Discussing Immigration, Israel, and Feminism At Penn State!
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How are we doing tonight, Penn State?
I can't hear a little bit on that.
Come on.
Yeah.
So Myron Gaines here at Penn State.
For those who are new to our events, this is Uncensored America.
We're a free speech organization on college campuses.
We're at Penn State, University of South Carolina, and a new campus too, University of North Carolina Asheville, where we're going to have a really cool debate coming up.
So if you guys are fans of Fresh and Fit, which I bet a few of you here are, I would assume, we have a really good debate if you're familiar with the guests that have come on Fresh and Fit in the past.
So if you want to stay tuned for that, go to uncensoredamerica.us.
We're going to have it probably announced in a couple days, so keep your eyes on that.
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We're looking for more people and we're looking for people to help at the chapter level here, but also with other chapters across the country.
Because many people, I'm sure, are well aware that when you're on a college campus, you don't have free speech.
You have all kinds of people to try to shut you down, like the people outside that were literally saying shut them down, uh, that don't want you to have these conversations or to talk to these people.
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Now, without further ado, we are here for the man of the hour, a former homeland security agent, and the host of the famous fresh and fit podcast.
Everyone, please put your hands together and welcome the one and only, notorious Myron Gaines.
Thank you.
Say that.
So, what's up, guys?
What's up, what's up, what's up, man?
Happy to have you guys here.
So, what I'm gonna do first is I'm gonna kind of explain my background, how immigration works in America when it comes to um illegal aliens coming here, and then obviously we'll open it up for discussion.
I'm sure a lot of you guys probably have a bunch of questions on my views on women and Jews and a bunch of other stuff.
So, anyway, uh yeah, we're going there.
We're going there.
Welcome, motherfuckers.
Yeah, we need to bring this back, right?
We need to bring back bigotry and racism and everything else.
It's awesome, isn't it?
Like, man, I feel so good to be able to say this stuff.
So um, but all jokes aside, so I guess to start off, right?
So I'm 35 years old.
Um, I'm an old man now.
You guys can see the graze for me debating all these stupid bimbos.
Holy man, bro, I've aged so much.
I've aged more doing this than chasing after cartel uh killers on the southwest border, man.
So talking to these girls, man, it's the worst.
But um, anyway, so uh I was a uh special agent with Homeland Security Investigations or HSI for those that are not familiar with my background.
I'll quickly go through and then I'll go into how immigration works in America, namely human smuggling and how legal aliens come in.
So I came on as an agent in 2013.
I went to the academy uh later on in 2014, early 2014, I graduated from uh Fletsi, which is down in um Brunswick, Georgia, where Glencoe, Federal Law Enforcement Training Center is what it stands for.
And then I started my career in Laredo, Texas, okay, Laredo, Texas, right there on the southwest border.
For those that are unfamiliar, it's about two hours south of San Antonio, Texas, on Interstate Highway 35, which Interstate Highway 35 goes from Laredo, Texas, all the way up until I think Minneapolis, I'm not mistaken, somewhere in the Midwest.
And uh I started my career there, and I remember getting there and uh driving in in my 2002 Honda, which I still have to this day, so it has a lot of sentimental value.
And um, you know, I was like, what the hell is this?
It's like you're not even in the United States, it's like you're in Mexico, right?
We're talking about dirt roads, you know, uh sand everywhere, um, you know, brush everywhere, no buildings, everything is like really flat.
You're you don't even think you're in the United States.
And it was kind of like a culture shock.
No one speaks English, everyone is Mexican.
Meanwhile, I'm like some random 6'3 ambiguous Arab dude or whatever, black, whatever you want to call me.
It depends on who's asking, right?
If it's black people, they say you ain't one of us.
If it's white people's like, oh yeah, you look like you're black.
If it's Asian, you're like, well, I don't know what this black man is.
But anyway, um, which by the way, you guys got a lot of Asians here, man.
Shout out to the Asians, man.
Holy.
I was like, I was I was shocked.
Yeah.
I was like, like, yeah, yeah, shout to the Asians.
Yeah.
Bro, I came from Miami.
I haven't seen an Asian in forever.
I was like, even my went like this for a second, man.
I was I'll squid.
I was like, what?
They're here?
This is awesome.
That's so many questions.
Why are you guys good at math?
Why do you guys always say hurry up and buy?
It's like, I can't take my time and buy.
Like, damn, man, I'm supporting your business.
But anyway.
Um it's like Mexico, right?
So I'm there, and I pretty much got a crash course on how a lot of um illegal aliens come to the United States.
Also, when I was there, I did a lot of drug trafficking cases, Mexican cartels, organized crime, all that stuff.
But for today's purposes, I'm gonna talk about emigration and how it kind of works.
So when I was there, I was assigned to a human smuggling group, okay?
And there's different groups that we have, um, because HSI is an agency that does a lot of different um crimes, you know, child exploitation, drugs, weapons, uh, illegal aliens, human trafficking, human smuggling, which there is a distinction.
I'm gonna talk about that here as well.
Um, so I was in a human smuggling group, but I also did drug investigation while I was there because it was it's so busy, right?
You're always on call, border patrol is catching people all the time, customs of border protection, uh, OFO office of field operations who are the blue uniform guys, they're catching people all the time.
So you're constantly getting called out because think of the Department of Homeland Security as a think of it as like a big police department, right?
And border patrol who's green uniforms and customs of border protection who's blue uniform, they're the ones interdicting and or catching people when they try to come into the country.
And when they do catch someone, what ends up happening is they call HSI and they're the detectives.
So think of them as the investigators for DHS because um within DHS, HSI is the biggest investigative agency.
The Secret Service is also in DHS and some others, but Secret Service doesn't really do criminal investigations like that.
They actually rarely do them.
Most of their um assets go into protection, but that's a whole other conversation, which I'm happy to talk about that too, because I've done protection details too in the QA portion.
But anyway, so you're often getting called, and what'll end up happening is you'll be on duty, the duty agent, which you'll be on duty for like 24 hours or whatever, and you're on call and they can call you and you show up to the ports and handle whatever it is.
And in this case, I was in a human smuggling group, so they would call me for um when they catch a load, which is basically border patrol would catch a smuggler with a group of aliens, whether he was driving them, he was moving them through the brush or whatever.
So this is a part I'm gonna kind of explain to you guys how human um human smuggling works and how illegal aliens come to the United States.
So I think it's very important that people understand that when it comes to illegal aliens in the United States, nine out of ten times that illegal alien probably had to pay some illicit criminal network to be able to come into the United States.
It's almost impossible to be able to come to the United States illegally cross the border or come through maritime options.
Well, I'll talk about maritime smuggling here in a second, but for now we're gonna focus on land border because that's the most prevalent.
Um, any illegal alien that comes in typically had to use uh uh has to utilize an organization.
And there's a multitude of different reasons for this.
Um the two big ones I could think of are basically they have to pay someone to guide them through because the land border is vast and enormous, and you can easily get killed through this and the weather and all the other uh things that are going on there, and uh you'll get messed up, you'll fucked up.
Like if you go and try to cross the border without paying the Zets who run that part of the border, they will whoop your ass and or kill you uh for doing that.
So illegal aliens have to go through some type of organization to be able to come into the United States.
So, how does this work?
Well, let's say um, well, since we're talking about Asians, let's say Lingling, right, decides, hey, I want to go to the United States, right?
I want to go ahead and have a future for my family, right?
So winds up happening is he contacts someone in his local area, right in China, wherever he may be, and there's gonna be probably like a facilitator and or like a coordinator, right?
That individual put them in touch with someone else, and that person will start making travel arrangements.
So he'll give them a quote hey, it's gonna cost you somewhere.
When I was on the job, Chinese nationals are paying like $60,000 to come to the United States, right?
And the more the further you are from the United States or the nationality you're from, if you're Arab, if you're Indian, Pakistani, Asian, Russian, what we call exotics, you have to pay significantly more money to be smuggled into the United States outside of you know, maybe a regular Mexican or a Hispanic from South America.
So he contacts this guy, Ling Lin contacts his guy.
Hey, I want to go to America.
It's like, all right, cool, I got you.
He puts him in touch with someone else, he puts him in touch with someone else, and then he pays that guy like like an initial fee, right?
It could be a couple thousand dollars, whatever maybe.
So he pays that guy, that guy facilitates his next round of the trip where he'll get him to somewhere maybe in Europe or some other place where he's able to travel.
And the goal is to get him into a transit country.
Now we're gonna focus on you know land border.
I'll talk about maritime after.
But let's say he's gonna go through Mexico, right?
Which is the common place where a lot of illegal aliens coming through.
So they're gonna probably get him to Mexico City.
Once it gets to Mexico City, because it's a very popular staging area, a lot of smugglers live there.
That smuggler will for a day or two and then he's gotta pay that smuggler, and then he's gonna go to the next leg of the trip, which let's say from Mexico City, which is right in central Mexico, typically, uh, they move them up to a butter town, let's say Nueva Laredo in this case, right?
Nuevo Laredo is directly across the border from Laredo, Texas, right, which is where I used to be.
So when they get to Lorray uh Nueva Laredo uh sorry, Nueva Laredo, getting ready to cross the border, they'll put them at a stash house.
And they could be at this stash house for a day, a week, months.
And it's contingent upon a couple of things.
It's contingent upon is it safe to cross the border?
Is border patrol gonna catch them?
Do they have someone available to cross them over the border, and have they paid up?
If they haven't um done any of these three things, more than likely they're gonna be stuck there for a bit, right?
