student retention, right?
Mm-hmm.
His job is to make sure that the students come to school, that they continue attending, they're achieving, whatever the case is.
He doesn't know who's absent.
So what we're able to do is say, hey, here's 100,000 students enrolled at fill-in-the-blank enormous State College.
Here are the students who haven't attended the first three days.
Here are the students that haven't done this.
And so we're giving them accurate, rich data that's real time.
So the technology, once we finally perfected it, it consisted of a hardware component, which obviously was running firmware.
It consisted of an Android iPhone app.
We eventually ran it on iPads as well.
Web application with data analytics for the college and then obviously back in for us.
And so we were giving real time.
We could tell you literally right now, if there's classes going on, we could tell you Myron came to class 10 minutes late.
He's currently there.
He went on a five minute bathroom break.
He's now back in the class.
And so we could give you very rich real time data.
And they use that to manage, you know, whatever they needed.
Now, let me ask you this.
Do the universities care so much that kids...
Because I remember when I was in college, a lot of kids wouldn't show up to class.
They would just show up for the finals, the midterms, and take the...
Do the universities actually care that much about kids showing up to class?
Or is it that if they don't show up to class, they're not going to be in a position to take the midterm, which would then actually be reported?
Universities care about the students paying their tuition.
Okay.
So whatever adds up to the student paying the tuition is what they care about.
Okay.
So is it that kids that don't attend class are less likely to continue on and go another semester?
Correct.
Okay, so that's why.
So lack of attendance in class would then probably mean that they drop out.
Precisely.
And our tagline was, showing up is half the battle.
Okay.
Which is factual.
It is very clear the students who don't show up are the ones who fail.
And you often hear people in popular culture say things like, oh, I never went to class.
I used to only show up.
They're lying.
The data indicates that the kids who don't go to class are the ones who fail out.
This might be different at some of your higher tier universities, but for the most part, the data is overwhelmingly clear.
If you do not attend, you're going to fail out of college.
Interesting.
Okay.
Yeah, I never thought about that.
So right there and then, having this talk with that Missouri University president, that's when you kind of shifted gears and you're like, alright, we need to find a way to keep kids in the university enrolled.
Not even to keep them enrolled, or excuse me, not even to keep them enrolled, not to make them show up.
Our simple job and one of the important things about being successful with a product-based business is simplicity and understanding what your customer actually needs.
Versus what you're trying to sell.
What he needed from us was to be able to know precisely who was not attending class and have accurate attendance records.
That's what they wanted to pay for.
What's the magic number where if they didn't show up for this percentage of classes, it was almost always guaranteed they wouldn't?
I might be trying to jog your memory here too much.
Frankly, I haven't gone through the data in a while.
I want to say there were two rules that we established.
I actually wrote a white paper on this stuff.
I was really deep into it at the time.
I wrote a white paper on it, but there were two golden rules.
One of them is if they miss the first three days, they're done.
And the other one is once they exceed having not attended 20% of the class, they're done.
Okay, so anything less than 80% attendance is typically, they're not gonna stick around.
They're not going to.
And they're gonna fill out.
And so we were the earliest alert that you could possibly give the college for figuring out who they need to talk to.
So, since they have this data, I guess, did it put them in a position where they were able to kind of like mitigate the risk and be like, hey, asshole, we know you haven't shown up to class.
Correct.
Sending emails, maybe having someone check up on their dorm or something like that.
I don't know.
That's right.
And the college has all the resources to do that.
They just didn't know where to target the resources.
So that was pretty neat.
And then the other piece about it that was...
Really profitable for the colleges is like they were seeing that not only were they able to keep the kids in college so that they can get their guaranteed state funding or government funding but also the kids are now persisting so you're going to get greater lifetime value out of the customer which is to say that they're going to pay you more tuition over time because they're not dropping out.
There's a program at most colleges called first year retention.
So if you can get the kid past the first year, generally you got a shot at keeping them for six years, even though it's a four year degree, most kids in America are taking six years.
So you're lacking in revenue.
Wow, man.
That's really cool that you created software to do that.
How much did they pay for that?
How much did they pay for it?
It depended on the scale of the cost.
For example, with DeVry, they paid $5 per student.
They have a tremendous number of students, so it works out really well.
We had deals with smaller colleges that paid $15 per student or $23 per student.
And then we had a deal with a college in Virginia where we actually had our technology come pre-installed on their iPads, and so we were able to charge them additional service fees for pre-installing.
So there was a lot.
And then also we had a hardware component, as I mentioned.
So they also had to pay for the hardware component, which we were able to mark up.
Initially, we had a partnership with a company called Estimo.
Actually, I shouldn't even say it because I'm not going to give them any promo.
But we had a partnership with these guys.
And when we started doing significant volume, like, hey, I need 100,000 of these units.
I was going to say, how did you scale up?
That was my next question.
Yeah, I need 100,000.
Dude named Alex, he was the CEO of their company.
We used to be on Great Terms.
And he was like, yeah, yeah, I'll get it to you.
So we got deals going through.
We're pumping out deals, revenues coming in.
And I'm like, hey, man, those units didn't come in because we have to program them.
He sends them in.
We have to program the firmware.
Okay, so they give you the actual hard devices.
The physical device.
You guys program it.
We gotta program them.
Then you guys go ahead and deliver it to the university.
Deploy them to the university, yeah.
And so they're going into my Erie, Pennsylvania office.
And so we have a whole big process.
And when you cause a supply chain issue like that, It's going to cause some reverberations.
So then I said, okay, and it was very stressful at the time because we got six-figure deals and they're breaking our supply chain and lying about it.
Like, oh, don't worry, it'll be there in a week type stuff.
I mean, let's also add in tight timelines.
School starts, most universities start in August and or September.
So they probably want the software by damn near July, if not sooner, probably, right?
When we're dealing with a lot of nursing programs and things that are running year-round...
We were really, yeah, it was going into high gear, it was exciting.
And so it was a major business problem and what was exciting for me, at the time it was angry and it was depressing because I'd worked so hard and we were finally winning, we finally had volume.
So I was able to make a contact in China and get our own device designed and produced.
We had two different devices, one we called the Dot, it was really small and another one was more long range.
So you said, fuck Alex, you outsourced it to the Chinese.
We didn't outsource it.
We partnered.
We had our own factory.
We produced our own devices, did our own, and then we were able to program the device in the factory.
Nice.
So, yeah, we improved process tremendously.
And from the factory, we were able to ship it direct to the school and then just meet them at the school and put them up ourselves.
Or if the school wanted to save money, everything was pre-programmed.
All they had to do was stick it on the wall and press a button to turn it on.
Question for you.
Why did the decision to move it to China versus, I mean, there might be obvious ones like maybe cutting costs or whatever it may be.
But like, what led to the decision to like, okay, we're gonna start manufacturing, getting everything ready to go in China versus using, I mean, that guy was unreliable, so I see why you didn't understand.
Yeah, no, we actually, and they were in Eastern Europe, so that firm was in Eastern Europe.
Yeah, precisely.
That firm was in Eastern Europe.
It was an American company.
The CEO was Eastern European living in America.
And they were manufacturing in Eastern Europe.
We actually did try to manufacture in the United States, because at this point I had offices throughout the U.S. and one in Erie, Pennsylvania, which is, you know, they have a decent manufacturing base there.
And we actually did try to do it.
It was just A, too expensive, and B, you didn't have all of the know-how and the materials to get it done in America.
And this is common across industries, unfortunately, and this is just a result of essentially bad government.
Yeah.
And we could talk about that later if people are interested.
Definitely will.
Anyways, because there's so many components to the hardware piece.
It's essentially a BLE. What's a BLE? Bluetooth device, we'll just say simply.
Okay.
It's a Bluetooth beacon.
And so there's a number of like silicon materials and casings and things that allow you to make it very small.
And then there's a certain battery that allows it to last for like three to five years.
Was chip production another reason why you decided to go through China because Taiwan is right there?
No, it was really the being able to do all of the components in one place, and I'll give you a note on why they're able to do it all in one place, whereas in the States we'd have to have like, okay, these people are doing the chip part, these people are doing the casing, and then, you know, it was just a mess.
So many hands in a cookie jar, which limits your efficiency and the ability to get the product out quickly to the universities.
And it's expensive.
Bam.
Yeah.
And eventually when I got a deal set up with China, essentially the government, and they introduced us to a number of investors, which in China is still the government, even though they pretend as though it's not the government.
They love the fact that we already had our factory there and we already had so many relationships.
And they have the Belt and Road Initiative, which, in my opinion, is their effort to take over the world.
But they're trying to bring all of the most innovative technologists, high growth companies into China.
And so they took myself and a number of entrepreneurs from around the world who had high growth companies.
And they said, hey, this city is dedicated to electric cars.
This whole city we've built is all about electric cars.
This whole city is all about artificial intelligence.
This whole city is all about fill-in-the-blank technology.
And, hey, check out this model we've made of the city.
Here's where we're standing and here's the building that we're constructing and let us know what you want in there.
We can put your office.
We can put a gym.
We can put apartments.
Whatever you want, let us know.
We'll lay it out how you want.
All we need is that you stay here for at least six months a year to run your business out of China.
Oh, wow.
And we promise there will be no intellectual property theft.
We're going to take care of you in any way, whatever you want.
And the budget's kind of limitless.
Wow.
Yeah.
Here's our AR, VR city.
It was ridiculous, but it was...
Let me ask you this, man.
How far ahead, if they are, is China to the United States when it comes to tech and production and just being able to get shit done without all the hoopla like here in the States?
Listen, I have a lot of connections in government.
I used to be in government.
You used to be in government.
I think Americans are overly optimistic, especially those in government.
I think they overestimate our hand.
And I remember my second trip to China.
First, I went to Beijing.
First time ever, I went to Beijing on holiday, myself and my assistant.
It was cool.
Then I went as a guest of the Chinese government when we were doing that business deal.
They took me on a tour of a bunch of cities and every city I went to, like of course we went to Shanghai, huge mega cities.
We went to their small cities which were bigger than our big cities and they were sparkling clean, brand new, high tech and I will never forget we were at a train station and I thought it was an airport because it was massive and we got on the train and the train You can't even take a nap.
It's so fast.
You're already there.
Punches miles per hour?
Like in Japan with the bullet trains?
And everything was first class there.
I knew that we couldn't beat them because everything's first class, everything's enormous, they have tremendous population, they're hardworking and focused, and they're importing all of the intellectual capital from around the world.
Here's what America does, we let other countries flush their toilets on us, right?
We get immigration, We get the poor and the sick and the tired from other countries.
China's not letting you in unless you're paying extra money to be a student at their universities or they have specifically recruited you because you are the cream of the intellectual crop.
Otherwise, you're not getting in.
You don't find a bunch of tourists just...
Strolling through casually.
You don't find a bunch of expats living in China.
No, you might find some people teaching English, but that's about it.
Beyond that, they're skimming off the top of every other country.
Yeah, their entire culture is based off of efficiency.
Yeah.
Being efficient.
Yeah.
And the reason why I wanted to go into this was because I remember the first time we interviewed you, you spoke about how you were getting really good treatment in China.
Yeah.
And I knew off-rip, if they're treating you well as an American in China, you're a fucking somebody.
Yeah.
Because if people may or may not know, guys, China's a rival.
Okay?
So is Russia, et cetera.
So if you're able to go to these countries and you're treated well, you're probably bringing something to the table.
So they basically wanted you to run your business out of their country, and they basically secured no intellectual property theft, which I think is very interesting because China's one of the number one places for IPRs.
I saw fake Rolls Royce there, I kid you not.
Yeah, China's the best at Bullick and everything.
It's amazing.
Yeah, in the airport, they're selling fake iPhones.
It's ridiculous.
Disgusting, bro.
Yeah.
Fake Rolls Royce?
No, I... Bro!
China is the biggest thief of American intellectual property in the world.
When I worked for HSI... Every time we did, like, because we used to investigate IPR, intellectual property theft, which is guys basically stealing stuff that's trademarked, you know, brands, right?
They steal Louis Vuitton, whatever.
All the fake stuff, all the counter for stuff, most of it almost always came out of China.
Absolutely.
All of it.
I have a question.
What is an NFT? You know what?
I still have never figured that out, but I tell you, if you want to learn, you can go to thesassin.com, Conference 2.
You can actually check it out and learn everything about NFTs, including how to make an NFT. They're screaming in the chat with an NFT. I don't know why, but apparently something to do with Destiny.
Conference 2.
Check it out.
You'll learn.
I need to buy it as well.
I need to buy Conference 2 so I can figure it out.
Speaking of which, NFTs have went down like, what, 90%?
Bro, Bored Ape, all these big NFTs are done, bro.
Done.
Which I've always said, because similar to cryptocurrency, which is traded as though it's like some sort of commodity, there's not an underlying asset.
It was like Tulip Mania.
You guys heard of Tulip Mania?
Who's your guy who Googles stuff?
Mo, can you fact check something real quick?
Yeah, so it was just tulip mania, which is to say, it's essentially a fad and people are trying to get rich quick.
You know, people tend to not want to work and they're like, oh, I could make a quick return on something without doing much.
I'll do it.
And cryptocurrency was not meant to be traded as an asset, right?
It was meant to be a private way to trade with other persons.
Currency.
Is it big in China or not really?
Was it big at that time?
Listen, every government is about control, but China does not pretend to not be about control.
So you will never be confused on the position of the Chinese government on cryptocurrency or much else.
And they protect their own industries.
For example, and South Korea does this too, but Uber failed in China.
Uber doesn't really fail, does it?
But it failed in China.
So that's because China made it fail.
They were not going to let it succeed there.
So that's an important thing to understand.
If you want to do business in China, you don't just go in there as a gung-ho capitalist.
You go in there underneath the Communist Party and they will let you operate there.
Yeah, they'll let you.
You know, it's funny?
They changed the Bible texts for their communities.
Like, they changed the actual word in the Bible, and it's because it was more efficient to have them believe a certain narrative towards Jesus.
That's crazy, bro.
And they're anti-religious because they're communists, right?
And they had issues with the Uyghurs, which is a Muslim minority.
You know, it's China, but...
That's crazy, bro.
We could hit some of these chats real quick.
I hope you guys are enjoying the discussion, man.
We got a lot more to talk about.
What else?
Hit some geopolitics as well.
We're going to talk more about the app.
Okay, Fresh, can you read that?
FBA donated $10, says, Fresh, you're going to let this guy outfresh you?
Listen, bro, Marquette is on a different level, man.
He's on his business swagger.
He's that guy, so shout out to him, man.
Always looking fresh.
I appreciate that.
Eldon, what do we got here?
Winston says, I actually chatted Marquette before, but he didn't answer.
So ask again, what's the definition of a fascist or fascism?
Where is he?
He wants to know.
What's the definition of fascism?
Oh, fascism.
Yeah, fascism.
Ah, okay.
So he said he asked me that before?
Like when I was on your show?
Or on my show, is he talking about?
It might have been your show, maybe.
Ah, okay.
Or, I don't know.
Yeah, sure.
So this is the best way to understand fascism.
Fascism is a term that's often used almost colloquially just to describe a regime that you don't like, an authoritarian regime that you don't like.
But paradigmatic fascism is that which was practiced by the Italians.
The chief philosopher of fascism was a gentleman by name of Giovanni Gentile.
And you can read about fascism and the ideology in detail by looking at Dr.
A. James Greger, who is the foremost scholar.
But in short, fascism was the authoritarian effort of the Italian government to get their spot in the sun.
And Nazism, which is often called fascist, modeled itself after fascism.
But it is, in fact, not fascist.
And fascism is not a racist ideology.
Well said.
Okay, we have our next.
QuandilisLift says, This is a bunch of money in my country.
What we're celebrating tonight.
Just got hired by Justin Waller for short-form content.
W. Wow.
You have any advice except for working my ass off?
Okay, so he's hired by Justin for short-form content.
I mean, that's a W in itself, bro.
I mean, honestly, I would just say make sure you're doing edits on time.
Make sure you're having things maybe pre-made.
The moment he drops content, have it ready to go.
And I'd say, you're off to a good start, bro.
That's pretty good.
Justin's a really good dude, so.
Okay, we have next.
Fed just says, shit, I forgot to change the name.
It ain't Quandelis Lifts.
It's Fed Jet, motherfucker.
Remember that name.
Okay.
It's kind of random, but...
All right.
Ghost says, Peace to the Saints.
Peace to the Saints.
Got a consolation.
And the Saint helped me out greatly in my product-based business.
Assassins or nothing.
Consultation, I'm thinking he probably means.
Yeah, I think he meant as well.
Julian Blim says, Fresh and Myron.
Thanks for having Tim Castiel today.
Men need to wake up.
Dating content is where the numbers are for you guys, but men need more Timcast IRL and similar creators.
We need to get ready.
Difficult times ahead.
If you know you know, God bless.
Well said, bro.
Shout out to your acronym game.
I was like, what does that mean?
