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#BermasBrigade #TruthOverTreason #BreakingNews #InfoWarrior #BreakingNews Show less
Hey everybody, Jason Burmes here, and today we are going to be talking about the chat GPT whistleblower, the quote-unquote suicide, and now this evidence, this second autopsy, first one seemed to have missed it, that suggests that he was shot twice in the head and also had a date rape drug in his system.
We're going to be reading that one verbatim to do it justice, as it is his parents that have now brought this to the attention of the public.
Still haven't seen it really too much on the mainstream media, and it really has not caught fire for some reason, not only in the alternative media, but on social media where there's supposed to be free speech, right, X?
Right?
Bueller, Bueller.
We're also going to be talking to Brett Miller about a plethora of items and products from this little bad boy, yes, the satellite iridium phone to this big backpack bad boy, the Escape Zone Faraday bag.
Yes, it's actually bulletproof and much more.
But I wanted to start the show today kind of talking about traditional media and its strengths and its weaknesses.
Okay.
I'm saying this because earlier today, I was actually out in Erie, Illinois, doing an in-studio radio appearance with my good friend, Todd McGreevy, over at the RC Reader.
Those familiar with my other broadcast know that he was a regular on the TNT show.
But we went there and basically I've been there a few times.
I hadn't been there in a long time.
I didn't realize how long it had been.
It'd been like a year and a half since I'd been there.
But, you know, normally there's a lot more, you know, he does the basic morning stuff.
There's some music.
There's the local news.
There's the birthdays.
There's the on-air reads, blah, And we just talked for like an hour and a half.
And, you know, they get a, you know, thank goodness, but every time I go on there, I get a pretty good reception.
People are actually calling in.
They don't even have a call screener.
You know, there's buzz.
And that's the strength of traditional media is you really do reach and local media is you really do reach people that aren't on TikTok, that aren't on the magic device all the time.
I know that's hard for my generation and the younger generation to believe, but there are still people that loathe that technology and, you know, only use it baseline.
They're not on it all the time.
That's not their newsfeed.
Okay.
So, you know, the strength of that is almost the same as the weakness.
It's yes, you are getting to a local crowd.
They're hearing things.
They think it's interesting.
They're going to look into it.
But that crowd is extremely limited.
That's the weakness.
And that's where the national media has taken hold.
And really, even with local media, unless it's a mom and pop shop, which is rarer and rarer and rarer out there, the truth of the matter is, you know, you're not allowed to talk about certain things or it's narrative driven or everything is regurgitated.
And what do I mean by that?
You know, we have one of those conglomerates out here, town square, that is the same thing where I was in upstate New York.
Town Square Media here in Iowa, Town Square Media out in Oneana, New York.
Okay.
And Town Square then has a group of stations for that area.
So it's not just one local station.
They have genre stations.
I listen to 93.5.
IROC.
Love it.
Love it.
But there's other ones under that banner.
And they have the same type of news reads.
Whenever there is a commercial that's semi-local, and what do I mean by like semi-local?
Like U.S. Cellular is a big Midwest provider.
So U.S. Cellular, they have their like national commercials with Ted Danson that play in the Midwest and all those things.
But then they have all these local DJs doing the same read.
Same thing with Culver's, right?
Culver's is a big Midwest fast food place out here.
They do the reads, and it's the same commercial on every network, but with your favorite local DJ, right?
So there are strengths and weaknesses out there.
But I take every opportunity to go to these things and places because there's just so much that I discuss on this show that like I hate to call them normies because a lot of these people are somewhat informed and they don't just listen to the mainstream media and they are questioning things.
They don't know about them.
And we hit the gamut of a multitude of topics.
Okay.
A multitude.
I mean, we went from transhumanism to what's going on in Ukraine to North and South Korea to, I mean, you name to Connor McGregor and him announcing he was going to be running for president of Ireland, Perception, Reality, Fluoride, Elon Musk.
We really got to dig in for about an hour and a half.
And I want to thank WQUD for giving me that opportunity.
I really do enjoy going there all the time.
So before we do shift gears to this whistleblower story, I do want to remind people: everything you see today, everything you see today, 100% unpaid.
No paid gigs right now.
Need you now more than ever.
I want to thank Stephanie and Castillo.
Trans Darwinism.
You bet, Castillo.
He's referring to my recent video on the DARPA keynote and Martin Rothbladder, which I really got to do a follow-up to that video.
Autopsy Revelations00:04:18
But once again, big donors, little donors, there are other links down below.
I can't do it without you.
All right, let's get into this one.
And I want to read it down the line because so much of this is important.
Open AI whistleblower, Suchar Bataj.
