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Nov. 7, 2021 - Full Haus
33:50
20211107_Never_Recantwell
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Over four years after the fateful events in Charlottesville in August 2017, the kosher butcher's bill is coming due.
No criminal charges were filed against the event organizers or speakers that day, and rightly so.
They were the victims of the true conspiracy at play.
Deliberate negligence on the part of the city of Charlottesville and the Commonwealth of Virginia to enable anti-Fo violence in order to deny us our right to assemble and speak.
But this being why Merica, the leftist hive, swarmed into action, raising millions of dollars, assembling a rogues gallery of Jew lawyers, and corralling a batch of black, brown, and anti-white, crocodile tear-crying commie activists to try to extract another pound of flesh from men who already put it all on the line to tell the world that we will not be replaced.
This so-called civil trial has been underway for the past two weeks with probably another two to go.
Some of the defendants hired lawyers, but others are defending themselves pro se or by themselves.
And in this full house special, we are honored to catch up with by far the most charismatic and hopefully persuasive of the defendants representing themselves to date, none other than Christopher Cantwell.
Now, Chris is already serving time on a separate BS charge, so he called in from the Charlottesville Regional Jail to give us a little insight into the proceedings thus far and what we might expect as they near their end.
Mr. Producer, hit it.
How are you, brother?
Good to be with you, man.
I'm doing pretty well, all things going to say that.
Amen.
Bless you.
I just want to let you know that everybody who is listening into the trial and reading the transcripts is pulling for you, rooting for you.
You're doing a hell of a job.
You're a regular Atticus Finch up there with a skull mask and glowing eyes on.
Please.
There have been memes, Chris.
Yeah.
Hey, before we get into the meet, and we can both talk a mile a minute and make use of our time here.
How are you doing personally in terms of letters and commissary and support behind the wire?
Be honest.
I know you've got a big fan club, but are they delivering?
Do you want more letters and do you need more money behind the wire?
Well, you know, money is always helpful.
I haven't gotten, as a matter of fact, I haven't gotten a personal letter since I got to this jail.
And so I'm at the Central Virginia Regional Jail.
I'm sure that you can edit the address into this.
I don't have it handy as across the room.
If anybody wants to send a letter, it's a maximum three sheets.
You can write front and back, but it's maximum three sheets is the mail that I can receive here.
And I ain't gotten a letter since I've been here.
You know, the mail thing kind of got screwed up because at the county jail I spent most of my time at waiting for trial.
I wasn't allowed to get mail.
Like, I couldn't get mail at all.
And so the only way for people to communicate with me was on this like this like tablet messenger wrap, which is kind of a pain in the neck.
And then when they shipped me off to the prison, in the prison, they got me in a place called the Communications Management Unit where my communications are severely restricted.
So, you know, I get like a handful of people that I communicate with, and I haven't been able to interact with the broader public in quite some time.
So, if anybody wants to get a hold of me, that would be a fantastic thing.
Good thing.
We'll be happy to do that, Chris.
We'll put the mailing address and commissary details in there along with the global minority guys have got you listed in the database.
And one more question before we get to the talk of the town, of course, and your lawful combat in Charlottesville and finally getting to give speeches is, how have you been treated in jail, in prison?
We hear horror stories about the January 6th protesters literally getting thrown in dungeons and beaten and starved.
How about yourself?
I don't have those problems.
The county jail that they had me at was a top-notch place, honestly.
I have literally never been in a jail so nice.
And I've been around the corrections system a little bit.
I was very briefly, and I spent a month in a very dangerous place called the Corrections Corporation of America CCA facility in Tallahatchie, Mississippi, where everybody was blasted out of their minds on K2 and taking as far as the commissary kiosks to turn them into shanks and getting great phones.
And I was like, oh, my God, this is where they're going to kill me.
And I was really nervous there for a little bit, but then they shipped me off to USP Marion, and they got me in a communications management unit where some of you probably heard, like, I met up with Matt Hale and Bill White, and we had a lot of fun together.
