All Episodes
June 13, 2023 - Full Haus
01:03:46
Lewis Country Store

The Lewis Country Store on the outskirts of Nashville, Tennessee is a glorious outpost of the kind of spirit and courage that used to be commonplace in America. Its chief now finds himself predictably targeted once again for standing tall and unapologetic against the baying woke mob. Hear his backstory and motivation this week for another shot in the arm. Check out the LCS on Telegram and Gab, and by all means patronize this White Man's Shangri-La if you find yourself in the neighborhood. Close: "I've Always Been Crazy" by Waylon Jennings (DJ Brad Lewis) Listen to The Final Storm. Or else. And HateHouse! And Cantwell!  Go forth and multiply. Support Full Haus here or at givesendgo.com/FullHaus  Censorship-free Telegram commentary: https://t.me/prowhitefam2  Telegram channel with ALL shows available for easy download: https://t.me/fullhausshows  Gab.com/Fullhaus Odysee for special occasion livestreams and back library in the process of being uploaded. Full Haus syndicated on Amerikaner RSS: https://feeds.libsyn.com/275732/rss  All shows since Zencast (S) deplatforming: https://fullhaus.libsyn.com/ And of course, feel free to drop us a line with anything on your mind at fullhausshow@protonmail.com. We love ya fam, and we'll talk to you next week!

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If you've ever been fortunate enough to be traversing real American rural roads and come across a local small business owned by a rebel proprietor with so-called edgy, politically incorrect signs on display.
Unfortunately, these are more famous in our meme world than in the real world for most of us, then the show might be of interest.
And if you've never passed one of them, we urge you to get out and drive in the countryside more often.
The Lewis Country Store on the outskirts of burgeoning Nashville, Tennessee, is just one of the many malign businesses in this so-called land of the free and home of the brave that dares to exist, thrive, and wear its heart on its sleeves in fluorescent lights, unashamedly in a country that seems to be comprised more of harpies and fat, nose-pierced, purple-haired, haired,
easily offended faggots than those unafraid to say what they mean and mean what they say.
And for daring to buck the system and do things their way, they are now predictably under attack by the usual suspects.
This week, we will speak with another proud, unbowed white man who refuses to do what they tell him, see what makes him tick, and hopefully provide you with yet another shot in the arm.
So, mr producer, hit it.
Welcome everyone to full house.
The world's finest show for white fathers, aspiring ones and the whole Biofam.
I am, as always, your chicken slaughter procrastinating host, Coach Finstock.
That's right.
I still haven't summoned the stones to process our two obese Cornish crosses yet.
And we are back with another just one hour this week of inspirational tales in a civilization circling the drain.
Before we meet the birth panel, though, big thanks to LB and two anonymous supporters for their kind generosity toward the show this week.
And please, if you haven't done it yet, if you missed the notifications or didn't listen to the past couple shows, please don't forget to donate to Ash Sharp's Family2 at givesendgo.com slash supporting P Sharp.
Got word from his wife that he's doing well.
I've seen a couple letters.
I have still, I've donated, but I haven't written to him yet.
And we are going to put a post up about that.
If you want to have some jail mail across the pond with a imprisoned, soon-to-be-sentenced great family man, you can do so, of course, with the caveat that the security services will unquestionably be reading your correspondence.
So with that, let's get on to the birth panel and our very special guest.
First up, he'd shop at the Lewis Country Store or any store like it if he could, but I doubt that there are too many white-owned businesses with giant AR-15s, robot skeleton soldiers, and replicas of the Twin Towers within probably a 100-mile radius of where he lives.
Sam, welcome to Guy.
Yeah, yeah, thanks.
It's great to be here.
And I was spent the afternoon perusing the Lewis Country Store channel there and very uplifting.
And if I can get down to that area, I will definitely be making a stop.
I think we're all invited.
So far as this interview goes well, Sam.
And I looked at all the pictures and the posts too, of course, and I'm just jealous that I don't have one down the street from me.
Right.
Well, maybe, you know, maybe he can make a chain, you know, franchise it out.
Exactly.
Maybe I'm going to have to put a franchise in the area here.
I'm guessing he's got his hands full with one big, awesome store.
But, you know, the country needs it, frankly.
Sure.
He could put sheets and wahwah and all the rest out of business.
All right.
Next up.
Do you have any?
Sam, we don't have to rush.
Anything at the top here you want to mention before we move on to our lowly?
Well, I'll just throw it in there real quickly.
We got a message from our guy, Mike, with the kidney transplant.
And he's, as everyone's known, that has followed it a little bit.
He's been up and down with his condition and his spirits have gone up and down with him.
And so he's been in rehab.
He's been out of rehab to go back for further treatment because of infection and so forth.
But we got a message today that he's, even though he's complaining about having a bad week, he's looking forward to maybe getting out this week.
Big maybe, but they're thinking maybe even as early as Wednesday.
So some good news there.
Great.
Hang in there, Mike.
You'll be out of there soon.
That was some funny commentary that he provided too, Sam.
My kidney's working again.
Oh, boy.
The flow.
Yeah.
Well, imagine that peeing in eight years.
I mean, don't, yeah, don't want to.
All right.
Hang in there, Mikey.
And next up, I think he needs to move to Tennessee.
Show up at the store at 5 a.m. on Monday, which is their opening time, and see if they're hiring.
Our special guest could probably use a pro bono consultant for new signed content, or maybe our producer could even add some colorful characters to the outside of the storefront himself.
Maybe he'll ask the boss tonight.
Rolo, how are you, my friend?
I'm great.
Well, I'm sure Durrell would be happy.
You know, he, I mean, he's never worked a day in his life, but maybe he's on his way.
Today's the day.
Perhaps some performative art from Durrell out front.
We'll leave it at that.
Rolo, I didn't look at your artwork yet.
Thank you for sending that, but I never checked that email account.
Anyway, what else is up?
Oh, you know, I've been having fun with this audio book that I accidentally started writing.
