Col. Pete Chambers (ret) joins Mike Adams in studio for an uncensored interview...
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Welcome to today's interview here on Brighton.com.
Mike Adams here in the Brighton studios.
We're joined today by retired Colonel Pete Chambers.
Welcome, sir.
Always great to have you back.
Always good to be back.
See you and your canine.
I have to tell the audience, I would not have my dog if it wasn't for you and meeting you and your dog.
That's right.
We met over at a different set, Alex's Place.
Joe came on.
He's been on there twice now, so I'm excited about that.
But yeah, that was...
I could sell in your face.
I was like, okay, first of all, he's a dog guy.
Second of all, he respects these machines, because he's a machine.
Oh, yeah.
He uses a machine.
I mean, that's what they are.
We just got to play a little bit outside, and I have learned so much.
I learn from having my dog as much as he learns from me.
You know, in a spiritual sense for me, I look at him, when he's looking at me, like he's just waiting for that command.
And he just needs that positive affirmation.
It's like, couldn't we think that way about the master?
So I learn from him a lot of messages.
Absolutely.
Also, I guess about dedication and persistence, too.
Because this guy, he doesn't give up.
Yeah.
Joe's the same, you know, so my guy is the same.
Well, my dog has the notable history of being the only dog to have scratched Alex Jones' desk.
There are scratch marks on his broadcast desk because of...
Well, he tried to get my dog on there.
I said, no, I don't train him to do that, so he didn't.
Because I remember he had papers all over his desk.
Are you sure you want me to put my dog over here?
But he didn't.
He knows what we're talking about.
He knows.
They're intuitive.
This guy, can you show a wide view so the audience can see?
No, sit.
Don't come up here.
Sit.
He knows when I finish an interview.
See, there he is.
He's waiting to come up.
He knows when I finish an interview, and he gets up by hearing just my words.
He knows what I'm saying.
Thank you for watching today.
Your tone has changed.
He gets up and comes around every time.
They're waiting for that because they're looking for work.
That's their motto.
Look for work.
That's true.
Yeah.
All right.
Well, anyway, again, thank you.
Meeting you actually changed my life in many ways.
I'm glad.
Yeah.
So thank you.
Now let's talk about what's happening in the world.
What's happening in the world.
I know you're aware of the border situation.
I mean, you follow that quite closely.
You want to give us an update?
Sure.
So, you know, I work in a think tank, but we're a think tank that actually does action stuff.
You know, most of those are white paper people.
They write things and we actually get on the ground and we go forward and we look at the problem sets and then we try to come up with solutions.
So in this case, the alligator closest to our canoe, I call it, is that border.
You know, because I don't live that many hours from the border.
And I worked down there when I was in the National Guard, so I kind of knew it like the back of my hand.
But having that and then having met the local players and, say, the stakeholders, the people that live there, the law enforcement, the federal side as well, you know all the players.
And you see, and then former Green Beret, you know, 20-something years of doing that, you know how to identify seams and gaps in chaotic environments, okay?
And that's chaos.
It is complete chaos down there.
Some days, one point might have 1,000 people come across in 12 hours, and then it'll be a whack-a-mole because they'll move a bunch of troops there, and then they just go somewhere else.
Right.
1,250 miles of border.
Right.
We've heard they're being texted GPS coordinates now.
Absolutely.
In real-time passageways.
And that is a concern.
And I spoke to the Eagle Pass Border Patrol guys off the record because they won't talk on the record.
Yeah.
And they'll get squashed.
And they said that that came from command directly to a guy in the field.
Absolutely.
Because you've got to realize that that was Eagle Pass.
Yeah, that was Eagle Pass, the point of entry under the bridge.
And we had double-stacked some connexes there.
The state of Texas did.
The National Guard.
So they double-stacked them, and then they put triple-strand concertina wire along the front edge of it.
Well, if they know that this GPS coordinate is going to link me up at a time and place, time on target, for a seam or gap, and there will be a forklift come in and lift it up, there's some preparation and planning that has to take place for that to happen.
Previous times they had gone in there and cut it with wire cutters, but I think that they just went ahead and just lifted it up.
So why isn't...
Governor Abbott, I mean, I think many of us who live in Texas, we're at the point where we're urging the governor to just arrest, you know, federal agents that are cutting the wire.
You know what I'm saying?
I mean, truly, the state of Texas, I call it the Republic of Texas, in the Constitution allows for a sheriff to arrest somebody doing that.
Yeah.
Here's the caveat to that, is that the federal government, the Border Patrol, owns a certain, I think it's 300 yards in, I'm not sure, the amount in from the river.
So just like the Corps of Engineers might own land around a lake or something like that, or a body of water, We're good to go.
And Mexico said it was theirs, and the U.S. said it's theirs.
Well, Texas just went in, and this is one good thing that Texas did, and said, we're going to check the maps, and we're going to look at it, and it's ours.
So our Texas Rangers, in combination with, well, they are part of DPS, Department of Public Safety, went in there and cleared that out, and then brush cut that, and then burned it so that they couldn't go back and use that as a hiding spot.
Yeah, we interviewed one of the guys on the op.
Oh, you did?
Okay.
Yeah.
So, yeah, you're fully aware of that.
So that's a win.
Yeah.
With Governor Abbott, you know, we have had to reveal things in order to kind of make a circumstance somewhat embarrassing in order to get some action.
I see.
Liberty County, the Colonia.
Michael Yons talked about it.
That actually will stem from Todd Bensman, Center for Immigration Studies, wrote an article about a murder that had taken place in there, in this colony.
At that time, there were 20,000 illegal immigrants living in there.
Wow.
