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Sept. 17, 2024 - Full Haus
02:24:17
A Cop's Life

A 30-year veteran of California law enforcement joins us for a marathon show with no break to trade war stories, defend the profession, and even share tips for common situations you might find yourself in. Bumper: Axel F (Retrofuture Version)  Closer: Radar Gun by The Bottle Rockets (DJ Will) Go forth and multiply.  Support Full Haus at givesendgo.com/FullHaus Become a member. And follow The Final Storm on Telegram and subscribe on Odysee. 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. RSS: https://feeds.libsyn.com/275732/rss All shows since Zencast 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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I'd wager that 90% of white nationalists hold extremely negative views of law enforcement.
When it comes to the gay Stasi shop troops of the FBI, that number is closer to 100% and fully justified.
But the hostility also extends to the average police officer, regardless of race and whether he serves in an urban hellscape or a rural haven.
I've always struggled with this one, because while the rhetoric from our side about Zog serving, power-tripping, trigger-happy, lazy pension seekers strikes a certain chord, it just doesn't jive with my interactions with police over almost three decades, many states, with the exception of a hot August day in that rat's nest known as Charlottesville.
And it strikes me as possibly counterproductive to declare an entire profession with significant power over us and extensive experience that makes them more likely to be one of us, a blanket enemy class.
Now, if you'll indulge a quick trip down memory lane, at the age of 16 and having just earned my learner's permit, I got pulled over on a borderline red light run.
That South Jersey cop wrote me a warning.
Still concerned, I asked what it might mean for my permanent record.
He responded that I could wipe my ass with that warning for all that it mattered.
Later that year, I hosted a rager in my parents' house while they were out of town.
It got totally out of control.
The town police arrived, shooed everyone away, treated me with bemused respect, and let some of my friends stay behind to clean up.
The next year, we got busted drinking and smoking in the woods on the first Friday night of high school senior year.
I remember the cops remarking that the girls were way more attractive than we deserved and that our coaches would be damned interested to learn of our activities that night.
They let us all go after pressuring one of us to give up the dealer's name.
And no, I was not the snitch.
Raucous off-campus frat parties in DC then attracted their fair share of spinning red lights too.
To the best of my recollection, they just tried to shut down the hullabaloo so they could move on to more important matters, be that a fresh homicide or a donut shop.
Early in my professional career, I then found myself in a completely empty train one night and had the brilliant idea to crack a cold one while enjoying The Economist on the ride home.
Utterly engrossed in highbrow technocratic liberalism, it was quite a shock to get a tap on the shoulder from a DC police metro officer with a fatigued look.
The result was a $25 citation and a cordial conversation before we parted ways.
A buddy later remarked that we should all just pony up $25 a head to host a Kegger on the metro.
Then on a rare night out in New York City, my cousin and I found ourselves bivouacked on the steps of a church, as you may have happened to you sometimes, enjoying some brown bag tall boys while deciding what to do with the rest of our evening.
A beat cop came up, knew the score, and told us to dump them and get our asses in gear.
And finally, more recently, my last three traffic stops for alleged speeding all resulted in warnings, and this included Maryland state troopers with a reputation for being notorious hard asses.
Was this all white privilege, pure luck?
I know that you guys have horror stories.
Or was it perhaps maintaining a serious yet non-threatening demeanor in the face of real authority?
It certainly wasn't all Mayberry or Bedford Falls stuff either, because this spanned the mid-Atlantic from urban to rural in three decades.
On the traffic stops, though, the USS Liberty cat might have won me some special treatment.
All that is to say that it's difficult for me to hate on all cops when my experiences don't justify it.
When we know they hold vital, dangerous positions, get paid far less than useless white-collar desk jockeys, risk death or lifelong imprisonment for a single mistake on a daily basis, and sometimes when they don't even make a mistake, and they almost certainly prevent this transcontinental madhouse from descending into Haitian slavery vault territory.
So in that spirit, we are honored and excited this week to welcome a retired law enforcement officer with over three decades of service to make sense of all this and a lot more.
so mr producer let's go
welcome everyone to full house the world's most respectfully deliberative show for white fathers aspiring ones and the whole biofam It is episode 195, and I am your perhaps excessively diplomatic host, Coach Finstock, back with another two hours of normal white man talk considered scandalous in a Jew-subverted civilization.
Before we meet the birth panel, though, gargantuan thanks to King Charles, WSAC, I don't know, maybe Western States Athletic Club, and an Anon champion for their support of the show this week.
If you are a benevolent donor or merely a t-shirt or hoodie monger, go to givesendgo.com slash fullhouse or drop us a line at fullhouse show at protonmail.com if you want a shirt.
And after that hosts, after that extremely lengthy introduction, excuse me, let's get on with it.
First up, in a different timeline, I could see him as either a skull cracking street cop or a hemmed up skinhead doing time for no good reason.
Sam, welcome back.
Oh, man.
Yeah, that was good as you were ticking off those different events.
I was recalling my own encounters with the law through the years.
Not so rosy as mine, huh?
Well, you know, it's a real mixed bag.
I will say that, of course, just subjectively, one man's view, the cops have got a lot friendlier as time has gone on as from what I can remember, let's say the 80s into the 90s, you know, I had some good and bad interactions, but, and I don't know why.
Maybe it's just, you know, all the trouble.
I mean, the one thing we could say about cops is this absolutely sickening kneeling before these niggers for this George Floyd bullshit.
Oh, man, you know, if that was the only thing we could talk about, but, you know, beyond that, yeah, I can remember getting hassled, you know, where back in the day, I mean, if you smirked, that you might either get hit or at least get hassled.
So there was definitely back in the day, like you knew that not to play at all with the cops.
And there definitely, at least in my experience, seemed a more hostile relationship with the public.
And it changed through the years.
I can remember sitting, we were just sitting in a car talking.
It was summer.
The windows were open with a comrade.
And I was, you know, we were just talking about things and maybe arguing about something, talking.
And the cops come, all right, give me your driver's licenses.
And so my friend, he didn't have a driver's license.
He had just a state ID.
And I gave my driver's license.
And then there was a woman cop.
She comes back and she says, or he did have a driver's license, but it was expired.
That's what it was, because she comes back.
She looks at me and she says, it's expired.
I'm like, what?
Impossible.
How could it be expired?
I mean, what do you want me to do?
I mean, we're in the city with a car here.
She goes, well, why don't you look?
And then we look at it and she gave, she gave it, you know, they reversed the licenses to give back to us.
And we were, you know, it was like just such a tense standoff over something so ridiculous.
You know, so that was a bad example of interaction with cops and, you know, maybe a few similar things where they just seemed right away in a hostile footing.
But then another time we were going to an event.
This is again in the 90s.
And I had I had had a couple drinks and we were actually going to a white nationalist event.
We were driving the van.
And so my then wife, I said, well, why don't you drive?
Well, her driver's license was expired.
And, but I had, I had a couple of beers and we had all the kids in there.
You know, if it was maybe four or five at that point, kids, they're all little in their car seats and maybe some of them not even in car seats.
And we're speeding down the highway and the cop gets behind us and my heart just sinks, you know, like, oh my God, this guy's going to throw the book at us.
You know, everything is wrong.
Kids are out of their seats.
She's not even supposed to be driving.
We're all dressed up like we're going to the gig.
Bomber jackets, patches, boots, traces, everything.
I'm like, this is, we are in trouble.
So he comes over and he, he looks at us and he's, he's like, he says, you know, he discovers she shouldn't be driving and all that.
And so he says, well, can you drive?
And I said, well, okay, yeah, sure, I can drive.
And he, he's looking at the family, he says, you have a very beautiful family.
And he let us go.
Yeah, he let not even a written warning, nothing.
He said, you drive.
She can't drive.
You have a very beautiful family.
Go.
So, you know, that was a, that was a good, a funny one.
That was like, you know, wow, we really got away with one there.
So yeah, it's, you know, been up and down through the years.
Good stuff.
Well, our, our next guest this week, of course, has a lengthy rap sheet, probably the length of the state of California, but he is still the Achilles heel full house.
And he may be on a reverse, on the verge of a revolt against me because he's just a natural contrarian.
You know, he, he's the one who provides the alternate opinions on a lot of this stuff.
So, Rolo, welcome.
And did the cops hassle you today or you have good experiences too?
Oh, today?
No.
But I like that I've been downgraded to guest.
Yeah, I was, it was, it was just an afterthought there.
Producer, excuse me.
Panelist is the preferred nomenclature here.
Oh, God.
See, this is what I'm talking about.
At least I know that, right?
Siri, serious though, overall positive, negative, neutral interaction.
Overall, honestly, more positive.
The worst experience, the worst experience I ever had, I was, I was in Beverly Hills and I was, I was driving a company car at the time and I got hit by a bus.
It just, you know, city of Los Angeles in, yeah, you know, just I was in Rodeo Drive and then just a bus hits me and I call the, will say my supervisor.
And I was like, hey, what do you want me to do in this situation?
He said, well, just file a police report.
Like, all right.
So I called, I called the cops and they came to where I was, which was a very fancy part of Los Angeles.
Sure.
And it was two cops and they were asking me all sorts of weird questions.
I was like, what's going on here?
And it turns out that I was not named on the insurance card because my name wasn't on it.
I was covered under the company plan, but my name wasn't on the card.
So they wrote me a huge ticket, like huge.
And I was, and I, and I'm, I became such a huge pain in the butt for them that eventually they just said, okay, I don't want to deal with this.
Look, I'm going to let you off with a warning, but make sure your name is on it.
But it was like a two-hour ordeal.
Like I put them on the phone with this old Jew and I'm like, here, you talk to him.
You talk to him.
Okay.
Because he was like, oh, God, I'm not paying that.
This is an outrage.
And it was this whole thing of what, because, you know, where I was and like what I was doing.
My bubby didn't survive Auschwitz to get treated like to have my employees treated.
Yeah.
And yeah.
And then the cop knew the score.
He's like, okay, all right.
I'm not, I'm going down this road.
Yeah, I thought, I thought I could get an easy win here with some stupid kid.
And then just I got, all right, better luck next time.
But it was pretty funny because there were two cops.
And this is my, my favorite phrase is a good cop, black cop.
And that's exactly what it was.
It's like the white guy was all nice.
Like, oh, gee, yeah, let me tell me.
And then the black guy was a total dick.
Yeah.
I was like, yeah, classic case of good cop, black cop.
Yep.
And we'll talk about this with our special guest who we have to get to, of course.
But my theory is that my experiences were, it's partially luck, luck of the draw, partially due to the fact that I still to this day, you know, I keep my hands on the steering wheel.
I give clear answers.
Here you go.
No guff, anything.
In the past, that was probably just genuine deference.
And now it's perhaps, you know, more cynical or opportunistic.
But regardless, I'm like, the last thing I want this cop to worry about is having to deal with somebody who's difficult and then making my life more difficult.
My objective is to get out of this without a ticket or an arrest or whatever.
And it's worked for me.
Of course, God knows how many cops there are in America, 50,000, 100,000.
I don't know.
You're going to have all sorts of different, I did enjoy seeing the Hispanic cops give that Miami Dolphins wide receiver a hard time.
We'll talk about that too.
Anyway, without further ado, our very special and patient guest.
He has completed the system gauntlet by navigating service both in the United States military and then law enforcement again for over 30 years and surviving to tell the tale.
He's also a husband, father, and dissident and a hopeful grandfather to be.
Wilmot Robertson, we'll call you Will on the show.
Welcome to Full House.
Good evening, gentlemen.
I'm a long time listener and fellow traveler, if you will.
And I just wanted to say, you know, I worked for about three decades in California.
And so whatever I say regarding the law or procedure may not fit your locality because the laws of the United States vary quite a lot.
Of course, we have international listeners.
I visited Canada and Mexico and their law systems.
I'm a little bit familiar with them too there.
But about myself, you did a great job doing an intro.
Thank you for the warm welcome.
I kind of, you know, early life began as you always ask me about the fatherhood status.
So that's right.
Oh, yeah.
Let's do it.
Ethnicity, religion, and fatherhood status.
Then we can go a little bit into the journey.
Well, I will tell you, firstly, that I'm 3% Native American.
Cool.
We were just talking about that last week.
It came up.
Yeah, I got the DNA.
And my dad's 100% Englishman.
So on that side of the farm, it's, you know, 49% English, maybe 1% Welsh and French.
My mom's, the side that has the Native American, you know, she's Scotch Irish, basically.
And so when you look at the DNA picture for me, my mom's always like, oh, we're Indians.
And my cousins are like, oh, we got to have Native American, this and that.
Well, I got the DNA result and it's like a rounding error.
It says 1%, even though by pedigree, I know it's 3%.
But, you know, the nice part about being an enrolled member of a Native American tribe is I get free dental care.
No kidding.
Oh, so you actually took advantage of it.
You did the bit.
Yeah.
Well, and then, and the tribe I'm a member of is, I'll just tell you, it's out of Oklahoma.
Okay.
It one day, one of the president, I might have been Biden.
I can't remember.
I'm pretty sure it was Biden during the COVID thing.
They were giving out all this free money for citizens, you know, remember that, what is that, bonus money that they gave us or whatever?
There's a thousand bucks.
Well, they dumped a bunch of money on my tribe.