I'm not too happy with the quality, but hey, you know, Darrell's not that technically savvy.
Okay, enough said.
You got Durrell recording an audio book.
It sounds like some fun for a future show.
Thank you, my friend.
And finally, our very patient and special guest.
He and his wife have been the proud owner operators of the Lewis Country Store for almost two decades now.
They're no strangers to controversy, merely for stating what the vast majority of normal, healthy people actually think.
When contacted recently by scumbag wannabe commissars, our guest responded with, you can go F yourselves.
And what I do with my life and my business is none of your effing meddling business.
In other words, I believe we have a modern day American folk hero emerging onto the scene.
Mr. Brad Lewis, welcome to Full House, sir.
Hey, thank you.
Thank you so much, Coach.
Thank you guys for having me on this evening.
And I really appreciate this opportunity.
And I know I told you before, you know, we used to do mainstream media interviews.
This has been several years ago, at least three years.
And of course, we know what their agenda is.
And, you know, they put the spin on it, slant it.
And I'm just grateful to have the opportunity to get with like-minded folks has got the same values that we do and help support you guys anyway we can.
Amen.
And yeah, I imagine that even hostile mainstream media interviews you've been going for almost two decades probably did more to help your business than hurt it.
They don't have quite the power that they think they do out in the countryside.
But before we dig into the store and ideology and commissars and all that, we always ask first-time guests their ethnicity, their religion, and their fatherhood status, please.
Ethnicity, I'm white.
Religion, I was brought up Church of Christ, went to a Church of Christ school from elementary all the way to high school and fatherhood status.
No kids.
I've got a wonderful wife of, gosh, we've been together over a quarter of a century now.
And we don't have any kids, but we've been in the fight for freedom.
And, you know, over the, like I said, over the past decade and, you know, the rights that are being taken away, especially from the white man and the white woman at this point is scary.
We're in the 10 stages of genocide, in my opinion.
And we figured this could be, we don't have white children, but this is our way to give back to the fight is to help fight for our race and the survival of our race.
Thank you very much for your courage and your sacrifices.
And the, you know, we chatted a little bit before we agreed to do the show.
And, you know, your statement that, you know, when you not having kids does give you a slight flexibility, you don't have the little ones to worry about.
They're obviously the greatest thing in the world, but without them, you do have a little bit more luxury to operate freely.
And I also hear, Brad, that you are a descendant of both Robert E. Lee and the Clan McGregor.
Is that true?
This is true.
Robert E. Lee on my mother's side, her great-grandmother was a Lee.
And then my father's descendants come from Clan McGregor in Scotland.
I've got a great uncle that has tracked that all the way back.
He did it before they even had the ancestry.
I'll call it a FedOp online just to get your DNA.
He did it the old-fashioned way.
Actually went to Scotland and dug up the research.
And so I got the, I've got some revolutionary blood running through my veins.
It shows in more ways than one.
I'm damn glad that it does.
Brad, tell us just a little bit about the store itself.
We don't have to talk ideology or politics yet.
I mean, I looked at the pictures on Google Maps and I was sincere that I said, damn, you know, we got some good country stores here in West Virginia.
I'm not putting them down, but nothing like yours.
So, you know, why did you open it?
How's the experience been?
What is, you know, what's it like for your daily customers?
It started.
My late father, I had a motorcycle shop.
I was a Harley mechanic for years.
After I got out of the military, I went to MMI, went through the Harley program, used my GI Bill to do that.
And I had had my motorcycle shop for several years, like going probably around eight years.
My father bought a piece of property in our neighborhood.
And he said, what would you think about if we built a cool country store?
You know, like something, you know, I used to see when I was a kid, something this nostalgic, you know, Americana.
And I was all for it.
I was like, shoot you up, Pops, let's do it.
And we did it right.
Brad, what do you think of this Harley Davidson with this woke shit?
Oh, man, that's just, that's just been another, add that to the list of gut shot punches that we've had through this horse crap that we've gone through the past several years.
You know, it's just like it's just never ending, man.
It's like every every corner that you round, they've got a, you know, another faggots jumping out at you.
Right.
That begs the question, Brad.
Now, I assume, is Bud Light still on your shelves?
Or you just got the old, the old, all right.
You did it.
It was pulled the very day.
It was no kidding.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah.
I wasn't going to give you any guff if you know, just the existing inventory.
You know, you got to make a buck here, though.
We don't mess around, man.
We're who we say we are.
I promise you that.
Hell yeah.
Yeah.
I imagine the customers wouldn't be buying it anyway.
And so it looks like you, I mean, when I looked at the store, I said, oh, that's a white man Shangri-La.
And my buddy who's visiting here said it looks like an R-Guy Cracker Barrel.
You know, because Cracker Barrel is another one of them.
But it looks like you got, you know, a little kitchen in there.
You got the dry goods, the drinks.
I assume you don't have a liquor license.
You're a gas station too.
And yeah, that's that's the, yeah, go ahead.
I can tell you one thing for sure.
We do not have any pride rocking chairs on our front porch.
Yeah.
And through all the controversy, has business boom, you know, are you at the are you at the mercy whatsoever of the uh the commie harpies or does business do better when you're at the center of attention?
How does that work out for you?
Business is booming.
Um it really is.
I mean, it's you can't even get into the parking lot some days.
It's you've got a line out to the road, people trying to get in.
Of course, we our fuel prices are better than anyone else around in our area.
And we do that on purpose because the working man, you know, this is the milking cow for the international Jew needs a break.
Right.
Oh, man.
Be still my heart.
Your wife and your customers are very now you're on the outskirts of Nashville, which shame on me.
I've never spent time in Nashville.
I've driven through it.
So I think like, you know, big traffic, uh, country music business, bustling Sunbelt City, maybe Taylor Swift.
Uh, but I guess you're you're far enough out.
You are a country store.
Um, and yeah, we are.