Okay, well, it can carry, you know, we base the estimate on looking at the land and the pattern of the land.
We flew over it, and it's about 40 square miles.
That will house 200,000 people when it's filled.
That will be the 18th largest city in the state of Texas.
About the size of Amarillo Brownsville.
Wow.
So that will be a trailer park with no services really.
There's no sewer.
There's no anything.
It will just be up to the Liberty County County Commission to develop the services.
Well, I say...
How many of those guys in that county commission have businesses that provide services?
I'm always looking at that now, and I have to.
But that was embarrassing because the guy that was developing it had given certain campaign funds to Governor Abbott.
It's embarrassing.
Now, thank goodness, Attorney General Paxton was exonerated.
Yes.
And so he's back out there, and he's swinging, and he's going to shut it down.
We'll see.
Well, thank God that Paxton was able to expose all the lies that were used by certain operators that we know about that tried to get Paxton out of the way.
I see Paxton as someone that's really fighting for Texans, and I think Paxton would make a great AG at the federal level.
When Trump wins the next election, I hope Paxton is the Attorney General.
Make Paxton Attorney General make me the border czar.
That sounds good to me.
We'll shut that thing down.
Absolutely.
Make Michael Yon the intelligence deputy officer.
And it truly was Michael Yon and Ann VanderSteel's Burning Edge that really got in there and got on top of it.
That's right.
Burning Edge.
Because then I just rode along and made sure that everything was safe.
But they truly did some amazing work.
But that led to other things.
When you start going down rabbit trails and following money, we started finding kids that were held up in Austin.
We're talking about apartment complex.
109 kids that were unaccompanied minors from the border, from Central America.
Boys, teenagers.
Apartment complex, one apartment complex in Austin.
And DHS released them to five sponsor families.
Five for 109 kids.
This is what the Muckraker guys have been covering.
The actual government-sponsored trafficking.
Right.
So I got to see it from the other side, you know, be the guy on the ground.
That's what I do.
I find things on the ground.
And so with that, and Muckraker does too, by the way.
You've heard their story.
Yeah.
But from that, we went down in there, and so they're using these kids and this gang, and if you're driving around downtown Austin, you see a sign, a tag on the wall that says Los Cholos.
That's them.
Los Cholos.
Which means the gang of boys.
No kidding, yeah.
No kidding.
Wow.
So this is the problem.
So we give that information to local law enforcement down there.
It's up to them now to do something with it because we don't have the authorities to do that.
Right.
But that's the fight we're in.
It seems like we need to see Trump back in office for anything good to happen about the border.
Right.
Now, Biden, even the Democrats are done with Biden at this point.
But some of that's because a lot of the Democrats are more pro-Palestine, and a lot of the immigrants are Muslims.
Yeah.
And so there's this civil war inside the Democrat Party right now over Israel versus Gaza.
And we do have a civil war on the conservative side, be it Zionist or not Zionist.
Exactly.
And this is, you know what, I got it.
It's sensitive.
The Bible says, Israel, chosen people, I got it.
But nobody has allowed atrocities either side.
I agree.
Completely agree.
You can't bomb a hospital full of women and children and say we think there's a target underneath it.
I mean, if you try to do that...
On deployment, you'd be court-martialed.
So when I called in as a commander for an airstrike, I had to confirm positive identification, number one, and then also what other effects would it have within the second and third order effects of that kill zone.
That's right.
And then I had to make sure, but then I had to also send up my initials, Papa Charlie, to that flyer, to that fast mover, or that B-52 way up high, To make sure that they knew who it was that called it on the ground.
The potential for war crimes is great when those things take place.
But you had accountability in that chain of command.
Absolutely.
And you were scrutinized, right?
I mean, you had after-action reports.
You had to justify your actions.
Oh, absolutely.
After-action and sometimes a 15-6 investigation takes place where there was a question, okay, let's see, and either exonerated or not.
I never had that, but...
Those are the things that go through your head.
I've seen people not call in strikes and go ahead and fight it out on the ground because it was just too close.
You're in a city.
I mean, most of it's urban warfare.
In Iraq, it was for sure.
Places like Fallujah and other, Ramadi.
But when you get out in the hinterlands of Afghanistan, it's easy to make that positive idea and clear the corners, so to speak, that you're not taking out unnecessary civilian casualties.
See, I'm really glad that people like you are working for America right now.
I want to talk about your community organizing efforts because you know what war looks like.
You know how ugly and dangerous it is and how important it is to de-escalate and avoid kinetic conflict wherever possible.
But you also know the consequences.
Of getting overrun by dictators or tyrants or just evil.
This is what Green Braves do.
We have a set of missions that we're very good at.
Very good at.
All Green Braves understand direct action and that's just kicking the door down.
You have to know that.
Yeah.
But the subset that we truly are the subject matter experts of is unconventional warfare and foreign internal defense.
So it depends on who the bad actor state is or bad actor group that you're going against.
against, you might be assisting a friendly nation for an internal defense, or you might be assisting early on Taliban that were good guys, the Northern Alliance, and then trying to overthrow the bad Taliban.
And at that point, it's unconventional warfare.
Either way, you're going into a place in a different language, convincing them to fight for you, America, for the good of the oppressed.
The motto, De Oppresso Liber, for the Green Braves, to free the oppressed.
So it's much more than that on a geopolitical level, but on the ground, 12 guys going to middle of nowhere and convince them that these people are bad, and we're going to organize you so that you can affect change in a positive manner.
Right.
Now, when you're doing that domestically, I just go ahead and say, I'm a community organizer, so therefore I should fit in the same category as Obama at this point, right?
So you just leave me alone and I can do what I got to do.
That's true.
I have to be very careful.