And this is, we don't need all this money.
Hey, you members, here's your money.
And they turn right around and a couple thousand bucks just fell out of the blue sky into my lap.
And then my kids got each, my kids were growing adults by then.
They each got a couple thousand bucks.
My girls like.
We're going to have an audience revolt on our hands here, Will, because last week we talked about the guy wrote in whose wife is 25%.
And we did a hypothetical of what admixture would you wish your wife had if she had to have some.
Now we're cucking for cops and welcoming a blood Indian onto the show.
Well, you know, and I like to joke about it.
I sometimes say I'm 3% TV creeper, or I might say I'm a wagon burner, but I have cousins, first cousins, the same degree as I am, and they didn't get enrolled as members.
And there's a secret out there that your listenership who live in America, if you have any ancestry out of Oklahoma, there are the so-called five civilized tribes, plus a couple other ones.
There's no blood quantum to join these tribes.
If you can prove descendancy from the Dawes rules, which the Dawes rules from like from 1895 or thereabouts, and you can say, well, shoot, you know, I have a, I have a white friend who's got a DNA test and it came back as 5% black.
And I like to joke, well, you got rhythm now, you know?
Sure.
Well, don't surprise us with your religion and tell us you have a totem pole in your backyard or something.
Oh, no, no.
Well, anyway, but religion-wise, I'm kind of like my mom's raised as a Methodist.
My dad was a Presbyterian, and I'm not really anything except for a twice-a year Christian.
Both of those churches I just mentioned are the most gayed up religions there are.
And I got two kids, two and a half kids.
I got an adopted daughter and then a boy and a girl.
And everybody's in their 20s.
And by the way, if I tell you something that sounds a little off, it's because I'm going to obfuscate some of my personal details.
And I'm just going to say, if you say, well, you said two and a half kids, well, there's an example.
I'm not interested in docs, and I'm going to throw some things out here that may not be utterly true, but are generally true.
Fair enough.
Yeah, do whatever you got to do.
It's interesting that you are raising awareness that you're going to obfuscate a little bit, but that's fine.
We get it.
Well, I wish you many grandchildren at the appropriate time, of course.
And I was happy.
You had a request for me.
We'll just say I tried to help out your daughter on her travels at some point in the recent past.
That worked out good, actually.
She went over there.
She said she likes the way the Englishmen talk.
And I was trying to find some of our guys over there over Crossing Pond in England.
And she got her one.
She caught her one.
And he's very slender.
He's very athletic.
And all he likes to do is watch soccer, which they call football, and drink beer.
And he works as a professional.
So I whatever.
I just want grandkids.
Now, I'm going to tell you about my son.
Okay.
He's doing quite well.
As I mentioned, I'm a twice-a-year Christian.
So, and I have, you know, played around with Odinism a little bit.
I met Steve McNallen, who founded the Ostruth Focus Association.
I met him a couple times.
Sure.
Bought his book, explored that.
But my son goes off to college.
And by the way, it's free for him because of the tribal membership.
So he's one and a half percent a Native American.
Free tuition for him.
Anyway, while he's in college, he starts up different Christian youth groups.
And he's a little older for a college kid.
He's a little older than most of them.
So let's just say he's 28 years old.
He says to me, Dad, there's this girl I like, and she's only 18.
Do you think that's okay?
I'm like, hell yeah, boy.
And then the next thing you know, this girl is like six foot two of Norwegian extraction, blonde.
And I'm going to have my own basketball team, I think, in a couple of years.
Our single audience guys listening are drooling and jealous and angry.
Well, they're out there.
They're out there.
You know, in my own marriage, I have kind of a traditional marriage.
I've got a troubled wife, okay?
Very beautiful wife I've married to for 35 or so years.
She would still fit in her wedding dress today.
So I'm very blessed.
And then this, the son-in-law, though, I mean, the daughter-in-law, all she wants to do is knit sweaters and have babies, and she's all out of yard.
You remember that joke about I want to kick ass at you, bubblegum?
They live, they live, yep, all out of bubblegum.
Yeah, well, she just got this.
I've got baby rabies on this daughter-in-law's side.
So I pray every day for the, and I said, I'm not very religious, but I do pray, and I pray every day for the um a future for white grandchildren.
So, amen, brother.
Hope you, hope you get many.
All right, let's get cracking on the CQ, the cop question here.
Uh, topic du jour for sure.
Uh, why'd you become a cop?
And uh, tell us, I guess, just the basics, what you know, what you did.
Um, take it from there.
Yeah, I uh basically I went, I was a I'm a smarter than average cop, and I was because of my uh affirmative action, was able to get into a very high-grade, uh, we'll call it Ivy League grade school.
Um, and guess what?
I didn't do very good because I was an affirmative action admission to the Ivy League.
And so I went from that to another college, more my speed.
And all I wanted to drink do is drink beer and chase skirts.
And so a couple years of that, and everyone's like, well, you're in college because you're smart.
So that's why you're in college.
And that's not really, for me, that's that doesn't compute too well.
I didn't know what I wanted to do in life.
I just, I always knew I wanted to become a father one day and have a successful career.
And I quit college and joined the army.
And I was in the combat engineers.
You know, I learned how to work with my hands and blow stuff up, you know, and build bridges and basically be a good soldier.
And then I got out.
And when I was in the army, I had, you know, like one girlfriend and I had interaction with a oh, I had a biker roommate.
I had a really scary looking biker roommate in the army.
And one day, this is well before tattoos were common.
Well, well before tattoos, no one saw tattoos on anybody but convicts and sailors back in the day.
But my army roommate was a super tattooed up guy from New Jersey.
And the first night I stayed in that barracks with him, I didn't sleep a week because I thought he's going to kill me because everybody said he's a dangerous biker.
Turned out to be the sweetest guy I ever met in my life.
High school dropout, who was the smartest guy I ever met.
And he took me out one night to the tattoo parlor for another tattoo.
And while I'm there looking at the tattoo art on the wall, thinking about getting a tattoo myself, uprolled a biker, another biker.
And he says, Hey, Blood needs help.
Let's go help Blood.
And I'm the only guy with, I'm the only, I'm the only guy with a car.
So I drove off.
You got mixed up in some biker gang.
You helped the biker.
And I look like I do now.
I look like a preppy, right?
So I go to the roadside emergency, and this biker is like freezing to death and had a breakdown.
So I put all these, I got this little two-seater sports car.
I crammed three bikers in there and they're using the heater to get warmed up.
And then I had a radar detector on the sports car and it starts going up.
Oh my gosh, there's a car coming down the road.
My radar detector is going off.
I'll bet that's the fuzz.
And it was the fuzz.
And they proned us out.
And I look like Mr. Preppy, right?
I'm a college kid who's stinting in the army.
And they're treating me like I'm some kind of bad guy because I'm hanging around with the cops.
You're drug dealers.
Right.
The cops of the 70s and 80s were taught to hate bikers.
And some of that still persists.
And so because I was with them, they treated us rudely.
So that was my negative experience of law enforcement.
And then another time was in the army.
I had a girlfriend and she was 18.
And I decided to take her out into the next county and get fresh with her.
And deputy sheriff rolled up behind us.
And I at the time thought it was a good idea to exit your car and approach the cop.
I don't know, no longer believe that's generally a good idea.
But I did that.
And he's like, freeze, mister.
And I did.
And he wanted to go up to the girl and make sure she was there of her own volition and that she was old enough to be with me.
That's all he wanted and run us for warrants.
And I was like a dummy.
And I should just sat in my car and waited for him to make contact and roll the windows down.
And kept my, you know, you touched on it also is how would you handle a traffic stop?
I meant to say that too.
But anyway, to get in law enforcement, I got out of the army and went back to college.
And when I was working this kind of crappy job where I was building office furniture or office cubicles in this Honeywell factory, Honeywell, big corporation, and I'm being paid eight bucks an hour.
And the people who hired me, I found out, were making off of my wages, they were being paid $24 an hour.
Yeah.
For now, I was getting eight bucks an hour.
I went and I was in the National Guard.
I was a field artillery observer in the National Guard.
And they sent me away to a summer camp of the National Guard.
And while there, I met a deputy sheriff from California.
And he told me about these awesome 1970s and 1980s cop stories, 1990s, I guess it was by then.
And I just thought it sounded like a riot.
I'm like, you mean I don't have to, I'm at the time pursuing computer related stuff and I'm terrible at typing and I'm terrible at computers.
And I know I'm going to be stuck in a cubicle farm like I'm building.
I could work outside.
I could do a different thing every day.
I could drive fast.
I could carry guns around, which I like guns.
And maybe I'd be at a motorcycle cop because I like motorcycles at the time.
Still do, but I advise against motorbikes.
But anyway, I thought, and then I could pay a job where there's a pension.
I'll have the adoration of society.
All the conservatives will love me.
All the hippies will hate me, which is a good thing because I hate hippies.
You know, we can.
And then the other thing is it's like a libertarian mindset where we should eliminate everything in the government, but just keep the law enforcement.
You know, that was sort of my attitude at the time.
Right.
And certainly evolved since then, but it's a vital service to have justice in a civilization.
You can have anarchy where, you know, one tribe raids another tribe and they steal each other and shoot each other.
And the only way you get justice is to have enough survivors to go attack the right tribe, you know, that kind of anarchy that has happened in humans' history.
And I fear it could happen again.
But I thought this is a vital service and it's a good job.
It's, I'm the right guy.
Now, your typical cop isn't me.
There are a lot of them are like ex-football players, jock.
What's the high school jock turn into?
He turns into a cop.
Maybe he's a big, dumb, big, dumb, nice guy, but he gets that job.
And he's, I'm not saying that there, there is a role for, there's all different stripes of cops, but there's a role for the big, dumb, nice guys.
There's a, there's a role for the wiry little smart guys.
There's a role for women too.
Although I'm one of the first people to say, I wish that the dissident right movement had more of that, we'll call it sex realism about it.
Because the idea that women and men are the same and are equally abled, I don't believe that.
I cherish women, but they're not in a physical fight.
It takes about three women to take down a single man on average.
Oh, yeah.
Women don't belong as cops.
I think probably 100% of our audience would agree with that.
Maybe a meter made.
Yeah.
So were you, without getting into too much specifics, was most of your lengthy experience as a patrolman, you know, a beat cop or, you know, a detective?
What was the long and the short?
Well, well, I got in the job because I liked variety, and that's exactly when that job presented me.
In the good old days, all deputy sheriffs started out in the jail.
And it's still true in many localities where you can't be a patrolman until you've been a jail deputy.
And that's what I was.
And then I got let out to go be home supervision deputy.
Say like a home arrest thing where before ankle monitors existed, where we let we were trying to reduce crowding.
And like one typical one was I had an old lady who was an embezzler.
She was part of a nonprofit.
And like most embezzlers, she had some sort of a gambling problem.
So she would gamble.
She would steal the money out of the cover for this National Association of something or other, National Association of Quilters, let's say.
And she'd steal the money from that and go gamble it.
And then she'd lose.
And she's like, I'm going to grab more money.
And this time I'll put even more, put it all back.
And then suddenly there's the National Association of Quilters was bankrupt and they put her in jail.
And then rather than keep an old lady in jail, they said, well, let's just let her stay home, home arrest.
And it'd be my job to come check on her.
And so I was out of the jail driving a patrol car, the square body Chevrolet Caprices.
Oh, yeah.
I had one.
Love them.
Yeah, I think it was an 88 Caprice.
Real beast.
And they're a good car.
You know, the Chevrolet could out-corner a Ford Crown Victoria, which was the classic car of my era.
Sure.
The Ford was a little better off-road for booty bouncing because it had a little higher clearance.
You could drive it like a Jeep if you needed to.
Anyway, then the drug ward was the drug, the war on drugs was going on.
There was Miami Vice was glamorizing the idea that you're going to wear like a sports coat with a t-shirt with a semi-automatic handgun, and you're going to have the guy from Cheech Marin, Cheech and Chong's going to be your informant or whatever, and you're going to drive speedboats and Ferraris around.
That's not at all what life was like.
I've seen few police programs that I like or agree with.
But in the variety, so I started out eventually in the jail, moved to eventually patrol deputy.
Then I was a resident deputy where I really got good at my job.
Okay.
And then I, after about, we'll say 10 years or so, I got into high-level drug enforcement, working with the D worth of DEA and with Homeland Security a little bit when Homeland Security got created.
And that was around the time I started listening to Michael Savage, the radio host.
Yep.
Language, culture, borders, or yeah.
Borders, Langer's culture.
And you know what?
I agree with everything he ever said, pretty much.
He's very pro-Israel, I guess.
Yeah.
But aside from that, he's, you know, he's about Michael Weiner.
He, I bought his books and I read them and I liked him.
And then that led me to a website for anti-immigration called American Patrol, which is no longer around, but American Patrol was, I found out later, was somehow tied up with some Klansman guy or something.
But I didn't know that at the time.
The internet was still new to me.
And in fact, I had dial-up at my house.
So if I got on the web, it was at work where I got the, you know, eventually I became an acolyte of Jared Taylor American Renaissance.
And I assume that your experiences in California led you to that point, right?
The stuff that you're seeing on a day-to-day basis.
