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Nov. 13, 2023 - MyronGainesX
02:42:31
Fed Explains Edward Snowden
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Time Text
And we are live.
What's up guys?
Welcome to Fed Reacts, man.
Today we're gonna be covering Ed Snowden, man.
You guys have been requesting this one for a while.
Let's get into it.
I'm a special agent with Homeland Security Investigations, okay guys?
This is what Fed Reacts covered.
Defender Jeffrey Williams, an associate of YSL did commit the felony.
So here's what 69 actually got.
This attack shifted the whole US government.
This guy got arrested.
Espionage.
Okay, trading secrets with the Russian.
John Wayne Gacy, aka the killer clown, okay.
One of the most prolific serial killers of all time, killed 33 people.
Zodiac killer is a pseudonym of an unidentified serial killer who operated Northern California.
They really get off on getting attention from the media.
Many years, Jeffrey Epstein sexually exploited and abused dozens of minor girls at his home.
It was OJ working together to get Nicole killed.
We're going to go over his past, the gang tie, so that this all makes sense.
All right, and we are live.
What's up, guys?
Welcome to Fed Reacts, man.
Today we're going to be covering Edward Snowden, man.
This one is one that you guys have been requesting for quite a while.
This is an espionage case.
It's been a while since we've done an espionage case, actually.
So I'm actually excited to cover this.
But before I do, I think some people got some quick announcements.
Bills, we'll start with you, man.
Say what's up to the people.
Hey, what's going on, y'all?
You guys know me as your favorite musician, J. Bills.
You guys can follow me on Instagram at J-B-I-L-Z.
And yes, I will be dropping more beats on YouTube.
I see you guys supporting my YouTube.
Thank you guys for all the support.
And yeah, go ahead and give Fed Reacts a like on the video.
Make sure you like the video.
Sinaloa out now.
Get it on Apple Music, Tidal, Spotify, everywhere.
All right.
And then also, guys, you can see here, we're experimenting with something right now where you can see the Rumble live viewers, and then you can also see the YouTube live viewers.
So we're trying to get the, right now it says like 542 on YouTube.
So we're going to fix that.
Bills will fix that right now.
Yeah, I'm working on it.
So go ahead, Mo.
Yo, what's going on?
This is Big Mo.
Best in the world, baby.
I'm glad to be here.
I'm always happy to be here.
Good to enjoy with y'all.
or Elmo or with the E-L-M-O or Media Mo.
I love seeing the Media Mo's.
Other than that, you guys can follow me at BigMo underscore B-I-T-W.
That is B-I-G-M-O underscore B-I-T-W.
Don't forget the memo to believe in big mo because that's the MO.
Cool.
And then Angie, you have something, right?
That you want to tell people.
Uh hello, people.
Hi.
Uh I got scared for a second.
Um, yes, so I want to mention the most requested cases.
As you guys know, I made a live on Thursday, on Thursday, I think it was 8 p.m. or something.
A PM to 9 or something like that.
And you guys requested a bunch of cases.
So I broke down like the most requested ones, and then I made a poll yesterday for it.
This one and Sick Road, because those were the like those cases where the ones like the most requested ones from you guys.
So the ones that are top of the list right now, it's Grattine Edwin Snowden.
The next one will be Silk Road.
Then we have Barbie and Ken Murders, Clow Bernardo.
That's a Canadian case.
And we're probably gonna have to do it because um you guys people guessing that one like a lot.
Uh we have Chambell shooting.
The Sean Bell shooting.
Um Chicago Tyler No Murders, Matthew Cox, Chicago Talonall murder.
Murders, yeah.
You haven't heard about it.
Tylenol murder?
Talental, yeah.
What the hell?
You haven't heard about that case?
No.
Which are people um uh drinking Tylenol and killing people?
Oh shit.
I mean, giving people title, sorry.
Okay.
Um Matthew Cox, Bunny and Clyde, and National City, California.
Those are the most requested cases right now.
Okay.
All right.
Very, very interesting.
Um, and then uh what else do we got?
Anything else, guys?
On your guys' end?
Uh no, there's no.
On your Twitter stuff.
Oh yeah, thank you.
Nah, nah, nah, nah.
It's uh it's unplugged FedEx, man.
Go follow it over there, guys.
You guys know I I'd be uh I'd be tweeting about a bunch of stuff on there, man.
Um jokes of all kinds.
How dare you?
Yeah, it's it's uh it's been growing.
It's been growing at a good rate.
Um so I appreciate you guys uh, you know, rock with me over there.
I cover a bunch of different things that I might not necessarily cover over here, but uh yeah, man, I'd be I'd be going wild on Twitter.
Um top right, you could already see one of my cartoons.
Anyway, we'll uh take his phone away, bro.
Oh bro, take yo, take Myron's phone away, bro.
And then y'all be here like, yo, Mo let him rock, let him rock.
No, no, no, no, no, no, no.
Shut the hell up, bro.
We're finished, bro.
We are finished, bro.
YouTube go look at it like, oh, that's you.
Oh, that's humor.
Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Oh god, bro.
We we are not we're not that big yet, man.
Don't worry.
Um we're not that big.
On Twitter, on Twitter we're not.
Um anyway, guys, yeah.
So check it out over there.
Unplug FedEx, man, go check it out.
Um and then guys, FNF Super Chat.com.
If you guys want to get involved in the show, you got any questions or comments or anything else like that.
I know somebody said that uh we didn't read chats or something like that last show.
Guys, you gotta understand.
That it was uh it was a show where we had special guests on, we had a bunch of people watching.
Um it was a debate panel, so you know, obviously we're not gonna be able to read all the chats.
And we made the announcement.
I think hell, you guys even made the announcement before we w even went live, and you said that it was gonna be 50 and up, right?
Yeah, before they said it before, man.
So uh, you know, you guys gotta understand that you know, running a live show where um it's an interactive show, but at the same time you gotta make sure that the entertainment factor is involved, and you got special guests that you're dealing with, you're trying to host a debate.
Um it's a delicate balance of being entertaining, right?
While simultaneously getting the crowd involved while also making sure getting the crowd involved doesn't derail the show.
So it's a very delicate balance, guys, that um, you know, we're constantly trying to improve and be better on.
So um, you know, like I said, every chat always gets shown on screen.
It's just that we're not able to read everyone.
Um, especially on shows like that.
And the other thing too I want to address, a lot of you guys were like, yo, Byron, this was a L show, you brought this lawyer, blah, blah, blah.
My thing is this, bro.
Even though that girl is annoying as hell and quite frankly didn't deserve the platform to be honest with y'all.
Um, Rolo and Sartain were in town.
They wanted to do a debate type show, right?
But a little bit more of a higher IQ show, because when we bring regular girls on, it's ridiculous, it's annoying because they're dumb.
And uh, you know, when you have higher Q guests on, you gotta go ahead and elevate and bring higher IQ um panelists' ladies on.
Now, despite what you guys might want to say about her, um, even though she argues in bad faith and she's just a a contrarian, she's not an idiot.
You know what I mean?
She she does does have uh a good skill set to be able to debate certain topics, um, even if it's in bad faith.
Uh obviously her, Pixie, and a couple other uh ladies on the panel, you know, have some views that we don't necessarily agree with.
So we're like, you know what, man?
People have been coming at the red pill, people been saying, oh, you know, it's all a bunch of pseudoscience, all a bunch of BS, blah, blah, blah.
So, like, you know what?
Let's put it to the test.
Let's go ahead and put some of the, you know, staunchest supporters of feminism and being 304s and all other stuff.
Let's put them on the panel and let's have a discussion and see what happens.
And I would say it was a pretty much uh a master class in showing how to deal with people that argue in bad faith and defeat their point and viewpoints, you know, with um you know, with arguments and you know, being able to look, hey, maybe this study over here is just one-sided, or this study only covers one thing, but we're able to go ahead and look at the totality of the circumstances, apply a little bit of common sense, apply some numbers, apply some anecdotal evidence, and be able to put things uh together in a full picture.
And I think we did a good job of establishing how um, you know, just quite frankly, a lot of these women are wrong, right?
To include the 304 lawyer, who a lot of times, you know, she argues about faith, but it is what it is.
Um, but I think it was really important for that to be exposed, and I know some of you guys are like, oh my god, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.
You know, it was either that or we bring on some bimbos and then just have a uh regular conversation.
So I said, you know what?
This is a great opportunity to have a higher IQ debate.
Um, these are some people that challenge the red pill.
We got Sartan and Roll in the house.
Let's fuck him.
Let's let's do it.
Let's make it a good show with a debate.
Yes, it is frustrating.
Yes, it's a headache every now and then.
But what does it prove to you guys?
It proves what I told you guys a million times.
Regardless of woman's education level, regardless of her intellect, regardless of her IQ, etc., right?
It doesn't change the fact that they're still gonna argue for stupid shit.
Like that's what I'll be trying to tell y'all.
Like, just because she's more educated, all it does is allows them to be even more ten toes down on their delusion.
That's what it is, guys.
Literally, you have a chick here saying, like, oh yeah, like um, men don't care about XYZ when in reality they really do.
But she says, but me and my lawyer friends, like, it doesn't change anything.
She's just able to articulate her delusional points better, guys.
And for all you guys are saying, bring educated women on, bring smart women on.
I bring them on, people start fucking bitching, right?
And then if I don't bring them on, bro, you just bring all stupid girls.
And I'm trying to explain to you guys after talking to almost 3,000 fucking girls.
Now I'm telling y'all, the software is almost always the same.
The hardware is different, but the software's the same.
And then depending on the education of the girl, the software might run a little bit smoother, but it still gets you to the same fucking beginning point, which is what?
Delusion.
Female delusion exists regardless of education level, and that's what I'm trying to fucking prove to you guys on this podcast.
And I don't haven't proven it enough at this point.
I don't know who what what else, man.
Even the copycats, they're having the same guy they have conversations.
Why?
Because women tend to think the same, bro.
So anyway, anything else here, guys?
Also, we're gonna be taking five and up chats from here on out.
And and don't worry, the ones in the Yeah, yeah.
I saw the one dollar ones.
It's in we about to read them.
Don't worry, we got you.
But like I said, we're gonna be reading all the chats from here on out.
So I kicked her.
The other thing too, y'all when I kicked her last time, right?
Because chat wanted to gone, bunch of people complaining, bro.
Why'd you kick her?
Blah, blah, blah.
I was like, you know what, man, fuck it.
We'll bring her on one more time, we'll do this debate and then be done with this shit.
So it's like, bro, you can't win.
Can't fucking win, man.
Uh what?
Mo, you were saying something?
Yeah, five dollars here on now.
Um, the one the ones who had sent those one dollars, we got you.
We already like, oh, bro.
This is this is just us now.
No girls, no times straight.
So don't worry, bro.
We're gonna read all y'all chats, man.
Shout out to y'all.
I already see y'all wallet now in the chats.
Y'all are fucking hilarious.
Y'all are like my favorite part of the job.
So I love seeing y'all in the chats.
I love the roast.
Roast me in the chats too, bro.
Bro, you got roast me right here, bro.
You say Elmo, vampire mold, bald mo bald mo.
I ain't gonna lie, I'd be looking sexy as hell with this with this clean face, though.
But regardless, though.
Uh roll, yo, roast me in these chats, bro.
I don't care.
I don't care about roasts, bro.
Listen, get on me, roast the hell out of me, talk about my voice, which which it's never going away, by the way.
I I fucking love my voice.
But roast it anyway in the chats, bro.
I don't care, bro.
Uh okay, let's hit the chats real quick.
Uh, I have a question.
When can we do like a like a calling show here?
Oh, we've done it before.
We yeah, I'm asking when can we do it?
Like here.
Uh you ready to see the sun with that, Tanji?
You ready to see the sun?
I kind of want to interact with people that ask like you're doing questions about the cases, though.
You're ready to see the sun.
No, stupid stuff.
Yeah, are you ready to see the sun, Angie?
I mean, uh You know what?
Let's see how much time we have.
If we have time at the end, we'll we'll open up the phone lines.
Fuck it.
You finna see the sun, bro.
If we got time, we'll open up the phone lines.
I'll get a gorilla mine.
Hey, hey, shout out to gorilla mine, by the way.
Yo, Derek Moore plates more dates, man.
I hope you be seeing when I'm saying this with this stuff, bro.
No, it's just that I shout outs, shout outs to you.
Hold on, Andrew.
Shout outs to you.
Derek Moore plays more dates.
You the fucking man.
Yo, when I see you, I'm gonna shake your hand on God, bro.
I put that on Myron's kids, bro.
Yo, you got the best drinks on God.
You were saying something, Angie.
Um, yes, I just want to do it because um um when I'm doing the live, people ask like really good questions.
And yeah, sometimes I cannot answer them, so it'll be good for us to to do like a calling show here.
I think.
Alright, if we got time, we'll we'll open up the phone lines at the end.
That won't be a problem for y'all, right?
In the back?
No.
Yeah, we well.
Yeah, maybe we'll open up the phone lines for y'all.
Fuck it then.
But we'll again we'll have to do what we always do with phone lines because you know, once you open up the phone lines, the weirdos come out, right?
So you have to put in, you know, hey, you want you know, uh, we're gonna put prioritize paid callers first, and after that, you know, we'll go do some free callers as well.
But uh, I've noticed that if you don't do that, then the the callers just they do they just troll and do those.
Yeah, no trolls, no stupid shit.
Yeah, so you know what I mean.
Um all right, cool.
So uh what do we got here?
Let's um okay, we got I'm Rick James bitch.
First saw black, he's forced to get bright colored uh cars so people don't think it's driving itself.
That is actually pretty damn funny.
Oh man, this is the follow up.
Myron, hope the uh porn star lawyer finally gave you some pussy.
Yeah, I know you assessing over the mid fat three or four.
No, guys, not at all.
Actually, matter of fact, after the show, I didn't say a fucking word to her, bro.
Like, like, I don't know what y'all are talking about, man.
Um hey Myron, a big fan, and like I said before, it was Sartain and Rolo that were like, yo, let's do a debate show.
So I was like, uh, because I was like I suggest I was like, hey, y'all want to do the base show?
They're like, yeah, let's fucking do it.
So I was like, all right.
So I don't know why, like, just common sense.
If I got Roland Sartane in the on uh in town, right?
And we already did a show with dumb bimbles before, why wouldn't I try to do a higher IQ show?
Like, what the fuck, man?
Like, like, yo, you can't fucking win here.
Yo, you just bring out stupid girls.
Bring out some smarter girls.
Boy, you just bring out this annoying.
It's like, nigga, what do you want, man?
Um, all right.
Hey, Myron, uh, big fan, this R R. I have a cross tattoo behind my ear on my neck, not gang related.
Do you think that will affect me from becoming a uh DEA and it's uh and is a bachelor's required required?
Um yeah, I mean, it could, bro.
I mean, I it's always better to be clean, um, clean.
DEA isn't as bad with tattoo policies as like other agencies, um, especially state police, but um, but yeah, dude.
Um, unless you got like maybe like a street look or something like that, and you could potentially do some undercover, but you want to get the job first.
All right.
Um Ali goes, uh Palestinian American attorney asking you to read my DM email again, inshallah.
Thank you, brother.
Dude, what email are you sending it to?
Like, I I have not seen none of your stuff.
Like what email are you sending it to?
He sends it in the next channel.
Oh, unplug fit at gmail.com and then fresh fit podcast.
It's not fresh fit podcast at gmail.com, bro.
He's a fresh fit.
It's unplugged fit at gmail.com.
And then tell me what your email is so I can look for it.
Or you send it to to Fed Reacts on Instagram.
And send it there.
And he also Yeah, send it to Fed Reacts on Instagram.
That'll be easier.
And then type in, type in Palestine of Capitol, and then and then type in your and then type what you gotta say on Instagram.
And and look and it looks like he says my email as well.
So I'm finna check it out.
Okay, we'll find it.
I got you happy.
Yeah, I don't know.
What do you what yeah, he's been yeah, we'll find we'll find it.
Umknown guy goes, I ain't gay, but since I followed Myron on IG, I want to pee.
Yo!
All right, Ali uh goes, not giving up on the uh dream.
Not giving up on this dream.
Shout out Chris, shout out Mo, and that's from Ali.
Thanks to you, man.
Uh, please bring on Matthew Cox from Honey Mondays.
I don't know who that is.
Um, and then Ali the clarified email.
And then Grease Junkies goes, Yo, Myron, the comedian Godfrey had a Palestine Israel debate.
Um should check it out and would be interested to see you moderate on both points of view and would be dope.
Godfrey would never be.
Okay, so Matthew Cox is an American former mortgage broker and meet at mortgage Froster.
So he got me he got me to fraud.
Bro, God what?
I I what True Crime Uh Um True Crime or I can say it.
Well, I'm not trying to put y'all in jail, so I don't know if we should put them on the Money Monday, man.
Hey, this is how you fraud and just come on, man.
I'll be coming with some weird suggestions.
And then uh Godfrey, uh, isn't he like a super wool comedian?
Yeah, very super super duper woke.
Bro, he wouldn't, you wouldn't even rock with us, bro.
Yeah.
You I'm sure he knows about us.
Oh, yeah.
But he he ain't he ain't rocking with me.
Bro, it's not even it's not even uh yo, your favorite rappers watch us, bro.
I uh I got this confirmed through fresh like uh a couple days ago.
Like, bro, you you your favorite rappers a fucking um shout out to the game.
The game posted us.
Oh, yeah, he's free.
Okay, the game posted us.
LA Combinator he posted us.
He posted a um he posted a clip um from Vegas when I grow the girl that was like, yo, name one thing that um men benefit from marriage.
It's she couldn't name anything.
He posted that whole part.
You know, shout out to the game.
But yeah, bro, like rappers be definitely be watching us, man, because I was shocked too.
Well, well, here's the thing, because we keep it fucking raw and we say what the hell it really is.
Like everyone else is like a pussy on YouTube, bro.
And shout out to yo, you know what?
Actually, shout out to the BBC, you fucking pussies.
You they they made they uh they put out a hit piece on me this morning out in uh the UK.
They said that they're gonna uh moderate certain content and that um they they literally released the law and they said that their um like content like ours is gonna be restricted, kids can't see it.
18 on up, basically.
Yeah, dude.
Yeah, it's it's wild, man.
Yo, UK man.
Yo, man.
Give me a double L because it's like, what the hell is going on, man?
No freedom of speech over there.
It is fucking crazy, man.
London is a the United Kingdom is a failed society, bro.
And when I was over there in London, London's a failed society too, man.
Uh, like, god damn, bro.
Um, like uh because uh they took the clip where I said um I'll go ahead and call myself uh like I don't care about being called names like a masongist or whatever else if I can keep guys from killing themselves off of women that are you know the uh off of females, right?
Obviously, I use a little bit more uh language, but the point I'm trying to make is that I'm seriously like you know, out here trying to save guys from killing themselves because of like chicks, bro.
Like, what the hell's going on?
You know how many guys hurt themselves over women?
Like, what the fuck is going on here?
Oh, she broke up me.
I gotta end it all.
Like, fuck that shit.
I don't want nobody doing anything to themselves over chicks, and they're over here trying to suppress me over there in the UK.
Like, what the fuck is going on in this fucking clown world where you can't even put out messages to help guys out?