Because with the background that I have and my guys, Green Berets, SEALs, you know, and other law enforcement, all retired, if somebody wanted to, they could make it look like, oh, you're trying to create a militia, which...
I don't see a problem with it.
It is in the Constitution.
However, we're not doing that.
We're organizing communities that they could take care of themselves from any sort of sleeper cell, cartels that come across the border.
I mean, these are real things.
Including natural disasters.
Natural disasters is truly, you know, I was at Katrina, I was at Rita, Harvey, all these things.
Those things are chaos, right?
Yes.
And we learn how to control chaos.
And we don't control it.
We know how to learn how to control our controllables in that.
All those years prepared me for this Esther moment, moments such as this, to be in these seams and gaps so that we can help our folks.
Let me mention a couple of vectors that I think justify what you're talking about, why local organizing is really critical for self-reliant communities.
But we had NERC, NERC, North American Electric Reliability Council, talking about how we're going to have power grid outages probably this winter during severe cold spells.
So when grids go down, bad things happen anywhere in the world.
And in America, we don't have the most polite society like Japan, or let's say, or South Korea even.
I mean, our society, when the grid goes down, looters come out, carjackings.
Katrina.
Katrina.
Exactly.
I was there in New Orleans and in Biloxi, and I saw two different communities respond two different ways.
Perfect example.
I mean, you got the country folk out there helping each other out.
You go downtown New Orleans, and it's a free-for-all.
Cops are stealing TV sets.
Right?
Oh, my.
Yes.
And the National Guard was trying to gun confiscate from the citizens in the cities.
All at the same time.
Right.
And then on top of that, we now have, because of the actions in the Middle East, We have a lot of Arabic immigrants or Muslim immigrants, some Persian immigrants, certainly some Palestinian immigrants.
And I want to say for the record, most people in most places all over the world are peaceful people.
They just want to live in peace, grow food, raise kids, be left alone.
But when you have heightened emotions and you have bombings and things happening, you're going to reach a tipping point in the minds of certain typically young males who might be easily recruited into extremist type of activities in the United States.
You agree with that assessment?
If I were to go after a group of people, I would go after what would be called the disenfranchised.
And this is a term we use quite a bit when we're looking at a country being overthrown, is who's preying upon those disenfranchised people?
If I'm going to create something, if we think Cloward-Piven doctrine, and we start bringing in a transfer migration, or as Michael calls it, Michael Young calls it, the human osmotic pressure, this overwhelms the system.
Power grid goes down, how do you get trucks to the store?
How do you pump gas?
So that all has a second and third order effect that really could turn into a disaster because then people that are on the fence, they don't have to be a jihadist and they don't have to be a white supremacist, but they could be somebody that's just like, okay, I'm a little bit hungry right now and I'm going to go loot my neighbor's house and take their food.
People will do exigent things in exigent times.
Well, and especially with food inflation worsening dramatically, the value of the dollar plummeting, and now we're talking about the rise of AI systems replacing a lot of workers, including laborers, by the way.
We're going to see hundreds of thousands, if not millions, of warehouse workers, fast food workers, and so on, displaced by humanoid robots over the next few years.
And what this means is you're going to have millions more Americans who have no To earn money and be self-reliant, they're going to become more desperate.
And when you put more people on the government, call it free cheese program for lack of a better term, that's that Clara Piven doctrine that really went awry.
You know, these social programs, there is a need for those things.
People that really need that, but it's overwhelming right now.
And the answer is not printing the money to continue the program, right?
The answer is not legal plunder.
According to Yellen it is.
The answer is not legal plunder as Bastiat, you know, the French Revolution talks about.
These people that are up there on the hill making their decisions legally plunder.
Our citizens.
Yes.
You know, give me a flat tax and get rid of the loopholes and include corporations.
We're done with that.
Get rid of the lobbyists, okay, and then add some term limits, and I think we'll fix the problem.
Yeah, good point.
Term limits would go a long way right there.
Right.
Wouldn't have any more Mitch McConnells hanging around for careers.
Nancy Pelosi's, Mitch McConnell's, yeah.
Yeah, Pelosi's as well.
Okay, now, while we're talking here, give people, like, your website or channels or how they can follow your work and efforts.
Yeah, just one, really.
I keep it simple.
DrPeteChambers.com.
DrPeteChambers.com.
And that is...
There's a place there you can go and see what's called the lines of effort.
And that lines of effort page is made so that I can have a place where the things that I'm working on, you can go look at it and see.
Because I've worked on everything from the whistleblowing with the mandates in the military to 5G issues to updating on the current VAX injuries, things like that.
But I also work on the border stuff.
So it's a humanitarian effort.
That's what my company is, the Remnant A-Team.
Here's your mission statement.
We're just bringing up the website.
You can see it up there.
And the call to action and the mission statement, and it's all there in a lot of words.
There's the A-Team symbol with my horse banded on the right and Joe on the left.
Love Joe.
He's hanging out in your truck right now.
He's out there in the parking lot.
He's out there right now.
And Joe and I and Bandit started out with just a three-man team on the border.
And that was just helping out friends that I had met down there.
And then we were blessed.
The America Project came out and supported us at an event.
Raised some money.
We got seed money.
And now we're looking at actual contracts that we can...
Actually do things.
We're waiting for legislation to be deputized, though.
You know what?
This reminds me.
I have a knife for you.
I was just looking at your knife.
Hold on.
I'm going to get you a knife because, you know, I worked with Dawson Knives and came out with a line of custom knives.
Oh, that's right.
I saw those.
Yeah.
And they're made of the Magna Cut alloy, which is corrosion-proof.
Right.
Oh, yeah.