And meanwhile, while they're traveling and doing all this, they're in constant contact with their family, they're sending money to smugglers, they're sending money to this guy, sending money to this guy, et cetera, to facilitate that person's entry United States.
Now, assuming all three of those prerequisites are met and they're good, what's up happening is they're gonna have to pay something called a cota, right?
Which is basically uh a tax to the Mexican cartel.
Now, when I was there, it was the Losetas that ran Nuevo Laredo, but now I think it's uh Cartel del Noreste when I left.
Um I was there from 2014 to 2018.
Um and there was a war going on, like with the Mexican Marines and the car uh the Zetas, because the Zetas are like a paramilitary group, so they're very strict.
So you pay a thousand dollars to cross the Rio Grande River, right?
And that's a fee that goes directly to a cartel.
And I think it's also very important to distinguish that a lot of the times these human or smuggling organizations aren't necessarily um cartel members.
They might have relatives, they might know some people, but they almost uh operate a lot of the times as like their own separate entity, and they have to pay the cartels to operate.
Now, obviously it depends, right?
Some cartel guys are smugglers or whatever, but people always think that, like, oh yeah, the cartel smuggle aliens.
A lot of the times they don't from a day-to-day standpoint because it's a very labor-intensive um criminal organization.
I mean, you're moving people around, you're housing them, you're feeding them, you gotta give them water, you gotta be able to keep them in a stash house, you keep them with their family.
So it's an enormous amount of bookkeeping and logistics that go into it.
This is why a lot of criminals don't like smuggling illegal aliens, because um, with drugs, you don't gotta f feed them or house them or anything, you just move them.
But with people, it's very um difficult.
So a lot of the cartels don't like to do that because it's a lot of work, right?
So what they do instead is they let these human smuggling organizations specialize in it and they just pay them a tax and they get cut of every single person that crosses the river and comes into their territory.
It's a much more efficient way to make money and profit from the illicit business without necessarily getting your hands dirty.
But anyway, so assuming all that's done, they pay, they cross into the United States.
Now, a lot of the times when they'll have like what we call exotics, like let's say uh Lingling and his squad, he'll probably be traveling with a couple of other Chinese nationals.
Um they'll move them all together, right?
And they'll move them all together because a lot of the times what'll happen is there'll be one person that's responsible for that group of Chinese individuals or these exotics, right?
So they'll move them together because they know that once they get them to the drop-off point, someone is probably gonna pick all of them up at the same time, probably go to New York City, LA, San Francisco, one of these places where you know that ethnicity is or that group of people is c uh common.
So once they cross into the United States, now the United States branch of the criminal organization takes over.
So we have a transnational portion in the Chinese side, then we have a Mexican portion.
Now we're gonna get into the US side.
Once they cross the border into the United States, now they're dealing with the next leg of the organization.
If when they cross, right, especially in the War of Laredo, they're gonna need to get them across the river.
Once they some get once they get across the river, uh we call a foot guide, but like you know, regular people call him coyotes.
That coyote is responsible for guiding them throughout the brush to get them to a destination where they could be picked up.
A lot of the times they're gonna try to walk in a way where they don't activate the border patrol sensors.
On the border, there's all kinds of sensors all over the place.
And the really experienced foot guides are not only able to get the group across, but they're also able to get them across and navigate so they don't trip these sensors at that activates border patrol where they go out and look for them.
So then some of these foot guys have been doing this for 10, 20, 30 years.
Like these guys are careers, like career foot guides, right?
So their job is to get them to where they need to get picked up and then go right back to Mexico.
Their job is not to get caught a lot of times, like some of them do.
The amateurs get caught, the smart ones, get them to where they got to go.
They're traveling with a compass, they know they have resources with them.
They have a phone, multiple phones, and then again where they got to go.
Once they get them to a highway, typically some type of you know, rural highway or whatever, another smuggler is gonna come in a van or a vehicle, pick them up quickly and get them to a stash house.
Now on the southwest border, guys, it's not like up here where we have like regular police patrolling.
You're gonna see border patrol units everywhere on the southwest border.
And that's because they have their authority um on the border and it's functional equivalent, right?
Or it's called the functional equivalent of the border, right?
That's why there's border patrol checkpoints.
If anyone here anyone here been to South Texas or Arizona or any of these places on the Southwest border, any of you guys went through a border patrol checkpoint where they ask you, are you what are you citizenship?
One guy, oh man, you're an Indian, bro.
You're in trouble.
I am Indian.
Uh secondary.
Did you put the odor on today?
I'm just kidding.
Um, so I had to, man.
Come on, man.
We don't got that many Indian guys in Miami.
Come on, bro.
I had to do it.
So I won't say thank you.
Come again.
I'll say thank you, come again.
I'm just sorry, I couldn't resist.
So um, anyway.
So where was I?
Uh so yeah, so once they get them to, once they get picked up, right?
That person picks them up and they got to get them to a stash house immediately, okay?
Because border patrol is crawling all over the place.
So they got to make sure that um they don't get stopped by a border patrol, because border patrol can like stop the vehicle, do an immigration inspection on everybody in the vehicle.
Hey, of what country are you a citizenship?
Uh uh are you a citizen of?
That's the question they ask.
And that's why they, when you guys go through the southwest, when you're on the southwest border and you go through these border patrol checkpoints, they can ask you that question.
Now, there was a time, funny story about this, where um it people were recording themselves going through checkpoints and not answering the question, right?
This is an illegal checkpoint.
I'm not gonna answer this question.
And I got a funny story in that that I'll tell you guys after I give you this monologue.
Someone remind me, and I'll tell you the funny story about these people that try to go viral on YouTube.
But um, so they have this stuff.
So they got to get the long story short, it's crawling border patrol, they got to get them to a stash house.
So they get them to a stash house, right?
Once they get to the stash house, now they have to deal with the stash house operator.
That stash house operator, a lot of the times has 10, 20, 30 different aliens at that house from other people that dropped them off.
And while those aliens are sitting there, they're responsible for feeding them, giving them water, giving them food, etc.
As a matter of fact, one of the ways that I would get my search warrants sometimes is I would check the trash of anyone that I thought was a suspected um stash house operator because I'm gonna see a lot of cheap food.
I'm gonna see a lot of you know um disposable um plates and plastic knives, all this other stuff.
And this is actually all good probable cause to establish that they are using that house and that residence um as a stash house because you're gonna see you like on paper when you do the check, two or three people are supposed to live at that address.
But do you see food for like these dudes are throwing a party every day?
It's like, bro, I know you guys aren't throwing a fiesta here.
What's going on?
So that's actually a great way to get probable cause and a great way to identify a stash house.
And they're all over the place in Laredo, Texas, on the Southwest border in general, whether you're on Laredo, McCallan, the RGV, doesn't matter.
There's stash houses everywhere.
Now their goal is to stash the get the aliens off the road immediately, get them into a house.
Once they get them in the house, they want to move them.
Now the stash house operator is gonna be pressuring the aliens when they get there.
Hey, um, did you pay your the next leg?
Because if they didn't pay to that stash house operator in his portion of the organization, they're not gonna be allowed to be picked up from that house and move forward, right?
And this is gonna be the most uh critical component of the leg of the trip because once they get picked up from that stash house, more than likely they're gonna take them north past a border patrol checkpoint, whether they get smuggled on a truck, uh on a truck, a regular car, in the trunk, whatever it is.
This is where they run into a lot of danger as well, because they can get you know put into a place or into a car, and you know, sometimes it's really hot, especially in South Texas, they end up suffocated and end up dying, whatever it may be.
I remember I had one big case out of San Antonio where like a hundred aliens were in the back of a truck in Walmart.
It might have you guys might have seen this a couple this a couple years back, and a bunch of them died and suffocated, right?
Because of the in from heat exhaustion, because the truck driver put them there at a parking lot, it'll lie, um, it just didn't back, and a bunch of them died and they couldn't get out.
So this happens all the time on the southwest border where legal aliens are dying due to the travel circumstances, right?
And it doesn't get reported often, but it's really sad.
So um, and they always get an enhancement if we arrest them and you know someone dies or gets hurt, or there's an what we call an endangerment, which is a sensing enhancement.
So now that they're at the stash house and they got to get to the next, like this is very important because more than likely they're gonna go to San Antonio, right?
And the reason why San Antonio is so important is because number one, it's past the checkpoint.
There's a big checkpoint called checkpoint 29 on Interstate Highway 35, where if the illegal alien the smuggler are able to get the aliens past that, they're pretty much home-free, right?
Because like I said before, the border patrol is heavily concentrated 30 miles inward into the border and beyond.
Anything past that, it's gonna be satellite offices, they don't have the same capacity to really interdict aliens like on the southwest border.
They don't have the checkpoints and the same amount of resources and the same amount of staff, etc.
They're typically gonna be assigned to like a local police department or a federal agency that doesn't prioritize immigration.
So if border patrol is beyond the checkpoint, they're gonna be far and few between.
So they get to San Antonio.
Um, if they make it there, uh, you know, successfully, they make it there, and then from there, whoever's responsible for those aliens picks them up there, pays off the final fee, and they're good to go.
And then they end up going, they need to go in the United States a lot of times since uh San Antonio is right there on Interstate Highway 35 and 10.
Interstateway 10 goes east to west, it goes from Jacksonville all the way to LA, and then state 35, like I said before, takes you all the way to Midwest, and you can get anywhere else you need to.
Um Austin is an hour up from San Antonio, then another three or four hours is Dallas, and then you're pretty much on your way uh wherever you need to go.
And then made the interstate highway system is very critical for the smuggling of aliens, obviously.