And the thing that people don't understand is that when you talk to men, you need to be very raw, you need to be very real, and you need to almost yell at them for them to understand what the fuck is going on.
Men and women don't communicate the same, right?
Men don't have this fucking problem.
It's if the way you say it, we're not pussies over here.
We understand that if something is wrong and needs to be vocalized, it needs to be vocalized in a certain way where it's fucking serious.
You we mean business over here.
With women, they're more concerned with how it's said and also the bullshit.
That's why they can't get the shit done anyway.
The point is is that with guys, for us to get shit done, we and we know that we have a problem, you gotta tell him you're a fucking loser.
Yo, you're a bum.
This is an emergency, you need to fix this shit.
Blah, blah, blah.
The way things are said to men doesn't matter if the message is true, and most importantly, the messenger of someone that they can look up to.
That's the key.
Can't become from another loser.
It's gotta come from someone that they actually respect.
All right.
So the fact that they want to go ahead and sit here and suppress me over in the UK, because I'm keeping guys from putting fucking um, well, they don't have guns in the UK, but but you know, from you know, slicing themselves or doing anything else like that is outrageous to me.
They'd rather go ahead and let uh, you know, people that you know might identify as a he she, blah, blah, blah, read books of fucking children versus have me tell guys, yo, this is what you need to do to make money, this is what you need to do to get in shape, this is what you need to do to become a better man.
This is what you need to do to not put yourself in a bad situation where you can lose your life over a chick.
But of course, they're like, oh no, bro, we don't want you doing that.
So, whatever, man.
Fucking clown world out here.
Um, so anyway.
Uh where we at her.
Uh any other chats?
Okay.
Uh hey, could you guys possibly do a video on Ruby Rich situation?
Uh, I think that's on the list from Angie.
Ruby Ridge.
And then we got here, um, Animal goes, LMFAO, my fair part, Fred Reacts is Angie messing up words.
WFNF, W Big Mo, W Bills, L Chris.
Chris ain't even here.
Uh the 304 lawyer.
That's probably uh, bro.
She kept trying to discredit you by bringing up the religion aspect.
She don't realize that men have to adapt as the women change.
Yeah, I mean, it's funny because um she comes from Muslim family and they definitely uh, bro.
She is literally like uh haram haram on a whole other level, man.
Like, guys, on her Twitter, she's literally like full on bang videos, dude.
Uh Marvin He Meyer, five bucks.
Wide open, bro.
Yeah, bro.
This is fucking 304 feelings.
And he says L the UK.
L the UK, Wilson Harding, yeah, man.
I mean, it's it's it's crazy, bro.
Um I'm not surprised.
Uh the shit they try to pull Russell uh brand and rumble, like I'm not surprised, man.
Uh hey Martin, any thoughts on Sudanese civil war and the RSF selling Sudanese gold to Saudi Arabia anyway, uh to sovereignty and security for Sudan.
Man, Sudan's had issues, bro, for literally decades, man, ever since I've been alive.
Um, I remember back when it was just one country, uh, North and South Sudan wasn't a thing, and they were fighting with the Janubi's.
Um Poggy Bogey goes, Yo, Myron, any chance of bringing Terrence Pop back on the FNF podcast, he's one of the realest motherfuckers out there, and I would love to see him Frank Castle 304 with you.
Uh, you know, he was here um a few months back, man.
But he uh he was out in like Jacksonville, so uh he I guess he just couldn't make it to Miami.
Um some German guy goes, Hey Martin, I'm almost done with my military service.
I've been thinking about going to our school.
Should I?
Also, I have funny looking mustache.
Should I shave it?
Shout out to Argentina.
Uh you guys aren't shitting here, man.
This nigga's a shady subject.
Oh.
Although big up Argentina and Chevy.
What the fuck, man?
Although Big Up Argentina Chewood.
You know what, bro?
Don't go to that art school, nigga.
Don't go to that or don't go to the art school, okay?
Oh my god, man.
Uh man, the chat got no chill, man.
All right, anything else?
Yeah, Rumble Rats.
All right, and then we'll I'll read these rumble reds, then we're gonna get into it.
Uh, just create multiple cows, and we'll be clipping as much as the of the show's posting as I can.
We about to blow this thing up.
Shout out to you, Albo.
Yeah, absolutely, man.
Any updates on Candace Owens.
Also, you should do an episode on the wrestler New Jack.
Um, yeah, because we got some fucking losers actually that we're hating, saying, Oh, yo, you guys came to get Candace Owens on your show.
Uh number fucking one.
She went on a big ass podcast, Nelk, and said that she will go on.
That's number one.
Number two, guys, she's pregnant right now and she can't really do many appearances.
So we're gonna have her on early next year.
Okay, I've speak what spoke with her people.
It's gonna happen, it's just gonna happen early next year after she gives birth, okay?
So for all the fucking low IQ people out there that try to compare us to other podcasts, bro.
They get these guys, you guys can't get bro.
She literally went ahead and said on uh full sand that she will go on our shit, and she's pregnant right now, like eight, nine months.
So don't worry, she'll be on.
Relax.
Okay, it's gonna happen.
Um, just a matter of when.
Herdmeyer speaks Spanish now, guys.
Johnny Silverhand.
I don't, man.
No response.
I think they created an account and they started like actually doubling your um you'll doubling you.
Oh.
So you know, people have been saying that we need to make uh fresh and fit Spanish.
Yeah.
Version.
Uh Mr. Beast does it.
I currently have 10 bodies.
Is this too much or too little?
For context, I'm a 30 year old man who's never been kissed, who's never even kissed a girl, let alone had sex with one.
Um so wait, how do you have 10 bodies?
Okay, never mind.
Wait a minute, hold on.
Uh yeah, yeah, yeah.
Max big enough to do a show on?
No, let him.
Oh, yeah, yeah.
Because I'm like, yeah, I I um I edited the name.
Yeah, the name's horrible.
That's why we're not gonna play with it.
Yeah, all right.
Yeah, but it's good.
It's but he's good, though.
He's trolling, he's trolling.
Uh just move on.
Yeah, uh, yeah, we'll do a show on Fast and Furious.
Don't worry.
Yeah, that's big.
That's really good.
You guys been asking for that one.
We're definitely gonna do it.
That's a good one.
Uh how are the Tates uh how are the Tates doing any updates?
Also, people are never happy.
They complain that you kick off the 304 and then they complain you brought her back on.
I know, dude.
These dudes are more emotional than females, bro.
It's it's literally one of the most annoying things because I actually do look at the feedback and I do try to make the people happy, but it's like, bro, it's like what the fuck then?
Like, I get it.
If there's like a legit criticism, cool, I'm all for it.
But if it's like criticism that contradicts itself, it's like, oh, okay, then what the fuck do we do?
You know what I mean?
Um, but yeah, shout out to you, Albo.
I appreciate that.
Hey, yo, Marion, I have an idea.
Bring the loser simp neon back without his 304.
Bring Mike Rolo, Sneeko, that loser aid and HS, and if you want to make it extreme Zerka as well.
What would we talk about?
What?
They just wanted you to roll the yeah, like grow.
They just wanted you to roast near all right.
Natella in my booty, bro.
You don't need to prove anything to us regarding the lawyer.
She does porn and respectfully, no one wanted to see her.
We all wanted her out the first time she was on.
Yeah, she's annoying.
Um I think she I heard someone said that she's gonna like do a podcast with some shit, which is comical to me, because it's like, bro, no one is gonna give a fuck what you gotta say, man.
Like, you anytime I see girls like that that are like um OnlyFans chicks or sex workers do podcasts, like no one cares what you gotta say.
They just want to see you get fucked.
Like, that's one thing that women need to understand is like as soon As you start doing sex work, congratulations.
You are no longer taken seriously by anyone.
Like, even if you're smart.
That's the thing that sucks.
Even if you're smart, you will never be taken seriously.
It's a big fat.
Niggas don't want to hear you talk.
They're just like, I want to see you get smashed.
All right.
We're uh no, what was that?
Shinobi.
Leave Shinobi goes, I'm in favor of rollers of vasectomy tweet because the father of the OF lawyer should have done did that instead.
Oh my god.
Shout out to Myron Moe, Blitz, and FNF crew, Discord gang, we up.
Shout out to you, bro.
Yes, sir.
W Discord.
Dom.
And let's get these last ones out the world.
Nah, I think we're good.
No, no, no.
There's a look.
Oh uh respectfully, the UK is a fat L. That's Nutella.
You cool.
Uh Ken Rose, uh, thumbs up.
Thank you so much.
Uh Albo Ace.
When y'all do the cartels, don't forget about El Mencho and the CJMG dude is a straight savage.
Yes, we will.
Uh Johnny Silverhand, some German guy.
He is a WMIR and the big uh bro, keeping it real.
W Tate's WFNF team.
Um and yeah, as far as the Tates guys, uh, we will do something with them probably with the end by the end of the year.
Okay.
So uh don't worry.
Uh, you know, I'm in I'm in uh I've been talking with Andrew even though they canceled him off WhatsApp fuck Zuckerberg, but I'm not surprised.
You know what I mean?
Fucking guys, bro.
You know what I mean?
Like, goddamn, man.
It's like it's like we're on YouTube.
Let me let me stop.
YouTube, we love you, man.
Yeah, man.
Okay, give us our channel back.
Fucking Zuckerberg.
Fucking loser, bro.
Um, so guys, today we're gonna be covering Ed Snowden.
Peace tuning in.
Good timing, because now we're gonna actually get into the uh the main topic at hand.
From this point forward, guys, we're gonna five?
You call it.
Five.
All right, let's do five.
All right and ro and uh our uh roast us, bro.
Roast us, bro.
All right.
And guys, like I said before, it's easier when you guys do FNS super chat because we don't have to screen it as hard as like with the Rumble rants.
When you guys do the Rumble rants in, great.
Shout out to Rumble.
Um the only thing that sucks is that we have to like screenshot it, capture it, edit it, and then put it up on the screen for y'all in the tab.
That's how you guys are able to see it.
So the FNF super chat is a lot easier.
But up to you guys how you guys want to do it.
Thank you so much for donating to the show.
We really appreciate it.
But let's go ahead and hit that first tab, Bills, please.
Okay.
I got you.
Um take his Twitter away.
All right, Ed Snowden, right?
Edward Joseph Snowden, born June 21st, 1983, is an American uh as United States naturalized Russian citizen and naturalized Russian citizen.
Oh wow, he got a citizenship.
That's crazy.
That's that's recent then.
Um, who was a computer intelligence consultant and a whistleblower who leaked highly classified information from the National Security Agency in NSA in 2013 when he was an employee and subcontract subcontractor.
His disclosures revealed numerous global surveillance programs, uh uh many run by the NSA and the Five Eyes Intelligence Allegiance with the cooperation of telecommunication companies, um, and European governments, and prompted a cultural discussion about national security and individual privacy.
Guys are probably wondering, yo, what the fuck is five eyes?
Guys, five eyes is the all the English-speaking first world countries.
England, the un uh well, the United Kingdom, the United States, Canada, New Zealand, Australia.
That is the five eyes, my friend of the intelligence community, okay?
Um in 2013, Snowden was hired by an NSA contractor, Booze Alan Hamilton, after previous employment with Dell and the CIA.
Snowden says he gradually became delusion uh disillusioned with the programs with which he was involved, and that he tried to raise his ethical concerns through internal channels, but was ignored.
On May 20th, 2013, Snowden flew to Hong Kong after leaving his job at the NSA facility in Hawaii in an early junior revealed thousands of classified NSA documents to journalist Glenn Greenwald, Aurora Poitress, Barton Um Gleeman, and uh Ewen McCaskill.
Snowden came to international attention after stories based on a material appeared in The Guardian, the Washington Post and other publications.
Okay, so let's go ahead and you have something, Angie?
Yeah, so he got he got the residency in 2020.
So it took him seven years to get that residency, which is what is taking Ryan Acker and to get a residency here in the United States.
Like getting a little bit more.
Wait, so he got the residency in 2020.
2020.
Okay, and then he became a citizen three years or something.
Yes, because he let he he w uh he moved to Russia in 2013.
Yes.
And he started asking for like a um He got asylum.
Yes, he got an asylum and he started asking for like a visa for like a temporal visa.
And he started renovating that visa like year on your own because I think that like expires every year.
And until he got the residency approved.
So it took him seven years to get that residency approved.
Uh fun fat guys, that's what's taking right now in the United States to get our residency.
Um, seven years.
Shit.
So that's what it gets gonna take for me to get ice when you need them?
All right.
Uh um where are we at here?
Uh next one.
Uh Frida.
Okay.
So uh guys, this interview right here was done in June.
Um right when he um when he basically came to the press.
This is an interview with um, you know, and I'm making jokes on Greenwald, but you know, shout out to Greenwald for breaking the story, man.
Um he's a um excuse me, a reporter, uh journalist.
And let's go ahead and see why Ed Snowden did what he did.
Thank you.
This is in Hong Kong.
Uh my name's Ed Snowden.
I'm uh 29 years old.
I work for Booze Allen Hamilton as an infrastructure analyst for NSA uh in Hawaii.
What are some of the positions that you held previously within the intelligence community?
Uh I've been uh a systems engineer, systems administrator, uh, senior advisor uh for the uh Central Intelligence Agency, solutions consultant, and a uh telecommunications information systems officer.
One of the things people are gonna be most interested in in in trying to understand what who you are and and what you're thinking is there came some point in time when you cross this line of thinking about being a whistleblower um to making the choice to actually become a whistleblower.
Walk people through that decision-making process.
Uh when you're in positions of of privileged access, like a systems administrator for these sort of intelligence community agencies, you're exposed to a lot more information on a broader scale than the average employee.
And because of that, you see things that uh may be disturbing, but uh over the course of a normal person's career, you'd only see one or two.
All right, pause real quick.
Uh when um so guys, in the in the U.S. government, the way it works a lot of times when it comes to like you know, access to um databases and stuff like that is the government operates on something called need to know, okay?
Um and basically you're gonna get information needed to know to perform your duties.
Okay, that includes information that you're briefed on, as well as access to databases and clearance levels, okay.
So um whatever is required to do your job is basically what you get, right?
And they're gonna give you the minimum required to do your job.
Okay.
Um now with that said, as uh as an administrator, like he's basically saying, right, um, you're gonna get access on a very high level, which I'm sure at this point now, um, you know, everything is obviously way more restricted than it used to be, but you're gonna get way more ac uh he had uh an enormous amount of access, so he was able to see things that other people wouldn't be able to see.
So um so a regular employee would only get access to do their job, someone like him that's an administrator, uh just based off of his position and him being in a situation where he's creating programs, he's overseeing certain things, he's uh responsible for making sure that it's not breached, etc.
He's gonna have a higher level of um of access to anyone else.
So that's how he was able to be privy to a lot of these things that ended up you know disturbing him later on as far as like um them the intelligence community's capabilities as far as spying on people.
So uh let's go.
That's not our place to decide.
The public needs to decide whether these programs of policies are right or wrong.
And I'm willing to go on the record to defend the authenticity of them and say, I didn't change these.
I didn't modify the story.
This is the truth, this is what's happening.
You should decide whether we need to be doing this.
Have you given thought to what it is that the US government's response to your conduct is in terms of what they might say about you, how they might try to depict you, what they might try to do to you?
Uh yeah, I I could be, you know, rendered by the CIA.
I I could have uh people come after me or any of their third party partners.
Uh you know, they they work closely with a number of other nations.
Uh or you know, they they could pay off the triads or you know, any any of their agents or assets.
Uh we've we've got a CIA station just up the road in uh the the consulate here in Hong Kong.
I'm sure they're gonna be uh very busy for the next week.
Um and that's that's uh a fear I live under for the rest of my life, however long that happens to be.
You you can't come forward against the world's most powerful intelligence agencies and uh be completely free from risk because they're such powerful adversaries that no one can meaningfully oppose them.
Um if they want to get you, they'll get you in time.
But at the same time you have to make a determination about what it is that's important to you.
And if living uh living on freely but comfortably is something you're willing to accept, and I think many of us are, it's it's the human nature.
Uh you can get up every day, you can go to work, you can collect your your large paycheck for relatively little work uh against the public interest and go to sleep at night after watching uh shows.
But if he was making quite a bit of money, guys.
Um definitely I would uh I would estimate he was a six-figure earner and you can you look up and see how much he was earning back then.
Um as a contractor, he was definitely probably earning uh in the six-figure range um easily, especially given his you know level of access.
He was working for the CIA?
Yes, when he was yeah, when he was in Hawaii.
Um and then also, yeah, and then also in the government, guys, um you get paid based on where you are.
So um you get some of the uh cost of uh cola, which is cost of local local locality, right?
Um local area.
And uh Hawaii has some of the higher colas um because it's obviously an expensive place to live.
New York City, San Francisco, um Hawaii, which he probably was under the Honolulu um pay b pay pay um pay scale.
So um it's gonna be expensive.
So uh or he's gonna make quite a bit of money.
It's expensive and he's gonna make some money.
So, you know, obviously the guy took an enormous amount of risk to uh you know get this information out there, living a very crush life in Hawaii.
He had his girlfriend at the time, and uh, you know, decided no fuck it, I'm gonna go ahead and expose this information and uh put himself in a very dangerous situation.
And yes, the CIA NSA, all these agencies definitely have other international counterparts that will work with them, you know, to include the five eyes, you know, obviously um the yeah, and the Mossad as well, for obvious reasons.
Um but yeah, so you know, we're gonna the US is obviously gonna be very close with Australian intelligence, British UT intelligence, New Zealand intelligence, um Canadian intelligence, uh the the Mossad, right?
Israeli intelligence, etc.
So um any of these countries, right?
Um that are strong allies with the United States are absolutely gonna work.
Um well, at least back then.
I don't think Sno Snowden is as much of a priority right now, but um back then they were definitely trying to get his ass right away, man, because um when it comes to the espionage act, they they they try to make an example out of everyone, especially people with a clearance.
Um we covered on this kid on this uh channel um Robert Hansen, if you guys remember, he was the FBI agent that um sold secrets to the Russians and uh he ended up getting pretty much life in prison.
He just died a couple months back.
He died this year um in in Florence, Colorado, right?
Um one of the I uh ADX, if I'm not mistaken, is is uh in Florence, Colorado.
The worst federal prison uh in the United States, right?
Like literally 23-1 lockdown in solitary confinement, it's l hell, and uh he died in there recently.
So um there is no doubt in my mind that Snowden would have got um if they had actually arrested him, uh he would have gotten life in prison and or the death penalty for this.
He was making a run uh 135 at least because people say because he didn't have like a full um college degree, um he wasn't being like taken seriously as a like a full like pay contract contractor.
So he was making between um eighty to a hundred thirty-five.
I would I wouldn't be surprised if it was one thirty-five.
Um could we go ahead and put in an inflation calculator um for 2013, 135, what that would be nowadays?
Because if people are probably like once 150, 160 somewhere in there.
People are rumoring that with that clearance that he had um for working for the CIA, he will have made um 200 cake, but since he didn't have like a college f uh like a college degree full on college yeah, contractors have a little bit more, so with contractors see as a as a full-on government employee, they have to pay you off the pay scale.
But with contractors, you're able to um their pay is a little bit different.
2013?
Yeah, 2013 to 2023, yeah.