And they are like, there's like 15 or 18, depending on which row you're in, cells per row.
And there's three TVs on a row.
So when I left the communications management unit to come here, I shared a TV with like five old white guys who watch Fox News.
And it was just like, white days would buy like this.
I got a subscription to the Wall Street Journal.
I was really good talk radio selection out there.
Oh, man.
And some pretty good guys that I hang out with.
So I was really having a pretty good time.
The only thing that was bad about it was like they've been sabotaging my trial prep.
It's a miracle that I'm doing as well as I am because I haven't to memorize all this evidence from when I was doing my criminal thing.
Like they literally, the CMU was holding back my legal mail for like two or three weeks before they would even let me see it.
And then they would only let me see it in the presence of a staff member.
And a staff member was only there for like a few hours a day.
So like in a civil trial, you're a pro se defendant.
If you don't respond right away, you lose the motion.
So like they're holding back my mail.
It's flat out sabotage, you know.
And it was this huge problem.
And they literally said to me at one point, there's a court order came back that said, you know, we're asking for the USP Marion's help in helping Mr. Campbell get prepared for trial.
And they literally said to me, quote, we talked to our legal team.
We're not helping you with the civil suit.
That's literally what they call a woman with the title of intelligence research specialist.
Well, at least we still have to do it.
I'm not asking for legal advice here.
Just asking for access to the regular materials that I need to prepare my defense, you know.
And the CMU sabotage my trial prep.
They really restrict my communications, but I have zero fear for my safety, and really I have fun every day.
My days have by.
Amen.
Yeah, it's a little vacation for you.
Get yourself together.
Let's go on to the trial, Chris.
And obviously, you have to be a little bit careful about what you say, not like the jurors are going to hear this.
But how do you feel right now?
You know, maybe day one, and you're just getting a look at the jurors and their reactions to the opening statements versus now you've got two weeks in the bag and tons of Jewish badgering of witnesses and the juxtaposition of these New York big money obnoxious Cretans grilling good sincere men who did nothing wrong.
Well, it is really, it has really been a thing to behold, no doubt.
You know, when I first walked in there, I was so nervous because, like I said, my trial preparations have been completely sabotaged.
And so I was like, I am so not ready for this thing.
And they actually offered to sever my trial from everybody else's.
And I was sort of tempted to go along with this.
I had actually considered at some point filing a motion to sever myself because I really don't think I'm actually like all that similarly situated to my codependents, right?
Like as a lot of people already know, I genuinely was not even an organizer of the United Right rally.
I was just invited to speak.
I had nothing to do with planning this thing.
So like, you know, it's actually a pretty reasonable thing for me to say like, all right, I'm not in the same boat as you.
I shouldn't be your codefendant.
Let's separate these trials.
But, you know, this thing has gone on for four years.
And by the way, like, you know, this is about more than avoiding proof of a conspiracy for me, right?
Like, I have, they told the jury, like, I have higher ambitions for this trial.
It's the easiest thing in the world for me to get up there and say, like, okay, well, I didn't conspire.
And by the way, here's a video of me saying that I'm not participating unless the cops are involved.
So fuck you.
Right?
It's the easiest thing in the world for me to do.
I don't really actually have to do very much here.
So I was like, hey, I'm going to make this, you know, I was like, I'm going to make this about James Fields for Christ's sake.
I'm going to start asking questions about who had baseball bats and who pointed a firearm at this guy.
That's right.
Freedom's just another word for nothing left to lose.
Yeah, you've gone the hardest as opposed to the maybe professional lawyers who seem like they're playing defense.
So let's talk.
Can we talk about, I have to tell you, we all have blue and white balls to be crewed after the Lipstadt Holocaust show.
And then we were licking our chops, waiting for you to go up there.
We're like, they're not objecting because they want to get all this answered so that Chris can cross-examine and basically red told the jury on the Holocaust and the lies that she told.