Yeah, it's kind of new age acronyms.
Julian Blame goes, Fresh Amar, thanks for having Timcast us.
Sorry.
Where are we at here?
Oh, Hawthorne.
He goes, finally the big homie back on the show.
By far the best and realest guest you've had on.
Respect God.
Bless y'all.
Myron tells Zerka, chill with Mark Wett and MLD roast is wild.
Are they trying to pull out the supervillain?
What's going on with Zerka?
Freshly Snipes.
Flex Luther.
No, there's nothing going on.
The only thing was he had mentioned my name, and I was curious.
I was like, wow, I've never mentioned your name.
Who are you?
But if you are going to mention my name, make sure we're the same caliber of person.
You hear me?
He lives in Miami, right?
Yeah, okay, so he lives in Miami.
I'm in Miami right now, right?
I'll say anything and I'll do anything.
You see what I'm saying?
You think he would box you?
He would never box me, but...
And I offered to box him, actually.
I offered to box him.
I tagged him on my community forum.
I said, hey, let's throw these hands.
But to be honest with you, I usually only box people I respect.
So you want to box him?
You see what I'm saying?
Okay.
He's not on your level.
But, I'm in Miami, and anyone who has an actual issue, you run your mouth at me, you know where I'm at, right?
Oh, yeah.
Especially now, I guess.
Well, maybe not yet, because we haven't doxxed ourselves, thank God.
So I'm just saying, I haven't brought anybody's name up.
Don't bring my name up talking disrespectfully.
I like that.
Okay.
He brought you up.
I didn't even know he did.
Right.
I was like, what's that about?
Maybe it was like a tweet.
I was like, I don't know you, kid.
I'll break your fake teeth.
Yeah, I'm not aware of what's going on.
In real life.
We the People goes, question for FNF. Y'all say it's hard for Chris to get girls on a pod because of repetition and the time.
But yeah, y'all letting Zerka make in his jobs harder by letting him disrespect the girls literally for no reason.
And he's there to show.
So unprofessional.
Alright, man.
I mean, like I said before, he's not on every single time, I guess.
Some of y'all...
Love Zerka.
Some of y'all dislike Zerka.
That's fine.
But, you know, like I said, we try to keep the show diverse and different.
You're not going to like everybody, bro.
You're not going to like every single guest on, bro.
I mean, a bunch of you guys were talking smack about, you know, saying the sinner coming on.
Like, we rock with him, and that's what matters, and a lot of people get value from him.
I think we're having a great conversation here.
But people are going to hate, man.
It is what it is.
And that's one thing I've kind of realized is that Like, no matter how good your content is, someone is going to find something to complain about or cry about, bro.
You can't please everyone.
It's crazy, bro.
It's not feasible.
Yeah.
You just can't.
And also, happy people usually are not going around catching Biff.
Even with, like, the kid Zerka, you know, what annoyed me is like, buddy, I've never mentioned your name.
Like, why are you just throwing shots at me?
I don't make peace between y'all, man.
I'm going to make peace between y'all.
For his good, because he pretends to be a savage.
I'm with the shits.
And so that's why it bothers me.
It's like, bro, don't mention my name, little buddy.
I never mentioned you.
People even ask me about him, because people know if they ask me, I'm going to say what's real, and I'm going to stand on it.
And people, I guess, perceive him as a big bad guy, because he's very extra.
And when they asked me about him, I was like, I don't know the guy.
He seems entertaining.
And then he brought me up and I was like, ah, that's strange.
He's a good guy, man.
Sometimes he just gets misinterpreted because of his antics.
He's an entertainer, though.
I'mma fix this between y'all, man.
He's an entertainer.
Some YouTubers need to get punched in the face, man.
And you guys could probably collab and do something.
Zerka's like content, he's like real life.
That's two different lanes.
So I'mma bring peace here.
Okay, what do we got here?
We got none of the above, right?
Okay, 50 bucks, shout out to the big homie, the real life super villain, the drip goblin, Mr.
Fleece Freeze, Flex Luther, okay?
Who gave me that name, Flex Luther?
Freshly Snipes.
Freshly Snipes out here, man.
Okay.
Cardi goes, yo, anyone else notice how happy these three are?
I wonder what's the common denominator anyways.
What's the highest ROI skill anyone can learn?
I personally think it's the skill of going viral consistently.
I would say in a different way marketing, because nowadays it's all about who's being seen, who's being heard.
Because right now, so many creators doing podcasts, doing content, but no one knows you.
Why is that?
You can't market.
It's simple.
What else do we got here?
We got Marquise Whitley goes, Peace to the Saints, there are companies such as Douyin, the Chinese TikTok and TikTok.
Is it possible to have an American social networking platform in China?
No.
Nope.
Hell no, right?
They won't allow it.
Listen, here's how foolish the American government is.
I used to live in South Korea, which is an ally of the American government.
We have soldiers that have been there forever.
We created South Korea in a literal sense.
And we've had a lot of technology transfer.
We've helped them out in many ways.
Yet they still steal our intellectual property, just like China.
And they don't allow us to implant certain technologies in there.
They won't have Google.
They're going to have Naver instead, which is basically a copy of Google.
They won't have certain communication platforms.
They're going to have cacao, which is basically them putting their skin on top of it.
And that's South Korea, which is our major ally.
That's like our child.
We created them.
It's our military base.
So if South Korea slaps us in the face like that, you better believe that China will never allow something like that.
And one thing you guys got to remember, technologies are basically platforms that hold a lot of data.
And data is information.
And when you have information on individuals, you can utilize this information for blackmail, for intelligence purposes.
For recruiting agents, there's so many things that can be done with this and China would not embrace that kind of a security risk.
And it's ironic, I was just in India, I don't know, maybe like 13 days ago I was in India, which hopefully I never have to go back to India.
But I was in India and you cannot use TikTok in India.
So, if the Indians are smart enough to say, we will not allow TikTok, they're part of BRICS, right?
China's a part of BRICS, India's a part of BRICS? I was going to say, they're allies, aren't they?
No, they're not.
So, India won't allow TikTok, but America allows TikTok.
I wonder why.
Right.
And that's how rotten we are as a nation.
And I think we're the greatest nation on earth.
I really do believe that we have the best people on earth.
And we need our government to reflect that and make better decisions.
The best and brightest aren't necessarily represented in the government.
Do you remember, way back in time, there was a country, not a country, but a state called Sodom and Gomorrah?
They were very well-versed, very technological, very advanced, and then they brought everybody in.
You know, the young, the sick, the old, the smart.
And then over time, they became corrupt, and then gone like that.
So America might be the new Sodom and Gomorrah.
Never know.
It's sad.
Alright.
What else we got here?
I hope you guys are enjoying the updated production quality, man.
I was up all night fixing these damn cameras.
It's almost too clean, bro.
They can see everything.
Shout out.
Let me know what you guys think of the new cameras and qualities and everything.
All the moles and pimples.
They can see everything, nigga.
Have you seen videos of La Piera PE class in 1962?
Why did they stop doing fitness like this?
Okay?
And guys, from this point forward, I'm going to read the chats, but we're going to read 20 enough from this point forward because I want to make sure that you guys get all this knowledge from Marquette.
My comment was read by Fresh.
Wasted $50.
I just hired.
I got hired by Jay Waller.
You got any advice?
Love you, Fresh.
Screw you, bro.
These guys, bro.
I didn't even read it bad!
Yo, my biggest thing, bro, is watch all of his latest interviews and have content ready to go from those interviews, okay?
And send it to him right away.
And make sure that you're using a lot of the jump text.
Keep the post very engaging.
That's how I was able to grow my TikTok.
My guy does it.
My TikTok, sorry.
My Instagram with Reels.
So just make sure it's good.
You're making it quickly and you keep your finger on the pulse of any new interviews on, take the best parts of it, clip it, have it ready to go.
Justin Eder, 10 bucks.
Peace to the Saints.
Steven, a pimp.
Okay?
Steven?
No, no.
Steven A. Pimp.
Fax Kellerman.
Yeah, instead of Steven A. Smith.
Okay.
Yeah.
MAGA donated.
Ten bucks goes.
Shout out to Marquette.
Peace to the Saints.
Remember, if you're not getting haters, you ain't important.
That's true, man.
That's true.
Anything else?
We got Romo Rats?
Alright, cool.
I'll fly through these.
And guys, if you guys want to get involved in the show, FNFSuperChat.com.
You guys got a question.
You got a very successful entrepreneur here.
He's not a YouTuber like you guys think, man.
He's a tech whiz.
Obviously, you guys have just heard a little bit of it as far as running a business, scaling it up, moving it to a foreign country that would never accept Americans.
So getting chauffeured around by Chinese government.
You got to be somebody to be able to do that.
That takes skill, dedication, and being that guy.
Absolutely.
And I just knew when you said that, from my being involved in law enforcement, dealing with China, as an American, if you're getting respect in China and they're treating you well, bro, you're doing something right.
You know what I mean?
You're adding some kind of ridiculous value where they're able to overlook the fact that you're a citizen of a rival nation.
Yes.
A black citizen of a rival nation.
There you go.
That too, because their race is over there.
That's a fact.
Very.
And in Asia, they don't give a fuck.
I know you don't get along with MLD. I'm going to bring peace between y'all too, man.
It's not that I don't get along with MLD, man.
Again, it was a strange situation.
Did you see the video?
I didn't see the entire interview.
It was so strange.
Honestly, it was the strangest thing on earth.
What was your take on that?
I found the whole situation to be very peculiar.
I was like, was he high?
Well...
I know both of you.
And obviously speaking, you're definitely more, I want to say, of...
How about this?
If I had to compare you and MLD, I would say you're more of a real-life person.
He's more of a content creator.
So the level of speech and the level of conversation was different.
But to get upset at you, I was like, why?
I don't know if it was an emotional day, but it's like random.
I don't know what it was, but...
This is what was spooky, though.
Because relationships are serious for me.
Meaning that if I rock with somebody, I'm going to fry and die with you.
Period.
We don't have to agree on everything.
If we're friends, we're friends.
It's done.
MLD had DM'd me.
The initial thing started off, he was on the Valuetainment.
Some girl came at him crazy, and he reacted like a sucker.
And at the time, I didn't know him.
I didn't even know who he was.
I believe he called her fat.
And then she called him out for that, and he said he didn't know what he said.
Right.
He acted like he was having, like, Alzheimer's.
Yeah.
And I was just saying, like, that's lame.
That's lame, man.
Like, how do you get scared of a female in a safe environment?
Like, what is she going to, like, de-bow you and sock you out?
Yeah.
And so I'm just giving commentary on it.
Content.
Didn't know him personally.
Might have cracked some jokes.
I can't even remember it.
It's largely irrelevant.
And then he had said some things about me, which, frankly, I didn't find him to be offensive or anything like that.
I was like, you know, he took a couple shots.
Dope.
And then...
He had DM'd me, and he said, hey, you know, I know Myron.
He says you're a good guy.
And I think I was about to do a roast of him.
I had listed that I was going to do a roast.
And so the roast is listed.
I think at the time I was in Vietnam.
I remember now, yeah.
Yeah, I'm in Vietnam.
The roast is listed already.
And he says, Myron says you're a good guy.
He says, oh, if you mess with Myron, I consider these guys friends.
So...
We're on the phone.
I said, I will cancel this roast.
Say no more.
To be fair, Marquette, if you're going to roast somebody, they should be scared.
Absolutely!
I didn't say it, bro.
Absolutely!
My question is breaking up with somebody's life and their, I want to say, personality can be so...
Yo, nigga, you go all the way in, bro.
You don't hold back.
No mercy.
None.
Goddamn.
None.
So, when he banged my line, he said, I'm friends with Myron.
I was like, I consider them friends.
Yeah.
I have a roast listed.
If you would like, I have no problem.
I will cancel it right now.
I don't care.
It's not about revenue.
I was just going to enjoy myself a little bit.
It's not an issue.
I'm going to cancel it right now.
Yeah, man to man.
And my assistant is right there listening to me, right?
He's like, no, no, go ahead and do it.
I was like...
Dude, there's no need.
Like, I don't have any smoke with you.
I don't need to embarrass you for any practical purpose.
I'll cancel it.
He's like, no, no, no.
How about, you know, like, no, like, just go ahead and do it.
I was like, well, you know what?
Like, I don't want to, at that point, he's like, well, I don't need to spew vitriol and negativity and put you down.
I was like, why don't you come on?
I was like, people will probably find that interesting.
Come on, have a conversation.
Comes on, has a conversation.
And then conversation goes left because he was being a weirdo.
And I thought it was strange because the situation would have never occurred if he would have simply just took my kindness, which was, I'll cancel the roast.
Which is what he really wanted was not to be roasted.
All he had to say was, alright, yeah, cancel it.
Boom.
Hang up the phone, cancel the roast.
This would never be a thing.
But instead we have to find out that he looks like a Colombian hooker.
The Boyden got everything done.
Why he thought he could mess with the bald head lover, I don't know.
Frankly, I don't know.
Strange.
Everybody gonna learn the hard way.
So to be fair though, you did record a call.
Absolutely, and you know why?
So okay, but Manson Mando, if I'm gonna sit with somebody and talk...
No recording.
He's not my man.
You see, now remember the way in which he came to me.
At that point we were on opposite sides of a battlefield.
True.
And so I don't know you and I don't know your nature, so I must make sure that I'm engaging appropriate strategy.
So if I find you to be a friend, then none of it would have had any relevance.
It would be immaterial.
So for example, if you called me and you said, hey, Myron's a friend, I say, I mess with Myron.
He's an honorable man.
So I will assume that you at some level are honorable and I will not do the roast.
And he says, thank you.
I'd appreciate that.
Great.
Hang up the phone.
The recording of the audio would be irrelevant, wouldn't it?
But the reason I had to record the audio is because he's a dishonest person.
And you know what people do, and I know you guys have experienced this, whether it's from males or females, is he lied about the contents of our conversation.
He lied about it.
And so when I released the audio, people were like, yo, during the live session when you were live, you lied and said certain things that weren't true.
And Marquette played the audio, and we can clearly see that you are a liar.
Had I not had that, we couldn't document that he's a liar.
Now, here's the thing.
If he would have recorded the conversation with me, Everything I said lined up.
Why?
Because I'm an honest person.
I stand on my word, whether you record it or not.
I'm the same man in every environment.
A business environment, a ghetto, the Waldorf Astoria, Monaco, Dubai, on a stage, off a stage.
So it wouldn't really matter.
And if you're my enemy, die with your dick in the dirt.
You heard me?
I'ma bring peace between y'all, man.
Yeah.
And remember, it's always...
There's no need for us to be fighting, man.
There's a bunch of other idiots out there that really deserve to get punched in the face.
And, you know, John is a good guy.
Zerk is a good guy.
You're a great guy.
You know what I mean?
Like, I get along with all y'all, so there's no point for us to be infighting.
So, you know, I'm a...
You know what was common in both cases?
What?
That they came out to attack me.
It was common in both cases.
In the Zerka situation, people asked me about them.
They tried to, you know, the internet, they like drama.
They try to ignite a beef.
They do.
As an honorable man, people are like, what do you think about Zerka?
He seems entertaining.
He seems an outrageous guy.
I don't know.
I think that there's other creators that really need to get beat up.
And I think guys on this side of the internet that are helping men out, helping guys get better, etc.
We need to stand united versus all these other soy boys that are out here pushing multiple genders, being weirdos, attacking masculinity.
And don't play with the supervillain.
And don't play with the supervillain on this side.
Because he gives zero fucks.
Don't play with the supervillain.
I almost want to say, let's come together.
But I don't...
I just noticed jealousy and envy, and that never goes away.
So ultimately, it sounds good, but we will never all be the same, bro.
Some people gotta lay down.
Yeah.
Some people gotta lay down.
You have to.
Yeah.
And here's the thing.
It's sad, but rarely.
With MLD, I tried to be peaceful and cordial.
I said, hey, I won't do the live.
He didn't want to accept that.
Then he comes on and acts like a brat.
I was like, goodness.
Now, Zerk, I've never interacted with him.
He could be a reasonable person.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I surmise that his internet thing is a persona.
He could, behind that, be a reasonable person.
He's a really cool guy.
Yeah.
And so is John, man.
Like, bro, and here's the funny part.
Who's John?
You talking about BBMLD? Yeah.
BBMLD? See, because the thing is that you guys, because I know all y'all, like, you guys all have, we all have, like, the same mindset.
So it's like, bro, you guys would get along if it was under different circumstances.
Yeah, MLD's a great guy, you know.
Yeah, he's a good dude, man.
In that scenario, I don't know what happened.
Maybe things were kind of scary for him.
But other than that, he's a really good person.
From what I've known so far.
And I hope that's the case.
Because you guys would make fire content together.
Because you guys are both very well-traveled.
You guys have spent extensive amounts of time in Asia.
You guys would be a killer together.
You're in Japan.
You're in China.
