Whistleblower: Get ready for MASS ROUNDUPS of illegals across America...
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All right, welcome everybody.
Mike Adams here with an emergency broadcast.
As you know, the state of Texas is being invaded.
Well, the whole country is being invaded by illegal immigration.
And joining me today as sort of a last-minute deal here is a whistleblower who has been hired Thank you.
Thank you.
Go ahead and take us down the rabbit hole here.
To the extent that you can, I want to protect your operational security and privacy and your buddies and everything else, but tell us what you can about what you've been hired to do and why you feel the need to blow the whistle on this.
Well, the main reason to hire is to transport these immigrants from the state of Texas that are coming in and shipping them off to the sanctuary cities as far as New York, Chicago, Colorado, LA. And that's basically, that's the job.
That's the job that's required, but there's just a lot more to that than What they're trying to see, and a lot of these people here, they're seeing it on the news, like it's only, okay, well, they're getting them out of the state of Texas and they're only going to these cities.
That is not the case, you know what I'm saying?
So they're being dropped off en route or all over the place, or what's the deal?
So with that being said, just to understand kind of the rules and everything that goes along with it, The whole mission that they're getting paid for is to get them out of the state of Texas.
This is Governor Abbott.
We have to get them out of the state of Texas.
Now, we try to persuade them to not get off the bus because if they want to leave and get off, we cannot hold them against their will.
You understand?
We're not law enforcement.
So they can actually have the law enforcement called on us and get us thrown in jail for that.
So we try to persuade them to stay on the bus, to get to your location and what you're trying to go to.
So once we get out of the state of Texas...
It's open ballgame.
If they want to stop at somewhere, we stop.
And they're like, hey, I want to get off of here.
Okay, well, if you understand that as soon as I cut your wristband off, you're done.
You can't get on this bus no more.
And with mine...
We had maybe two people do that, but for all the other contractors that was there on there, there was cases to where you're going all the way to Chicago, to New York, and it's like 50 people max on these buses.
What do you call the buses?
You know what I'm saying?
Yeah, like commercial, like tourism, stuff like that.
You got different companies trying to get on that.
We'll get on that here in a minute.
But some of them were getting there with 50 people on the bus and only arriving with two, meaning in between every single state going up there, they are getting dropped off or left in them states.
So with everybody thinking, oh, well, they're just getting to this spot, and that's it.
They're leaving them there.
Big no, not happening.
It's not true.
Okay, right, because, you know, a lot of Texans actually support the idea that Governor Abbott is sort of...
Dare I say dumping these illegals on cities like Chicago and New York and L.A. in order to try to, you know, force them to realize the depth of the problem here or the scale of the problem.
But what you're saying is that oftentimes the migrants don't even end up in those cities.
They're dropped off in Indiana or, you know, Illinois or somewhere in between, right?
Anywhere in between.
So I'm just going to tell you right now.
So with that, and as far as transportation...
That's what's happening there.
And they are stopping at every other state.
It's not just certain locations.
These people are getting dropped off at.
Now, when you get to the kind of people that you're talking about, that gets into a different realm.
But before we hit into that, we can go back to the government.
Abbott, you were speaking.
There's two things behind this.
It always is.
It's never going to stop.
One of them is political.
We all understand that.
A lot of Texans and everybody, we believe that that is the right thing to do is to get them out of here.
That's one thing we all agree on.
Okay, that's great.
Get them out of here and everything.
The second is money.
Let's not get twisted.
Let's not, you know, go around and be like, oh, you know, just all political.
No, it's not.
It's money.
So when I'm talking about money, this is the big one right here that's going to hit as far as TITUM, which is the Texas Department of Emergency Management.
You know, they're the ones that are in charge of getting these contracts and everything.
Well, the actual security companies that we were actually doing this work for The bus systems and the bus companies, Wayne and everything, that awarded this contract, that received this contract, that's Governor Abbott's buddy.
Oh, really?
That kind of lets you know how the circle goes, scratch and scratch.
That's how they do it.
And you've got to understand, for every bus that we're doing, it's $5,000 a head.
That's a quarter million dollars for each one that's getting shipped out.
Wait, hold on a second.
$5,000 a person?
$5,000 a head.
Wait a minute.
So the state of Texas, you're saying, is paying $5,000 to the bus transportation company?
$5,000 a head.
So it's a quarter million dollars.
I mean, that's more than a first-class airplane ticket.
It's a billion-dollar project.
It ain't moving.
That's just what it is.
It's money, man.
What do they get?
They get like free gold on the trip or something?
They don't get nothing.
So on the trip, they're allowed.
You give them MREs.
And of course, you know, if we stop at certain spots, you know, we can let them out, scan them on, scan them off.
You know, they can get some food or whatever.
You got to understand, they are getting paid money too as well.
These people are getting $1,200.
They're getting paid $1,200, and they're getting a cell phone, they're getting clothing, they're getting everything right there.
Wait a second.
So are they being paid $1,200 when they arrive at the destination or to get on the bus?
No, at the destination.
So I'm going to clear that up right now.
So the whole thing is...
Texas just signed a law now saying it's illegal or it's felony or whatever to come over without having your paperwork and everything.