So you dipped your pinky toe in cross, but then you backed off.
What happened there?
So because she really didn't say very much, right?
So Lipstadt put in this report that was like 50-something pages or whatever, right?
And I had like 10 pages of really mean questioning right for her.
I realized at some point, watching people get questioned, I was like, okay, a lot of this stuff I'm going to have to reword because it's going to be seen as argumentative.
And I'm learning how to question witnesses, right?
But I was like, I had all these questions ready for her, but then she didn't even say anything.
Like, she was like, oh, you know, the invitation is too bad.
It's 6 million views.
And then she's like, yeah, here's three memes that I saw.
And it made me upset.
6 million was a lowball, too.
Yeah, some French prison wasn't 6 million.
I thought that she was going to be testifying all day about how everything we said was some kind of Nazi conspiracy, right?
But she just didn't do that.
And what I realized was, and you're actually right about the lack of objections.
I went to the lawyers, too, and I was like, I was like, listen, I don't care what she says.
Do not object.
The jury is going to hate her, and she's going to look like an idiot.
Just let her do it.
And we all agreed on that, okay?
That was a strategic thing.
Make no objections, okay?
But then she didn't say anything about us, right?
She's just like, she's a Nazi.
And literally what I came to believe afterwards, you might have heard that she was nominated by the Biden administration to be like international holidays.
Right.
And so what I literally came to believe was I don't think that the plaintiffs even went to her because she wasn't paid, by the way.
So if you read the expert reports, Blee and Sini are like the white supremacy movement experts.
They got paid 30 grand apiece to produce this 66-page report.
Lipstadt was not paid.
So what I literally came to believe is that Lipstadt is some kind of fame whore who who approached the plaintiff counsel and was like, I'd like to talk about the Holocaust.
Let's do it for free.
I really want to give my feet.
That's what I really think happened.
And I think they literally gave her a cameo for political reasons.
Yep, yep, they cut her short, too.
She didn't say anything about us.
So what I realized was, if I started questioning her, the only thing that I could do is bring more of this crap into evidence, which would have been fun, but not legally sound, right?
This would have made a great episode of the radical agenda.
It would not have made for a wise legal defense.
And so I just asked her a couple of questions.
And the other thing was, once she said that there's no such thing as an innocent racist joke, I was like, the best thing I can do right now is say no further questions, because that's exactly what I said in my opening statement, that this is about hate speech.
Exactly.
Even at that moment, even at that moment, I was like, there's more than I could ask her.
But if I leave it at there's no such thing as a joke, she looks like a dancehole, she makes my point, and I walk away, drop the money, and that's what happened.
I got to tell you, there's only 500 call-ins for the trial.
And during that moment of the Lipsat trial, it was maxed out at 500, and there's probably about 250 Nazis on the line and about 250 Pink Okami journals.
And I've been telling people, you've got to call in because there's a window into history.
And this is like our trial of the century, at least so far.
And you are center stage, and you are doing by far the most compelling work so far.
My fear is that the jury, even if they recognize that you guys are not guilty, you didn't conspire, et cetera, that they don't have the moral courage to return the right verdict.
Are you worried that it is political and we should abandon hope?
You think they're going to deliver a split decision, not to jinx you or anything.
Or do you think this thing might just all get nobody liable because it's a ludicrous assertion?
I think that the defaults and adverse inferences make a mixed verdict inevitable.
Because if the court tells the jury that so-and-so-and-so-and-so, it is deemed an established fact that they met all of the elements of the accusation, I don't think no matter how good of a job I do, that the jury's just going to nullify the judge's instructions.
So people who defaulted, people who have adverse inferences, I think they're going to get found with some degree of liability, even if they're only liable for two cents or whatever it is.
So, you know, I genuinely think that at least so far, I mean, maybe they have something up their sleeve that I haven't seen yet.