Yeah, bro.
Y'all would make great content together.
So I'm going to bridge that gap, man.
There's no reason for us to get fighting each other.
And I'm always willing to make peace.
But as you know, having been in government, as an American, I make peace through strength.
I understand.
And so once the peace comes, it's like, but still know who's on top.
We can be peaceful, but know who's on top.
I'm here.
Yeah, know who's on top.
And for the record with the internet, the internet nerds always come at me saying crazy shit like, you don't have as many subscribers as so-and-so.
I'm like, yeah, but I have two Rolls-Royce, an IA and a Maybach, and multiple properties in places I don't want to talk about, in bank accounts around the world.
And I didn't just get that.
That's been the case for over a decade.
Yeah.
Count up the money, goddammit!
Don't count the followers!
Count the money!
Give me my goddamn respect!
And also, I'm rich in bitches for the record.
Is that a metric as well?
I've never heard that one, but that's a new one.
I'm rich in bitches.
Actually, this is the business segment.
I apologize.
Let us stay on the business.
We'll talk about the hoes after.
Yes, forgive me.
And we got some coming later on as well, so that'll be interesting.
I like how he said, my back.
My back.
The Maybach.
That's funny.
What else do we got here?
Any other...
Well, you know, we can save it.
Guys, again, fnfsuperchat.com if you guys want to get involved in the show, ask a question.
We're going to read 20 and up from this point forward.
Also, do me a favor.
We got, I think, 3.5k of y'all watching right now on YouTube and another couple thousand over on Rumble.
So, guys, like the video on YouTube.
Open up another tab, actually, if you guys don't mind.
And sub to Rumble.
Rumble, man.
Yeah, we got almost 7,000 y'all watching.
We got almost 7,000 watching on Rumble.
So guys, do me a favor.
Open up a tab on YouTube.
Sorry, open up a tab that's YouTube.
Like the video on there so we can continue to stay in the algo with YouTube because YouTube is how people discover us.
But then we're going to bring you all over to Rumble, the dark side, because Rumble is way better than YouTube.
So, Mark, I first discovered you on the Avengers panel, FNF hosted in Access Vegas studio a little while ago.
Yeah, that was a great discussion.
You stood out as a classy gentleman and high-value man.
Much respect.
Yeah, definitely.
That was a great discussion, actually.
Very good.
Speaking of which, during that discussion, we talked extensively about education in college, right?
Sure.
You're a very educated guy.
Obviously, you got your undergrad from Cal.
You got your master's degree from John Hopkins.
Great, fantastic universities, right?
Can you tell the people a little bit about college?
Is it a scam?
If people do decide to go to college, how should they go about it?
What's your thoughts on higher education in general?
Because I would say in the past...
Ten years, there's been a complete shift where people are saying college is a scam, etc., which I agree with it to the most part, but there are circumstances where college is absolutely a necessity, depending on what you want to go into.
But what are your thoughts on this in general?
I want everyone to know there's a ton of cameras, so I don't know which camera to look into.
Don't worry about it.
But I'm dead serious.
I would look you in the eye if I knew which eye, okay?
I'm very serious.
And yes, I've gone to elite universities, and I've also done business with a tremendous number of universities.
That was my business.
I could say that I'm an expert at some level, right?
No, you are.
Definitely are.
I appreciate that.
And, you know, I wanted to give you guys also your compliment when the gentleman had asked about, you know, how's he going to do his shorts for Jay Waller.
And I want to say, like, this is the guy who knows.
Like, you guys are the experts in this stuff.
So he got advice from the expert, which is where you should go.
Anyways, with regards to college...
Is college a scam?
There are many things that you hear common in the culture that are frankly either too simple to be true or they're outright lies.
Is college a scam?
If you just take that sentence, that is a complete lie.
And I say this as a person who, if I could do it over again, would not go to college.
So guys, listen to what he's about to say here.
This is very important stuff.
So is college a scam?
Absolutely, it is not a scam.
If you're talking about just across the board, if you go to an elite university, you take a degree in...
Remove elite.
If you go to any university, you take a degree in mathematics.
You take a degree in software engineering and electrical engineering and computer science.
You take a degree in chemistry.
You take a degree in accounting.
Those are all degrees that will lead you to what's called gainful employment.
You will get an entry level position somewhere.
Those are strong degrees.
And with mathematics, you can go into currency speculating, you can go into paper assets, you can go into Wall Street, you can go into investment banking.
You will make that money back.
The great majority of degrees.
You see, college is not a scam.
The degree you pick makes it a scam.
Bam.
There you go.
It's choice.
It's choice.
If you major in something that ends in the word studies.
Chicano studies.
African American studies.
Gender studies.
Fill in the blank with something stupid.
Studies.
Stupid.
You have been scammed, but guess what?
Like Khaled said, you played yourself.
Yeah, no one else did that to you.
So that aspect of college is a scam.
What are the critical aspects of college that get you to the next level?
The network.
And if you want the network, you can't go to an average college.
You have to go to an elite college because you're with wealthy families.
My first tech company that was successful, you're all at the early stages, you're broke!
You need money!
And I remember I was working hard on a company, a good buddy of mine, because I founded a fraternity when I was in university, so I have strong relationships.
Jewish young man.
He had already founded a company that was successful.
And in fact, it was his mother that encouraged me to go into business.
I was trying to help people.
I wanted to teach for America.
I wanted to help young, impoverished black kids like myself realize that education can take you anywhere.
That's what I was focused on.
And she told me, and I write this in my book, The Black Box, she said, What are you doing being a teacher?
I said, you know, I'm thinking about running a non-profit after this.
She said, oh, you want to run a non-profit, do you?
She was like, are you a rich man's wife?
Are you a rich man's wife?
Because that's what they do.
They create non-profits and then they get their husband to give them a little money and their husband's friends give a little bit of money.
But if you really want to do something, if you're really a leader, you need to be able to cut the check.
And if you want to cut the check, you need to be a businessman.
Stop with this nonsense of being a school teacher.
You went to Berkeley and Johns Hopkins to become a public school teacher?
She said it like it was pathetic.
It was like almost made me ashamed to want to help people in that way.
She says, let others do it.
It's not for you.
Now, I say that to say this.
I went from that and went into business.
Is college a scam?
No, because my mother couldn't tell me that.
This Jewish kid's mother who was a professor and a successful journalist around the world and her husband a successful entertainment lawyer in Los Angeles and represented all of the stars.
She was able to tell me that.
I only had access to her because of the college I went to.
And then when I fell short on capital for my startup company, which I had sacrificed everything for, sacrificed my personal credit, sacrificed all of my money, sacrificed other people's money, when I ran out of money, my buddy David says, He's like, hey, how's your startup going?
Oh, it's going pretty good, you know.
He was like, oh, okay.
And he knew I'd been working hard and he knows the kind of man I am.
He says, hey, I got a bunch of cash I got to do something with.
I don't want to take it to the bank or anything like that.
He's like, I'll give it to you.
Just give it back to me when you can.
Now, mind you, his startup's cracking.
I forget exactly how much it was.
Maybe he handed me like $8,000, which to now is like, you know, we'll fuck that off in a day.
But at that time, when you have no money and you're like in your early 20s, it's like- Damn, you just handed me $8,000 with no contract.
Just love.
Just love.
I personally did not have friends who could do that that I grew up with who were living a legal lifestyle.
So getting access to those kind of people was a direct result of the university I went to.
And it didn't end there.
And from there, I branched out a massive network that can allow me to do anything.
And when people say funny shit on the internet, it cracks me up because...
Sometimes I'm on a live session.
I'm like, yeah, I'm going to such and such country tomorrow.
And they're like, you're not going to do this.
You're not going to do that.
And I was like, that's strange because not only am I going to that country, I know the head of police there.
It's like the network is so strong now.
You're in government, so I know.
So college, if you want to go big...
Network matters and where you went to school matters.
It's like a business card.
It's like a social thing.
But if you're paying directly to get an outcome, you need to take a good degree.
And it doesn't matter what college you go to at that point.
And now if you're a kid who doesn't like school, and many don't.
I didn't like school.
I was good at it, but I didn't like it.
I would love to study under someone like you, if that's what they want to do.
If they want to get into your field, study under someone like you.
That's called an apprenticeship.
Right now I'm doing a practicum, which is essentially a course where you get to learn.
I'm doing a practicum called How to Create and Monetize Your App.
So, you're getting the lecture-type education that you would get regularly, but I'm also actually building an app, and you're going through the entire process.
I'm telling you everything that I'm doing.
Oh, I'm investing this amount of money.
Here's why.
Hey, we need to do version two.
We're on the beta.
What do you think we need to change?
Hey, I got a task for you.
I want you to do this work.
So, by the time you're done with my practicum, if you were to apply to a job, you could say, Hey, I've experienced bringing 100,000 users onto a technology.
I've experienced onboarding.
I've experienced doing customer discovery.
I've experienced with AWS. I've experienced hiring developers, and you've actually done the things.
And one of the young men had said something to me that was entertaining, and it let me know I was doing the right thing.
He said, Hey, Marquette, this is kind of hard.
What he meant was tedious.
That was the word.
It's tedious.
You actually have to do stuff to get paid.
And I was like, that's right.
It's not hard.
It's tedious.
And it's important that you understand that it's tedious.
And that is why I have all of my cars are 100,000 plus because I'm willing to go through this.
But here's the thing.
Once you finish, you never really finish, but once you get to market, And users get on it, you have what's called a money machine.
And the money keeps on going.
And now, you're in a different position than these other suckers who are working day and night, nine to five.
So, yeah, if I don't want to go to college, I take my practicum, which you can get at marquettism.com, or I study under someone like you, because to be able to watch you and observe how you guys work and how you network...
That is the ballgame, is getting to the transaction.
How do I get paid?
College doesn't teach you how to get paid.
It might teach you how to be a great employee, but it won't teach you how to get paid as an entrepreneur.
Wow.
And that's probably one of the best explanations for it.
From my experience, too, because I've always said, you know, in general, college can absolutely be a scam, depending on what you do.
Like me, for example, right?
If I had not went to Northeastern in Boston, I wouldn't have met certain individuals who made me have a different outlook on life on what is possible.
Made me realize that material things are stupid.
Spending a bunch of money on Jordans might not be the best move.
Spending a bunch of money on designer, etc.
Especially at my younger age when I didn't have the money to do so, living beyond my means.
It taught me, hey...
Being successful is the number one thing, and then you can go ahead and choose to buy that stupid shit once you make the money.
But when you're building up, it's delayed gratification.
So it definitely opened me up to a different class of people, because I had never been around rich people until I went to college.
And just like your situation where you were exposed to...
This woman who was a lawyer, excuse me, no, journalist, and she was a professor who was married to a lawyer, powerful people, it lets you see what's possible, especially when you come from an inner city like I did, right?
So I think that's important, but I 100% agree with you that if you're gonna go the college route, it's gotta be one of two things.
You either got a major or something that's gonna get you an entry-level job immediately, which is what you were saying before, Or, if you are going to have a bullshit degree, you better go to fucking Harvard or Yale.
Because that network will make up for your shitty ass degree.
Because the reason why I've leaked schools, Harvard, Yale, Cornell, Princeton, Penn, Dartmouth, did I say Princeton?
No, I said Princeton.
I think it's like eight or nine Ivy League schools.
I named, I think, six or seven.
But either way, you guys get what I'm saying.
They're all in the Northeast, right?
What's the one in New York?
Cornell.
No, there's one in the city.
In the city.
Ah, yeah, yeah.
Columbia.
Columbia.
Columbia, right?
The reason why these schools are so prestigious and people love them so much is because they have huge endowments, they have a huge network.
Once you get out, even if you major or something bullshit, you're going to probably find a job.
Right.
Right?
I mean, just to give you guys a perspective on how strong some of these schools are when it comes to networking and money, I'll never forget this.
Harvard, right?
As you guys know, crew is a very affluent, rich sport, right?
Right.
Right.
Now, a boat, guys, an M-Pocker, is about $50,000 in eight, right?
Nice and wrong college.
And it was a struggle for, you know, Northeastern didn't get a boat here and there, Boston University, you know, we'd get boats every now and then, right?
Because, you know, it's a private school, a lot of wealthy people are alumni.
Harvard has a waiting list.
You're on a waiting list to donate $50,000 to get a boat named after you.
I mean, if that doesn't- Boss talk.
Yeah, man.
Boss talk.
That's the difference, man.
And we used to make fun of Harvard and talk our shit, blah, blah, blah.
But schools like that where there's a waiting list to donate $50,000, that tells you guys the type of, once you have a degree there, the type of network you're going to be open to.
So if you are going to major in something bullshit, you better go to a damn good school that's going to get you a job.
Northeastern, they had a co-op program, which I was able to get my government job through them because they had connections with Homeland Security.
So that was how I was able to get my foot in the door to get that job, six-figure job out of college.
Well, it started at $60,000, $70,000.
I worked for four or five years, hit 100K, was able to take that money, invest it, now you guys have the podcast that you see here.
But I would not have been able to do that had I not went to college.
So my thing when it comes to college is, It's got to be either A, you're majoring in something that's going to find you an extra level job, or it's going to get you a skill set that will be a higher earning like a doctor, lawyer, etc.
Or you better go to a damn near Ivy League school that will get you a network that will get you a job right out.
Can I say something crazy?
Please.
And you know, I can say just fine now, but you know, I was considered going into clandestine services.
For a number of probably obvious reasons, the application didn't fully go through.
Intel agencies?
Yeah.
Okay.
Would you agree that there are feeder schools that if you really want to be well positioned to go into FBI, CIA, Homeland, there are a number of feeder schools that you're going to have a much better opportunity.
Absolutely.
The guy that hired me was a Northeastern alum.
Bingo.
That's how I got in with Homeland Security.
The things that helped me was I was an athlete, Division 1 athlete, and I had a 3.3 GPA, but I spoke Arabic as well, but that helped me because the guy that hired me was a Northeastern former football player, and I was an athlete.
So they're like, okay, this guy has good grades, and he's an athlete, speaks Arabic, boom, let's pick him up.
But if I didn't go to Northeastern, I would have never got that job.
And there's definitely universities that have shoe-ins with certain agencies or certain positions.
Heavily reliant.
Yes, heavily.
That's also something as well, and I think that kind of gets overlooked, but again...
A lot of the times, a lot of y'all go to college and some shitty-ass school with a shitty-ass major with a shitty-ass degree, yeah, you're not gonna get a job.
But if you go to a more prestigious school that has a network or you're majoring in something that will get you a job, then it's worth it.
People underestimate the power of a network.
You made a very good point because even getting a degree, you might know something, but you don't know the workspace.
You don't know, for example, the culture, the career, how it even works, versus you have someone that knows, like a professor that you shadow or you kind of like apprentice.
He can say, you know what?
Marquette is a quit student.
He's very well laid out.
He's very well set up.
And he wants to do well and work hard.
You know what?
I have some buddies over here at a company.
They want to hire somebody.
And people that went to school, did honors, everything like that, they don't know anybody, but they want a job.
That's right.
But guess who gets it?
The guy that they know.
Yeah.
But inside.
Every time.
All the time.
Every time.
And is it fair?
No.
Life is not fair.
But whose fault is it?
Yeah.
Your fault.
They literally had something called over at the HCI, they had the Northeastern Mafia.
Like a bunch of alum that graduated from Northeastern and then they opened up that internship program for students specifically from Northeastern.
So certain schools do have shoo-ins with certain Government agencies, companies, startups, whatever it may be that you want to get involved in.
Figure out what you want to do, figure out which schools have the best connections to do so, and do it.
I think the biggest mistake is when you go in undeclared.
You don't know what the fuck you're doing.
You're going in there without a plan.
Do not do that.
That's when you mess up.
Do not do that.
I had a friend.
He wasn't really good at networking, but he asked a question to his...
I think he asked his teacher a question.
He said, hey, listen, I want to get a job after this is done.
How do I go about it?
He said, you know what?
I'm going to watch it more closely.
I'll pay attention to what you've got going on.
We'll see from there.
He did well in school.
Stayed later than most students.
Did all the homework.
He saw the focus and confidence.
He said, you know what?
I'll make a phone call.
I'll make a phone call.
Now he's working at Microsoft.
Boom.
That's how it works.
That's a good gig.
I think the biggest takeaway here, guys, is if you're going to go to college, go in with a plan.
Yes.
Go to a prestigious school or major in something that's going to get you a job.
Try to get scholarships so you can lower your debt.
Yeah.
If not, then go.
If you're not sure what you want to do, get a trade.
Yeah.
Simple.
You know?
And you got, you know...
Two college grads here telling you guys that if we could do it again, we could probably get by without school.
Stop it.
I would not do it.
Especially nowadays.
With all the knowledge out there for free.
It's different.
It's so different.
It is.
It's way different now.
Especially with the internet and you being able to learn so much online.
When I was going to college in 2009, You didn't have this vast amount of information for free on the internet.