So that's kind of how um smuggling works in the United States when it comes to the land border version, right?
So um, and then they can get to wherever they got to go.
So Ling Ling made it, right?
He makes it through through, he pays this ridiculous amount of money to different uh people within the organization to facilitate his next step of the movement, and then from there he gets to wherever he's gotta go.
Next thing you know, he's in flushing Queens, you know, selling fake Jordans.
So now when it comes to maritime, very similar.
The only difference is is instead of going to Mexico, guys, they're gonna go to the Bahamas, okay?
Now, um, in my career, just to give you guys a little bit of background.
I started my career in Loreto, Texas from uh Laredo.
I was there for about four years, left in 2018, went to the Miami field office from 2018 to 2020 before I resigned because you know he started having this podcast that are going viral and stuff like that.
So hey bro, you can't be talking about this stuff on the internet.
Uh, you know, so I ended up resigning.
I left out good terms, but it was a great, you know, it was a fun time.
Um, but I got a look at maritime smuggling.
Now, the difference between maritime smuggling and land border smuggling is with the maritime, the transit country instead of Mexico is gonna typically be the Bahamas, right?
So they get to the Bahamas, Bimini is a big one, especially since it's just a few miles off the coast of Miami.
Um, they'll get into the Bahamas, they'll pay their fees, etc., and then they'll be smuggled across via boat.
Now, obviously, since it's maritime, they can't do the same level of volume as the Southwest border, so most aliens come in through the southwest border, but you know, I do think it's important to note that maritime is still very prevalent.
It's not just you know, the Miami Vias where they're smuggling drugs and um illegal aliens with the spot, they also do it with illegal aliens, and in that one, right?
They'll typically some a lot of times they'll clean them up, say that they're just passengers, uh, they give them fake documents, and uh maritime is also very prevalent as well.
So that's typically how it goes on that end, and then they come in through the whether it be Miami or when these other big ports, Fort Lauderdale, West Palm Beach, et cetera, they're coming in.
Uh so that's kind of how smuggling works, guys.
Now, I think it's very important for people to distinguish that there is a difference between human smuggling and human trafficking.
I see people talk about this all the time, like even law enforcement professionals will get up there and conflate human smuggling and human trafficking.
And the big difference between human smuggling and human trafficking, guys, is with the human smuggling, a lot of the times, almost every time, they're paying an illicit organization to come to the United States, tens of thousands of dollars, depending on where they're from, um, versus the human trafficking typically occurs once they get here, and maybe they didn't pay their dues, maybe they're working for a boss that's taking advantage of them, they take their documents or whatever, uh, they're being forced to work to pay off a debt.
So that's the difference between human smuggling and human trafficking.
Smuggling, they're paying to come here, they get in, um, and a lot of the times they just want to get them out the house, like I told you guys with the stash house operators, whatever, because they're hot box down there in the Southwest border.
And then once they're their final destination, that's where they're more likely gonna be a vim uh for the human trafficking.
Does it occur during the actual trip course?
It Happens where people are being held in stash houses or whatever, they can't pay their fee, they get stuck there, uh, they're extorted in the family.
That happens, of course, as well.
But it's not as common as TV and people make it out.
The human traffic a lot of times ends up happening once they get to their destination or where they're supposed to go, because the smugglers want to get paid, and they know for them to get paid, they need to get that person out of their mist and get them to the next leg of their um trip.
So that's in general how smuggling works in the United States and how legal aliens come to the United States.
And I think it's very important that you guys all know this because people think all the time, oh my God, these are like innocent people that are just coming here and they're being abused.
But make no mistake about it, they have to pay an illicit organization to facilitate their entry into the United States.
And these illicit organizations, a lot of the times also, you know, are involved in drug trafficking, they're involved in extortion, they're involved in murder, and they're involved in all kinds of things.
Because like I said before, even if that human smuggling organization isn't, you know, intimately tied to maybe the cartel, they're still paying the cartels because they're operating in their on their um on their grounds.
So I guess I can open it up for questions if anybody had anything for immigration, and then if anybody wants to talk about anything else, we can.
But I saw like a hand or two go up, and I went over a lot, by the way, guys.
So if you need me to go back and refine anything, please let me.
Thank you.
Is that uh you know, a huge concern, a lot of numbers are building cells over there, like uh daily delivering.
Great question, great question.
Yeah, so it does happen.
Um I I worked on a couple of cases where we had you know Pakistanis that were utilizing the Mexican corridor to come in the United States.
Um, obviously, when you get um human smuggling cases like that, you bring in the FBI because the FBI is a lead agency when it comes to terrorism, and you know, it's it's interesting because like human smuggling is typically what HSI investigates, but if there's like a terrorism nexus, you do have to bring the FBI in, but they don't know what they're doing nine out of ten times, right?
We call them famous but incompetent, right?
Uh so if there is that nexus, you definitely do bring them in.
But winds up happening a lot of the times is you can't prove material support for terrorism, so you end up charging them with like an immigration violation violation because the um support them uh material support to a terrorist organization is like the bread and butter charge for the FBI, but a lot of the times they can't even charge that.
It's very difficult to prove.
So they end up using other charges a lot of times to get rid of these individuals or outright use immigration um statutes to deport them.
But it does happen, it's not as common, um, but it does happen, and that's why they charge that's specifically why um smugglers charge nationals from certain countries so much money.
China, Pakistan, Arab countries, Russia, etc.
Any country that's basically like has an adversarial um stance against the United States, any alien coming from that country, they get charged two, three, four times as much.
I've seen upwards of a hundred thousand dollars for an uh illegal alien for some of these countries to come into the U.S., especially if they've been deported before, etc.
Because for these smuggling organizations, they know that if there's an exotic that has a you know shady past um and they get caught, that's gonna slow business down for them.
They can't move people through as much as they want, and that ends up hurting them.
So um it does happen.
They're just a lot more cautious about it, and they charge them a lot more money to do it.
Are there any other questions?
If so, please come over here and you'll have the mic.
So if you have a question, please walk over here.
Please be careful, and I'll have the mic.
Okay.
And no question is dumb, guys.
I went over a lot quickly to give you guys kind of a summary.
So anything that you guys need refined or clarified, I'd be happy to do it because I covered a lot of ground quickly.
What were some of your experiences like with protection?
Because my dad actually works for DHS as a special agent had to do protection for the United Nations.
What was your experiences with protection like?
That's that's interesting.
That's when I had to go to uh to the UN.
I protected the president of Congo.
Um it's cool, man.
I mean, like I could see why so many Secret Service agents hate their jobs though.
Like, okay, so for so you guys are all in college, so I'm gonna give you guys some game here real fast.
The three worst agencies to work for, guys, okay.
They're gonna hate me for saying this, but I'm gonna say it anyway.
United States Secret Service, U.S. Marshall Service, and DSS might suck too, diplomatic security service.
And the reason why is because people think that, like, you know, you join the marshals, you're gonna be in a task force and catching people.
When's up happening a lot of times?
You just transport prisoners around.
Um, Secret Service, you think you're gonna do financial investigations or protected president.
No, you're guarding a bridge camp somewhere, you know, they're like meeting with someone, like, and it's not in the president, it's like they're they're a kid, right?
Who's in college that's a that's an idiot.
So um, and then DSS, like uh think of it as like Secret Service, but you're like abroad.
You're you know, you're doing a lot of protection details.
So the protection detail agencies are not that fun, and then the Marshalls obviously doing courtroom security and moving prisoners around.
The future of task force is fun, but winds up happening is you can only do it for like three, six months at a time, and the most senior guys get that coveted position on those task forces.
Um protection is cool, it's just that like I can see why the Secret Service has the highest um they have some like the highest attrition rates, like people leave or go to other agencies, and they also have the highest divorce rates because they work so much.
Now, if you want to make money, young single guy, best one of the best agencies to work for.
You'll make a bunch of money you can get overtime, which many um criminal veters don't offer overtime, secret service does.
So um if you want money, you want to travel, single, great.
Have a family, terrible, get out of there.
Um, but yeah, I've done a couple details, and I was like, wow, this blows.
You're just sitting there in a suit, standing next to a freaking garbage can or a door, like just securing a door.
Because it's like the way they do stuff is like they typically have like a grid security system where they need people in certain positions.
A lot of times for deterrence, also for visual stuff.
So it ends up putting you in a weird spot where you're just sitting there for 10, 12 hours looking at a wall.
Sucks, but yeah.
This is exactly where I went to.
Is your dad like HSI?
Yes, he is.
Sorry?
Yes.
Okay, yeah, yeah.
We we get called on all the time to help um Secret Service because they have such few agents.
Anytime these four dignitaries come in, they need help.
So AJ, since they're both in DHS, they get pulled all the time to help out with that because they don't have enough bodies.
Also, on the last presidential um uh election, HSI was heavily augmented on um the Secret Service details.
Matter of fact, that's actually one of the things I was critical of.
Um that they had a lot of like um Secret Service guys and other agencies that help with these Secret Service details, and what's up happening is like these people aren't as refined or as good at protection as the Secret Service agents, and that's where you end up with lapses and security lapses in security, you run into problems, and bam, next thing you know, some weirdo is taking a shot at the at the president, right?
So that's not cool.
But um, but yeah.
Good question, man.
Hi.
What's up?
Yeah, so this question doesn't really have much to do with like the whole immigration uh topic, but rather more about the logistics of it that you were mentioning earlier.
So when it comes to like trafficking people, uh especially past the U.S. border, and you were mentioning there were certain checkpoints, or especially like very rough checkpoints.
What do they do to get people past?
