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Aug. 29, 2025 - Health Ranger - Mike Adams
01:16:11
Interview with Doc Pete Chambers, running to be the next governor of TEXAS
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Welcome to today's interview here at the Brightown.com studios in central Texas.
And I'm joined today by a longtime friend of the show and an extraordinary man who is, of course, a veteran and much more than that.
He leads a faith-based ministry also in Texas separately from what he's doing now, which is running for governor.
It's Doc Pete Chambers.
Welcome.
Pete, Mr. Chambers.
I should call you.
Hopefully soon, Governor Chambers.
Yeah, that'll be in November.
So tell us about the website, the effort, right?
Why'd you decide to run for governor?
I mean, we've got to hear the whole story.
Yeah, this is not something that I could answer without talking about faith.
Yes.
And I was on another show when we first announced and I said I had to stop the cameras being taped and say I actually have to use my faith in this.
And we're like, absolutely, just please, everything.
So being a guy that, that, that, you know, has been in counter human trafficking, you know, disaster relief, military for a lot of years.
I did 39 years total active guard reserves, got over my 20, got out.
And I thought I was just going to go and raise some cattle and all that kind of stuff and live an easy life.
However, during my last eight years in Texas in the Texas National Guard, I saw what was happening back home.
I had been in Afghanistan, Iraq, all these other places down range, back and forth for twenty years.
Really, that's what we've been doing.
And you don't really pay attention to what's happening back home sometimes when you're focused on your missions.
Because I'm a mission focused guy.
And so getting back, I really pay attention to these things, even though I'd heard about things, you know, people call it getting red pilled.
You know, I just really, not focused there because I'm focused on a lot of other things, you know, the fifty meter targets, if you will.
When I got back home, I really focused on that, especially during COVID.
That was the wake up call for a lot of people.
And so for me, it was, you know, standing in the gap, basically for soldiers, saying they're not going to take the shots, getting fired over it, which at that point, I had nothing on the internet about me.
You could only find one article when I graduated from residency, and I went to residency down in Beaumont, Texas, and Port Arthur, and really, that was it.
There was a picture of me in a newspaper.
That was it.
And then after that, I ended up on Alex Jones show, where we met.
You got Rhody.
That's right.
That's right.
And here he is.
And here he is.
Where did he go?
Yeah, he's tooling around somewhere.
And so I paid attention to those things and then I started testifying in court cases, federal court cases, to protect SEALs in one case, an individual in another case, Roberts v Austin, SEALs v Austin or DOD.
And so now I'm digging deeper into what's going on.
Now I pair that with my faith.
And my faith has always been there, but it's really come along stronger in the last several years since we've been tested, wondering why are people that I thought had some constitutional character falling by the wayside?
What's going on?
It's not a judgment thing.
This has to do with fruits of the spirit, right?
So when you see what happened to the nation and it really is in your face, then you start reading and researching, right?
Because I got more time on my hands.
I didn't have a job.
I was out of the military.
I retired, honorable discharge, all that good stuff.
But I saw what they were willing to do to guys like me, who were really top echelon guys in the DOD.
If they did that to me, what are they going to do to the rest of them?
Are they kidding?
Oh, shit.
That's what went through my head.
Right.
Because I had soldiers that were damaged, some for life.
Some I can question whether or not they died, but we had six deaths in the Texas Military Department.
There were unknown causes.
And so I have to ask, well, what caused this?
So I started researching that, went on Alex Jones.
At that point, I couldn't stay hidden off the internet, right?
Yeah.
I don't, and nothing against Alex.
I've never been on his show.
I had never watched his show.
It wasn't, I don't watch a lot of shows.
I don't watch TV.
And so when I got on his show, it was like, it went viral in the sense of the DOD coming after me, went viral.
Yeah.
And so I got out.
And that was during the, was that the first Trump administration?
Was that Biden?
No, that was in 2021.
So that was right when I was finishing up Operation Lone Star, so around May of 2021.
Oh, okay.
So that was when Biden was a new president, so of course they were coming hard for you.
Coming hard.
And I got a call from inside the Pentagon, a friend of mine that said, you need to get out.
Your name's on the, on the list, or whatever the list is.
And so they were coming after me.
And they were coming hot and heavy.
And they did some things with regard to pay.
It took me two years to get my retirement pay.
Wow.
We still can't figure that out, but it's here now.
So you're on the let's mess with him list.
Let's mess with him list.
Because I was already out.
They couldn't catch me, you know, they didn't throw me in the brig, which is great.
But truth.
Truth has a cost.
Absolutely.
Right.
So when I take the sign of a lie.
Right.
And I take the Bible and I look at the Bible and I look at the red letters.
When you talk about being red pilled, I'm red lettered.
totally because i look at those letters yeah and i'm like okay those words and christ had a cost for truth oh yeah he paid the ultimate cost of all sin for from before recorded time and up to the end of time and so for me and so did james and so did all of peter and so i mean they all down the list right right so we we we take a hit you know whenever we tell the truth yeah especially against an establishment that term is you know people use that might use it the deep state
might use a globalist might use whatever term but it's all one thing it's it's it's love of self it's it's black and white it's evil evil, whatever it is, it's pretty binary to me.
Yeah.
I look at things.
Right.
And so doing that, I got out and I started going after bad guys that I knew were on the border with regard to counter human trafficking.
Because that's really where my heart was.
Yeah.
Because I'd seen those kids come across the border and then knew that some of them I handed to the border patrol would never be found again.
And it came to fruition with Terra Rodas' testifying on Capitol Hill regarding 300,000 to 500,000 unaccompanied minors that are missing.
Yeah.
Right.
Those are innocent.
Wherever country they're from.
Right?
They're innocent.
Yeah.
So I went after them.
There's a massive, I mean, you know, there's a massive human trafficking network that was deeply tied into the Biden administration and the deep state elements, et cetera.
You know, I bet Tulsi Gabbard has been red pilled recently.
I know.
Seeing all that intelligence.
Yeah, I know she has.
Oh, Mike, how do you even sleep after you know those secrets?
And so what do you do with it once you do see it and you're in the...
I mean, you're up there where no matter what, we have a new administration now, the border has been, the tourniquet has been put on the border, but we still got a thousand tiny cuts.
Yeah.
Right.
So nobody pays attention to those now because the numbers are down.
But we're still having the same problem sets, but they're expanding, they're networking.
When I say they, the cartels, the bad guys, the deep state, they're expanding their networks into other avenues of tyranny.
Right.
It ultimately results in that.
Right.
The loss of freedom.
unlawful plunder of your resources.
But it seems like Texas in particular is very vulnerable to all of those tactics that are being weaponized against us.
Right, sir.
And you're running for the governor of Texas, and I just want to give out your website, docpetechambers.org.
Is that right?
.org.
Okay.
Okay, so docdocpchambers.org.
There it is.
That's the website, yeah.
And of course, you're accepting donations for your campaign.
Absolutely.
But talk to us about the vulnerabilities that Texas may have to all these threats against us.
Right, so Texas, you know, is, if it wanted to, if it wanted to, it could just operate independently.
It could.
Own power grid.
That's right.
Eighth largest economy in the world.
Yep.
It's bigger than most of the resources that we need to survive.
And ports.
Ports.
Yeah, energy.
Earl.
out there in the Permian Basin.
Right.
Right.
I mean, we've got it all.
That's right.