YouTube wasn't a thing like that.
It wasn't an education tool like that.
But nowadays, it's crazy how much info's out there.
I have a friend, right, that studied so hard in school, bro.
Every day, studying, going crazy, got a master's degree.
I think it was in communications or whatever.
I can't remember what it was in.
Some bullshit.
But, you know when they were I got a pet shop.
Damn.
And I'm like, wait, you spent all that time in school to work at a pet shop, minimum wage.
I'm like, bro, this is not worth it.
But once again, it was choices that they made, degrees that they made, and not having a network.
What do you expect?
Go to trade school.
Yeah, go to a trade school.
At that point.
You know, for so many guys.
If you don't know what you want to do, guys, don't go to college.
That's my biggest thing.
That's scary, bro.
Don't go to college if you don't know what you want to do.
What else do we got here?
60 Minute Man finally got the gold whale.
We need Aaron Clary back for Money Mondays.
We'll bring it back, don't worry.
Myron, when you find a wife in the Middle East, how many weeks or months of the year do you intend to spend outside the U.S.? Will you be living on call?
What is the ideal situation?
It depends on what kind of business ventures I've set up at that time.
As you guys know, I'm building a real estate portfolio.
Yo, shout out to you, bro.
Shout out to you, bro.
Big supporter.
These from earlier.
Okay, Mark.
Thank you.
No, he super chatted it, so I appreciate him supporting you.
Yeah, appreciate that.
Okay, so what led up to- But what is an NFT, though?
Does it stand for non-fungible token?
Something like that?
You know that the fascinating thing is, and this is important for guys who want to be something, right?
Like I'm wearing a suit right now.
Every time I do business, I always wear a suit.
Or every time I want to take position, I always talk about people, places, position.
You want to always be around the right people.
What can these people do for me?
Can they get me to where I need to be?
Is this the right place?
Is this a safe place for me to be in?
Is this a place of affluence and opportunity?
People, places, positions, right?
I always wear a suit because, you know, you'll hear black folks complain about racism all the time, which racism is real, but it's not strong enough to stop you from achieving, right?
Absolutely.
I agree with that 1,000%.
But one thing I know for sure is there's certain things that you hear it and you gotta say, huh?
Like for example, you got a kid like Destiny, right?
Blue-haired booty bandit.
Oh my god!
You got the blue-haired booty bandit.
This kid worked at a restaurant Had to quit his job because it was too much to work at a restaurant and go to school.
Then he fails out of school, right?
Spends all of his time playing video games, which is what kids do.
I understand.
So then, you know, he's debating me.
I went to elite universities and my background is as an inventor of technology.
I invented a vertical in technology.
Effortless attendance.
We're the first people to be able to take attendance in the university setting like that.
And then there were many copycat companies after that.
Got investment from well-known investors.
And I'm not going to name the companies, but one of them, for example, is the largest online dating technology in the world.
Tinder?
Anyways, so Tinder is owned by another company.
This is that company.
So you got me.
Got the education.
Got the technology pedigree.
Then you ask me, like, what is an NFT? Those are the kind of things that subconsciously you gotta say, that's a strange thing to ask.
That's like asking Michael Jordan, like, what's a double dribble?
Or asking Floyd Mayweather, what's a shoulder roll?
And the question is like, well, why do you look at a certain person who already is proven, but you ask them something to suggest that they're an imposter?
Even though what I've done is easily found on Google or on Forbes, right?
So these are the funny things.
And I always want to let people know, like, don't ever let anyone lower you.
Because what they're trying to do is lower you.
So if you're a real boss, always stand tall.
I'm too tall to act small.
So someone asks you something like, what's an NFT? It's like, I'll Google that when I'm in the Maybach using the Wi-Fi in the back of the Maybach with the tray table.
Like, I'll Google it, see if I can find it out.
But...
Maybe I'll never find it out.
How did that debate come to be?
Oh, sorry.
No, no.
Go ahead.
No, I was just going to say, like...
It wasn't a debate.
He ragequitted.
He started playing piano during the debate because he got mad.
Because what happened, the reason he brought up NFTs and he got mad is because I said, Hey, man, like, you're just a grifter online.
You're just trying to fleece people out of money.
You're not a leader.
Just play your video games.
No.
And he got big mad and he was like, why am I not qualified to be a leader?
I didn't say this, but in my head I was thinking, because you...
I'm not going to say it.
What I did say is I said, check out this video, right?
So we played the video.
In the video, you can see him in full HD stating anyone who sells NFTs is just a grifter.
They're just a con artist looking for a bigger sucker.
And you know what's funny?
I agree with that.
I was like, so you saw yourself right there, right?
You said selling NFTs is a scam.
Check out this other video.
Play.
Shows destiny.
Oh, you know, look, you know, you can actually make money selling NFTs and the content creator gets 10%.
So I could actually sell my clips.
You know, I got some legendary Twitch clips.
I can sell my Twitch clips as NFTs and get paid for it.
And you guys want to support me, right?
I was like, bro, you's a cold hypocrite.
You said they're a fraud, and here you are selling them to your own fans.
Damn.
You're a fraud.
Show them the videos.
The evidence is there.
So then he rage quit, starts playing piano.
Now here's a difference between a character like that.
He's defrauding his followers, selling them things he himself said was a fraud.
I've sent out over $100,000 to my fans.
I teach them how to do product-based business.
You go to my websites, you see products that I created, and I let you or you, one of the fans, sell them.
Like this very watch right here, you can go to mdblabel.com.
And if you buy this watch, does it make me money?
No, it makes money for a guy named John Jacobs.
You see?
I sent out over $100,000 to my fans.
I've taught them how to fish.
And I've put money in their pockets.
Radically different than defrauding them on things that I myself said are no good.
So I basically told him, like, no, I don't respect you.
And that hurt his feelings.
He got big mad.
Okay, because I didn't see the full debate.
I know that you guys had a discussion.
Once again, I like Dustin.
I get along with him.
I have respect for the guy.
I'm sure he likes you, too.
I think he likes tall guys.
Big strong man like you?
I'm sure he likes you, too.
Yeah, thank you.
But no, he's a good guy.
I get along with him.
Honestly, I'd love to say, of all the people you mentioned, like, hey, we should make peace.
Yeah.
I actually feel like Destiny and I have had a misunderstanding.
Truth be told, of all the people you mentioned, Destiny is the one guy that I'd be willing to sit down with in as much as, admittedly, I've said some things to him and about him that I think were hurtful to him.
And I'd be willing to sit down with him and hash that out.
Okay.
I don't agree with his behaviors.
I think his behaviors are filthy and immoral.
But I respect him as a human being.
I respect everyone as a human being.
And in as much as that's the case, I'd be willing to sit down with him and be civil and, you know, Because one thing I don't want to be my legacy is a kind of intolerance that edges on making other people feel like they're less than.
Just because I find something you do to be reprehensible or immoral or disgusting doesn't mean that you need to walk through your life with your head down.
And so I want to teach people that you can tell someone I don't agree with your behaviors.
I think it's valid.
I don't want people to be like you.
I don't want this to spread while maintaining a respectful relationship.
Yeah.
What about academics?
Academics are a funny ass dude.
I'll make the connection between you and Destiny.
Destiny's a good guy.
I'll make that happen.
And I'd love to.
I got a good amount of respect for Destiny.
The fact that he can come on platforms where people he disagrees with and have a civil discussion.
I didn't say I respect him, but go ahead.
I'm saying I respect him.
I respect the guy.
DJ Fattedemics.
Livingston!
Here we go.
That's the homie, man.
That's the homie.
I want everyone to know I ended his shit.
Listen to me.
The supervillain ended his shit.
You heard me?
And I want the record to record that DJ Fatadimix thought he was that guy.
He thought he wanted smoke, but end up what?
What happened?
You heard me?
At the time, I think I was in some small Eastern European country.
I think I was in Poland, actually.
I was in Poland, flaming this shit on bad internet.
You heard me?
They had me on dial-up, 56K internet, flaming this shit.
Now here's the thing.
The ball said he could flame anybody.
He got in the ring with a serious opponent, got his shit shattered by a prime Mike Tyson.
He ain't speak my name after that.
You heard me?
Turn the boy into a mime.
Let the whole internet record his own fans were saying the Satan the sinner fucked your shit up.
You heard me?
His own fans.
I'm not gonna lie.
He did top out, though.
That was a body.
Then he started lying.
He's like, I can't even talk to these people unless they showed me bank statements.
Which bank?
Which bank?
At that time, I went to that country to deposit money.
And they told me, we can only insure up to this amount.
Let us introduce you to another banker.
Which bank are you talking about?
It's not about money.
It's about the fact that you got fucking flamed.
And by the way, for people like DJ Thadademics, you make your living by lambasting and verbally assaulting dimwits, rappers, drill rappers who can barely speak English, right?
They're ignorant among the African American masses.
But then I step up all of a sudden, he quiet as a church mouse.
Those are called bullies, friends.
Those are called bullies.
Well, now the big bad wolf is here, the super villain.
You're me the warrior king of this YouTube thing.
Tell everybody to shut they mouth when I come around.
Carrying on.
You know who's my favorite person that you roasted?
O'Shea.
Oh, man.
That was beautiful.
You ended that nigga, bro.
Listen.
That's one person I agree with that.
Yeah.
That was a great roast, bro.
Listen.
You notice I never mention O'Shea online.
Yeah.
No, really.
You notice.
I've never mentioned him since the roast.
Some things are on the internet, and then if I ever stop talking about something, I stop talking about it for a reason.
And he's never mentioned me again.
Yep.
If people knew the story, nobody else would mention me.
Yeah, he's not one to be played with, bro.
If people knew why he doesn't mention me and I don't mention him, no one else would mention me.
Oh, I know.
Yeah, he's fucking...
Hey, man.
One person you don't play with is Marquette, bro.
Something called the...
I mean, bro, you over here gossiping on other people.
That's literally what the dude does.
It's ridiculous, man.
That's not masculine behavior.
That's what girls do, bro.
Yeah, so I'm just...
Yeah.
We'll move on.
You know, they say intelligent people talk about things.
Stupid people talk about people.
So we'll move on.
And actually, that's the sin in the Bible.
Gossip.
Yeah.
That's a sin in the Quran as well.
There you go.
Absolutely, it is.
It's a good book.
Love the show, guys.
Keep up the good work.
A question to the saint.
Can you describe what an NFT is?
Again, bro.
I tell you what, I will describe it, but he needs to send my people at least 200.
And I will consider describing this.
It'll be difficult.
It'll be a strain.
It'll be a strain, but I think I can figure it out.
I'm telling you, they were spamming that in the chat.
It's nice.
I am a legend.
And this is when you know that you use the potent ingredient in what you said.
You use the truth.
Because it burns people up so much they just can't let go.
Yeah.
I mean, they just can't let go.
And here's another thing.
Can I talk my shit real quick?
I always want everyone to be happy and enjoy life.
I am actually the happiest man on the planet Earth.
I really am.
If you study what I actually do on a regular basis, all I do is travel around the world and try to slay the baddest hoes in each country.
That's really all I do with my free time.
And get suits tailored from scratch.
That's it.
And shoes handmade.
That's it.
That's all I'm really doing with my life, right?
That's why I can't be a proper YouTuber, because I'm never in the studio.
Trying to slay these bad chicks and these models.
But I want to say this.
When the greatest insult that your enemies can level at you is what is an NFT, you've lived your life right.
When the greatest insult you can tell me, like I have a book you can read about my whole life.
The best insult you have is what is an NFT? Damn it, I've lived my life really well.
And for those who actually want to know the answer to what is an NFT, marquettism.com purchase conference two-footage.
I actually did a whole conference before we had that conversation teaching people how to create NFTs.
So it's ironic.
Very interesting.
It is ironic.
Okay.
So a question for you.
Tech has switched up a little bit over the past 10 years or whatever.
We're moving towards people talking about AI, ChadGBT, all this crap, right?
If someone wanted to get into tech now and wanted to make a bunch of money, because we get questions from people all the time.
Hey, I want to get into tech.
What should I major in school?
What should I do?
What's the path?
What would you advise someone do if they want to get into the tech world nowadays?
To make money.
Right, to make money.
So your outcome is to make as much money as possible.
You're going to want to get into tech on the founder side.
You're going to want to be in a B2C company, if it's your first company.
Can you explain what a B2C company is and then a B2B? Yeah, so there's B2B, B2C, and B2G. B2C is business to consumer.
So you're the business selling to an individual consumer, which means you're selling to an individual person who can be whimsical.
B2B is business to business.
You're a business selling to another business.
The challenge with selling to businesses is that it takes a collaboration of persons to make decisions.
There's a chain of command, a hierarchy.
You usually don't know the person at the top.
And also you have to be able to establish those two, generally two, but possibly three value propositions.
A, I can demonstrate that I can make you this much money in your business.
Or B, I can demonstrate that I can save you this much money in your business.
Or C, I can help you meet these regulatory goals.
So that's more difficult.
It's advanced and you're going to need more money in your bank personally to use that kind of company.
And the same thing is true of B2G, business to government.
Now, B2G is we're talking huge amounts of money, right?
You're really not doing a deal less than $100,000 when you do B2G. We're good to go.
With a very simple and clear revenue model that is focused on an average consumer.
And what I'm saying is you'd be the Walmart of technology.
You have a technology that everyone can use.
There's not one person on earth who...
See, I choose not to go into Walmart, but I can go in there and buy a great many things.
So you want to be Walmart in as much as, who can't use TikTok?
You have old thoughts using TikTok, young thoughts using TikTok.
You have grown men using TikTok, everyone can use it.
So that's the kind of technology you want to create.
And those are all simple technologies.
You see, people often bring up AI now.
One, frankly, no one understands it, like the people who are talking about it.
And B, very few people actually are building AI. They might say something is AI, but it's usually not AI. AI is very expensive and very complex.
Can you tell us, because it's getting thrown out everywhere nowadays, right?
And as a real tech professional here that's made millions of dollars doing this, what is real AI versus what people are describing on the internet?
Let's put it simple, and this is occurring consistently.
There are trends and fads, right?
It used to be big data.
It used to be a thing.
Oh, yeah, our technology uses big data, and then it was blockchain.
Oh, yeah, our technology's on the blockchain.
Why?
Why is it on the blockchain?
Why?
Can you explain to me why this needs to be on the blockchain?
Or how about this?
Explain what the blockchain is.
You know, people are using terms because they're popular and truth be told, they're marketing terms more than anything.
So let's talk AI, right?
So people will use the term AI and they're talking about like a simple chat bot, right?
We're not talking about ChatGBT, we're talking about a chat bot.
So say you ever message a business on WhatsApp or on Facebook and it could be Spirit Airlines, right?
Because you always have customer service issues on Spirit Airlines and you message them.
Hey, I missed my flight.
Then Spirit Airlines will automatically reply to you on Messenger and say, oh, is your issue a missed flight?
Is your issue that you need to rebook?
Is your issue this?
And you click something and then it'll say something else to you.
And people think, oh, this is AI. It seems like a human interacting with me.
No, that's fairly simple logic there.
It's kind of like a...
This or this.
If they click this, then this.
The software is not thinking.
There's no machine learning.
It's not artificial intelligence.
Intelligence suggests thinking.
It's artificial because it's not a human brain.
You've coded some things that lets it take information, assimilate information, and then come up with something new.
Gotcha.
Whereas usually people are confusing this idea of, let's simply say, pathing with artificial intelligence.
Gotcha.
Automated responses for preconceived options is not artificial intelligence.
Correct.
Artificial intelligence is like a computer thinking.
I'm telling them something extremely specific and they're giving me back an answer based on the specific circumstances I announced in my problem.
And importantly, it can create something new.
It can give you an option or give you a piece of information that is new.
Gotcha.
That is the thinking it creates.
So for example, with ChatGBT, which I also think that people don't know how to properly utilize ChatGBT to make money to this day.
But the two common forms of AI that people actually have interacted with are ChatGBT and then the image creation one.
So if I go on an image creating artificial intelligence and I say, hey, I want to see a version of Myron Gaines that Destiny will find attractive and so then it generates an image automatically so it'll show Myron Gaines with orange hair and a big booty wearing like that Borat g-string you know the neon one you know so it'll show something like that and it thought of that there's nowhere on the internet that Destiny could currently find a photo of
you with orange hair wearing a neon color g-string it created that you see what I'm saying The imagery is shattering, bro.
Precisely.
Pause.
Big pause.
Yeah.
So that's artificial intelligence.
And I bet they could even create an NFT of that as well.
Yeah.
I know they love NFTs.
So that's artificial intelligence.
Do I recommend that people who want to go into software go into artificial intelligence?
No.
That's like, hey, Marquette, I want to learn how to play basketball.
Oh, great.
Let me put you on this team with LeBron.
No!
Like, you're going into the most sophisticated end of technology.
And here's the funny thing.
The technologies that make the most money are the ones that appeal to the brain-dead masses.