We're in a um, we're actually in a farming community, um, and we're only 15 minutes from downtown Nashville.
So, uh, I mean, we've, we've, we're close enough to the wokeness that, you know, you, you can feel the heat.
Um, but uh, you know, we're we've got uh we don't mess around, so they you know, they don't mess around with us.
So I think they know what we're about, and uh, you know, it's uh, Nashville's Nashville's become pretty woke.
It's uh, yeah, I'm looking, it's kind of almost looking like the new uh the new LA, you know, and that's unfortunately very, very sad.
Um, but hopefully, we can uh, hopefully, we can turn this thing around and you know, salvage Tennessee as one of the one of the holdout states, you know, from absolutely, yep.
My Appalachian brother, for sure, yeah, I feel the same way about West Virginia.
If a state like West Virginia or Kentucky or Tennessee turn, then uh, there's going to be virtually nowhere left to run.
So, thank you for standing strong.
Um, Brad, let's uh, when I, so you know, a mutual friend uh connected us and said, This guy's great, you know, he'd make a great guest on Full House.
And then I, when I saw that the story came out, I said, Oh, hell yeah, let's do this.
And your mutual friend is a very, very solid man.
I, you know, I've never actually gotten to meet him, IRL, but some guys they just come across as so genuine and likable online that you're like, nope, I trust this guy, you know, The real deal, so you don't have to worry about him.
I promise, amen.
But if, if I didn't know, uh, if you know, if he didn't give me any background and I just looked at the Lewis Country Store from pictures or whatever, and pardon me here for the judgmental, you know, some of us are a little bit jaded by Americana and Second Amendment stuff.
That doesn't mean we don't support it, but it's just like, all right, I would have thought, oh, you know, it's a good old boy boomer store.
And I'm, I would guess, you know, I was a Trump supporter in 2016, too.
I didn't in 2020.
But could you give us a little bit of background, Brad, please, about your evolution, if there was any.
You know, I assume you're always a good old American, and then eventually all this garbage forced you to come to terms with some other ideologies or other things.
Your basic evolution.
Sorry for the long-winded question.
No, no, no, it's fine.
Perfect.
Yeah, I directly out of high school, I enlisted in the Army, went in with the Ranger option, made it through Airborne, boot camp, AIT, Ranger Indoctrination, got stationed at 1st Ranger Battalion down in Hunter Army Airfield, Savannah, Georgia.
Got out of the military, used my GI Bill, went to Harley School.
Was you know, I was just your, I was the typical American dude, the typical American patriot, you know.
Um, a little wild, you know, I got some little outlaw biker in me.
But I mean, I was, you know, it's just what I guess the culture we were brought up in.
You know, I love the, you know, the stars and stripes, love the country, loved all the guys I served with.
I've still got dear friends that are in the military that love those guys too.
But, you know, this thing started about a, like I said, a decade ago when Obama was in his last year and they started pushing the tranny bathroom crap.
And my wife and I were like, you know, we got this, we got this big reader board out here.
Why don't we start using this thing?
Yeah, we have IRL Twitter, essentially, the place for all your.
Yes.
And our first, I think our first sign when we got out there was seven years of Obama.
And now we don't know which bathroom to use.
And dude, they went.
I'm sorry.
They got freaking out of this.
That's all right.
Yeah, I assume your customers loved it.
And was that the first media feeding frenzy on your college?
Yeah, yeah.
We had all the homo.
Yeah, they did a big homo interview with all the local media channels.
We got three of them here in Nashville.
They had, you know, they all came down there.
Well, it was, we're closed.
We've been closed on Sundays for years.
So our, you know, our employees can spend that time with their family, go to church if they wish.
So, of course, they do it while we're closed.
And my wife and I were actually shooting a cowboy action tournament when they came down there to film.
We were down in Alabama shooting a cowboy action tournament.
And so they do, you know, they do their typical, you know, they're going to do their coward thing.
They ain't going to show up when we're there, you know.
But yeah, that was that was the first big first big part of the three ring circus that got started.
Yeah, that second term of Obama's for sure for me as well.
That was when all the real anti-white justice system things like prosecuting Zimmerman for Trayvon Martin, Chris Brown, the humble giant or whatever the hell they called him, that woke up a ton of guys.
That was Mike Brown.
Mike Chris Brown.
Chris Brown's the rapper that meets people up.
Different criminal names.
Gentle giant.
Gentle.
Chris Brown is still alive.
And a fag marriage and yeah, all the rest of it, just as Trump was running up.
So you, I know you were a Trump supporter 2016, probably 2022.
And, you know, if you still are, that's okay.
Cause I'm leaning toward voting for him purely cynically as a big F you to the system.
But yeah, politically, where are you now in terms of Trump, the Republicans and stuff like that?
I'm probably exactly where you are, what you just said.
You know, he, I'll give you, this is, this is my take on Trump.
He's, he's still Zion Don, you know.
They can control him to a certain point, but he just got that little, he's got enough rebellion in him where he'll, he'll run that mouth and they'll find him.
You know, they'll, they'll, they'll pop him.
They'll find him.
And, you know, he's just, he got a little, he's, he's got a little bit of that rebellion in him.
But I mean, they, you know, he's touched the wall, you know.
Sure.
Now we, we know how all this operates now.
So, I mean, you know, but he's still got, he's just got a little bit of that, you know, rebellion in him where he just can't, he can't help himself.
You know, they, they don't have him totally beat down just yet.
He could be in a jail cell November 2024.
And I'll be damned if I have the self-restraint to not vote for a guy who's, you know, it could be a felon in federal prison.
Yeah, yeah, I mean, they're, they're going to do everything they can to, you know, shut him up or, you know, you know, we know how they operate.
You know, the final deals, they just, they'll assassinate you, you know, like they've done the rest of them.
So, yeah, it's fair enough.
Yeah.
No, I hear you.
Yeah.
And for the guy, like, look, there are guys out there who are like, oh, you kidding me, coach?