I'm sorry, Sutar Bataji was shot a second time by a bullet that was missed by the autopsy that ruled the death a suicide, his parents claim.
The Tech Prodigy 26 was found dead on November 26th, only a month after revealing the company's dubious methods of training ChatGPT.
Balaji was found next to his bathroom door with a gunshot wound to the head and blood all over part of his apartment in San Francisco, Mint Hill neighborhood.
His parents, Perinima Ramaro and Balaj Ramataj Murthy, insist he couldn't have killed himself and paid for their own autopsy, toxicology, and other tests.
They are yet to release the entire reports, but revealed the bombshell new evidence they claimed would help prove he was murdered to keep him quiet.
You think?
CT scans of his head were sent for analysis to two radiologists who knew little of the case and hadn't seen any of the other evidence.
Balaji's parents claimed both saw evidence of two gunshot wounds to the man's head, neither of them immediately fatal.
A second bullet probably entered through the mouth.
No clear entry wound seen is lodged in the back of the throat.
And the skull base, Civis, said Dr. Daniel Cousin at, I will just say in Weston, Florida, wrote in his report.
And there's some of the gruesome blood spatter.
This bone stopped it and did not cause any damage.
Likely, perhaps it traveled through the air passage of the mouth to the back of the throat without causing problems.
Romero said the second autopsy revealed injuries to her son's tongue that couldn't have been caused by the gunshot to his forehead, which traveled at an odd downward angle, missed his brain, and lodged in the back of his neck.
The tongue shows extensive laceration and discoloration over the margins with a centralized, nearly oval-shaped defect at the distal, the report read.
Romero also claimed Balaji had a broken cheekbone along with a previously claimed injury to the side of his head, both of which weren't listed on the medical examiner's report.
A graphic photo from the scene showed him lying diagonally across the floor with his head in the corner of the bathroom door where the biggest blood patch was found.
It also showed Bataji had blood on his knee, which his parents believe was from yet another injury, and obviously it's an assault.
Why there is bleeding and a wound on his knee?
Why there is a head injury?
Why the ripped tongue?
Why is he spitting blood outside the bathroom where the crime occurred?
Why was a date rape drug found in his body?
So here are some of the scans.
Why does the autopsy report not account for the wounds?
Why doesn't the autopsy report the metal object in the skull that was not removed?
How could someone sedated shoot themselves in a weird downward angle?
Why is his cheekbone broken?
I mean, all of these are huge, huge questions.
Now, the medical examiner found that he had a blood alcohol level of 0.178, which his parents said was out of character for him as he never drank in excess.
Cell Tower Signals00:15:25
I mean, this guy, you know, was making big bucks, blew the whistle a month before in an emerging technology, artificial intelligence.
Again, Sam Altman is now part of the club.
He's part of the group.
He's one of their new faces.
He is an extension of the military-industrial complex, really the media military-industrial complex.
Now, I'm not accusing Sam Altman of anything, but I am saying that he is the face of OpenAI.
All right?
And OpenAI is much bigger than he is.
If you don't think this is foul play, I'm not sure what You will think is found.
I mean, come on.
I mean, it's as bad or worse than the Boeing cases, period.
And that's it.
So we are going to move on to my guest.
We are now joined by Brett Miller of Galileo.
Now, Brett, we spent some time together just before the election out in North Carolina.
I was lucky enough to not only get this little bad boy, which I'm sure we're going to be talking about, but something I actually use all the time.
And not that that isn't very useful, but that's more of an emergency case scenario.
I have before me, maybe the heftiest backpack I've ever had my hands on.
And it's not just the heft and the protection for the oodles and oodles and oodles amount of cameras and equipment that I have just lying around, as Brett was actually privy to as I unloaded my bags of cameras.
But they actually have Faraday cages, not just in one spot, but throughout.
And for a guy like me that likes to do on-the-ground reporting and maybe in some areas that you don't want your personal information, I've never covered a DEF CON before, but it certainly is on my list.
And I assure you, if I were to cover a DEF CON and I were daring enough to leave any of my electronics on or on my person, they would be in that very bag.
So, Brett, thank you so much for joining us.
Before we get into Galileo and what you do there, give us a little background on yourself and how you found this company.
Yeah, thanks, man.
It's good to see you.
And we did spend some time.
It's funny, I've gotten to know you over the last couple of years, probably the last year and a half, two years.
And you actually, you impacted my life, though, when I was getting out of the military because I watched your film Lose Change, which I didn't realize that you actually made that until we had met.
So it's funny how the world works like that.
But yeah, I was, you know, growing up, I was an Eagle Scout.
I did a search team, search and rescue.