Bam.
There you go.
Okay.
I mean, I just learned a bunch there.
Like, so, because people tend to throw out that artificial intelligence term all the time.
Of course, yeah.
And the reality is most of this stuff doesn't even constitute as it.
And would you say that we're probably, since most of the things that people think is AI isn't really AI, it's just literally preconceived answers based on, I guess, questions and or phrases that might have been thrown to them in the first place and they just kind of have it in a data bank.
Yes.
How close are we to real AI then?
Well, AI does exist.
It's just not in common usage.
Gotcha.
So it's like far and few between...
Can you give us an example maybe in every day where there's real AI? Camera.
Example maybe?
The closest thing that we get to AI, and you'll hear people talking about this, and sometimes they're exaggerating.
They're like, oh yeah, if you do this, the algorithm will...
They refer to the algorithm.
Yeah.
Which sounds creepy as hell.
Maybe it's like the algorithm, like it's a person.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
That's what real AI feels like.
It feels like it is a person.
That's the closest thing we get to on a daily basis in terms of a consumer interacting with something that has artificial intelligence.
When it's choosing what things to push out to you that are new, like for example at Spotify, if Spotify suggests a new artist, Well, they've taken a number of values and the technology did some thinking to say, okay, well, if you like Drake and you like Young Thug, we think that you'll like this artist.
So maybe it's future, right?
There's intelligence that can go into that.
For example, it can do an analysis on the language of the actual music, right?
And say like a mumble rapper, they tend to have shorter bars, right?
Or a drill rapper will have shorter bars.
The rhymes are tighter.
There's fewer words per bar.
And so you can actually, on a text analysis basis, find out like, oh, okay, well, DaBaby and Young Thug Linguistically have similar lyrics.
So if we know that he likes this rapper, he'll probably also like DaBaby because they've both been categorized as hip hop rap from a genre standpoint.
And so in analyzing this, the technology thinks and then suggests DaBaby if you listen to Young Thug.
Wow, okay, so social media...
Evolved though, it never started that way.
I want everyone to understand, when you're trying to create a technology, oh you want to create YouTube, you want to create Spotify, Spotify's first iteration was not sophisticated like that.
YouTube's wasn't either, Facebook obviously wasn't either, and they evolved to these things.
So an example could be of like real AI would be like the YouTube algorithm where you're feeding a certain information on what you're watching and it's real time processing what you're watching.
Look at the minutes watched.
Look at how much you interacted with the content and giving you, spitting out content creators that you probably like based on your real time viewing decisions.
Sure.
And remember that there's levels to everything, right?
There's levels to AI. There's one AI that you say, hey, what is the outfit Destiny would like to see you in?
And then it creates an outfit and it's perfect.
Destiny looks at it like, do I want to be the top or the bottom?
We know it's accurate.
Then there's other technologies that you can plug in the same values and the only thing it would do to alter you is it might...
I'm trying to think of something basic that this kind of individual would like.
I mean, I think I get the idea.
I get the idea.
It might just only change your hair color, right?
So it's simple.
Just like human beings have levels of intelligence.
There's different levels of sophistication with it based on how nuanced it's going to be or how detailed it's going to be.
But in general, it's giving you information back based on your real-time decisions and what you're giving it real-time.
That's right, and the creator of the AI is the one that defines the level of intelligence of the AI. Okay, so algorithms you would say are probably the closest to AI that are simple, I guess, that everyone deals with.
Well, AI is just, put it this way, software is just mathematics.
So when people are saying algorithms, like just colloquially speaking, yeah, like when you have more algorithms interacting with a greater data set, then you're getting closer to AI. And then when your technology, yeah, let's just say that.
I would argue we haven't really seen what AI can do.
You know what I'm saying?
Like we have an idea, what we think it is, but we don't know what it really is.
And we mostly won't ever.
When I say we, I'm just talking about everyday people.
The elites won't know, but we don't know.
Because it's just not necessary and it's not useful and it'll put a significant number of persons out of work.
There are a number of lies that are going on.
I was just going to ask you that.
Do you think AI will reach a point where it will take away manual labor jobs?
It's already reached that point.
Most of what we're experiencing in the world is a lie.
So for example, I remember when I first opened my office in South Korea, what is this?
Maybe, I don't know, like 2014?
Creeping up on a decade?
I don't know.
It's a while ago.
At that time, you walk into a McDonald's and you order on the iPad.
There's no one taking orders.
Do you ever walk into a McDonald's in America and type in the order on an iPad except at an airport maybe?
Yeah.
They're trying to maintain employment.
So when you hear people, you also hear people say silly things like you'll hear Elon Musk say things like, oh, you know, we have a declining population.
We need to have more.
No, it's irrelevant.
The only reason you hear dumb people in politics say things like we can't have declining population.
For example, Italy is having majorly declining population.
It's a problem.
Same thing with many places in Europe.
That's because they're focused on a metric of GDP, which is actually not the metric that we should be focusing on.
And how does it make sense that in this world we're concerned with climate change, but at the same time we're saying we need to maintain high populations in Western nations?
What is a high population?
A high population is consumption.
What is consumption?
Consumption is degrading the climate because of the emissions and all these other things that come with consumption.
So there's an infinite number of lies that we're experiencing.
Karl Marx, for example, his thesis was essentially that capitalist economies will evolve such that You will reduce the necessity for human beings by increasing the usage of machines.
So why is it that there's a problem when you have declining populations?
There's not.
For example, in like the state of Washington or Oregon, I forget which one it is, you go there and you can't pump your gas.
It's illegal.
Why?
New Jersey too, yeah.
New Jersey, yeah.
Why?
Why is that, Myron?
It's a bit strange.
For employment.
Yeah.
To keep the idiots employed.
Yeah.
Because they're too stupid to do anything useful.
Because there is a fixed set of IQs.
You have people who...
You're going to have a portion of the human population that is too dumb to operate in the modern economy.
So as a result, to make sure that these people don't have a bunch of free time to do dumb stuff and be dangerous...
We keep them busy.
Let them pump the gas.
Let them take your order in American McDonald's, even though it's not necessary.
And an iPad would do it more accurately.
Oh, and by the way, there's also machines that make hamburgers as well.
And smoothies.
My buddy invested in the smoothie machine.
Makes smoothies.
Wow.
Yeah.
There are machines that do surgeries as well, better than human beings.
Yes.
Wow.
So...
Are we talking like, you know, smaller surgeries?
Are we talking extensive...
I'm talking about significant surgeries.
In fact, 15 years ago, there was...
Let me actually...
I can tell you the exact time because I gave a speech about this at a university.
There's a movie that kind of highlighted this as well.
You know, the Alien series, Prometheus?
There's a lady, I forgot her name.
She got injured.
I know it's kind of like sci-fi, but it's vitro.
No, it's real.
No, it's current.
She got injured.
Massive cut.
Went to this chamber.
The technology fixed her up.
It's going like an hour.
Something closer to home.
BBMLD, right?
He's got every surgery in the book.
So when BBMLD got his hair done, right?
You know there are machines that can do the hair transplant for you, right?
Really?
Yeah, yeah.
There are machines that can do the hair transplant for you.
So makes it much quicker, much more efficient because this stuff takes a long time.
It's fairly tedious and that's why often the doctors are not the ones placing the grafts.
It's like the nurse or the assistant.
You can have machines place the grafts now and they're going to place them better and there's going to be quicker healing.
When I did mine, the doctor, but I did the old school one, cut the strip in the back of the head and then plucked the hairs in.
The doctor actually did that, each one for me.
But there are machines I know.
Actually, the ones in Turkey, I think they do the machine.
And Turkey's going to be the bleeding edge because they get such crazy volume, right?
The bleeding edge, but not necessarily the best quality.
Yours looks great, by the way.
I was admiring the Wave Gamer.
God damn!
This man makes me want to go get an MLD! Yeah.
Get everything done!
You hear me?
Thanks, man.
No, I... With the transplant, because I thought about going to Turkey, but then when I did the numbers in my head, I was like, this doesn't make sense.
Actually, it would have cost me more money and time to go out to Turkey, recover over there and everything.
So I was like, you know what, man?
If I could just do it here in the States.
But they do have good surgeons over there.
Yeah, it's like the cutting edge.
Speaking of foreign...
Yeah, I could read the chat.
Yeah, you know I got a question, but I'll read these chats real quick.
Let's go ahead and hit them up.
I'm ringing bell right now.
Thanks for keeping me entertained as Rock is flying.
Pray for...
Oh, okay.
I see.
They're talking about the situation going on.
Peace of the Saint.
Shout out to you, Rock and Ship.
An NFT is a unique digital item you can own and prove it's yours.
Done.
Okay, fantastic.
Him Holland goes, my two favorite creators.
Much love, Peace of the Saint.
Shout out to you, Him.
Fresh, do you say...
How do you say or pronounce...
Here we go.
Yeah, that's actually laughing in Spanish.
Yes.
Instead of yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah, I said yeah, yeah, yeah.
What else do we got here?
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah.
Rocketship, why do you not recommend B2B? Well, he explained that earlier.
He just did.
And then we got here.
What are the best books to read or whom would you recommend dead slash live mentors regardless of what stage of life you're in?
I'm in medicine but always looking to improve until I die.
Very good.
So, number one, even though I am an author, I don't recommend books.
I do not recommend books in general.
Is Audible better?
No, I just don't.
If you want to do something, you have to do something.
Okay.
And reading is not doing something.
So I do not recommend books.
But if you would like to read books that will keep you inspired and educated and give you some knowledge and maybe a base to start on, I can recommend the following books.
The Black Box is the best book ever written.
It's a book for this time.
It took 10 years to write it.
Because what I realized is that if you actually want to do something, it requires your emotions.
And it's a book that stirs your emotions to actually do something.
So that's number one.
Number two, a great book in terms of money management, which you should learn how to manage money before you have money.
I agree a thousand percent.
So I would recommend The Richest Man in Babylon.
Oh, by the way, I actually have a whole book list.
If you go to amazon.com slash shop slash the saint in the center, I got like probably 50 books on there.
But The Richest Man in Babylon, Think and Grow Rich, Outwitting the Devil.
And I could go on endlessly, but the truth is you're not going to read all those books.
So I always encourage you to prioritize action over all things.
And one note on Henry Ford, great American and capitalist, changed the world.
He's the reason everyone can drive cars.
Henry Ford was once in a court under oath and he was asked a basic question that most people who have went to school would be able to answer.
He didn't know the answer.
It's because he didn't read books, which shows you how critical reading books are.
They're not critical.
He was able to make a tremendous amount of money and change the world such that we speak of him today because he knows how to get things done.
Go out and do something.
What else do we got here?
Shout out to you, Zantians.
It's been a while, man.
We haven't seen you in a minute.
Symphony Pimpin.
Thoughts on...
Oh, the war.
Okay.
We might have to go to Rumble for that one.
Alomero.
Love the show.
Shocked seeing Neon and his 304 girlfriend.
This is crazy.
He needs to be saved to your guest.
I heard there's a contract for a minority.
Can he talk about it?
What?
I don't know what you mean.
What contract?
I don't know.
Chris goes, I was very intrigued how the 304 lawyer argued for whoredom as if it was an academic literature.
It was like a religion for her.
Oh yeah, you had a debate with her.
The holosophy.
Oh God.
Yes.
How was that?
She was a holosopher.
And you know what?
I tell you, she stuck to it.
She was really committed to win the gold in the hololympics.
But, you know, a nice young lady, and I was frank with her.
I said, you know, I make every effort to make sure that your way of living and thinking does not spread.
It is a great poison.
But what we can understand, and she called you guys out during the conversation.
She was like, yeah, you know, I get all of my fans from Fresh and Fit's audience.
That is so sad, bro.
Goddamn.
And those are the facts though, right?
She's getting her fans from guys who say that they despise her type.
You know, if you really do despise her type and more importantly, love yourself, you have to give up pornography, you have to give up those kinds of obsessions.
The world is in decay because of male perversion and men's inability to control their emotions.
If we can get those two things in order, we'll be in a strong position to move things forward, but it's upon us.
What are your thoughts on, because not just her, but a lot of women in general tend to look at it like, oh, I get sexual attention from men, so therefore my value is high.
What is up with this delusion?
They don't believe that.
They're just saying that.
They don't believe that.
And really, it's a sales pitch, and they're trying to see if you'll buy it.
The moment you don't buy it at all, they swoon over you.
And this is an age-old story, right?
They see if they can talk themselves up, and if you buy it, then they'll carry on with their chest poked out.
Yeah, men love hoes.
Yeah.
Yeah, for sex only.
Right.
But if you look at her like she ain't shit, and you tell her like, bitch, if you walked across the street and got hit by a car, I wouldn't even call 911 for you.
And I really feel that way.
Once they realize that you really feel that way, then they're going to scramble to find another way to offer you value.
Because it turns out that their desperate need is to be approved of by you.
That's why they put on the makeup and they get the surgeries and all those things.
They need some fathers in their lives.
They need you to love them.
Give up a respectable career to be a hoe and try to sit there and tell other women to do the same.
I mean, that's just crazy to me.
Because other women actually do want to be married to a strong masculine man that isn't going to be a loser.
Because the only type of guy that would accept that ridiculousness, like, for a long-term relationship.
Correct.
Not for sex, guys.
Remember, sex.
Myra, like, I accept the sex.
Yeah, I'll accept the sex, but I'm not going to fucking take your dumb ass seriously.
But women like that are never able to secure those guys long-term.
Correct.
It is what it is.
Correct.
Question for you.
We talked about Turkey a little bit.
You're a very well-traveled guy.
You've been all over the world.
What are your thoughts on where the United States is right now in comparison to other places that you've been to, and where do you see the future going as far as the next place to be?
Yes.
I often echo that the best politician, the best political leader is an international businessman because he actually understands the world.
And the more time you spend in the world, you understand that really the world is just composed of gangs warring against one another.
And as Wu-Tang said, Wu-Tang, the deepest political philosophers ever, they said, cream, cash rules everything around me.
And you will observe no matter where you go...
Ah, the almighty dollar is powerful.
Do you think that's why Trump was so successful?
Despite people hating on him?
Because businessmen get things done.
They have to, or else they go out of business.
But if you're a career politician like Barack Obama, Hillary Clinton, Joe Biden, you've been in a, air quote, business where if you don't deliver the goods, your business never shuts down.
And you don't have any competition.
I mean, you guys go to the DMV. You gotta spend the whole day in the DMV. Terrible, bro.
It's unpleasant, right?
That's why the government is so inefficient is because they don't have competition.
Yeah.
I network, though.
I met one of the managers.
Now I just make a phone call or text.
I get everything done.
W. Boom.
So to answer your question, a businessman is going to understand the world best.
For example, I was in Malaysia, which is a great home for a capitalist.
I was in Kuala Lumpur in Malaysia.
They have one of the best Ritz-Carlton's in the world.
Best Waldorf Astoria is in Thailand, strangely.
But anyways, they have the best accommodations.
Great place for a capitalist.
And I went into an off-white.
There's a particular sneaker I like that they produce.
I already got it in different colors.
I saw a color I didn't have.
That's Kanye's brand, right?
Off-white?
That's Virgil.
Virgil Abloh.
He's now deceased, right?
Yeah.
Rest in peace to him.
Awesome creator.
And these are the kind of guys that do well for us internationally.
These kind of black guys that represent us well when we travel around the world.
They know how to play a part and they understand that, listen, my nigga antics can't come over here.
On some level.
Right, because when you travel around the world, another reason I wear a business suit, the first thing, if they see you or I, their first question is like, oh, where are you from?
And then you say America, and they're like, oh, well, where are your parents from?
And you say America, and they're like, oh, where are your grandparents from?
They're waiting for you to say Nigeria or some African country, right?
They don't understand the concept of your family's been in America for 300 years, you just don't know.
But anyways, I say that to say this.
When I was in Kuala Lumpur, I saw some shoes in off-white that I really like.
I like to give anecdotes.
It makes it easier for people to digest.
I saw some shoes that I liked, and they didn't have my size, so my assistant says, I'll go online, I'll find them, and we were going to Vietnam, and she says, I'll just mail them to Vietnam.
So then we fly to Vietnam, and eventually DHO gives us a notification like, hey, your shoes are here.
You do have to pay an import tax and duty.
Okay, for sure.
I think the shoes are probably like $600, $700.
I'm thinking, how much could the import tax be?
It's 40%.
So I end up paying over $1,000 to get this pair of shoes.
Now, why do I bring that up?
Vietnam is the only place in the world you can go and get a pair of shoes handmade.
Why?
Because they don't import shoes from other countries.
They protect the industry.
The government has to do that.
When I travel around the world, and I'm a real American, I look around and I'm like, damn, where's the Ford?
Where's the GM? Where's the Chevys?
Why don't they have our cars here?
I travel back to America.
We got all their cars here.
We let them send their garbage here.
Oh, but you go to these other countries and they don't want to let us put our cars in their markets.