That's like, you know, how many hard lessons do you have to learn?
It's like, no, I get it.
I, I expect zero or negatives from virtually all politicians.
And that includes DeSantis.
DeSantis has kissed the wall and he's arguably more philosophic than even Trump, who has a shred of like honesty every once in a while.
He is the Trojan horse for Israel.
Yeah.
Yeah.
He's, uh, but so I get it.
Like, if you want to stay home, that's fine.
I completely understand.
But don't give me guff if I'm just going to do a figurative middle finger to the system by pulling the left for that.
It's like if you're grasping at straws and you can, you can maybe get a hold to one, you know, just at this point, what you got to lose, you know?
Yep, exactly.
All right.
You mentioned your first infamous sign there, Brad.
And I know you went to the archives to dig up some of some of your classics from over the years.
And I get that's pretty, I don't know if you, I don't know if you had to rack your memory or if you got like a beautiful photo album.
Imagine if you could sell a Lewis Country Store all-time greatest signage photo album.
I would, or coffee table book.
I'd buy one of those.
Oh, yeah.
You're the second person that's ever mentioned that.
I'll take one.
But yeah, what do you got?
What do you got from the archives?
All right.
So we got the first one.
I laid that one on you.
Number two was my wife and I were in the express car wash business too, as well, over a decade ago.
And we were at a convention in Chicago.
This is where they had, you know, Vegas or Chicago is where you had most of the press car wash conventions.
You'd see all the latest and greatest equipment and all that stuff.
And this dude that had, he runs a supply house for car washes and manufacturers' equipment.
He had these bumper stickers on his table that said, talking about Hillary, Trump, that B.
And I was like, I was like, dude, you might, I said, I've got a store.
I'm going to put that stuff on my sign.
Do you that's not copyrighted, is it?
Yeah.
He's like, yeah, go ahead.
So we started running with the Trump that B.
And that was another one.
I mean, it's just like they're, you know, their heads start spinning like the exorcist, you know, and the vomit comes out and all that.
I mean, just like they're, they're so easy to incite.
You know, it's almost fun.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So that's number two on the list.
All right.
Let's see.
Number three.
I don't know if y'all remember the big skit that Kathy Griffin did with Donald Trump.
Yeah.
So right after she did that, we put on her rearboard a $50,000 reward for Kathy Griffin's head.
And then they went, they just went nuts.
I mean, it's just like, it's like poking the bear, you know.
It's so ridiculous because there's all that, all that outrage about that.
But what about what she said?
That was fine.
That was supposed to be funny.
You say it, and somehow it's supposed to be some serious thing now.
Oh, yeah.
They call it, you know, they'll call the feds on you, the whoever you can get, secret CIA, whatever, you know.
I mean, it's comical.
These people are like self-parody.
This is the first thing that Brad said that's really disappointed me and made me question his courage.
I mean, he could have stood out in front of his store with a Kathy Griffin head or, you know, if it's good for the goose, good for the gander.
Come on, big guy.
Like, you know, maybe ideas.
No, I'm joking.
Yeah, don't do that.
I don't want to, I don't want to get you in any more trouble.
I've got a good one for you right during the scandemic.
That's what I always call it.
Sure.
When they're trying to, you know, force vaccinate everyone.
We put on our sign.
This is by the time we upgraded to the Vegas style reader board, you know, where you got the, you can put the nice graphics and everything.
We put a hand holding a pistol like is pointing towards you, a revolver.
And it says, force a shot on us and we'll force a shot on you.
And they just, oh, yeah, they lit it up right there.
But you know, every time you know when one goes viral, they just start, they start calling the store non-stop.
You know, it's just so, yeah, you, you, you know, when one goes viral.
We're not even on Facebook, Instagram, any of this stuff.
We're Gab Telegram only.
We're hardcore purists.
Same here.
Because I mean, they, they, they canceled us.
Facebook canceled us years ago, you know.
So we're like, well, we don't need you anyways.
We'll just keep posting this stuff on the sign and people do the work for us.
And that's the way it works, you know.
Has have the feds or other law enforcement ever come knocking just to say, hey, just got a couple questions.
I'm not probing for details.
No, no, no.
We had the Secret Service come visit us during the Biden election.
We had a sign that it had, we had, it had the Biden Harris signs in front of gravestones.
So, you know, they're voting dead people.
The Secret Service shows up at the store and I'm, we're back in the office, you know, like I said, this, you know, everything's really weird.
You know, we're, you know, morphing into this third world, I don't know, circus that we live in now.
And so I'm, you know, I've got my M4 with a suppressor on it back in the office and my body armor and all that stuff.
And the Secret Service comes walking in.
They're like, hey, we need to talk to you about the sign.
And I'm like, well, what's wrong with it?
And they're like, well, you got is it broken?
Is it not working?
We're from the government.
We're here to help you with your sign.
We're here to help you.
So I get, I said, well, what about it?
They said, well, you know, you got these, you got these Biden-Harris signs in front of the tombstones.
And, you know, we got calls and reports that these are, you know, this could be perceived as you're threatening Biden and Harris voters.
And I ran them around the circle for about 10 minutes.
I'm like, what are you talking about?
Like, can you say that again?
And, you know, we went through this spell.
I'm like, I don't understand.
Like, I just played dumb, which I was just like, at this point, I'm like, you got to be kidding me.
You know, and so finally I'm like, oh, yeah, I get it.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And he's the agent's like, well, you know, you don't have to take it down, but, you know, if we get more calls, they'll send somebody else out.
And I said, no, I said, I'll take it down.
I said, I'll, I'll put something up there.
You got a better one.
Yeah, I got a better one.
It's going to make them even matter, you know.
And, you know, they're the typical dudes that came in.
Hey, we really love your store, you know.
Yeah.
We like your place, but we're, you know, if we, if, you know, push comes and shove, we will kill you.
That's, that's the MO.
Yeah.
Hey, we're sure you're a fine, upstanding American.