Say, like you're in a car with like four other Chinese immigrants, like do they give them fake documents, do they give them fake stories?
Like how does the whole process work of smuggling them past these checkpoints to safe areas in the US?
Fantastic question.
Really, really good question.
Um typically, the more sophisticated the smuggling scheme, the more money the smugglers pay, the smugglee is paying.
So if they're getting fake documents or they're getting, you know, even sometimes like procuring a visa through fraud or whatever, they typically paid a lot of money to be able to do that.
So the more money they pay, the better the experience would be.
So um if we're gonna talk about a regular smuggler, they're just basically like, you know, trying to see what they can do, whether they're smuggling them in a truck, the back of a car, in a trunk, uh maybe they're moving them through the checkpoint at the same time as like uh a load is being moved, right?
They can lose some weed to go ahead and move some aliens through because they're gonna make some money on that because the weed isn't as expensive, they'll do fake loads or whatever.
So there's many ways that they get it done, or they just go around the highways and just like move them uh through these, you know, rural highways all across South Texas.
So there's a bunch of different ways that they get them through, but typically the more sophisticated the smuggling scheme, the more the smugglee is paying to the smuggler to get a better um experience.
I hate to say like first class smuggling arrangement, but that's kind of what it comes down to, depending on uh how it goes.
But yeah, this is just like, and this is guys, when I'm talking about illegal alien uh aliens coming to the United States, I haven't even touched like the visa fraud, the overstays, the massive amount of people using marriage fraud and document benefit fraud, getting these documents illegally.
Like that's a whole other thing in itself.
And we have different squads just assigned to that that don't even touch the human smuggling stuff.
They're focusing more on a document benefit fraud with a lot of these DMVs, etc.
So that's also another problem.
You got dirty immigration attorneys that are filing um documents for people to get them married or whatever it may be.
Because um marriage fraud is like huge, huge.
Like in Miami, for example, the going rate was paying 10 to 20 thousand dollars to a U.S. citizen to go ahead and get, you know, a fake marriage.
They literally walk you through the entire process of what to tell the CIS officer when you go in for your interviews, how to fill the paperwork, how to do everything to, you know, get the green card and then obviously get towards uh naturalization.
And the thing is is if you become a naturalized citizen, it's very hard to deny to you.
It's very, very hard.
Like you'd have to be damn near a terrorist and they'd have to prove like you know uh like deliberate fraud for them to be able to get you denaturalized.
Because quite frankly a lot of AUSAs, a lot of federal prosecutors don't want to take those cases.
And that's another thing that's also very important for people to understand.
In the federal system, um agents don't have as much discretion to arrest people as people think they have to do everything through the United States attorney's office versus like local cops like if you know you're driving drunk, you're doing something dumb, they observe drugs on you, they can make that arrest right then and there they don't go to call a prosecutor.
Feds don't operate that way.
They have to always get concurrence from the United States attorney's office to arrest anyone on a probable cause.
And even if they do a probable cause they still got to file a criminal complaint we get it sent in within a day that's a whole affidavit the agent has to write up with their probable cause and then they got to bring the guy to court etc.
It's a very cumbersome process in the federal streamline like the state and locals.
So um and if a case is sexy prosecutors simply are going to take it in the ration case a lot of the times especially when there's a Democrat in they don't want to take them right now with Trump in office, right?
This is the first time I've ever seen the FBI mobilized doing roundups of illegal aliens.
They never help out with that stuff man.
Those guys are useless.
But um but all these agencies working together like DEA ATF FBI agencies that historically have never had title aid authority assisting this is something I've never seen before unprecedented but it's it's good that he's uh cracking down on it but you know that's a whole other conversation in itself.
But does that answer your question bro?
As far as I follow Yeah uh okay just a little add on.
So when you say paying for these premium processes like regardless of how premium the process you pay or in premium for that matter like uh does it still guarantee a pass from like through the border checks or like not paying enough like maybe put you at a higher risk of getting caught.
No it it it so it it makes it where um the chance of you getting caught and the travel is going to be less strenuous and less painful because the the like getting smuggled in the United States is sucks.
It could take weeks months at a time to just you know move from country to country set yourself up you know you get delayed sometimes because border patrol is doing certain things and the smugglers don't want to move you because they think you'll get caught but most of the time they get at least two to three tries most smuggling organizations yeah it's like a that's like the return policy like most smuggling organizations will give the s the smugly two to three attempts to try without charging them again.
So if they get caught, let's say, very common, they cross the river, right, into the United States, like Ling Ling in a squad, right?
Let's say they get caught trying to cross into the river.
Border Patrol apprehends them, sends them back with something called an expedited removal, which means they're getting deported within two weeks.
That smuggling organization that was responsible for them, they'll get them back in Nuevo Laredo, and then they'll try again, you know, when the coast is clear.
And they typically get a few chances.
No problem, man.
Good questions.
Myron, I wanted to start by thanking you for coming to our university and raising awareness about this issue as an American citizen.
I really value someone's...
voice as big as yours to spend their valuable time talking about an issue as important as illegal immigration.
I appreciate that, man.
No one really talks about it.
Like, I haven't seen any YouTubers go into, like, real detail about this and how, like, you know, immigration works in America.
And I think if more Americans knew that damn near every illegal alien that you see here in the United States probably came in through some illicit organization, I think people would look at immigration differently.
Because that person, whether they did it inadvertently or directly, funded, you know, these transnational criminal organizations.
Obviously, that's not their intention to, you know, fund these organizations, but they understand that it's a means to an end for them to come here because otherwise you can't – can't get through you you would literally die from the elements or get beat up by the cartel for trying to come in uh without doing it now have I seen situations where guys have smoked like literally come in without using organization yeah but every single time I see it.
Like it'll be like their third or fourth time, and I'll interview them like, hey, like, how'd you get here?
Yeah, I paid one time, I couldn't get through.
I said, screw it.
Uh, I just try to go in myself.
They caught me, they beat my ass, and then I got sent back, and they've been like assaulted multiple times for doing it.
So most people don't want to deal with that.
So sorry, go ahead, but what's your question?
No worries.
Um I would define my political views similar to yours as you know, an American first patriot.
Yeah.
But um not Israel.
But I would I wanted to ask your opinion on the latest rhetoric out of Washington.
Um there's been a lot of talk about war with Iran.
And someone that was I would label myself as reluctantly supportive of the Trump administration going into 2024.
I view this perspective war with Iran as not something I would I would regret my Trump vote over that.
Something something similar to that.
Would you agree with that statement?
100% I agree with you.
I'm anti-war all the way.
Like I am anti neo con, anti-war.
I think going to war in the Middle East for Israel is bullshit.
I you know, let's just call a spade a spade.
A lot of these conservative, you know.
Thank you, I appreciate it.
Um, a lot of these right wing, you know, political commentators cuck for Israel, and they don't want to admit that's why up until like October 7th, you couldn't even have this discussion.
Most Americans didn't know what Zionism was, they didn't know about the ethno apartheid state that Israel is.
I mean, Netanyahu's in America right now, you know, and obviously Trump pulled out the chair from once again.
But um I find it absolutely ridiculous how people are saying, Oh, yeah, defund Ukraine, we need to stop this war in Ukraine, but then those same people will turn around and say, Oh, but we need to give Israel everything they need for war.
And the problem is that Iran is a capable country.
They have um an advanced missile system.
They can absolutely uh attack us all across the Middle East if we were if we decided to try to destroy their nuclear program, which is what they're angling to do.
Um right now, they're not refining it to levels of nuclear weaponry, but you know, who knows?
Because they look at it like the United States, uh excuse me, Israel has a nuclear bomb, which must by the way.
Um so there's been an arm race effectively since like the 50s in the least, thanks to Israel illegally procuring nuclear weapons.
So I don't want a war with Iran.
As a matter of fact, the when I voted for Trump too, just like you.
Uh the two reasons I voted for Trump were anti-war.
I didn't I wanted to end the war in Ukraine, um, and I wanted to make sure that we kind of get a reel on Netanyahu, because Netanyahu was going crazy under the Biden administration, do whatever he wanted.
He didn't listen to him, he was still, you know, breaking ceasefire deals, etc.
So, yeah, man, and immigration were the two main things I voted for him for.
So, right now, what are we getting?
We're getting a potential war with Iran, things are escalating.
We have the signal gate situation that happened last week or two weeks ago, and on top of that, we have college students being deported for speech that's anti-Israel, which I found absolutely ridiculous that they're deporting college students that are legally here because they're criticisms of Israel instead of deporting illegal aliens that are here.
Ridiculous, man.
Because I know for a fact, ICE ERO, who's responsible for the deportation, by the way, guys.
Um, because and I'll explain this real fast, just so you guys really understand this.
Once an illegal alien makes it through the United States, let's go back to that Lingling scenario, right?
He makes it to New York, right?
He's selling fake Jordans and Flushing Queens.
Lingley made it through, he paid a 60k, his uh smugglers got him through.
Now that he's actually in the United States, he's gonna be the responsibility of an agency called ICE, Immigration Customs Enforcement, Enforcement and Removal Operations, ERO, right?
And ERO has only a certain amount of ICE officers that they can go ahead and design uh delegate to catching illegal aliens.
And um, you know, these major cities have a lot of illegal aliens.
So a lot of times they end up, you know, putting their resources into going after criminal aliens or what's called the CAP program.
And if uh what's basically happened is if you guys notice on Twitter ICE was putting out how many people they were arresting every day, illegal aliens.
They stopped putting those numbers up.
Why?
Because they basically shifted their focus to go after anti-Semitism on college campuses.