Excuse me.
Right.
Just as of now.
Well, actually, about a month ago or a few weeks ago, it went into law.
So before that, Tidham, they were getting these people...
And saying, hey, don't worry about filling out your paperwork of our sanctuary.
Come on, and we'll fill it out while you're over here to get you over there.
So as far as the people that are getting paid, that goes through the state and it goes through some federal deal.
I didn't really quite understand how they did that.
But the federal part comes in with their cell phones.
And so, like, one instance, we had a whole family that was on there, six, seven, eight people, and one of them trying to be slick.
They're like, oh, I forgot my phone at the base or wherever, you know, where we're picking them up at.
And they were like, nah, we can't.
Let's go.
Let's get them off the bus now.
And I was like, well, why?
You know, like, leave him there.
And then he'd go, no, because that phone is the way that the government uses to track them.
Why is the government tracking them?
You can come up with your own stuff on that.
I have no idea.
But that phone is designed for that so they can track where these people are at.
Well, I would imagine they're trying to make sure they get the right number of them into the right districts, like swing states, where they can outvote Trump, probably, in the coming election, is my guess.
But I guess there could be a lot of reasons for that.
Now, what about, are they given food and water on the trip?
Yes, food and water is provided, everything on there, blankets, everything.
They have that.
You gotta understand, these people are coming from, you know, different parts of the world.
Most of the ones that I was going through, which were all Venezuelan.
So, that's a different...
Okay, I wanted to ask you...
I'm sorry to interrupt.
Like, what can you describe?
Because we've heard a lot of people, you know, many reporters that are covering this, like Michael Jan and Ann VanderSteele and Anthony Rubin and so on, they say there's a lot of military-age males.
Did you see that?
With the military-age males?
Me being, that's my background, looking at these people, their demeanor, how they are, nah, it ain't that.
Most of the ones that we were transporting, I hate to say it like this, but they're all criminals, man.
Straight up criminals.
Whoa.
Oh, wow.
So you're seeing what, like tattoos?
No, you're talking about, I understand Spanish, and I can understand exactly what they're trying to do when they get there.
They're talking about when they get there, which kind of dope they're going to try to get, how...
They had it down to the T. Now, these people here, so the ones that you're seeing on the news and the ones that they're coming out, one that I've seen that was outside the actual, I believe it was the Roosevelt Hotel or someone that's in Chicago where it's dropping them off at, they're showing them on the outside saying, yeah, they're barely giving us food and all this.
Nah.
Those are the rare part of the ones that are actually being out there.
Those are the families right there to where I feel bad about because they have no choice.
You know, they understand what's going on.
I mean, you can't blame the kid.
I mean, you can't do none of that.
I mean, we're all human.
But these individuals we're transporting and dropping off and the ones that I'm saying that are getting off the bus in between them, I'm going to have to say they're all criminals, man.
Straight up.
Okay, so like MS-13 type of people?
You understand what Venezuela did?
They did it almost like what Castro did.
They got rid of everything that's in their prisons.
So they're just emptying the prisons and sending them to Texas.
Yep.
But who's doing it?
Who's giving them across that?
They got to go through a lot of stuff to get here.
They can't just do that on their own without any kind of funding or helping.
United Nations.
Yep.
Yeah.
I mean, we've seen all the...
The invasion camps and the Darien Gap, you know, I mean, we've had a lot of sources show us videos of those camps and how they're given maps, right?
And they can go by truck, by boat, on foot, by bus, they can get a, you know, a bus and make their way up.
The United Nations is what I'm hearing.
Yeah.
And these people ain't going to come over there and get out of the jail and just be like, oh, hey.
But I'm going to tell you like this.
They're the most ungrateful people I've ever met in my life.
Meaning they are everything.
I need this.
I need this.
Where's the Wi-Fi?
Where's this?
Where's this and that?
And like one of my friends was saying, hey, we got veterans in this country.
They don't get no $1,200.
They don't get no $300, $400 apartment or place to stay.
Food, clothing, and a phone?
Hey, so with that Chicago stuff, that's what they don't want to show you is they got rid of them.
They do not want no more people going in that hotel room because they ran it down to the bone.
Straight up.
So now, so when you're dropping them off in Chicago, you kind of tell these people like, hey, you see all them out there as camps.
It's all on the outside.
You know, it's kind of like what Austin had with the homeless people, but these are actual nothing but Venezuelan.
And you just tell them and say, hey, you only got 30 days that they're going to allow you here.
If you don't get a job or do anything, you out.
Straight up.
They're not housing them no more because of how they crippled That hotel room and everything around it.
In New York, it's the same thing.
They can't stand it.
Well, that's their problem.
Here it is, Red Cell.
That's extraordinary.
I want to ask you more questions about that.
But here's the organization.
In Espanol, it's called the OIM. Organización Internacional para las Migraciones.
OIM. Or in English, it's I-O-M. Immigration of the International Organization for Migration.
Okay, so IOM or OIM, depending on English or Espanol, that's the United Nations that's running those programs.
And they're giving them maps and they're giving them rape kits, by the way, when they cross the Darien Gap.
And they're bringing them in and they're paying them to make the trek to get to Texas.