We just get these calls and we just have to come and check.
And meanwhile, yeah, they'd love nothing more than to throw you in the slammer.
All right, Brad.
You got any other classics there before we move on?
Have added as many as you want.
Okay, yeah.
This was one of our Christmas signs.
We don't sell skinny jeans, but we do sell Confederate knives.
Yeah, you got wonderful.
I mean, you got guns on display, rifles on display in the store, rebel flags everywhere.
Yeah.
Not a skinny gene to be found.
You look like you got women's clothes and handbags and hats in there.
Yeah.
Carry carry purses, you know, for you that like to carry.
Hell yeah.
Like to pack.
So, yes, sir.
Yes, sir.
I got to ask.
I was meaning to save this for later, but it's got to be a ton of work.
You know, be it, you know, obviously being a small business owner is hard for anybody, but that much responsibility, 5 a.m. open and I don't know what time you close, but is it genuinely a ton of work and tiring?
I guess it's probably a labor of love too, but what's it like running that store?
It is.
My wife and I have kind of, we've stepped back.
We've got a full-time GM general manager now.
This just happened, you know, within the past half year.
I mean, we've, we've been at that, when we first opened that store up, you know, you're, you're talking about 80 hours a week, you know, for years.
Yep.
Years and years.
You know, people, a lot of people don't, can't really wrap their head around that.
You know, it's we've, and I watched my mom and dad do the same thing, you know, and it's, it's almost sad.
My wife and I don't, we don't, we don't have this system that we've been forced into.
We're basically a slave to it.
And I don't, I'm, we've, we've had everything wrong all these years.
I mean, I'm just, I'm, I don't even have the same thought process as I used to.
I mean, my parents, I watched my parents just work and work and work and work and work.
You know, it should be more about you need, you need family time, you know, enjoy your family.
And just stop being a slave to the globalist Jews.
Stop being the milking cow.
Yeah.
You know, if there's some other, but I mean, if you, if you want stuff and have a lot of stuff, you want a lot of money, then yeah, you're going to, you're going to have to put in the, you know, 80 hours a week.
But at the end of the day, it's not about that in my opinion anymore.
You know, I mean, that touches a nerve with me because I work maybe 45 to 50 hours a week.
And, you know, we're doing okay and all that type of thing, but we're not living in the way that maybe you could imagine a few extra things and so forth.
And somebody said to me one time, it really kind of set me off like, yeah, but, you know, you can in America, you could do these extra jobs, you know, these odd jobs and things.
And with my particular skill set, I could go take on some side jobs and things and make that more money to have that, you know, little bit more affluent lifestyle.
And it's like, wait a minute, this 50 hour a week job I have is not enough to support my family and to have a house and everything.
So I'm supposed to be grateful that I live in this country where I can make myself into a total slave just to live kind of decently.
That's retarded.
That's stupid.
Absolutely.
When I was a basic B conservative, you know, reading National Review, I remember mocking the Europeans for their short work weeks and their month or two off during the summer.
Oh, yeah, that's why you're not a super powerful.
Must be nice.
That's one of the things.
Yeah, no, exactly.
I mean, of course, I was like jealous at a certain level, but I was like, not me, you know, especially my first professional job in DC was 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. for pretty low pay and very little time off.
You know, I wasn't working my fingers to the bone digging coal, but it was still, as white collar goes, it was tough.
And as I've gotten older and you have kids, you start to realize, ah, yes, there is much more to life than working long hours to keep padding your income.
Now, some people have to do it just to survive.
But yeah, one of the little lessons we learn on our kind of sad American journeys.
Brad, I want to ask before we get too far, you were in hot water again after the commie scumbags from the SPLC took a little notice at your kind store.
And I guess this was all based off you committing the cardinal sin of having a beautiful gym and boxing setup above the store.
I couldn't believe it.
I was like, can this store get any better?
You know, it's awesome on the first floor.
I was like, there's no way they can fit all that stuff up there.
But it sounds like you just want it.
Yeah.
So they want to make it out that like having local good guys over to box and lift weights or something like that is a federal crime now.
But anything you want to share about that?
Did you like, did you have the gym for yourself or was that always open to people who wanted to rent it out?
Just looks awesome.
You know, when I was 13 years old, my old man took me and dropped me off at the local police athletic league because I liked to fight when I was a kid.
He's like, well, if you like to fight so much, we're going to get you into boxing.
So he took me to the local POW when I was 13.
And I mean, I've been fighting ever since.
Fought some in the military.
I started kickboxing some MMA when I got out of the military.
So, I mean, it's been part of my life and my lifestyle pretty, you know, since I've been 13 years old now, and I still do it, you know.
And I've got some guys that are ex-MMA pros that have been training with me for, gosh, 15 years now.
And...
Then we've got these, the guys that come up to the gym, uh, we're getting some younger, younger men, younger white men in there.
That uh, we're.
You know, we're trying to make these kids.
These kids nowadays are, you can get sucked into the, just sitting around all day on the computer, the you know social media yeah, they're not getting any exercise, it's rotting their brain.
It's just, this is sad state.
You can just look around, look how you know how many these kids are.
Just, they're out of shape.
Um, I mean, it's just, you know um, it's really sad once you look at society now and I mean, what is what's the crime of trying to, you know, make a young man or a man even better himself?
I mean, what?
What kind of?
What kind of?
Uh, viewpoint is that of saying?
You know what I just this is beyond my realm of comprehension when you yeah, you know if you're trying to better men, but you know that if you got strong men in a strong society, then you can't overthrow them that easy.
Strong yeah, strong white men with white racial solidarity and awareness of Jews who are training to be better fighters.
Good lord now Brad, you just got to put a rifle range out back with maybe some uh small uh, the Lewis Lewis Country Militia.
It's going to be great.
Yeah yeah no no no, don't, don't do.
Yeah, call it something else.
We're not going that far yet.
Yeah yeah, go ahead.
No, that's a good idea.