We've got it all.
But that makes you a target, or makes us a target.
Absolutely.
It's a target.
And so when we look at, you know, what Bobby Kennedy called the corporate democracy, of course, greed is going to step in.
I'm going to give you an example of that.
This is something that I'm currently drinking from the fire hose of all the issues that I have to talk about.
Oh, I can only imagine.
It's crazy.
It's crazy, brother.
But one of them is data centers.
Yeah.
Okay, so data centers, first one that came on the radar for me was Abilene.
And the hundreds of millions of gallons of water required to cool a server.
Yeah.
Well, that takes place.
Those decisions to put that in.
there took place behind closed doors.
That's right.
The county commission didn't know about it, the local leaders I've spoken to.
They didn't know about it.
They're not happy about it.
You get less than double digits or double digits in rain a year, Abilene.
You don't want your water to disappear.
Well, Microsoft, the company that started that particular line of effort, they said, well, we're going to have a net positive gain.
Well, how are you going to do that?
Oh, oh, you're going to cloud seed?
Or are you going to put a desalination plant somewhere around Abilene?
Because it ain't going to happen.
So, net positive gain in water?
Even though they use an evaporative process to cool servers, and think about the amount of energy as well they're going to use.
Oh, I know.
You know.
No, the state is supposed to be using up by 2030.
Bingo.
400 billion gallons of water just for data centers.
Probably 30 data centers.
I've had three more that I've got information about.
And the main investors in these are huge, huge corporations.
Absolutely.
Right, so we're looking at SoftBank.
Yeah, right, SoftBank out of Canada.
There's companies out of Canada that are straight up in Oracle.
Yeah.
So when we look at who's investing in these things, then who's going to gain from that?
Is it going to be the citizens of Texas?
We still have to consider, they have to drink water.
You can't drink anything that AI can produce.
You can't eat anything that AI can produce.
That's right.
Right?
And the AI benefits the company but doesn't benefit the company., but it doesn't give anything back.
There are hardly any human jobs in the AI data center.
Correct.
And so that falls under the category of don't pee on my leg and tell me it's raining.
Yeah.
That's right.
It's not going to happen.
So we need to think a little bit more, a little deeper about the second and third order effects of something that brings in we want to usher in.
We want to usher in things that are not progressive.
Wrong word.
We want to usher in technology.
We want to usher in all those good things, business, right, development.
But at the risk of what?
At the risk of what?
I've talked about this in great detail on my own podcast about not only are data centers taking water, but obviously, of course, a massive amount of megawatt hours or gigawatt hours.
Right.
And, you know, you can go to the ERCOT website and we can see that, you know, there's a power grid in Texas.
It almost broke in 2021, as you recall.
Yes.
Right.
But it's working now.
And I think it's more resilient now.
But you start adding data centers to this that themselves will use up gigawatt hours every day.
And you're like, what?
Because there's not every day.
You know, and it's 24-7.
Right.
And the wind farms, yeah, sometimes the wind blows at night but the solar farms in Texas don't work for some reason when the sun's not shining.
Right.
That's, and I don't believe that that green energy is the answer.
No.
Now, in discussing that piece of the fire hose that we're taking is energy, we have to look at much smaller but nuclear power plants.
Totally.
We must look at that.
Right.
I'm 100% right with you.
Because we can do this.
We can actually export energy around the world if we wanted to.
Right.
That's going to really bring in some revenue for the state if we consider that wisely.
We have to look at the number of refineries that are still shut down right now.
So when Trump says drill, baby, drill, that's a great idea.
But we still have four refineries that are down in the Beaumont and Port Arthur area.
So that takes five to seven years to bring them back up online because during the Biden administration, I believe they shut down about seven.
So we're looking at four that are still offline.
We've got to look at that because it's crippling our whole economy.
It cripples the economy and then it keeps the boys in the Permian Basin going, well, it costs us too much to pull the gas out of the ground.
So we're actually seeing prices go back up again.
I drive a diesel and I'm coming back down.
I just drove here four hours and I'm seeing diesel prices up at four dollars thirty nine cents.
You're kidding.
The gallon.
I'm not kidding.
Man.
Right?
In certain places.
Now you get to certain places down here it's about three dollars a gallon okay 299 you know three 17 but we're still watching this variable variability in a time when right we should be drill baby drilling right absolutely so that doesn't make a lick of sense you know what's really interesting and i'd love you to speak about this from the perspective of texas' next governor but The whole climate change,
I call it cultism, climate cultism argument crippled this nation and it hurt Texas and it hurt our energy infrastructure and it put us behind China by years in terms of our ability to scale up AI data centers in this race to superintelligence.
So it's Not just that all the green energy policies pushed by the Democrats hurt Texas or LNG exports or oil exports, it also hurt our ability to even compete for the future of this planet.
You know what I mean?
Correct.
Because when you talk about a global power competitor, which is China is, and they're playing a long game, we always talk about that, but here's what that looks like.
That looks like waiting it out.
It looks like microchips laden batteries, the big battery thing they're bringing in, putting power in the ground to control the next Yuri type storm so that you can plus up the grid.
That grid shifting technology.
Grid shifting technology.
So when you look at that and they're being plused up by technology that's from China, if I'm a global power competitor, I could use that if I wanted to shut down the grid completely if those components are in those systems.
That's right.
That's a danger.
That's a national defense danger, a clear and present danger.
It's, and it's, I think, I mean, I interviewed a guest on this very point.
talking about that's the greatest risk to the integrity of our power grid is the cyber attacks.
Yes.
Which don't even have to be from China.
Like, no, China built backdoors into it.
Some other country could exploit those backdoors.
Backdoors are easily exploitable.
And having not been on the technical side of that, but the user side in the sense that I need to go somewhere and conduct an operation and get in through a backdoor to decrease their security stance, their platform, absolutely.
We use it all the time, right?
So that's just at the very tactical level.
At the geopolitical level, that can be devastating.
And it can even be a non-human actor.
It could be an AI, a rogue AI system that wants to...
You know what I'm saying?
So then the question has to be asked, what is the need for 30 new AI super centers.
I mean, we're going to turn West Texas into an AI data bank.
Yes.
And the people in West Texas probably don't want that.
The ag people don't want it.
There's a lot of crops to grow out there because we have enough water in the aquifer to, you know, the circular, circular watering out there of crops.
All right.
So, so we have that.
We still have a ranching industry that is fairly robust in Texas.
Should be number one in the nation.
So we have that.
How are we going to balance out the water usage and say, well, we're still going to supply you water for food?
Once again, AI doesn't produce food.
So we, we've got to consider these things.
And this is where now as a governor, as a man that's going to, you know, have the 40,000 foot view picture of everything, my job description, number one, says Commander in Chief, right?
That's what it says.
Now the Lieutenant Governor actually has more legislative power in the state of Texas.
Right.
But the governor himself is the Commander in Chief, which requires me to be concerned about two main things.
Physical security, economic security, right?
Now food security and all those things fall underneath those categories, but we've got to be able to produce enough to sustain ourselves, right?
To go into the next generation.
I'm really glad you brought that up because you have in essence listed the three resources that humans need but data centers compete for and that's land so it's either a food producing farm or now it's a farm bought by a data center right which produces no food and then water you mentioned and then electricity now all of these are bottlenecked Right?
They're all essentially scarce, although Texas has a lot more land than most places at a cheaper cost.