That would come in handy.
Oh, actually, this might be...
This is it.
That's a Tanto style.
Yeah, that is a Tanto style model.
Wait, do you prefer the Tanto style?
You can choose.
Let me grab the other one.
There's a Kydex on here too.
Oh yeah, I like this handle.
I've got to show you my green braid knife.
It's very much similar.
First of all, there's the tomahawk.
Oh man, look at this.
We don't have that in production yet, but if you want that, sir, it is yours.
Are you serious?
Yeah, I'm serious.
I'd rather do this.
Go for it.
Yeah, because I got plenty of knives, but I love them.
Take a look at it, but we've also got, this is one of the other styles we have.
That handle's beautiful.
It's got a nice finger guard, and then we have more covert styles.
Yeah, and I've got...
This is bushcrafting.
Yeah, I've got similar sizes, but no, that I don't have because I've got an old World War II one that I... It's yours.
Well, thank you.
Absolutely.
Yeah, I like these handles.
I'll show you my green braid knife on the way out that they issue us.
It's a Yarborough, and when you graduate the course, they give it to you.
But same kind of inlaid...
Alright, yeah, we're going to...
I didn't mean to turn this into like an infomercial or anything.
No, I mean, it's alright.
But that was not...
We don't even have that in production yet, but we're going to produce that next year.
I might have to get you to sign it with a Sharpie.
Open it up.
Take it out.
Check it out.
It's really something.
Oh, man.
I've been wanting to get you.
You know what?
I'm going to have to start throwing this thing and get it balanced.
Yeah, this is a good pry tool as well.
Absolutely.
Right there.
Yeah.
And look what you can do with the other end.
I mean, talk about breaking stuff.
G10 handle, the whole deal.
Anyway.
Yeah, so...
I came from the Indian nation.
This fits right in my hands.
This is perfect.
I love it.
I love that in your hands better than just sitting here in the studio.
So, yeah.
Well, you know, and this will go on my kit.
I'll actually put this on my ruck because it's nice to have a tool to either.
Oh, yeah.
And it won't rust.
You know how it is in Texas when you leave your tools out.
Especially down there.
And there's just too much humidity in the air and everything rusts.
Oxidizes and rusts, yeah.
Yeah, but that won't rust.
Yeah, well, thank you.
And this is a Dawson as well?
Yeah.
Yeah, that's actually John Roy's design.
I think my team guys are going to be upset.
Yeah!
We're going to have to get more?
They're going to be just, oh yeah, we'll outfit them.
Well, that's what we'll do.
We'll get more for you next year.
Yeah, we actually get issued these, not this nice, just basic issue, and they're just a plain wooden handle, but sometimes they break.
Yeah, yeah.
Because we go to the lowest common denominator company charging the most money for that hammer or for that hatchet.
Right.
Yeah.
Well, you can stand on it.
You can chop it and stand on it, bounce on it.
It's not going to break.
These things flex.
Yeah, that's nice.
Nice stuff.
All right, so how can people help support you, by the way?
You know, there is a support doc thing there.
It's a give, send, go.
When we set it up, we thought, well, we don't know.
It was just me, actually.
And Ann Vander still happened to be over at our think tank.
And she said, let's set this up and it'll help you out.
And it did.
Yeah.
And that gave us the seed money that we needed to get started instead of pulling money out of our savings.
Oh, here it is.
Support doc.
Okay.
Yeah, support doc.
Click that and then it goes to give, send, go.
Got it.
Right.
And so my intent with this is...
Oh, here's a funny story.
I've got to tell you a funny one about this.
All right, so supposedly there's a meaning to the number 17, which I didn't know.
Oh, yeah.
Right?
Q. I didn't know.
Because, you know, my whole military career, I'm like, well, if there was a Q, I would have been involved, right?
Yeah.
I'm a good guy, even though I do wear a black hat.
But no, so when this started, the numbers were coming in, donations, and they were either 17 or 45.
Right.
Yeah, Trump or Q. So I'm sitting there, and we've got all these smart guys in the think tank, and we're like, why is it $17?
Did they take $3 out of a $20?
No.
One of the dumbest guys in the room goes, no, Doc, that's Q. I'm like, oh, never mind.
You're smarter than us.
Anyway, I started looking into it because when you look at life, 39 years of wearing a uniform, and all you're doing is looking at a mission through a straw.
And you've got to do that mission.
And that's all you do.
And you don't pay attention to what's going on back home and all these things.
And then I come back from Africa on a mission, and COVID kicks off.
And there I am back in this crazy world that changed.
And so, yeah, so 17.
So that was it.
So, because of that number...
I'm going to show you something to blow your mind.
Because remember, our first camp on the border, we're calling it Camp 17.
For those people that gave $17.
A lot of people did that for us to make a good bit of money.
That tells me we the people, number one.
It tells me these Q people can't be that bad.
And I never thought they were.
They care, right?
And so, to me, they get Camp 17.
Then we'll have Camp 17 Alpha, Camp 17 Bravo, Charlie, all the way down the border.
And 1776, probably.
I think we're about 1775 right now, but that's where I think we're at.
Yeah, probably right.
I want to show you something.
Well, actually, you can see it up there if you guys put it on the screen.
Amazon just released a new AI agent called Amazon Q. And this was just announced two days ago.
And what Amazon Q does, it is an AI agent that...
Oh, my God.
First of all, you give it all your passwords to everything, email, Slack, Salesforce, and then you can give it instructions of things to do, like business flow instructions, like go out and research these prices, build a chart, zip the file, upload it to Dropbox, send this email, compose this letter, and it's called Q. Because Q-level clearance, as you know, means access to all the secrets.