But they really haven't, other than the adverse inferences, they really don't have a conspiracy.
Everybody gets up there and is like, I have no idea who these other guys are, right?
We don't know each other.
Like, I'm going to risk going to prison for the rest of my life for Richard Spencer.
Get the fuck out of here.
Stupid thing.
Richard Spencer to keep his fucking dick in his pants to stay away from his bodyguards girlfriend.
He's going to die for a clause.
What the fuck are you talking about?
He's not doing himself any favors up there now.
Yeah, I know.
Everybody's just groaning.
No, I mean, no, I'm not even saying that he's not doing himself any favors, but it's like the idea that the idea that these, the idea that the people involved in this thing are so dedicated to something that they're going to spend the rest of their life in prison for, I mean, it almost sounds noble compared to what I'm watching.
That's not what happened.
And so these people don't know each other.
I don't know these people.
They don't know me.
They don't know each other well enough to take those risks.
And so, well, we're back.
Thanks so much for calling back from the clink.
We were just talking about the split decision likelihood, which I think sounds rational.
Yeah.
I thought you guys were when we cut off is that they literally, they just don't have a conspiracy.
And every time they try to make it, I literally, I'm looking at the jury and they're falling asleep.
They're getting annoyed at these people, okay?
They kept on trying to, if anybody was listening when they were questioning Richard Spencer, for example, and it was annoying the judge, too, that Richard would deviate from his deposition testimony by fractions of a syllable, and then they'd go back and they'd try to go through impeachment and just try to make Richard not look credible, right?
Exactly.
They were yelling at them.
The judge was yelling at them.
And it's like, this is tedious, and it's wasting the court's time.
And the jury is sensitive to that.
And I saw that coming, by the way, which is why I made a big deal out of they're stealing a month of your time in my opening statement.
They're doing this to you, not us.
Because that's exactly what they're doing.
They're wasting time and trying to make something where it isn't.
And it's coming across, and I think it's annoying the jury.
So I think that while people who have adverse inferences to the nth degree and there's people who defaulted and stuff, I think that that makes a mixed verdict inevitable.
I really don't think that they're going to be able to just make the jury mad at us enough to find us liable for all of the whining and crying of a bunch of people who were voluntarily participating in a riot.
Amen.
Now, let's imagine the worst case here, Chris, and you're found liable.
What kind of impact does that have on your life?
Obviously, immediately not.
But when you get out, are you going to owe these people millions of dollars?
I mean, I hate to even mention it, but worst case for you.
Well, you know, I don't really know exactly how this works, except that, you know, there's a time when I contemplated defaulting on the lawsuit myself because I'm like, whatever, I don't have any money.
Like, I'm going to have to file for bankruptcy anyway.
You know, like, once they took my payment processing away, I was headed for bankruptcy, no matter what, right?
So, you know, like, I contemplated that, and then, like, it was pointed out to me that, like, what we're accused of might not be dischargeable for bankruptcy.
Like, something that, you know, if you do something maliciously and intentionally, that you can't just, you know, discharge after bankruptcy, you know?
And I was like, well, I guess I better fight this thing.
And so, you know, when this trial's over, I'm going back to prison either way.
I'm getting, you know, no matter win, lose, or draw, I'm going back to the same fucking prison when I'm done.
And I'm going to get out the same day, no matter what happens.
And no matter what happens, when I get out, it'll be broke.
But like, at the same time, we're going to pick you up and give you a good pizza party with balloons and cake.
No, it'll be a little bit better than that, but something to look forward to.
Well, but at the end of the day, like, you know, like, I have the capacity to make money, and so I don't want to have this debt looming over me for the rest of my life while a bunch of fucking raving-lying Jews strip my fucking carcass.
Last thing I'm going to have to deal with.
Like, I mean, I'm pretty good with cryptocurrency and stuff, but the last thing I want to be doing is making LLCs and hiding my assets until I die and telling my kids where to fucking dig up the buried treasure.