But the water is very scarce, of course, the whole western half of the state, very scarce.
Right.
And you can't create water.
from nothing, right?
So I don't know what the plan is.
It's too far for a desalination plant, and that's very energy intensive anyway.
Right.
But it seems to me like at least the energy problem could be addressed with small modular nuclear reactions.
Exactly.
You want to talk about that?
So this is, you know, I I understand they exist.
I can't tell you about the technology, but I can understand I can say this that those would still require water for cooling towers and things like that.
So they have to be along the coast.
You might be able to get away with it in some of the bigger rivers, the Red River, Guadalupe.
I mean, that's a river, although you don't want them to be in close proximity to areas where there's high populists, but I still believe that with two or three of those that we could actually be selling energy to other countries, just based upon my team advising me on specifics of that.
So I know that you've probably had some people on here to discuss that.
And I ask this out there.
Citizen-led governance is one of the things that we are big on in this campaign, but also when we do, I say we, our team, when we do take the governor's office.
The way that we're going to do it is not through lobbyists, and it's not going to be through corporations.
It's not going to be through, as far as decision-making, citizen-led.
You bring me the smartest guys in the room.
We put a task force together.
We solve the problem.
I need the bottom line up front.
I'm the governor.
I need the so what?
Why are you telling me this?
And I need courses of action, at least three.
And then we combine those, and then we build up a plan that will then not only take us to the next generation, but generations to come and usher in.
As one lady told me, what I'm seeing in your campaign, this is a spiritual lady, she said, I see Texas being ushered in through you.
50 more years of 50 good years at least.
I think Texas could be the capital of the next America frankly.
Yeah, I do.
And that's my opinion because you know DC is corrupt beyond repair, it seems, for lots of reasons.
The culture of what DC has become is a cesspool that's anti-American.
It's anti-faith, anti-human.
It has nothing to do with our constitutional republic at all, whatsoever.
And yet Texas still has that strong spirit that is pro-faith, pro-human, et cetera.
Now I do want to ask you though, about, uh,
saying that Abbott is a WEF who allowed Texas's border to remain totally unprotected for all these years, which appears to have been the case until recently, actually.
What do you say to that?
Right.
So I know Michael Yaan very well, and I understand his background, and he is probably the smartest guy when it comes to what comes up.
through Central America.
That's true.
Into the United States.
Into all the camps.
He's also one of the most well-read historically men I've ever met.
He carries libraries on the back of burros.
Yeah, burros.
You know what I mean?
And so this is what I know.
Because I'm a fat guy.
So facts are, on my time on the border, 99% of the optics that people saw on the news were not the reality.
99%.
Wow.
Right?
Are you talking about the optics of defensive?
Defensive, yes.
The posture.
They were staging it to make it look like we were protecting the border.
Because I had wondered many times sitting on that.
on that border Who is pushing this problem set to the right and why?
Okay, there's a lot of money that came into this thing from the federal government and from the NGOs through USAID.
Who is pushing it to to the right?
And everybody had their hand in the pie, trying to get that funding, whether it came from the UN, UNESCO, or taxpayers that were giving money to UNESCO, a UN organization, to give money to people that were being used as ponds to transfer migrate into the United States.
Totally.
Through the seams and gaps of all that chaos then came the nefarious actors, Trende Aragua, CCP, all those individuals.
That's what I was down there on the border working on.
Right.
Right, looking for those needles in that stack of needles.
And so now, when Makarion says that, I have to say that I concur with that statement, because I've seen it firsthand.
Now, this campaign is not about slinging mud, but it's just presenting facts.
I don't have to sling the mud.
I've known you for several years and I've never heard you just viciously try to reputationize someone as a sport or anything of that kind.
It's not in my character, nor is it really, you know, when I read that book again, in that book, you can have righteous anger about things, and I do when it comes to people being oppressed.
We all do.
Yes, absolutely.
But facts are facts.
And the facts are we have not done anything as a state that came from the governor's office to protect that border that was actually functional.
Wow.
That's a big statement.
Functional.
Right.
That's a big statement.
We have optics.
We do every once in a while roll somebody up.
It looks good on the news, right?
But not enough to make a difference.
And so why did Pete Chambers step in?
Because I knew what was going on behind the scenes.
And I saw the threat.
A bunch of folks in North Texas got together, a bunch of spirit-filled folks and other people from around the country, and they said, and they met me at a, we were having a dinner and then a campfire.
And they said, would you consider running for the governor of Texas?
And so I said, now I said I would be an executive, but I meant sheriff, right?
Because a sheriff is an executive.
I didn't mean governor.
said, but I'll pray about it for a week and I'll get back to you because it really presented a good case and it was an argument.
And then subsequent to that, every day that I was looking for something to tell me no, I was looking for God to tell me no, I kept hearing yes.
I kept hearing yes, perceiving, not audibly hearing, but perceiving because the information was coming to me at that point and just as I was seeking it, who's going to do it?
Okay.
A career politician isn't going to do it if he's already represented himself over the past 12 years or 30 years as a politician total, that what I'm doing is, let's say, he says, I'm going to decrease taxes or I'm going to abolish taxes.
He's gone up 26% during his time on property tax.
Okay, well, that's unconstitutional, right?
Yeah.
They are unconstitutional, both Texas and federal law.
Now, there are certain things that you might have to pay into for schools and things like that.
But then we'd have to ask the question, well, if Texas is the eighth largest economy in the world, but yet it's ranked somewhere between, depending on the metric, 27th to 40th in the country on education, then if I'm giving money to education and that's not functional, I'm seeing what's on the border.
That's not functional.
I look at the 26 billion dollars of emergency money that we have in this state, that's a rotating, or it's called a living budget.
If I look at that living budget, that's 26 billion right now.
And we just went through flooding in the Guadalupe Corridor, and I say, well, where's the money for this?
And then I look at the budget, and now I'm understanding how to read it, and I'm going, wait a minute, we still have money here from Hurricane Harvey.
Why hasn't that been used?
There were 200,000 homes that were damaged in that.
Only 9,000 of them have been affected by any of that money, right?
So if we're getting this, 75% of that money comes from the federal government, and there are expectations that come with that then where is it going right what's it being used for right once again this is just a simple audit so you know we we don huff eins wants to be the comptroller for the state of texas i like don just saw him the other day we interviewed don right great man great man he's got some great ideas so he's talking about a doge texas it's on my website doge texas i agree with that we did it separately i didn't think about what's don doing yeah yeah you know i don't look at what government common
sense idea right just common sense there you go we got to doge texas we got to clean this up There's too much fraud.
We don't want Texas to become California or even Illinois for God's sake.
The fraud level in Illinois is off the charts all the time.
Yeah, for the Californians out there, this is not for you.
This is for the people that come over here with that politics.
Do not California are Texas.
Yeah, unless.
Politics.
Unless you're a pro Second Amendment California, like you pro, your own food at home.
Yeah.
You know, yeah, come on out.
Because you're basically a Texas.
Gavin knew some politics we don't want here.
Right.
Right.
Don't come over that.
Because I got a lot of friends there from there and they're great people.
They're here for that reason.
Because they saw freedom.
But now they're a little bit nervous too, like me.
And so when you say, you know, that he's polling well, I had a strategist tell me this a few weeks ago in Houston.
He said, well, Abbott's polling at 78 percent, right, by, from his previous voters.