So now they diverted those resources that were supposed to be allotted to moving removing illegal aliens and put them towards college students that um you know they think have you know pro Hamas sentiment or they think are you know anti-Israel or whatever.
And obviously that takes an enormous amount of resource because not only do these ICRO officers have to get pulled off these details up and grab these illegal aliens, now they gotta investigate, go through stuff, look at who's at the protest, identify these individuals, figure out what school they go to, what kind of visa they hold, all this takes a enormous amount of time.
Then they gotta go out and find them.
Then they go ahead and arrest them, and you're gonna need like a couple of officers, just everyone person.
I'm sure you guys saw the viral story like a week or two of a Turkish student who was arrested up in Tufts in uh Somerville, Massachusetts, right outside of Boston, um, for writing an op-ed, right?
That was um talking about protesting Israel.
So and uh you know uh protesting them and boycotting their products.
So that's kind of where we're at, man.
You and and this is all being done to facilitate that very war because they want to shut down dissident of anyone that's critical of Israel and the potential war that we're going towards, which is which isn't good, man.
I think um going after students for free speech in the United States on the behalf of another country is absolutely wild.
Like the fact that they can you could take college students, burn an American flag, say I heard Trump, I hate Trump, etc.
And that student won't get deported, but if he says, hey, I don't like Netanyahu and the legal occupation, they'll get deported.
That's wild to me.
Criticize a foreign country, you go to jail, criticize our country, you stay.
So yeah.
But I agree with you on the anti-war sentiment, bro, a hundred percent.
We don't want a war with Iran, it's not good.
So good question.
Of course.
Hi, Myron.
Um, again, big fan, and I really appreciate you coming here and raising awareness to a lot of issues that are affecting us all.
And I'd really just like to ask you, sort of in similar respect to my brother, why or rather how you found the courage to raise awareness to issues in specific regard to the Israel-Palestine conflict and Russia-Ukraine.
How you found the courage and the will to raise issue to these issues with great sacrifice to your own business and your own life, sort of how you're talking about.
Yeah, no, I appreciate that, man.
Yeah, I got demonetized for talking about this stuff because I was talking about Israel's influence on America before October 7th.
You know, and before talking about this before October 7th was very taboo.
You know, they call you an anti-Semite, they would say all these things about you.
But I mean, you you don't even got to go to October 7th.
You can go to the USS Liberty, you can go to JFK 9-11.
Like all these events have Zionist fingerprints all over them, right?
I'm not gonna sit here and say, oh, the Jews did it, because that's like stupid.
But what I can absolutely tell you is that um Israeli intelligence had fingerprints on all of these different events that went down, and in some cases were literally involved with like with the USS Liberty where they just bombed and killed 30 sailors, right?
And this is stuff that was suppressed information for decades, right?
I'm really happy that like Candace Owens had Phil Turney on, who was a survivor from the USS Liberty.
That video got like five, six million views, and I went through the comments and I was shocked at how many people had no idea about this historical event.
So um talking about this stuff prior to October 7th is a huge tab of one of the fastest ways to get yourself banned.
But I'm glad that we're finally able to have this conversation because I think October 7th kind of highlighted, you know, people seeing these kids dying, getting blown up or whatever, and ask people are asking, well, hold on, how's Israel able to get away with this?
And then bam, they started to figure out you know, the tentacles of the Zionist lobby in our politics, how they run our foreign policy, and they've been doing so for literally decades.
Um, and how they've gotten us in a lot of situations in the Middle East.
I mean, every war in the Middle East has pretty much been done for Israel's benefit.
Every terrorist attack that we've endured has typically come from Islamic extremists that are angry about our foreign policy with Israel.
You know, the letter to America that uh Osama Bin Laden wrote in 2002, um, it went viral on TikTok.
I think in November of 2023, right after October 7th.
And it was amazing to me how it went viral because most Americans didn't know why we got attacked on 9-11.
Obviously, the loss of uh American citizens unacceptable, it's why I joined up in the service.
Um, but I do think it's important to understand why your adversaries dislike you and the fact that we've not been honest with the American public and telling them that, hey, it's not that they hate us because we're free, they hate us because we invade their lands and bomb their people on behalf of Israel.
Um, I think the American public needs to know that.
But this is something that's been suppressed for literally decades, and now people are finally starting to wake up.
And I'm glad that, you know, in the conservative space, which is typically been, you know, super pro-Israel, super, you know, they're our greatest ally, whatever.
I'm glad to see people on the right wing waking up to this when it's typically been, you know, people on the left that talked about this.
But now this is the only topic I could think of that both people on the far right and people on the far left agree on, which is the control of our nation by a foreign state in the Middle East called Israel.
So, yeah, it's getting crazy.
Yeah, even Antifa me and that's probably the only thing me and Antifa agree on, probably.
Those losers.
Right.
Hello, Myron, thank you for coming to Penn State.
Uh I'm very passionate about uh illegal immigration as a topic.
Uh I it's one of the most I think it's one of one of the most pressing issues uh the United States is currently facing.
Uh from your unique perspective as an ICE agent, I wanted to ask about uh illegal illegal immigrant crime specifically, because as you touched upon before, a lot of economic migrants are posing as refugees and committing asylum fraud, and while they're in our country,
they are committing numerous crimes, like uh such as the murder as Lakin Riley, her killer was uh committing asylum fraud, and the typically the legacy media give a talking point that you it's not a big deal, uh illegal immigrant crime isn't a big deal because citizens actually commit more crimes than illegal immigrants.
But from what I've heard uh of the various states that collect crime uh illegal illegal immigrant crime crime uh crime data, it's only Texas.
Now, can you tell me as an IS agent if that's true or not?
Um, so as far as like collecting data, I know they collect data obviously from all crimes that go down, but is you're asking specifically like do states collect data as far as like the person being an illegal alien or the person being a citizen committing the crimes?
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah, I mean, the the reason why a lot of the um states probably don't collect it is because a lot of states simply aren't interested in um immigration status.
So um I do think it's important to note that before the Trump administration came in, eight uh Title VII, which is the immigration code, it only gets enforced federally, and there's only a couple of agencies that can do it.
There's uh immigration customs enforcement ERO, HSI, Border Patrol, which is the green uniform, uh customs border protection blue uniform, and Air Force of Office of Aaron Marine, which is like at a limited capacity, and then the FBI also has some limited title eight.
But um the state has zero immigration authority, so that's probably why they don't ask.
And then on top of that, right, because of sanctuary cities and blue states or whatever, they look at it like it's a political hot potato.
And this is the thing that really bothers me when it comes to immigration enforcement for the state.
Like now they're getting on board because Trump's in.
But I remember many times where when I was an agent, if we we would have federal warrants and we'd say, hey, we're gonna go pick this guy up.
And you know, the state and locals would not want to come out and help us, right?
Um because the governor or the mayor of the city didn't want to be attached to that and and look bad, because immigration is like a political hot potato where if it's a Democrat in, they typically don't want to touch it.
If it's a Republican in, they want to touch it, but within regard where it's like, oh, is this a violent criminal?
You know, it's a very touchy subject, and um it depends on who's in office.
Like Europe doesn't do anything ever when there's like um a Democrat in office when Biden was in and and um Obama, they were barely doing uh you know, going out and getting people.
So yeah, I I think um when it comes to that, the states just a lot of times don't report it because they don't feel the need to.
Um, but I I do think you know we need to be very harsh on a lot of these illegal aliens that come here and commit crimes, especially against U.S. citizens.
And for those that say, oh, well, you know, they don't commit as many crimes as American citizens, blah, blah, blah.
Well, they shouldn't be here in the first place.
That's why that's even more egregious and why it's like the fact that someone shouldn't have been here in the first place and commit a crime or kill an American citizen is absolutely unacceptable.
So I think with them we need to push it to the highest extent of laws and like really punish them because they shouldn't have been here to begin with.
So it's one thing if a U.S. citizen commits a crime, but it's another thing when a legal alien comes in here that shouldn't be here commits a crime, especially against the USC.
So but no man, I had the same sentiment uh when it comes to um migrants committing crime here.
And yeah, a lot of the fraud too.
That's something that no one talks about.
Um especially when they come from certain countries, they claim asylum, uh, they they do marriage fraud a lot of the times, they're getting visas in uh illegally, or they come here on a student visa.
This is a big one that a lot of people don't know about.
One of the most common ways that people violate our immigration system is they'll get an F1 visa, which some of you guys here might have an F1 visa.
Um as a student, they'll some BS language school in the middle of nowhere that probably doesn't exist anymore.
They'll get that visa, come to the United States, not go to class, and then end up just you know skipping out and then just working and staying here illegally for decades.
So very, very common tactic that a lot of people employ to abuse the immigration system.
And the problem is that we have such a the immigration system is so busted that people are able to exploit it from different ways, whether they come in illegally, they come illegally.
There is always a way that they can scam the system.
So we need to definitely fix it.
Sorry, thank you.
No worries, man.
Did I answer your question?
Oh, yeah.
Yeah, it did.
Thank you.
Oh, sorry.
Hey Martin, um, I moved here 10 years ago.
I immigrated from India with my parents.
They came here on a visa.
Oh man, we gotta send you back, bro.
Uh yeah, so they came here legally, worked really diligently, did the entire process, got the green card, and I'll be a citizen within the next year.
So I'm really proud about the fact that my parents instilled those same balls within me and taught me how to work hard.
So my question to you was what do you think about H1B visas?
Because I think I saw a few posts online saying that you were against it, and popular uh uh celebrities like Elon Musk and other people, they tend to defend that.