Call it uh, call it the Randy Weaver.
Two in honor, in honor of uncle Ted.
Now, we're not trying to get Brad in trouble uh, but no yeah, that's absolutely awesome and I just want to yeah, double down on that like the the screw.
Uh, just in the past year I don't know what changed because you know, maybe my son got a new phone.
He's 11, so like he's old enough to have a phone, but damn, if it's not a constant struggle uh, with the screen time.
Obviously parents have been struggling with this for years, if not decades, including with tv, but just just around here i'm seeing it with myself.
I'm like no, i'm sorry you're not getting extra time on that.
Like I put the limits in for a reason.
Go outside, read a book.
My kids are in good shape, but they will veg on those damn tablets and phones if you let them for too long.
So uh yeah, the struggle is real.
It's the double.
Yeah yeah, I know, I mean there's there's, There's some good stuff.
You know, I'll still stick by Minecraft, the creativity that goes into having to build some of those worlds.
And there are some good educational ones, but yes, networking.
Definitely a double-edged sword.
For sure.
Absolutely.
Brad, are your customers die-hard supporters, neutrals, maybe even a few who don't agree with you, but still love the store?
What's your assessment of your clientele?
in a you know in a positive way of course you know it's we've we've got a we got a mixture of all of them you know and And my wife was, she brought up the point earlier today.
She goes, somebody posted on her store page a long time ago.
It goes, I just love seeing all these never Trumpers pulling in there for the cheapest gas around.
Yeah.
Brad, honey, possible bullshit walks.
Yeah.
That's it.
Brad, what about even the sentiment in the neighborhood beyond just the customers?
Do you get a sense that people that live in your parts like the store and the message?
Yeah, we've got, you know, we've got some commie scumbags that's, you know, infiltrated down here in the neighborhood, just been 15 minutes outside of Nashville.
You know, that's going to happen, but, but we've got some good ones too.
You know, we got the, yeah, you know, you've got a, you got a handful of the left-winger, you know, brainwashed morons.
Sure.
Yeah.
But they don't.
Go ahead.
Sorry, Brad.
No, no, they just, you know, you just, you look at them and go, God, I just feel so sorry.
Well, I don't really feel sorry for them.
I don't, they're not people.
Yeah.
Yeah.
When Roe v. Wade was overturned, there was a gaggle of about half a dozen to a dozen, most of them fat, short-haired, funny colored hair, gathered at the courthouse with their little, you know, pro-baby killing signs and asking people to honk and stuff like that.
It was, it was, it was pitiful, but it was a reminder that, yep, they are everywhere and they come out of the woodwork every once in a while.
Brad, what's the worst day that you had at the store in over a decade?
Not related necessarily to politics or do you have any disasters or chaos?
I'm sure you had at least one rough day.
Gosh, man, I'm trying to think.
Well, how about did Shell really cut you out of gasoline supply for your signage?
Absolutely.
Yeah, we had it.
We had a shell rep come down and said that we had to take anything off that sign that says anything about Hillary Clinton.
We can't have anything up there about Benghazi.
And of course, you know, Benghazi was close to my heart because I was in First Ranger bat.
Tanto Peranto, he was in second bat and he was one of the guys, you know, over there that got hemmed up in the Benghazi deal.
And, you know, just another deal where there's military industrial complex.
They don't give a damn about these guys.
They don't care.
It's just all about the money.
But, yeah.
And so, yeah, we said, I said, well, I'll tell you what.
I said, you can go F yourself.
And I said, my wife was sitting next to me.
I said, and send him a certified letter telling them that.
And she composed it.
I mean, this was like, this was a literary work of art.
And at the very, very end, she goes, and with all due respect, you can go F yourself.
Bless your wife too, big guy.
You sound like you're a dynamic duo there.
Oh, yeah.
She's probably more of a, I'd say a tiger than I am.
I don't think you'll ever see a strong, successful man without a successful, strong woman right next to him.
Amen.
You know, that's just part of the deal.
Yeah.
Brad, you probably have your finger on the pulse of white middle America, MAGA country, whatever we want to call it, better than some of us, at least.
Do you sense this?
Do you have a sense of optimism?
Do you think people are starting to wake up to the anti-white agenda, maybe even to malign Jewish power in this country?
What's the, what's it, what's the tone in the store or in your interactions with customers?
I mean, I do.
I mean, I think people are waking up to it not quick enough.
You know, I think that your typical average white American is still under that spell that, I mean, it's just once that light bulb goes off and you finally break free of this stuff, you know, of course, we all, we're, we're all in the same boat here.
We've got the same thought process.
We, we know it, we see it, but that's this, the scary part is, are they going to wake up fast enough?
You know, that's, right.
And that's kind of what we're trying to, we're trying to push that along.
I mean, I had some hope today.
I was listening to one of Tucker's latest deals on Twitter, and he was talking about, you know, the white, you know, anti-white agenda.
So if you get, start getting big people talking like that, you know, there's coming out, then, you know, hopefully, you know, we're going to turn this thing around, you know, but I think definitely going mainstream.
Yes.
Yeah.
And I had the same sort of awakening around 2014, 2015, Brad, that things were just so bad.
I was so disgusted.
The Republicans weren't doing nearly enough, if anything, to push back.
So did you just sort of wake up on your own?
Were you, you know, was it Twitter or Telegram came later in terms of all our guys being on there?
But did you more or less just see things through your own eyes and say, this is crazy, effed up, and this is not the same country that I once loved and fought for?
You know, our awakening kind of started, you know, like I said, with the last that last year of Obama.
And I mean, I really didn't know what I know now.
And, you know, right around 2019, 20, hell, I joined the Proud Boys.
And, you know, we did the did the rallies and all that stuff, fought the commies.
And that was kind of my, that was kind of like the beginning of my real awakening, you know, was going through that, that process, you know, it got accelerated from 2019 until now.
I didn't know who was really running this world, you know, 10 years ago, like I do now and how everything operates, you know.