We can go back to the to the video bills.
If you realize that that's the world that you helped create, and it's gonna get worse with the next generation of 178.
Well, once okay, that may that sounds about right.
So in today's dollar he was making about almost 180,000 dollars a year.
Not bad.
Not bad to give a giveaway to to you know, say to throw it all to the side to say, fuck it, I'm gonna go and expose the fact that they're collected phone numbers on on on citizens, you know.
Um leave his girlfriend behind, leave Hawaii behind, run over to China, you know, hide himself in Hong Kong and then eventually flee to Russia.
Let's keep going.
The next generation who extend the capabilities of this sort of architecture of oppression, uh, You realize that you might be willing to accept any risk.
And it doesn't matter what the outcome is, so long as the public gets to make their own decisions about how that's applied.
Why should people care about surveillance?
Because even if you're not doing anything wrong, you're being watched and recorded, and the the storage capability of these systems increases every year consistently by orders of magnitude to where it's getting to the point you don't have to have done anything wrong.
You simply have to eventually fall under suspicion from somebody, even by a wrong call, and then they can use the system to go back in time and scrutinize every decision you've ever made, every friend you've ever discussed something with, and attack you on that basis to sort of derive suspicion from an innocent life and paint anyone in the context of a wrongdoer.
We are currently sitting in a room in in Hong Kong, which is where we are because you traveled here.
Talk a little bit about why it is that you came here, and specifically there are gonna be people who will speculate that what you really intend to do is to defect to the country that many see as the number one rival of the United States, which is China, and that what you're really doing is essentially seeking to aid an enemy of the United States with which you intend to um seek asylum.
Can you talk a little bit about it?
Pause this is actually a pretty good question.
So are you actually defecting because you're trying to do the right thing or because you're trying to, you know, claim asylum in a country that is an adversary of the United States and sell her secrets?
So let's see how he answers this.
Snowden's a very smart guy, by the way.
Um if you guys have ever watched his interviews, um I watched both of his interviews on Joe Rogan, which we're gonna play a clip of from it as well.
Um really shar sharp guy.
And this guy was a high school dropout too, served the military, um, ended up getting injured in the military.
He wanted to do SF, but he couldn't, um, because he just didn't have the physical capability, so he ended up getting in um doing contract work.
If I'm not mistaken, his father or some or his grandfather as is FBI, so he comes from a long line of government employees, guys.
He uh they they his family uh used to go to the military too.
Um and he had an IQ above one hundred forty-five.
I'm not surprised.
Yeah.
Yep.
Sharp guy.
Um let's keep going.
Uh assertions in in those arguments um that are they're sort of embedded in the the questioning of the choice of Hong Kong.
Uh the first is that China is an enemy of the United States.
It's not.
I mean, there there are conflicts between the United States government and the Chinese uh PRC government, but the the people's inherently, you know, we we don't care.
We trade with each other freely, you know, we're not at war, we're not uh in armed conflict, and we're not trying to be.
We're we're the largest trading partners out there for each other.
Um additionally, Hong Kong uh has a strong tradition of free speech.
Uh people think, oh, China, great firewall.
Mainland China does have significant restrictions uh on free speech, but uh the Hong Kong, the people of Hong Kong uh have a long tradition of protesting in the streets, of making their views known.
The internet is not filtered here, um more so than any other Western government.
And I believe that the uh Hong Kong government is actually independent uh in relation to a lot of other leading Western governments.
If your motive had been to harm the United States and help its enemies, or if your motive had been personal material gain, were there things that you could have done with these documents um to advance those goals that you didn't end up doing?
Oh absolutely.
I mean, and anybody in the positions of access with the take technical uh capabilities that I had could, you know, suck out secrets, pass them on the open market to Russia.
You know, they always have an open door, as we do.
Um I had access to you know the the full rosters of everyone working at the NSA, the entire intelligence community, uh, and undercover assets all around the world.
Uh the location guys, that is scary that he had all that information.
And um, you know, thankfully he didn't, you know, go ahead and say, you know what, let me make a bag while I'm doing this, and uh, you know, because uh trust me, guys, there are countries that will pay millions upon millions upon millions of dollars to get that information.
Um we did an uh I did an episode, guys, on um Anna Montez, okay, um, who uh they called her the Queen of the Queen of Cuba.
Um and what ended up happening was she was selling secrets to the uh Cubans um, you know, when Fidel Castro was in office and she was doing this in the 90s, uh well, no, she was doing it since like this since like the eighties.
Um but you know, she got caught in the early 2000s.
She actually just got released from prison, like this year too.
Yeah, she just got released.
Um and we did an episode with her on on Classified.
If uh you guys know we reacted to the documentary Classified, which is actually really good.
I might we might do another one.
It's been a while.
Yeah.
Um but once we once we start uh we're I estimate, guys, that sometime this month or next month we're gonna start doing the Thursday streams uh Thursday podcasts again.
So don't worry.
And we'll do reactions to stuff like that.
Um I just I'm just you know, against some things on the side.
But any regardless, um, Cuba, for example, right?
What they do is they steal secrets from the United States, and what they do is they sell it on the black market, they sell it to China, they sell it to Iran, they sell it to Russia, they sell it to Venezuela, they sell it to all of our you know, main adversaries that aren't necessarily as friendly with the United States.
And um, and Snowden absolutely could have taken some of that stuff and sold it to the highest bidder, which he didn't, you know what I mean.
So that that you know, on my end makes me think, okay, you know, because here's the thing with Snowden, it's kind of 50-50.
Some people are like he's a hero, and then a bunch of other people are like he's a traitor.
And for me, I I need to think about it a little bit more because I I'm I'm split with with it because as a guy that used to hold a clearance and used to work for the for the government, I see why what he did was wrong, right?
But at the same time, I see why he did what he did as well.
Um could he be one about it another way?
Yes.
Um, but it's just it's it's a very tricky subject.
It's a very, very tricky subject as far as like being a whistleblower, etc.
for the government.
Um, but maybe I'll have a more formulated opinion on it uh a little bit through throughout the show.
I used to be sorry.
Yeah.
So we were talking about his background, yeah.
Um his maternal grandfather used to be um uh senior with the FBI working in the Pentagon in 2001 during the September 11 attack.
Yep.
That's actually what prompted my thing to join the military.
Yeah.
Was it was 9/11.
Yeah.
So the guy, the guy's a patron, he loves his country, and he comes from a long line of um government employees.
Um it's just that he really it really bothered him to see the over-expansive uh surveillance state that the United States uh was under.
And and also, uh you know, you guys gotta understand as well, right?
Going back a little bit here, right?
After 9-11, guys, something was passed called the Patriot Act, okay?
Um, and with the Patriot Act, it basically Bush said, you know what, man, fuck it.
We're gonna spy on everybody.
We don't care.
This will never happen again.
We're gonna go ahead and um, you know, uh heightened security to the highest level, and we don't necessarily care about your individual liberty as much, right?
And the thing is is that and I've said this before, and I'll say it again, and this is something that Americans really need to understand.
You have two choices.
You can have the utmost security, or you can have the unmost liberty, but the two cannot coexist.
If you're gonna have the utmost liberty, your security is gonna have to come down.
If you're gonna have the utmost um security, right, then your liberty's gonna go down.
You cannot have them both coexist at the highest levels.
Because for in order for you to have liberty, you must give up security to a degree.
But in order for you to have the most security, you must give up liberty to a degree.
Think about when you're going through the um, you know, the airports and TSA is over here touching your balls and shit like that.
Why do they do that?
They're doing that um for security.
So your liberty has to be um invaded to a degree.
Now, obviously, there's a delicate balance where you want to be in the middle, etc.
But let's keep it a thousand.
In 2023, guys, in today's day and age of social media, etc., you guys do realize that when you click those little things like I, you know, I agree or I authorize or I waive, whatever the hell, you're basically telling these apps, these um these phone companies, etc., that you're okay with giving your private information away.
You guys do understand that, right?
When you put when you make a social media account, when you make a Twitter, when you make Instagram, when you make a Facebook, when you uh sign up for one of these apps, when you do any of this stuff, you are absolutely already waiving your rights and privileges away off of that, like that, guys, by having a smartphone and have using any of these apps.
That when you everyone scrolls through and they don't read it, whatever.
If you actually go through and read it, yo, they're literally telling you, oh yeah, we're about to invade the shit out of your privacy.
They go, we're gonna go look at your browser history, we're gonna advertise to you, etc.
Matter of fact, the TikTok one is crazy.
They will not not only do they collect on um on your uh on the device that your TikTok is on, they collect on every single device that your TikTok is logged in on.
Okay, so if you're logged in on TikTok on your iPad, whether you're or you're logged in on your phone or log on on your computer or whatever else, everyone that uses that device, TikTok is collecting Information on that individual's browsing habits, that's how they're able to target you for what?
Ads.
To make money.
Okay?
So it's obviously in 2013, right?
It was a little bit different than it is now, but nowadays everyone's giving their shit away for free.
Yeah.
It's crazy what they can know about you.
Yeah.
And they what they can target you with the ads.
Yeah, man.
Like they're reading your mind.
Yeah, dude.
So um so in today's day and age, it you there is there's very little liberty, man.
Keeping if I'm gonna be all the way one million with y'all.
You know what I mean?
So uh anyway.
Um she was released on uh January 6th of the year.
Yeah.
So early this year.
There you go.
That's crazy.
And to give you the US something back.
So the Cuban military keeps all their gears underground.
There you go, give me my residency.
Oh, their what?
Underground.
Their gears?
Like older like guns and stuff.
Oh, weapons.
Or weapons, like canyons, all that stuff like the things that too in case like for like a US invention.
Oh, oh, okay, okay.
Like cannons, missiles.
Okay, they have their weapons uh underground.
Yeah.
Well, yeah, I mean, you know, obviously they tried already with the Bay of Pigs.
Dude, they've tried to assassinate Fidel Castro so many times, and you have he he literally stopped every single time.
They have a very good military, and um, yeah, that's good intelligence too.
Yep.
Yep, those are secret guys.
So they steal a lot of intelligence from the United States, man, Cuba.
Cuba's like the uh the American intelligence uh like drug dealer almost.
Because they're so close to the United States, so they're always trying to steal shit.
Yeah.
Was it was that I said it, Way they they they love Haitians, that's why.
So WQ.
Okay.
All right.
Whatever you say.
Uh all right, let's uh let's keep going.
We have what their missions are and so forth.
Uh if I had just wanted to harm the U.S., you know, that you could shut down the surveillance system in an afternoon.
Um, but that's not my intention.
And I I think for anyone um making that argument, they need to think if they were in my position, uh, and you know, you live a privileged life, you you're living in Hawaii in paradise and making a ton of money.
What would it take to make you leave everything behind?
The the greatest fear that I have regarding um the outcome uh for America of these disclosures is that nothing will change.
Um people will see in the media uh all of these disclosures, they'll know the lengths that uh the government is going to grant themselves powers unilaterally um to create greater control over American society and global society, but they they won't be willing to take the risks necessarily to stand up and fight to change things, to force their representatives to actually take a stand in their interests.
Uh and the months ahead, the the years ahead, it's only gonna get worse until eventually there will be a time where uh policies will change because the only thing that restricts the activities of the surveillance state are policy.
Uh, even our agreements with with other sovereign governments, we consider that to be uh a stipulation of policy rather than a stipulation of law.
And because of that, a new leader will be elected, they'll flip the switch, uh say that um because of the crisis, because of the dangers that we face in the world, you know, some some new and unpredicted threat.
We need more authority, we need more power, and there will be nothing that people can do at that point to oppose it.
Uh, and it'll be turnkey tyranny.
Bam.
And that was the first interview that he gave guys right when the information came out.
That was back in uh June of 2013.
Obviously, this is gonna cause a huge ruckus, right?
So uh let's go back to the tabs real fast.
Uh what's so funny, Mo.
Uh and then we got the we got a documentary here that we'll play a part of as well.
Um so after this happened, guys.
Twenty-six minutes.
It's 26 minutes.
Okay.
Yeah.
Um and then go go back to um so uh click the US files criminal complaint.
Um that one.
So um right when this happened, right?
US files criminal charges against NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden.
Uh charges include theft of government property and on the authorized communication and national defense information.
Obviously, this is out of the Guardian guy, so they're gonna spell the fence and all that other stuff a little bit weird.
And this dropped uh June 22nd um of 2013.
Um and then click that next tab over USA versus Edward J. Snowden.
And there you go, guys.
That is my friends, okay.
That is a criminal complaint from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia.
It's under seal, guys, okay.
Um and uh 18 USC 644 641 to U.S. government property unauthorized communication national defense information.
That's a 793, that's under the Espionage Act, and then you got it again, 793 83, willful communication uh classified communication intelligence information to an unauthorized person, which obviously is who the media in this case and the general public.
And um uh and and you can see here, this was this uh complaint was written by uh special agent John A. Grey Lake Jr.
Um for the FBI, probably out of the Washington DC field office, and then it was signed by a judge um John F. Anderson, okay, and this was signed uh June 14, 2013.
So uh guys, uh simply put, this is still sealed.
We have no one has read this criminal complaint because Snowden is in Russia.
So they can't unseal an indictment or unseal a criminal complaint unless the individual is actually captured.
Why?
Because the criminal complaint is gonna reveal how they built their investigation.
It's gonna reveal informants, it's gonna reveal uh investigative strategies, it's gonna uh reveal um witnesses, interviews, all that stuff.
Now, is it gonna reveal everything?
No, as you guys know, we've read you know a million criminal complaints on the show at this point.
Not a million, but you guys know we've read a lot.
Maybe maybe almost a hundred at this point, uh, criminal complaints on this on this podcast, guys.
And as you guys know, to a criminal complaint is a um it's a way for you to arrest someone, right?
You file the criminal complaint, which has an affidavit attached to it, that affidavit of lists out all the probable cause that establish your, you know, need to your establish a probable cause to arrest an individual.
Um and then obviously um shows investigative techniques, informants, witnesses interviewed, surveillance that was done, it shows pictures sometimes, depending on how advanced it was.
In this case, it's gonna show classified documents that he um leaked and/or classified information.
Uh so um the criminal complaint, uh, and I'm willing willing to bet that that criminal complaint's probably 20 to 50 pages, 100 pages.
Anytime a case like this is that big um and it's gonna be that type of media, they're gonna make sure that they have their T's crossed, I's dotted, it's gonna be very well thorough, very well written.
Um, but here's the crazy part.
It's probably not everything known to the agent, and they even put that in the first paragraph.
You know, obviously the first paragraph is you know, my name is such and such, I'm a special agent with this agency.
Um I've done this type of investigation, right?
You give your it's called the I Love Me paragraph.
Matter of fact, fuck it.
Type in, I'll pull up one of mine for y'all right now, man.
Yeah, give me a one in the chat if y'all want me to pull up one of my criminal complaints for y'all.
Give me a two if you guys want me to just keep putt pushing on.
Because I'm thinking of my head like, man, they're probably thinking like, what the fuck is this guy talking about?
Is that allowed?
Give me ones if you guys want me to pull up one of my criminal complaints.
Give me a two of you guys want me to uh just continue on with the Snowden stuff.
Let me know.
I'd be worried if these things be allowed, Martyr.
It's all public information, bro.
Okay.
It's all public information.
Yeah, he can you you're gonna look Google it, right?
Yeah, literally.
You can Google uh, but you it's gonna show up your name?
Yeah, they already know you're gonna be able to do it.
Fuck it, man.
We transparent over here.
Give him the well one thing people can't say is that uh uh that I'm a fraud or anything like that.
Anyone that calls me a fraud, I'm like, I'd be laughing.
I'm like, how?
I'm transparent as fuck.
What the hell y'all talking about?
It's mostly ones.
Okay, mostly ones.
Mostly ones.
All right, let's uh let's go ahead and have fun with it.
Because the people doxed me, and this is how actually the Fed Reacts channel uh came to be.
They fucking doxed me.
So that's how the channel started.
So um go ahead, Google my fucking real name, type in Amra Futel.
Bro, let's do it.
Yo, bro!
God damn.
I'm not worried, bro.
Niggas already know.
It is what it is.
I didn't even have to type that much, bro.
Yeah, it just comes right up.
Do it on the side.
Do it on the side, and it's gonna probably show a criminal complaint.
Oh shit.
I didn't even have to type.
That's what I'm telling the.
That's why I'm not even like uh because my name is so unique, right?
So uh fucking oh shit.
Tripet type in type in um type in space uh criminal complaint or some shit.
You know, yeah, bro.
This is where I followed because I wanted to read that one.
And for all the fucking losers, right?
Yeah, click that one.
For all the losers, before we pull this thing up real fast, uh minimize it real fast.
Because all the losers say, Oh, my Myron, you're scared to use your real name.
Why did you use a fake name, Myra Gaines?
You fucking idiots.
When I started this stuff, my fitness business, everything else like that.
I was still working for the government.
I was still special agent homeland security investigation at the time, right?
So obviously, my name is unique.
If you Google my fucking name, you're gonna see, right?
That them criminal complaints come back.
Because I've done a million cases, right?
So I was like, yo, let me probably not use my real name when I do this internet stuff because people will be able to dox me immediately.
So some fucking idiot decides, I'm gonna do smart.
He's a photo snitch, blah blah blah.
No, I control the snitches, you fucking loser, okay?
That's number one.
And then number two, it's funny because once they dox me, I said, you know what?
Fuck it.
Let's go ahead and start a channel and teach guys about how this stuff is really done.
And now that was the birth of Fed Reacts.
So it's all the haters out there that doxed me, etc.
Stupid.
Thank you.
You made a whole nother YouTube channel, and people got to see a side of me they've never seen before, and they really fucking enjoy it.
So fuck you, motherfuckers.
Um you type down your name, and it's it says, I'm Rufferu Patterns, I'm referred to homeless security, Hamler Flu family, Wikipedia agent, wife.
What the fuck?
Wife.
I can't believe everything on it.
But that's my God.
Um wanna see your wife.
That's uh now now the rumor mills are gonna go crazy.
Oh shit!
Oh shit.
Who is Myron Gaines' wife, bro?
I'm not fucking married, but that's fine.
I'll tell you this.
If I do have one is you gotta find her.
Like this just in toxic masculine alpha fake alpha male.
He's actually married to a simple accusation.
So, real quick, go back to the Snowden complaint, and then we're gonna show mine.
And I'm gonna I'm gonna go through a criminal complaint with you guys now, so you guys uh know how to read one of these things.
Gotcha.
Oh my god.
You got a bill?
Okay, uh no.
See where it says right there, uh yeah.
Yep.
Okay.
So that's the that's the criminal complaint, right?
That's the first page.
Normally, guys, and then once you submit your criminal complaint, you and you get signed by the judge, you get an arrest warrant, okay?
For the individual.
In this case, obviously, he's not in the U.S., so they weren't able to unseal the affidavit.
But since I've actually done this shit before, let's go to that last tab over there.
This is an example of a criminal complaint.
So this is a criminal cover sheet, guys.
Every district is different.
This is out of Miami.
This is actually one of the cases I did.
Scroll down.
Scroll down, scroll down some more.
All right, ninjas.
You can see here, uh, criminal complaint by telephone or other.
This is during COVID, by the way.
I had to do it.
I had to do this by swear this shit out on FaceTime.