So what are your thoughts about that?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
This actually I knew we would talk about H1B visas.
Yeah, so for those that are unaware, I ended up getting like banned on Twitter for being um anti-H1B visa.
And my issue with the H1B visa is that it's a visa that's you know often exploited and utilized by you know tech companies and a lot of these other companies to employ foreign labor at a cheaper cost, right?
We gotta just be honest here and realize that's what it's for.
And my issue is that I'm a hardcore American nationalist, and when I say I'm a nationalist, you know, I say U.S. citizens over everything.
If that means we need to employ US citizens and some foreign nationals don't get a job because of it, I'm okay with that because I think we need to be serving our people first.
And a lot of these companies are more interested in you know, a return on investment in capitalism, and that's what ends up happening a lot of times.
Like capitalism takes over the nationalism.
That's a whole other conversation.
But when it comes to the H1B, um, it needs to be reformed.
It's it's a broken visa, it's uh abused, especially by tech companies to get cheap labor in.
And a lot of times, like the um people that get this visa, which a lot of times end up coming from India, um, they get like basically indentured servitude, like they gotta work for the company for a certain amount of years, they get paid very little, uh, they can't leave.
And the reason why these companies do is because they know if they hire an American citizen, they have to give them a better wage, and that person can leave at any time for a more competitive position.
So they look at it like no, we want to go ahead and get these guys in so we can abuse them.
So it's really a lose-lose for all parties.
Uh and who benefits the company's benefit.
So I'm against um displacing American workers for the benefit of foreign nationals and uh and corporations.
And obviously, Elon Musk didn't like this, and he took my check away because I was like ratioing him on X for talking about this.
But um, you know, that's a big reason why I voted for Trump was to go hard on immigration.
I think we need an immigration moratorium for at least one to five years when we don't let people in, because we got to fix our system.
Our visa system is messed up.
Our border needs to be completely reformed how we do things.
Um and we need to definitely crack down on the de document benefit fraud because that's been being abused for a long time as well, and people don't talk about that.
We focus so much on the Southwest border, which is important, but we don't utilize we we don't look at all the other ways where we're getting beat as well when it comes to immigration.
Well, thank you for coming out here.
I've been uh watching your content for a while now.
I appreciate you what for what you do and keep keep doing what you do.
Thank you.
I appreciate it, brother.
You keep killing it.
First of all, thank you for coming out here, Martin.
Thank you, man.
Uh this may be a little bit of a niche question.
Sure.
But uh as deep as you guys want.
So when I think about Opera Fast and Furious and Las Vegas shooting, uh, we talk about transferring uh from Mexico into the US.
How about uh the US into Mexico?
Uh do you come across any kind of mercenaries from prime US military uh in those cartels?
Great question.
So um first and foremost, operation of Fast and Furious.
I'm glad you asked that question.
For those that are unaware, basically we let a bought a bunch of guns walk into Mexico, those guns ended up in the hands of tell people killing people, and honest, and one of the worst situations, um, and this is a situation very near and dear to my heart because the guy named Jaime Zapata, well, HSI agent, he actually was assigned to Alaredo.
He was killed by a gun from the operation of Fast and Furious.
He was killed in Mexico.
Um and it's funny, funny story.
Not funny, but like crazy wildly, you know, close to home.
My supervisor, my first supervisor, he was the one that was supposed to actually go to Mexico instead of Jaime Zapata, and he ended up not going to be with the wife.
And it could have been very well him that got killed on that day.
Um, back in, I think this was like February of 2011.
But the operation of Fast and Furious almost got the ATF disbanded.
It was such a big um problem.
But typically, when it comes to firearms, we You know, we could talk about guns all day.
Um, money and guns typically go south into Mexico, and then drugs and illegal aliens come north.
Because in Mexico, funny to believe, they actually have um strict gun laws.
Like uh, like if they catch like a bullet in your car.
This is why I never went to Mexico, because like if you're going over there, like as a tourist or whatever, if they catch like one bullet in your car, you might go to jail for five years.
So um, you know, it's interesting how they have these strict gun laws, but it does nothing for them.
But that's a whole other conversation.
But yeah, man, like um, that's typically winds up going on when it comes to the guns.
A lot of the guns that end up in Mexico came from the United States, especially places like Texas where they have very lax gun laws.
Does that answer your question?
Uh yes, but uh the th I guess the follow-on was have you ever come across you uh you you could call them mercenaries?
Oh, yes, yes, with respect to uh prior military in the US.
Yes, funny story.
Okay, so okay.
Um year is roughly 2015-ish, 2016-ish, right?
I'm on call, which uh when you're on call, you're basically you know, on the line for 24 hours, right?
They can call you for anything.
Um so I get a call, I'm like watching breaking bad or something like that.
And um Border Patrol calls me and says, Hey, there's this guy here.
Um, you know, he wants to provide information.
We caught him at the we caught him at the border.
Um apparently he's been in a formal before, he wants to talk to an HSI agent, he doesn't want to talk to Border Patrol, he and you know, he wants to talk to somebody.
So normally, right, you'd be like, Man, I'm not gonna go out for this because you you know you can get called at any time, so you want to conserve your energy and not go out for random calls.
But me, I was like a go-getter.
So I was like, you know what?
I'll go out and talk to this guy.
Let's see what he has to say.
So I get dressed, I go over to the border patrol station, Laredo South, uh, right there on 109 Shiloh Drive.
Um, and I go then I sit down and I talk with him, and I'm like, uh, so hey, what's up, man?
And I get his information, right?
He only wanted to talk to me.
I mean, he didn't want to talk to any border patrol agent.
I was like, okay.
As I'm sitting there talking to him, he tells me basically that he's a um a hey man for the Zettas and that he worked for uh the Trevinios.
And for those that are unaware, the Travinos basically ran the Losetas cartel uh for many years.
You know, they call they use call signs Z42, Z40, etc.
And he would work for these guys, and his job was he was basically the guy that ran like cover fire.
So when they would move around Lowe Laredo, because there was a war at the time, the uh you know, 2014 and like 2018, the whole time I was there, there was like a war between the Mexican Marines and the Losetas.
His job was any time they move around in their motorcade, um, and they were getting uh attacked by the Mexican Marines, his job was to get out the car and start shooting back at the Mexican Marines to create a diversion to allow his boss to escape.
Because um, since the Marines didn't know which car he was in, um, they would have these diversion techniques.
They're like a paramilitary organization, they have these diversion techniques to ensure that the boss always got away.
So and it's interesting because like as he was telling me this story, he was just so like candid and matter of fact about it.
It's like, yeah.
So I get out the car, I pull out my AK and I just start shooting at them, and uh, you know, what I do is I try to confirm as many kills as I can um because I get a bonus.
I was like, what?
He's like, Yeah, uh, I get a bonus.
I was like, what are you talking about?
He's like, yeah, so what I would do is like after I shoot them and I know someone's dead, um, like I'll go up to the body and I'll cut a finger off.
And um I would get a bonus per finger that I brought over to the boss.
You'd get like a thousand dollars per person he killed or some crazy stuff like that.
Um and he would have to cut the finger off to confirm it when he brought brought it back to the boss.
And it wasn't so much the story was crazy, it was more how he told the story with just plain face, didn't care.
It was like he was like talking like, yeah, this is what I do for work, man.
This is my job description.
And um, I guess I guess that's what ends up what winds up happening, where when you're doing this as a job all the time for years and years and years, you have to just kind of like look at it that way and just become stone cold.
Um, so and he was giving me a bunch of information.
Basically, he wanted to give information on the uh the the moralist because I traded and he was pissed off.
Um and I was in a human smoking group at the time.
I had a buddy who was in the border slash kidnapping group, or also known as best border enforcement security task force, which is all over the United States.
I called him up.
Hey, got this guy here, it's probably gonna be a good source.
He came, took it over from there, and I handed him off.
But that was something that will always stick with me.
How he talked about killing Mexican Marines and how we would go over to the bodies after and cut the fingers off so that he can, you know, claim uh his prize at the end of the day.
Absolutely wild.
So I'm good, bro.
Thank you.
No worries, man.
Good question.
How's it going?
Once again, thank you for coming out here.
What's up?
Uh I guess my question is just kind of give more perspective to the people here and people at home about like what you're a day-to-day could be to you, I guess.
What would you say is the most horrific thing that you ever witnessed down at the border?
Sure.
Um, and I'm assuming when you say day-to-day, like when I was on a job, right?
Right?
Yeah, just example of how bad it could get.
Yeah.
So every day was different, man.
Uh, because on the Southwest border, you're getting called every day, right?
You're getting called like so on the Southwest border, since border patrol and customs are catching illegal aliens and people moving drugs and things are guns are going, they're catching guns going south, money going south all the time.
You're constantly in response mode.
So it's very difficult actually to run like proactive cases because you're getting called so much.
And like they have duty where you're on call for 24 hours and then it rotates from like you to other guys in your group, and if someone in your group gets a call, let's say they catch 20 aliens.
The whole group's gotta go out to interview, you know, all the witnesses and stuff like that.
So you end up where you end up getting a lot of response cases, right?
Now for me, I did a lot of proactive cases.
I was not one of these like reactive agents.
I was always on the duty list and took those cases too, but um I was real big on doing like you know, big organized crime cases.
But a day, man, like I would wake up, you know, middle day, right?
Like 11.
Um, I'd check my phone, check my email, um, you know, eat something real quick, or go right to the office, start working on reports, um, you know, following up on anything, maybe an informant would call me at the time I was running like 10 informants, some documented, some not, which I could talk about how that works too with informants if you guys want.