We know that for sure.
But what you're adding to that is now they're given major incentives to be deposited across the country and that these are mostly a criminal element.
Yes.
Yes.
Wow.
So tell us more about the conversations that you overheard about what kinds of things they plan to do when they get off the bus.
I mean, they're like anybody else.
They're slick.
They're not stupid.
As soon as they start to look and be like, oh, this guy's listening.
They're doing whatever.
Yeah.
They're not...
Yeah.
Yeah, but it's just the things that they're saying.
And me, I'm not going to lie, you know, so my upbringing and that, I just...
I've been around that world a long time, so it's not no joke, you know what I'm saying?
But that's the majority of what's there.
It's sad to say, you know, I mean, there's some to where we had Hispanic, actual Mexican people.
Refugees or immigrants, whatever you want to call them, coming in, and it's like a totally different tone.
There's a total different tone.
Like, these people here are like, hey, thank you so much.
Like, hey, we're not going to try to do anything.
They're just so proud.
It's just that different kind of, man, it's the attitude that they have in Venezuelans.
Now, let me tell you something like this.
In Venezuela, there's some guy that they have.
I can't remember his name right now, but he is on big TikTok.
He's on something new.
And he literally tells these people what to do when they're here, what they're entitled to, how to steal, how to do every single thing in the world.
And he's a big follower, and they have.
And what that is, he is getting fed his money to tell these people to come here, and this is what they're doing by their own government.
Okay, so wait a minute.
The Venezuelan government is paying this influencer to give people instructions on how to come to the U.S.? And they actually think that that's right.
So my guys are telling him, like, hey, this is what you're seeing.
That's why y'all are doing this.
I'm telling you right now, it ain't working like that.
It ain't going to work like that.
You need to get here.
You need to do this.
If you really want to be here with your family, yada, yada, yada, yada.
But...
Most of the ones, if they don't have family, like I said, they are criminals and they don't care.
They're going to be like, yeah, whatever.
Let me get off this bus.
Did you overhear anybody talking about weapons or wanting to acquire weapons or smuggling weapons?
There's no weapons or nothing like that.
They're not that retarded.
You know what I'm saying?
That's for anybody that's doing that game.
But what comes along with that, and I say it as a game, all that comes along with it.
You understand that.
You see what I'm saying?
You ain't going to go and start doing that.
But they talk about drugs a lot.
Yeah.
So when they were talking about drugs, did they already know contacts in places like Chicago, New York?
That's what I was saying.
So that was one of the main things for me and a lot of, well, just my guys that operated out there, like, hey, man, they're always asking, hey, We're going through here.
Are we doing this?
Are we doing that?
I said, dude, we're going to New York.
I ain't telling you anything in between there.
We're going to Chicago.
I ain't telling you anything in between there.
Because I don't know if they got somebody that's going to meet them at that store or somebody going to meet them at that location where we're at.
And they are constantly, constantly, constantly asking for that.
But, you know, it's opposite.
You can't tell them nothing.
So tell me about the numbers that you're talking about here.
How many buses a day are leaving Texas?
So right there with Teetum, right there, with these particular people, it was Wynn, Wynn Company.
There's the charter buses.
That right there, those are the ones that are the actual direct buddy with Abbott.
Now, these people here with the contract, they were starting to get a lot of pressure to where, when I was midway through the contract...
They had to have, the state of Texas was like, hey, you got to have this many buses running at all times.
Now, you got to understand, these people here, it's a contract, they're trying to save money, so they're buying these buses for $10,000, throwing $2,000 into it.
Hopefully, they get it inspected through the DPS, because they have to inspect them before they get anything on there.
And hopefully, it makes it to A location, B location, stuff like that.
You see what I'm saying?
But they're being, like you said, they're being paid up to a quarter million dollars a busload.
Yeah, no, that's just a contractor being, you know, like any kind of contractor and that.
But, I mean, even if they spend 50 grand on a bus, I mean, they pay off the bus five times over on the first trip.
One time over.
So they wanted a minimum of 23 buses running a day.
23 buses a day.
23 buses a day.
You look out there, there's 50 people on that bus, $5,000 a head.
You can do the math.
Yeah, so we're talking over 1,200 people a day.
Yes, sir.
Or almost 1,200.
So now you got them going from staging point to San Antonio.
That's the main staging point.
Once you go into San Antonio, you're there.
They fap you out to wherever.
They say, hey, you got orders.
You're busing to El Paso, McAllen, Laredo, Del Rio.
Eagle Pass was just at it.
And Brownsville.
Those are the locations right there you go to.
And then once you sit there and wait, then they will tell you, because they've got to process their paperwork and everything on that, but as soon as they got the 50, then you'll get your order being like, hey, go and pick up these people, and your destination is either Chicago, New York, L.A., or Colorado.
And that's how they would do it.
No.
And your team then was hired to actually operate the buses?
No.
So our team was just straight security.
They have their own bus drivers that are doing the bus driving and doing everything.
We're just security for the drivers on the bus.
But your team went along on the ride then to the destination?
Yes.
So we're with them.
So just to give you an idea, so from El Paso, which is the furthest point I can kind of tell you, from El Paso to New York is about 33 hours.