Well, this agent accesses all of your secrets.
And I was just going to say, that is an agent.
It's an actual agent.
It's an agent.
And you pay for it.
You pay $25 a month for Amazon Q to know all your secrets.
And a lot of people paid to go get booster shots.
They did.
Right?
They did.
So you're paying for your own demise.
And Amazon AWS, of course, is funded by the CIA. Yeah.
So, I mean...
That's pretty amazing.
It's not hard to connect these dots.
So now when you see this stuff, it stands right out.
Yeah.
And so that gives me a little bit of hope.
Because when I'm out, I've been everywhere from South Florida now to the Redwood Forest...
As this has gone on, more and more people are waking up.
Yeah.
You know, that's why I truly believe that we're going to be okay.
I don't think it's going to get easier before it gets harder.
Right.
And that's going to call out a lot of people, hopefully not terminally, but it's going to get harder.
I agree with you.
Yeah.
And I'm a glasses-half-full guy.
Oh, I think we have an incredibly bright future once we get through this.
Yes, I agree.
I think we're going to call out those at the top, and that may be happening now.
This is like freedom training, actually, if you think about it.
It's like you go in the gym and train in the gym to gain strength.
Right now, because of all the oppression, you're getting freedom training.
There's that, and there's also a certain sense of discernment that you learn through this.
You can talk to somebody for about 10 minutes and go, nah, idiot.
Clueless.
They're going to get lost.
They're going to be just destroyed in this.
But you find the people that truly are real people that do care about others.
And I'm not talking about just America, even though that's what I'm about, just Texas and America, but the world.
I'm talking about humanity.
Yes.
You know, this is a worldwide fight.
Oh, absolutely.
And we're smack dab and not even, we're past the middle.
Oh, wow.
Yeah.
Well, what do you think about Texas and how Texas is going to do during this?
Because my assessment, I mean, I think Texas is very well positioned.
I'll just say that up front.
And the spirit of Texas counts for a lot.
But not only that, I mean, we have ocean ports.
Texas is like one of the largest economies in the world, if it were considered a country.
Between 7th and 12th, I've heard.
Yeah, it's wild.
Yeah.
Texas has manufacturing, technology, agriculture, fossil fuels, its own power grid, and telecom, innovation.
People that want to do amazing things right now in business, they come to Texas.
Elon Musk.
Tesla's right down the road here, man.
The whole freaking Tesla spaceport or whatever they're building over there.
And we want that.
Yeah, exactly.
So Texas is what I call the first domino of the flyover states.
If Texas were to fall, The rest of it could potentially go a lot easier, but Texas will not fall because of that spirit.
That's right.
And because of...
Look, I'm out there talking to folks, and I have outrun my headlights, so to speak, in this, as far as getting help.
Yeah.
More help than I need.
I don't have the infrastructure yet to support all of that yet.
Yeah.
But it's coming.
And it's just like the Alamo when people from Tennessee showed up and all over.
Now, the Alamo didn't end up so well, but the outcome overall was a republic at that point.
And I see that now.
I see people from Florida contacting me and saying, how can we help?
We're going to send some guys out to volunteer to help sit on the border and to see.
I can't run operations on the border.
I can't.
But I can teach people how to take care of themselves and their property and their livestock and their fences And I can send guys out, medics, to take care of those poor and fortunate people that the coyotes are leading through these hot places down Presidio.
Now it's cooling off now.
And just leaving them behind to die.
We find bodies all the time.
There's nothing humanitarian about this humanitarian crisis from our side, from our response side.
So that's the things I can do, right?
Right.
Right.
But do you feel optimistic about Texas being able to survive this?
Even if, let's say, even if the dollar collapses and the federal government is nullified for a while, or just in chaos, it seems to me like Texas has the resources to be able to, we could do our own thing for as long as it's necessary.
We could have our own gold repository and we could support ourselves.
We could have our own petrodollar, so to speak.
Exactly.
Like a new Texas dollar backed by oil.
Backed by oil.
Absolutely.
I would use that.
Heck yeah.
I mean, who doesn't want energy, you know?
Right?
Right.
Or gold.
Yeah, so I talk about it and I say, look, Texas was a republic once.
And it may very well be again.
It may be again.
Because if this thing squashes, this thing that's, you know, I call it the corporation of the United States, if that squashes, there's got to be a phoenix to come out of this.
And the people that I know are resilient.
Yeah.
That will do it.
These communities, I speak to five different communities now, and I don't lead anybody because they lead themselves.
These are citizens.
Neighborhood watch programs on steroids, is what I call it.
And as a matter of fact, tonight in Drip, we got one meeting there, and they're going to be talking about canning.
Okay, so they...
Last year when we had a minor ice storm, that group went into high speed, moving generators around, cutting trees.
You see it, right?
I grew up in a town with 3,000 people.
That's what we did when a tornado hit.
But this is watching it with people from all the walks of life, backgrounds, in Texas, learning how to be Texans.
Yep.
And watching it happen.
Now, on that point, in fact, I want to mention something.
I'm pretty sure you'll agree with me, but it's okay if you don't.
But I know a lot of Latino Texans who are hardcore, all on board with everything that you and I are saying.
Cowboy Latino guys who, they live the Texas spirit.
They're Americans and they're Texans and they have their Latino culture.
And I love these guys.
Oh, yeah.
I would serve right along beside them.
I would help them out just like anybody else.
And we need to distinguish between illegal immigrants and cartels.
Absolutely.
And that's a good point.
I got a great story for you on that.
A real short one.
About my second, third month into the border when I was in uniform and working down in McAllen and in the town of Roma.