Um, and then like maybe a guy would be saying, Hey, we got a call, we gotta run out.
Hey, I'm about to do surveillance.
Hey, we got an arrest warrant on this day.
So every day was different.
One day I might be in court, another day I'd be debriefing an informant, another day we'd be hitting an arrest warrant, another day we'd be, you know, responding to the port to see some drugs.
So literally every day was different.
I know it sounds very cheesy, but on the Southwest border, you're like running a gun and like they say one year on the Southwest border is like the equivalent to like being five years in the interior just because things move so quickly, right?
So um, but that's like what an average day would be.
Now, as far as like the worst situation, um, man, there's there's so many.
But one thing that I could think of off the top of my head that stuck out to me was I remember we got a call one time um about a a little girl that was kidnapped out of Houston, and the the girl, uh basically that they had said that the person that kicked her was trying to bring her to Laredo and Houston's about five hours um west of of Laredo, and they were saying that this guy was trying to get her into Mexico.
Apparently she met him in a chat room or something like that.
He met her at her house, picked her up, her parents didn't know where she was, but they looked back at the logs and they figured out who it was, etc.
So um, and at the time we didn't have like his info, we just kinda like had a rough number, whatever.
So I I get this call like one o'clock in the morning.
Um, and it was my buddy, I'll never forget John, he it was he was the on-call guy.
So I think they had contacted the FBI, but they didn't answer whatever.
And we're border agents, uh HSI, so like we're used to getting late night calls.
So out and we immediately try to figure out who this guy was.
We're looking at all cameras.
I remember being up all night, man, trying to like figure out where this little girl was.
And we ended up finding out um where she was, and we got the guy arrested.
But the thing that I remember the most was like how I was so tired, um, and I was dead, but I was like, you know what, it doesn't matter because I can always sleep later, but if we don't get this, you know, this little girl back, like that's she's gone forever.
She crosses into into the border.
So we put CBP on notification, told them, hey, lock down the ports.
If you see this car, um, this is the girl.
This is the guy who we think is the suspect.
Um and we ended up finding her, but it took uh you know, it was up all night, like from one o'clock all the way up until like the afternoon of the next day.
And it's funny because the FBI didn't find out what was going on until hours later, like the like, oh we heard that this girl that's missing, like bro, we're already on.
So yeah.
And this happened a lot where agencies fight on the southwest border.
That's another thing that's very common as well.
Um agency fighting, because a lot of the times we have different authorities that all overlap, right?
We can all investigate drug trafficking, we can all investigate violent violent crime to a degree.
So there's a lot of c uh competition on the Southwest border too, because DEA, FBI, HSI, ATF, all the agencies have a pretty strong representation on Southwest border because of how busy it is.
Yeah.
No, thanks, man.
I appreciate it.
No worries, man.
Good question.
Okay.
Were you racist before you worked on the border?
Was I racist before?
Or did it make you racist being on the border?
I've always been racist.
I was born racist.
I was born this way.
Thank you.
Let's go, baby.
Myron, Chad's getting mad at us in both of the live streams because we're not asking about the Jews.
So uh do question for you.
Sure, let's do it.
Uh, what is the time scale that we learn at mass?
Uh The answer to the JQ.
Man.
I'll tell you this, we're going through a mass awakening right now.
Like I like, you know, I've talked with guys that have been talking about this stuff for a minute, right?
A couple of decades.
And they're they've even said, I've spoken with guys like, you know, shout out to Lucas Gage, Ryan Dawson, all these guys have been talking about this stuff for like the better part of a decade.
They even told me, like, dude, the rate at which people are waking up to Israel control of our government is is crazy.
Like they've said in the past year or so, they've seen more progress than in the 10 to 15 years that they've been talking about it.
Because the thing is, is if you talked about this topic prior to October 7th, man, like you were gonna get it's like an instaban, right?
And then, hey, I don't want to play the music, right?
But like, let's yeah, the the butt you know, if you do the early life check and you figure out who ran YouTube and who ran Facebook and who ran Meta and Instagram and Google during this period of time, and they still do, and many of them, they're all Zionists, man.
So, you know, there's a reason why this topic has been taboo for so long, but I think with the overwhelming amount of shock and outrage of what's going on with October 7th, the ADL Media Matters, a lot of these organizations that typically would censor individuals that were critical of Israel, they just can't go after everybody.
There's too many people that are talking about this.
And the crazy part is that this is like I said before, this is like the one topic I've seen people on both the far left and the far right actually agree on.
Now, they come to different reasons, same conclusion for different reasons, right?
What I've noticed on the left is they make the humanitarian argument, it's partite ethno state, you know, they're occupying Israel, it's messed up.
They're coming from that angle.
And then a lot of people on the far right come from a more nationalist angle, like, hey, we have a foreign government controlling our politicians, um, and our foreign policy is 100% basically being run by these individuals who put which puts us in precarious situations internationally.
So they both come to the same conclusion for different reasons, but hey, I'll take it all day, right?
Like, this is you know, if if someone like me is agreeing with like someone like Hassan Piker, uh, you know, that should tell you that it's a big problem.
So people are waking up, which is good.
Yeah, and we can we can thank Elon for that for facilitating that, even though uh we may have disagreements on the H1B position.
I'm sorry?
I said we can thank Elon for that, facilitating that on X. Yes, yes, and Rumble too.
You know, there's been an incredible rise on like free speech platforms, alternative platforms that allowed people to say this stuff.
But I would say October 7th definitely like set it over the edge.
You know, then you got people like Candace Owens, Dan Billzarian, um, Ian Carroll, like, you know, it's crazy.
On the same day, Ian Carroll went on Joe Rogan, Candace Owens went on um The Ovan, and Andrew Tate went on Nelk, and they all talked about Israel on the same day.
I was like, holy crap.
Like, and each of these interviews got like millions of views, right?
Like uh Ian Carroll talked about the dancing Israelis and Epstein, which he we could talk about Epstein all day.
We all know what he was doing.
He was a Mossad asset.
Or is that Israel Israeli intelligence asset talked about JFK?
This Owens talked about the black uh male groups, and um Andrew Tate said, you know, there's one group you can't criticize in America, and he said, you know, it's uh the Zionist lobby.
So uh the fact that this all happened on the same day was wild.
So while we're at it, uh, what's your quick take on the JFK files that's come out?
We were fucking right.
That's what I gotta say, man.
We were fucking right.
The Israelis were absolutely involved in killing John F. Kennedy.
If you had talked about this, see now I'm excited.
Now I'm excited.
Bro, if you talked about JFK and you said Israel was involved, they would consider you a fringe conspiracy theorist.
They would want to silence you, they'd say, get this guy out of here, he's a cook, blah, blah, blah.
But now we know because the files finally got declassified, and they redact they unredacted a bunch of the stuff.
We know for a fact what we've been talking about forever.
And the long short of it is this, because I know a lot of you guys might be saying, JFK, what is this guy talking about?
Long story short is this.
John F. Kennedy found out that Israel had a nuclear program that they're working on.
He didn't want them to have nuclear weapons for obvious reasons, because now we have the destabilization in the Middle East that we have now, thanks to the Israelis getting this nuclear technology.
How'd they get it?
They stole uranium, higher grade uranium, From the United States out of Pennsylvania.
This is a great state of Pennsylvania, by the way, um, from the Apollo facility, and they legally smuggled it over there and they used it to create their nuclear program that they have now.
And JFK worked really hard to try to get them to stop, and basically Israel lied to them.
They made a fake control panel room, had the inspectors come in.
JFK figured out it was a lie.
Um, and then we find out that James Jesus Angleton, who was a high-ranking CIA officer back then, basically helped Israel procure their nuclear program that they currently have now after JFK was killed in the 1960s.
And he talked about this in closed Senate hearings back in the 70s that were classified.
And finally, now we got access to those uh to those hearings of what he said in there, where he basically admitted that he helped Israel procure the nuclear program, and have these files that are unredacted that show that Israeli intelligence was involved in a lot of these situations, and they were they had been reacted there for decades and said, even when you look at the document on the set says like CIA is okay with declassification, except for brackets, all of the brackets were basically Israeli intelligence, and that's what we got a chance to look at with these 80,000 documents.
So the conspiracy theorists were proven right.
Now I want to say one thing, uh, and then we'll go to the next person, because I do think that this is important.
Look, some people say it's a coincidence.
I don't think it's a coincidence, but I find it interesting that the most famous movie that depicts the JFK assassination is a movie by Oliver Stone, 1991 called JFK.
Good movie.
And in the movie, it documents the you know uh the pursuit of the JFK assassination from uh prosecutor out of New Orleans called Harris uh Garrison, Jim Garrison, if I'm not mistaken.
And the interesting thing is if you watch the movie, entertaining movie, um, they talk about the mafia angle, they talk about the CIA angle, they talk about inside job, etc.
But one thing that's interesting is that the Zionist angle and the Israeli intelligence angle is completely left out.
Well, if you research the movie and you find out who funded the movie, who funded it?
Guy named Arnon, feel free to Google on your phones right now, check the early life.
I think what's we're gonna see there.
Yeah, definitely chitching.
A big one.
Jewelry Zionist billionaire running around Hollywood, right?
He was the one that funded the JFK movie, as many other Hollywood movies.
Now, why is this important?
The reason why this is important is because the guy went on Israeli television and admitted that he was a spy.
But not only was he a spy, he was a spy for their unacknowledged nuclear program.
So let me get this straight.
The president tried to stop Israel from getting nukes, was assassinated.
We now know that Israeli intelligence was involved.