And then when I got out of high school, I graduated and I went to the Marine Corps and I was an O311 Cross Train 41.
I ran a mortar team and did some forward observation and ran communication.
Actually, I used to work on, they were called Syngar radios and PRC-77s.
We call them Prick 77s because we're Marines.
So yeah, I used to do some encrypting on comms way back in the day.
And then, you know, I got distracted, moved to Los Angeles for 17 years and then, you know, started saying some prayers and wound up meeting Clay Clark and then wound up meeting the owner of these great companies.
And I was fortunate enough to take over one of them.
So now I work with all these great companies and we give all this cool gear out.
So let's talk about some of the gear.
Now, before, you know, and we've all heard of the sat phones.
You're also with the Bivi thing.
I come from the quote unquote conspiracy world, if you will.
And when I hear or see these things advertised, it's usually in the sense of some like mega disaster, like an EMP attack and all these other things.
Now, I'm not a doom and gloom guy.
I'm a realist.
I'm not saying that that's not a possibility and that you don't want to plan.
But in all honesty, there are so many other things in the day today where if you get stranded somewhere or if there's a natural disaster, a wildfire, a flood, a tornado, I mean, things that happen.
They've happened in the past, and I can assure you.
Space lasers.
Yes, they will happen in the future is all I'm saying.
Is that these are very real things?
And I think this past, you know, year, two years, you just kind of alluded to Hawaii, but what happened in North Carolina has kind of woken people up to, wait a minute, the government doesn't necessarily have my back.
And really, it's only through social media that you find that out.
These things are really key in those emergency situations to what I would say is doing the best with what you got.
And if you don't have this, you're kind of way behind those that do.
So let's talk about that.
Yeah, I mean, you brought it up and you make a great point.
You know, over the last couple of years, we've witnessed America just in itself and Hawaii has witnessed many natural disasters, many maybe not so natural disasters.
Either way, they are disasters.
And there's been loss of life, loss of property, loss of power, loss of communication, loss of food, all of it.
And some of the places to this day, after receiving that, you know, whopping $700 check from FEMA, they still don't have power.
They still don't have comms and they're still not able to go about their daily, their daily life like they did before.
So we offer things at the satellite phone store like solar generators, bug out bags, off-grid comms.
You know, this Bibby stick, like you, like you mentioned, this thing, you know, it attaches to your smartphone.
You know, this is a satellite device that attaches to your smartphone through an app.
So, you know, you don't plan for the emergency in the emergency.
You plan for the emergency beforehand.
That's why you have a spare tire in your car all the time, not just when you pop the tire.
So, because you never know, you know, so we're just kind of in the business right now of, you know, it does seem like life is getting a little better maybe than, you know, the ship is not headed directly for the rocks.
We've kind of veered it maybe off to the side a little bit.
However, in the calm is when you want to prepare for the chaos, which you just went through and the chaos that could come.
So just so people understand how the bibby stick works and goes through a device and an app and all those things, it actually doesn't need cell service.
Obviously, that would kind of be redundant.
It hooks through Bluetooth.
So it can also be utilized not just by your cell phone, but anything that runs on an Android or an Apple.
So, you know, your iPad's going to work, any kind of cheap tablet.
Like maybe you don't have your phone.
Maybe you invested in something that was literally $35 on sale on a Black Friday.
It's not the best tablet in the world, but it goes hand in hand with that Bibby stick and it keeps a good charge.
Those are the type of things that when you're thinking about these things, you do want to be somewhat, I would say, technically savvy.
But you take a lot of that out of the equation when it's something like this, when it's literally a grab and go device that powers on and you just need to be outside.
So let's talk about what the Iridium satellite network is.
Obviously, the Bibby runs on that as well.
But then, like I said, with a standalone device, you're not worried about your cell phone and the charge and what you're going to do.
This is just there.
Exactly.
You know, there's several satellite companies out there.
People are familiar with Starlink now.
It's catching up.
Iridium was the largest and is the largest.
They have about 67 satellites in circulation, and then they have about seven to 10 on reserve that they work on in case one gets knocked out or malfunctions or whatever.
Iridium is the network that all of your governments and your militaries work off of, and it's a very secure network.
This that phone you're holding up, this is that Iridium phone as well.
The difference between a satellite and a cell is that you don't need that cell tower, right?
You use the satellite network, and that's what we're saying.
So, this bibby stick actually operates just like the phone.
However, it doesn't, you're not able to make a phone call on it.
It's strictly for texting, which you use, yes, with that smartphone that we're talking about via Bluetooth.
It does also have like an emergency GPS button there.
That's a one-touch GPS.