There's no way from his previous voters.
From his previous voters.
Well, that's a pretty big qualifier.
Right, right.
So the metrics you there wasn't meaningful to me.
But I actually used your Enoch.
Did you?
Yes, I did.
I used the same questions.
And I, and I threw it in there, 44 percent.
Well, it may, I mean, I don't know what Enoch's quoting for that number, just to be clear.
Right, and I don't know what, you know, as far as me just learning how to use Enoch, this was my first, you know, trial run.
I'm using it now regularly because I, I understand that when I add things in that, that it gets to know me essentially.
No, actually, but our engine doesn't.
Okay, so I didn't know.
Yeah, because it doesn't really it doesn't track your query history okay it's very privacy oriented no that's great but what i did what i do still is i enter in my website yeah and i enter in my counter human trafficking stuff and our in our ministry and i say this guy here running in this primary in the republican primary on the 3rd of march 2026 what are the odds of this so i just keep putting that back in ah and also it looks at that and says okay well this guy here this is what he would do so i look at that and then i and i try it in different ways
and it is kind of become uh it's not it's not i'm not running the campaign off of that but i'm using it as almost a sentiment analysis we look at other things.
Well, that's interesting.
But there's actually a better tool I can give you on the AI side that will do that.
And by the way, when you do become governor, if you need an AI expert, AI, I'm your guy because we've we've built an AI engine that beats Rock, it beats Chat GPT, it beats them all.
We built it here in Texas for less than two well, around two million dollars only.
So imagine the task force on artificial intelligence.
Yeah.
Right?
You would be the guy that I would come to and go, all right, get your smartest and brightest people on that task force.
Oh, I could sort it out.
And then we would do it because that's how I do it.
I know you are.
You're a get down to business guy.
and I have a very low tolerance for stupidity in work teams or whatever, right?
So the combo, get shit done.
Well, part of your language.
I mean, that's exactly, but that's this is the number one thing I hear.
Now, bear in mind, I go around the state now.
I'm barnstorming as we call it.
I'm barnstorming.
And I meet with people downtown Fort Worth, rich people, rich people in Highland Park, you know, rich people down in Houston, but I spent most of my time, right?
Because I'm not courting building nurses.
The first one I talked to said when I asked him, are there any strings attached?
He was like, what do you mean by that?
I never got any money from him.
That's okay, right?
Because I'm not that guy.
But when I'm out in the periphery, like today, up in Tyler, and I'm meeting people up there with all the different GOP groups around the state, and they said, if you get all of us, we can beat the big cities.
But you've got to get all of us, name and condition.
So we're there.
But when I tell them the way that we're doing this in the citizen-led governance with the task forces, which is, as I read the job description, under the authorities of the state of Texas, the governor of the state of Texas, Not only can you do executive orders, I'm going to stay very low on those, but there are some key ones that I have to do in order to save this state.
That's right.
But the citizen-led governance, that task force model is going to change the picture.
Oh, yeah.
There are certain tools that within the state of Texas that the citizens can use that are already in the constitution, right?
And it's a, it's a, I'm going to keep it off the air because I want, I'll just say it like this.
Yeah, just keep it a surprise.
It's a surprise, but I'm just going to say this.
It stopped Rick Perry from putting in the Trans-Texas corridor.
Citizens in the state of Texas stopped it.
Wow.
During the NAFTA reign or NAFTA era.
So that kind of stuff, that's where citizens get to make a choice.
So then it doesn't become a proposition on a bill or something like that that the legislator fights about all day long, the citizens come up with this on their own.
This is for them to use.
This is a tool for them to use.
It's in our constitution.
Yeah.
And that changes the playing field.
But people got to know about it.
Yeah, absolutely.
Yeah.
Well, okay.
We hope to hear more from you on that later.
But I want to talk about honest money and the fact that Texas has its own depository.
And there's already been a law passed to tie that to a debit card so you can deposit gold with the state of Texas and you can spend it on a debit card.
You can spend fractions of your gold.
So now we're making goldold and silver kind of spendable.
Yeah.
Right.
I'd like to know about your plans for continuing to support honest money for Texas or where that goes from there, because I don't think the dollar has that many years left on it, frankly.
No, I don't either.
Gold backed is, you know, if you look at the book, once again, gold and silver.
Right.
That is the true commodity.
So gold backed, silver's, silver's passed certain legislation that will allow for that, but there needs to be more.
We need to push harder.
Yeah.
Because we need to have a gold backed currency in the state of Texas.
It's a Texas currency.
Backed by gold.
Backed by gold.
Have you thought about what that might be called?
The name of the currency?
I'm sure I haven't.
Longhorn bucks or something?
No, I haven't.
because right now, everything that, you know, when someone asks me what's your top priority, I'm like, well, I have to look in parallels.
I can't just look at, you know, a linear thought process, I have to look at, you know, parallels of what, what you're talking about, then how does this one affect this one?
Yeah.
Right down at the bottom.
I have to look at it that way.
So, yeah.
With regard to that, and I can do that.
I've been able to do that in my military career many times when considering running operations sometimes in Africa, a thousand miles wide, but not just the E metric c of what the enemy, information preparation of the battlefield of the enemy, but I got to take more into account the center of gravity.
As a Green Bray, we didn't look at industry or minerals in the ground.
The center of gravity for everything is people.
Yes.
Right?
And so when you change that paradigm, it takes the focus off of ushering in or luring in corporations for more money, for more gross national product.
I'm looking at the metric c of I've got to have the citizens, right?
The center of gravity.
Once again, my city center of gravity, be the deciding factor with regard to all of those aspects, all those strata of the fire hose once again I'm drinking from.
Okay, so a follow-up question on that.
I believe one of the largest expenditures of the state budget is basically health and human services.
Right.
Right.
And I think we just saw the governor sign a new nutrition education bill for medicine, right?
It just happened.
And I think it's going to require nutrition education in the medical schools.
Now, I was saying in my podcast, I know more about nutrition myself than almost every doctor that comes out of a medical school.
You absolutely do.
Because they know nothing.
They're not taught, right?
And you know more about nutrition than most doctors because you've added this knowledge base.
And you're a fit, healthy person as a result of your lifestyle choices, right?
But the doctors in the medical systems in Texas, which are very powerful, very economically powerful in places in Houston, for example.
They want the money train, which is sickness and disease, not health.
So this is going to be, this is one of those, and it's on my website, decentralized medicine.
right so we take it out of the hands of the bureaucrats the Texas Medical Board is responsible responsible for disallowing care that could have changed the outcome of many people with regard to COVID that's right period Mary Tally Bowden MD yep you probably had her on it God bless her yeah she's gonna be the head of that task force matter of fact I'll probably make her the the TMB you know, number one.
I don't even know what they call Graham Pouba of Texas Medical Board.
But they need a good red pilling over there at the Texas Medical Board.
You know, when I tried to get my.
license in, it just didn't happen, right?
Because I already had a ding on me for doing informed consent.
But here's what I do know is that when we decentralize medicine, and that's going to be a task force, but it also has to be, and it's almost reached a level now of executive order.
Because I don't see that coming without a fight.
I'll probably get sued right out of the gate.
The governor's office will get sued.
And one of the last things I want to do is waste taxpayer money for lawyers, right?