And so it's right there across from Miguel Aleman, one of the highly contested cartel fights between CDN and Nuevo Generation.
But these people are coming across at night, and sometimes they're wounded.
Sometimes they're dying of heat.
Sometimes they're doing whatever.
So me as a doc, even though I wore a hat of a Green Beret, I was still a doctor, I would help people.
And so you'd be on the ground, you'd be helping these folks, and of course my National Guard guys are mostly Hispanic Americans.
They're from Texas, right?
And they live in the McAllen area.
So a lot of culture there.
And I had this sergeant major, no, sergeant first class.
And we got back to the base.
He said, Doc, I see how you take care of those people coming across.
You're really good to them.
I said, okay, I appreciate that.
I like people.
And he said, when I was three years old, I came across that border.
No kidding.
Now here's a sergeant first class, 20-something years in, Purple Heart, Bronze Star, served our country in several wars.
He came across that border illegally, right?
Uh-huh.
By the letter of the law.
That doesn't make him lesser of a citizen.
I use the term illegal aliens because that's the way I grew up in.
That's what it was called.
But there's no demeaning of that.
Because I see these people face to face.
Two little girls that we took off the border from some people that were trafficking them.
Seven, eight-year-old sisters from Guatemala.
Your heart breaks.
They're humans.
But that's an example of somebody that is just as American as you or I who came across there Illegally, without papers.
Yeah.
We love them.
Look, I call my cowboy brothers down there in Eagle Pass area the Cristeros.
That's based upon, back in the days of Pancho Villa, they were Christian riders who fought against the government of Mexico who was trying to squash the church.
No kidding.
They were called the Cristeros.
Wow.
This group exists now down in South Texas as a bunch of cowboys that are concerned about what's going on on the border.
Right, right.
And I'm really glad to hear that story because it's so important to make this distinction.
You know, there are narco cartels that are doing horrible things, human trafficking, weapons trafficking, child trafficking.
Right.
But frankly, there's a whole lot of human trafficking domestically in the United States by U.S. people as well, or in Israel for that matter.
And there wouldn't be if there wasn't a need for it.
In Europe?
A demand for it.
There wouldn't be in the United States.
Exactly, exactly.
So what...
If I could say this, I think what you and I stand for, or let's say we stand against evil, for sure.
We stand for humanity.
We do stand for the rule of law.
We want people to follow the law and to go through the process.
We want to invite immigrants based on merit and background checks and all the things that matter.
But overall, we are pro-humanity.
We want to help people be free and be prosperous.
I would gladly put a revolving door on the border and bring across people with merit and load up some of these legislators that don't have merit and send them back south.
I'd love to make that bargain, too.
We could make a list.
I mean, they broke my heart up there.
We'll trade.
We'll do a barter.
Send them south.
I mean, just send them on out.
Or for all those people that hate the Constitution.
Yeah, guess what?
Go somewhere else if you want.
You're right.
The merit is there.
I see them.
These families that are second, third generation on the border, wonderful people.
They have a culture.
If you're a Polish-American from Chicago, you have a culture.
You're American.
Right?
Irish from New York.
I mean, you're still an American.
And so they are as much or more, and especially right now, because some of these people, I know this for a fact.
I've heard the stories.
They're being used as pawns.
They were collected up to move forward, to bring in NGOs, moving them forward, pushing them forward.
You're talking about the illegals.
Illegals.
They're being pushed.
Yes.
Yeah, absolutely.
They're given maps.
They're given coordinates.
Yeah.
What's app is got all kinds of channels for people and different ways that they can go and where to go and who to contact and how to get there, what NGO is going to pay for them.
And that's the invasion.
That's a cold-blown invasion of the United States.
Yes, sir.
It's an invasion, and I talk to guys all the way down the border, and I hope that we can take our project here, this Camp 17, and move it all the way to San Diego, but we just take it one bite at a time.
Wow.
How can people actually help you with your project?
I mean, we talked about donations, but can people volunteer in different areas?
Yes, yes.
And so we're really picky about that because we have to be careful not to bring in the wrong element.
Absolutely.
Because anybody can come in and say, okay, let's go down there and shoot some people.
No, no, no.
We're not doing that.
You know, what we want to bring in is assets.
We want to bring in calm.
We want to lend.
We want to control the controllables.
Through decreasing chaos.
Absolutely.
Increasing.
So we've got to be careful.
That's right.
Or being infiltrated.
Or being infiltrated.
Yes.
We've seen that too.
So on the website, there's a contact page.
Even though it says contact to speak, you just hit that.
It goes to my email.
And then I say, hey, yeah, and we vet you.
And we say, come on down and we'll do this.
But like I said before, having done a few shows like this, When that happens, it literally can be thousands of people saying, hey, how do I help you?
Well, then I've outrun my headlines.
Yes.
So I've got to be careful.
Difficult.
Just phase it.
We're in phase zero to one right now.
I hear you.
And I think there's going to be even more interest in what you're doing as the systems that people have lived with and relied on for their entire lives, those systems are crumbling around us.
People see it even in finance.
Banks are having more mistakes and more outages.
Power grids are not as reliable.
The money just doesn't work as well.
And there's also a lack of capability.
And I know you've seen this because you and your buddies in the Green Berets, you are people who get things done.
And you're not going to sit there and say, oh, we can't do that.
We're going to figure out a way to get that done.
These are conversations we have every day.
Exactly.
But there's a culture in America, among America's youth, not all of them, but most of them, of Can't do anything.
Don't even want to do anything.
I'm just a consumer.
Just give me money so I can buy brand stuff, and I can't produce anything.
And that is the effect of what Yuri Bezmanov talked about, demoralization.
Exactly.
It's a demoralization.