Uh so yeah, um, right?
The conspiracy, right?
Uh, to bring aliens in the United States and encourage them.
So this was a human smuggling case that I did.
Um, where the guy was bringing in um Sri Lankan nationals actually into United States uh destined for Canada.
This is a really um I won the director's award for this investigation, guys.
And I I promise y'all, I will I will talk about this case in way more detail.
Um, but there this is we did a crazy undercover on this thing and everything else like that, but uh anyway, let's let's go down.
This is all public information, so it is what it is.
Y'all can see right there.
That's me.
Um, okay.
Special agent, right?
Well, HSI.
Um scroll down.
So I am Ruffado Boom.
I'm a special agent of homeland security investigations, right?
This is what you call the I Love Me paragraph, okay, guys?
So you talk about yourself and your experience, right?
So it goes here, I've been employed since 2013.
I'm currently signing human smuggling group in HSI Miami Field Office where I'm responsible for conducting investigations regarding violations of federal laws, particularly those in Title VIII, which is immigration, title 18, which is criminal, title 19, which is customs guys, and then title 21.
21 is drugs.
Okay.
Um, including violation of Title 8, United States Code, Section 1324.
Why?
Because that's human smuggling.
Parsons assignment I was H slash special agent in Laredo, Texas, where I conduct investigations, lead case agent related to drug smuggling, trafficking, weapons, violations, border violence, kidnappings, and human smuggling, okay?
And then it goes into what this uh criminal complaint is gonna be.
You talk about the affidavit.
Um the affidavit submitted support of criminal complaint charging uh.
Um, knowing Lee conspired to bring in this United States, blah, blah, blah.
These are like what he did, right?
B uh and then B, all the laws scroll down a bit.
Scroll down.
Um scroll down some more.
Okay, bam.
So paragraph three.
The statements contained this affidavit are based on my personal knowledge as well as information provided to me by other law enforcement officers and law enforcement personnel.
Based uh, because it's after David submitted for the limited purpose of establishing probable cause for the criminal complaint.
It does not include every fact known to me in connection with this investigation.
I have only set forth the facts that I believe are necessary to establish probable cause where the contents of documents or the action statements and conversations of others are reported here in.
They are reported in substance and in part unless noted otherwise.
Why did I put that there, guys?
I put that there because I wrote this complaint myself.
But I put that there, guys, because you don't want to you're not gonna put everything in the complaint.
You're not gonna put everything.
You're just gonna put it the bare minimum to get your probable cause, get your arrest warrant, go get the fucking guy.
In this case, he was in a foreign country and we went over there and got him.
Um but uh and I'll talk about this case in more detail, guys.
If you read that complaint, that's only some of the investigation.
It's actually way wider than that.
Um but yo, bro, like yo, uh this why do you guys think I make fun of so many of these YouTubers, right?
And I fucking say like a lot of y'all are fucking losers, blah, blah, blah, people that criticize me, talk shit about me.
I was out here doing real fucking shit.
International investigations, picking up really dangerous people.
This dude had some ties with some really bad guys that I'm not even gonna fucking mention on this on on uh on this podcast uh because I can't I it's fucking classified to this day.
But what I will say is excuse me.
What I will say is that I was out here doing real shit.
You can Google my name and see fucking documents, okay?
So for everyone out there talking shit about these guys are frauds and blah blah blah.
Fuck you.
Fuck you.
Why are you over here recording videos on your fucking shitty ass Sony sitting in a in a room with your retarded ass partner?
Oh, I'm gonna talk shit about fresh a fit, blah, blah, blah.
I was out here doing real fucking shit.
That's why I don't respect a lot of these loser ass YouTubers that criticize us and talk shit about us.
We did some real shit back in the day.
But anyway, with that said, I'm gonna woo saw, calm myself down a bit.
Um but yeah, guys, that is a criminal complaint.
That's what it looks like.
That's how it comes off.
So in this case with Snowden, um, it's sealed, guys.
Okay, so we can go back to we can get rid of my stuff.
Um W is sealed.
W Amru You do see what these faces say about you.
He's saying that your favorite song is Toxic by Britney Spears.
And your favorite actor is Charlie Sheehan.
What the fuck?
And your favorite food is Seafood.
What the fuck?
Well, Toxic isn't a bad song.
But yo, but uh, but I do like I do like Brittany Spears, but with that said, um uh even though she's fucking crazy right now.
They said your birthday is in September 22.
1987.
Yo, 1987.
Not even close.
Bro.
Not even close, man.
Stupid.
They can't even properly figure that shit out.
What the fuck?
Not that that matters, but they got my they got my network fucked up too.
They said it was like I'm worth like 600k or some shit like that.
I was like, I just updated it.
Whatever.
They updated it says it's two mil.
Yeah.
Says two meal.
That's wrong too.
Stupid.
That's wrong too.
Picked up a few more houses.
Oh, what the shit is.
Hell no.
You're Christian.
No, man.
Yeah, nah, man.
They're way off, man.
Their research skills are fucking terrible.
Their research skills are terrible.
Oh my god.
My old rolling photo.
Bro.
Okay.
Okay, uh, let's go back to the show.
Should we get some child?
Yeah, we can get some trials.
Yeah, they said I'm a Christian.
What the fuck, man?
My parents will disown me.
Bro.
Damn.
Never, man.
Never.
I here's the thing.
I admit that I'm not the best Muslim, but bro, Islam solves a lot of the world's problems, man.
It really does.
He says your favorite colors, black and blue, and your favorite movies Wall Street.
Wolf of Wall Street.
That's not true.
You know my favorite movie.
I'm not fucking like it.
Yeah, I know.
That's why.
Niggas.
They probably saw a couple of pause that they're like, yo, he uses a sound effect.
This is his favorite movie.
He says your favorite card is a Bugatti in a Lamborghini.
A Bugatti.
What?
You do it, bro.
Well, what's my favorite movie, Edgie?
The notebook.
Yeah, boy.
This is the notebook.
Yeah, I know, but that's most favorite movie.
It is.
Is it really?
Yeah.
Yeah, bro.
Yeah, yeah.
Bro, remember, bro, I was I was like the most blue pillowed of the blue pillow of the most blue pillows.
Yeah, but you ain't no way.
Oh, yeah.
Oh, bro.
I'm actually well aware of almost all of Nicholas Sparks' movies.
Who?
Um the author of those the author.
literally writes movies like that.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I'm actually yeah, I am one I don't know.
Well, I haven't been caught up on the past.
Yeah, okay.
I'm actually having been caught up on the past couple years since watching Fresh Affairs.
Thank God.
Thank God.
Alright.
Okay, I'll read these real quick.
Um we got DT.
Uh Zirka Imagine pulling up uh on a motherfucker 20 pounds lighter than you and getting rocked.
What?
They're talking about Zerka and um this guy getting in a fight, uh HS TikTok, tiki talkie.
Um how do you pick up girls on your car on the first day or in general, especially in Florida, not a car that stands out.
Uh you don't.
You Uber them.
Yeah, there you go.
Yeah.
Um, holy setting my support as a woman who admires all that FNF staff do, keep doing what you do.
W Fed Rex, W Myron, WNG, W Mo and WJ Bills.
Thanks for the content for my long work drives.
Friday's show was a great experience.
Oh, um The girl that was like Paige.
Shout out to Paige.
Uh she's gonna help us out with um with researching some stuff, everything else like that.
Um I guess she embraced she was on a panel.
Like, I guess she embraced what the chat the chat was calling her.
Yeah, yeah, she called us a wokeyball.
No, no, the chat, the chat.
No, I know they called her what we call her.
Yeah, yeah.
I guess she's just embracing it.
She was really nice though, man.
Uh really nice.
So uh shout out to her.
Yeah, dub.
Um okay, we got here uh Nate.
Uh shout out to Myron and the Fed Reacts team.
Please investigate the Seth Jackson case where a co-conspirator was set free.
Oh, I I have that reading uh Seth Jackson, yeah.
Okay.
It's on the list.
Okay.
Uh Ali goes, uh, the point above about the terms and conditions on apps is interesting for both the contract theory and a uh policy theory perspective.
What do you think about the legalities arguments in the future?
Why aren't we legislating against their validity?
I mean, bro, if you sign it, you sign it.
It's on you.
You know what I mean?
It's if you want to use their app, it's their terms.
Um, why are so many men restrained and locked up in the system who are innocent by the lawyers and attorneys, police and other people are part of the justice system.
Why Ed Snowden has a goat when Daniel Elm uh when Daniel Rigamon is the real goat.
Okay.
I mean Oh wait, hold on.
And uh, and before we show that uh uh thank God it's just five dollars.
No, no, no, no, no, I'm gonna take that out of there.
Well, let's go let's word it a little better, bruh.
Um let's go, Myron.
Shout out to taking down, you know.
Uh man, man, I really can't.
So inspiring.
Yeah, we need too much love.
Yo, you can't.
Um, Rav Z, thank you, and Jesus Christ.
Um, regarding the question about the Temp Sar Condition thing, I think that that stuff is gonna get just worse because of the AI.
Myron was ready to read it too, bro.
I ain't gonna lie.
Yeah.
Uh yeah, let's just transition from that one right there.
Uh uh Rapsi, thank you very much.
I I used to work for the NSA.
This is from Doge poster.
The whole organization is so woke.
They asked me if I was pregnant at their clinic when I'm clearly a man.
Uh during June, every man emails about gay sex and trannies.
Uh thanks, Doge shit poster 69.
Uh Matteo goes, what do you see?
Where do you see the state of cybersecurity and AI heading in the next year?
What's your biggest concern?
And you were saying that, right?
Yeah.
Yeah.
It's getting worse.
It's getting worse.
I don't know if you guys saw that that news that um Bat Bunny just just got pissed off because there is a uh song trending on TikTok that AI, a guy, a guy that is actually very fine on Spotify, is making songs with AI, and um is he's making a profit out of it, and he made um a song, like a brand new song with Bat Bunny's voice with an AI um software.
And he got pissed.
Like he made like he has uh uh WhatsApp channel with 60 million people in it.
Oh, like a WhatsApp community.
Uh-huh.
And he said there, if you guys are my fans, you're not listening to that shit on TikTok.
So get out of this fucking channel.
Like you're not supporting me right now because you like that shit.
And this is why I created this because he just dropped a new album last week.
I think it was um you're you're this is why I created this new album because this is for my real fans because you guys are not listening to that shit right now with the AI sound on TikTok.
Damn you're listening to that TikTok song, yeah.
He got pissed.
That's how I'm that tight.
And I saw an interview of that guy that created that software, which is like real software that's creating AI songs.
Like with artists' voices and stuff like that.
Yeah, like that's how they did the Drake one and stuff too, probably right?
Yeah.
Yeah, exactly.
And and he's Chilean.
The guy's chilling.
And um Are they the ones with the fucked up Spanish?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Okay.
Yeah, pretty much.
And he said that he when he saw that, he was like, Man, I'm uh I'm making the real competition.
This is gonna be like a new thing and a new generation for music.
Next role.
So he's gonna make more stuff.
Like he's like fair with David.
You got bad bunny tight.
He's like, Yeah, I'm gonna keep going.
Yeah, literally.
Alright.
Literally.
Okay.
Um let's see.
So AI is gonna be like worldwide thing, man.
Like let's see here.
Myron Gain, Debbie Meyer for the nonstop work.
Can we get a video on Hush Puppy?
Already did it.
I already did Hush Puppy, man.
Uh go back, uh Moe, can you pull it up real quick at the moment of the chat for them?
Also, I'm scared for DJ MV.
Hush hush puppy did the scammer, the Nigerian scammer.
That girl was dating on the podcast.
She was dating the biggest.
No, no, no, it was a hip.
It wasn't him.
No, it was that.
He was on FBI most wanted though.
Bro, he oh my god.
That's wow, the guy was on FBI most wanted.
He was on the FBI's most wanted list.
The guy that she was talking about.
Wow.
Ah, I I see.
Okay.
Yeah, but Hush Puppy's another guy.
Um, but I did a video on Hush Puppy, guys.
Uh, what do we got here?
Um Punisher goes, Mario, well, all the drama going on in Miami fights and guys getting jumped.
Stay away from all that.
These kickstreamers will only bring you down an idea for Frederick's James Egan Holmes.
James Holmes?
James Egan Holmes.
Can you search someone, Angie?
Who that is?
I've heard that name before from somebody.
Anything else, Bills?
Um, no, that's all Roman Reds.
Alright, cool.
Um You can do this one.
Oh, it's a mass murderer.
Okay.
Um, Myron's Waves.
Hey, shout out to you, Myron's Waves.
Uh, thanks for reminding me.
Uh, we got here uh off topic, but did you see that dude that was in your podcast named Nick broke up with this girl?
Sky Brie LMA.
Yo, how do y'all yo, you guys have been telling me that for a bit.
How do y'all know that he broke up with her?
In the chat.
Where's the proof?
Like, yeah, where's the proof?
Can someone in the chat tell me like how y'all know that he actually broke up with her?
She announced it, did he announce it?
Because I want to look at his shit.
I didn't see him announce it anywhere.
Hey, W. Maybe the girl did.
Myron on Twitter, unplug FedEx.
Yo, shout out to Myron Update.
Shout out to you, bro.
That's a guy that you had like uh uh uh Elon take Copo therapy thing.
No, it was the guy that we Were you here?
Elon take his own.
It was the dude white guy with the with the with the cap.
He had the the shaggy hair.
He dated a porn star.
Oh Elon take his Twitter one.
I think I know who he is.
Like the porn the girlfriend was uh uh porn star uh like a like a big porn staring Sky Bree.
Oh, okay.
Yeah, he he dated that chick, man.
She was all over.
Myron Nigga, shut up, dude.
We're talking here Twitter.
Okay Oh, Michael the fuck is this guy talking about yeah.
So what did the chat say?
How did they know that he broke up with her?
YouTube video, YouTube video.
She said it online.
She s oh she said it.
Ah, she wrote up with him.
Oh, hold on, hold on.
Bro, man, bro what the fuck man yo, that is a like the the fucking audacity.
Like, yo, you're literally getting smashed by like BBCs on Pornhub, and you have the nerve to fucking say, Oh, I'm breaking up with him.
Like, you're a whore.
Oh shit.
Like, seriously.
And you know what the thing is too?
Because I told him this shit when he came over here, right?
Now I can speak freely about this shit.
I told him when I told him I was like, bro, she's a whore.
What what are you doing?
Like, bro, like she's a nice girl, man.
Like, you don't know.
Like I'm told you she's a nice girl.
And I was like, look, bro.
I think I saw a girl.
Girls like her are are are they not good people.
Okay?
Like, and the thing is is that she's been through shit.
She's been through trauma.
She's you can't fix that shit.
She's trying to explain it to him.
He's like 26-year-old kid, 28-year-old kid, like, bro, like, yo, you don't commit to these girls.
Women that are porn stars are never gonna be suitable long-term women.
Like, what's wrong with you?
You got some fame, you got some clout.
Go find yourself a nice Girl, that's not gonna embarrass you.
Like, what the fuck is wrong with these guys?
What's up with Neon and Nick and all these guys wiping up these 304s, man?
This shit gets me makes me lose my mind.
Because in my head, I'm like, why?
Like, what the fuck are you guys doing?
Like, why?
Why?
Why are you rescuing these 304s?
Why?
God damn.
I think I saw a clip of this guy, Neon, uh, telling that guy that he wanted to see a video of his girlfriend.
Oh, yes, yes, yes.
Yes.
And he was like, No, I don't want to see that.
Yeah.
Bruh.
Like, come on, man.
Like, bro, like this shit kills me.
It's like in my head, I'm like, why are these guys that got some status?
They got some fame, they got some money.
Like, nothing pisses me off more than seeing guys like be with women that don't deserve relationships.
Like that shit makes me lose my fucking brain, bro.
Like, what do you not guys not understand about catch and release?
Like, catch and release.
Smash and dash.
Ejaculate and evacuate.
Don't take them seriously.
Don't fucking wife them.
Don't do it.
Okay.
You don't take them seriously.
God damn it.
Bro, because I didn't even know who she was until like after the show.
I just wanted to go.
And then when I saw when I saw a little the little them them Reddit posts, bro, when I saw the NSFW posts, bro.
I might remember the rant I went on, bro.
Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah.
So it's terrible.
That was I'm like, bro, if you gonna bust it wide open for all these dudes, like she went and said that she broke up with him.
Oh my god, and she's 24 years old.
That's what they say it.
That's what the chat's saying.
She's so young.
Oh my gosh.
She's 24.
24, bro.
24.
Yeah, 24.
Y'all the moco, bruh.
Like that one.
Culco.
Boom!
Yeah, you know what I mean?
She was over here on fucking porn up getting hit with the Falcon.
Calcomb from a bunch of BBCs, man.
And she has the nerve to go on there and say, I'm breaking up with him.
You fucking useless, cum guzzling whore 304, literally useless to society.
Like, well, like, bro.
Oh man, bro.
This is fucking terrible, man.
Fucking terrible.
She dated a bunch of like people, like famous people.
Yeah.
Shit's terrible.
Anna 22 Smashers.
Shit.
Like, come on, man.
What the fuck, man?
Man, Nick, if you're ever watching this, bro, if you ever see this, or if this never take her back.
If this gets clipped, bro, I have a fresh of fit episode for you, bro.
The episode with um featuring the roommates of Lil Loaded offing himself.
Just look up Fresh of Fit Lil Loaded.
You're gonna see that at the moment.
We talked about that.
What if that is the one episode that I recommend to any guy?
If Bro, because I actually care about you, because I met you, bro.
You're such a solid dude, bro.
Nice guy.
Because I really care about you like that.
Fresh and fit, Lil Loaded episode.
I'm gonna put it in the chat or any mods who can see it in the chat, bro.
That is the episode that I recommend to any guy that I want to help.
And that if you want to, and anyone in the chat, if you have a friend who's frustratingly blue pill, or or you have a friend that you want to save or help out or friend who's not getting it, I recommend you send them that episode right there.
Fresh and fit.
Um I'm disgusting Lil' Loaded with the roommates, bro.
Yeah, man.
That shit is might save somebody's life, man.
But like, dude, that yeah, man.
Guys, please, if you're watching this right now and you're with a woman that's like involved in some kind of sex work or something like that, or she's super promiscuous or whatever, bro.
Don't wife up those girls, guys.
Don't just don't do it, man.
It's it's it's gonna lead you to problems in in the future, man.
Don't do it, bro.
There's plenty of good girls out there that y'all can go ahead and meet that aren't gonna ruin your life, bro.
Trust me.
There's plenty of them.
Okay.
Um She did a Jake Bull.
Yeah, that's another translation.
He smashed her.
Um W's in the chat goes, uh, I have a way better job and been hitting the gym, eating healthy, focusing on my main goal, short and long-term uh goal.
Thanks, Myron and whole FNF.
Uh cast it cast in chat.
By the way, Neon's girl Sam is the biggest clout demon.
You're spot on, and he's getting finesse.
Yeah, bro.
Hell yeah.
Hell yeah.
She's a clout demon, bro.
Yo, all these OnlyFans girls are clout demons, bro.
That's why you that's why I tell y'all, don't take them seriously.