Yeah, you don't have to.
we may have to one of the easiest ways to decentralize medicine is to have a state-run uh ai nutrition wellness coach chatbot right that's free to everybody in the state just have knowledge bases of information for people right it doesn't even have to be only medicine it can be uh how to how do i repair drywall how do i build a fence how do i you know oh yeah how do i hog tie a hog that would be and it would not be something that would be tied to a uh
a brand or a or a corporation online right a lot of those out there are going to push you towards a certain no these need to be open source right public, non-commercial.
Non-commercial.
Just like make a knowledge base available to everybody in the state.
Right.
Right.
And AI makes it very cheap and easy to do that do that now.
But moms could go on there and look at, ask ingredients if they're going to buy, you know, food for their babies.
Like, what's in Fruit Loops?
You know, tell me what it is.
What color is it?
Probably not good for your kids.
Yeah, exactly.
One thing that you mentioned before about the Maha meeting that he had where Bobby was sitting with, I say Bobby, like I know him.
I've only met him once, but I'll say, you know, Robert Kennedy Jr., that to me there, I kind of got to just pay attention They took it out of our inventory, right?
That same guy now is going to put it across.
Over the counter.
Over the counter, right?
Yeah.
Right.
So it's okay.
Taking picture with the Maha director.
Got it.
It's good stuff.
That same guy whose generals fired me for doing informed consent is talking about healthy living.
Yeah, it's unbelievable.
No, I don't abide with that one.
Right.
At all.
No.
Well, Texas is not known.
Well, let's say Houston in particular is not known to be slim, fit people.
over.
I mean, it's derogatory articles about it being an obese city.
It is not one of the healthiest states in the nation.
No, it is not.
Yeah.
So that means there's a lot of room for improvement because I think a lot of Texans would love to be healthier if they just had knowledge.
But, you know, try to schedule an appointment with a doctor these days.
You know, like, my time is written.
It is written.
It is written.
My people perish for lack of knowledge.
If they just had the knowledge and the knowledge can be free.
That's it.
I mean, yeah.
But I guess that as soon as people have a, well, I guess everybody's got a phone now.
They can go to a website.
And I think that needs to be available.
And as far as decentralized medicine, that is a huge piece of it.
It's huge.
It's huge because to take control of your own health, that's what decentralized medicine is about.
It's about the art of medicine and not the algorithmic program of medicine.
And there's going to be some nurses that are going to get mad at me out there, but when Psychotropic medications.
We see the problem that when I was working, even ten, twenty years ago, in Beaumont, Texas, I would work in the emergency room and people come in over prescribed by their doctors.
And I'm not just talking about nurses doing that, physicians as well.
I had a doctor tell me once, you can put your kids through college if you just fill out these scripts for them and just send them on their way, right?
This is a guy telling me in my training, wow.
I'm like, this is not the kind of training that you want to perpetuate.
And you were talking about nutrition training in college, I mean, med school?
I think it was probably about two months and it was like an hour, two, three times a week.
Well, they don't even do that in most medical schools.
No, nowadays, this is for 1995, 1994 for me in med school.
But yeah, that has fallen by the wayside because it is not pushing the pharmaceutical company models that we're based on.
So we got to get away from that.
So a lot of docks, MDEs, DOs, I'm a DO, a lot of those docks now have fallen or have turned to alternative methods that they're seeing are working, right?
With light therapy and with other things like that that actually work.
I think it's absolutely critical that Texas needs to become a health freedom kind of state.
Yeah.
You know, not just a Second Amendment freedom State or an energy freedom state, like, yeah, we can drill, we can use energy that God gave us, but also we should be able to have access to natural health.
And the Texas Medical Board is very restrictive against alternative and complementary therapies.
Although they do license people like traditional Chinese medicine practitioners.
And my wife is a Chinese medicine practitioner, by the way.
So she knows exactly how that system works.
Texas tends to drag everybody into the Western pharmaceutical model.
And then they say everything else is not medicine.
Only medicine is what's in a pharmacy, everything else doesn't work.
But that's just not true.
And so when we empower the citizens to take care of their own health to the degree that they can, where they can at least understand the basics of nutrition and the basics of physical movement, right?
Just to maintain a body habit that is conducive to a longer life, a healthier life, right?
Life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.
Yeah.
And in other ways, property.
But the pursuit of happiness, well, it's if you're not healthy, you're not happy.
So that is one of the things that is a guarantee in the Bill of Rights.
But also, you know, the right to life.
Also, we're going to usher in a Texas grown program where schools will be teaching kids how to grow things, even inner city, boxes, right?
Growing food, healthy food that they can go home with no chemicals, right?
No GMOs, no mRNA.
You know, getting back to that.
where then kind of a, you know, go to the farmer's market and the kids take it there, they go make some money and then they learn how to budget that money.
So you're doing multiple things.
Now you're thinking in parallel when it comes to learning and you're really learning how to survive and not only survive but to thrive.
So when a lot of people say, now I've seen this out there on me, hashtag Texas needs a dock, right?
That's what they're saying.
So that's exactly right.
But I'm, you know, I'm a trauma guy on the battlefield.
That's what I do.
I'm not a trauma surgeon.
I'm a trauma guy.
I stopped bleeding on the battlefield.
That's what I'm trained to do.
But for me, getting the smartest and brightest guys out there that can come, guys and gals, to come in and to head up that program, we can turn this around.
And like that one lady said, the next fifty years.
Yeah.
That's the thing.
The resources are available.
And there's a will among people.
The hard part in any government that has centralization is overcoming the corruption.
and the skimming and the kickbacks.
Like look at Ukraine right now, you know, as a kickback engine.
Yeah.
For the Biden administration.
Well, look at the CARE Act.
It was a kickback engine during the COVID.
Absolutely.
Or USAID and the NGOs.
It's just our whole political system has been based on this money laundering, which is insane.
But they want the bank to report on you if you deposit $1,000 or something.
I always thought that was third world countries when I was downrange, right?
I thought, well, at least back home, we're not corrupt.
They do it openly.
Right.
They'll just do it in your face.
Yeah.
I mean, you could negotiate for anything on the streets of, you know, Baghdad or Istanbul.
I mean, you negotiate anything.
They're going to rob you anyway, but they'll tell you they're robing you.
They don't tell you.
They enjoy the banter.
They want to see how far down you're going to go.
It's kind of a thing in those cultures.
But here, they'll do it right behind your back, and they'll be the guy sitting on the front row of, you know, their church.
This is the apostasy that we live in.
Both economic, both in church and a four walled church and in the legislatures.
That's so true.
And we recently saw Democrats in the state legislature abandoned their posts and they fled to Illinois to avoid the redistricting vote, right?
And then there were some threats made, but the Republicans never followed through on any of that.
They should have those people should have been arrested and booted.
And the governor, I think at one point, promised he was going to take more aggressive action.
Never happened.
But it just feels like we get so many empty promises from the GOP in Texas.
They talk big and they do nothing.
That's political theatrics, first of all.
My opinion on that.
It's happened at least since I've been home in the last eight years or before I got out of the guard, but 8, 9, 10, 11, 11 years.
I've seen it happen four times.
Anytime you redistrict in Texas, somebody's going to take their ball and go home.
And it's a game that they play.
They've gotten away with it every time.
The same threads come, people forget about it, and then they go back to nothing happened, slap on the wrist, we're going to find you.
But they never really find him.
Exactly.
Right.
It's all theater.
Yeah, theatrical stuff.