I don't want to go through that.
So I'd far prefer to fucking win this goddamn trial.
When are you getting out because we're going to expect a fresh radical agenda the day after?
But seriously, what's your most likely release date?
My release date in the BOP is December 2022, but I'll probably be in a halfway house by next summer.
Hot day.
Oh, that's not bad.
You could do that time, brother.
Yeah, I'm more than halfway done.
I've been in 22 months at this point.
So it's, you know, and like I said, like, once I get back to the prison, especially, like, my days, my days it but hey, you know, guys are seriously saying that you should consider studying for the bar while you're behind bars and while you have those resources, right?
We know that they love to turn blacks behind bars into the next Johnny Cochran.
Is there any chance you would consider studying for the bar?
I have my doubts about that.
I mean, I actually doubt that I even can.
I think that a convicted felon, I'm not sure if you can even become a member of the bar.
Sure.
So, you know, I mean, if I win my appeal or something, which is another subject of interest, like, you know, I am appealing to conviction.
I didn't plead guilty.
I went to trial for a reason, you know.
And there's meat on the bones of my criminal appeal.
So, you know, if I got my felony conviction vacated, this might be something I would consider pursuing once I'm out.
But, you know, Something I'm going to be doing in prison for sure.
All right.
I got you.
I mean, when you get back out, do you I mean you clearly your convictions haven't waned behind bars.
When you get back out, are you thinking of getting right back to it, or are you looking at possibly changing things up in your life?
Do you want to do a show?
Oh, I'm definitely staying in media.
There's no question about that.
You know, precisely what I'm going to do is a thing that I, you know, I have that is a subject of hot debate within my own mind.
I sincerely want to regain access to financial services and stuff.
And so I am contemplating exactly what I want to do with my media.
It would be fantastic saying.
Gotcha.
I definitely want to get back into media, and I definitely want to pursue largely the same goals.
The people who are destroying this country really have to be stopped.
And I cannot find it in myself to step away from that fight.
Amen.
Yeah, we thought things were bad 2015 to 2017 and 2018.
Well, brother, you know, it's only gotten worse out there.
But the silver lining in that, of course, is that millions upon millions of white Americans are now far more receptive to our arguments after January 6th, after the BLM riots, after the COVID tyranny.
So there's more material out here to work with than we know what to do.
Just watching this all happen from behind bars has been like this grueling experience, right?
That like for years I felt like I was at least a participant in all this stuff, and in 2020 I couldn't even vote, right?
And so like it has been torturous to watch this, but I'll tell you what really brought me up was like jury selection for this thing.
I don't know if you saw this, but there was a filing by the plaintiffs after we got our jury pool, right?
The list of jurors that we could select from.
We had them fill out these surveys, right?
And the jurors wanted to exclude all of these voters for cause right off the bat because they had like problems with mask mandates or because they had what the plaintiffs described as extreme views on Antifa.
Like, what's your view of Antifa?
People calling them terrorists, useless criminals, a violent mob, right?
And so we were like, no, absolutely not.
We're not excluding these people for cause.
And juror after juror got up and was like, yeah, I think that racism against white people is the worst thing.
And this other stuff is actually not that bad.
And I mean, it was like, it was really, it was uplifting to watch these people willing to say that in a courtroom in front of all of these people.
And I'm like, you know what?
I don't think they would have done that if we hadn't done what we did.
That's right.
If we hadn't taken the chances, if we didn't take those lumps, if we didn't take the risk that we did, I really don't think that these people would have the balls to say what they're saying in this courtroom right now.
Thank fucking God that we did that.
Amen.
Exactly.
Yeah, we had our Charlottesville, and then the sort of MAGA conservatives had their January 6th, and our job is to sort of bring those two together in a mass movement.
This is full house, Chris, and we, you know, we're a dad show, but we talk politics too.
But we've been connecting singles.
We even got some new white life that we can take a little bit of credit for.