I guess, were 90 of your days relatively uneventful, not exciting, not dramatic death-defying um, you know, your traffic stops and during, I guess the bulk.
But and then, when you got into drug enforcement and dealing with some of the gangs, was that part of your ideological evolution?
Uh, you know, I the gang thing.
It's for where I, where I live, there's almost no black people, but there's Mexicans, and the Mexicans kind of have three groupings.
Uh, one is called north northerners or Norteños, and they um think of the, the Republicans.
Republicans are red and they're in the northern part.
Well, the Norteños, I think, have a red color.
And then the blue is the Sereños, and they would inhabit Los Angeles, as you should know, as a blue area as far as Democrats right, so that's how I keep it in my brain got your Serenos, which means southerners in Spanish, and your Orteños, and there's another kind another, another kind called uh, I forget now, I think it's Campesino, but this just, that's just your dirt farmer Mexicans,
all that is he's not involved in in the uh war between North and south Mexicans yeah, and and uh the the, the gang, land stuff didn't really matter when it came to doing my job, except for the two warring factions didn't like each other.
You didn't want to mix those up.
And then the campesinos are sort of neutral, but when it came to fighting drugs, 98 of the time it was Mexican nationals who were doing it.
They would go out in the national forest.
They literally would chop down like a hundred by hundred yard, so a thousand square yards of uh, of national forest, and plant marijuana and I mean they just killed the whole forest and they would put poison down and they were armed.
They did shoot people um, innocent people are just doing, doing white people, things like hunting in the woods for deer, and they come across a pot patch and they get shot, sometimes to death.
Uh, and the to their credit, the Forest Service um, which own that land.
They weren't buying all this.
We can legalize weed and it'll be harmless stuff.
They were going after these guys and doing sometimes some good jobs, getting them put away in prison and um, you know, on an individual basis.
You know I did find these.
These Mexican people are famously hardworking um, and you know to go hike five miles or ten miles into the woods with a propane tank uh, across your back to power your, your month-long super hooch that you're living in and dig trench lines and dig up a thousand little potholes to put weed in and then fertilize it and carry that fertilizer.
This shows you what a lot of work ethic they possess To go out into our country and grow weed.
It's kind of a shame.
It's kind of a shame that, you know, conditions are so bad back in Mexico that this is their best option.
It's a shame that Americans are so degenerate and lazy that all they want to do is buy weed and get fat and lazy and stupid.
Because the reason they're here is to sell weed to who?
To your fat Doritos munching skateboarder types.
That's who buy the weed.
And, you know, I see a problem with our own people in that it's a rare day when I go into Walmart and see a pretty girl, you know, young woman that's pretty, or I would want my son to meet.
You know, everyone's fat and in sandals and wearing too tight of stretch pants, too tight of sweatpants.
The people of Walmart thinks real.
So Walmartians, they call them.
Yeah.
And that's who's buying the weed, I think.
And then there's also the Tom Cruise types that are up there promoting it in their movies.
And I'm kind of on board with the legalize the weed thing because the drug war is lost.
Besides marijuana, I was fighting methamphetamine labs, which are quite bad.
And I actually, there's three main ways you could make methamphetamine out of cold pills.
Cold pills are called pseudofedrine, okay?
And you should buy, and you used to be able to go into the drugstore and just buy some Actifed, which is my favorite brand of cold pills.
Unplug your stuffy nose.
Now the limits limit what you can buy.
Well, that was all because they thought, well, we're going to curtail that.
So that did cut what the white dopers brew their own.
White dopers do homebrew their own methamphetamine in like a coffee pot or whatever.
But there's these super labs, Mexican National, they call it MMDTO, Mexican National Drug Trafficking Organization.
That's an official acronym coined by the federal government to identify who is brewing the meth.
And I had some very successful anti-drug missions where it started with informants typically.
Now, an informant is also called a snitch.
And they do have a bad jacket where snitches are, especially under the rap culture, they're the dirty birds.
And some snitches really are dirty birds.
I did a couple informants that I had, these are flawed individuals, okay, by and large.
But my good guy, George the Mexican, he was able to turn me on to a drug lab.
And oh, by the way, George is not one of those George the Mexicans, a hardworking, honest guy.
But he turned on, you know, he turned me on to something.
And Mario, not meth.
Well, end up being the best drug bust I ever did.
Okay.
So I, but anyway, you got, you got five Julios, called them Julios.
And by the way, our guys are in law enforcement, whether they know it or not, because one of the local terms, every industry has its own jargon.
Okay.
And Julio's was cop jargon for, you know, kind of a slick looking Mexican or just, it's just a shorthand way of saying there's a Mexican.
So there was These uh five julios came up into our county, went out on a rural ranch land along with nine other individuals who were out there just to chop firewood.
Um, and they were so one batch of guys is cutting down trees and making cordwood, and another five guys are in the barn with a 22-liter glass flask mixing together pseudophedrine and red phosphorus and uh swimming pool chlorine and brewing this stuff.
And then when they're all done making their meth, and it kind of sort of resembles old-time uh you know, uh, stills for moonshine a little bit because they have some of the same business where you got a condensing tube and you know it's done under pressure, maybe uh not very much pressure.
No, it's boiling, you have to boil the solution.
Um, anyway, but it's all about you bubble providing meth production tips to the audience just for yeah, right.
I'm writing this it's on it's on TikTok.
You can do it on TikTok.
Be sure you don't take the don't take the tube of gas and run it through a solution of of uh chlorine and have a persistent tomato.
But you can actually do this in a coffee pot.
But um, and the other kind was called the so-called Nazi method of making um methamphetamine that involves lithium batteries and is probably the easier way to make meth.
Um, and any Jew skin or hair or nothing like that.
Well, no, no, no, no, that gets that gets into another part of the Nazi.
I'm trying to figure out what's called the third method.
Cyclone B. There's no impurity in terms of the purest stuff.
Nazi method.
Oh, God, I see.
The Nazi method, the Nazi method was created by the Nazis because, as you probably know, historically, the Nazis would give their soldiers method for fighting.
And, you know, and to a certain extent, the army, our American army, did the same thing too.
They empted up their soldiers too when they had to, and especially their pilots.
But the Nazi method was Red Foss was a lithium method.
Anyway, it was a great time to have this drug thing going on.
I learned so much.
But it's all run by Mexicans.
And we had to have Spanish-speaking officers on our task force.
We had wiretaps going to listen to these people.
We had to have Spanish translators who cost a ton of money to listen in.
Why do we have to have?
Well, because our government doesn't enforce the border and they let these people in who are impoverished.
And they're here to be the wage slaves, the scabs that drive down our wages and drive up our rents.
They're living in our country to make everything worse for the white working man.
And they turn around and they go, well, this isn't a good enough wage.
We want more money.
We want to buy a hacienda back to Mexico.
Let's all get together and brew meth.
And so, and then when they get caught, what happened when my big meth bus was they had their lawyers already paid for.
They got up bailed out of jail.
He showed up with a lawyer that literally drove a super exotic super car in this little town, your rural county that I worked in.
And everybody got a year in jail.
So if you know, because like not enough people showed up for jury duty.
So because not any people showed up for jury duty, put the Julio on trial, they got a sweetheart slap on the wrist when it came to actual trial day because the court system couldn't do its job.
but that that was part of my red pull experience is to see that if you or i have a 22 liter flask boiling um poisonous chemicals and dumping out on the environment they're going to take our house they're going to get a hard time to take they're going to take our kids away our wife's going to divorce us the house will be torn down and condemned they're going to take our cars and our asset forfeiture and take all our guns they're going to send us away to prison for five years but these mexicans they all got a year in jail So pretty pretty infuriating.
Well, now, were they legal?
Yeah, I think most of them were.
As I mentioned, this is a group of about 15 Mexicans, most of whom were woodcutters and claimed not that was going on.
At first, I didn't believe that.
We arrested all the whole pastel of them, right?
All, you know, 15 or so.
But I come to think of it, actually, you know, they may not, the woodcutters may not have any idea what's going on in the barn.
That's conceivable.
So, you know, I'm proud to say that in my career, I never made an arrest that wasn't fully justified somehow.
I never arrested someone solely based off their race or picked on anyone because of their background.
Will, you know, you mentioned the Julios as being a term of earth there.
How about Canadians?
Use that term.
Canadian.
Yeah, I've heard that Canadians are bad tippers.
Yeah.
Unruly.
They're very loud.
They're very loud.
They don't ungrateful.
Ungrateful Canadians.
That's what, you know, that is, yeah, that's the same thing.
So every industry has its terms.
You know, I was friends with nurses and stuff at the hospital.
And I come to find out they have their secret terms.
Like, you know what a gomer is?
Yes, I do.
I do.
I do.
I know the most.
I know this one.
So this is basically an old person that has no faculties that you just push them around like you're moving them to somewhere important, but they know what you're doing with them.
They're basically a dead body, but they're all that could be that could be a related term.
But a gomer from the emergency room where I was usually at was the emergency room at the hospital.
A gomer was a get out of my emergency room.
And coach, forgive me, I'm going to cuss because this is a this to tell you the true term hospital has to say there's also amf yo-yo.
So if you're a hospital nurse or doctor, you have to.
Hold on, hold on.
You don't need to say you can, you can censor yourself for the hard word.
Everyone else.
Audios, audios, motherfucker.
You're on your own.
That's an AMF yo-yo.
Leave that in, Rolo.
I think that's content, context necessary, necessary content.
I feel like I'm on racist jeopardy here, you know, for $50.
What's a go?
What's a gormer?
Well, we're cracking through this first hour, and I've barely even scratched the surface of my numerous questions for you here.
So let me, let me reel you in just a little bit.
I do enjoy the wide-ranging discussion.
I mean, we could do a whole damn series probably on your career.
But for the purposes of serious deliberation, whether it's 90%, 80%, whatever, you've probably seen it.
I certainly have the widespread hostility, antipathy toward cops from our guys.
Is that right or wrong?
Obviously, there's good cops and bad cops, black cops and white cops, et cetera.
But you saw more of them and knew more of them and worked more with more of them than hopefully our guys have interacted with them.
Break that down for us.
How should white nationalist dissidents talk about, think about cops writ large?
Well, you got it.
I think for ourselves is treat others how you'd want to be treated.
And the cops have the same obligation.
You got to remember, though, you know, about 20% of the cops are really hardworking, honest guys who believe in their cause and they do their job fairly.
And there's all the, there's also the lazy guys, which are a big number of people.
They also want to do their job fairly.
They just don't want to do it enthusiastically.
They don't want to solve a crime.
They just want to show up and be a pulse.
These guys will back up the hard chargers.
And it's called the 80-20 rule, right?
The Pareto.
Pareto principle.
Yep.
So 20% of the people do 90% of the work.
And that's still true.
You know, I did see, there was a time or two where I knew I was with another officer.
He pulled over a big rig for going 60 in a 55 zone.
And he acted like such a jerk that I was embarrassed to be with him.
Like, it's not your job primarily to go.
Number one, your deputy sheriff.
You're not going to enforce traffic laws unless it's to suit another purpose.
Okay.
Now, by the way, that's not true in other states.
Other states, they make their deputies enforce traffic laws.
But in California, that's not a sheriff's deputy's primary mission.
It is a tool.
So like if you see a drug dealer run a stop sign at two miles an hour, you're going to pull him over for running the stop sign.
Not really because you want to get to the stop sign issue and give him a ticket, but because you want to see what kind of drugs he's got in his car.
That's called a pretextual stop.
You see a soccer mom do two mile an hour do a stop sign, you're going to ignore it.
Or if you do pull over, it's just to make sure that she's not drunk and then send her on her way.
So, and are there buttholes?
Yes, there are.
I knew cops that were buttholes.
I knew cops that were dishonest, you know, rarely, but it does happen.
A guy I liked, he got somehow hooked on that painkillers.
And next thing you know, he's going through his co-worker's purse at the jail, stealing her meds out of her purse.
So he got fired justly, but these people are honest, you know, by and large.
I knew very few times where something like that ever happened.
These are honest, good work, good, hardworking people who most of them have their height in the right place and they just want to do their job properly.
Do they put an emphasis on pulling over the public and giving them traffic tickets?
Well, maybe some of them do because that's the motorcycle officers, that's their job, actually, is to do traffic enforcement and to try to satisfy the Karens in our society who go bitching about, hey, my sign on my street says 30 miles an hour and they're going 40 miles an hour in the morning to get to work past my house.
I demand action.
So you've got that kind of a Karen complaint.
So they'll send officers out to pull people over and maybe make an example out of a couple people.
And, you know, I've got my regrets.
I pulled over a black church lady one day and this one, I gave her a ticket because she made like a crazy insane suicidal pass on a line curve.
Okay.
And I gave her, it was a dumb way to drive a car and I gave her a ticket for it.
You know what?
Looking back, I wish I just let her go with a warning because I like black church ladies.
You know, that's, is that wrong?
You should have tased her, really.
We got a softie.
You don't know what she's capable of.
She may have been smuggling a few pounds of cocaine.
At least you didn't give her anybody cavage.
I never saw her again.
So my ticketing might have saved her life.
And that was, you know, when they, when the cops justify it to themselves, that's what they tell themselves.
If we write enough tickets to make a few examples out of some of our people, people get back in line and stop passing against WL line around a blind curve, which could kill the people in the other lane.