But that's see, and I think that the Democrats in power in Texas are still completely delusional.
They still are climate cultists.
They want to decarbonize the atmosphere, which would destroy all farming.
They hate the rule of law.
They want criminals to roam the streets of Texas.
I think they're incredibly destructive to the state in almost all their decisions.
So why is the GOP in Texas willing to continue to tolerate them when they could have fired them all?
My question is, are they truly the GOP?
Yeah.
Right?
I don't know.
I mean, it just acting a lot like a Republican, you know, gets the nomic of a rhinoceros, but I think it goes further than that.
I think it's truly, I don't believe that there's really the two parties as we see that.
Yeah.
I see a Uniparty is what I see.
And I see that there are some good people in the legislatures that are typically called grassroots.
And as another strategist once told me, well, if you're running a grassroots campaign, you're going to lose.
Because you're not, you don't have the backing of, really the backing of the parties.
And the corporations.
And the corporations which come with that.
So to me, there are more Texans that are not part of that, voters, that once they see it, once those scales have been removed off their eyes, and it's happening, right?
There's a shift.
I'm feeling because I'm out there talking to folks.
Yeah.
So it used to be when I came home eight years ago or ten years ago, it was, well, Abbott, he's okay., right?
He's okay.
And now it's, oh, that lion son of a gun.
You know, I mean, this is what I'm hearing now.
I have to be careful not to be in an echo chamber because I'm talking to the same group all the time, a group of types of people that everybody's saying, you're what we need, but, you know, that's one percent of the state.
I've got to be careful with that.
So I do look at those things, but I'm hearing more of it than I did before.
Well, you could always go down to Austin and get in line for some Waymo cars or something.
You can find some very left-wing leftists who would be offended by your hat.
Yeah, they would.
You know, and they' so I think, you know, I've met some folks like that, on the outskirts of Austin, you know, Dripping Springs and Wimberly.
There's it's kind of grown out a little bit that way.
And some of the baristas or whatever you go, I love my coffee.
So I'll go in there.
And I don't usually go to, you know, fancy or high-end, you know, corporate ones, but I go to some there.
And you know what, when you get down and talk to them, right?
They may have rings everywhere, they may have tattoos everywhere, crazy stuff.
But when you get down and talk to them, you just disarm with the whole, you know, I'm just a cowboy, you know, because I'm not a cowboy, I'm a rancher or a rancher, I'm a hand.
I can make a pretty good hand on a ranch.
But when they realize that you're just not this threat guy and you're just talking to to normal.
There's a bell curve, right?
You know, the bell curve thing.
And you've got the far right and you've got the far left, and they're really part of that Uniparty that's circling around us like lions in the night, trying, you know, coming to devour us.
When you look at, really, the bell curve of common sense, I can have a conversation like that with someone, and they go, well, that makes sense.
Well, wouldn't you want education?
Wouldn't you want to push VoTech for people that don't have to go to college?
Why do you have to go to college?
Yeah.
When most of those degrees don't do anything.
And I'm glad you said that.
And there are core issues that defy parties, political parties, like energy.
Everybody wants electricity, left, right, center, libertarian, whateverver.
Everybody wants power.
Decrease taxes, everything.
And water.
Right.
Water.
Yeah.
Good.
And everybody hates the property tax.
Yes.
Because it's absurd.
How do we own the property when we have to keep renting it?
That's a lien.
That's called a lien.
Yeah.
On your property.
Right, right.
Sorry.
But again, back to what you said, a lot of your messaging is transcending political parties.
And that's what we need is, you know, this tribalism that's in one party or the other at all costs and throwing common sense out the window.
That doesn't work and it's not sustainable.
And I honestly, I think there's a big shift among Texans to say, we're tired of the B BS.
We need to get things done.
The future is arriving more quickly than we anticipated.
So I'm not surprising that you created Enoch because that's what your machine is telling me.
Well, it's also been trained on our previous interviews.
Did you know that?
Oh, that's good.
Yeah.
That's good.
Quote you.
Yeah, because now we got some new stuff to add in there.
We do.
This is going to go in.
But I think that people...
all over, which is absurd.
Why should one group be able to paint the streets with their symbols and colors?
What if it were a Nazi group or something?
You wouldn't tolerate that.
But now that Trump is in, it like those symbols are not going to be allowed, but there's other symbols.
Everybody's waving the Israeli flag all over Washington, DC now.
So it's like you've exchanged this one symbol that's not America for another symbol that's also not America.
This is a concern.
This is, for me, that falls under the category of a dialectic, you know, the Hegelian dialectic of what he looks at.
But when we start pitting people against each other and emotions involved, we have to get back to discourse, back to true discussion, debate because I don't operate in that space.
I've learned not to for a long time.
I just don't I don't operate in that space.
So Fox News versus CNN, oh, kill the rich, kill the rich, burn them.
No, no, it's you're you're falling in you're falling into a trap.
If you get emotional, you're falling into a trap.
Now, I've been guilty of it too.
I'll say, I can't believe they're doing this.
And then I have to step back, reconfigure and go, why am I getting emotional?
And then I'll look and say, wait a minute, this thing is all part of the same system.
Yeah.
Right?
So that system is fooling people into believing that they that they're disenfranchised.
And then what do I do as a green beret and go back to my knowledge there, if I want to overthrow a country, I disenfranchise the populace.
We've been targeted with social engineering.
Yes, sir.
Yeah.
But I also understand many people don't truly understand the principles of liberty like they they should.
So just in the last couple days, there was a quote transgender shooting in the Catholic school, you know.
Right.
Prayers for all those impacted.
But then I saw many conservatives online saying, we gotta take away guns from all trans people.
And I said, you mean, you like red flag laws for trans people?
And they said, Yeah, we've got to take them all away.
I'm like, Well, wait a second.
The Second Amendment doesn't say everybody except trans.
I mean, you got to think about first principles first.
You may not agree with a person's lifestyle, but it doesn't mean you can take away their guns.
No, you know what I mean?
That's a huge problem set.
And that has to do with your sovereignty, your freedom.
I still will always default to, with regard to that, the Second Amendment.
Second Amendment.
Right.
I must.
Absolutely.
Otherwise, I'm not a man of my word and I'm off of the constitutional republic mindset.
So that's where I go.
Here's another one in the state of Texas, Sharia law.
Yeah, that's a big topic.
People are mad.
Yeah.
Now they're emotional.
Yeah.
And so I was on Lara Logan's show and she asked me about that and I said, why don't you and me while I'm a candidate go drive in there and we'll meet them.
And I'll explain to them that you cannot have another form of laws underneath the laws of the state of Texas.
Right?
I couldn't create a neighborhood of all white people or all brown people or all Hispanic people or all Asian people and then say, and these are our laws here.
Yo, stay out.
Ain't gonna happen.
It's been tried in Seattle though.
They did.
They tried it.
They did.
And they just got, you know, they just waited them out and now they're gone because they didn't, they couldn't eat.
Yeah.
You know, because they don't, they can't grow their own food.
Right.
But, but, yeah, no, that's just, it will not exist under that.
It doesn't matter what I think about Sharia law.
It doesn't matter what I think about any religion, because I had a guy, this is my, one of my interpreter friends from downrange, Afghan guy, Muslim, voted for Trump, loves America, loves the Constitution.
I asked him, and he said exactly this.
He said, Doc, that's a sect of Muslim that is tied to the Muslim Brotherhood.