Amen.
Yeah.
Hey, as long as guys are very impatient and very judgmental of those who haven't gotten it yet.
Remember, we got a ton of young people who have gotten more programming than we ever got.
I grew up in the 80s and 90s.
And hey, if it takes somebody a little bit longer, just be persistent and patient.
Don't write them off.
We're so inclined to say, ah, stupid conservatives or stupid, you know, rural Americans.
Too simple to know the score, but I can attest to it, living in white, rural America makes me a lot less agitated than when I was in a diverse exurb and the big city every day.
I wanted to ask about Tennessee itself, Brad, because, you know, our guys are always talking about where the best places to be to network and live.
I'm a huge advocate for West Virginia, but basically all of Appalachia is great.
Some parts of New England.
And of course, you got a lot of good stuff out in the Rocky Mountains or the upper Pacific Northwest.
Are you positive still on Tennessee?
I know it's kind of booming.
You got a lot of new people coming into the state, but it seems to be holding up pretty well and is still a desirable place to live.
That jive with what you're seeing and feeling?
Absolutely.
Yeah.
We've got a strong network here of anti-communist guys.
And, you know, I think that's played a huge role in keeping Tennessee in check from the commies just running wild and just burning it down like Sodom and Gomorrah.
You know, you got good men that are willing to stand up against them.
And we've got a really, really great network in Tennessee.
And I think that has been instrumental in holding the, you know, the child molesting faggots at bay.
Yeah.
Any part, any parts of the state that you really like other than in your same zip code to increase business for the country story?
Excuse me.
Oh, sorry.
I was being cheeky there, but any parts of Tennessee in particular that you like?
And of course you would prefer guys move right next door to the country store to give you some more local friends.
But yeah, just in general, like if you're like, say, move to Tennessee, what are the places, the regions, areas, et cetera, that are best there?
Oh, gosh.
I mean, any, you know, we're still so close to Nashville that, you know, you're still close to the AIDS.
Right.
Once you get out, you know, if you get out 30, 50 miles from Nashville, I mean, it's just, it's like another world, especially up, you know, around East Tennessee.
You get up there, you got, you know, generational families that are up there that are a lot of sons of Confederacy guys.
You know, it's, it's a totally different world.
And, you know, it's just kind of like my family's here and we're kind of stuck here with it.
You know, my wife's family's here.
So, you know, this is this is where we live.
And, you know, we, even though we're on the outskirts of Nashville, you know, a rock's throw, we still just, we deal with it.
But, you know, if we had our dreathers, we would probably migrate a little deeper into Tennessee, you know, in some of these areas that are, you know, not as populated.
And you're, you know, you're getting kind of like the Mayberry treatment, you know.
Yep.
Yep.
I always tell guys, you got to spend time and do your homework before you settle.
You know, of course, our pal Arian Stellian just like chose a rural part of Montana and then he was a little disappointed once he got there.
But for us, we just got lucky because there's a small town south of us that on paper, you know, at least when I drove through the first time, I was like, yeah, this looks like a nice, you know, good middle American white town, but there's a big chicken plant there.
And over the past three or four or five years, I've started to see literal off-the-boat Eritreans, Somalis, Nigerians, you name it.
You know, you just see them sort of riding their bikes with a grocery bag hanging off the handle or just walking that aimless shuffle, you know, into their shift or after their shift.
So even in the most beautiful rural white areas of a red state, you got to look out for that big ag and big employers, frankly, because they will fly them in.
They will sponsor them.
They will put up the beacon.
And before you know it, in the span of years, you can have your turning in the third world, baby.
Yep, exactly.
Burn it all down and rule over the ashes.
And I know those people notice it.
I notice it.
But the conflict is, well, that's the biggest employer in town.
They sponsor the baseball field and this and that.
How could we possibly oppose them, even though they're turning our neighborhood third world?
But, you know, it's also a question of numbers.
When it gets too bad, then it's basically lost and people start moving away.
And when it's not that bad, they sort of hold their nose and their tongue to not get in trouble.
So don't be afraid to get in trouble.
Take it from our friend Brad Lewis.
Is it fair to say then, Brad, you are not interested in syndicating or franchising the Lewis Country Store all across America?
It's too yes.
We've got our hands full of this location.
I figured.
My wife and I are, we're, we're kind of migrating towards the retirement deal.
You know, we've, we both been, we've both been burning the candle at both ends for well over 30 something years now, you know, and just kind of want to enjoy our enjoy our family.
And, you know, just, you know, get you know, do the, just the not being the milking cow like I was talking about earlier and start focusing on what's really important in life, you know, things that we realize we missed out on, you know, all these years working, you know, seven days a week.
Yeah, that's kind of where we're at.
All right.
All right.
My personal greed takes second seat to your well-earned sort of, you're not sailing into the sunset, but yeah, you're not putting your nose to the grindstone quite as much as you used to.
Brad, you know, it sounds like you've lived a really interesting and virtuous and brave life.
So this is another one of the questions I ask first-time guests.
What's your favorite childhood memory?
And don't try to, you know, I'll filibuster here for a second to give you a chance, but it doesn't have to be super special or significant, but maybe just a kind, fond memory, the first thing that pops up to your head from an America when things were a little bit simpler and more genteel.
Probably, you know, my family would, we would all go to my grandmother and grandfather's house, my dad's mother and father every Sunday.
It was a thing we did.
You know, it was every Sunday you would have Sunday dinner at Mamalu and Papa's house, you know.
And that's, I think we're, you know, that's one of the things that America's lost is that it's, you know, kind of like the Patriot Front guys, you know, strong family, strong nation.
There's, there's a lot to be said for that.
Telling you.
Amen.
Yeah, there's a lot of people where I live with the big extended families, grandma, grandpa, aunts, and uncles and stuff like that.
And the amount of family parties, events, and frankly, just, you know, in a pinch babysitting that they have makes me envious because we're sort of internal exiles here, but we love it to death.