So I just, you know, like I said, it's, it's, I'm not, I never took action on someone for their race or, or anything.
Maybe you could say I could take action against the homeless a little bit, but aside from maybe homeless people, I never was, what do you call biased or whatever.
If anything, I'm biased for the black people because I like black old little old black church ladies.
I would love to not give them a ticket.
Her violation was so egregious, it had to be done.
And I never saw her again.
So it must have worked.
What percentage?
What percentage of cops are racially aware?
I imagine it's pretty high.
It doesn't mean that they're crypto Nazis or white nationalists, but I assume even there's a lot of racist black cops who are tired of dealing with the black cops.
There's a lot of dog whistling.
So you're never going to hear someone say, you know, I, well, build the wall and deport them all.
You might hear that kind of a thing, but you're going to hear or, you know, I just remember one of my co-workers one day goes, something black came up and it was a Monday and the guy goes, well, nobody likes a Monday.
And that was code speak for a black person to say Monday.
So they're out there.
One day we had a presenter come to my agency and put up a YouTube video.
And the YouTube video was to sell his product.
He was selling a product designed to restrain people in the jail, in the jail setting.
And in the good old days, before censorship, we had the daily show and the right stuff was on YouTube.
And the guy goes to pull up his product video and put it up in the big, they had this giant computer, which is like a nine-foot-wide computer monitor.
And he goes to put up his product video and there in his playlist was the daily show.
Yeah, you know, and by the way, I lose track in being a fan of the dissonant right, you know, who doesn't like who or who's out.
Don't worry.
Don't worry about it.
I like everybody.
I like Milo Yiannopoulos for crying out loud.
I like everybody.
Okay.
I just like some more than others.
I like some more than others.
And that counts.
You try to like everybody.
I try to like all whites that are straight mostly.
Yeah.
Right.
There you go.
Did you worry about being labeled a racist or getting in trouble?
Social media posts, comments at the office that, you know, I assume, you know, you're going through changes.
So is the country.
So is political correctness in probably departments all across the country.
Yeah.
Were you worried about that?
Or you just did your job and it was in the background.
Well, without getting too doxy, I had a Facebook account, which was an undercover account.
I got a Facebook account because I was told to get one.
And I created one by taking an obituary from a guy that died in Australia.
Now I've got his picture, right, of this nice looking white guy that died in a motorbike wreck in Australia.
So there's little chance we're going to have someone here in North America know the fellow.
And then I created this fake profile and I friended everybody I could.
And I was using that to snoop on people for my job.
And somehow or other, I got on the topic of police shootings.
Somebody was going on about, I think that Black Lives Matter kind of went in two stages.
Of course, St. George Floyd of Fentanyl fame was the lattice, the later one, but before St. George Floyd was that hands up, don't shoot thing.
Gentlemen Michael Brown.
Yeah.
Michael Brown, which that was another lie.
So I think it was Michael Brown era, Michael Brown era thing.
That was a lie.
He would never say hands up, don't shoot.
And the poor cop who got, he could probably never work under his own name in North America.
And I forgot the guy's name.
Darren of the Saharan.
Darren, Darren Wilson, I think was his.
Darren Wilson.
Yeah.
Darren the Saharan Wilson.
That guy did nothing wrong, but look what happened.
And then Michael Brown, under, we'll call that BLM 1.0.
Okay.
I had somebody on the Facebook going on about blah, blah, blah.
Poor black people, they get shot and stuff, and the cops are racist.
And I'm like, I, at the time, had a statistic, which I wish I could find.
I've not, but it goes like this.
At the time, about 45% of the time when a cop got murdered in the line of duty with a gun, the gunman who shot the cop dead was black.
About 45% of the time, which you know that blacks are about 13% of America and black males are half of that.
So let's call it 6.5% of America is doing 45% of the cop murdering, okay?
Or thereabouts.
And these figures have fluctuated a little bit over time.
So let's look at the other way.
Of police shootings, what percent of the people the cops are forced to shoot are black?
I'm not saying they were shot dead.
I'm just saying they were shot because handguns are not that lethal.
You can get shot in a handgun your most more than like 50% of the time you're going to live.
So it's not a murder or homicide.
It's not a murder.
It's a homicide.
It's a justifiable homicide when a cop shoots a bad guy.
And the cop shootings, not even talking fatalities, just cop shootings.
It's around 30 or 35%.
I forgot exactly the number at the time.
I wish I had saved it.
So my point in Facebook was to say, it's not that the cops are shooting black people too often.
There's a case to be made that they're not shooting them often enough.
Yeah.
Well, you know that you're going to be tried.
The cop will be tried for murder and maybe go to prison for the rest of his life or get the death penalty or a slave shooter.
That's what I've been saying all along.
Yeah.
If you shoot a white person, you're more likely to get away with it.
Well, I get a medal.
Yeah, you get it.
So I got in a little bit of trouble for posting these facts.
And also, I made an utterance about, look what happened to Great Britain.
They live in the third world.
And look what happened.
The rapes went up like eightfold and the murders and the stabbings went up.
And your department knew that that was your essentially your socks on Facebook.
Well, no, a local liberal activist derived somehow that as that alias, I had gone to another state to some kind of a conference and had posted something about look how awesome this other city is.
And then that liberal activist decided that I was the sock account.
And yeah, and I had said some things that in the uh it was brought to my attention out there.
She was trying to complain to my agency that I was uh biased or whatever, but I don't see it as bias to tell the truth.
And by the way, the police shooting statistics at the time I was getting were from something called the Force Science Institute run by a guy named Bill Lewinsky.
And I know that this, these recently on Twitter, I'd seen these statistics about blacks shooting cops have still held up.
And I'll give you the latest one.
There was somehow or other came up with 14,123 police murders where cops were killed.
53%.3% of the time, the murderers were black.
So let's assume they're all males.
There are some lady cop killers too, but black males are the ones responsible for 53.3% of the cop murders in the country.
And then 46%, 46.7%, you know, most of which is going to be Hispanics.
Hispanics have basically double the crime rate of white people.
And then Native Americans and Asians are in there, and maybe some Arabs or whatever.
Arabs, of course, get lumped in with white people.
So Hispanic crime underreported too, because a lot of times they get put in the count the Hispanics as white and they count the Arabs as white.
And so if you address unless they're victim.
Yeah, well, that's the other reason.
Back to Jared Taylor.
Jared Taylor has something called the New Century Foundation, and he has his report called The Color of Crime, and it explains in detail how when they're suspects, Hispanics get called white.
But when they're victims, they get called Hispanics.
Well, anyway, but 40%, 6% or so of the Asians and the Native Americans and the whites and the Arabs and whatever excess categories you have that are not black, that's who does 46% of the time.
It's other groups.
53%.
So the lion's share, more than half of the cop murderers are black.
And if you add up, what's the per capita rate?
It's actually per capita 7.6 times as great as all other groups combined.
And of course, Hispanics have a pretty high number of police shootings themselves.
Famously, during the Trump administration, there was an officer in Central Valley, California named Singh.
So he was a Sikh dude, a Sikh immigrant, an Indian American.
And that guy got killed like on Christmas.
And there was a whole pastel of Mexicans who were all illegal that shot the guy.
So Hispanics have a big, they're the next big group of cop killers.
Hold on for one moment.
Hispanic refers to Spanish descent.
And what they're talking about really is Latinos, which is essentially Central Americans or mestizos.
Yeah, well, the mestizos aren't Hispanic.
They're Latino because Latino is Central American.
Hispanic is of Spanish origin.
Most Hispanics in the United States have Indio in their blood for sure.
The European Hispanic is the rare.
My point is that they mislabel them.
It's more, I'd almost call it Talmadry at this point.
Well, and I like to often, you've heard me say this too, Rolo, many times, is I like to say, you know, I'm a little, I've been accused of being a little, I guess, pro-Hispanic.
And I'll be my reason.
My reason is, my reason for that, I like to tell you guys, is What do Daisy Duke, Wonder Woman, and all three of John Wayne's wives have in common?
They're all higher.
They're not transparent.
They're all Hispanic.
So is Raquel Welsh.
So Raquel Welsh.
Well, hold on.
That's my point, though.
Those are Hispanics.
Those aren't the round face squads.
Five foot tall, 300 pounders.
And that's Charlie Charlie Sheen.
Charlie Sheen's an American actor whose real name is Esposito or something like that.
Yeah, that's it.
Yeah.
So there are a lot of white Hispanics out there.
There's, of course, black Hispanics.
I had a roommate in the army that was Cuban, great guy, and he hated Jews.
That guy did.
Interesting fella.
He put a my army roommate, Cuban guy, put some kind of witch doctor poison underneath my bed in the barracks, which some foul-smelling fluid.
And I said, hey, what is this, Eleon?
And he's like, oh, I don't know, man.
But you talk about a racist person, that guy.
He told me, you know, we Cubans, we are the best of the Spanish world.
And the Mexicans, they are, they're shit.
And the worst Hispanics are the fucking Puerto Ricans.
That's what he used to say.
Cheech Marin was the interlocutor there.
Yep.
Yeah, he would talk.
DCLA, Mexican.
He was, he was a Cuban.
And my good roommate was a Cuban.
And there was some pretty, down at the local mall in the army, there were some pretty girls.
My other roomie and I were chasing after.
Turned out one of them was a white Cuban girl.
So that's a big rat bag out there in the Hispanic world.
Well, I have known a handful of cops who were, let's just say, you know, fully racially aware, our guys over the years, or our guys who are racially aware who happen to be cops.
And I know one of them deliberately, maybe two of them, deliberately got out of the service because they saw which way the winds were blowing, that one way or another, you know, they were going to get hemmed up on bullshit or they were going to get out of it as an evil racist and, you know, be the two minutes hate in international media.
Is it insane for someone not just who understands the world as we do, but might actually be involved in trying to change it to go into law enforcement of any stripe?
Or would you actually suggest that they do it?
In my mind, I'd be like, man, I could see it doing it in like a small town where it's still mostly white and you don't have to risk losing your life for a losing cause, arguably this country.
But could you, can you, with a straight face, recommend to any of our younger listeners or guys looking for jobs out there to become a cop?
Yes, I would say I do agree with the career still.
I've seen changing priorities over time, you know, where drug enforcement was a big deal.
Now they legalize drugs, so it's not as big a deal.
They decriminalize a lot of crimes.
So what I call mens Raya crimes are, because you and I are born, not are born knowing not to steal, not to kill.
We don't need Christianity to tell us that or any other kind of religious system.
We don't need the law to tell us not to steal and kill.
But we're not born knowing that you can't smoke marijuana.
So in terms of a legal word for that, that's called me.
That's called mala ense or mala in prohibita.
So mala in prohibita is a fancy Latin word for, well, it's marijuana is illegal because we said so.
And mala and se means it's you know in your soul, it's already wrong.
So I'm seeing is Mala and Say where naturally natural law wrongdoing is going unpunished increasingly.
And so that's discouraging for today's era of law enforcement officers.
Back when I was in, you know, I could put a guy away justly for some kind of, I'm proud of my career.
I mean, I put away bad guys sometimes.
It was a serious time and was the hero of the community for what I did.
And I was attracted to it because I knew I'd be outside, get a lot of variety, and I did get a lot of variety.
And yeah, I could drive as fast as I want to.
And initially, I must confess I did like the idea of being able to have the handgun around because I was, I thought that was important.
I don't really agree with that anymore.
I'm kind of a Canadian about gun control.
Forgive me, but I don't think I'm like, I okay, I'll tell you what.
About gun control, I'm kind of, I think it would be sensible if we adopt a little bit of Canada's gun control policies.
I know that's now that's going to go off like a lead balloon here.
Hard to disagree just to say it.
Hard disagree.
As long as there are blacks and the cartel running around, once you take that away, blacks will be killing everyone in sight.
The cartel will take over every town.
That is a little accident.
Let me qualify what I meant by Canadian.
I do think that having a 10-round magazine is a sensible thing for safety, but get off the gun thing for a minute.
I thought it was a good career to live in a rural area, have a trad wife, have a small farm of my own, and make a good living and get a secure pension.
And I pulled it off.
And I got two drug-free kids.
We homeschooled them a little bit for some of the time.
If I could, as this is sort of the successor to the fatherland thing, as a parent, I know how I could have done better.
But we did the right thing living in a rural area.
We did the right thing being involved with the church.
We did the right thing by staying moral and upright in the midst of all the degeneracy that sit around us, surrounded us.
We stayed strong.
We stayed together.
My family's fit and healthy.
None of us are taking psychotropic medicines or drugs.
I myself drink too much, but you would have too, if you've seen some of the stuff I had to put up with.
But I think for our, is it still a good career?
Yes, it is.
Do you want to be a member of, I don't know, Patriot Front and get in the cop work?
No, I think you got to be careful.
That's the other point I wanted to deliver here today.
The part of the reason why cop work pays so much is very few people can do it.
Now, I took my son to see the Air Force recruiter, and that recruiter stunned me when he says only one in seven kids that walk through his door can even join the Air Force.
Everyone's too fat, too criminal, too insane, or too much a degenerate to join the military.
Now, that's how bad it is.
So, six out of seven kids are ineligible to even join the Air Force.