It is not all of us.
Of course.
We don't all believe this way.
Yeah, I'm not apologist for anybody, but he said, we don't all believe this way.
If he wants that, tell him to move to Damascus.
Yeah.
Go to Syria where the ISIS is operating, and then you can have that.
But don't bring that here.
Well, I completely agree with you that you can't set up a town of Sharia law or any other made up law.
No.
Right?
And at the same time, I am also disturbed by just the knee jerk anti-Muslim reaction among many conservatives and some Texans.
Because you and I understand we've both of us been all over the world and we work with people in different cultures, I mean I speak Chinese, et cetera.
You know that most people are good people, number one, and they're not going to become violent terrorists because they have a different faith than you.
And it's wrong to paint an entire religion as evil just because their religion is different from your religion.
You and I are both Christians, but we don't hate Islam or Sikhs or Buddhists.
Right?
That's crazy.
But when you bring in, and in Epic City specifically, I don't remember his name.
But I'm talking to counterterrorism experts on this specific individual.
He's a number two guy.
What's that?
Investor guy.
No, he's an email.
And so he's the number two from the guy from, it's in the US with regard to the Muslim Brotherhood.
Okay.
Okay, so that guy's in here.
So what does he do?
He brings in people that feel disenfranchised because they're Muslim.
They don't really have a home.
Let's bring them in.
Let's recruit them.
Let's get them fired up.
And when you start doing that, then you're creating a whole populace, you know, Frisco, the whole area, Plano, right?
You're creating a population that's now starting to believe your way.
And then when they start taking the seats of county commissions, city planners, when they start taking those seats and they all starting to believe that Sharia law is okay.
Right.
Now we've got a problem.
It's almost like the Somali population in Minneapolis.
Exactly what happened in Minneapolis.
Yes.
And now we've got a problem.
Right.
So that's a problem.
You're going to get a takeover.
Because that can turn into a powder keg.
That could.
Right.
Because now you've got emotional people on, you know, that are Christian, you've got emotional people that are Muslim, and you've got emotional people that are Jewish, and they all live in the same area.
Yet for thousands of years in the Middle East, in Palestine, they've lived together for thousands of years.
Right.
They did.
Right.
They did.
Right.
They did.
Right.
Until corporations or until the corporate mentality or the Rothschilds or the, you know, the Carnegie's type thinking came in there and said, what can we exploit in this region and how can we get rid of these people?
Yeah, yeah.
That's a mess.
And interestingly, there's also, there were protests last week at the Microsoft campus by its own employees who were saying something like, no Microsoft genocide or something like that.
The issue is that Microsoft and Google license their AI technology for targeting acquisition decisions.
And that's automated in the Middle East right now.
I don't know if it's in the Middle East right now, but you know, those are American companies and they can license it to the Pentagon, probably already happened, we just don't know about it.
And they can use it right now to target narcos south of the border.
But you know as well as I do, eventually that's going to spill north, they're going to start targeting narcos here, and then they're just going to start targeting everybody, like profiling everybody.
You might be a terrorist, you might be a narco.
And then we, the people, are living under a police state.
This is one of my concerns.
Yeah, that would be a concern.
And that would be something that would fall under the purview of my, my desk with regard to state security.
Yeah.
And so there's a danger there, as we know.
The Palantir folks, they have a function, but it's the regulation not to allow.
We had posse comitatis.
I grew up as a soldier understanding that, that we were not to target, we were not to attack, we were not to harm US citizens as members of the Department of Defense.
Right.
Period.
Now, if you're a contractor for the Department of Defense and you're targeting American people Now, that would be a, from my position there, as my understanding, would be something through the Attorney General.'s office to then develop the legislation to protect us from the overreach of the federal government.
Right?
Because that's what my job is to do, to the Attorney General to then protect the citizens from any overreach of the federal government.
Now, I'm not saying they're doing that.
I'm just saying if they do that, that would be our job.
Because we don't know what federal government is going to exist in the years to come.
Yeah, exactly.
Or who could be rich either.
Once again, another argument to have a guy that understands that stuff in that seat so that we don't end up there, right?
In a very common senseful sort of way.
Because what happens is that when you have typicalically attorneys running things and they're They become political career politicians.
They're going to stay with the status quo.
They won't leave the status quo.
The reason, and I almost brought it in here, I almost brought my Texas Constitution in here.
It's 100,000 words long.
The US Constitution is 7,500 roughly words long.
It's a labyrinth, okay?
A legislative labyrinth.
So it is very difficult for the average citizen to come in and read the Texas Constitution and truly understand the basics, right?
The basic tenets are there.
They're pretty easy to understand.
But when we get into the finer points of the propositions that were turned into amendments, it's a labyrinth.
And so it's difficult to understand.
So we've got to simplify that.
We've got to simplify that for our citizens.
And I believe that we can do that with our AI as we run that through there and say, so the question can be asked, can I raise bees without a license?
Right.
You know, AI is not transparent.
It's not transparent.
It's transparent.
Yeah, I mean, everything's so regulated now.
And what's happening is, you know, you're getting all this money coming into the state.
Some of it's like Elon Musk money, SpaceX right outside of Austin, massive infrastructure.
A lot of employees of the Elon Musk companies moving into this area, affecting property prices, you know, farmers can't afford it.
Especially, yeah.
I mean, east of Austin, especially.
way over there.
Yeah, yeah, exactly.
So Texas is changing.
And like, you can't go back in time.
We all understand that.
But what is it, you know, could Texas lose its soul in this transformation and end up becoming not a Texas, but a technocracy.
Or something, you know what I mean?
Yeah, I mean, definitely a potential for anything like that to happen.
But I would say this is that, you know, instead of looking at it like an adversarial position, I know you're not, but if you were to consider it, why not approach Elon as the governor of Texas and say, I want a Texas Space Administration, right?
I want that flag on the side of rockets.
Yeah, that makes sense.
So that we can then add that to our sovereignty as far as protecting this piece of ground.
Yeah.
Right?
And keep some of that tech in Texas.
To keep it in Texas, right.
Because you haven't, we have enough here to take care of us, but to take care of the world, really, if you talk about energy right now, it's just it's not coming out of the ground for all the reasons that we enumerated.
But I believe that we we cross over those lines.
And I know the governor of Texas talks to Elon.
So, you know, when I'm sitting there and I go talk to him, look, Texas Space Administration, let's go.
Time now.
Let's make this happen.
Right?
And so I believe that he'll he'll entertain that.
Yeah, that makes sense.
Even to have Texas should have its own emergency backup comms satellite network.
I was on the river when we had all the comms go down on the Guadalupe on the Independence Day, really four or five hours after it happened.
And comms went.
to repeater radio, repeater stations.
Oh, wow.
Yeah, we had to bring in, ATT finally brought in some little mobile units so we could have cell coverage, but yeah, a lot of that was down.
Yeah.
Well, let me give out your website again.
Sure.
And docpetechambers.org.
And if people want to support you right now, what's the best way they can do that?
Both donations or other things?
Number one right now, right now is donations.
You know, we've got to put diesel in the tank, so to speak, but there's a lot more things we have to do in order to compete at that level.
at the level that we need to compete.
We're doing pretty good considering we've really only been campaigning three weeks.
We're doing pretty well.
The river held us up and I couldn't campaign and do that at the same time.
Just not, not saving.