Good stuff, Brad.
Where, obviously, of course, people can find you at the Lewis Country Store outside Nashville.
You can look it up.
It looks like your website is not up, at least as of when I checked this afternoon.
So just, you know, find you on the Googles and whatnot.
Yes, sir.
Yeah.
I think they hacked into our website like years ago.
You know, we're just like, people, people are like, yeah, we know where they are.
Yeah.
No, I know.
Yeah.
There's some company around here that is advertising it.
It's like, we don't have a website.
Like, just call or show up.
And they made it a whole batch of honor thing.
I was like, all right, respect.
Yeah.
Fight the power.
And yeah, Ted Kaczynski died just this week.
And you are on Telegram and Gab, right?
Give the audience your channels.
I'll put them in the show notes too.
But if you got okay.
Yep.
On Telegram and Gab.
All right.
Now, I looked for you on Gab and couldn't find it.
So I'll take a look again.
But if worst case, I'll just be a further nuisance and ask you for those links if I can't find them.
I know.
Yeah, I know you're device banned.
You truly are naughty.
Your channel on Telegram is banned on Apple and Google.
Ours is not.
Although we did get banned earlier and then I started a new one.
I don't know why they haven't zapped us.
You know, the speculation they're using you as a monitoring node or whatever.
I was like, well, whatever.
I'm trying not to get banned.
I do want to reach more people.
So I try to keep it pretty clean.
But you, sir, are a bit of a madman on the social media.
Yeah, the Lewis Country Store Telegram channel is a real gem, let me tell you.
I spent all afternoon going through it and a lot of lot of great memes and just funny as hell.
I especially love the telling off of these shitty SPLC people.
Oh my gosh.
It's hilarious.
But so many things on there, it'd be hard to point too many of them out.
But just one, I thought I would read it.
It's a very nice, it says, hire your people, buy from your people, give charity to your people, continue your people, rally with your people, love your people.
And it had a nice picture capturing each one of those sentiments there.
I thought that was, that really is what it's all about right there.
Lewis Country Store gets it.
That would be a pain in the ass to put those manual letters up on one of your signs.
But with that new fancy digital sign you got, Brad, you might be able to make it a little bit easier.
You might be able to squeeze that one up there.
Yeah.
Good stuff.
Sam Rulo, any other questions for Brad before we let him?
He's probably got to be up early tomorrow, and so do I.
So that's why we're only doing one hour this week.
Yeah, just a great, a great channel and the correspondence with the SPLC people or other enemies or just telling them off.
You know, it really is making our side look so much better.
Our side looks whether the little videos or some pictures and things, the Patriot Front stuff makes our guys look virile, masculine, cool.
Their people look disgusting, weak, just a real turnoff.
And it's getting hard for them to make us look bad.
Yep.
If Johnny Paycheck said, take this job and shove it, Brad says, take your concern and shove it.
We don't need them.
We don't need them.
We're going to have our own thing.
They're holding over us all this thing.
Oh, we'll make you lose your job or make you get kicked out of your apartment or whatever it is.
We're getting to the point we don't need them anymore.
And then things are going to really take a different look.
That's right.
Especially if we have each other's back.
We got to need each other.
Yeah.
And Having that steel spine too to be like, oh, some commies put the little spotlight on me temporarily.
Oh, no, it's over.
It's over.
It's like, please, thank you.
It's a badge of right.
Yes, I take pleasure in your concern, good sirs.
All right.
Brad, I am so sincerely happy and honored to have you on for multiple reasons, but primarily just want to thank you for standing strong, sticking to your principles, and giving the good people of your locality a place where it's not all globo homo gay crap and they can go get a burger or buy a shirt and feel good about it.
Kind of like my buddies in New Orleans and say back at you.
I appreciate what you guys are doing.
And you guys keep it up too.
And hey, we'll, I'll have you back.
We'll, you know, we network, we'll take care of each other.
This is how we make it through this thing, and we win.
That's right.
Amen.
Thank you, Brad.
Everybody, support the Lewis Country Store if you are in the neighborhood.
If not, subscribe to Brad's channels, boost them, and tell your friends.
Take a trip down to Tennessee, beautiful state.
I've only been there once or twice.
And it's no West Virginia, sorry.
But it's a little warmer, flattering, quite pretty, too.
All right, everybody.
Full House episode 161 was recorded on another dry day here, man.
We haven't gotten a good soaking rain for like two or three weeks.
So my full-time job has been water boy recently going out to get all the trees and the potatoes and the tomatoes and the peppers and all the rest of it.
But regardless, yep, we soldier on.
June 11th, still June 11th, 2023.
Follow us on Telegram, ProWhiteFam2.
Two is what we had to add on after we were censored the first time.
Gab.com/slash fullhouse.
If you'd like to support our efforts, please visit givesendgo.com/slash fullhouse.
And of course, check us out at full-house.com or drop us a line at full house show.proton fullhouse show at protonmail.com.
And in honor of our special guest and his interesting, brave, and fascinating life, Brad, you got the DJ booth this week.
Let the audience know what they're going to hear and why.
I've always been crazy by Waylon Jennings.
Oh, yeah.
All right.
Perfect.
Thank you, Brad.
God bless the audience.
We love you, fam.
We'll talk to you next week.
We'll definitely do two hours next week.
And I'll take it this week.
See ya.
Been busted for things that I did and I didn't do.
I can't say I'm proud of all of the things that I've done.
But I can say I've never intentionally heard anyone.
I've always been different with one foot over the line.
Winding up somewhere, one step ahead or I'm behind.
It ain't been so easy, but I guess I shouldn't complain.
I've always been crazy, but it's kept me from going insane.
Beautiful lady, are you sure that you understand the chance that you're taking love in a free living man?
Are you really sure you really want what you see?
Be careful of something that's just what you want it to be.
Nobody knows if it's something to bless our plane.
So far, I ain't found a rhyme or a reason to change.
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