Wow, seems like we're losing.
For example, I had an office in South Korea.
When Trump says, make America great again, if you're a business person, if you're well-traveled, you know what he means.
I had an office in South Korea.
You go in that office, next to it, it had a gym, a cafeteria.
It had two sleeping quarters, so you could literally take naps in bunk beds.
And to get in the office, it's a retina scan.
Scans your eye off some Batman shit.
So I'm like, damn!
I used to work in Silicon Valley.
Silicon Valley is the technology hub of the world.
How do I work in Silicon Valley and we don't have the basics of technology that you're going to find in South Korea, which is supposed to be an inferior country?
They retina scan my eye for me to get in, then let me tell you something crazier.
They got this little card that you can use to navigate their public transportation, which even if you don't speak Korean is so well designed that you don't need Korean because it's beautifully color-coded and it's very clear.
And you take this card, you use it to get on the train.
And then if you choose to go get a snack at 7-Eleven, you use the same card at 7-Eleven.
And anything else you'd like to do, you use the same card.
It's extraordinarily easy.
Life is so simple because things are well organized and most importantly, high tech.
High tech.
Consistently across the board.
America, you don't have that.
Ain't nobody getting a retina eye scan to get into their office.
So, I can name so many examples like that.
And like, you got countries that are just like nobody, countries like Costa Rica.
How do they have better roads than we have?
Really?
Costa Rica has nicer roads than we have.
So, I say that to say that the American government has been incompetent for a long time.
And in fact, and it boils my blood because if you look at the last couple theaters of war we've occupied, where have we won?
Hmm.
Yeah, Iraq was a hell.
Where have we won?
Look at what our spend is on warfare, on murder.
We spend so much on murder and we can't even get the job done.
Billions.
It saddens me.
You know, I'm anti-war, but if we must, you know, let's get some bodies.
We don't even know how to do that.
Hurts my heart.
And this is not a new thing.
It's been going on for a long time.
I just said I left Vietnam.
Did we win the Vietnam War?
No.
What, 50,000 dead Americans, if I'm not mistaken?
And there's so much evidence we didn't win because, you know, I go that, you know, I bring people in.
They show up.
They don't need a visa.
I'm an American.
I show up.
I got to get a visa to come in this country as though I'm like trying to like stay and loiter in your country.
American, I got to apply for a visa and pay you to be in this motherfucker when I'm the one bringing in the revenue?
Stop it.
Yeah.
America has been getting screwed up the backside because we have not had any leaders who are actually American patriots or nationalists.
America first.
Every other country is their country first, except ours.
Do you think Trump is the closest that we've had to an America first president?
In our lifetime?
Correct.
Damn.
That's a good point.
Yeah.
And, you know, you don't really realize how far behind we are or how much messed up stuff.
And it also helps you appreciate the United States, too, because we do a lot of things right when you go to these poorer countries, etc.
But you really start to see, kind of like, oh, why are they doing this?
But we're not doing it.
Are we the strongest country in the world?
Like, this doesn't make sense.
It'll get you mad.
You think it's the U.S. government that basically is the main reason that's holding us back, why we're not able to...
I am certain that it's the United States government and it's the disconnect between the intelligentsia, the United States government, and the top percentage of Americans that is causing this.
And it's also the fact that we have a diverse country.
So, for example, in South Korea, it's a homogenous country and there's tremendous levels of trust.
It just makes life easier.
No crime.
Right.
Everyone is Japanese.
There's no crime.
I don't want to sound like a racist or whatever, but homogenous countries tend to have less crime.
And it's better all the way around, generally speaking.
And actually, they're the most racist.
I was going to say, in Japan, I know you don't get along with John so much, but he's told me stories of where they will literally tell him, no, we're not serving you at this restaurant.
Correct.
And the racism is open.
They don't give a shit.
And in some cases, they don't even consider it racism.
I've spent a lot of time in Latvia, for example, little known country no one ever really shows up to.
And I'll hear the Latvians say things that are most certainly racist, like say things like, oh yeah, you know, You know, we're trying to keep out like we don't want to accept any Ukrainians or we don't want to accept any such and such because, you know, the Latvians are very competent, productive people and we don't want to mix our blood with anyone else.
Well, look me dead in the eye and tell me we don't want to mix our blood with anyone else.
And she was like, you know, and also you have to understand that certain European countries, they have the higher intelligence.
They tell me this in English.
They have the higher intelligence.
And so if we we mix a lot with the other countries, then our country is going to go down.
This is how they're simplifying it in English.
They're like, yeah, our country's gonna go down.
I'm kinda like, damn, that's some quality racism right there.
But to them, it's not racist because they don't even understand the concept of discriminating against you because you're Sudanese.
Their thing is, you're not us.
You're not Latvian.
You can be Sudanese, you can be Italian, German, you're not Latvian.
And that's all that matters.
Out of everyone you've been to so far, Marquette, top country for making money and then for getting girls?
Top country for making money.
There are a number of destinations in which you can make money.
Dubai is one of them.
I think it'll be harder to find good partners and good workers in Dubai.
You know, the Emiratis are not very productive and then you're dealing with a lot of foreigners, which, you know, it just makes business a lot more complex because they belong to different nations and, you know, Long story.
So Dubai, you can set up shop.
Kuala Lumpur is a great place, especially for people who are not well-established financially.
It is a great place to set up and do business.
I like Poland as well.
They have a great...
I haven't heard anyone say anything bad about Poland.
Everyone loves Poland.
And the women are legitimate.
Oh, I've seen a few here.
Yes, they're legitimate.
And they're not very liberal.
So it's one of the few places you can be in Europe, reasonably close to Western Europe, and the women are fairly conservative.
I think those are three interesting places to do business.
Okay.
Okay.
If you couldn't live in the United States anymore and you had to pick one country to live in, where would you pick right now?
It'd be very difficult to pick one country.
Give us your top two or three then.
Right now, my last tour was to get ready for the...
I have a men's trip in Vietnam in 2024, so I'm taking about 30 guys over there.
You like Vietnam, huh?
I like some of the business opportunities there.
Okay.
Some of the things that you can get done.
Strictly for business to getting things done.
Right.
And there also are some lovely women in Vietnam.
Okay.
And I'll tell you the rest off camera.
Small, huh?
Right?
But yeah, so...
A couple places.
If I wasn't going to live in the United States and it's not for criminal purposes, meaning I'm like, dang, I need to find a country in which I will not be extradited out of.
Okay, gotcha.
If it was like a criminal issue and I didn't want to be extradited, I'd go to Israel.
Because Israel, even though they're our ally, they never extradite anyone.
Really?
No, a lot of times Israel will, if you're a Jewish and you go to Israel and you live there, they will not extradite you.
You know what?
No.
Yeah, you're right.
You're right.
There was a spy that fled, and it took forever for them to get him.
They had to do some crazy...
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
There's an international scammer from Spain who's just blatantly scamming, left Europe, went to Israel, and continued scamming, grew a scamming business, and they wouldn't extradite him.
Yeah, they won't.
Wow.
And that's an ethnostate.
It's a homogenous ethnostate.
So anyways, I mean, they care about their people.
Let's say that.
They care about their people.
I'll tell you this, they put Israel first every time.
Every time.
Every time.
No matter where they go.
And they truly believe, like for example, one of the, we're not going to get into it because I know you guys got like some rumble.
We can switch to rumble and talk about this because anytime you talk about this, it becomes a problem.
Real quick, besides there, what else did you want to say?
If it was criminal, if I was Jewish, or if I could prove that I had some Jewish in me, I would go to Israel.
If it was a criminal issue, I'd go to Israel.
They take care of their own.
I'll give them that.
Or I would go to...
Really, there's nowhere else interesting to go from a criminal standpoint.
Yeah, I was going to say Venezuela.
You don't want to be in those places.
Yeah, you don't want to be there.
But if it's just for a fact of just not living in the United States, I would go to Southern Europe.
I would touch down in Athens and, man, have a ball.
Be a great place to live.
Okay.
Yeah, great place to live.
Okay.
What do you foresee the future of America is if we keep going down this route?
It's very dark.
Increasingly, we're going to see that the wealth is going to shoot up to a very small minority of people.
And mind you, I am a capitalist.
I'm a person.
I want to be in the.001%.
But we're going to see wealth sucked into that.001%.
We're going to see a rapid decline in culture and quality of people.
You see, the problem is when we're talking about making America great again, we forget that we also have to make the Americans great again.
So it used to be that Americans were more productive than other peoples and had a superior culture, work ethic and mindset.
As compared to other peoples, I would not say that that is currently the case.
And so increasingly, we're going to see...
And you know what?
The Soviet Union actually described a strategy of cultural subversion.
They wanted to spread the hippie movement and get Americans focused on drugs, irrelevant things, become idlers, unproductive.
And I think TikTok has largely achieved that.
I call it a children horse.
Yeah.
Like, the country's great.
You can't fight them head to head, but from within.
And it's been very successful.
I mean, at the end of the day, we're borrowing money from China to pay for a war in Ukraine that is not really our own, and thereby pushing Russia and China closer together, which many analysts and even the persons within those nation states have always said America should not let this happen.
If we stopped all trade in other countries, we'd be fucked.
On some level.
Trade has been a critical part of international capitalism, but we have to stop certain...
One, we need to create certain import taxes on particular industries that are core to our national security.
For example, if you're talking about the things that go into building tanks, aircraft, that should all be domestic, which is not actually the case.
I agree.
We also need to improve our presence on the African continent.
They need to view us as a friend, not as a colonizer.
We need to have access to the critical resources there.
Uranium, coal, tan, things like this.
China's been doing that for a very long time, building their roads for free and everything.
And Russia.
Farming.
And China pretends as though it's for free, but what they'll do is they'll...
Nice hat, my brother.
You dig?
What they'll do is they'll say, hey, we'll use your airport as collateral.
We'll use your port as collateral.
And you guys are Sub-Saharan African nations, so you're always going to default because they're predatory loans.
And you guys are idiots anyway.
So when you screw it up, we're going to own this, that, and the third.
And we're also going to overpopulate your country with our people.
So we're going to send them over there as well.
As workers.
People don't know.
And they also send police too.
The Caribbean is, and I didn't know this until I came to the Miami field office, the Caribbean is filled with Chinese.
Everywhere.
They're all over Jamaica.
They're all over the Bahamas.
There's a Chinese embassy in the Bahamas, guys.
Bro, I knew it was crazy when I saw an Asian guy in Barbados that spoke Jamaican.
I was like, wait, wait, what?
You will always see that.
They will always speak the language of the place that they are in fluently and still live in a community that is all their own.
Yeah.
And eventually the Chinese government also starts to create a police force in that nation that is Chinese police.
You can observe this in Zambia.
And when I was in Ethiopia, I noticed all their new constructions were being built by the Chinese, funded and built by the Chinese.
When I was in South Africa, I noticed that they put up a sign, like a public sign, and they have it in English and then in Mandarin.
I was like, oh, you ain't put that in Zulu?
You ain't put that in Nusa?
You ain't put that in Nusa?
Right?
That's crazy.
Like no respect for the people who are here.
But do you expect the Chinese to respect you or do you need to respect yourself?
Major problem.
People don't have self-respect.
That's why I have that three-sentence Bible, three-sentence Quran.
Number one, be yourself.
Number two, be good to yourself.
Number three, be good to good people.
Be good to yourself.
Number two, a lot of people forget about that.
It causes problems.
They do.
My granddad would always say to people that are good to him.
Anybody else, don't give a fuck about it.
Because they don't care.
Yeah, I mean, I think at this point, you know, people talk shit and say China is behind, blah, blah, blah, the economy is going to fail or whatever.
I mean, dude, within the next 50 years, I mean, China is a very serious, you know, nemesis for the United States.
They're stealing our intellectual property left and right.
They're the biggest thieves of our technology.
They got spies getting caught left and right here all the time.
And what do we do?
Catch and release like they're immigrants, huh?
Yeah, pretty much.
Russians too.
You know, because we're doing stupid trades, right?
Where we're giving like the merchant of death over for a WNBA player that smoked some weed.
Ridiculous, man.
It's just wild.
And it sucks because, you know, I'm America first all the time, right?
And I think a lot of our foreign policy doesn't necessarily put America first.
Matter of fact, we should probably switch to Rumble right now because I'm about to say...
What I'm about to say.
He's just switching.
It's time.
It's time.
Anything before we switch over from YouTube to Rumble?
We got anything?
We should do the chats first because they were waiting.
Oh, yeah, yeah.
Let me read these chats.
Sorry about that.
Yeah, good call, Fresh.
I'll read these chats and then we're going to go over to Rumble and we're going to talk about a certain...
Place.
And then a certain conflict that's going on that just broke out, what, 48 hours ago, approximately?
And it goes out here as well.
IT guy from Italy here, thanks a lot for your podcast, FNF. Love.
After Hours fan.
Yeah.
It changed my dating completely.
I work with a company in China, and the government banned last newer version, cryptography, TLS 1.3, from all our servers in the country.
Sus.
Yep.
So they banned their, basically.
That's from name three countries.
Yeah.
Marquette's wisdom and membership has positively changed my life.
The best guest that has ever been on Fresh Fit, Peace of the Saints, Assassin or Nothing.
There you go.
In a real way.
Appreciate it.
Shout out to the Saints Center for collab with the page on IG. We will clip the best parts of this money.
Oh, yeah.
Absolutely, man.
You get a lot of game on this one.
Yep.
We got Kevin Argo is great.
Guess FNF. We need the Supreme Court to allow student loan bankruptcies.
Thoughts on China over leveraged real estate market?
Would y'all invite Peter Schliff?
Supreme Court to allow student loan bankruptcies and then thoughts on China over leveraging real estate?
That will destroy the country.
Oh, the bankruptcy of the student loan stuff?
Yeah.
And if you want to know if...
First off, most of the governments of the world are scams.
If you want to know if the American government is a scam, ask yourself, how is it you can't go to the dentist and just...
They're like, hey, we'll cover this.
You've paid enough taxes.
We'll cover this.
Government will...
Can't have an ambulance ride.
The government's like, we'll cover this.
Don't worry about it.
But I think, what are we saying, like 200 million per day to Ukraine?
Per day?
So if you're wondering if your government is a scam, the answer is certainly yes.
And the government is borrowing money to give to a foreign entity that is not an ally.
Let me let everyone know what the definition of an ally is.
An ally means I can help you, but you can also help me.
How could Ukraine ever help us?
Can't.
Good question.
Damn.
Beautiful women.
I've had some personal experience.
Beautiful women, good engineers, miniature country with a retrograde economy, and it's been that way forever.
Poorest country in Europe.
And it used to be a part of Russia anyways.
Mother Russia.
Anyways.
So the point is this.
We're borrowing money.
Strategical placement, but they can't even give us that anymore.
Putin took that over.
They can't even give us that anymore.
There's so much.
It's so deep.
We've screwed our economy on so many levels, and if we allow for defaults on student loan debt, people are going to default.
Americans have such little integrity and a very low savings rate.
You mix those two things together, it's a disaster.
And one thing I want to point out, and it saddens me, you look at our armed forces.
I wish they would clean that up.
Do you know how many people go out on disability or say they got injured on the job?
They've never been deployed to war.
When you look at the numbers, you will be irate.
Wow, we're giving this person a check every month.
They've never been deployed to war, and they pulled a hamstring.
They were like the petrol person.
They fill up the gas on the tank.
They don't drive the tanks.
They just fill up the gas.
Somehow got injured doing that.
We're cutting them a check every month.
Do you know how many people we're cutting checks to who got injured on the job?
Yeah, a lot of people scammed the VA. Yes.
And it's just an example of the nature of the Americans.
So if you give them the chance to default on student loan debt, we're all defaults.
They will do it, 100%.
Welfare.
I will do it.
I don't even need to!
And you know why?
Because we fundamentally don't believe in our government.
We call it the government.
If you go to London, those psychopaths are convinced that their government is right about things.
You go to Japan and South Korea, they believe the government serves them, and it does.
So they're not going to say, you know, hey, if I can get over, I'm going to get over.
And I'll tell you one last thing on how goofy our government is.
I had a Hungarian chick, you heard me?
Tall little ting, tall and slim ting.
She was telling me that she got a check for the stimulus check.
She's not even a citizen!
What the fuck?
She was here on a tourist visa, was babysitting, and someone told her, hey, apply for the stimulus.
She was like, hey, what can they do to me?
I'm not a citizen.
I'll just go home if it goes bad.
I like Europe.
I'll just go home.
I don't care if I get back in.
Applies for it via cash app.
And gets it!
And gets it!
Bro!
Goddamn, bro.
Yo, shout out to Europe, man.
Man.
She came here with a gold mine.
All right.
What else do you got?
Right.
To win.
Love the new studio.
For me, it's CJ and FNF for life.
Stick to the grind and you'll surpass your previous Super Chat totals.
FNF serving lives are more educated than the masses.