It comes to being a cop, you have to show that you've got clean criminal record.
Now, coach, I looked you up and I learned you used to work in the government or something.
They put you through the, the internet said you had to do some sort of security questionnaire.
And you know what I went through.
You have to ask, they ask about your divorces.
If you ever cheated on your wife, have you got a bankruptcy?
What's your credit report look like?
And then they go around, they talk to all your friends.
You have to fill out a personal history statement, every place you ever lived.
And they go talk to all the neighbors in the old crappy apartments used to live at.
And he used to shoot pigeons off his porch, you know, guilty.
Yeah, just to be clear, I have never been arrested, let alone convicted of a crime.
I don't know if you ran a background check on me or you just Googled me.
And I've never, despite some brief, you know, I was subject to the two minutes hate back in 2019.
I was never leaned on.
You know, nobody, of course, the feds knocked on my door on Inauguration Day, 2021.
I think suspect because I was on the radar, they suspected I might be a J6 typer to show up on Inauguration Day.
But I've never been even leaned on to be like, hey, you know, we can make your life a lot easier if you share some information just about dangerous white nationalists or whatever.
They have never even bothered.
I like to think because they know the answer would be silence or, you know, buzz off.
Anyway.
Right.
Well, but anyway.
There was like a hanging chad there I wanted to clear up.
I think it's still a good career.
But to get through what they call the background process, it's going to, in California, they're knuckling down on cops because like what was with teachers.
If you got to be a teacher in California, you could not get fired.
And I have a story at war.
I got a lot of war stories and I've got a teacher war story where we couldn't fire a teacher who clearly could have been because the goddang teachers union in California made it so you can't fire a teacher.
So it was like that with law enforcement.
So historically, California law enforcement was like every other state.
Many of them are still this way.
You want to be a cop?
Well, here's your six gun and here's the Bible.
Go out and enforce the law.
No training, literally give this is, I had multiple stories of 70s cops who told me themselves, no training, just a revolver that was so gummed up it didn't even work and going out stopping cars and looking for violations of I'm not even kidding here, the 10 commandments.
That's the type we saw.
I can, I've seen pictures in the old newspapers in my own agency of the mayor's fat, feckless son shooting a target practice.
And you can tell he's just a, well, anyway, they used to hire just the mayor's son was given or or classically the football team captain was was made the cop of the town.
And eventually in the 70s in California, they started this called peace officer stand-ins and training, which is called post.
And every other state in America pretty much copied California and enacted post peace officer standing.
So you now have an Oregon post and you got a Nevada post.
And like, and in my experience, I used to sometimes have to call other agencies in other states.
And I learned like, I would call a place in Georgia and I said, hey, I need the address for this place.
And it's in the deep south.
And it's a black lady answering the phone.
There's a baby crying in the background because the dispatch is in her house.
And get to get the house, there's no street numbers.
You have to like drive past a stump and go over the cattle guard.
And it's the third mailbox on your left with a blue or something.
So there's a lot of this really rural, unsophisticated part of America out there that they still hire cops, not really with a whole lot of standards.
And sadly, when I call Colorado, for instance, I don't like them at all.
I called an agency in Colorado and I said, hey, I've got this child molest case.
I'm aware that you guys interviewed my bad guy to be a foster home man.
And out here in California, I've got a girl that was molested by the same guy.
You guys interviewed him.
And it was, they did, their job they did was worse than nothing.
Okay.
They let this molester run child molester run a foster care home, and they didn't cash it.
They gave the guy a lie detector test, which gets back to what I was going to say about to become a cop, personal history statement.
They're going to also run a lie detector test on you.
And there's two kinds of those.
One is called the polygraph, which you've seen on TV and maybe in TV ads.
And then, you know, Ben, what's his name?
Ben, Ben Stiller's movie with the Meet the Fuckers.
Yeah.
And, you know, and these are real deals, though.
This is a device that measures your heartbeat, your breath intake, and your galvanic skin reaction.
And if they look for like what it's really measuring is measuring anxiety, is what it's measuring.
And then the other type of lie detector test is called a VSA voice stress analyzer, also called a C V S A for computer voice stress analyzer.
And these are quite a bit newer than the old standby.
And the C V S A that voice stress analyzer people believe that these things are infallible.
They're not, they're never to be beaten.
Well, the guy I just mentioned, who was a molester, he was interviewed by the local police agency and they said they hooked him up to their computer voice stress analyzer and they said, did you molest these girls?
And he said, no, I did not.
And according to them, he passed.
Yes.
To finalize that story, I dug into this individual who lived in Colorado and he would come out to California.
And I came up with about seven victims.
And ultimately, the FBI got involved because I asked them to, because the locals were no good.
And the FBI got a hold of that guy's laptop.
And even though the laptop had been wiped over 100 times, the FBI was able to restore the imagery.
And they found video of him doing his crimes to these children.
Credit were due.
Yeah.
Dump the FBI there at the top.
But yeah, they do actually arrest bad guys sometimes still, despite a little bit too much.
I'm sorry.
I'm just trying to tell you, you know, my experience, it's good, still a good career.
I never saw a whole lot of affirmative action stuff happening in my midst.
I did, I'm aware of one agency near me.
I kind of worked by Fresno.
There was a chance to become an assistant chief.
And a bunch of guys wanted that job.
And I remember speaking to some of the people that wanted that job.
And they did the bit where the white guys all scored 90% on the assistant chief police exam.
And the guy who they gave it to was some black guy who scored 50%.
Flash forward a couple years.
Roll, if you could look this up, assistant chief of Fresno Police Department.
What was his name?
Black guy gets promoted to be assistant chief.
Next thing you know, circa 2015, he's caught dealing drugs as the assistant chief and got sent away for, of course, he gets like ultimately ends up doing like two years in prison, which should have been a five-year hitch.
So I've forgotten that guy's name.
But that's on the internet, right?
Keith Foster.
That was it.
Thank you.
I couldn't remember his name, but Keith Foster was what I just said.
And he should have been given the job to start with.
Was, but there was more deserving Irish American guys who wanted that job, and he they were turned down in favor of diversity.
Well, just the other day, the uh New York Police Department chief resigned.
The FBI has been poking around everywhere in the New York City mayor's office.
He's got resignations left and right.
Uh, corruption, and yes, black neck, black lawyer resigned.
She's like, I can't deal with this anymore.
This is bad for my reputation.
Remember that one guy?
He was like, He was like the Republicans' hero, Sheriff David Clark.
And then it just turned out he didn't have as big a controversy, but he was just lying about the crime stats to make Milwaukee look much safer than it was.
But he was just like literally just not reporting crime.
And it was a terrible place.
I wanted to thank you for bringing that up, Rolo, because that gets into a larger problem.
Um, some science fiction movie, I don't remember what it was, mentioned comp stat.
That was a term like, oh, well, the comp stat says.
So I think I heard about it in a fixed science fiction movie.
Next thing you know, there's a bigger city near where I was working, city cops.
And because I was a county Mountie, I was, you know, cowboy hat wearing Copenhagen chewing cowboy boot wearing mountain dwelling rural officer, right?
Well, they got the city slicker guys who these cops make more money in terms of hourly wage than me do than I do.
They're a little, they consider they look down or snout at me because I'm a you know uh you know country pumpkin.
Um and they were doing that.
They they had said to the supervisors in that town, okay, if you're a sergeant of a shift and you got like you know a bunch of officers under you on your shift, we need to see the crime go down and then we'll pay you a bonus.
And if we don't see your crime go down, we'll do bad stuff to you.
So your next thing you know, you've got things like thefts are being reclassified as quote unquote civil.
And like if you, for instance, in the good old days, you could drive into a gas station, fill up your tank, walk inside, and hand your money to the clerk.
Okay.
We're so used to the thievery now that our side where I you can't ever do that.
You got to put your credit card in, gash your vehicle and leave, or you can prepay with put the 40 bucks in the counter, walk out, gas your car, and go back in and get the change, right?
Total mystery how we went from high trust to low trust society.
Yep.
Exactly.
And so like if you didn't pay for your gas, if you just gas your car up and took off, they didn't call that a thief.
The reason they called that a breach of contract.
Just like O.J. Simpson was charged with murder, but famously was charged for quote unquote wrongful death.
And because pretty much everything you can think of as a crime or bad thing has a civil equivalent.
Now, you know, that under criminal law, you have to have a massive preponderance of evidence to secure a conviction.
So beyond a reasonable doubt and to a moral certainty, this guy did this crime is this is a high degree that you have to meet in the court of law.
Well, for civil, it's just like it's more likely than not that he did it.
So it's a much, far lower standard to meet a civil threshold of responsibility.
And so, you know, it's a good thing and a bad thing, but most of the time it's a bad thing.
But what you have here is you got cops that are fudging numbers out of laziness.
Number one is number one causes laziness.
Number two is their sergeants reclassifying stuff so that on paper, it looks like the crime's going down in order to get their stupid bonuses.
And then the chief turns around and tells the city, hey, look, crime went down 20% in my town.
I need to raise two.
And it's all a bunch of fudge numbers.
Like our government lies so much, you know, like with the inflation rate, they won't consider the cost of gas or housing when they lie about how many jobs there are in America or what the inflation rate really is.
They give 80% of the new jobs that Biden created were given away to foreigners who shouldn't even be in our country to start with most of the time.
And they lie.
And so, you know, they're doing it too.
And I feel it's there's a conflict at hand, is that we expect our officers to be honest.
But when the rubber meets the road, sometimes you'll see this questionable truthfulness.
And I used to have a joke, and it's a rude joke, Coach.
I might get dirty on you for now.
It's an old joke goes like, what are the three greatest lies?
And there's versions of this joke that are that are sexual and versus this joke that are racist.
But it goes like this: the three greatest lies are: black is beautiful, the check is in the mail, and I won't have to bleep that one, please, Mr. Producer.
Yeah, but but but but my but what I would like to say is I can take that same joke and retell it.
I used to tell us to my to my friends, I'd say, um, what is the Madeira County Sheriff's Office three greatest lies?
Go.
And it was verbal disturbance only.
So when they, when they go to a call, they radio it in.
Either they got to do a log incident or a full-on police report, pretty much.
And so if you don't, if you're lazy, you don't want to report.
So you call it in, tell the dispatcher, put on the log as a verbal disturbance only.
So verbal disturbance only.
Just an argument.
Yeah.
Yeah.
You know, guy's bleeding or whatever.
The other one is reporting party requests no further action.
Well, did the reporting party, the complainant who was complaining about her mailbox being busted or whatever, really say she didn't want any action taken?
Is that really what happened?
Or the other greatest lie was, we'll expatrol your house.
Because kind of the joke was here, we got, you know, 120,000 rural citizens out there living in the hills.
And you got maybe one guy, maybe four to cover that number.
And you got some poor, scared citizen in her house who calls in and says, oh, my stepson's mad.
And he threatened, you know, whatever to come steal his dad's old pickup truck and it's mine.
And I really want some ex-patrol around my house because I feel he's out there stalking me.
And these deputies or dispatchers would say, Sure, Mrs. Jones, we'll mark you down for ex-patrol.
So back to the joke.
What is it?
It's black and beautiful.
Check is in the mail.
And I'll buy a beer tomorrow.
Or the other joke was, our reporting party requests no further action, verbal disturbance only, and we'll expatrol your house.
Those are all, I feel like they're morally compromised things to say, and you can make a joke out of them, but they're not true.
We're not going to expatrol your house.
We're not the Pinkerton guards, you know, and that's reality, you know.
Very important for the audience.
I'm sure you've done hordes of traffic stops, interactions with actual criminals, victims of crime.
Educate the audience on uh, let's say, traffic stop or best practices, to get the results that you want from law enforcement, whether you might be the bad guy or you were the victim, uh.
But let's start.
Start with uh, the traffic side of things.
Well well, before the traffic stop ever happens, think about where you keep your car registration.
Don't keep it in the glove box.
I recommend getting one of those visor wallets and keeping it up on top of the sun visor, because that eliminates the whole jumpiness factor of oh, just a minute officer, let me reach in the glove box and get this out of here.
You can't see what the hell's in there, so why keep it in there when there's a better option?
So keep your registration insurance up on the visor on the passenger side uh, and that way it's out of your.
You're never going to reach over there and, and I can't think, and now your wife's not going to have a makeup mirror to look at, but so what you know, what i've done before will is uh, if i've gotten pulled over and I have kept my uh registration and insurance in the glove box, i've had to unbuckle my seatbelt to go reach for it, and then i've got in my hand, i'm already.
I'm like oh, I got, I gotta like frantically buckle it again.
And then i'm like oh, is he gonna think that i'm like fraudulently representing myself as not wearing my seatbelt?
But i've never had an issue with the seatbelt or yeah, I always go for the glove box before he gets to my window.
So yeah, I don't have to have that suspenseful moment of.
I recommend, I recommend um, don't just pull over as soon as possible.
You want to go to a safe spot, which is a wide spot in the road where you and the cop are going to be able to talk better and you're not going to get hit.
You don't want to get hit by passing car, um.
So you, I would say, put on your hazard flashards so he knows you.
Just put on your house, your four-way flasher so he knows that you know that you saw him number one.
And you begin slowing down, looking for that super wide safe spot to pull over.