Oh my gosh.
That's a long trip, especially if you keep making it over and over again.
That's a long trip.
And it's a round trip.
It's a round trip.
So, well, we drive them down there.
Their bus has got orders to go do something else afterwards, and then they fly us back down to San Antonio, and we do the same process over and over.
Oh, I see.
So you fly back, you get a new bus, and then you do another one-way trip.
Same thing again, over and over.
Now, when you get to the destination, who is there in New York or Chicago?
Who is there to receive all the migrants that are offloading from the bus?
So when you go to New York, everyone's different, and you've got to understand...
Because of everything that's happening now, and now they got flooded, they got a real good taste of it, is what I like to say.
They can't stand us.
They can't stand us.
They hate us, you know, because we're dropping them off.
That's their problem.
They're the ones that said sanctuary.
But the first thing that you do is you got a timeline that when you're going in there, you let everybody know, like, hey, man, I'm two hours out, three hours out.
And then once you're an hour out, that's when you start getting the...
That's when you call the...
Oh, man, the name of that.
Jesus.
They're port authorities.
You call the port authorities and you tell them and say, hey, we're an hour out.
All you do is tell them how many people you have, what bus number you are.
And then from there, it's 30 minutes out.
They're like, okay, you're going to this location.
Okay, boom.
Go and drop you off.
You sit there.
They put us right there.
And I'm telling you, I believe it was...
2nd Street, 3rd Street.
Well, we were dropping them off in New York was literally one block away from Times Square.
Really?
Mm-hmm.
And then, so, are there ever, like, protesters there trying to stop the buses?
Yes.
So, they figured in Chicago and New York, some protesters, nothing like that, what they're doing, their protesters is their law enforcement.
Their law enforcement would be like, hey, get off.
Let's inspect your deal.
What are you doing?
Basically, to hassle the shit out of you.
I'm sorry.
It's okay.
To hassle you to make it inconvenient to be like, don't come no more.
So that was the protest and harassment.
You know what I'm saying?
That's pretty much...
All the harassment there is pretty much law enforcement.
Now, you're talking about the only ones I've really seen was in Colorado because we're dropping them off dead smack center in Denver to where City Hall, everything.
And then all of a sudden you have families that are walking their kids and everything, and they're looking like, oh my God, what is this?
Oh my God, what is this?
Well, welcome.
You sanctuary city.
Yeah.
The El Salvador prison just got dumped on your front lawn right there, right?
Yeah.
So I'm curious then, when the people that are on the bus, these migrants, when they get to the destination, And they get off the bus.
Are they happy to be there?
What's their attitude?
I'd have to say some of them, yeah, because it's like anybody else, any human being on a bus for that long, it's like, ugh.
But as far as when you look at it to be like, what are you going to do?
Because they have their port authority.
They have their people who we're transferring them over to.
They come on their bus and, you know, we got speakers on there and say, hey, this is this.
This is what you're going to do.
Right now, we have no housing for you.
There were some of them.
We was dropping them off.
And I was telling them, this is how ungrateful these people are.
I said, hey, hold on to your blankets.
Hold on to your blankets.
That's okay.
We're going to get more.
We're going to get more.
I was like, I'm just telling you right now, they ain't giving you nothing.
They ain't going to let you in there.
Hellstorm, 30-something degrees in Chicago.
You're going to be sleeping outside on that sidewalk.
You know what I'm saying?
And then all of a sudden, because the buses are real cold because of the heat from the engines and everything else, they keep it real kind of cold.
So they're thinking that's just the temperature there.
You got to understand, it's people, tropical people.
And then all of a sudden, when they make that step off the bus to get in that cold, oh man, they're wearing sandals and stuff like that.
Oh, it's a different ballgame.
Oh.
Wow.
Yeah.
Welcome to Chicago in December, right?
Welcome.
You know what I'm saying?
So they just...
Most of them, I'd have to say, the families would be like, thank you.
You see what I'm saying?
Thank you and this and that.
Even though how much they were like, hey, this, this and that.
I get that, you know.
But all the other ones, which I'm saying that are up to no good, they're like, whatever.
Get me off the bus.
Let's go.
Like, hurry up.
I got stuff to do.
Wow.
What about children?
Did you see children with families?
Did you see any unaccompanied children?
Man, there's children on there that I've seen, so small, you have to go back and recount them because you have to keep a proper head count of everybody who's there.
You have to show from this point to this point.
Some of them were so small, where they were having them underneath their clothing and that, that you couldn't even see them.
I'd be like, wait a minute.
How many did you sign for or say that we're taken?
Wait a minute.
We only got this number.
Hey, go call back again.
Now, I was looking at that as far as like, does this kid look like he's supposed to be with his family?
And I'm going to tell you, for two trips, I looked at that and I seen a quarter of them know that kid does not belong.
You see what I'm saying?
They did not belong with that family.
Do you think that they, I mean, that's called child recycling.
That's money.
They take a kid.
That's money.
That's like money to them.
That's money to them so they can use that later.
Yeah, like anything else.
So it's kind of a, it's a form of child trafficking.
They're trafficking right in front of you and we're paying for it.