Yeah, actually, you head out CJ, right?
He's going to come?
We're gonna bring him back, guys.
Yeah, we're gonna bring him back.
We will.
And I hope you guys, like I said before, I hope you guys are liking the studio, man, and the new studio and the camera angles and the lighting and everything else.
Because, bro, literally, guys, the past two weeks have been hell for me with building the studio, making it look really good and making sure everything is good and, you know, up into quality at the same time.
Because we didn't just build...
We didn't just build a new studio, guys.
We upgraded it while simultaneously building it.
So I hope you guys are really enjoying it with the new cameras and everything else like that.
Day and night.
So it increased the internet speed.
So many things behind the scenes, man.
But give me once in the chat if y'all are liking it.
This is the best studio ever made.
Facts.
By Hans.
Yeah, bro.
Myron Gaines.
Appreciate that.
And Andy.
And Mo.
What else do we got here?
Chris.
Chris ain't doing nothing.
Just kidding.
Marquette has a few programs for marquettism.com that guides people in creating large product-based businesses that have been paying dozens of people dividends for a while.
They're basically minting money.
Also, his videos on finding cooperative...
There's one straight down too.
Okay.
Finding cooperative girls is top.
Okay.
And then what else do we got here?
Um...
N.D. Marko had the conference a few years ago, Conference 3, where he explained NFTs and created Sazen Coin Live.
Of course, he knows what it is.
Check out the conference of Markoetism for proof.
Anyone going to check out his presentation, there it is.
And then N.D. goes, Peace to the Saints.
Honored to be able to listen to the Santa Center's live mindset on FNF. I have personally increased my own net worth and relationships from directly knowing him and supporting the Sazen.
I respect him immensely and he has changed my life.
Shout out to you, my friend, N.D. Ty Lopez, how productive to black society has Marquette been?
With W. Very productive.
Can you get connected to SauceCast, Patrick, David, and Graham, Steph, and Ty?
Okay.
FNF, wanted to personally thank you, guys.
I've been making 100K for over 20 years.
I'm 41 now.
I was chasing women, but was fat now.
I've lost over 150 pounds.
I'm at the gym every day, 5.30 a.m., and now they're chasing me.
Fat, depressed, and chasing, not the key.
Money first.
Okay.
And then we got here, Peace of Saints, I'm a poor community college for cybersecurity.
I'm at a poor community college for cybersecurity.
What to do to maximize my successful career?
I'm going to the military for cyber, but I was diagnosed with ADHD. Will I get accepted?
How to make revenue with content on media with zero follows?
ADHD. Wow.
What's your thoughts on that?
He's asking about how to maximize his time at school for cybersecurity.
Oh, is it on me?
Okay, I thought you were about to take that one.
Alright, here we go.
So let's reread this one.
I'm at a poor community college for cybersecurity.
Unless you're pursuing a certificate, your community college doesn't really matter.
So you're probably going to need to transfer anyways.
So that's number one.
Number two, what to do to maximize my success with this career.
It's one, to be able to define the outcome so that you can walk a focused path.
So what I highly advise you to do is to identify the specific job title that you're seeking.
And I'd probably talk to some professionals to figure out what that actually entails.
For example, people often want to be an attorney.
They think it just involves showing up at court when really it's a bunch of reading and research.
So figure out what the job actually is.
Once you identify the job title, then you can backwards plan to make sure that you get the appropriate education.
With regards to ADHD, what you're essentially suggesting to us is that you have challenges studying and focusing.
For cybersecurity, this is essential.
So if you find that you can't get past that, you have to do something that's appropriate for your capacity.
And when you say, well, I still get accepted, well, people are accepting you based on outcomes, not based on the acronyms associated with your name.
And then lastly, you write, how to make revenue with content on media with zero followers.
I mean, goodness, Lord.
So the reason I say that is because I feel like you're doing a bit much here.
Yeah, focus on the schooling, my friend.
Like, don't worry about the social media crap.
That's going to distract you from what you're trying to do specifically.
Right.
Question for Mr.
Byrne.
What's your take on gematria?
Assign letters with number of ciphers.
No take.
Okay.
Fully Cooley goes, Peace of Saints, Chinese and the Jewish folk are doing it right.
Can't speak for us at the US, UK, left or right.
They're quick to eat each other.
Yeah, I mean, I'll tell you this.
They put their country first.
Peace of Saints, do you think it is okay to bring chocolates to a man you were trying to meet for the first time?
Oh, man.
I think it's hilarious.
Can we address that real quick?
Yeah, go ahead.
That was a main issue people have with you and Andrew Tate.
What happened there?
No kidding.
Yeah, because they were like, why are you supposed to be chocolate?
That's crazy.
Did you guys actually see that stream?
I thought it was hilarious.
I didn't see the stream, but I heard about it.
I saw a clip.
Because Matt Shea did that.
Right.
And when Matt Shea did it, Tate was basically tormenting him, right?
So Tate was a tormentor.
It was comedy, right?
And he said, if you give me the chocolates, I'll do an interview with you, right?
But there was never going to be an interview, right?
It's just comedy, right?
So we mentioned the algorithm earlier, the algorithm, right?
When you utilize the algorithm, what you are trying to utilize it for as a content creator is to get exposure, right?
So A, you want to utilize the algorithm, and I'll speak to that in a second, and then B, what is going to sell the best on the internet?
What are people going to retweet?
What are people going to talk about more?
Yeah.
Right?
Haters are going to be much better promoters than those who are fans.
Your haters are going to shout it high and low.
So I asked myself, I said, Marquette, being the supervillain, the evil genius, Flex Luther, freshly snipes, the idol of James Bond, Attila the Hun, you're in Romania already, right?
How much money would it cost you to associate the term the saint and the sinner with the term Andrew Tate?
Why would it be good to associate your search term with his search term?
Why would that be a good thing for a content creator?
Views.
He's the most searched Googled man in the world, right?
Yeah.
Now, there's paid reach and there's organic reach.
When you utilize the algorithm, as people call, that's organic reach.
What's better, organic reach or paid reach?
Organic?
It's always going to be organic by far.
Organic is going to get you farther and organic is going to be longer lasting and organic is the algorithm.
So a genius, an evil genius is going to say, okay, well, if I know that negativity sells more than positivity, let's take the side of the negativity.
And if I know that the algorithm is critical to getting my content pushed out, who do I want to be associated with?
I want to be associated with the guy who's the most Googled person on earth.
And then how do I do it?
And how do I get people to talk about it?
In other words, be remarkable.
Make a remark about it.
Well, piss them off.
Give them something to say.
And there's a quotation that goes, nothing is more urgent than the want of something to say.
You know, most people are brain dead.
They don't have any ideas.
So, like, let's give them something to gossip about and talk about.
And so I asked myself, I was like...
To get my name associated with Tate's name and the algorithm would cost a tremendous amount of money that, frankly, I don't want to invest.
Or a connection.
Or a connection, correct.
But temporally, time-wise, when I was actually already in Bucharest, it was not the appropriate time to have an interview with him.
And I knew that.
But I was already there.
So I said, I'm going to put this to use.
So I put it to use.
I think the stream is hilarious.
I laughed at it.
I laughed.
I thought it was very funny.
I thought it was personally, I watched it, I laughed at it, it was hilarious.
So I utilized that to the best effect, and I really enjoy looking at people in the comments like, you brought a grown man a box of candies, and I'm like, you watched the video, you add it to the watch time, you commented, you're pushing it out further, and I appreciate what's called engagement.
Thank you for engaging it.
And whether your comment is negative or positive, it increases engagement.
And so that, my dear friends, I call that a chess move.
And that took all of probably like 45 minutes out of my day.
And the most I spent for that was like about 45 euro.
I had my assistant with me and paid for an Uber.
So 45 euro, including what I was paying her.
And then after that, I flew over to Yash, second largest city in Romania and made sweet, passionate love to a beautiful Romanian woman.
And after that, I went on to the next country.
Perfect.
Fair enough.
Yes.
Can I be honest here?
Yeah, please, please.
You could have done that differently though.
Talk to me.
Because I mean, bro, you went to his house.
I did.
I pulled up.
The blacks call it pulling up, right?
Yes, I pulled up.
Did you make the introduction?
For example.
First off, first off.
Temporally.
Yeah.
Temporally.
Yeah.
Was that the right time to do that?
No.
It was the wrong time.
Even with connections, right?
It was the wrong time, right?
Wait, hold on.
Yes and no.
Okay.
Let me explain.
Okay.
Because you can reach out to us, and obviously speaking, it won't happen right away, but maybe with time.
If I wanted to actually do it.
Yes.
But you're assuming that I wanted to actually do it rather than get the algorithmic association.
What's a better benefit for yourself as a creator to actually do it?
But here's the reality of things.
You see, I live in reality.
You always have to ask yourself, especially if you're going to do a business deal, what is the benefit to the other person?
What is the benefit to the other person?
Never delude yourself.
When you're looking at rational actors, you got the BBC trying to interview an individual.
The BBC. Does that stand for British Broadcast Company?
Yeah.
All right.
So the BBC is trying to interview him.
Even if I had a million subscribers, would I rank against the BBC trying to interview him?
You wanna hear a joke?
He's on interviews with people, less subs.
I think...
Temporally, at that time, that was BBC time.
That was his biggest opportunity.
And we have no prior relationship, but it's not even a realistic thing.
My goal was to get associated with the algorithm.
And so, rationally, you ask yourself, What is my downside?
What is my upside?
What is my downside?
Did I lose any money?
I invested $45.
I wouldn't have even spent that on an ad spend.
I wouldn't have got that much mileage on an ad spend at 45 euros.
So what's my downside?
Everyone has an opinion, and that's fine, but I've never cared.
As a supervillain, what was my downside?
Okay.
No, I want you to tell me, though.
I'm asking you a real question, not rhetorical.
See, I'm going to give you this as a friend.
Yeah.
I just think, personally speaking, that whole video itself and an actor going to his house hurt you in the process.
Connection-wise.
To whom?
Connection-wise.
Yes.
If I wanted the connection, though.
But monetary-wise and maybe view-wise, it might have helped.
But I'm just saying, was that worth...
Absolutely.
And it was calculated, too.
I know you were smart about it.
It's always calculated.
But was it worth the cost?
To me, from a networking standpoint, it wasn't.
So for you, and remember, we're radically different personalities, right?
Yeah.
So from a networking standpoint, you have to ask yourself, does Marquette actually want to be networked with him?
And the answer's no.
No.
The answer's no.
Okay.
And it was obviously no because of the action, right?
Yeah.
I personally don't like people showing up to my house unannounced.
At all.
I was about to say.
I don't like it at all.
Yeah.
So I knew in advance the outcome, and there are personalities that you will observe that they know the consequence, and they say, absolutely, let's saddle up.
You call those personalities Julius Caesar.
You know them as Alexander the Great.
You heard me?
So I knew in advance, and whereas many people might esteem someone because they have money, or they might esteem someone because they have fame, I don't esteem anyone because they have money and fame.
I esteem people because they have principles, morals, and values that I respect.
And you guys know what my values are.
The audience knows what my values are.
I was not trying to become friends, and I had no intention of that.
You know, in all respect to him, and we don't have any beef or anything like that, but I was not trying to become friends.
See, now this makes sense.
Because I couldn't understand why you would do that, but now the background story makes sense to me.
Cool.
And that's why I always say checkmate, because it's grand strategy.
It's chess.
These hoes out here are playing Connect Four.
These hoes are playing Connect Four out here.
The audience is playing Connect Four, but it's like, I know they're playing Connect Four, and I want them to ask themselves, well, how is it that for a long time Marquette has lived on his own terms?
Yeah.
See, as a man, you do what you want to do.
I do, yes.
But again, I mean, you're better than me because I can do that.
Right.
Agree.
Agree.
And there's a lot of things that I do that a lot of people couldn't do.
Yeah.
And that's the part I pride myself on.
Vice versa.
Vice versa.
That I wouldn't do or couldn't do.
Correct.
Yeah.
Absolutely.
Okay.
All right.
Fair enough.
Yeah.
What else do we got here?
Dr.
Evil, WFNF, WPIMBAYLESS. Shout out to Discord gang.
What's PIMBAYLESS? Pimp Bailish, Stephen A. Pimp, Fleshy Snipes, Flex Luthor.
I'm not the sport, so that's kind of like the rule for me.
Okay, go ahead.
Zentians, much respect to FN. I've been busy trying to build two businesses I watch almost every day, especially the day show.
Wisdom, luck lingers around Sages slash Fools.
I have learned to keep quiet to hear a difference.
Cool.
I appreciate that, my friend.
Chris, what are we looking like for time?
We got to...
I mean, 15 minutes is fine.
If you want to interview him some more.
That's a rumble?
I was going to talk about the coffee.
Alright, go ahead.
It's fine.
We got time?
Yeah, it's fine.
Alright.
Real quick.
Alright, guys.
So we're going to end it there.
Come on over to YouTube.
Unless...
Did I hit all these?
Yeah, do this one.
Sorry, I meant to say come on over to Rumble.
Yeah.
Rumble.com slash Fresh or Fit, guys.
I just got hired by Jay Wallace to create...
I think you read that one.
I think we read that one before.
No.
Pop goes...
This is a different person.
Oh, okay, to create lungs.
You had an old team!
Goddamn!
Making some hires.
Well, I'll tell you guys this, man.
Don't run around and tell people you got hired.
That's another thing, too.
Like, yo, just do your job.
Like, do what you were hired to do.
You know what you gotta do.
Like, do what you gotta do, bro.
You mentioned it earlier, being efficient.
Your job should be, or your focus should be, how to get faster, smarter, more effective to Justin.
Don't run around name-dropping him.
Instead, how about you make your contest so good that he name-drops you when people ask?
How about that?
That's how you guys do it.
Wait!
Justin!
Who does your videos?
Oh, my boy Jack.
Oh, my pop Ghost.
Yeah.
Damn.
Let them find you, bro.
Like, not the other way around, man.
So, alright guys, come on over to Rumble.
Rumble.com slash FreshFix because I definitely want to get Mark Wett's take on the current conflict that's been going on the past couple days now.
Yeah.
Which we kind of alluded to a little bit.
Let me know when we're clear and we're over on Rumble.
Dun, dun, dun.
Let's go!
We're going to go ahead and switch on over to the best platform ever.
Let's get ready to We good?
Freespeech.com.
We're clear?
Alright, cool.
So, as you guys know, there was an attack from Hamas onto Israel.
Hamas is a paramilitary organization out of Palestine.
I mean, what's your take on it?
You've been to that part of the world plenty of times.
You're very well versed in geopolitics.
Give us a take on it.
Well, that was very general, so I'm going to say what I want to say.
I'm generalizing here so that you keep it open-ended for you.
Sure.
Number one, it is a war for annihilation on both sides.
Yeah.
And the irony is that the Jewish people are behaving in the precise way that the Nazis were behaving and thinking.
What did the Nazis have?
They had a philosophy called Lebensraum, meaning living space in English.
What are the Jews seeking?
More living space.
Were they seeking that living space in a land that is not their own?
Oh, that's the same thing that the Germans were doing.
That's why they were trying to take over other people's land.
The Germans also had this idea of Aryan superiority, which is to say that they were superior supermen, better than others.
That's the same thing that the Jews say, that we are divine.
We are the chosen people chosen by God.
So you find a complete mirror in the ideology and approach of the Jews and the Germans, which is to say that the Jews became the same people that tried to eradicate them.
But also, with all things you must ask, is this true?
I remember Noam Chomsky said that, and I think that's an important question, which is, you know, what was the motivating force for fill in the blank?
Like, for example, there's been a history of, as they call it, persecution against the Jews in Europe.
Why?
Why?
There's also gypsies in Europe.
There are various minority populations in Europe.
Well, why the persecution?
That's number one.
One simple explanation is that they've always been separatists.
In thinking that they're superior, they've always separated themselves out.
Even, for example, in Baltimore, Maryland, and Hollywood, California, you'll find, or in New York as well, you'll find Jewish people living only among Jewish people.
Even when they sell their house, they won't sell it to you if you're not Jewish.
They have their own hospitals.
They have their own police force.
They have their own private schools, and they will not let you in Any of those institutions.
There have been situations in New York where two people were experiencing violence or a victim of violence and the Jewish ambulance came and picked up the Jewish person and left the non-Jewish person.
And they have every right to that, but they have historically been separatists.
They dress different.
They look different.
They want to speak Yiddish or Hebrew.
They don't want to speak the language.
And you have places in America where you find Orthodox Jews or Hasidic Jews and they don't speak good English.
Strange.
So one thing that's worth noting is that there's always a reason for things.
You know, there's even reasons for racism against black Americans.
There's reasons I don't hire a lot of them.
You know, there's reasons for- Things don't just come out of nowhere.
So that's number one.
Stereotypes are typically rooted in some sort of fact, typically.
They were not coming out of thin air.
And so the Jews were in Europe.