And it might take a mile sometimes to get out of the middle lane over onto the shoulder or into the center meeting or onto a side street or onto the off ramp to get to a safe spot.
But put your flashers on so that way he knows you're not running from him.
Now, once you stopped, obviously put it in park or or whatever you have, or set the parking brake and put it neutral for you stick shifters and probably turn off the engine after you've rolled down the windows.
You just rolled out the windows.
You come to complete stop and you're going to reach up and you're going to turn on the dome lights, if you got them, and you might even reach over before you stop and grab your wallet out and put it up on the dashboard with your driver's license in it.
So now all the fidgeting to get your wallet out has already been done.
It's up on the dashboard with your wallet.
The dome lights on the windows are down, the engine's off.
I might even take off my seatbelt, but that's just me.
I always wear my seatbelt, but when I come to a stop, out of habit, I take my seatbelt off.
When I reach about five miles an hour, then I pop, pop it off because I was a cop thing.
Um, you never have your seatbelt on on.
You come to complete stop.
You already got the seatbelt off so you can jump out of your car a whole bunch of reasons for why you want your seatbelt off before you come to a dead stop.
So five miles an hour, I pop the seatbelt off.
Um, it might, that's my deal.
Maybe you all leave it on, but I, if he comes up me and says, hey man, you don't have your seatbelt on you like no, I took it off right, like I just said okay yep yeah, I don't think you're going to catch hell for that.
Um is your car in good shape, you know?
Are you speeding?
What's going to happen?
And I, I got myself pulled over um For tailgating.
And I told him, hey, I was just trying to see whether my automatic brake system on my car would come on by getting close to this big rig.
Yeah.
I was just experimenting to see if I might.
It's a super smart car.
It's supposed to come on, and it didn't.
And I just want to see if it worked and it didn't work.
So you caught me.
I said, you caught me.
You got a gold card in your wallet that you pull out of the camera.
I did.
I did.
I did show him a retired card and he let me go.
But you know, the other thing, another thing you may want to look into, I'm a little unconventional if you didn't know that.
I like left foot braking when it's called for.
And that is a skill.
Now, nobody drives automatic transmission or manual transmissions anymore.
So in the olden days, you didn't use your left foot because you need reserve for use of the clutch.
Right.
And now, driving instructors, most of them will say, don't use your left foot because you'll drag the brakes, heat up the brakes, and wear out the car.
Bullshit.
If you do it correctly, left foot braking is much faster than switching your foot off the accelerator pedal onto the brake with your right foot only.
And but it takes a long time to develop good skill at that.
And one of the things people do is they'll, when they do left foot braking incorrectly, is they'll panic and they'll do both accelerator and the left foot at the same time on the brake.
So trumping, trumping down on both the brake and accelerator.
So I, by tailgating that one time, I was on the left foot brake because I know I can stop my car super fast with left foot brake because I'm highly skilled at it.
Nobody else out there does this.
I'm the only guy I know.
We used to take us to what are called emergency vehicle operations courses where they have us race old patrol cars around a racetrack.
And the instructor guy noticed I was doing that and I was like, but I was able to get the back end of the Crown Victoria to swing out and fishtail earlier because you can actually, it's whatever.
You can do certain tricks with left foot braking that you cannot do.
Maybe it's maybe I just left for advanced class, but I think by tailgating with left foot at the ready, I would say that's enough about that.
Yeah, their traffic stop stuff, you know, and then I would say, okay, so for most people, it's going to be a stop sign or speeding.
Maybe they're got, like, this happened to me.
I didn't get my renewal in the mail.
The mail, for some reason, the letter eight in the address got changed to a three.
And like three months goes by, and they never sent it to 139 Main Street because I don't live at 139 Main Street.
I live 189 Main Street because the three and eight look a little bit alike, right?
So I never got my renewal for my vehicle.
And my vehicle's two, three months out of date by the time I realized this is going on.
And had I been pulled over, I would have said, well, looky here, I didn't get my renewal.
And I'm too much of a dummy to have looked at the tag to see that it's expired.
So that one's a good one to get to look out for.
Another one is, at least at my state, not having an insurance ticket is horrible.
The highest find I played bailiff wasn't as I said before.
I got to do so many different little sub-jobs being a deputy sheriff as a drug agent.
I was a bailiff.
I was a detective.
I was an airplane guy.
You know, I was in.
Did I like Dinky Cooper?
Yeah, well, no, I used to dangle.
I used to fly in fixed-wheeling aircraft and spy on drug traffickers.
I used to deal with the Israeli government for some of their airplane stuff, and they make some of the best stuff in the world.
Anyway, I just really love the career.
I was going to say also that considering your careers, and I don't really know too well what all you do, but when you watch what TV dramas, what movies are out there, they make TV dramas about nurses and doctors and firefighters and cops.
And I don't know, you know, I'm thinking back to TV shows like Three's Company or Happy Days or, you know, whatever the hell is Friends.
And those are comedies that never, nobody seems to have a job.
But when it comes to job-based TV shows, cops are probably the number one.
And, you know, what does that say about our society?
It's, it's like, this is a big deal.
This is a big industry.
These are the heroes.
Maybe these are the villains of our society.
But, you know, I can't think of many cop any TV shows made about accountants.
I can't think about too many TV shows made about carpenters.
You know, I can think of only one truck driving show that was ever, no, two truck driving shows.
Trucks are vitally important to our America, but yet there's only been BJ and the Bear and Moving On where TV shows that ever came on about that.
Well, how about a vital job?
How about Deweys?
There's a comment on that.
So, like he said earlier, if you're an active PF member, it probably shouldn't be something you should do.
Yeah, but I think now probably is the best time to be a cop for a white man because the standards are probably much lower.
And so, so you can probably get in because once upon a time, I knew a guy that he wanted to be a sheriff.
And then they said, Yeah, this is where they want to stick me.
And it was a place that was notorious for high crime because the place he wanted to be, it was full.
And after all the George Groyd stuff, there was a bunch of cops that retired early.
So I know a few people near me that work for the police department.
They're not cops.
They just work for the department.
And one of them let slip that there was this Mexican guy that worked there.
And I was like, there is zero percent chance that guy does not work the cartel.
Zero.
He's a Mexican guy with the thickest accent.
He's covered in tattoos.
He looks like a scoundrel.
He acts like one.
That guy is not.
That guy would, when he wouldn't be hired 30 years ago.
So now, like, you can get in there and you can get an eye on the inside.
I'm pretty sure you don't need a four-year degree to do it.
You have benefits and you can, one, make a difference in your community, which is very important.
And you can be that man like a white guy pulled you over.
Hey, you know, you think about what you've done.
Black guy, you're well, I don't know.
It depends on, it depends on how shirtless he is at 10 a.m.
But like, yeah, you can write tickets to your enemies and, you know, I'm of two minds on this.
First off, quick correction: the New York Police Department commissioner who resigned, Edward Caban.
He is Puerto Rican, not black.
So what's the difference?
Talk of Negro.
What is it?
But I feel like I can't.
It's sort of like I would like white men still to be cops, not because I want them to get killed or that I want them to, you know, get passed over for hiring or whatever, or promotions, but I don't, I couldn't, in good conscience, like if a 22-year-old who's fully red-pilled on the Jews and race and the decline of Western civilization, could I in good maybe, maybe Will can and would and has and Rolo too, but I don't think that I could recommend that.
A, because of the possibility that you're going to get killed in the line of duty by some savage and you'll just be dead.
Two, the high likelihood that if you're red-pilled on race, at some point you will slip up and get in trouble and either do something.
Or even if you're, I mean, even blue-pilled normies, white Asian cops get hemmed up for being too rough with blacks or having to use lethal force and stuff like that.
It seems like a pretty big ass roll of the dice to me, given all the risk involved across the board when there's other professions where you can, you know, have job security, not have possible death on a daily basis confronting you.
But at the same time, yes, I still am glad that we have white cops in America and it's not all black and women and Latinos, etc.
So it's kind of a catch-22, as far as I'm concerned.
Why should a white man go on jury duty but not be a cop?
Well, yeah, that happens.
Uh, Rolo, very well said, and coach too.
I like both your viewpoints.
Um, you know, I agree mostly with everything you said.
Um, I think, though, do you want your local high patrol or sheriff's officer town police to be run by with no white people in it?
Certainly not.
Absolutely not because we're the that's who they're hiring.
Well, but you know, and the thing is, I knew race realist Hispanic cops, I even knew a Korean guy that was like that too.
Um, and uh, you know, oddly enough, I didn't have that much interaction with tribal police, uh, but you know, they're kind of uncommon.
But um, you want some white people out there to be the enforcement to keep.
I will say that we're positive, we're positive influencing everyone around us, and that's why they choose to move next to us, isn't it?
So, you don't want to see our boys abandoning the field of law enforcement.
We want to see them.
And Roll, you said it well, you know, if these days, if you show up to a job, I don't care if it's cop job or what job it is.
If you show up, you have a license to drive and a clean drug test, you're ahead of 80% of the people already hired.
And if you have a clean haircut and a weird button-up shirt, and your shoes are clean, and your car has tire tread on the treads instead of being bald and not a not a not a fart cab muffler, but it's a decent car.
You show up at the job interview looking decent, then not true for tech.
We know that's absolutely not true for tech jobs and a lot of white-collar jobs, but well, a lot of and it, but it's true for the police department because they lowered their standards and so many white people walked off that crime went through the roof in a lot of those areas.
So now they're they're gonna get back to the point where we need to hire white people because what's the LAPD?
Well, the LAPD just had a huge scandal where they were hiring a bunch of Mexicans, and it turned out they weren't just they weren't cartel, but they were like East LA Mexican gangs and they were extremely corrupt.
And then they were helping these Mexicans take out all these rival black gangs.
So they're like, okay, we can't hire them, we can't do DEI hiring like this anymore.
I mean, the other thing is gonna, what's gonna work?
Here's what our guys need to do.
And I don't care.
It doesn't have to be just for law enforcement, any job.
Learn to write a complete sentence.
You want to have every essay is going to have a beginning, a middle, and an end, and maybe a preamble.
Your paragraphs and your sentences sort of need to follow the same order.
We're like, well, I'm going to tell you about what Mr. Bad Guy did today.
And I want to recommend Mr. Bad Guy get some charges.
So that's my introduction of my police report.
On Monday, Mrs. Jones said, Mr. Bad Guy gave her a dirty stare.
Then she found a dead cat on her doorstep at around 10 in the morning.
She turned out to be her own cat.
Yadi yaddi.
So now I'm laying on, right?
Haitian strike again.
And then I interviewed Mr. Bad Guy.
He admitted he hate Mrs. Jones and he killed her cat and laid on the doorstep.
And conclusion, Mr. Bad Guy needs to be charged for animal cruelty for killing Mrs. Jones's cat.
The end.
You know, every story is going to have a beginning, a middle, and end.
And the police reports do too.
And you know what?
Was this guy Haitian?
This is completely hypothetical.
All right.
Okay.
Mr. Umfufu said he was hungry and ate Mrs. Jones's cat and put the, you know, put this, put the empty skewer on her port doorstep.
But, but, you know, point is, there are so few people that can write a sentence or an essay or a paragraph completely.
And that's a skill that, frankly, everyone needs to hone.
And, you know, if you, I don't care, it doesn't have to be law enforcement.
You can be an accountant or a carpenter.
I don't care to be able to make a report that is one page or two pages in length that makes sense and doesn't have misspellings.
I've, and I'm criticizing my own fellow cops because I knew a lot of them that are basically semi-illiterate because you'd see things like the word break.
Well, there's break like break a window and there's break like break a car, right?
There's different spellings.
And I see these sort of hominin errors all the time because everyone's, you know, I don't know what to spell.
Are these handwritten things or computer typed things?
Well, I've seen it progress from handwritten to both.
And the good old, it was all written in pen and the whole thing.
And then it went to computerized.
And then they do, they did the thing where they got away from written reports and just do these so-called log entries, which are unsolvable times.
And like I referenced earlier, you call it in the radio.
Oh, Mrs. Jones requests no further action.
That's not what she said.
She said she had broke open her mailbox with a baseball bat and she wants something done about it, you know.
But I know that realistically, I'm not going to catch the guys that did it.
So I'm not going to waste my time in filing a report about it unless I look into catching them.
And I was really good at catching guys that did wrong.
You know, and I, you know, I wanted, oh, it's funny.
I have a lot of respect for bikers.
Bikers are outlaws.
Cops traditionally don't like bikers.
Bikers don't like cops.
And I had a guy that was molesting teenage girls.
And somehow or other, there was multiple bikers on this.
We got the bad guy collared.
We got him to confess to molesting this teenage girl.
And I had the wherewithal to take out my cell phone and capture a short session of his confession.
And he was like, I, Joey Cube molester, molested the fortune old girl.
I'm sorry.
Basically, it was a short clip of my phone.
And we went to the biker house.
So the girl was this daughter of bikers.
And bikers hate cops.
They can't trust the cops.
So they're worse than black people as far as how they trust or distrust cops, I should say.
So I go to the house where the mom is and my partner.
And I says, Mrs. Jones, your daughter's here.
We now need to talk to her.
Oh, what for?
Oh, something very bad happened.
Well, you're not talking to my daughter about me.