You can send your location and an emergency message to your family and friends and say, Hey, you know, I popped a tire in Utah.
This is my GPS.
I need a tow truck.
Or, you know, where are you?
Things are going down.
You know, either way, you know, communication, it's one of the most important things that you can have between you and your family.
And in the world that we live in, where not everybody lives on the same farm anymore for generations, you know, people live all over the world, you know, that peace of mind of being able to contact your loved ones, mom, dad, sister, brother, daughter, you know, son, whatever, just being able to contact them and say, Hey, where are you?
How are you?
Uh, at all times, no matter what, you know, it's it's priceless.
So, you know, one of the other things that you kind of mentioned that goes hand in hand with this is, you know, you talked about the tire analogy.
Well, what happens if you don't have that tire or you do have that tire or a dummy tire or it isn't your tire?
Like, it's something, it's your axle.
You don't got a spare axle.
Listen, as a man that has driven many a clunker on many a country road, now, number one, I try to forego that.
I do run two cell phone networks on my phone, right?
That's one of the ways that you can mitigate some of it in rural areas.
But again, I literally was out in Erie, Illinois earlier today doing an interview on local radio.
Yes, local radio still exists, folks.
And I not only not didn't have a signal on one of them, but when I got the signal on the other one, it was on the R network.
I'm not even sure what the R network is.
Like, I remember the Edge network.
I know the no bar GPRS.
Maybe that was what the R was, but that's 45 minutes from my house, right?
When I go sometimes on trips to New York, and a lot of people can't believe this because they think like New York is this metropolis.
Well, when I'm on my way to New York City and I'm going up through the Catskills and I'm out in a place like Downsville, zero bars on either.
God forbid anything were to happen.
And the nice thing about this is this basically needs nature and air.
It doesn't need, it doesn't need the help of Verizon, T-Mobile, or ATT.
So car stuff, not a bad idea to have this in your glove box, seeing as your car is going to be with you all the time.
And even if there is an emergency at your house, one of the things you're going to have to do is step outside to use these things, right?
So kind of explain the technology.
You talked about the satellite networks themselves and how things go down, but this works device to device, but also like you said, to anything you have a phone number on.
And guys, I'm going to tell you this too.
Might down, might want to write down some emergency numbers just in case.
You know, we're all so used to, again, you know, some people don't even hit the damn button.
They ask Siri to do it for them.
I just, I, I, I don't get it.
But, but talk about the tech and that what goes into it.
Yeah, so like I was saying, unlike your set, your cell phone uses a cell tower, and everyone's very familiar with cellular and Wi-Fi.
And, you know, to your point, thanks for bringing it up.
You know, most people do have just one device, right?
You have one phone with one provider that gives you both your cellular and your Wi-Fi.
And you hope that nothing ever goes wrong with that solo device, that one company.
However, what we've seen with multiple hacks, you know, multiple breaches, Twitter's getting hacked.
And during that Twitter hack, and you can go to websites like DownDetector.com, which I have no affiliation with.
I just like to reference them.
You can see that AT ⁇ T was attacked.
Verizon was attacked.
I mean, it was multiple platform attack.
And when you think about the firewalls that someone would have to go through in order to do that all at once, I mean, you're talking like a massive state actor.
I mean, this is not just a couple of hackers in their basement, right?
So that being said, you know, to get back to what I was talking about, you know, that solo cell tower in your neighborhood, you know, can only take a thousand phone calls.
And if a thousand people are calling, you know, in an emergency, that cell tower is going to go down.
It's going to freeze up and it's going to have to be hard reset by a professional.
Now, in that emergency, how long is that going to take?
And if that cell tower is destroyed, like in a flood or in a fire or in an ice storm, you know, how long is it going to take for emergency services to get out there or those services to get out there and repair that tower?
So, you know, relying on one, you know, one device, one provider, relying on just one, one thing, I think is, is kind of a fool's effort, right?
So that's what we're trying to do.
I mean, I'll give you this $300 satellite device.
I call it my little satellite snickers.
I'll give it to you for free.
You know, you have to pay a low monthly for the satellite credits, but it's all rollover.
They're rollover credits.
Yeah, thank you for pulling up my site.
That's Galileo.
You can check us out, satnews123.com or the information site.
Our free app is on there.
Download our app and that will connect to this Bivi stick.
And also we have a great relationship with Satellite Phone Store.
So we sell all the products on the satellite phone store too, which is Starlinks, Iridium Goes, all the solar generators, all the things like that.
But yeah, just to back and get back on track, this one cell tower in your neighborhood, one cell phone provider and one cell phone is not necessarily the safest for you or your family, especially when you consider all the things that could happen to that one company or that one device.