The Europeans, pogroms, and all kinds of persecution, as they call it, throughout the continent, including Russia.
Then there was this idea that after World War II, we'd give them their own homeland.
This was largely championed by the British.
Balfour Declaration.
Yeah.
Where is their homeland going to be?
Palestine.
Don't people already live there?
Doesn't matter.
We're colonial powers.
We specialize in genocide and moving people out of their homes.
I mean, a settler state, they call it.
We're in a settler state.
America.
You know, there used to be people here.
We called them Native Americans.
Have you seen any around Miami?
You seen any in the club?
Not really.
Yeah.
Genocide, they call that.
Casinos.
We force them to reservations on their own land.
Yeah.
And there's so few of them.
Yep.
There's so few.
And they're all alcoholics and fucked up.
So I say that to say...
Free money.
Basically, the Jews went there.
There was an agreement on how much land that they would have.
They've expanded that infinitely against all international agreements.
And mind you, when that international agreement was made by the United Nations, there were not many nations that were a part of United Nations and had any voting power in this.
So there's that.
And the Jewish people, the Israelis, expanded their territory against international law, kind of the same way NATO expanded against international agreements.
It's fascinating.
Then the Palestinians start to fight back.
They had friends of theirs that fight back through Arab.
It was a result of Arab nationalism against the Ummah, the Muslim community.
You had The Egyptians make a go.
The Persians make a go.
Many groups have supported.
Now the Israelis, they're not to be played with their mean.
You hear me?
They're a body and shit.
And you'll see that.
They're one of the best intelligence agencies in the world.
And you know, they even send spies over here, even though we pay for all their stuff and we share our intelligence with them.
They still have spies here treating us like we're their enemy.
We went to war with Iraq off of Israeli intelligence.
They can't.
Mossad agents are the ones that said, oh yeah, we witnessed the lead hijacker, Mohammed Atta, go ahead and get anthrax given to him, you know, in, I forget, somewhere in Asia.
And we went off that and we said, yeah, that's the link between 9-11 and Saddam Hussein.
We need to go to Iraq.
These people are very clever in as much as I mentioned Henry Ford earlier.
He had a book called or a pamphlet called The International...
No, no, no.
I know Henry Ford was not a fan of them boys.
I know that.
Yeah.
He had a pamphlet called The International Jew.
And basically he was saying like, hey, this is how they operate.
This is who they are.
We need to be cautious of them in America lest they might take over.
There's the Israel lobby today and...
AIPAC. Yeah.
And we give Israel a bunch of aid, right?
Like a bunch of money.
They were number one, I think, for a very long time until this Ukraine situation happened.
Oh, I see.
Number one foreign aid.
Do they need money?
Are they like a poor Sub-Saharan African country?
Are they like Haiti or something?
No, they do very well.
Do they need money?
They're doing really well, right?
Yeah.
Waze, that's a great app.
You guys have used it, right?
Yeah.
Tech unicorns, all that.
Fascinating.
I wonder why we send them so much money.
They seem to have a disproportionate amount of influence.
It's curious.
You know, it's crazy.
If you go on the APAC website, it says like 95% of our candidates win their general elections.
Oh!
They're out and brazen with it now.
There's a saying, if you can't beat them, join them.
And they can't lose.
Well, here's the thing.
You can't join them.
I was going to say, yeah, we can't join them.
That's the funny thing.
You can be nice to them.
They think that they're superior to you.
And you know, in the Talmud, they have a number of books with rabbinical knowledge and things that they'll never share with you.
It has been written that all of the non-Jews, collectively, are worth not even the fingernail of a Jew.
Not even the fingernail.
Wow.
Talmud has a bunch of other stuff in it, too.
Oh yeah, they describe us as dogs.
Yeah, it's amazing.
The important thing to know is that the way they operate...
What?
They call us Goyim?
Listen to me.
You know Tokyo Ghoul, those monsters?
I picture that every time they say that.
Goyim!
Oh, shit, man.
the way that they look at themselves and the way they look at us is expressed in how they deal with non-Jews.
Like, for example, you had a similar situation in South Africa, right?
They had the apartheid government, which was an experience that lasted a lot longer than what the Jews experienced in Europe or, excuse me, in Germany.
And at the end of that apartheid government, they had, I think they called it like the Truth and Peace Commission or something like that.
And what they did was they basically said, hey, if you guys agree to not oppress us anymore, you know, we're chill.
We don't need to hang anyone.
At the end of the situation in Germany, the Jews said...
Yeah, we're hanging everybody.
If you had anything to do with this, if you worked there, you're getting hung.
If you served a sandwich to somebody who worked there, you're getting hung.
If you went to Argentina to hide out, we don't care how long it takes.
We're going to find you, and we'll bring you back and hang you.
Those Mossad agents went on a mission hunting South America for former Nazis.
Yes.
They went on a...
I don't think people will give...
I mean, like I said before, they've done a lot of things, but their intelligence agencies were fantastic at finding these guys and tracking them down, and it's crazy.
And then also, not only that, after the Olympic Games in Munich, where they took those Israeli athletes hostage and killed them, they went on a warpath and went and looked...
They found all those guys that were behind it in other countries and killed them in foreign soil.
Yeah.
Right.
Which is illegal.
With zero, you know, awareness of the host government.
Yeah.
Crazy.
You can't beat them.
You can't do that shit.
Like, bro, and they didn't even get penalized like that.
They found them in, I forget which country, out in Western Europe.
It was one of these Scandinavian countries.
They found out that they were doing this shit, arrested them, whatever.
They got a slap on the wrist for what they were doing.
They didn't do much time.
I think a couple of the killers only did 10, 20 years, and they killed the wrong guy.
That's hood.
That's hood.
They killed the wrong dude when they went over there looking for this dude.
They thought he was behind the Olympic kidnappings and killings.
They found him.
It was someone that looked like him, shot him and killed him.
Didn't do that much time.
These people are ruthless.
And, you know, the brainwash has been extraordinary.
It used to be that WASPs, white Anglo-Saxon Protestants, were like, you know, were Christian, God-fearing people.
And the position of Christians historically is that, you know, Jesus is their guy, isn't he?
Jesus is God.
Who killed Jesus?
No, really.
In the Bible, it says who killed Jesus.
Yeah, we know.
Okay.
So if it says in the Bible that the Jews killed Jesus, historically, white Anglo-Saxon Protestants did not consider Jews to be white.
They were other than.
And secondly, they considered them to have a religion that was in direct antithesis to their own.
I mean, you guys killed the Messiah for Christ's sake.
Yeah.
Then you had a whole parade of constant propaganda to recalibrate the thinking of the white Anglo-Saxon Protestant.
And now they start using terms like Judeo-Christian values.
Judeo-Christian values.
And then on the opposite side of Judeo-Christian values, the Muslims.
So you got Judeo-Christian values, which is to say we're the same.
Christians and Jews were the same.
Before it was, you guys killed Jesus.
Now it's, we're the same.
We love Israel.
And then the Muslims.
Because the Jews were able to evolve and become included in a definition of white.
They became white.
Historically, coming into America, a lot of folks were discriminated against.
The Italians, keep them over there.
The Irish, keep them over there.
The Irish became white, the Italians became white, and the Jews became white.
And then within the identity of white, they also became empowered and protected because a greater boogeyman came about because, okay, we're white, but you're an Arab, right?
You're brown.
Okay, so you're different.
Okay, and you speak what language?
You don't come from Europe?
Allah, you call them?
No, that's a bit foreign.
That's a bit foreign.
No, I don't think we like you, little buddy.
I don't think we like you.
And you see, it was a great distance because here's the funny thing about the creation of the state of Israel.
It's in a place called Palestine.
Where did they come from?
Europe.
These are Europeans.
These are European whites who have invaded another place that's called colonialism.
Anyways, the point is this.
They're there illegally.
They're there as a result of violence.
They have expanded their nation state illegally.
And they're there for a war of eradication.
They're trying to commit genocide.
Isn't it amazing how everyone else in the world knows this but America?
America also knows it but does not care.
Yeah.
Or they censor you if you talk about it.
Correct.
You become a target.
Yeah, you become a target.
Hence why this is kind of OD. No, they definitely know it.
And you know what the funny thing is?
And Muammar Gaddafi said this to the Arab leaders.
I don't know if it was at an OPEC meeting or what.
It was a group of Arab leaders.
And he said, hey, you know, they kill us whenever they feel like it.
You know, they got Saddam and, you know, they're probably going to get you next, points at Bashar al-Assad before they, you know, before they came at him.
He said, they'll probably get me at some point.
You know why?
Because we Arabs, we don't stick together.
It's true.
Which is true.
It's true.
The Jews.
They stick together.
They stick together.
Yep.
And the ironic thing about the Judeo-Christian value.
They have a turn for it.
Zionists.
We don't have a term for it.
Pan-Arab nationalism?
Yeah.
But it doesn't really hold water after Nasser.
Yeah.
But the point is this.
There's so many lies going on.
They call it Judeo-Christian values, which were based on religion.
But today, the persons who are running Israel are non-religious Jews.
In fact, you have a group called the Naderi Carter, which you can find them in New York, you can find them in Canada.
These are religious Jews, Orthodox Jews, who say, we disagree with the existence of the state of Israel.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
You will find orthodox religious Jews who think the state of Israel should not exist.
In Israel, you will find religious Jews who do not agree with the way the country is being run because it's too secular, non-religious.
So how is it that you're entitled to the land based on a religious claim, but most of the religious Jews don't even agree?
That's true.
That's true.
And, you know, I've always said, like, not all Jews are Zionists.
Not all Zionists are Jews.
You know what I mean?
Correct.
People tend to think that they're the same.
They're not the same.
That is correct.
So, because there's a lot of people that are like, you know, a lot of Jewish people that literally are great people and say, hey, like, yo, this land doesn't belong to us.
What are we doing here?
You're Europeans.
You know what I mean?
But again, you know, it sucks because the actions of a few make everyone else look bad, right?
So it's like, it is what it is.
I wouldn't say it's a few.
I mean, it's an organized, it's a significant number of persons organized.
And the way I look at it is the same way if you had someone say, hey, you know, America belongs to the Native Americans.
Like, you guys should leave.
Like, people would be like, nah, I think I'm good right here.
You know, I think I'm good right here.
And in fact, yeah, I am willing to kill to keep what I have.
And they're the same way, but they're fighting a war of annihilation and they will be successful in that war with the backing of America militarily and financially.
Yeah, we gave them eight billion dollars.
Right?
Yeah, like Joe Biden that day signed it in.
Eight billion dollars going boom.
Which is crazy.
Yep.
Eight billion.
Yeah, it's insane.
In less than a few hours.
Yeah, and it's like, word?
Like, word?
You can't forgive the student loan stuff?
Like, word?
You said you were going to forgive the student loan stuff?
Oh, man.
You somehow can't?
Like, stop it.
So what do you predict that's going to happen then?
I predict that...
Obviously, they got the jump on them.
The Israelis?
No, they didn't.
I mean, the Hamas, they got the jump on them.
I still don't think they did.
You think they knew?
It is kind of weird that Mossad wouldn't know what the fuck was going on.
Like, come on, man.
One of the best intelligence agencies is like, you guys didn't see this coming?
Come on, man.
Henry Kissinger had talked to a president of the United States, and he said, hey, man, we have an issue with this country right here.
What do you think if we bomb the country next to it?
The President was mortified.
Wait, what?
You're saying bomb an innocent country that has nothing to do with the conflict?
He was like, yeah, we're going to bomb them heavy just to show these guys that we don't give a fuck.
It's called a mad dog strategy.
Just to show them we don't give a fuck, that we'll do anything.
What do you think?
Now, sometimes the president doesn't have the stomach for this kind of thing.
But if you live in an ethnostate and you're Netanyahu and you believe that these people are animals, and you've even said that many times, He wanted Lex Friedman's podcast, Lying Up a Storm.
Right, oh yeah, of course.
Lex Friedman is Jewish, right?
Definitely.
So, let me ask you a question.
Is it easier to go to war after 9-11 or before 9-11?
Once 9-11 happens, you're like, now we can let loose.
Is it easier to eradicate people you've already been trying to eradicate if you're punching down or if you're fighting back?
I see what you're saying.
Average people have morals.
Statesmen have ethics.
And sometimes morals and ethics diverge.
A great man is not always a good man.
And if your chief aim is to take full dominion over Israel, the Holy Land, and you believe these people are animals anyways...
You need something to galvanize the people.
So you're saying that they might have recreated this or created this to...
Or let it happen.
Let it happen.
They don't have to create it, they just have to let it happen.
Because Mossad is very capable.
You have enough Arabs that are crazy enough to...
Listen to me.
The Palestinians throw stones at Israeli troops.
The bull got an automatic weapon with the scope and he's wearing body armor.
You're throwing stones.
Do you know how stupid that sounds?
But then you have to understand the psychology of the kind of pain you went through to where you'll throw a stone because it's all you got.
Yeah.
And that's how you get categorized as a terrorist because you're not a formal army.
And how is the terrorist so scary when they have inferior resources?
They're only a terrorist because they don't have the resources you have.
If you gave them the resources you have, then they'd be called an army and then this would be called war.
But we try to make a terrorist seem more scary than an actual army.
It's amazing.
And the way they're reporting it right now, you know, Hamas, they go in, they make their little strike.
Then Israel responds and they kill an ant with a sledgehammer.
And you don't get the correct reporting.
They say, Israel is bombing the Gaza Strip.
It's one of the most densely populated places on earth.
Translation, they're killing civilians.
Yep.
Translation.
They're killing everyday people like you and I who are in their apartment just trying to watch Netflix and got shit to do with Hamas.
You're trying to Netflix and chill.
You're getting bombed.
There's no military targets.
They warn them to evacuate, so I mean, give them a warning.
To where?
Shit, I don't know where they're going.
Okay, so it's bordering the water and Israel, right?
Yeah.
So you'd either start swimming somewhere, God knows where, or you'd walk into your enemy's territory.
Where are they evacuating to?
Good question.
Yeah.
It's not like a Hurricane Katrina situation, right?
Where they're like, look, just go to a different state.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
It's not that.
Yeah.
But anyways, yeah, I think Israel is going to utilize this for war of annihilation.
And honestly, the only way you have peace there is...
We're in war.
He immediately made an announcement a few hours after.
When Netanyahu got this opportunity, when nobody was looking, the bull was like...
What about his deal with Saudi Arabia, though?
Listen.
Proxy wars.
Yeah.
Proxy wars.
Saudi Arabia don't give a fuck, man.
I'm just gonna say it.
They don't give a fuck.
But here's the thing.
They care about money.
That's all they care about.
I'm critical of Israel.
I'm critical of Saudi Arabia too.
Me too.
They don't give a fuck.
But here's the crazy thing.
Saudi might be doing the deal on the money side and still financing terrorists or insurgents against Israel.
Yeah.
They might do it on both sides.
Yeah.
That's the world we live in.
Yep.
I mean, they're about an unbanned liquor.
Saudi Arabia is about the money.
They're about the money.
So is the UAE. I mean, I just got to keep it a million.
Come on.
They're about the money.
There's a guy whose name I won't mention.
He was a son of Saudi Arabia, came from a very wealthy family.
He was a religious scholar.
And he basically left Saudi because the Saudis were not behaving as you would hope someone would who lives in the holy land of Islam.
And it's been a long time since he started out on that jihad.
So if it was corrupted then, surely it's more corrupted now.
I mean, they killed the journalist.
Goddammit, what's his name?
In Turkey.
Killed him on foreign soil.
Well, technically they killed him in the Saudi Arabian embassy.
But like, bro, like, come on, man.
Someone in the chat's gonna put it in here.
The journalist that was critical of...
Gosh, it starts with the...
Yeah, uh...
Khashoggi.
Yeah, there we go.
Bam.
So, anyway, um...
Last words for the people?
Where can they find you?
Yeah, sure.
Check me out on The Saint in the Center.
We do a lot of stuff on health, wealth, and relationships.
A lot of what I teach is how to build prosperity.
If you're one of those folks who are asking yourself- Very well knowledgeable about geopolitics, too.
I've told you that off here plenty of times.
Like, hey, I watch a lot of your geopolitical commentary.
Great stuff.
Very based- I appreciate that.
These are conversations that we can't have on YouTube or anywhere.
It's crazy, right?
Can't even talk about this shit.
Listen, I don't even feel comfortable going to the airport tonight.
I don't even feel comfortable going to the airport tonight.
Scam my ticket.
That was great, guys.
Hope you guys enjoyed that one, man.
This was a great Money Monday.
We talked about everything from tech, making money, expanding your business, geopolitics, traveling the world.
We're going to be back with some lovely ladies.
Chris, call it.
10, 15.
And guys, I'm telling y'all right now, Marquette's got a flight to catch here tonight, so we won't be able to go as long on the after hours, but I promise you guys it's going to be a great show.
We're going to have some questions ready for the ladies.