And then what do you think happens to those children when they get to the destination city?
I have no idea, sir.
I have no idea.
Well, anybody else can kind of imagine what happens there.
Do you think the person that's actually being there that is doing the stuff that they have intent to do going to care about that kid?
Highly doubt it.
Probably not.
Right.
Unreal.
But you did see some unit, like family units, like a mom and dad and a couple of kids that did look like they were a family?
Yes, you could see that.
Like, it's anybody.
Like, I'm a family man.
So, like, it's anybody.
Like, you see, like, you could just see it.
You know, like, okay, yeah, yeah, yeah.
And then you could just see some, like, this kid's lost out of his mind.
Like, no way.
Yeah.
Like, he doesn't know what's going on.
He's listening to this person.
And, like, you know, I'm like, okay, man.
All right.
I get that.
I don't know.
Yeah.
So if I could summarize some of what you've said here, So the state of Texas is funding this operation that's enriching certain transportation companies that are getting these contracts, that are getting paid $5,000 per migrant to load up 23 buses a day,
drop off these migrants essentially all over the country, and these migrants largely consist of people that you would characterize as criminals, and some children are being trafficked during this process.
Is that...
Is that a pretty accurate summary so far?
That's pretty much it.
Okay.
Let me ask you another question then.
So your team, or I don't know how many people, I don't need to know, but what's the attitude of the people that you work with?
Do they support or oppose this program?
Everybody is supportive in the beginning.
You know, like everybody, because they're humans.
You know what I'm saying?
Everybody has a chance to do what they...
Everybody has a right to try to live and do what they need to do for their families, and that kind of goes out the window after two weeks.
After dealing with these people and you're like, oh man, hey, you know what?
I'm not going to say the F word, but hey, man, whatever.
Get out of here.
Like, man, it's not happening.
That just shows you how ungrateful and how they take advantage of what everybody's giving them right now.
And we are.
We're giving them that.
You know what I'm saying?
And then that's not...
So speaking of that, so being on there...
This is just illegals and everybody was transporting by during the times when I was there.
And this is specifically in El Paso.
In El Paso, when I'm sitting there, I have a friend of mine.
He's in charge of all three ports of entry for El Paso.
He's with customs.
He's in charge of that, right?
So I'm over here.
We're doing the math.
Like, oh, man, what are you doing?
Who are you seeing?
You know, we're talking, collaborating.
We're in the war together.
And I asked him, I said, hey, dude, on the points of entry, who do you got coming in?
You know, I'm expecting, you know, Venezuelans, Cubans, whatever, you know.
No.
Every single person that they got right now coming in over there in all three points of entry are nothing but Russians.
What?
Nothing but Russians.
Wait a second.
Well, I was going to ask you about Chinese, actually, because we've had reports of that.
Chinese is in Arizona.
No kidding.
But Russians are coming in through El Paso.
When you say Russians, do you mean just ethnic Russians who could be from anywhere around the former Soviet Union?
You're talking about Russian, like actual Russian citizens.
Russians.
Coming to America.
Coming to America.
All military-age fighters.
Well, it's too bad you don't speak Russian, because I'd like to know what they're talking about, huh?
Well, that just kind of threw me off the loop, because there's some spots, you know, they're getting Africans, they're getting different ones, you know, and then with that, it was kind of in the time frame to where all this Hamas stuff kicked off.
So we're doing that, and I asked him, I said, hey, what are we doing, you know, security?
He goes, hey, man, we're about to have a big brief on that, dude.
But...
Yeah, they're going to start slowing stuff down.
And even contracts with us at that time, because I was delayed.
You're supposed to go to a certain spot in a few days, get your people, and get out of there.
I was there for like almost two, three weeks at one time.
And it's because of the Hamas and everything that was going on at that time.
And they're trying to figure out what countermeasures they need to take, you know, as far as precaution.
So that's why I was asking my guy, I was like, well, who's coming over here?
He goes, dude, it's nothing but all Russians, bro.
What about Middle Eastern people?
Syrians, for example, Iranians, and so on.
Nothing?
Not over there in El Paso.
So it's Russians.
What about Chinese?
You said Arizona, but do you see Asian ethnic people coming through Texas?
No, none at all in Texas.
That's all Arizona.
Huh.
Okay, and what other stories have other members of your team told you, things that they've seen that maybe surprised you?
That was the biggest one there for me, as far as who we're transporting and everything, because they're pretty much the same people.
A majority of the southern Texas and everything right there is nothing but Venezuelan.
You know what I'm saying?
That's the main one.
You know, you got some from other spots and that, but that's the majority.
So I'm like, okay, all right, that's great.
So I'm in El Paso.
I'm like, hey, you got Venezuelans or whatever.
It just, that took me for the loop right there.
And he's like, nah, bro, don't change straight up.
Nothing but Russians.
I said, damn, what?
It's like they're strategically putting them in spots and letting them come into this country for a reason.
I'm not trying to say or do whatever, but I just...
I'm not a...
You know, we're...
How can you say this?
I'm in the profession of arms.
So, yeah.
They're strategically putting these people in place in certain parts of this country for a reason.
I wanted to ask you this question anyway, and it's scary.