These ethots, these OnlyFans girls, these like any of these girls, bro, like, don't do It because what's gonna happen is whenever a girl's a clout chaser she's involved in one of these types of things, she's always gonna chase clout.
And a lot of times her chasing clout is gonna put you in a weird position.
You know what I mean?
Guys, just so y'all know.
It's not like Angie was like, uh I asked Angie to come on and help me with Fed reacts and shit like that.
You know what I mean?
She wanted to be behind the scenes.
I was like, no, you could be on camera, it's fine.
You know what I mean?
We could have to have these uh talks, it'll be it'll be good.
And now she's here, but she don't want to be out in the spotlight and shit like that.
She has her profile private because a lot of y'all niggas are weirdos.
Yeah, you guys are weird.
You know what I mean?
But girls that like thrive on that shit, bro.
No, man.
That's definitely Calcone!
Pong!
Get out of there, man.
Get out of there.
It's probably the Reddit mob in her DMs being weird, bro.
Them niggas too.
Yeah, they are being weird.
Well, some of them send me messages like, yo, tell tell uh Angie to accept my request.
Nigga, what the fuck is wrong with you?
Seriously, stupid weirdos, man.
That's no, but I have to have a bunch of people DM and me and stuff and the side.
All you're gonna see are like really gay stories of us together and stuff.
Like, that's what you'll see.
Like if y'all really want, like, that's what you're gonna see.
Her taking pictures of me and shit when I'm not looking, you know.
It's living in the place.
Yeah, you know what I mean?
She'll yeah, she'll take like weird, she takes like weird, really awkward photos of me and shit.
Like, that's what she'd be doing.
Um like what what the fuck?
Oh, that boom, it's like a a weird selfie or some shit.
We don't have any photos.
We don't have any photos.
We don't have to phone photos.
We do have pictures.
No, we don't.
Yeah, we do.
We have one.
What do you mean?
I just spent well actually Sneagle spent the money.
Oh, well, too.
Well now we have two.
That's a lot.
No, we have two.
That's a lot.
Man, that's that's not a lot.
That's a lot.
That's very good.
A bunch of people take pictures with Myron every day.
So what you said.
Well, I how dare how dare you?
How dare Myron save lives, bro?
I'm gonna say this though.
I gotta give it a hold on.
Hold on, hold on.
I will say this.
Angie is real good about this shit, which I gotta give her.
I gotta give you your uh respect on this.
Anytime someone comes up uh uh and says hello or whatever, Angie will immediately say, Do you want a photo?
And she'll take their phone and take a picture and she'll make sure she takes a good picture every single time for them.
So I I will say that.
Like, she doesn't even because you know sometimes people don't want to say it or they don't want to be annoying or whatever.
She'll be like, hey, do you want a photo?
Uh I'll take it for you.
And she like takes it, or they'll say, Yo, Mario, can I do a selfie?
She'll be like, No, you're not gonna do a selfie.
And she'll take the picture for them.
So shout out to you.
You're always like, this is what women are for.
This is she's just telling you guys if you ever made my industry, like this is his speech.
He would take in the picture, and then he's like, uh, what's what's the thing that you're doing?
Someone's gotta tell these bitches the truth.
Yeah, he doesn't say bitches, bitches, no.
He said what he said horse.
Someone's gotta tell you.
Someone's gotta tell.
I switched it up.
That's always gotta tell these horrors.
Yes, I was gonna tell these girls the truth.
I was like, what?
Hey, hey, tell me Hey, tell your friend stop simping, all right?
Tell your friend stop simping, all right.
Yeah, nice to meet you guys.
That's what they that's what they I really like about Angie that she does.
That's why she's she travels me everywhere, guys.
Um, you know, when I'm when I leave uh Miami, she's always with me or whatever, and anytime someone comes up, uh, you know, they always uh she always takes a picture, so shout out to her for that.
Um think you guys guys always come up, say what's up, man.
I'm never gonna be on some fucking weirdo Hollywood shit.
Like, I'm not taking a picture.
Bro, I will stop what I'm fucking doing to take photos with y'all.
No matter how mad I am, even if I'm at Angie or some shit, I'll still take a picture with y'all.
Or mad at Halloween Horror Nights.
And he's fine.
And if he's my picture too.
He doesn't do it with me.
I always be like, give me a picture.
He's like grumpy as fuck, I'll say.
I'm just kidding.
I don't I never be mad at Angie.
Or or when or when you piss me off.
Or when a woman gets in the way of the picture.
When a w like there's times if a woman gets in the way, because he'll be like this.
And then and then a woman gets right.
The only time I was like, no, you're not gonna take a picture, is was was with that girl who takes this that was like with French and you guys.
Well, you want to tell that bitch that you want to tell that tell that bitch a story?
Yeah, yeah.
So we went to go do Crowder, right?
And we get and we get out of our Uber, and another guy gets about is about to get in and he recognizes us.
Go ahead.
Yeah, and he'd recognize them, and and he's like, Oh, let's let's take a picture.
These guys are awesome, blah, blah, blah.
And he's flipping his shit.
But he was with a girl.
Fuck girl.
It's okay, you can say it.
You can say it.
Trap itch.
She was drunk.
Once she was drunk, and she was loud.
She was screaming.
So she was like, Oh, who's this?
Who are these guys?
And they were like, Oh, these are the podcasts.
These are the guys from the podcast, Fresh Afade.
This guy's awesome, blah, blah, blah.
The guy.
And they I take the picture for them, for the guide, right?
And then she's like, oh, I want a picture too.
And they're like, I'm like, no.
You don't even know there.
And then I told her, like, you can't.
Yeah.
I told her, like, you're loud.
Like, stop being so loud.
She's like, I'm Martina.
I'm supposed to be loud.
And I'm here like, no.
No, that's not true.
Leave it.
Yo, that was funny.
I had a picture.
No.
Yeah, no.
We just left.
No.
Fuck that bitch.
POM!
Is that one of your favorite sounds?
That's a great sound effect, man.
I ain't gonna lie.
That's one of your favorite sounds now.
I want to see another one.
This one was big, I will never forget about this.
Oh shit.
Second day with my we were walking down the street, and the guys recognizes him, and he's they and he was with a girl too.
We were like dating us or something.
I don't know.
And the guy was like flipping his shit too.
I take the picture for him.
And while I'm taking the picture, the girl is like, who's him?
And I'm here like, you don't want to know.
And then she didn't want to fuck up the date for that other guy.
She wanna fucking.
Then I said, um, he's a bit controversial.
And she was like, like undertake.
And it was like, yeah, kind of, kind of.
And she was like, oh, go to hell.
He said to him, like, go to hell.
And Myra didn't hear her, but I heard him.
So I was like, what the hell?
And I turned around and he was like, what did she say?
And then I said, I just told Myra, like, she said to go to hell.
Like she told you to go to hell.
Myra was like, fuck this.
Fuck this.
No, keep walking.
I was about to turn it into Super Smash Brothers.
Cool.
Oh, Myron.
What?
Oh, I'm just kidding.
Angie would have done it for me.
No, how cool I see.
Or Icy.
Yeah, I see something else too.
I see it.
I actually could hit her with a five four.
Yeah.
That's exactly why I'd be telling girls that I work at a small local radio stationtown.
Maxie's ready to enact violence on these hoes.
So I hey, man.
I will call it.
It's great all the time.
I ain't gonna lie, because I'm gonna do a little self-snitching, but it is what it is.
Uh y'all recent trip to Vegas when y'all had just came back.
Uh-huh.
Uh I was on a little outing.
Okay.
And you self-snitching.
I was on a date, bro.
I ain't gonna lie.
No fucking.
Okay, okay, bro.
Okay.
Hey, look at him.
Hey, hey, hey.
And uh and fresh caught me.
I was like, wait, because she was like, 'cause she was like, who, like, who's this guy staring at us?
And I see Fresh, I'm like, and she was like, who like who is that?
I was like, wait, where are you at, nigga?
Next door, bro.
I was actually next door.
He was next door.
Next door, bro, because y'all was out of town.
He thought he was actually sitting there just coming back.
I was like, I'm like, fresh.
What?
I thought you was in Vegas.
Fresh is always spying with people.
He's always outside.
He's always out there.
I'm always walking, and he was like, yo, Angie!
Where?
And he's always hiding in the dark.
Like you can see him.
So you don't know who's chilling at you.
The other day I was coming out of work, and he somebody jellied me from the other time from the from the other side of the street.
And I turned around and I was with a friend.
He was like, yo, Angie!
I mean, he was frightening his car.
Flashing his car.
He's everywhere, bro.
He's literally every you can't escape him.
Like, if you're in Miami, he's gonna see you at some point.
Myra, now the other day with my brother was in town.
I was walking with my brother, and he was like, Angie!
like this.
W-Fresh.
W-Fresh.
Oh my god, don't hurt my brother.
Don't hurt me.
Don't hurt me.
But I couldn't see him.
He was like in the dark.
Snicker, man.
So she actually someone at the chest that earlier he that's why he purposely drives around in uh light colored cars.
So people can see him.
Yeah.
And she actually does not recognize you or fresh.
So you're a chick.
Yeah.
Okay.
Shout out to her.
Yeah.
Okay.
Well, she finds out it's a rap for you, bro.
Well, I mean goodbye, literally.
I ain't gonna lie.
I'm not even worried anymore, bro.
You ain't gonna mark it.
Just know I came to work extra early, bro.
No, no.
It was actually it was South Beach.
Yeah, south beach and That was easy.
And uh I I had extra clothes just to know that I ain't go home for like another two days.
Okay.
Thanks for all that information.
Appreciate that.
Yeah, that's not more ass.
Oh man.
I hope the chat isn't mad.
And no, she's talking about Snowden for like 20 minutes.
And no, she was not during that time in the month, bro.
Don't worry, it wasn't that time.
So there was no, there was no red markings anywhere.
No, everybody to know.
They call it Reacts.
Oh, yo, also, yo, I'm looking right now.
Hold on, I'll stop the goddamn show.
Yo, we got 1800 y'all watching right now on YouTube, right?
And then we got another uh Bills.
Can you throw the number up on there for Rumble?
3.5.
3.5 on Rumble watching.
Right?
Well, we'll show we'll we'll pull it up for y'all real quick.
Um, our rumble.
Vamp Reacts, bro.
Yeah.
So we got we have over 5,000 y'all in here, bro.
I need you guys to like the video right now.
Okay, do me a favor and like the video, okay, guys, because um at the end of the day, right?
As y'all know, we're demonetized on here.
We're doing this basically for free for y'all.
And I told you guys this before that this channel isn't necessarily profitable.
We do it for fun.
We do it because we love you guys.
We do it to educate you guys, we do it to entertain you guys.
So um, you know, it's about you know getting it out there.
So the only thing I ask guys is like the video, subscribe to the channel if you haven't already, and it will be uh, yeah.
Like I mean, like I said before, man, we just enjoy giving y'all this this sauce.
Um and don't worry, timestamps will be in here so that if you watch this on the replay, uh you'll be able to skip to the Snowden parts.
I apologize.
I know we've been talking about a bunch of random shit here, but you know, the real ninjas watch Fed Reacts, man.
Oh, you guys, the real supporters watch it, so I figured you guys would like to see um some things behind the scenes.
But yeah, man, only 221 likes right now, and we got almost 2,000 of y'all watching on YouTube.
So do me a favor and like the goddamn video, okay, and subscribe to the channel if you haven't already.
All right.
Uh any other chats before we get, or actually, no, we get a couple we can get back to this thing.
Because we we've been having them wait long enough.
Uh to so let's go.
We did the Chroma complaint stuff, right?
I think we're we're we're just about to start this one on the mistake.
Uh you know what we could do?
We got time.
Or let's let's do because I still got the the um, so let's do this.
So, as y'all know, right?
He wrote a book, okay, as well.
Um hit that next tab over.
Um so the Justice Department uh on requests to Hong Kong for Edward Snowden as a provincial arrest.
So as y'all know, they tried to get him arrested and it didn't happen.
He ended up jumping on a plane and getting over to Russia, okay.
Um and I'll be honest with y'all, I don't think China gave a fuck.
They were kind of like, eh, you know what, bro, we don't care.
Like, you know, it is what it is.
So he was able to escape and then hit the next tab.
Um and then, oh no, no.
Uh click the uh where it says the lawsuit, USA versus um, yeah.
No, no, no other one.
Uh no, one before that, maybe.
Yes, okay.
So, guys, this is a lawsuit, okay, in the civil court.
All right.
Uh United States of America versus uh Edward Snowden, right?
And they don't know, obviously, is the exact address.
But what they're doing is and McMillan publishers, um, and what they're basically doing is um he wrote a book, and in that book he talked about a bunch of his stuff, right?
And in the introduction, we can let's see if how long the introduction is.
Let's see here.
Yeah, we could read it real fast.
Okay.
The United States of America brings a civil action for breach of contract and fiduciary obligations against defendant Edward Snowden, a United States citizen who formerly worked as a contractor and staff employee for the CIA and employed as a contract employee by the NSA, and who published a book without submitting the manuscript for pre-publication review and has given speeches without submitting the necessary materials for a period of publication review in violation of a secrecy agreements and non-disclosure obligations in the United States.
Now, guys, if you're a government employee and you have a clearance, you have to sign a non-disclosure agreement, Okay.
So obviously he didn't go ahead, and if you do want to release a book after the fact and you want to be able to profit, you have to be able to get it approved through the government agency that which gave you the clearance.
As relief defendants only, the United States also names McMillan Publishers, McMillan Publishing LLC, uh Henry Hope uh Company and Holzburg uh publishers LLC.
No independent claims are asserted here and against the uh relief defendants, rather they are named as necess uh necessary parties for a purpose of according to uh the United States to complete relief in this lawsuit through the suit.
The United States is not seeking to enjoy or restrain publication or distribution of Snowden's book.
So basically, look, man, we don't care.
Y'all could go ahead and keep selling the book and make your money, etc.
But we're gonna collect the revenue.
Oh, Snowden is no longer gonna benefit.
We're gonna collect the revenue.
So they went ahead and they actually ended up and clicked that second um one.
That's what I hear.
Yeah, that the one that one.
Um and they were able to get final judgment and permanent injunction against Edward Snowden.
So uh October 1st uh 2020, they were able to go ahead and get um the lawsuit going because I don't think Snowden appeared in court for obvious reasons.
So they were able to go ahead and now they're able to collect um all the money from that book, okay.
Um so let's go ahead.
You know, let's go to the Joe Rogan interview.
Fuck it, because I think that's gonna be better.
And this is we're not gonna play the whole thing, guys, but we are gonna play um when Edward Snowden realized government spying had gone too far, and then I think I got another one as well.
Um that should be uh type in Snowden Joe Rogan.
Another tab.
Snowden Joe Rogan.
He's gonna talk about the police state under Obama or sorry, the uh surveillance state.
So right after he he um did that first interview that when he what where he uh just do it on YouTube, not Google, so I can search through.
Where he dropped all those secrets and stuff.
The Department of Justice console his um passport.
So when he went to Russia.
Oh yes.
So when he went to Russia, he got detained for like over for like a month.
Yes.
He originally wanted to go to South America.
Um, but he ended up getting stuck in Russia and it worked out.
Yeah.
And and Russia, right?
Like, you know, the the there we go, third one down.
One Oba Obama made mass surveillance worse.
Um pause real quick.
Shout out to Rodrell Rogan.
Um it's a little weird thing.
Um so yeah, he originally wanted where did he want to did he want to go to Ecuador or El Ecuador?
What?
He wanted to go to somewhere yo, bruh.
I think it was Ecuador he wanted to go to.
Check, correct me if I'm wrong, but he wanted to go somewhere in South America.
Um where did Julian Assange stay?
Which which um when he was in in the embassy for like two years.
I think it was Ecuador.
Julian Hassan?
Julian Assange.
Yeah.
Um W said W racist Angie.
Oh, y'all don't even know the bet the the small of it.
Ecuador was one of the Simon Bolivar countries.
Yeah, I think they're saying Ecuador, yeah.
Okay, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah, it was Ecuador.
What do you mean I love anything?
Because Ecuador has a non has a non um has a non-extradition and and doesn't extradite with uh the United States.
But um they do with Ecuador.
But Russia, right?
No, but Russia though, on the other hand, Putin, right?
Here's the thing.
They look at it like yo, we're able to stand up against the United States.
Because, bro, everyone in their mom was trying to get Snowden when he was on a run.
Okay.
They were definitely trying to get him.
Um they even stopped um the did they stop the pre I think they landed his plane.
They force landed a president's plane, okay.
Uh it was either President of Peru or Ecuador.
Um, they forced landed his plane uh in Austria because they thought that Snowden was on.
Like that just goes to show the crazy power that they had.
All right, and how much they had a heart on for this guy.
All right, let's go ahead and um click the uh this Rogan clip right here with the uh Obama thing.
And yo, shout out to Rogan for being able to get interview with Snowden, man.
I'm gonna try to do this shit myself.
I'm gonna try to get him on.
What?
I don't know how to do it.
See what happens.
So you're in this position where you have this information and you you know that these surveillance systems are in place and they're unconstitutional, and you feel this deep responsibility to let the American people know about this.
What what makes you take the leap?
So this is um covered uh extensively in the book.
Um because it took a long time.
I would imagine.
People People, you know, yeah, right, exactly.
People like to think it's like a cinematic moment.
Um where I find this golden document, like the Stellar Wind report, and that's the closest thing to a smoking gun, right, that that exists.
But look, if you found that you you can read that later.
Look at that, and like imagine yourself being like, oh, I'm gonna go outside on the courthouse steps and wave this thing and burn my life to the ground, burn my family to the ground, I'm never gonna be work again.
Uh I'm going to jail for the rest of my life.
Um the question is, what would it take for you uh to light a match and burn your life to the ground?
Um for a long time.
Uh too long.
Um the answer was nothing.
And I'm I'm I'm ashamed of that.
Uh it took me uh so long.
Guys, I said I would try to get Snowden on the podcast, not not Rogan, guys, not Rogan.
I was trying to get um uh I'm talking about Snowden.
All right, so people reach out to you.
Yeah, nigga, we know that.
I'm talking about Snowden, getting Snowden on.
All right.
Like, God damn.
Um but uh uh but yeah, guys, we almost we got almost 4,000 now watching on Rumble, and then another uh, you know, 1800 on on YouTube, guys.
We're at 1.1k likes.
So do me a favor, man.
Let's hit 1800 on YouTube, man.
We really appreciate it.
Um and I really do think you guys should watch this interview that he did with Rogan.
I th I thought it was fantastic.
Um and it goes into way more detail, but uh let's continue on here.
So wait, uh so you were right about uh he was going to go to Ecuador, and then and he says here that it's not they had a seat reserve to continue to Cuba.
So he was gonna go to Cuba after the uh okay.
Okay.
That makes sense.
Yeah, because if Ecuador wouldn't take them to Cuba, definitely would have been like fuck yeah, come on over.
Yeah, so he was he was intended to transit through Russia, but he was topping route.
So what you said.
Yeah, because they canceled his passport.
State department canceled his passport.
So um they flagged the shit out that boy.
Um at the time, I think it was John Kerry was a secretary of uh state at the time.
So L. John Kerry.
Let's keep going.
Uh to get over that home because I was waiting for somebody else to do it.