So we just encourage people to utilize the networks that your governments and your militaries and your emergency services are using currently and that are available to you as the individual so you can be as safe and backed up as the government is.
Now, before we get into, you know, the meat and potatoes product, as I like to say, the one that I actually use all the time.
The features are just ridiculous.
Using Solar Panels for Backup Power00:02:59
I mean, honestly, I could exercise with it.
I just put a little, you don't have to put much into it, but folks, if you're not looking to do strength training, you could.
Don't get me wrong.
You throw a 25, 50 pound weight in here.
This thing isn't going to rip.
But, I mean, just on this alone, if I could do 50 of them right now, I would be in a lot better shape than I think I am.
I promise you that.
Now, you just mentioned the solar panels and that product.
Tell us a little bit about that for like the off-gridter, the person that likes to go camping, or in the case of an emergency, like for me right now with these four bad boys going.
You know, I have this and my router and my modem on a battery backup.
So I know that if I am live, even if the power goes out, you know, MetroNet's probably still going to be up with the fiber folks.
And I'm able to end my broadcast not totally abruptly.
Now, maybe I don't have these lights plugged in.
It'll get a little dingy and dark.
And we'll have to do a little dickadickoo.
But certainly when I'm editing something on the fly, everything is in a battery backup.
So I have that extra 20 to 40 minutes.
These things go into a battery, as I understand.
So it's not like you have to use it while you're using the sun and powering it up.
No, you have that stored energy for some time.
Yeah, exactly.
It's very similar to any homeowner who's familiar with solar panels on your roof and the solar battery.
You know, it's a solar generator, as in it stores the power and then converts it back so you can plug in your phones, plug in a hot water heater, plug in a blanket.
They'll run a refrigerator.
Some of them, some of the larger ones will run a refrigerator for one to two days.
And in an emergency, obviously you're going to scale those.
So you might not need to run the refrigerator 24 hours a day.
You might only need to run it a few hours during the day when it gets really hot.
And then that's a great time to also charge that generator.
So a solar generator is a battery that allows you to charge from the sun no matter what.
And even in snowy conditions, ambient light or cloudy conditions, it will still charge.
You may not get as good of a charge as if it were sitting in the bright sunshine, of course, but it'll still work.
And you can still charge those devices that you need, boil some hot water to make some soup for your family, run a blanket, like I said, run a fan, or power parts of your house, depending on the size generator that you get.
But yeah, of course, you can always just take it camping and, you know, or go outside with your kids, take it fishing.
You know, they're good for everything.
Well, again, you know, in an area like, I mean, in the places that I've lived, you know, it's different strokes for different folks.
But, you know, the power may go out in the middle of winter in upstate New York.
Economic Uncertainties Ahead00:15:42
It happened when we had the, I think it was, I think it was a four-footer.
I think we had, I think we got 48 inches of snow.
And I actually had to go and open up my bar anyway.
And I went and bought registers.
You know, you can buy the little dickadickadoo registers.
So we had one of those.
And then I had those little light battery things, right?
And the kegs themselves were down in the cooler.
So the cooler is going to stay cool for at least 24 hours, even with the power off.
And the taps don't run on energy.
We were banging.
I would have loved the little solar.
So we could have made, I mean, we had a Bluetooth speaker there and people were running as much power they could for some music, but it would have been nice to have the jukebox.
Well, I mean, I just want to say the only difference is you don't need diesel, right?
You don't need that gas.
I mean, how long can you run the bar on gas?
And hopefully you have like a huge tank.
Well, we didn't even have it on gas.
We just opened the door.
Yeah.
No, I mean, we were at it on zero energy, just the energy of young people in booze, folks.
That's energy of alcohol.
Yes, yes.
So I'm not doing it to hog the camera.
All right.
I'm going to back up a little bit because this thing is so damn big.
All right.
Now, what I need people to understand is I think this is the Kevlar one.
So it's also bulletproof.
Not that I plan on being shot at.
9-0, 556, 308.
Let's see what I still got in here.
Yes.
Like I said, I'm not kidding when I'm telling you that it is Camera City USA in here.
Now, if that were like the front pouch was, you know, Faraday, which this is what you see right here, folks.
All right.
If that were it, that'd be impressive.
Nope.
We got another one here.
But wait, that's not it.
There's another one behind it.
And wait, that's not even the main part of the bag that has yet another one as I drop my camera gear out of the part I didn't zip up.
That's my jackassery.
But as I've stated before, this is the bag.
I mean, hands down, bar none, the bag.
It's hefty.
It's heavy.
You get a laptop, a couple tablets in there.