Okay, so do you get the impression, and this would only be your opinion, I understand, but do you get the impression that this is a planned occupation?
It is.
They're hitting this and targeting this on all certain points to get them into certain areas.
Straight up.
Now, I was just saying, and like I said, it's not opinion, but the way that they're bringing them in and how they're bringing them in and where they're placing them, if something was to go down, and I was speaking with old Highcap over here about this one a while back, but we have never fought a war to where we are just over there fighting a battle and that's it.
This will be a war to where China knows it, and we would be fighting not only away from here, but we'll be fighting our own homeland at the same time.
That's a hell of a disruption.
That's a hell of a disruption.
We've never had that ever.
And for them to put it together to make that happen, it's bad.
They're already planting IEDs along the border.
Who's planting IEDs on the border?
What do you mean?
I can't confirm who's doing it.
They already have...
IEDs, when they're transporting, IEDs were found on the border.
Now, that one right there is IEDs, meaning cartels fighting each other and how they're smuggling and doing whatever they want to do, all that.
But just, I mean, if they're already doing that there, I mean, come on.
Right.
Yeah.
Okay.
So, and by the way, I really thank you for your time here.
If you just have a couple more minutes, I have a few follow-up questions.
I mean, this is really important for the American people to hear the details.
But war correspondents like Michael Yan, who has been a guest on my show many times, he says that Governor Abbott is working for the globalists to further this occupation and invasion of America.
But many Texans...
Feel like Abbott is doing exactly the right thing here, which is to share this burden with other states in the hope that they will recognize the problem of having an open border and maybe they'll do something.
Yeah.
That's what we want to hope for.
And that's what the right political thing to do is.
You know what I'm saying?
I mean, that's what we agree on.
Like, okay, that's great.
That's the political part.
But like I'm saying, don't get it twisted.
That people who are fulfilling these contracts are the people that he knows.
Like, a lot of people, no disrespect to anybody out there that's, you know, in a wheelchair and everything, but I'll say to him, not joking around, I'm being serious, the reason he really can't walk is because their pockets are too thick.
They are too thick.
That sounds bad.
I know it's ugly.
I know it's going to probably offend a couple people, but that's what's happening.
It scratched my back.
I'm going to scratch yours.
It's money.
You'll get some pushback on that comment, no doubt.
But I understand the metaphor that you're using, although, again, that's going to offend a few people.
But look, you're just saying that his pockets are deep because of his financial ties to the transport companies and probably some other players in Texas is what you're saying, correct?
Yes.
Not trying to offend anybody out there, just something.
But if you really think about it, because like you're saying, the question you're asking, like, hey, you know, he's doing the right thing.
Yes, he is.
You know, to get the attention, like, hey, it's something that's real now that's here.
You understand that?
But on the flip side of that, well, I'm not going to do all that for nothing.
Okay, now let me ask you another question, a bigger question, because Donald J. Trump, I think there's a very good chance he's going to be elected president again.
And, you know, especially the Colorado trying to take him off the ballot.
Well, they did take him off the ballot, and that just tends to piss off Americans.
I'll just vote for him now because you say I can't, you know?
And Trump gets back to the White House, he's promised to have the largest immigration or illegal migrant roundup, you know, in the history of the country, round these people up by the millions and deport them.
I want to ask you, just from your experience, seeing this firsthand, is that even possible?
Oh, yeah.
Oh, yeah.
It's possible.
Oh, yeah.
And it's going to happen.
It's going to happen.
I'll tell you that right now.
It's money.
Okay, please.
It's money.
So you got these people out there, and I was seeing it towards the end of my contract to when I'm flying, and they're already sending these people back through their air flights.
I'm sure you can see it on social media on some of them.
They're not showing that.
They're not hitting on it.
They are.
They're already sending them back.
They don't want them no more.
They can't take them.
What do you mean sending them back to where?
Venezuela, wherever.
Like the ones that I was there, they couldn't speak a lick of English.
And they had cars.
They had a thank you, hurry up, welcome to America, PAC.
And they had on there say, I do not speak any English.
Can you please help me to go to where I'm going?
So you're saying the cities, like New York City.
New York City.
That's where I was at, the airport.
Now, what you're talking about, the roundup?
Oh, yes.
Now, who's going to get that contract?
That's what I'm interested about because you have all these people say, like, if you're familiar, you're Texas, you're here in Austin, you see, like, they had all the homeless and everybody there.
Well, they're not going nowhere.
They're going to be outside.
And that's exactly how they are.
They're in these big old communities outside, homeless and all that.
All it is is taking them back up and sending them back.
And probably $5,000 a person.
Probably more at this time because they're flying.
Wow.
Yes.
Right.
So, so if what you're saying, if I could restate this, it sounds like if Trump becomes president, we could see essentially bounty contracts to find and, you know, recapture illegals all across America and deport them.
And then there would, that would be another massive payout.
I mean, first somebody made a lot of money dispersing these people across the country.
Somebody else is going to make even more money rounding them back up.
back up.
Yes.
And that's why I'm telling you back in the day, back earlier when we were discussing about that federal phone, yes, might work constantly into play.