Uh when I saw uh people like Ron Wyden on this, uh when I saw people like the court case that I showed before, where people were actively challenging these programs, right?
Journalists had the scent of it.
Uh and you know, there are a lot of people who are gonna be in, you know, the the YouTube comments or whatever and go, oh, I knew this was happening.
No, you didn't.
Well, Bill Bimini, you had Bill Benny.
Bill B excuse me, Bill Benny, he initially was the one that came out and spoke about this issue.
And uh so yeah, Bill Benny uh is uh part of shall we say the group of early NSA whistleblowers who came with Thomas Drake, uh Bill Binney, uh Kirk Weeby, I believe, and Ed Loomis.
Uh and these guys all got their doors kicked in, you know, they they got harassed um by the FBI.
Tom Drake, uh, who is a senior executive at the NSA, this is a guy who had a lot to lose, uh, was charged under the same law was the espionage act, and these guys who were doing it earlier during the Bush administration.
Some of them were talking to the journalists uh that in you know, maybe it's alleged.
I don't want to put them on the spot.
Maybe they deny it, maybe they don't.
Leave that to them.
Um somebody somewhere was informing this reporting, right, that got into the New York Times about the Bush era warrantless wiretapping program.
And eventually journalists put this out there.
People knew these capabilities existed.
Um but yeah, then there's the person in the YouTube comments who's like, oh, we knew all about this, it's nothing new.
And the thing is, you can know about some programs and not know about others.
You can have a suspicion, you can know with a certainty that this stuff is capable, or is is possible, the capability exists.
You can know that the government has done this stuff in the past, you can know they are likely to do it again.
You can have all these indications.
You can have um like the jewel versus NSA case uh that's um run by the EFF, which is about the AT or it's about AT setting up uh secret rooms in their uh telecommunications facilities where they basically drag uh all the fibers for their domestic internet uh communications and like phone communications into a room that's purpose-built for the NSA and then they bring it out.
Um but ATT denies it's the NSA.
The NSA denies that these things uh happen or that are done at all, right?
And so this is the context.
Uh you say you know, and you know let's put it the other way, maybe you do know, right?
Maybe you're uh an academic researcher, uh maybe you're technological specialist.
Uh maybe you're just somebody who reads all the reporting and you actually know.
Uh you can't prove it, but you know this is going on.
But that's the thing in a democracy.
The distance between speculation and fact.
The distance between what you know and what you can prove to everybody else in the country is everything in our model of government.
Because what you know doesn't matter.
What matters is what we all know.
And the only way we can all know it is if somebody can prove it, if you can prove it.
And if you don't have the evidence, you can't prove it.
And of course, when we talk about the earlier stuff, right, like this uh a more corporatized media.
They've got a thousand incentives not to get involved in this stuff.
They need access to the White House.
They need these officials to sit down with them uh and give interviews, right?
That's constant content that they need, that's access that they need.
They need to be taken seriously.
They need to be uh, you know, uh admitted to briefers.
Uh it is a codependent relationship.
And yet uh and rather, and so the only way to make sure people understand this broadly is if we all work together, right?
Um if we collectively can establish a corpus of evidence, right, a body of facts that is so large and so persuasive, it overcomes uh the natural and understandable resistance of the these more corporatized media groups.
Um it overcomes uh the political and partisan uh sort of loyalties that that all of these uh political factions in the country do where they go, you know, it's it's my president.
Even if I don't like this stuff, even if I don't agree with this stuff, I don't want to say it exists.
I want to deny it until it's proved, you know, uh in HD on video, you know, signing the order to do this, that or the other.
Um because otherwise there's a chance my guy might not get reelected.
And that's the only way this kind of stuff can happen.
And the sad fact is the opportunities that we have to prove this, like the the moments in history where we do prove something, anything, uh, beyond a reasonable doubt, are so few uh and so rare that they almost always only come from whistleblowers.
Uh and and I think that's uh one of the problems that we have, uh particularly in the the climate movement.
Did uh too much.
Did you look go ahead?
I'm sorry, did you take any comfort from knowing that Obama when he was running for office and in his hope and change website, he had provisions to protect whistleblowers and provisions to reward people, right?
I mean, do you remember all that?
I mean it was eventually YouTube.
YouTube had me with a thing?
Yeah.
Oh.
Okay.
So that there uh wait, it's saying that uh the streaming thingy?
Yeah.
Oh.
Alright.
YouTube is down.
It's just uh rumble.
That's fine.
I mean, I think we covered enough of it on there anyway.
So that's fine.
Um it just says like stream suspended or whatever.
Unavailable.
Yeah.
Yeah.
That's fine.
It'll it'll come back in a little bit.
We'll just stop playing it.
Um it's because of Rogan.
Uh huh.
Because of rugging?
Probably.
Yeah, um, well, yeah, it's probably yeah, because Rogan's probably signed with Stot he's uh he's on Spotify, so they might have it.
Okay.
So that might be why we can with a documentary.
The point is is um the point, guys, is from there, I think the takeaway is that the takeaway is simply this.
He needed to show profound evidence.
Oh shit, the rumble numbers are jumping up.
Everyone's going over to Rumble, they're like, fuck it!
Come on over Rumble, shout out to Rumble.
You'll know what time it is, right?
Uh so but yeah, anyway, what he's saying is that um for him to prove that you know this is some actual shit going on, etc.
That yo, you are being spotted on, etcetera.
He has to he had to expose it the way he did with the whistleblower way because you know when you go the whistleblower route, guys, are they gonna expose all the time?
Not necessarily, right?
And for you to expose it at the level that he wanted to expose it at, you pretty much gotta violate the law, which is why he planned all this in advance where he was gonna go to China.
He was gonna leak it to the press.
He was gonna put out the full capability out there.
Um and that was it.
There was another guy.
Um type in Drake NSA whistleblower on Google real quick.
Because this guy did it too, and I think he ended up getting the charges dropped.
Drake.
Drake, yeah.
His last name is Drake.
That's why.
Let's go on Google real fast.
Yeah, Drake.
Yep.
Nathan Drake.
Uh shut on charter.
Thomas Drake.
There we go.
Bam.
Click him.
Click that.
Guys, something interesting.
I don't know why the link to Rumble says Fets plains the Las Vegas shooters.
Tutor.
It says that?
Yeah.
That's weird.
Yeah.
Let's go look at that real quick.
Let me just complain.
That's weird.
It says Fed explains Edward Snowden right here.
Yeah.
Does it?
Well, it says here.
I'm looking at it right now.
Fett splends the Lesbate shooter.
I just repeated the stuff.
It's fine.
Yeah.
People are in the right video, though, so it's fine.
We got 5500, y'all in here on Rumble, man.
So shout out to y'all ninjas, man.
Uh, you guys could be anywhere else, but you guys are here with us on a Sunday night, and we really appreciate it.
Um let's um okay.
So here we go.
Thomas Drake, right?
So this guy was also whistleblower, guys.
Oh, back on YouTube.
Or back on YouTube?
That's fine.
And the video is gonna come back on YouTube as well.
Shout out to uh TL.
You guys are watching on YouTube, like the video if you guys are watching on Rumble either or do me a favor, if you're watching on Rumble though, guys, guys, open up a tab, like it on YouTube as well, so that we can hit the ugly on YouTube.
Um so going back to the Wikipedia here from Thomas Drake, he goes, Thomas Drake, uh born 1957 is a former senior executive of the NSA, uh decorated United States Air Force and uh United States Navy veteran and a whistleblower.
In 2010, the government alleged that Drake mishandled documents, one of the few uh such espionage at KC U.S. histories.
Drake's defenders claim that he was instead being persecuted for challenging the Trailblazer Project.
He is the 2011 recipient of the Ridden Hauer Um Okay, for truth telling and co-recipient of the Sam Adams Associates for Integrity Intelligence Award on June 9th, 2000 uh twenty uh twenty eleven.
All ten original charges against him were dropped.
Drake uh rejected several deals because he refused to plead bargain with the truth.
He eventually peded to one misdemeanor account for exceeding authorized use of a computer.
Um Dreslin Raddock of the Government Accountability Project, who helped represent him called it an act of civil disobedience.
So um scroll down real quick.
So this is an example of uh of a whistleblower that was able to beat it, right?
But um, but again, he was charged, and people weren't sure if you, you know, if he was gonna be able to beat it, etc.
So it sent the intelligence community obviously uh very concerned.
Keep scrolling down.
Um let's see here.
And then he what did he whistleblow exactly?
Okay, he scroll down.
Let's see here.
An acknowledgement.
Damn, he cost one billion dollars.
Damn.
By 2003, NSA Inspector General declared Trailblazer an expensive failure.
It cost more than one billion dollars.
Um and then eventual whistleblowing.
Okay.
Okay, Drake felt the NSA was committing serious crimes against the American people on a level worse than what President Nixon had done in 1970s.
Drake reviewed the laws regarding disclosure of information, decided that if he revealed unclassified information to reporter, then the worst thing that would happen to him was probably he would be fired in November 2005.
Drake contacted the COBIN Gorman of the Baltimore Sun newspaper, sending her emails through Hushmail and discussing various topics.
He claims that he was very careful not to give her sensitive for classified information.
It was one of the basic ground rules he set out at the beginning of the communication.
The communication occurred around 2006.
Uh Gorman wrote several articles about waste fraud and abuse at the NSA, including articles on Trailblazer.
She received an award from the Society of Professional Journalists and her series exposing government and wrongdoing.
George Richard Bennett uh later ruled that there is no evidence that reporter uh A relied upon any allegedly classified information found in Mr. Drake's house in her articles.
And then the FBI raided his house in 20 in 2007.
So basically, guys, he was able to kind of get away by like not um using classified information.
But again, you know, they're able to bring charges against you because um certain stuff doesn't have to necessarily be classified, guys.
So um when you're talking about national defense information, right?
Like um, for example, like Trump right now, right?
If you guys watch the episode that I did with um with Trump and uh the Mariloga raids and how he got charged with the um with the classified information, you are fake news.
It doesn't matter if he declassified the stuff, and the reason why it doesn't matter is because they're gonna, if it's military stuff, they're gonna consider it national defense information and national defense information, guys.
It doesn't matter what his classification is, that's where the issue arises.
So, um, and that's probably how they're able to get this guy because NSA information a lot of times is gonna be national defense information, regardless of what classification it is, even if it's unclassified.
So that's what it is, man.
Um what else do we got here?
Did you wanna oh yeah, because the Rogan thing hit us.
Uh we could watch that documentary.
You want to watch it a little bit?
It's only 27 minutes, and I think it's really good.
Okay, let's run it.
Honestly.
This video is sponsored by Surfshark VPN.
Let's take that off.
Yeah, we can speed it up too.
Oh, yeah, we can speed it up because it's a little slow.
This video is sponsored by Surf or Wait.
Let me just put We could do one point two five.
See how it goes.
Fuck Sher Shark.
Damn.
Yeah, yeah, no, no, you could go back a bit.
Right there, right there.
W Gorilla Mine.
Clasps her case on the unmade bed.
As she sets her camera on a tripod, the agent takes his position on a chair opposite.
And that's how they took the interview, guys that we watched earlier with Snowden in earlier that 13-minute interview.
This is them setting up for it.
Uh, Greenwald and the other woman.
The reporters in the Hong Kong Hotel.
That part is in the movie too.
That's how the movie starts, too.
Wait, Hong Kong?
Yeah, he went to Hong Kong.
He doesn't want to sign with the weight of their impending conversation.
The world, unknowing, teetered on the brink of a revelation from Edward Snowden that would change it forever.
More than ten years on since Snowden's infamous NSA leaks, the debate over whether he is a friend or foe to America rages on.
Edward Joseph Snowden was born on the 21st of June 1983 in North Carolina.
His father, Lonnie, worked for the U.S. Coast Guard as a warrant officer, and his mother, Elizabeth, as a clerk for the U.S. District Court of Maryland.
He had a sister, Jessica, who would go on to become a lawyer, also working for the U.S. federal government.
Snowden's interest in technology and computers developed from a young age.
Sparked by his father bringing home various gadgets from work.
Snowden was captivated in particular by the new Commodore 64 personal computer his father brought home one day.
Snowden would stay up past his bedtime watching his father use the computer, and was eventually allowed to play games on it himself.
From there, Snowden got into video gaming, spending countless hours playing games like Super Mario Brothers and Tekken.
Young Edward was a child of the internet, reveling in the anonymity the first decade of the world wide web provided.
He crawled various forums and chat rooms, creating multiple personas and hiding his true age.
Shortly before his ninth birthday, the Snowden family relocated to Fort Meade in Maryland.
Edward told of how he went from being popular among his classmates to being relentlessly mocked and teased at his new school in Maryland.
By his own admission, young Edward was not a good student, staying up late every night playing computer games and browsing the internet.
Snowden spent his time at school daydreaming about hacking and sleeping through his classes.
He developed a keen interest in Japanese art and culture, including anime.
Glandular fever caused Snowden a prolonged absence from high school and ultimately caused him to drop out during his sophomore year.
Snowden later enrolled in community college and claimed to have passed the GED exams, an equivalent of the US high school diploma.
But later investigations by the US authorities could find no evidence that he actually did this.
If Snowden knew one thing, it was that he wanted to pursue a career in computers and the internet.
Without much in the way of formal education, Snowden decided to take a Microsoft certification course.
He started working as a freelance web designer for the owner of a small business that he met in his Japanese classes.
Then, on September 11th, 2001, the world changed forever.
The terrorist attacks on US soil had a profound impact on the then 18-year-old Edward Snowden, as they did on most, if not all Americans.
The attacks prompted a legislative response in the form of the USA Patriots.
The controversial If you guys want the full take on 9-11, watch it on our rumble.
We go over Ryan Dawson in detail, it's like five parts, and we break down who was involved in 9-11.
Yeah, we already know.
So we'll just keep going.
Y'all know if you guys want to um reform.
Yeah.
So let's keep on.
Or they also said I did it, bro.
...act expanded the surveillance powers of the US government in an effort to thwart future terrorist attacks.
He talked about the Patriot Act.
Snowden's parents divorced that same year in 2001, which led to him living with his mother in Ellicott City, Maryland.
He continued to spend much of his time online, in particular on the Ars Technica web forums, where he posted under the alias, the one true hoo-ha.
But as time wore on, the horrific events of that infamous September day continued to stir in Snowden a sense of patriotism and a desire to serve his country in the war on terrorism.
He thus enlisted in the United States Army in 2003 with the aim of joining the Special Forces.
This was, however, not to be, as he was discharged on medical grounds just a few months after joining the X-18 training program.
Snowden claimed that he broke both his legs during a training exercise, which was the reason for his discharge.
However, an NSA security official said later that it was shin splints that saw Snowden unable to complete basic training.
With his military ambitions thwarted, Snowden needed to find another path to serve his country.
The story of Edward Snowden will demonstrate just how important it is to be vigilant about our online privacy and security.
Which brings us to the sponsor of this video.
So now we know, guys, his background, right?
So and we talked about some of it, but obviously, you know, divorce household, grew up in a government um household where you know everyone worked for the government.
Um obviously got a deep sense of patriotism after 9-11, joined the military, couldn't hack it though uh from a physicality standpoint.
Um and then this is where you see him transform and uh get into the Intel world here in a second.
So let's uh skip the Surfshark thing real fast.
Yeah, shout out to you, Bills.
Um, and let's keep going.
In 2005, Snowden took his first job at the CIA as a security guard at the Center for the Advanced Study of Language at the University of Maryland.
After passing a polygraph test and a background check investigation, he worked as a security specialist and was given top secret security clearance.
Just four months later, Snowden joined BAE Systems in Maryland, a private company contracted to the CIA, where he worked as a systems engineer and administrator.
A year later, Snowden converted from a contractor to a full-blown CIA employee, working from its headquarters in Langley, Virginia.
As Snowden's career developed, he continued his life online, becoming fascinated by hacktivist groups, including the decentralized online hacking community, Anonymous.
He longed for the Internet of the late 1990s and early 2000s, which he saw as representative of the new frontier of the American dream.
He observed, however, that as the internet grew ever larger and more complex, it became monopolized by large operations and controlled by centralized governments and agencies.
The dial-up was crazy.
The dial-up was crazy.
Within the CIA, Snowden didn't quite fit in with his peers.
Contrary to claims made by Snowden, at the CIA he held an entry-level IT support position known as a TESO, or Telecommunications Information Systems Officer.
The position still required top secret security clearance and often involved operating under diplomatic cover in countries outside of the USA.
He spent six months training for this position at the CIA's secret school for technology specialists, during which time he lived in a comfort in hotel with his fellow trainees.
The hotel was somewhat dilapidated and was less than ideal as a semi-permanent residence for the students.
Snowden raised the students' concerns over their accommodation.
When he felt the complaint was not being suitably addressed, he went over the heads of his superiors by reporting the issue to more senior management.
While the students were ultimately rehoused in more suitable accommodation at a Hampton Inn, he was reprimanded for his insubordination.
This incident set the tone for Snowden's career within the intelligence community, with later reports on Snowden suggesting that he routinely ignored the chain of command and disobeyed orders.
During his relatively brief time working directly for the CIA, he was sent for multiple counseling sessions to address his behavioral issues.
Snowden nevertheless completed his training and was sent on his first assignment to Geneva in 2007.
Snowden later wrote in his memoir that this was his creative punishment for the hotel incident.
He had indicated his preference to be sent to the front line of the war in the Middle East, but was instead given a cushy assignment about as far away from the fighting as anybody could have hoped.
While on his assignment in Geneva, Snowden told of an incident that cast a shadow over his view of the CIA and its operational methods.
Snowden recounted an attempt by the CIA to recruit a Swiss banker, ending in him being plied with alcohol and encouraged to drive home drunk.
When he was arrested for drunk driving, a CIA officer offered to get the banker out of trouble in exchange for him becoming an informant.
This led Snowden to question the actions of his government and to feel that he was part of something causing more harm than good.
Somewhat disillusioned, Snowden left formal employment with the CIA in 2009 after the end of his stint in Geneva.
That same year, Snowden met American blogger and acrobat Lindsay Mills, and the pair soon started dating and living together.
Yeah, she was like a like a poll instructor as well.
This chick.
I like how he called her an acrobatter.
Acrobatter, yeah, acrobatter, okay.
And she was a blogger too.
Um you said earlier that um she left her in America, but she then joined him in Russia, and they're not a big thing.
Yeah, yeah, they're together now.
They're together now.
Um options though.
In the movie, I don't know if this is true, but apparently she kept her dating profile profile open for a bit after uh he was because he was working so much and he like confronted her on it, and I don't know why he stayed with her after that shit.
Because they met online and then Yeah, yeah, I saw that movie, goddammit.
I saw that I was like, what the hell?
That shit pissed me off.
I was like, bruh.
Hello!
It's unacceptable.
But yeah, like yeah, if you guys see the movie Snowden, basically she she had he had been a little distant because he had been working and work with Struston Mount shit, and she asked him about uh he said he told her that she needs to like watch out with like um was spying on her were being spied on and shit.
And she was like, Why I got nothing to hide?
And he was like, Oh, really?
And she was like, Yeah, I got nothing to hide.
He was like, Oh, okay.
Well, I saw that you still have your dating profile, blah, blah, blah, blah.
And she and she was like, uh, because he was saying like it's not good that pe you know, people will take pictures and people can get your information, and then he kind of checkmate it on that one.