Like you just saw how many cameras dumped.
Man, I didn't even pull this one out.
Let's hope baby doll's all right.
She looks okay.
But, you know, this is hefty gear.
So any of you prosumers, aspiring bloggers, just for what it can do alone is impressive.
But then it has the security features on top of it.
Take me through the specs of this bad boy.
Yeah, buddy.
Yeah, so bulletproof, 9mm, 22, obviously, 9mm.
It stopped 5.56 and it stopped at 308.
I remember all the, you were lugging all that stuff around, and I had these bags, and we actually shared a hotel room in North Carolina right before we went to see Trumpster at that event.
And I had an extra one.
I remember giving you that bag and saying, here, just try it out.
And you were a little hesitant at first because it was a little big because that's the bulky one.
That's the one I carry.
We actually have a very similar one, but it's more size for, you know, it's a regular size backpack.
Actually, my kids take them to school.
So they have an extra Spartan shield if they ever would need it.
God forbid.
But, you know, there's a lot of applications for a bulletproof backpack.
And the Faraday part, you know, just with what we're seeing with people getting their phones scanned, having their wallets scanned, people stealing their IDs, you know, stealing or tracking them, tracing them.
You know, you pop that in any one of those Faraday bags.
Yeah, and you're invisible.
Plus, you're bulletproof.
So I'm really happy to see that you love it and that it's helping you carry around that massive amount of gear that you carry around because I've never seen anyone with more gear than Jason Burmes.
I mean, I love your brother.
No, I'm a gearhead.
I actually just had to, I just shot, we did the MMA I was telling you about, right?
We did three nights of it.
Yeah, yeah.
And on the third night, God love him, the guy that was calling it, he's an ex-fighter, but he's also a coach of some of these guys.
So he kind of ended up coaching a little bit and maybe saying some things he shouldn't have said on the air and things like that.
So I had to reshoot the audio with the guy that I called it with the second night, who's Jens Pulver, UFC legend.
He does the UFC fight pass watch-alongs.
And Pulver's a big video game freak and tech guy.
He'd never been in my house before to reshoot it.
He came in here and he saw this gear.
And I mean, now he wants to be my best friend.
So there's plenty of gear here.
There's plenty of specs in that bag.
You mentioned some of the things that you might want to keep in there, but one of the other things that people are doing is they're now scanning key fobs.
And that's how they're lifting cars.
And for those that don't know how that works, and I'm not trying to scare people, but let's just say for any reason, any reason, like you said, you're going into a high crime area.
Maybe you want to put that key fob for your car, especially if you're in a hotel in this bag because there could be someone just scanning around and they don't want to do the traditional break-in, take or lift.
And that happened.
I mean, my January 6th story, a car on milk crates next to mine.
Yeah, with, you know, nothing you can do there.
At least they didn't take the car, I guess.
But what happens is they scan that.
It's an RFID code.
And then they literally have it.
They reprogram it into another fob and there's no real breaking entering on your car.
It's biggity, bobbity, boobity.
And they're out of there.
Yeah, it's one of the scariest things about this age of technology we live in is that, you know, when you get away from the mechanical and everything becomes electronic, then everything is out in the ether, right?
All the information is stored somewhere.
And, you know, they may say your stuff is stored in a cloud and that sounds really nice, but there's no cloud.
It's just a server, just like everything else.
You know, there's no magic place where everything's safe.
It's literally someone's living room.
And the technology is advancing, you know, so rapidly that the criminals are catching up to, you know, the innovators.
But secondly, I just wanted to say, I'm old enough to remember when they used to tell women not to stick the cell phones in their brawls because it was causing frequency damage and causing dis-ease in women and they were having issues that were being needed to be treated medically.
Now I think about, you know, I take this phone, I stick it in my pocket.
I have a laptop, a laptop just on my back.
If I'm carrying my backpack, it's just like zapping my spine all day long, you know, not to mention anything else that's happening.
So, you know, I think just for safety, and then you go to the electric car and we're all just sitting, or not me, but you're just sitting on a giant battery.
What's that frying?
I'm not sure the safety protocols on that.
And we actually have EMF blankets on there, two EMF blocking blankets on the Escape Zone site that you can get.
So, you know, you can put one of those down and keep yourself from being fried.
But the frequency part, I mean, Faraday was a guy in the 1800s, right?
This is an old technology.
That's who made this, Faraday, right?
1890 something.
So he was worried about blocking frequencies and things like this back then.
So think about where we are now.
You know, I just think it's a wise decision.
We have there on the Escape Zone website, if your producer can pull it up, there are handbags for women that are very fashionable.