When you get out, Chris, are you looking to settle down with a certain special someone?
Are you still dating?
You're going to be a dad one day, or you think not in the cards for you.
Well, I haven't been on a date in 21 months, and I'm looking forward to hearing that.
Thirsty man in the desert right now.
Yeah.
You know, yeah.
I mean, if you have if you have beautiful women of childbearing age who want to reward me for my sacrifice, I'll be entirely too happy to meet them.
And I'll treat them.
I'm trying to think of the most exaggerated word for excellent that I can come up with right now.
But I lack the words to describe how well I'll treat the beautiful white woman who helps me exceed the replacement rate.
Amen.
Yeah.
Well, it is Nove November, though, Chris, so no funny business when you're back there.
I need all my angst for the courtroom after all.
That's right, yeah.
Release the vrill on the Jewish law affair being voiced in front of you.
We'll love to have you on.
I got it, Mark, your December 22 Welcome Back party.
What's next in the trial?
Are you worried about anything?
Are we just going to keep doing this thing where the defendants are examined and then these random false victims from that day?
Well, you know, I'm not looking forward to the plaintiffs questioning me, honestly.
As I said in my opening statement, they're going to go through every nasty thing I've said for the last decade, and that's why this trial is going to take a month because there's just that much of it.
The truth of the matter is, I looked through some of the stuff in their exhibits.
I mean, they're going back to things I said in my libertarian days and all of this stuff.
And frankly, I'm not proud of a lot of things that I've said.
So, having these people dig through the worst of it and then bring it up to the jury and then me being in this situation where I've got to either justify it or disavow is something that I'm genuinely not looking forward to.
But at the same time, the more time they're wasting talking about how I got to kick out of the free state project, the less time they're spending proving a conspiracy.
And so, you know, legally it's really not much for them.
And so that's fine.
You know, I don't really, I'm really not worried about anything in the legal sense because they've already shown that they don't have it.
Like, right, they had this.
Here's the funny thing, right?
They had these slides for their opening statement, which is like the funniest thing about trying to draw the connections to us, right?
And you're like, okay, here's identity Europa.
And here's, you know, this guy and this guy.
And here's the National Policy Institute.
National Socialist Movement.
They're connected.
I'm like, this is the Alex Jones would be ashamed of this.
This is the dumbest thing I've ever seen.
And then they show this one slide that's like, and like my picture, you know, it's really difficult to connect me to all these things.
And they have this one slide where it's like these orange lines are connecting everything.
And then this one slide is like all orange lines.
Like they all stem from me.
And I'm like, you're not going to do this.
You don't make an idiot.
And so I'm not worried about any of this in terms of what they're going to accomplish legally.
They've already failed to do it.
The jury's fallen asleep on it.
Yep, let's wrap it up.
I think it was about my cell phone, so we'll go here, and I don't care if this is in the recording, but this is going out to several thousand people, and people will love to hear this.
So, yeah, hey, I just wanted to tell you that all you, I mean, not that you need a pep talk from me, but all you have to do is be honest and yourself and on your toes that day, and you can have a lot of fun with those lawyers trying to twist your words into conspiracy and give it right back to them, right?
So I would just encourage you, coach you, if you will, to go up there and have fun legally and intelligently, right?
You can really knock it out of the park.
Yeah, no, I, like I said, I have no concerns about it legally.
And so, you know, you know, you know, the stuff I've been through with the media, right?
You know, okay, you want to pull up embarrassing things that I'm not particularly proud of, that's fine.
We can do that.
And if you want to waste the jury's time with that, then you can take the jury off.
And at the end of this thing, you will – my favorite joke, Michael Block, IMS, I'm going to make this council this week.
And right before we got started with jury selection, I said, hey, Mike, come here.
And I said, are you ready to lose to the crying Nazi?
And I'm just like, I put that idea in his head, and he kind of had a really uncomfortable chuckle as he walked away.
Good.