And uh, and then she was like, Oh, well, you know, I just do it to pry into other people's lives, give some like bullshit excuse blah blah blah, like bruh.
Come on, man.
Snowden is the reason why I have my my blocker, like camera blocker on my I'm gonna be a little bit more.
Oh, Snowden is why yeah.
He's made a lot of people definitely black.
Nope.
Um, but um but anyway, what was I gonna say?
Uh yeah, look her up, look her up.
She's in Russia now with him, I think.
Yeah, she is.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
They are married.
Yeah.
All right.
Uh so three or four.
He stayed with her?
Yeah, he's still with her, yeah.
Whatever.
Bro, you speculated like his second body or something.
I don't know, man.
Bro, you watched that little loaded episode with us too, bro.
Uh Snow Snowden, bro.
Yo, Snowden, watch that little little loaded episode fresh and fit.
Like, she wasn't that bad.
She's an animal.
And a blogger.
And an acrobat Let's keep going.
You don't believe that.
She doesn't.
W Venezuela took up a new working for Dell, one of the many private companies contracted to US intelligence agencies.
Snowden's role saw him assigned to the Pacific Technical Center at the Yokota Air Base in Japan.
Edward and Lindsay packed their things and moved to Tokyo.
While in Japan, Snowden worked on how to defend US networks from Chinese hackers.
This led him to study the Chinese government's mass surveillance programs.
Snowden's top secret security clearance also gave him free access to peek behind the curtain of the NSA's own spying systems.
What he found induced in him a sense of shock.
Snowden was left questioning whether the government he worked for was any better than the bad actors he defended his country against.
Two of the primary surveillance programs worked on by Snowden during the time that he was contracted to the NSA included Prism and X Keyscore.
Prism is an NSA program that gathers foreign intelligence passed through servers owned by Google, Apple, YouTube, Facebook, and other large tech companies.
It allows US intelligence services direct access to the company's servers to search for patterns of potential criminal activity.
Oh shit.
The program is massive in its reach, allowing for near limitless access to metadata without a court order.
X-Keyscore is the NSA's most wide-reaching intelligence collection computer system and is used to search and analyze global internet communications.
It allows NSA operatives to observe the communications of anyone in real time anywhere around the world, pulling data from massive servers located globally.
X-Keyscore depends on the cooperation of multiple other Western countries that share data with each other.
Seen by some as necessary tools to protect national security, the broad reach and lack of oversight of the implementation of the Patriot Act and its various programs raised concerns about potential abuses of power and infringements on civil liberties.
At the time that Snowden became aware of these programs, they were of course highly classified and unknown to the American public.
While working in Japan, Snowden by chance came across a classified report about the Bush administration's intensification of data collection and surveillance in the wake of the September 11th attacks.
The program, known as Stellar Wind, allowed US intelligence agencies to intercept and data-Points.
All metadata associated with the email communication.
This is the big one.
Stellar Wind is the big one that he exposed.
Um that really, you know, got him uh in trouble here.
Let's keep going.
God's telephone conversations, financial transactions, and internet activity of its citizens.
The program was first leaked to the media by Thomas Tam in 2004.
However, the classified report that Snowden found gave far more detail about the extent of the program.
What Snowden found to be the most disturbing fact, however, was that the program was still very much running in full swing.
Snowden's disillusionment was made complete by his discoveries.
He was sent into a deep depression and even manifested physical symptoms of his distress, including seizures.
This was a decisive period in Snowden's life during which he decided that he had no choice but to go public with the secret information he had discovered.
In March 2012, Snowden was reassigned by Dell to work at an NSA facility on the island of Oahu, in Hawaii.
Snowden claimed that his doctors recommended his transfer to the island as the climate would alleviate his medical issues, but in reality, he applied for the transfer to allow him broader access to classified information that he planned to leak.
His role, much like before, was as a systems administrator, and he spent long days transferring large quantities of data between internal Microsoft SharePoint servers.
He was stationed at an NSA facility called the Cunia Tunnel, which was a repurposed bomb-proof underground facility constructed during the Second World War.
Snowden said that his breaking point came on the 12th of March, 2013, when former director of national intelligence James Clapper testified before the U.S. Congress that the NSA was not spying on its own citizens.
Snowden, however, began to download files from...
...and he knew he was lying because he was the one collecting the information.
So he's like, bro, you literally are lying under oath to your own government.
Like, what the hell?
So that was the biggest...
Stop the cap!
...right there, man.
So let's keep going.
Yeah, Oahu's about like...
It's in the same land as Honolulu, so...
Yeah, yeah.
It's going to be like...
It's going to...
I mean, this is going to be the same pay.
Like, it's between my house to here.
Okay, yeah, yeah.
Yeah, it's going to get paid under the same pay scale.
Yeah.
Oh, shit.
...from NSA servers eight months earlier in April of 2012.
To make his task more efficient, Snowden created a web crawler application that pulled together files and data from all across the NSA's internal network.
He legitimized his app by making it available to all NSA staff as a tool to aggregate and collate notices and documents posted to various virtual bulletin boards.
In contravention of all security protocols, he also managed to convince as many as 30 colleagues to provide him with their passwords so that he could gain access to other secret information not otherwise available to him.
Oh, shit.
By March 2013, Snowden had mined to the very bottom of the information available to him.
He decided to leave Dell, transferring to work for another NSA contractor, Booz Allen Hamilton.
Sorry.
He was conveniently stationed at the same NSA facility in Hawaii, but in a new operational role that provided levels of access to an entirely new repository of top-secret reports and information.
He transferred from the Kunia Tunnel to the NSA Cryptologic Center on the island.
It was here that he stole from the NSA its most top-secret information.
The security at the Cryptologic Center was much stricter, using laptops without any USB interfaces or the ability to transfer data to external storage.
Fortunately for Snowden, he had retained access to his old laptop.
He could therefore transfer the classified documents within the NSA network and then download the data to external storage devices via his old NSA laptop.
Within six months, Snowden illegally downloaded millions of files from NSA servers.
He then had to think carefully about how he was going to reveal the truth to the world.
He considered self-publishing his revelations online, but thought that would raise too many questions about the authenticity of the leaked documents.
Sending the documents to WikiLeaks presented the same problems.
Snowden felt also that he couldn't go to his superiors with the information, fearing that it would never see the light of day and his opportunity to expose the NSA would be lost forever.
Snowden was aware of leakers and whistleblowers that came before him and how they faced criminal prosecution as a consequence.
He had no faith in the legislative protections afforded to whistleblowers and decided therefore that his best option was to go to the traditional media.
He identified Glenn Greenwald as his target.
A journalist and former constitutional lawyer living in Brazil, Greenwald was a vocal critic of the NSA and an advocate of civil liberties.
He seemed the ideal candidate to give credence to Snowden's leaks.
On the 1st of December 2012, and while still working for Dell, Snowden made a decisive move.
He sent an email to Greenwald under the alias name Cincinnati.
Snowden told Greenwald that he worked for the NSA and had confidential information to share, but insisted on Greenwald installing encryption software on his computer before sharing any documents.
Greenwald was reluctant, thinking that Snowden was not genuine or that his story was not newsworthy and so never installed the software.
Growing impatient, Snowden also contacted Laura Poitras, a documentary filmmaker who by that time had released revelatory and controversial documentaries, including one on the American war in Iraq and another on the infamous Guantanamo Bay military prison.
Poitras convinced Greenwald to try to do the same thing.
to travel with her to Hong Kong to meet secretly with Snowden, for she believed him to be genuine.
Greenwald's bosses at The Guardian insisted on a third reporter, Ewan McCaskill, joining the party as they prepared to leave London for Hong Kong.
Meanwhile, Snowden took leave from his NSA job, citing the need for treatment for his epilepsy.
He left his girlfriend Lindsay behind, saying only that he would be away for a few weeks.
Snowden chose Hong Kong as the location for the meeting, as it would put him out of the direct reach of US authorities.
He also thought he had reasonable chances of being afforded asylum after the newspapers hit the shelves and all hell broke loose.
Twenty-nine-year-old Snowden arrived in Hong Kong on the 20th of May 2013, where he barricaded himself in his room at the Mira Hotel for ten days.
Greenwald, Poitras, and McCaskill arrived on the 2nd of June 2013.
On the day arranged for their meeting, the three journalists entered the hotel restaurant and identified Snowden by the Rubik's Cube he played with while waiting for their arrival.
Once inside his hotel room, Snowden was interviewed by Greenwald and McCaskill over several days, all of which was filmed by Poetras.
Snowden said that he was motivated by what he felt was his ethical obligation to his countrymen and the world.
He believed the NSA's abuse of power needed to be exposed and the free internet preserved.
He couldn't bear to see the tools designed to protect the American people against terror attacks being used as weapons against them.
Stunned by Snowden's story and the tens of thousands of classified documents he provided on an encrypted thumb drive, Greenwald wanted to start publishing stories as soon as possible.
I listened to McCaskill.
Greenwald went on to write four primary bombshell stories that were so I will say this.
Even though this stuff is super invasive, it has stopped terrorist attacks before, which I will go ahead and we'll cover some of those cases for you guys.
You give me ones in the chat if you guys want to want us to cover some of these um cases where um the bureau did stop some terrorist attacks.
Of course, I'm not justifying it.
Uh, but it did give them the ability to go ahead and stop terrorist attacks from it happening.
Um and I'll cover a couple of these cases for you guys in the future.
Um, you know, and as far like and it's interesting, because I know some of you guys are probably wondering, oh my, what's your take on this?
Like I said before, the almost liberty cannot exist with the utmost um security, right?
It just can't the two can't coexist, and it's you gotta get a happy balance between the two.
Um should they be sponsored to the extent that they were?
No, absolutely not.
That's fucking ridiculous.
Um but did their spying start terrorist attacks?
They did.
They absolutely did.
Um a couple of them uh was uh the uh uh the N um a plot out of Colorado, which I'll cover for you guys one time, where a guy was driving from Colorado across country to New York to do a terrorist attack.
Uh um the uh subway plot terror attack as well will stop through stuff like this.
Um I'll cover some of those cases though for y'all, man.
Uh free guys in the future.
100% ones.
Yeah, they want once.
Okay, I'll cover some of them in the 100.
But that's still not a justification for the the the spy the you know, the massive spying that they did.
So it is what it is, man.
It's kind of a sucky situation.
Did they save lives?
Yes.
Um, but did they invade people's privacy and break the law?
For sure.
West they can continue spying, you know.
Yeah, they're still spying now.
I mean, dude, even people give it away now.
People give it's easier to spy on you now than ten years ago.
Because the social media and shit.
When you get on TikTok, TikTok is the most invasive one by far.
And that one, it's not even an American government no more, it's China.
Which makes you think like how this guy did all of this, like contacted all these uh journalists and stuff in 2013, where there wasn't like a big social media there wasn't like that social media platform that there is right now.
Yeah.
Yeah, no, back then no, there wasn't.
Like YouTube was as kind of like in its infancy.
Instagram was just starting to take off.
How was he here contacting all these people?
Uh all these journalists like email.
Email.
Email.
Yeah, I think Messenger wasn't a thing yet.
Or I mean I messaged IMessage?
I mess no, not I message.
You guys didn't have like Messenger.
BBM, I was like, BBM.
BBM was a thing, yeah.
BBM, that was Blackberry's Messenger.
No, Admiral Pin Y'all.
Yo, ad my You guys didn't they use like Messenger?
Like, what kind of messenger?
MS MSN.
What the fuck?
Also, that was yo.
MSN.
I had it.
I mean, that's what I was thinking.
Latin America, we we used to talk through computers as well.
It was just my senior.
Yeah, like that was big.
Alright.
And this is a good thing.
In their MySpace era, I'm talking about like W MySpace.
My space.
Let's keep going.
I used it though.
Published by The Guardian.
The first article was published on the 6th of June 2013, and the public's reaction was immediate.
Over the next few days, the world learned of the forced collection of all domestic phone records, the NSA's ability to eavesdrop on every single digital communication without a warrant, and the wholesale mining and collection of private metadata.
Also revealed was the Five Eyes, an intelligence and information sharing agreement between the USA, Britain, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand.
There seemed no limit to the reach of global intelligence organizations into the private lives of individuals across the globe.
On the 9th of June 2013, the Guardian revealed Edward Snowden as the source of the NSA leaks.
This was done with Snowden's consent, as he had no intention of hiding his identity.
Shortly thereafter, Snowden was charged by the US Justice Department under the Espionage Act with theft and a host of other charges.
The race was then on for the US authorities to catch up with Snowden and have him extradited to the United States to face prosecution for his crimes.
The moment his interviews were over, Snowden went into hiding in Hong Kong for several weeks.
And I'll tell you guys this from me being an agent and working with China, because remember, as you guys know, I had a Chinese organized crime.
They're fucking useless.
They don't help at all.
So I'm not surprised that they and I should have mentioned this earlier, I'm sorry.
Um when they said that, oh yeah, the Hong Kong authorities let uh you let him escape.
Bro, they they they were dragging their feet, they didn't give a shit at all.
It is very difficult to get information from the Chinese government on anything, dude.
They're not very compliant with American law enforcement, man, at all.
So I am not surprised that they were useless in this situation, because they knew where he was, they could have got him easy, and they said, uh yeah, I don't know, bro.
And they gave him enough time to get out of there.
So let's keep going.
He would not be offered asylum in Hong Kong.
He was forced to plan a hasty exit.
Snowden left Hong Kong on the twenty-third of June 2013, bound for Ecuador, the country that offered Julian Assange asylum.
His route included a layover in Russia.
However, he became stranded at Sherimatevo International Airport in Moscow after US authorities rescinded his passport while his plane was still in the air.
He spent the next month living in limbo in the airport's transit centre, but on the 1st of August 2013 was granted temporary asylum by Russian authorities.
All the while, the revelations from Snowden's leaks continued to make headlines, the fallout perhaps going beyond his own wildest expectations.
Mass protests were sparked across the US, which soon spread to other Western countries and beyond.
The debate around the individual's right to privacy versus the need to protect national security raged intensely.
I'm sorry.
Snowden's girlfriend, Lindsay Mills, was left shocked and confused after Snowden's revelations became public.
She had known nothing of what her partner had been up to, and his plans to change both the Pause.
She didn't know shit about his government job, by the way, guys.
So she was like, What the hell is going on right now?
Because he didn't tell her anything.
So uh imagine being on the news, uh sorry, watching the news and being like, oh yeah, my boyfriend's an international fugitive, and then FBI is at your fucking door.
Next thing you know.
Because they definitely interviewed her.
And they raided that house, I think.
So yeah, bro.
Oh man.
Well, that was good.
Like that he she didn't know because.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah, that's what it actually ended up protecting her.
She didn't know shit.
Yeah.
She knew she would have been jail.
Yeah.
She ultimately came to terms with what Edward had done and left the United States to join Snowden in exile in Moscow around October 2014.
On the 10th of October 2014, Poitras released the Snowden interviews as part of her expose documentary, Citizen Four.
The documentary told a more personal side of the story, giving the public insight into the man who drew back the curtain on the world's most powerful intelligence agencies.
While Snowden remained at large, the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence was tasked with conducting a thorough investigation.
After two years, a redacted version of the committee's report was declassified in September 2016.
The report told a very different tale to that championed by Snowden and his supporters.
It was revealed that Snowden stole as many as 1.5 million documents from NSA servers.
It is thought that approximately 10,000 of these were leaked to the press, And there is no accounting for the rest.
A member of the Intelligence Committee said this about Edward Snowden.
He and his defenders claim that he is a whistleblower, but he isn't.
Most of the material he stole had nothing to do with Americans' privacy, and its compromise has been of great value to America's adversaries and those who mean to do America harm.
Whistleblowers are important to proper oversight, and we will protect them from retaliation, and those who engage in civil disobedience are willing to stay and face the consequences.
The Select Committee report also declared Snowden to be a serial exaggerator and fabricator, lying about various events from his past and exaggerating his position and seniority at the CIA.
He was a disgruntled employee, so the report says, that started stealing from the NSA following yet another altercation with a superior.
Yet Snowden considers himself a whistleblower, as do many others.
But the fact that Snowden did not utilize the regulated whistleblower procedures available to him and stole millions of classified documents means that he That's what they're always gonna get him on.
Is that like he could have went the whistleblower route and been protected?
Um would it have reached the um the level of notoriety that he did if he did it that way, probably not.
Would the public have gotten the information that the the amount of information that they got, probably not.
But he could have went that whistleblower route and said, but he said, now fuck I'm gonna just gonna go straight to the media, which you know you never want to do.
Um if you don't want to go to jail at least.
Can you imagine if we have done this like in today's saying?
Oh, yeah, it would have been way worse.
It would have been way worse.
Um because we have way more advanced stuff now.
So let's keep going.
Would be afforded no legal protections should he ever return to the United States.
Ironically, for somebody purporting to champion the rights of privacy of the individual, the information he stole and leaked compromised.
I will say this, no one knew who the NSA was before Snowden, though.
I will tell you all that.
He definitely put the NSA on the map, man, gave them some clout.
You know what's crazy?
In his Twitter, I saw his Twitter.
The only account he follows is the NSA.
Really?
Yeah, that's fucking funny.
That's actually pretty fucking funny.
Yeah, I follow everybody, bro.
Don't worry, man.
Right, Elon, take his phone away, bro.
Okay, Elon, take his account.
As the personally identifiable information of thousands of government employees and contractors.
In twenty sixteen, the EU Parliament passed the General Data Protection Regulation, GDPR, and the general awareness of data privacy has become a hot button issue politically.
The online world has also seen the wholesale adoption of the HTTPS encryption protocol and the rise of encryption tools such as VPNs.
While there is no denying that Snowden contributed to the conversation around data privacy and mass surveillance, how much of the development of the law and practices around these issues is hard to determine.
Snowden's memoir, Permanent Record, hit the shelves in September 2019.
The book offered an in-depth look into his life, his motivations, and the events that led to his decision to expose the US government's mass surveillance program.
A significant legal victory came for the public on the second of September 2020, when a US federal court ruled in United States v.
Molin that the mass surveillance program Snowden exposed was illegal and potentially unconstitutional.
In October 2020, Snowden's ties to Russia were solidified when he was granted permanent residency.
This was followed in September 2022, with Snowden swearing allegiance to Russia and President Vladimir Putin granting him Russian citizenship.
The irony of Snowden making Russia his home can hardly be denied.
It is hard to square the people's champion of internet freedom and data privacy, living in a country very much opposed to those very ideals.
Pause.
Today, Snowden continu But the reason why they gave him asylum is because the Russia stands for anyone that's against the West.
Yeah.
That's the real reason why.
You know what I mean?
They're they're top ops of the United States, Russia, so um, you know, you know, Pooh was like, come on, comrade, come through.
And then I and here's the other thing too.
Let's just keep it a million.
I guarantee you guys, Russian intelligence was all over Snowden, debriefed the fuck out of him, got a bunch of information on American intelligence, so he was an asset to them.
That was the only way probably that they will let him stay there.
They debriefed the hell out of him, they probably know all of our shit um from from Snowden now.
So yeah, man, 100%.
He was debriefed by SVR.
They don't have KGB anymore.
I think it's called SVR, if I'm not mistaken.