There's crossbody bags.
There's small pocket bags that guys can use just to stick in their pocket.
There's blankets right there.
You can see some of the large blankets, throw rugs, throw it over top of stuff.
I mean, protect yourself, right?
I mean, all the famous fighters, you mentioned MMA, a lot of the fighters sleep on those mats.
You know, those mats are designed to do the exact same thing, protect you from frequencies and to kind of ground you from all of the different stuff that's zapping us every day.
So, you know, I just think it's, I love these products because they're bulletproof, but also I love them because they're EMF proof.
So you're not going to zap your body.
So, you know, you kind of get a little more peace of mind, right?
With one more layer of protection for you and your loved ones.
Well, I'm not going to say it's going to be the last backpack you ever own, but as somebody who literally, over the years, I've probably gone through 25, 30 backpacks from being on the road.
Now, I got the ape backpack over there that has all the Velcro in it.
And I'm not going to tell you, it's really cool for compartments and things like that.
I think this one's way half the year.
I don't even think it's, I mean, with that one, there's still the fear if I use the eight bag hardcore five, six years, maybe a strap is going to rip or something like that.
I really, ladies and gentlemen, I mean, even up here where they've got it buttoned on top of this, I mean, they've double and triple bagged this bad boy.
And it looks sleek too.
Like you said, you know, I like, I dig the all black.
I dig the extra compartments.
I'm not going to lie.
When I fill it up to the brim, it is like I am on a camping trip.
It's heavy.
You fill that thing full.
It gets heavy.
Yeah.
It could be 75, 80 pounds.
Still feels pretty good on the back, though.
Yeah.
And I just want to shout.
I'll get sat news.
If you go to escapezone.com, anybody, anyone here on the Burmese, I'll give you sat news as the promo code.
You get 20% off.
Get anything you want, 20%.
And then I'll send Burmes a couple more backpacks so he can get some of those muscles.
You can have one on either side.
You can start doing exercises, bulletproof EMF exercises.
Brett is in much better physical condition than my old ass.
I'm trying.
I've dropped 10.
I'm down to like 206, 207.
We got to get down to 195, and then we'll baseline work from there and try to build some muscle tissue again.
This bag doesn't hurt.
Kind of on the horizon right now, like the big things people are obviously talking about are the economy, the tariffs, and in my camp, the fact that these wars still haven't stopped and honestly seem to just be escalating.
You know, this is where you kind of do, you know, if you're not, if the traditional means haven't convinced you to have some type of a plan.
Again, I'm not pushing the disaster scenarios, but economic hardships lead to disaster scenarios.
Certainly sudden economic hardships do as well.
And then with the instability of Russia, I mean, God forbid anything were to happen in the United States, whether it was from a foreign enemy or an enemy within.
Things could change very, very quickly.
We're in 2025.
It has now been well over two decades since the last significant terror attack that totally revamped and changed the world.
These are tools in a toolbox.
Can you kind of speak to that?
Just, and again, God bless that we got Trump in.
All right.
Again, we were at the evangelical thing, and you know, I'm no evangelical.
And I'll pray for you.
Yeah, yeah, I know, I know you are, and many others.
Good for you guys.
But it's going to take more than prayers if something actually does go wrong here.
And the guy does have a ton of enemies.
I don't know if you saw the news yesterday, but what little we do know about that second assassination attempt, apparently that Ralph guy reached out to his Ukrainian contact and was trying to get a rocket launcher to do the deed.
Now, I don't, again, folks, now, again, that sounds cartoon level, right?
It doesn't sound real, but just think about the last few years.
Think about what would happen in this country if anybody on either political side was killed by somebody with a freaking rocket launcher.
Economics are going to change.
Social mores are going to change.
Again, it's not bad to have communications and then something that you can literally stick something in and know nothing bad is going to happen to it.
That's the other thing.
You know, you stick like even steaks in a bag.
You've got at least that one day before you got to throw it into a fridge and it's not going to rot out in there either.
And it's going to be pretty safe.
So kind of, I mean, again, you're a guy that comes from the military.
You've seen the economic instability and then the outright societal global instability via the COVID-19 44 nightmare.
Things can actually get worse.
You've been in other countries where they are worse.
Can you kind of talk about that?
Our miss is the best country on earth, without a doubt.
We are certainly not without flaws, but we live like kings compared to 90% of the rest of the planet.
Maybe Dubai or Beijing has his beat or something, a handful.
But this is a beautiful place, and it took a lot of work to get here.
It took a lot of community.
It took a lot of hard work.
It took a lot of sweat, blood, and tears.
It took a lot of defense of this nation.