But those are the ones that I talk to, right?
Those kids.
Good.
Right?
And I said, you know, my kid's 24.
He's going into the Army.
He wants to be a Green Beret.
Okay, great.
He's finished his college and he's going in.
But we talk to kids like that to say, when I go to these groups and I go to places where they've got kids camps and things like that and try to talk to them about what they can do.
So we teach them how to do tourniquet class.
Yeah, cool.
But it gets their mind right, like, I'm actually outside learning this thing, this thing that could help, you know, and starting a fire.
I mean, just basic stuff, but it develops that interest in something other than a box and a TV set.
Or a social media chat.
Or a social media, right.
Log.
That's the demoralization stuff.
Yeah, yeah.
That's great.
I mean, we need capable hands-on people.
This is what made America the world's power from World War II, especially on...
Frontier spirit.
I mean, how did we win World War II? It was people who could get things done.
Bunch of kids from farms and ranches.
Absolutely.
19-year-old United States Marine, weighed 145 pounds, but could carry a full load with a.308.
I mean, getting it done.
Yeah.
And today, you don't see that that much.
And that's where we focus.
But truly, what we need, the numbers that we need to have kind of come to that side, if you will, are not as much as you think.
Okay.
Because you just need a few active people to say, hey, follow me if you want to live, and they will.
Yeah.
But the same thing can happen on the dark side of this, right?
Follow me and you'll die.
They just don't tell them that.
You know, follow me and life will be easier.
It'll be comfortable.
You know, I say this, it was from a movie, Gladiator says, you know, Gladiator asked his aide, you know, would you enjoy your life?
He said, well, most of the time I do what I have to do.
Sometimes I get to do what I want to do.
And that's really where I'm at.
There's days I don't want to drive six hours to Presidio or whatever, you know, the big bend.
But if I don't, then the second and third order effects of me not doing something and all my other, it trickles down.
And as a leader, you're responsible.
Absolutely.
I have similar conversations about even what I do, having this platform and having this influence.
There are days where I don't want to come into the studio, but you do it because people depend on what you do.
That's right, yeah.
And I'm so happy to be able to work with you.
I mean, it's a great combination.
You're face to face with people, teaching people skills and attitudes.
And then thank you for coming in the studio today so that we can help share this with the world through this platform.
I'd much rather do it this way than a TV screen.
Although we could do a Zoom or whatever.
No, this is much better.
It's always cool when you get to swing by.
And I get to see your dog.
And I get cool stuff.
You get cool gifts.
Thank you.
Yeah, we have more for you.
There's also a whole rack of our Health Ranger store snacks and food products and freeze-dried.
And you're welcome to raid that rack before you go.
You would be proud to know that we use your buckets, actually, for our standby.
Oh, that's nice.
We keep certain stashes along the border if our guys need it.
Okay.
Oh, yeah.
We call those caches.
We are about to release, and again, I'm not trying to promote it, but just for your sake, especially, we're about to release instant meals next year.
Ooh.
First one's going to be macaroni and cheese, all organic, with the macaroni elbows made out of amaranth and quinoa, which is high protein.
Which is good.
It's high carbs.
And then it's real organic, freeze-dried, powdered, heavy cream.
Oh.
No crap.
That's keto.
No crapping.
I mean, there's no artificial...
You had me at a hole.
And powdered cheese.
I mean, like sharp cheddar organic freeze-dried powdered cheese and powdered butter and then onions and pepper and whatever.
And it's going to be where you just boil water.
And that's what we need for traveling.
Exactly.
The problem with MREs is that they're already wet, essentially.
We're just heating heat, but they're so heavy, so you can only take a few meals and you end up not getting the amount of calories.
Plus, they're not good calories.
I hate to say it.
I know, that's true.
The military didn't go there to the high end either.
No, and we're not going to do precooked MREs.
We're just going to do uncooked, dried materials that you add water.
That's it.
And it's light and you can move.
It's light.
Exactly.
So we will get you some supply of this for your team.
Throw some in the saddlebags.
Yep, absolutely.
What else do you want to cover before we wrap this up today?
You know, I think we covered everything.
There wasn't anything that was particular on my mind.
I do want to, you know, anybody that has supported, I want to thank you, first of all, because it's taken us from, you know, one guy and a horse and a dog to a bunch of guys, and we're going to keep that operationally secure because we don't want to talk about places or names.
I'm the only face of this thing now.
You know the movie A-Team or the TV show?
Yeah.
Right?
So they had one guy, he was the face, and that's my job.
I've got to be that.
How come nobody could shoot straight on the A-Team show?
I know.
They never hit anybody.
They should have taken lessons from Antonio.
Nobody ever got shot.
Antonio Banderas flying across the table hitting everything.
It's like a thousand rounds were expended during this episode.
Nobody got hit.
Never got hit.
It was scary though.
It was very scary.
Someone has run out of patience here.
He's good.
You can keep going.
He's just going to hang out and listen.
I just want to thank people because that has taken it.
This is going to result in Us being here to hold that wall, to stand a post, if you will.
Yeah.
I know you would never let your dog do this to you, but I've let him be a little more friendly here in the studio.
You know, Joe will do that with me once in a while.
He's older now.
He's 10.
Yeah.
So we don't mind.
He knows when the show's about to end.
He does.
And he comes up and he wants to play.
So that's what he's doing right now.
Yeah, no, that's good.
And like we were saying outside, I was saying, you know, if you learn to bring your life into his life, things will be so much easier.
You know, instead of trying to get him to assimilate.
I mean, they have to sit at certain times and go, you know, I've taken my dog in the Capitol building, not on January 6th, but in the speaker's office.