Like, well, okay, we interviewed this guy today and he said he molested your daughter.
No way.
You cops made that up.
He's our good friend.
He would never molested my daughter.
We're bikers.
And if he molested my daughter, we're going to skin him alive and roast him.
And no, you can't talk to my daughter.
And you cops are making it up.
And I'm like, well, the main video cassette taped things back at the office.
And so I whipped out my cell phone.
I'm like, ma'am, I want to show you this.
I want you to know I'm not here.
I didn't roll out of bed today hoping I'd come to your house and get involved with your daughter's child molest case.
I'm not here for the fun of it, but really, believe me, here, watch this video.
And she was watching the video where the scumbag was like, yeah, I molested this girl.
She's the daughter of bikers.
And it was just really tremendous to see her finally come around.
If I hadn't had that video in my pocket, she was never going to let me in the house to take a picture of the scene or talk to the victim.
And then another, I think it was the same kind of guy, and the same guy was off molesting some other girl.
And once again, it was bikers.
And the girl says, there's this other girl you molested.
He's over, she's over in this other town.
And I went there.
The girls answered the door and they like go back inside their mobile home and they won't let me talk to them.
The next thing you know, I have you remember how the Indians and with circles of wagons and go, whoa, with the lances and the bows and arrows and the torches.
I got 30 bikers doing that around me.
And they're running them.
Harley Davidson's in a circle.
30 Harleys circling in the dirt around my patrol car.
And all because the did it stir any ancestral memories in your soul?
Well, yeah, exactly.
So I finally, I stopped the road captain of the biker gang and I said, excuse me, can I talk to you for a minute?
It's quiet.
Your Harleys are loud.
I'll just talk to you alone in my car.
I'm like, here's the deal.
This guy, this is a picture, molested that girl in that mobile home.
He molested another girl in the other town.
And I'm here to get her story.
And the biker guy's like, hey, bro, I'm with you, man.
We'll go get him for you.
We're going to skin his ass alive.
And off they went.
And I don't think I got to talk to the biker girls on that one.
But point is, later that day, I caught up with the bad guy and I arrested him mainly to save his life.
I was thinking these local Vagos or whatever kind of biker they were, there was a real risk they're going to come whack him.
And putting him in jail was the nicest thing I could have done.
So that's what I did.
On the practical side, Will, I have heard that, of course, we have a zero tolerance on drinking and driving.
No joke, nobody should do it.
But I've heard that, you know, let's say you had none and a cop, you know, you were bobbing and weaving on the road or whatever.
You were distracted.
I've heard that you should never consent to a breathalyzer test on the road.
One, because the machines are often faulty.
And two, on the off chance that you happen to be on the way home from a happy hour, the delay between the pullover and getting to the station can help your numbers.
A little bit about DUIs, not to help facilitate drunk driving, but in case someone in the audience is in that situation.
Yeah, I know a lot of defense attorneys and I've asked them this question too, because I've wondered what would I do if I were on the other end of the sticks, as it were, if I'm being pulled over.
And I've had a couple beers.
I know what the chart says.
The chart says for my body weight, I can have like three or four beers and be on the margin at 0.08.
And, you know, your body supposedly burns off one drink an hour and you forget how many you had, and then you're over the limit.
And then what now?
So the standard for a DOI thing is to get a guy out of the car and do what are called field sobriety tests.
So that's field sobriety tests are going to be walking on a straight line, usually a line somewhere, toe to heel, and you're going to see a guy's fall over.
Another one I used to have them do is pick one leg straight, kick their leg out so it's one straight, straight at the knee, pick one leg up off the ground, kick it out like you're kicking a soccer ball, and hold it there a foot off the ground and count to 10.
And you got your business where you touch your nose.
But the secret, the secret one, you should have fun with this at a party.
The secret one's called a horizontal gaze nystagmus test.
And that is where you take a pencil or some other kind of an object that's small, you know, an eraser on a pencil is a good one.
And you hold the pencil out away from the guy's nose, maybe a foot or two.
Say, watch this pencil go left and right.
And you move the pencil left and right.
And once their eyeballs get to a 45-degree angle, the eyeballs will begin to bounce.
It's called nystagmus.
So your eyes normally move.
Your eyes will shift left to right rather smoothly when you're sober.
But once you've got a few in you, once you get to 45 degrees, I used to know this stuff good.
But your eyeballs will do an involuntary twitch.
Bing, bang, bang, bang, bang.
They go bing, bing, bang, bang, bing.
And then you look to the right, it goes bang, bang, bang, bang, bing.
You know, like that, the sooner that vibration, the eyeball sets off, the drunker they are.
And the other one that I, my secret favorite one, it's not really on the books, is it in their voice?
If you talk to a person and you can tell from it being in their voice, because I know me, I'll start talking like an Englishman when I've had way too many.
My great-grandmother came from Suffolk, England.
But anyway, I'll start talking like an English person.
And just because I'm talking like that, I'm just face.
But I'm sorry for cursing.
But if it's in a normal citizen's voice, or you know how I normally talk, and he flurs it up just a little bit, that little slur is the key for me that they're probably a 0.012 or whatever.
And then there's an electronic gadget.
The electronic gadget is those evolved over time.
They're called a preliminary alcohol screening device.
It's a little box and it's got a mouthpiece.
You put the new mouthpiece in it and you show the guy how to do it and he'll fake blowing because a lot of these old drunks are like pickled all the time anyway.
So they'll, since they're always drunk, they actually do rather good on those sorts of tests.
The old drunks do.
But you put that device up to him and he's a 0.22.
And you're like, holy cow, I thought he was a 0.1 because he's an old drunk, so he can hold his liquor good.
I saw a guy one day, I was trying to go home from my shift and I worked a long day and I'm leaving the office and there over across the street from my office driveway was this what I thought was a dead guy.
And I just want to go home.
Maybe I'll pretend I didn't see that.
I thought, well, no, that's, I'll go check on him.
And the guy was so schnokered.
I, I, I, you cannot take a guy to jail that can't walk or talk when he's drunk.
So I scooped him up and I hauled him to the hospital because I have to have him get sobered up before I can book him for being drunk.
And it's called a crime of drunken public.
And the lady doctor, I said, what's his BAC, the blood alcohol?
She goes, it's a 529.
I'm like, 529.
He should be dead.
He should be dead.
No, or it's a five.
I got this backwards.
I said, it's 527.
He should be dead.
She goes, no, he's 529.
He was here last month and he was a 529.
So he actually been there at a higher degree and he's walking dead because he's such a good alcoholic.
And then that one, I actually went a little out of my way.
I normally wouldn't do this, but I know they're going to do this.
They're going to keep him in the jail, kick him out on a toilet paper ticket, or maybe drop the charges altogether.
I said, no way.
Uh-uh.
We're going to get this guy some help by get him getting in, get him booked into this, what I call an electronic plantation.
Because all the criminal justice system is, if you ever call your courthouse and need some help, the first thing that they're bring, push one to pay your bill, press two to figure out how to pay your bill sooner.
Press three if you need how to pay your court fines with a credit card.
They don't care a damn thing about answering the phone and helping you figure something out.
They just want to collect money.
And that way, the justice system's become what I call an electric plantation where people that are on probation are on kind of a slave plantation of the old South, but they're paying their money every month to probation or to the court.
And I'm going to get this guy on the plantation because he's a hazardous society, being a 529 laying around outside a public building.
And I went a little further.
I called his daughter.
Somehow I figured out what his daughter's, I maybe stole the information from the hospital.
You know, everything's HIPAA.
You can't get anything out of the doctor's offices.
So I might have could have done something like snake the phone number out of the hospital records and called the daughter.
And I said, hey, you know, what's the deal?
Why is your dad a 529?
And she gave me the spiel about what a bad drunk he was.
And so I put it down my report.
It's like, you know, I talked to his daughter, and this guy's always doing this.
He's going to get killed.
So you, Mr. Prosecutor, need to not kiss someone off.
You need to do your job and put this guy under probation.
That way, when he does it again, he'll get a jail sentence and we'll dry him out for 30 days.
So that's, you know, it's one story about drunks.
But back to the traffic stops.
If you're a citizen getting pulled over, you can expect a blood alcohol essentially to be presented to your mouth and it's your choice to blow in it or not.
And then if you say, I refuse the test, what they're going to do in the good old days, we used to just haul him off the hospital and say, you're going to get a blood draw.
It's not your choice.
We're going to take it under what's called exigent circumstance, which means emergency.
Well, they changed the law.
The law has changed a lot.
So they now say you can no longer do a blood draw under exigent circumstance.
You must get a search warrant.
So we have to, we have like this pre-made search warrant.
You fill out his name, what the objective symptoms of intoxication were that he was driving the car.
And then you say, I therefore apply for warrant.
Then you call a judge at his house on his day off or at in the middle of the night.
Hey, Judge, you got drunk.
I need a search warrant.
Get us.
And the judge will usually say, I authorize a warrant to suck his blood to get the blood alcohol.
And then they're going to get the blood alcohol out of the blood.
They can also get it out of the urine.
So, you know, it's the hard way or the easy way.
And like you said, if you wait long enough for the search warrant to be approved and you dick around, get in the hospital, and there's a, you know, crash victims and stuff at the hospital.
The nurses are busy working on guys with broken arms.
A couple hours go by and you could foreseeably see your blood alcohol decline where you're going to get a better sentence.
The other way is just to take the hit and just blow in the machine.
I hope you're going to, you can have it work the other way where you just had a drink.
And if you don't blow in this device soon, the next drink's going to onboard your bloodstream and you're going to get a higher result.
So blow now, not later.
Funny.
We're in kind of a pickle here because thank you very much, Will.
I wanted to say there that it certainly seems by all accounts that you were unquestionably one of the good ones.
You were upright, you cared about the people in your community, and you made a difference and you made it through alive and without getting hemmed up on BS racism or unlawful force, et cetera.
So I commend you.
Full house salute to you.
This is definitely the longest we have ever gone without a break.
But at this point, it's already after midnight here on a Sunday in the Mountain Mama.
I've got some stuff that I want to read from the audience, but I did want to give you one more chance in case there was anything that you think essentials that we missed.
I mean, I've got other questions about whether Rodney King changed things because you were serving at the time and fatherhood stuff, but we are getting a little long in the tooth here.
And Sam looks like he just put on his, you know, special pants so that he could take a leak in the chat.
No, I wasn't going to make it.
The Penn's joke there.
So what do you think, guys?
Should we just, I mean, I don't know if it makes sense to take a break now and come back and do a third hour, but I do have some stuff from the audience too.
Okay, Rolo cannot, so we will not do that.
So, Will, final last call for any succinct things we may have missed or a summary if you'd like it.
You certainly earned it.
I think law enforcement is a good profession that we should be part of.
I think, furthermore, knowing the law, knowing the Constitution, knowing the search warrant requirements, the interrogation requirements, we didn't really touch on those, but if you're ever in a situation where the cop reads you the so-called Miranda warnings, that's usually a very bad sign.
If you're not being read the Miranda warning, people think just because they've been arrested, they have to be read the Miranda rights.
That's not true.
Interrogation law is something I used to know a lot about.
It basically works like this.
If the cops have you come down to the station and they say to you, you know, you're free to leave at any time.
Here's the door.
Would you like a cup of coffee?
And they let you wander over and get a cup of coffee or show you where the exit door is.
That's another kind of a Miranda law called a behealer admonition.
Okay.
So by saying, here's the door and you can leave at any time and you come down voluntarily to the office, that's taking away the custody equate.
So for Miranda to apply, you have to have two things.
You have to have a custody and you have to have interrogation.
Well, interrogations in this case, what that really means is a line of questioning designed to get that person in trouble.
And so if you hear them say, hey, you're free to leave at any time and you came down here on will, the offer, right?
That's think of that as a yellow flag.
I don't know if it's a red flag, but if they say to you, you're under, you have right to remain silent.
You say we can't even against you.
This is your chance to say, I want a lawyer.
Your magic words, I want a lawyer.
Because once you ring, you can say, I choose to remain silent, but if you, and they, you can revoke the right to remain silent, but the right to invoke a lawyer, that's a bell that can't be unrung.
That should stop all questioning.
So just, and you know, you don't always want to play that card.
I mean, I want to tell you a funny story from my college days.
I had a really good friend of mine.
He's come from a wealthy family, and we're walking out to my little crappy Ford Escort in college.
And there was this group of black people who were coming out of the Safeway grocery store.
And with no warning at all, my good upstanding friend, he yells at them, naggers.
Only he didn't say naggers.
Okay.
And these people got offended and they're running at us.
And me and him are running to the to the crappy Ford escort.
And I'm trying to unlock the door and get the engine started, just like in the horror movie where the car doesn't start.
The car is going, it won't start.
And I got to get the hell going before this gang of black people thumps us up.
And what did I do wrong?
You know, nothing.
Fortunately, we got away.
But had it turned out differently.
I could have been behind bars charged with a hate crime.
Or maybe I defended myself against this onslaught of people who were mad.
I had nothing to do with them being mad.
My knucklehead friend.
I could have been questioned.
I could have been the wrong side of the stick as to say it.
And I could have been questioned under Miranda.
Hey, you're arrested.
You're with a car.
There was a racial thing that happened at Safeway.