Speak Because they have to have that phone in order to get their little $1,200, in order for them to continue to get their food, to get everything.
So, yeah, exactly.
But then, I mean, that sounds like theater almost.
It sounds like they're using these people as pawns to shuffle a bunch of money into the right pockets.
They're giving them phones where they can track them, and then they're going to round them up again.
And deport them and disperse even more money and maybe even have kind of like a, you know, like a domestic martial law, show me your papers type of situation.
I mean, what about all the Hispanic Americans who are legit Americans, you know, who are not illegals, but they look like they're from, you know, Venezuela or wherever.
I mean, aren't you concerned about that?
Hey, that's just, I'm going to say right there, it depends on what city you're at.
Be honest.
I mean, it is.
Because if you're from here and you're doing everything, you ain't going to worry about it.
Be like, hey, man, I got this.
I ain't got nothing to worry about.
But I see where it is.
And then you can go down that hole all you want.
And they're going to be like, oh, that's racist.
That's this and this.
Hey, man.
Bottom line is, somebody's going to do it.
And...
That's their job, and they're going to find it out.
But most of them people right there, they already have documents and everything with Tidham and all that.
All they're going to do is turn them over, turn over that cell phone, their number and everything, and say, bam, that's them.
I mean, there ain't going to be no bounty.
They're right here on the side of the street.
Now, I'm thinking they're probably not just going to be like, hey, round you up and go whatever.
They're going to do the first things that they're doing now.
If they can't make it here, do whatever.
They'll be like, hey, here's a plane ticket.
Go back home.
If they take it, they take it.
If they don't do it, then hey, be like, hey, you out of here anyhow.
Wow.
Wow.
I mean, so isn't it possible that perhaps you and some of the people you work with could actually then be working that contract?
I would have to be lying, which I'm not going to lie.
I'm not going to do it again, but I'm going to tell you now, there are people right now working on that right now as we speak.
Yeah.
What?
What do you mean?
Working on getting that.
Getting them buses or getting whoever to send them back.
To go round them up and go get everything.
There are people out there that are company and contractors that are doing that right now as we speak, waiting for that trigger to be pulled.
Are you talking about in places like Chicago?
Are you talking about in Texas?
You're talking about Chicago, New York, all of them.
All of them, they're just waiting on the standby.
They're waiting for somebody to tell them.
Right now, they're still transporting, which I told you, it has already slowed everything down because Texas already signed that deal to where you can't come over no more without them having their paperwork already at least in transition to come over here.
Tidham was already being like, no, come over here now.
Obviously, come on, come on, come on, come on, come on, come on.
So that's it.
Let me ask you.
Okay, man, you are blowing my mind here, by the way, but With the buses leaving Texas and taking people to these other destinations, for the most part, people are volunteering to do this.
They want to be on the bus.
They want to go to where they're going.
They want to get paid.
But if you're talking about rounding people up and deporting them, you're going to get a lot of resistance from a lot of people.
All of a sudden, doesn't that make your security job way more difficult?
And also, you don't know if people getting on the bus, if they've got weapons or connections.
At that point, don't you have a really bad security situation?
Yeah.
Yeah, of course you will.
So like you're saying that now, I'm glad you brought that up.
So for these stations and everything they're at, State Trooper, everybody in there, they don't frisk them down.
There's nothing going on.
You know what I'm saying?
One of the protocols is like if anybody in there had COVID or anything...
Then you ain't even allowed on there or this and that.
Now, being in the contracting and doing that, oh yeah.
I mean, if that's what they do, that's their job.
They understand that.
But with the increase of risk means increase in money.
So that's just what it's going to be.
They're going to know that.
They'll understand what's going on.
And that's going to be their job.
That's going to be their risk.
That's what they put.
They put a dollar amount on their life.
That's them.
Yeah.
Because, I mean, maybe this is not the right term, but it sounds like in the scenario we're talking about, if this happens and people are being rounded up in places like Chicago, if they're not put on the planes, if they're put on buses, I mean, it sounds like it's going to be a massive prison transport operation back to the border to drop them off in Mexico.
I mean, it sounds like a high security, high risk, high pay, lucrative type of deal.
And it seems like you're saying that's coming.
Yes.
Yes, because they're already done with it.
You can see it every day.
They're already blaming, oh, well, they're taking advantage of us, this and that.
No.
You're a sanctuary city.
That's what you put out there for.
Well, give them sanctuary.
They don't want it.
It's killing their own people there.
It's retarded.
These people here, they're crying about it.
There's one instance where these people were coming over They had two individuals.
They found one.
They're still looking for the other, but this dude had literally 10 girls in a hotel room, and they were doing nothing but raping them nonstop.
And the only reason that they got to that person, because one of the girls escaped and went to the hospital, and they found one of them.
Well, guess what one of them was?
Well, exactly the people that we was transporting.
So, it's just...
It's sad.
It's ugly, but...
Send them back.
Get them back.
But you got to be honest, and we cannot BS ourselves here.
You can send those back and grab those.
The ones that I'm seeing that they're going to probably grab will be probably the people with the families that couldn't make it out there.
The ones that were plotting to do the dope and do everything there, get out of here.
They're gone.