And so he's been up there.
No, he's great.
They know when they're on duty.
Oh, yeah.
I put the vest on him, and I've got the collar on him right now.
I take him into shopping or whatever.
He's cool.
He's doing his thing.
If we've got time for another story, this is a good one.
I'm standing on the border at McAllen at the Rio Grande, looking 400 meters across at what we call the Mike side, which is Mexico.
I've got a congressional delegation behind me, six congresspeople from all over the country, Republican congressional delegation.
And they're there to do their typical, you know, let's take pictures and we can tell everybody we went to the border story.
So I'm in full body armor.
I've got my weapon system.
I'm looking south to where the cartel could possibly be.
This knucklehead congressman comes up behind me, this tall guy.
His name is Katko.
I can go ahead and talk about it because he's not going to run again and it didn't matter if he did.
From New York.
And by the way, he was one of the 11 to vote to impeach Trump.
So I knew that's why Joe didn't like him because...
I'm standing there, now imagine this, M4, looking in Mexico, night vision, dog on a leash on the front of me, he's standing there looking too.
Guy comes up and goes, Hey, puppy!
And he comes over, and Joe literally turns me around, and now I'm face-to-face with this six-foot-three, you know, congressman who's a knucklehead, and Joe, at the end of his leech, jumping up.
And on my website, you can see it.
If you look at the media page, there's a picture of me talking to these congresspeople.
And I was like, Sir, you've got to be careful with that.
He goes, I'm a sitting U.S. congressman.
I said, Explain that to the dog, brother!
I said, he's working right now.
Exactly.
But if that tells you something about the mentality of something...
Oh, I know.
It's incredible.
Right?
Now, did you leash him to your belt?
Yeah, you have a little thing, and you can quick release.
That's what I do, too.
Yeah, a little red tab you pull, and it'll quick release if I have to.
Oh, I don't have a quick release.
Yeah, you just take...
We use the same thing when we're strapped into a chopper.
It has a red tab.
You pull it, and it just opens up the little pin.
Oh, great.
I'm going to have to get that.
Yeah, I'll show you what it looks like.
Okay, cool.
Yeah.
See?
We're upgrading each other's gear today.
It's just for a quick release.
You're out and you need to send him.
That's the fur missile.
But I find, yeah, I strap him.
I leash him right to my riggers belt here.
Yeah, don't ever put them on your loops because it'll tear your belt.
No, not the loops, but where you're supposed to.
On that, you can do it there or you can actually get one that's right on the side because I like him over here.
He knows to stay on my left side because I've got my weapon system over here.
So he's always doing that.
And then the other thing is when you're carrying a weapon, you want them, when they stop, their body's got to be touching your leg.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
You don't want them out in front of your body.
And you don't want to be looking down when you're supposed to be up here.
So I say the word and he gets up next to me and locks in.
He's really good about that, too.
He'll back up.
He's not...
What you're seeing today is his, like, playtime behavior.
It's not...
Yeah, well, Joe's...
Believe me, the guy that I work with in the shop, he's a colonel, retired colonel as well, Phil Waldron.
Great guy.
Oh, I know Waldron.
Yeah, we've interviewed him.
So Phil, you know, we call him Uncle Phil because he ruins Joe.
He's like, come here, Joe.
Yeah, yeah, right.
And I'm like, he's like a, you know, a crazy uncle that just ruins your kids.
Yeah.
So it's okay.
You know, we...
That's awesome.
The dog does it.
He's 10.
He's earned it.
So...
Most definitely.
Wow, amazing.
Well, I've got to say, it's just an honor to have you here in studio.
Oh, yeah.
I want to thank you for taking the time with us today, for making the drive and being here.
And you are welcome here at any time.
Same thing.
If you need something from us, just holler.
Well, we're going to get you some supplies coming up, some more new food.
Okay.
You've got the tomahawk.
Let's see what else I can wrangle up for you and your team.
I know you'll get stuff distributed as well.
And we're going to give you some items.
You have your truck here, so you can handle a few things.
And I want to say hi to Joe before we go, if that's all right.
Okay.
We'll go out and say hi to Joe.
He's cool.
Yeah.
Oh, yeah.
I'd love to see you.
Okay.
Let's do that.
Yeah.
All right.
It's an honor, sir.
Hey, honor's mine.
Thanks for being here today.
Yeah.
Alright, the website, folks, is drpetechambers.com.
That's D-R for doctor.
Drpetechambers.com.
Check out everything he's got going on there and consider supporting him at the support doc link here on the upper right, which will take you to this donation page.
And doc, you're doing amazing work for America and for Texas.
It makes me really, really happy to be a Texan and to know that you're a fellow Texan.
I'm just so thrilled to be here.
To know that you're here.
That's what we do, right?
That's amazing.
You're one of the people that gives me faith in the future of Texas.
Feeling mutual, yeah.
I see it across town here.
Yep, absolutely.
Alright, we'll be safe and we'll talk again soon.
Roger that.
Alright, take care.
All right, everybody.
Thanks for watching today.
Of course, you can repost this interview on other platforms if you'd like and other channels.
Feel free to do so.
And please support this platform, BrightTown.com, where free speech is welcomed, not censored.
And I'm Mike Adams, the founder of BrightTown, and thank you for watching today.
God bless you all.
God bless America.
God bless Texas, especially.
All right.
Take care, everybody.
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A global reset is coming.
And that's why I've recorded a new nine-hour audiobook.
It's called The Global Reset Survival Guide.
You can download it for free by subscribing to the naturalnews.com email newsletter, which is also free.
I'll describe how the monetary system fails.
I also cover emergency medicine and first aid and what to buy to help you avoid infections.