We're there to help save people.
Yeah, we were there to do that.
People would ask me about it.
I'm like, we didn't talk about that today.
I was on Bannon twice.
I could have said something.
I'm like, no, I'm talking about the river.
You know, but eighteen dollars thirty six cents, if you just don't have a lot of money, that's the year Texas became a republic.
eighteen dollars thirty six cents, give it until we finish this campaign, just give it regularly.
Or if you want to give eighteen thirty six, you know, eighteen hundred thirty six dollars, that would be even better.
But we're appealing to the masses.
I'm not asking for the major bucks.
There'll be someone that will, and people have.
They've really, you know, come out there with tens of thousands.
That's good.
But for the citizens, we really are going to be populists or grassroots, as I was told not to say, because otherwise we're going to lose.
But if we're that, then that's why I want you to be a part of something.
On the website, there'll be a PDF, you'll be able to print it, it's going to remind you, eighteen thirty six was a year, and that you gave, and that on the third of March, march 2026, the day after Texas Independence Day, which is the second of March, it will be Liberation Day, because we're going to liberate you from the Uniparty, eighteen thirty six.
There we go.
That's it.
It's going to liberate us from the Uniparty.
I love that.
That's a great slogan.
And that's really important.
And imagine also one day if Texas becomes its own sovereign nation again, the Texac concept, without the burden of the obligations to the federal government and with an honest state-based gold-backed currency, Texas would become an economic powerhouse.
Washington, D.C. steals a tremendous amount of money from Texas through currency printing.
That's not on the books.
The value is sucked away by devaluation of the.
currency.
Yeah.
The Republic of Texas is still alive.
It's still alive.
It is alive in so many ways.
But sovereignty, you know, I don't have to change my status or I don't have to get a passport from somewhere else to achieve sovereignty.
We walk in that.
That is just the natural progression.
You know, for our campaign, I took on the natural progression of a godly man is to seek out injustice and to take a stand.
Right?
That's my first reason why I'm doing this.
It's the natural progression.
I could go and just retire or I could take a stand.
So finally came up with that through our staff and really just, through just listening.
But truly, it is the natural progression of the frontier spirit or everything that is dear to the American character just to take a stand.
Absolutely.
It's in our blood, it's in our DNA.
And especially with that flag right behind you, it is definitely part of this.
William Barrett Travis and Bowie and Crockett would be rolling over in their graves as they saw what this state has become, what this republic has become.
We've got to bring it back.
And Travis County, what it has become.
Oh my gosh.
Whole other problem set.
That's, you know, someone asked me about this.
Lara asked me this.
She said, That's kind of crazy you taking this on.
I said, Just actually, Crazy got on the train, they got off in Austin.
They're still there.
And they want to be called Crazy and Weird.
Keep it weird.
You know, may God love them.
But I'm talking about the capital, right?
That's where they got off.
Yeah.
Right?
And so playing the games and the shenanigans and all that, that'll end.
We're going to have to herd the cats for a little while.
I pray that we get a good lieutenant governor that will do that.
They have the power and the authority with the legislative branch to handle that.
But that's my job as commander in chief.
And the responsibility all falls on my shoulders.
Well, I have to say, I would be, I would feel a tremendous amount of faith in our governor if that governor were you because I know your executive capabilities are really strong and you're a man of the heart you're a man of integrity you have been helping people volunteering everywhere you I mean you and I we've you know we've known each other for a few years you've seen what I do and I've seen what you do
behind the scenes, off camera.
And it's high integrity, pro-human behavior and helping people in need every time.
It's just your nature.
Every time we've been in the field, you've been right there behind us texting me, all right, what do you need?
And it comes.
Well, thank you for acknowledging that.
But I'm trying to acknowledge you.
You're out in the field every time helping people where there's no cameras.
You're not doing it for the limelight.
And you've been doing this consistently year after year after year, helping people.
through your...
ministry and other efforts so it's with you it's never an act this is the life you are this is who you are Always will be.
Authentic.
Always will be.
And like when you wear that cowboy hat, I know that that's a real tool that you use when you're out in the sun.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah.
And it's not a decoration in a cool office.
No.
Somebody asked me on a show just last week, there's a group that wanted to meet me and interview me.
They said, well, you know, when we see a politician wearing a hat, we say, All hat and no cattle.
I was like, I sold 48 headed longhorn so I could run and counter human trafficking.
I still have my horse and I've ridden him on the border for years.
So yeah, I mean, like I said, I'm not a rancher, but I'm a good hand.
Well, absolutely.
And did you know there are many Americans, but especially on the left, who they don't even understand why the cowboy hat is shaped exactly like that.
They think it's just a decoration.
And all it takes is one dark night looking for your lost cow as it's raining to understand why that hat is shaped exactly.
And I've brought cattle out of the mountains of Montana before those snows come and snow's already up there.
When you get a tree branch when you're riding through and that snow hits you, you don't want that going down your neck, right?
Absolutely not.
You don't want it going down your neck.
And or pooling in the back and going down the back of your neck.
That's right.
Inside your jacket.
Yeah.
And this was actually a subsequent to, you know, the revolutionary days.
You know, they had the hats that were, you know, kind of like the same style, but it was a triangle.
Yeah.
And then over time, this was the morph that it moved to.
See, that's the thing.
The spirit of Texas is always very practical.
Even the hats, there's a reason you have that hat, right?
But Texas is very practical.
Texas has energy, food, technology, high potential for even much stronger education if we get the teachers' unions out of the way and allow school choice.
But Texas has everything.
It does.
It really has everything to be...
Yeah.
Even Houston itself is like five different cities, right?
I mean, it's different cultures within Houston.
Yeah, and we should be proud of that.
Absolutely.
And all the different resources, we need to protect that.
But we can't let outside entities come in and just abscond with it and leave the citizens with no way to drink water.
Go back to that.
Exactly.
We want to see technology, but it's got to be, you know, there have to be limits to...
Thank you for coming today.
I know you're super busy on the campaign trail.
Yes, sir.
But thank you for being here today.
Is there anything else you want to add?
No, I think that's, you know, that's where we're at.
Look, look, citizens of Texas and all Americans.
We've been besieged on all sides by tyranny.
William Barrett Travis said it in the Alamo, but it was under forces under Santa Anna.
I'm calling on your aid.
This is a nationwide election.
I'm calling on your aid with all despatch to come to our aid in Texas.
We've come to other places to aid in the past.
We need your aid at this point because this is the first domino of the flyover states of our breadbasket of America.
If Texas falls politically, if Texas falls politically, and you look at the map, it doesn't look as red as we want it to.
We're in trouble.
This nation is in trouble.
And I believe they know that in DC, and I believe that President Trump knows that.
And so I see a bright future, and I will continue to be the public servant, except I'll just be the senior public servant in the state of Texas.
Well said.
And thank you so much for being here, Doc.
It's always an honor and pleasure to have you here.
Great to be here, sir.
All right, there you go, Doc Pete Chambers running for the governor of Texas, and his website is docpetechambers.org.
And consider supporting him with a donation.
Again, $1836 would be a great amount to donate, or $1,836.
Also, those donations would be welcome.
So check out his website, spread the word, share this interview, and thank you for watching today.
I'm Mike Adams here at brightown.com, located in central Texas.
So thanks for watching today.
God bless Texas.
God bless America.
Take care.
Yeah.
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