And, you know, and we've come to a place now where, you know, even the Bible says, to your point, I'll give you this one.
The Bible says prayer without works is worthless, right?
So faith without works, it means nothing.
You have to work.
You have to put in the time.
You have to, you know, put your efforts into building your house, your business, your livelihood, building your family, building your faith, and building, you know, just building community, building this whole country.
We have to build together.
So, you know, we are in a place where, sure, if Donald Trump, no matter what you feel about him, you know, if a gentleman's head exploded live on TV in Butler, Pennsylvania, that would have caused a lot of problems.
And if it happened, you know, moving forward, we got huge problems.
If one bomb were to drop overseas, you know, if one war were to break out, you know, economic stability erupts.
If they called in one note, we're $36 trillion in debt.
You know, if they called in a trillion-dollar note, we're just going to write a check.
No, it's going to cause problems.
And China even said the other day that failure to pay on our debts is a declaration of war in their eyes.
So, you know, rumors of war, wars, and even not the war part, just go back to the natural disasters that are taking place.
There's no worse feeling than the feeling of being unprepared or the feeling of inability to take care of the ones you love.
So though we have entered this maybe golden age where things do seem a little brighter, there are still a lot of hot spots and there's still a lot.
I mean, there's still a lot of issues.
Worst Feeling: Unpreparedness00:04:20
I mean, they just said that this is going to be the worst tornado season coming down the pipe.
So the worst tornado season.
So if you live in Tornado Alley, I recommend you take heed and take the warning, you know, because it's better to have what you need in the closet and never need it than to go to the closet and not have it.
And then it costs you your life or your loved ones your life or injury or God forbid, something like that.
So, you know, without without being the fear monger, you know, it's really, that's what we're doing.
You know, I do thank you for that, for the compliment.
I do come from a place of seeing, you know, people that are prepared and then seeing people that aren't prepared and seeing how good it is to take a hot bath and to, you know, just plug in my coffee pot, you know, instead of having to start a fire and go roast a bean somewhere.
So I just think we all need to take a deep breath and also assess your life and make sure that you are ready for whatever is coming down the pipe because nobody knows the time or the hour.
And once again, you know, outside of the emergency products or their uses, there are products that you can use every day, whether it be the solar powered generator or the bag.
The website is galileo.com, G-A-L-I-L-E-Y-O-G-A-L-I-L-E-Y-O.
What would you like to leave us with, Brett?
Yeah, you look, if you want information, get the free app, satnews123.com.
If you want gear and goodies and all kinds of deals, tell them Jason sent you.
Come to sat123.com.
That's the satellite phone store.
And if you want to be bulletproof and Faraday proof, go to Escape Zone.
Tell them Jason sent you.
Use the promo code SATNews.
And I just, you know, pray for you, pray for everybody and just, you know, prepare your house, you know, buy some gold and silver.
I think that's a good idea too.
You know what?
I think that's also a good idea.
I've got some physical silver.
That's what I always tell people.
You know, you've got to look at everything.
Don't, I mean, a lot of people right now are crying about the markets and the fact that the stocks are going down and that their portfolios and their 401.
K.
We did everything right.
We worked here.
We gambled in the right stock market.
Yeah, we bitched and complained and we said we wanted Wall Street taken down and occupy Wall Street, but we didn't actually mean it.
I mean, it drives that Wall Street.
And that's not at Wall Street.
And that's my thing.
That's the one place, I guess, that I haven't gambled on because I'm not a part of that system.
And I just never, I mean, you could, you could, I know guys that just individually stock traded and did things like that.
And it wasn't necessarily in a 401k and all those things.
But I've always stayed away from that.
I've always stayed away from credit.
You know, I'm a big believer in buying what I can buy with the money that I actually have.
And yes, I may not have physical gold.
Wish I did.
I do have the physical silver.
I do have a bank account, a few.
And then I've also got some crypto reserves, just in case.
Diversify, especially in what he's calling a new golden age.
I'm not so sure it's going to be that golden for a lot of people.
I think that we're on the road to a very large societal technological change, whether we know it or not.
Hopefully, a lot of it's for the better, but buckle up for the worst.
Brett Miller, Galileo.com.
Thank you so much, my man.
Thank you, brother.
Good to see you.
Thanks.
Take care.
Folks, that is going to do it for the show.
I do want to remind everybody once again to please consider supporting the broadcast.
$5, $10, $15.
It does mean the world to me.
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Always remember, no matter what the issue is.
It is not about liberal or conservative.
It is not about left or right.
It is always about right and wrong.
And we have to ground ourselves in that.
And when people that we think are trying to do the positive things do the negative things, we need to hold them to account.