You ain't going to see them no more.
Well, that's...
Right.
That's my question.
I mean, it seems like the more capable, street-savvy criminal types, they're never going to be found.
They're gone.
They ain't going to be there.
They'll be like, bye.
Thank you for getting me here.
That's it.
Wow.
So, I mean, this is a nightmare scenario for law enforcement all across America.
It is.
Think about it.
Over there in New York, they don't care about them.
You know what I'm saying?
Now they're going to do all that on top of everything else.
Chicago, you already got bad stuff there.
It's just, it never ended.
Colorado, okay, don't hatch up on the ballot.
Doesn't matter.
When they start raping and doing everything you're doing over there, you'll figure it out real quick.
Doesn't matter.
That's their problem.
If you voted for Biden, don't be surprised when the illegals break into your house and rape and murder you.
Yep, like I tell them, I say, well, you go ahead and help them in your house.
They ain't having any.
And they're coming.
They're coming to your house.
Yeah.
Probably.
I just tell them right now, for everything that's going on, as far as all the Russian stuff and everything, and then the Habas and everything, it's going to be the northern states are going to get hit first.
They'll get hit first.
That's just what it is.
They'll get hit first.
Why do you say it?
Because they're the sanctuary city?
No, just because they...
How can I say this in a nice way?
They just run wild out there.
Now, let them come and try to do that here, like in Texas or something.
It ain't happening.
Are you saying because people are armed?
I'm going to say people are armed, but we ain't going to tolerate it, period.
It's just going to be different.
They know where to pick.
They know who to hit.
They're cowards.
You've got to understand that.
The people who do this and do all the mass...
You know, whatever.
They're cowards.
So they're going to go to the most vulnerable spots that they can do.
But I'm not saying not to be not aware of what's happening here in the state.
It's just that, in my mind, I have a feeling it's going to happen up there first.
They'll try it, but...
It ain't going to happen here.
Well, how do you feel about the fact that these migrants that are being dropped off in a lot of these cities like Chicago are, in essence, displacing local aid resources from homeless, which tends to have a lot of veterans, a lot of military veterans on the streets, obviously, in places like Chicago.
tent cities are being set up for the illegals, but not the Chicago people, not the Americans.
Same thing in New York City, right?
Mayor Eric Adams there is saying New York City is going to collapse because of the burden of having to rescue all these migrants here.
But that means resources don't go to New Yorkers.
How do you feel about that, seeing this?
Oh, you already know how I feel about that.
I ain't even going to express much on that, but...
I mean, that's...
It's sad to say, but that's who's in power right now.
What can you do?
I mean, it's sad.
I mean, you try to help or hope that those out there that actually did something, you know, to keep us from all that ugliness, you know, and how they treat it and how they don't get, you know, what they need, it's sad.
It's sad, but it's a reality.
And it's going to continue.
So that's just, you know...
Are you a veteran yourself?
Yes, sir.
And so, can I assume that you are taking steps to protect your family, yourself, your home, with Second Amendment tools, correct?
Oh, yeah.
There's no doubt about that.
Oh, HICAP already knows that one.
Yeah, yeah, exactly.
Well, some high-capacity magazines seem rather appropriate right now, actually, come to think of it.
Okay, you've given us a lot of your time, and I appreciate you, and I know our viewers do.
Is there anything that you want to add that I haven't asked you?
I would just say right now, just be...
On your toes.
Just don't follow, don't listen to all this that they're trying to show you.
And just understand, especially in your bigger spots and stuff like that, to where these cowards and that, that's where they target.
So just keep the head on the swivel.
Just keep the faith in the Lord.
And just stay sharp out there.
With me, that's my game, you know what I'm saying?
So I just say, stay violent.
That's the only way I can say it.
Stay what?
Stay violent?
Doesn't mean it like that.
I was a sniper in the Marine Corps, so you probably didn't get that real quick.
Oh, I see.
Yeah, so it's kind of one of the things we say is stay sharp, stay violent.
And I'll tell you all my law enforcement.
Okay, no, I didn't know you were a sniper, a Marine Corps sniper.
But, yeah, knowing that, then I pity anybody that comes within 1,000 yards of your house because the Marine Corps knows how to train snipers, that's for sure.
Yes, sir.
Okay.
All right.
Well, thank you, sir, for helping to sound the alarm.
And I hope that this warning serves the purpose of helping to secure America.
You know, we're not out here to try to say bad things about anybody, but rather, you know, why can't we defend our border, protect our country, protect our families and communities?
And, you know, until that border is closed off, This nightmare is going to keep getting worse.
So I thank you for taking the time with us today.
Thank you, sir.
And like you said, it is worth it.
It's definitely worth it.
It's the main priority right now.
All right.
All right.
Well, please reach out to me.
Keep us posted.
If you see anything else that you think needs to get out there, I'll help spread the word.
And let's continue to pressure lawmakers, politicians.
We've got to close this border.
We have to have organized, rational immigration control.
Otherwise, we don't have a country.
And it looks like we're being invaded and occupied and set up for a massive...
Domestic war is what it looks like to me.
But thank you, sir, for your time today.
I appreciate it.
Thank you, Mike.
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