Can you Google it from your fact check?
I don't want to sell like anything.
Yeah, I think it's it's I think it's called the SVR now.
Um, which is their their equivalent to the CIA.
Um isn't the K A B. Well, that's KGB was Soviet Union.
But after this but a uh after that, it's it's something else now.
FGB.
Okay, yeah, FGB.
Um go ahead.
Used to live in exile in Russia, often appearing via video link as a keynote speaker at various events around the world.
On the tenth anniversary of the breaking of the NSA spy scandal, Snowden says he has no regrets.
Although he fears that government and corporate surveillance is today more pervasive and intrusive than ever before.
Despite many calls, no US president has seen fit to pardon Snowden for his crimes.
Throughout the years since the infamous leaks, Edward Snowden has remained a figure of controversy and intrigue.
His actions have ignited global debates on mass surveillance, government secrecy, and the delicate balance between national security and individual privacy.
His story continues to unfold, serving as a potent reminder of the power of information and the lengths to which governments will go to control it.
Bam.
What YouTube channel was this?
Shout out to them, man.
Let's give them a shout out here.
Um it is um Philip Thompson.
Uh let's give him a subscription and a like, man.
Go ahead and show some love.
Yo, shout out to you, my friend.
Uh go check out his channel, guys.
I will tell you something.
Like how I hope it's worth it to not be able to come back to your country ever again.
Oh, yeah, it's worth it for him.
Seriously.
Like I hope it's worth it.
Yeah, he's it's worth it for him.
Yeah, uh the foreign intelligence service, uh Russia um is um it's SVR.
Russia's external intelligence agency focusing mainly on the civilian affairs.
Um SVR succeeded the first chief director of the KGB in December 1991.
The SVR has its headquarters in the Yesenevo district of Moscow.
And then let me look uh right because when I typed in Russian CIA, that's what I came back.
Let me FGB.
I I'm gonna tell you something like I love spying Russian movies.
Those are so good.
Russian Russian um Russian cover means crazy.
They are crazy.
They are crazy in their sadistic too.
Or FSB, sorry, I said FSB.
I'm thinking of FDB.
Folk Dubitch.
Alright.
Uh Federal Security Service, the Russian, the principal security agent of Russia and the main successor agency of the KGB, it's a media president's.
Okay, so they got SVR and FS.
FSB.
God damn, these niggas are confusing.
Alright.
They're like America.
We have they have a bunch of agencies as well.
But um, anyway.
Uh okay, what what what's up, Mo?
Someone just roasted me.
They're roasting you.
Okay.
Let's finish off the chats and then close this bad boy out.
You say Mo's next songs.
Guys, do me a favor, like the video, please on YouTube.
Um and then also like it on Rumble too.
We got how many of y'all ninjas in here?
Do we got almost 7,000 in the shout out to y'all, man?
We only have 400.
Like the video on Rumble as well, guys.
700 likes and 6,000 of you watching.
Like, please like the video and rumble, guys.
Yo, shout out to Rumble, man.
I really do.
Man, Rumble's the best, man.
Like, here's the thing, guys.
YouTube is a necessary evil because it's a discovery app.
Right, so that we can bring more people over, but Rumble is always home base, my friends.
It's always home base.
Okay.
We'll rumble till we die.
Alright.
Uh let's see here.
Okay.
We got here.
Limitless goes.
Myron, what are your thoughts on going to private swinger parties and practice game confidence masculine frame and improve your experience a lot cheaper unless headaches?
You.
Uh bro.
Yeah, I'll keep it a thousand with you, bro.
Swinger parties.
A lot of the girls that are gonna be there are gonna be ugly.
Most people that go to swing a parties are not attractive.
Don't go.
Yeah, and be prepared to deal with a lot of yeah, like weirdo people.
The kilted carnivore goes, hey Myron, quick add to your chess script with girls.
A skilled player can have more than one queen.
That's very true, my friend.
Uh, because if you get uh yeah, anyone that plays chess knows you get the pawn over and it turns into a queen.
Uh okay.
Another thing on the delusion calculator to drive the message home.
Tell the girls that if they find a guy that they like, there's an uh X percent chance that he meets those requirements.
Yeah, we do that.
Uh Ali goes, great stream.
Uh putting a request in for the Jeff Davis 8 case, a very interesting case with many different ang angles.
Jeff Davis 8?
Is that what it's like?
Yeah, Jeff Davis 8.
Yeah, Jeff Davis 8.
Alright.
And you will write it down and look it up.
Uh what else do we hear?
Uh Jose Price goes, Dear Myron, I wrote you, but you still ain't calling.
Left my cell, my pager, my home phone.
What?
You mean He sent letters.
Letters.
send those letters in 2023 bro this is 2023 bro you must have not got them there probably was a problem in the post office or something It's not like a rap lyric.
Yeah.
That boy's spitting.
Oh, is that a is that a play on MM's Stan?
Uh you guys be trolling.
Yeah.
Man.
Yeah.
And I'm trying to read it at the cadence of the song.
Dear Myron, I wrote you, but you still ain't calling.
Right?
Yeah.
It's Stan.
Yeah.
There we go.
You guys have trolls.
Yeah, you're lucky, bro, that we we we're uh we're younger, we're older guys, and we were like, I remember that shit.
A lot of them is Jed's ears are like, what the fuck are they talking about?
Uh Baljeat, my meat.
Wow.
Okay.
What the fuck is wrong with y'all, man?
Alright.
Where's he at here?
Uh based on Snowden's.
Uh, based on Snowden's info, they have eyes and ears everywhere.
How is that government cannot track and stop CSAM and human trafficking?
Because it's not as high on the total pole as uh terrorism is my friend.
If y'all were Pokemon, Mo Snorlights, Chris is wobble fett, blitz is totodial, Myron is Alakazam and Fresh as Bulbazore.
Okay.
Thanks.
Uh Big Mo, they're saying that this is the same.
Mo Snorlax.
That's actually pretty funny.
Uh, what else do we got here?
Uh just how to do that.
Yeah, thank you.
Uh what else we got here?
Um, Othon goes, supporting my people, you got the best freaking crew.
Love all your content is God bless you all.
Thank you so much.
Speaking of which, we still gotta do the top 10 simp songs.
Y'all want to do that next Friday?
Oh.
And not Simpsons, sorry, top 10 red pill songs.
Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
We gotta do the sandwich contest too.
Oh, Big Mo gotta be the person.
Yeah, I gotta I'll be the judge.
W. Alright.
Ooh, W Venezuela.
Okay, maybe maybe next week we'll do that sandwich.
Or we could do it this Friday.
Maybe we could do it this Friday.
When you go to grocery store engine get the stuff.
Uh all right.
Um let's see here.
Roro 51 goes.
But you know what we'll have to do?
We'll have to make like a sandwich.
You know what?
No, we got the kick out cam right there.
We can use that to set that up.
Yeah.
And watch the girl give them each a sandwich making station.
No, we're gonna make it here.
Will they have enough room though?
Yeah.
Absolutely.
I'm gonna pay the put the ingredients, and they have to like make the sandwich.
Make the best assortment?
Yeah.
Uh okay, so they'll pick the condiments and the meat and everything else to make the best sandwich.
We give him a time.
Five minutes enough to make a sandwich.
Damn, five minutes.
And what are we gonna do?
We're gonna give them turkey and then baloney and then all the different types, and they gotta pick chicken they gotta pick.
Yeah.
Uh all right.
Martin trying to keep it hello.
No, I mean you're gonna be the one eating it, so it's fine.
We'll put the pork there for you.
No, no, no, no pork.
Yeah, no, no, no, that's pork.
That is, no, no pork.
Keep it hello and then turkey.
Turkey ham's cool, yeah.
Oh yeah, yeah, yeah.
Okay, and keep it kosher.
Um complaining about what I be saying.
Alright, uh, what do we got here?
I'm currently where we at?
Oh, you're I'm currently in the school of computer science, but really admire law enforcement work, but I have not had any experience so far with any agency yet.
Do you think it's possible to be some kind of Leo or with a CS degree?
Or what should I do in order to do so?
You could definitely do law enforcement, bro.
You know what?
Go ahead and do a ride-along with your local police department.
They'll let you do it.
Fill out the form and they'll they'll let you do it and see and see and get it get a feel for it.
Um Joseph goes, why was he so comfortable fleeing to these countries?
Was he not at risk of being captured and tortured for more intel?
Man, that's um that's potential, but he's smart enough to know that he's more of an asset if they let if they don't torture him.
He has to be asking.
And he wanted to go there.
You know what I mean?
He wanted to go.
There's no need to torture him.
He actually deleted all the evidence before going there.
So the government wouldn't have any liberty leverage over him.
Yep, yep, yep.
Uh Steph Proctor goes, This makes so much sense.
I live in DC and I have someone close with me that gave me photos of Biden in a shower with a my Alright man.
Alright, bro.
We gotta we gonna move on.
Bro, what in the What the fuck?
Uh hey Myron, is there any way I can use my computer science degree in order to become some kind of Leo or work some kind of no?
No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, he donated twice.
Oh, he donated twice?
Okay.
Shout out to you, Roro.
Yeah, shout out to you, bro.
Um, yeah, man, just like I said, do a ride along and see if you like it, bro.
Ali.
Um Palestine Habibie.
Habibi!
Hey man, y'all know what time it is, bro.
Um We got Romo Rats.
One second.
If you guys want my take on that, go ahead and go on Twitter, man.
Oh, oh yeah.
And there's Unplugged FedEx.
We're gonna talk about that a little bit more.
Huh?
They've been asking about that topic on the live that I've been making, and I told them not to ask for that.
Because I know how Myron is Marius Wild who be talking about that stuff, and you know we are we cannot be talking about that stuff on YouTube, guys.
Especially now.
Bro, our channel's gonna be blown to smithere.
Stop asking for those topics.
Go on uh go on Twitter and you guys will see what I what it is.
I talk about it on Twitter.
Take his phone away, bro.
All right.
Fucking bro, I'd be texting Myron, I say, yo, Myron, bro, go to bed, bro.
Uh Mitchell Blair tortured her children, then hid their bodies in a freezer for years.
This would be a great case.
Ooh, I'd read that case.
That's interesting.
Uh Roy 17, any word on Zirka?
I'll hit him up.
Make sure he's okay.
Uh Mario Lord, hey guys, will you do an Alabama brawl?
Sweet.
Alabama, bro.
The um remember the the Alabama with the with the chairs.
It was even though it was kind of a race topic, but uh, you know, the black side and the white side, they was they was both like fighting each other in front of the boats.
No.
It was like that viral moment.
Yeah.
Uh they know the talk.
It was a race topic.
That's why Mario.
When Zirk is supported, do his case out Fed Reacts.
You guys are fucking clowns, bro.
Uh and then someone said uh uh El Meyer for not discussing it.
Number one, guys, we did talk about this situation when we had Saint the Center on.
That's number one.
It's on Rumble.
It's on YouTube and on Rumble, but the that part is on Rumble, okay?
So fuck off, number one.
Number two, I talk about the shit on Twitter.
All right.
So, but you guys already know where I stand with that shit.
All right.
You guys already know.
I've said it before.
He's probably uh he's probably a um apin beast fan that wants to.
And he wants our channel to be canceled.
That's what it that's what happens, but uh no one's scared of shit, man.
Like I've already talked about we've talked about this shit on on all the other platforms, bro.
Um Hey Martin, have you heard West Side Guns Music?
I'm sure you'd enjoyed this certain mixtape series and his album covers with the forbidden one.
If you know, you know.
Okay.
Wow.
Uh bro, when you doing John Pollard.
Uh guys, you gotta um specify that it's Jonathan Polar, not John Polar, because John Polar is a whole different person.
Okay.
Yeah, they want John John, they want the the Israeli spy, right?
Jonathan Pollard?
Yeah, yeah, that's what they want.
Okay.
Yeah, I brought it down.
Okay.
Can you do a video on bro polite?
That's also written down.
Okay.
Uh Mo Easy.
Mara, this you Adam 22 has a reality show show for his wife who's gonna smash her next.
Yeah, I know.
I know.
I hate blood.
Myron, bro, I love you.
Always be on uh I'll always be on your ex.
Thank you.
Uh bring Snowden on after hours.
After hours, okay.
I ain't gonna lie.
That was I thought that was the chat of the night.
Jonathan Hogu, uh, a good RPA wear song is Slick Rick's treat her like a prostitute.
It describes the pitfalls for not vetting a woman properly.
Okay, I can take a look at that one.
Oh my gosh.
What?
Uh we're just gonna move on.
Shout out to thank you, uh Blicky.
He did another one earlier.
And then we good, right?
You don't gotta read the Matt Cox will be a good interview.
Um he actually understands financial things.
He just started to defraud a system with the housing market with elaborate schemes.
Please look into him.
Yeah, I gotta bring down you guys been asking for him.
So he has he's actually the most requested um.
No, but they want him on Money Monday.
We'll do his criminal case.
Ooh, okay.
Yeah, I don't know about a money Monday, but we'll do his criminal case for sure.
Yeah, no problem.
But they actually want him like to come here.
They want him to come in the studio and do a show, yeah.
Uh alright.
Um, guys, anything uh I think I think Bill's Mo, anything for y'all?
Angie?
Privacy.
Yeah, pri privacy, right?
Yeah, shout out to the shout out to the foreigners.
There is another um rumble rant.
Yes, dog shit poster 69.
What'd he say?
It says I need someone who used to work with Snowden.
He said that Snowden almost got fired for sending his co-workers any mail calling calling the boss a Marian.
A moron.
And Warren.
They almost got rid of him before he did this.
Oh, okay.
Well, he's a practice.
Well, there are a lot of morons in the internet, man.
So I'm sorry, and in the government, so I wouldn't be surprised.
But then again, I don't know if I could believe you because you've been trolling all night.
Yeah.
So anyway, uh, with that said, guys, um, hope you guys enjoyed this episode of Fed Reacts, man.
We covered Edward Snowden.
You guys have been requesting it for a while.
Go ahead and check me out, guys, over here on uh Twitter, unplug FedEx.
I'm trying to get this thing to 100k by the end of the year is the goal.
Um, it's a lofty goal.
But let's see if we can do it.
Um, I'm way more active on there as far as like talking about certain topics that obviously are more taboo on YouTube.
Um, but uh you guys like politics and all other stuff.
I talk about that shit on there.
I talk about everything on there.
And you guys, you know, I make my racist jokes on there as well.
So um yeah.
Yeah, guys, follow Fed Reacts on Instagram too.
Yes.
Um make sure to um stay tuned on Fed Reacts.
I'll be doing lives on Thursday, even though we're gonna start doing um episodes on Thursday now, right?
Are they gonna be live?
Yeah, no, no, um, probably pre-recorded.
Pre-recorded?
Yeah.
Okay, so um we'll drop Obama next Thursday for I said Obama.
Osama next Thursday for them.
So um, anyways, I'm gonna keep doing these lives with you guys because um it's very entertaining to hear your topics and your your cases.
But stop trolling, guys.
You you asked me for the bite of 87.
That's a meme.
Please stop.
Like don't the what?
The bite of 87?
Yeah, and they they've been saying like Nicker and stuff like that, like the case of Nicker.
And it's like following me.
It's not funny.
So yeah.
Um, stay tuned on Fred React.
And yes, please follow us on on Rumble too.
Should we open up phone lines on the next one?
Yeah, we should.
Yeah, yeah.
You know what we'll do, guys?
We'll open up the phone lines on the next case for y'all.
Be ready to see the sun, bro.
I don't know.
I don't know what case we're gonna do next time.
Be ready to see the sun.
Probably Silk Road.
I'm gonna I'm gonna do Oh, Ross uh Ross Elbricht for them.
Yes, Russ Albridge.
Because I'm gonna do um from the most requested ones and break it down like so he's the next one?
Yeah.
Do they want that one more than DJ Envy?
Yeah.
Yeah?
Yeah.
Okay.
Yeah, because they've been they've been asking for Silver for like three months at least.
All right, you guys got it.
Next episode will be Silk Road, and we'll open up the phone lines on that one.
Be ready to see the sun.
All right.
Uh and we'll try to start it a little bit earlier since we're gonna open up phone lines.
And we need to do the Canadian case with Paul Bernardo and his wife.
They got the the couple that was killing chicks.
Wait, the couple that what?
We they were killing chicks, and the guy was ripping there.
The Barbie?
And the Barbie.
Okay, the Barbie couple.
Yeah, they're all killed.
Why are they all killing chicks, bro?
Yeah, yeah, man.
Misogynist, bro.
Yeah.
Saga.
All right.
Um, a great RP song is Bitch by E40, Lie to Kick It by Tupac.
Okay.
Uh we will do our RP list um top what, 10 or 20 the next Friday?
Yeah, top two.
And then we'll make some honorable mentions.
I already got like two.
Yeah, I already got I already got like two.
You guys there were any of these on this list that they mentioned to you?
Nah.
Okay.
All right.
Cool.
But I can have them on though.
I'm I'm writing it down though.
Okay.
I am writing these things down.
Okay.
Sweet.
Um, all right, guys, we're gonna get some food because I'm starving.
Uh, I had hard workout right before this thing, so I'm dying.
Uh, guys, like the video, subscribe to the channel if you haven't already.
Tomorrow we're gonna have money Monday.
I'm gonna have Steve from accounting, and I'm gonna have uh Roger.
And we're gonna talk about how to find a real estate agent, how to um accountant, all this other stuff.
Um, and then I gotta talk with Roger and Steve as well as Angie.
Um with some stuff on the side.
Um that, guys, hope you guys enjoyed uh today's episode, man.
Uh shout out to Bills and Mo being in the back and helping out.
Um shout out to Icy in the studio as well, helping out uh tidying some things up.
And uh we're definitely gonna be back Monday tomorrow, 6 or 7 p.m. from any Monday.
And then uh I'm gonna drop the old Osama bin Laden video for you guys on Thursday on Fed Reacts.
Oh, Menendez Brothers is out, by the way, guys.
It's up right now Fed Reacts Brothers out.
It's on Rumble only.
So if you guys uh I can't believe I didn't mention that.
Guys, Menendez Brothers, you guys asked for them forever.
It is up on Rumble.
Rumble.com slash uh Fed Reacts.
It's there.
Go check it out, man.
You're bored, you want to have you need an hour to burn or something like that.
You want to listen to something while you're at work, go check it out.
Me and Angie reacted to that one on YouTube took it out.
Check it out.
I watched it yesterday.
So I hope like I watch it completely yesterday.
It's really good.
So go go go check that one out, guys.
Um, and uh yeah, other than that, man.
Love y'all.
Catch you guys in the next episode of Fed Reacts.
I'm a special agent with Homelancer Investigations, okay guys?
H S E. This is what Fed Reacts covers.
Here's what 6ix9ine actually got.
This attack shifted the whole US government.
This guy got arrested.
Espionage.
Okay, trading secrets with the Russian.
John Wayne Gacy, aka the killer clown, okay.
One of the most prolific serial killers of all time, killed 33 people.
Zodiac killer is a pseudonym of an unidentified serial who operated Northern California.
Serial killers guy.
They really get off on getting attention from the media.
Many years, Jeffrey Epstein sexually exploited and abused dozens of minor girls at his home.
It was OJ working together to get Nicole killed.
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