Your friend's here too.
He's told us all about it.
And they're going to play you off the other guy.
You know, you just say, I want a lawyer.
On the other hand, the other way to play it is to say, I had nothing to do with this.
I was just an innocent party and I had to defend myself.
So it's a choice you're going to have to maybe make.
Yeah.
If I had one last one, it would be those situations where, you know, say you have a suspected home invasion or somebody's on your property menacing you and you shoot them in rightful self-defense in your mind, but you have that nagging suspicion.
Am I going to get hemmed up here?
You know, maybe if you're not aware of castle law doctrine in your state or whatever, what I'm getting at is the situation where you are inclined to talk to the police so that you don't get arrested, right?
I suspect that the majority of our people are honest, law-abiding, and their inclination is to give their side of the story before they're arrested to prevent being arrested and because they're confident of the situation.
But I suspect in this America, it's like, well, should I just keep my mouth shut and risk that they're going to arrest me for something?
Or do I try to not talk my way out of it, but give the honest truth here the same thing I would have to say, you know, in front of a jury?
Those hazy areas, clamming up versus trying to talk your way out of an arrest, essentially.
I think you're right.
And most of the lawyers, what's in it for them is they want more business, but they really do mean it when they say, don't say nothing, just talk to the lawyer.
And so remember that Beheeler admonition, it's B-E-H-L-E-R.
It's not commonly known by the public, but that's that's a something to know about.
And then, of course, the Miranda warnings are always on TV.
Some of these rules don't apply to juveniles.
Juveniles have, you always have Miranda as a juvenile, okay?
But that's not going to affect most of us.
But it could affect your kids if they get into teenager trouble.
About growing teenagers, the biggest mistake I think I made growing up with raising my kids was we got those little handheld Nintendo DS machines.
And as soon as we got those little video games in their hands for Christmas, because they wanted them, they stopped reading.
And those little video games were a gateway dog to the big old video console that he wanted.
And then next thing you know, he's done.
He doesn't go outside.
He doesn't meet up in real life with his friends.
His friends are in that video game box on the PlayStation 4.
So if I would say fatherland advice, just pro law or forestall video games as long as possible.
And just not until you're YouTube.
Until you have a job, you can't have a video game be my rule as a dad.
If I could do it all that.
Very good.
All right, Sam Rolo, anything?
And then I got a couple things to read and we'll get the heck out of here.
This has been a total marathon.
I'm grateful for it.
It's been a blast.
But we got to roll.
Will just tell us, please, that you didn't kneel down for any George Floyd.
He's probably out by then, I hope.
I never did.
Hell no.
I was on a picture by George Floyd.
Okay.
During the Michael Brown thing, I was still active.
Everybody saw it as I did, which is, it was a drug.
That was a justifiable shoot.
George Floyd, for that matter, was a fentanyl though, Death.
I mean, we've had guys die in custody, too.
Nobody had a chimp out.
Okay.
Right.
These dopers die from that.
You know?
Yeah.
All right.
New white life.
Hello, Full House crew.
I'm writing to let you guys know some good news.
A little under two years ago, I sent a new white life email about the birth of my second child.
I'm writing now again to let you know that I have my third child and also my first baby girl.
I was very thankful to hear the girl dad advice given on a recent show as I'm now in uncharted waters.
I'm in my mid-20s.
Way to go, pal.
And being a parent is difficult, especially being the only source of income in your family.
It can seem damn near impossible.
I want to encourage younger guys in our circles that it's possible, though.
If you plan your life accordingly and make the necessary sacrifices, it will all fall into place.
My wonderful wife is the glue that holds the family together.
Make sure you pick a good one to ensure success.
Thank you guys for all that you do.
And I'll be sure to write in again the next time around.
And that's from Biggs.
Mr. Biggs, you are that's big time.
Man.
Yeah.
Great.
Impressive.
Absolutely.
You're welcome for the girl advice.
And don't I know?
I wish that I had started earlier and had at least one more.
All right.
Got another nice one here.
I wanted to reach out and thank you guys for all your sustained efforts over the years.
Full House has played a significant role in finally forcing me to recognize the importance of networking and getting out there IRL and having confidence in growing a beautiful white family.
We will be bringing baby number four into the world at the start of 2025.
I was vetted into the Midwest Network in 2024 as well.
Something I'm looking forward.
I don't know if you know that.
Yeah, looking forward to that.
Probably do.
Yeah.
Much more.
Hoping to eventually cross paths with you all at some point in the future.
I could probably write a few more paragraphs of thankful platitudes, but Coach Sam Rolo Smasher and all the guests are doing the heavy lifting of our people right now.
What you're doing does matter and is positively impacting lives.
And I'll just say that's from R. Thank you, R, very much.
Very good.
Means a lot.
And okay, this is a stem winder.
I'm just going to let it rip here.
I hope we still have a lot of listeners here at the end of the second hour.
Hi, Full House guys.
Longtime listener would like to start off by thanking you for what you do.
The show played a big part in shifting the nihilistic worldview of my youth towards something more positive.
I finally decided to write in about the dozen or so folks who have written in self-consciously and sheepishly asking, I'm Hispanic.
Am I white?
Or my wife girlfriend is Hispanic.
Is she white?
As an American of white Hispanic descent, interesting that we touched on this earlier this show, I find this really annoying.
If you don't know your European history and love your ancestry with confidence, you'll never make it as a white nationalist, period.
People won't respect you if you have these hang-ups.
Making this even more pathetic, Spain and Portugal have some of the most glorious histories in all of Europe.
We conquered continents with handfuls of men.
Why the lack of confidence?
Because millions of brown Mexicans and Colombians speak Spanish.
Mexican and Colombian are as much of an ethnicity as American is.
There's white people in every single country in Latin America.
Sure, they're a minority, except for a few in South America.
They're a majority, but they're there.
There's no racial difference between the Iberians or Germans that participated in the settlement of South America and the Englishmen or Italians that participated in the settlement of North America.
There's no magic soil in Latin America that makes you non-white, just like there's no magic soil in North America that makes nons into whites.
Have confidence in your heritage.
You look white.
Three quarters of your ancestors are confirmed European, willing to make sacrifices to fight for our racial survival.
Welcome to the struggle.
And that was respectfully or angrily, perhaps, from Gus, maybe Gustavo, maybe.
From Poco.
From Carlos.
It's funny you mentioned that, Rolo.
When I worked at a garden center, I was like 16 or 17 years old.
There were the Mexicans who lived in the trailer on the property and they would sometimes get us beer and I think once even pot.
And I had to call in.
I wanted to talk to one of the Mexicans, but you'd have to call the front desk and then they'd like, you know, call the Mexicans up to like take a phone call.
So I called in.
Hello.
I did a fake Spanish accent and I said my name was Pacho.
It was the first name that came to mind, which I don't, which I don't think is a real Spanish name.
I can't remember if I hopefully I was just hoping that they could buy us some beer for a Friday night party.
And I got a really sad one in the inbox.
I think I'm going to save it for next week.
And we also got a question from a guy on Telegram about recently discovered low-level amount of Jewish admixture.
But I think that deserves more consideration.
We should save that one because I got a thing to say about it.
And I think you all appreciate this particular point of view.
Well, one thing I would just quickly say about any of these is, you know, it is a mark of a subjugated and defeated people that we've all been taught to identify with aliens.
You know, even all of us at least have had to work through all that in our minds at some point.
And so somebody has some maybe tiny percentage of something, which is maybe even questionable how much it is, right?
But then all of a sudden, they're taught to think you're entirely that thing, you know, and that's that's really sad.
And I guess I would sometimes I want to react to these types of things and say the thing that real white nationalists want to hear, which is this is movement for white people.
But I'm also moved to say something that's maybe a little more comforting.
And I remember a guy talked about an article, or not an article, an advertisement he saw in the newspaper.
And it was by a Jewish group and they were saying, hey, Jews, make sure you marry other Jews because despite all of our history and being conquered and invaded and subjugated and enslaved and intermarriage and all that, we still have a unique identity that deserves to be preserved.
So Jews should marry Jews.
Okay.
Can you imagine me taking out an advertisement, but put the word white in there?
You know, it would absolutely.
That's terrible.
Jews should marry other whites.
Oh, well, it would just simply not be allowed.
But the point still stands.
Despite all the history, all the invasions, especially in the ancient world where entire population would be moved out of wherever they were living and assimilated into another group and all these things, invasions, intermarriages, name changes, language changes, everything, we continue to exist as an identifiable race.
We are white.
And for all of these people, I'm going to assume that they fully believe that they're a white person.
They feel like they're a white person.
They can attend one of our events.
They just seem like another white person.
You know, I think that's like good enough, really.
And all I would say is when I attend a white nationalist event, I expect to see white people there.
Correct.
I don't think that's unreasonable.
And so to those people who are raising those, because I sense a note of pain in some of those maybe, you know, sometimes or ones that I've talked to in the, especially in person in the past, where people are genuinely confused about who they are.
And that's like a really important thing in a sense, because it cuts to your sense of, you know, being alive.
Who am I?
Right.
Like the hippies used to say in the 60s, who am I?
So I think it deserves a good answer.
And I hope I've given, I try to say things that are, you could kind of think about it and maybe apply that to yourself, you know.
So anyways.
Yep.
No, we'll take it up again for sure, including a heartbreaking personal tragedy.
Actually, a friend of mine just went through and sent in a very thoughtful note and dealing with something like that.
All right, gentlemen, Will, which is a, I forget if we mentioned it before the show or on air, Wilmot Robertson, of course, the dispossessed majority, probably a book that all of our people should have on the bookshelf.
But regardless, I am very grateful, sir, for your past service and your service on this show.
Can I give you one parting remark, if I may?
Absolutely.
One night I pulled over this carload full of Mexican parolees, and I was all by myself, and there's about six of them.
And then I called for backup, and the little town nearby has a canine police officer, and the high patrol shows up.
Pretty soon I got just about the equal number of cops to convicts, and that's fine.
And the police dogs out on the ground.
And there's all these nervous cholos or, you know, outlaw Mexican types.
And I said to everybody assembled, I says, hey, do you guys know why do police dogs lick their butts?
The guy goes, no.
I was like, it gets the taste of hippies out of the mouth.
All the cholos and all the cops laugh their ass off and confuse the intense situation.
But the police.
Humor does that for sure.
Well, anyway, thank you so much for having me on your show.
And I just, you know, I wanted to encourage our guys to keep clean living, no drugs.
Yeah.
Look out for families.
Learn how to write well.
And you can consider a job in law enforcement.
You'll be paid highly for what does not require a college degree.
Keep your nose clean.
Learn about those lie detector tests and personal history statements.
If you do want to become a cop, you got to get through that process.
And that's what usually defeats most applicants.
So live, give a clean, righteous life and treat everyone well.
And thank you very much for having me on your show.
And arrest black people for legitimate crime.
Sorry, I had to get that in there.
Thank you, Will.
You've got the music.
This was Full House episode 195.
Definite deviation from our usual format.
We just plowed through over two hours.
Testament to all of our bladder control.
Our retirees prostate is apparently very healthy.
Or he's got a little Gatorade bottle next to him that's suspiciously.
Oh, no.
How about how about Radar Gun?
It'd be a good song for parting, I think.
Radar Gun.
You got it, Will.
Thank you.
Stay safe.
Best to your family.
God bless and good luck on grandchildren arriving soon.
And Junior's an absolute Chad for scoring a Nordic 10, I'm sure.
Rolo, thank you as well.
Sam, thank you.
Rolo gives a thumbs up.
He's falling asleep.
Sam's got work tomorrow.
I got to get up with the kids at the crack of dawn.
We love you, fam.
We'll talk to you next week.
Enjoy Radar Gun.
And I guess think very carefully before you consider taking our special guests' advice, but take it under advisement, as they say in the movies.
We love you, and we'll talk to you next week.
Sam, it's all yours.
See ya.
See you everybody.
Making me a law enforcement nurse.
I've got me a gun and a bad old man.
Radar gun, radar gun.
43 from where I was sitting.
30 miles an hour is a law of our land.
Please remove your license by your registration.
And what is the name of your insurance man?
Radar gun, radar gun.
I'm making money and I'm having fun with my radar gun.
Radar gun with my brand new radar gun.
You know our sheriff William Buck Burger says our mayor's got a master plan.
A new post gun means a cost of living.
And one of them stoplights is now on brand.
Radar gun, radar gun.
I'm making money and I'm having fun with my radar gun.
Radar gun with my brand new radar gun.
Schedule 19 on a special election.
Got our money problems right and dropping them limits like a hot potato.
50 down to 30.
Oh man, oh man, radar gun, radar gun.
I'm making money and I'm having fun with my radar gun, radar gun with my brand new radar gun.
Brand new shiny Simmons radar gun.
Me and my partner go patrol car cruising on the parking lots at the shopping malls.
Scanning those dashes, those mirrors, and visors.
The little detectors that ruin it all.
Try to call the one on a Navy 6T bird.
Pull up slow just as close as I can.
Milliwatt seconds on maximum output.
We'll dust that puppy with one small flash of my radar gun.
Radar gun.
I'm making money and I'm having fun with my radar gun.
Radar gun with my brand new radar gun.
Come back home from Union Missouri Detention Center from Michigan.
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