You're going to lose to me.
How do you feel about that?
You know they're neurotic.
You know that that's going to eat at him.
He's not going to get over that for the duration of his career, right?
He's going to be like, I lost to the crying Nazi.
And that is going to be a lot more embarrassing than anything they're going to do to me on the stand.
And so I'm really just good about it.
Yeah, just what, yeah, it's going to be like a few good men, and I want you to get him to say, like, you're damn right.
I ordered the conspiracy charges, the Trump's on conspiracy charges.
Or I can't believe you missed this softball when Willis was up on the stand.
Just once, Chris, I wanted you to say, what you talk about, Willis?
You're old enough.
You remember different Trump.
Well, you know, I will look for the opportunity to do that again because I am going to call him as a witness.
When I put on my case, I do intend to recall him.
And so what are you talking about?
I don't know if I'll be really sitting, but if you hear me say, if you hear me say, what you talking about, you know exactly what you're talking about.
Very good.
Hey, I got one more question for you, Chris.
I know you've got things to do, and God knows we want you to do your best.
The pit bull question: I have been reliably informed that you like pit bulls and you think that those are a good dog.
Come on, tell me it's not true, Chris.
Have you had a change of heart on the pit bull question?
No, I like pit bulls.
My brother had a pit bull, and he was really like, he was a really good friend, you know.
I think the pit bulls are good.
If you can treat them badly and turn them into terrible monsters, then I think I know where this audience gets the idea that pit bulls might be monsters because they're raised by animals.
Sure.
But yeah, all the arguments.
Any argument you can make for this.
Any argument, sorry, I didn't mean to overtalk you.
Any argument you can make for pit bulls you can make for blacks, you know, like they just weren't raised, right?
You know, socioeconomic status.
But that's okay.
I'm trolling you a little bit just to have a little fun here at the end.
ChristopherCantwell.net.
And anything else you want to share with the audience, Chris, as you prepare to re-enter legal warfare next week?
You know, I just, it's my, you know, it's against the court's orders to record this thing, but I do hope that some law-breaking communist leaks it because I want to be able to listen to this again.
And I'm so jealous of everybody else that gets to listen to this because it seems like it's probably a lot of fun.
And so this is, you know, after the CMU, you know, basically prevented me from podcasting from the jail.
And it's been kind of nice for the prison, I should say.
And then, you know, first, then when they transported me, then I got to use the phone again.
And now I'm in this courtroom and they've set up this listener call-in line of all things.
It's been really great.
And it's very good to talk to you again, Coach.
I miss our talks.
And to be able to connect with your audience is a special privilege.
That's right.
And I'm feeling good.
And, you know, obviously, I'd have probably rather not gone to prison.
But considering the state of affairs with the world today, it's a small price to pay to participate in all that's going on.
I consider it an honor and a privilege.
Amen, Chris.
Yeah, you're still young.
You're going to get out soon.
You're waging the good fight.
I am not falsely inflating your hopes to say that everybody is rooting for you and celebrating your performance.
We're proud of you.
We can't wait until you get out, whatever the hell happens in this Jewish show trial.
And yeah, can't wait for the party.
We got to do another, we'll do a Christmas ham December 2022 or 2023 at the latest, just like the good old days.
Looking forward to it, friend.
Thank you very much.
Godspeed, Chris. We love you.
I don't stop and I don't know.
We're doing fine, we got the time.
Christmas time for you to hold up.
We just don't get it.
I don't think that we should live all my time to control your crime.
I don't focus, I don't know.
I don't mind that I wish I to reload, fight back, stand together and fight all final.
We just don't get it.
I just think that we should live all my time.
So control your crime.
We just don't get it.
I just think that we should live all my time.
So control your crime.
We don't care, we're just living.
I don't stop and out of the limit.
We're doing fine, we got the time.
Question time for you to hold up.
We just don't get it.
I just think that we should live it all time.
I control your crime.
We just don't get it.
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