The guy that funded the movie that is the biggest blockbuster hit when it comes to JFK assassination that most Americans are familiar with, was a spy for Israeli intelligence for their unacknowledged nuclear program that JFK tried to destroy.
Crazy, absolutely nuts.
But then if you say this and you make this connection, they'll say, Oh, you're a conspiracy theorist.
Well, I don't think it's a mistake that this guy funded the movie and made sure to keep the Zionist angle out of this movie because I think if the American public knew that a former president tried to stop Israel from getting nuclear weapons, they got them anyway, illegally, and potentially had a hand in him being assassinated, the American public would not stand for that.
They'd be extremely angry.
So I think him funding it and being involved in the movie was very important.
Now, do I think Oliver Stone, you know, is responsible?
Who knows?
But what I will say is follow the money.
When you follow the money, you figure out where we're gonna go, right?
We look at Trump's campaign, who funded it mostly?
Mary Madelson.
Now we might go to war with Iran because she's a hardcore Zionist and wants to ensure that all of Israel's enemies are destroyed to preserve um Israel as the hegemony in the Middle East.
So if you follow the money, you're always gonna go.
And this is something that I was sought as an agent.
Always follow the money.
So, yeah, interestingly enough, man.
That's my thoughts on JFK.
And the fact that uh like an Israeli spy funded that movie that was a part of their unacknowledged nuclear program, is just crazy to me.
And you know, I think we need to wake more people up and let them know, like, dude, like this is wild.
So, and there are many other facts that I wanted JFK gone.
I'm not gonna just sit here and say, like the CIA wanted him gone, organized crime wanted him gone.
They all had their acts to grind with him.
Um, but I find it very interesting how the Israeli intelligence angle is almost never touched upon and it's censored.
And it's been censored that way for a very long time.
And we got the what took us 60, 80 years to get the documents unclassified finally to see this angle.
So we were right, man.
We were vindicated.
So it's me again.
Uh, I came up with another question.
It's related to the uh Columbia and tough students who are in the process of getting deported uh or uh having their cases uh hurt again because they reportedly violated their student visas or green cards based on uh and this is only uh a lot of uh you see a lot of suppression of free Palestine or groups or protests criticizing Israel by saying that they are uh promoting Hamas,
they're using uh that reasoning to deport them.
Do you think that those criticisms are or those charges are legitimate?
And if not, what do you think would be a legitimate uh justification for deporting those who have already have green cards or are in the process of uh becoming citizens?
Great question, man.
Really great question.
Um now, with the Homeland Security Act, right?
Uh, which you know obviously came after the Patriot Act, which we know who wrote that off, a guy named Chertoff, which if you do early life on him, we'll know where he's from as well.
Um, but that's a whole other conversation.
So the thing is is that the statute that they're using, I think it's a section of 237 um for removing, I don't remember the exact statute, but it's a very um unclear and nebulous statute that they're using to use to deport the the students.
Um and here's the thing.
Obviously, they deported uh well, they began the deportation process for a guy named Mahmoud Khalil out of Colombia, right?
And he's kind of been like the main beacon of this, and they've arrested other students as well.
I think honestly, what they're doing here, I don't even think they're really concerned with deporting the students.
I think the punishment is the process here.
I think they're trying to create a chilling effect to get these students to chill out and stop protesting, especially students from um from foreign countries.
Um will they get these guys deported?
Who knows?
I I don't I think the law is very um you know uh nebulous at best, and it's gonna be tough for them to be able to articulate like, oh, well, how's this person like a Hamas supporter?
Like for the girl in Tusks, for example, she just wrote an op-ed talking about boycott Israel.
No mention of Hamas in there.
So I don't think they necessarily care so much about actually going through the deportation process with these guys.
Rather, they want these guys make these guys an example so other people don't think to protest against Israel because the college campuses, like they're the ground zero for some of the opposition for the wars in the Middle East.
So they're looking at it like, hey, this got out of control last year.
We're gonna reel this in, we're gonna scare these people into pr uh from protesting.
And just off of pro um telling uh foreign students that they get deported, that might bring the protest down by like 50% because they don't want to get deported.
So I think that's what their real goal is.
Now, as far as like um, you know, Hamas and terrorism and everything else like that, um, and this is kind of where you get into a a weird area because for I know a lot of you guys already know this, but like for those that are watching on YouTube or whatever, Hamas is the governing body of Gaza.
So it's very difficult to separate the two, where if someone advocates for the freedom of the Palestinians in Gaza, it's very difficult to be able to separate that from potentially benefiting Hamas too, because if you say give them relief, stop the bombing, ceasefire.
Well, guess what?
Hamas gonna benefit from that because they're not getting bombed and killed too, just alongside the citizens.
And since they're amongst uh the citizens, um it's very difficult to be able to clearly um articulate they are supporting Hamas or not because if you advocate for the Palestinian people, you're kind of by definition advocating for Hamas too because you don't want them that they benefit from the citizens not getting killed, right?
So it's very easy to come to that conclusion.
Well, you're a Hamas supporter too, which I think that's what they want.
So that they could go ahead and put you in a box and say we're gonna deport you now, or or whatever, because this immigration law is very nebulous at best that they're utilizing that Marco Rubio is trying to use.
So we'll see what happens.
Uh, but I do think that the punishment is the process, and that's their that's their goal here.
And you know, just to be clear here, you know, I think uh, you know, Hamas is definitely a terrorist organization.
You know, they fit the definition, they're committing acts of violence for a political ideology.
But if we're gonna call uh Hamas a terrorist organization, so is the IDF.
And I think it's also important that people understand that the IDF was created by Ergun, Haganah, Stern Gang, etc.
These were all terrorist organizations, even defined by the United States.
Um, and then they rebranded and became the IDF.
But you know, Menachim begin, right?
One of the prime ministers, the father of terrorism is nickname.
I don't know if I butchered the last name, but You guys get the point.
Um, he ended up becoming a prime minister.
He was responsible for the bombing of the King David hotel, killed a hundred people, British people, right?
Assassinations, etc.
So Israel's been uh committing acts of terrorism for for decades, and this is how the state of Israel was created, was through terrorism.
So if we're gonna call Hamas a terrorist organization, fair, I agree with that, but we also need to label the IDF as one as well.
Um but yeah, man, I think this the punishment is the process here.
I don't think they're really too concerned with deporting these students rather than creating a chilling effect and getting these these schools to comply.
All right, thank you.
No worries, man.
Hello, I'm back again.
Another question.
Sure, interesting.
I believe for the one they're using to port students is the Alien Enemies Act, which the Supreme Court just ruled saying they're allowed to do that.
So and it works for that in that situation.
The one from like the 1700s, right?
Yes, I'm not mistaken.
I think or might have been around World War One.
Yeah.
Okay.
So that's now allowed again.
Also the one there's a movie called Some of All Fears.
Israeli nuke is used by I think something like Nazis to blow up in the Super Bowl.
But the interesting one it correlates this.
The bomb plutonium was American plutonium.
Because the story was in pla in Pennsylvania, I believe it was American nuclear company supplied Israel with uh with the weapons, and they falsified records saying that's how the uranium got to Israel.
It's an interesting documentary about that of how's the name of it?
American I believe it's called American Nuclear Company.
I'm not sure what the exact name was.
I forgot what the documentary's name was.
It was on YouTube.
It was about all this because I want to be a nuclear engineer, so I'm I'm very interested in nuclear stuff like this, especially for the fact that Numek by Ryan Dawson.
He goes over this as well.
It's really good.
Uh it's on Rumble.
You can't find it on YouTube for obvious reasons.
Numek is and that's the name of the facility where they stole the uranium from.
Yeah, I believe it was the exact one.
What's the one that's interesting for an DHS and also deals with nuclear smuggling and based on how little containers we actually check?
What is the actual threat of a terrorist organization or a rogue state sending something to attack us?
And there's one more thing interesting for the Israeli military comparing them to uh Hamas.
Well, that's because every intelligence organization technically does acts of terror, but it's under the banner of doing it with your state.
So if you get a nation, now you're allowed to do terrorism.
And also, nuclear bomb is probably the best defense against war crimes because nanonaboo boo now you can't invade us.
Look at Iraq compared to Israel.
They have nukes can't get invaded.
Yeah, no, I mean, uh you know, nuclear weapons, you know, a lot of the times are more of a strategic tool than like an actual, you know, weapon.
It's it's used a lot of the times.
And this is why like Israel's been able to do the things they do pretty much unchecked, is because they're the only country in the area of nuclear weapons.
So um, but and this is why they're so hell-bent on getting rid of Iran's nuclear program because know that if it is Iran's able to get a nuclear weapon, they will not be able to be as aggressive um in their you know military tactics or escalation towards war as they're being now.
So that's why they're hell bent.
And they've been trying to do this for 20 years to get rid of it.
But the problem is they need us to do it.
So we'll see what happens, man.
I really hope we don't go to war.
But um the way it's looking, like we're we're close.
I'd say we're closer to war now than in a very long time.
There's also one there's a weird thing for a seismic event that classified that Iran might already have a nuclear weapon.
Also the fact, but this one interesting fact if Iran gets a nuclear weapon very quickly afterwards, Saudi Iraq's gonna start a program to do it, and then basically that by that time the entire region will have one.
Absolutely.
And and this this nuclear arms race has been kicked off since the 50s, since Israel's been trying after the Suez Canal crisis in 56, Israel pretty much determined right then and there we need the bomb by any cost necessary.
And that means we need to steal it from our ally, the United States, or we need to go ahead and work with the French to get the reactor.
They pretty much were hell-bent on getting that nuclear bomb.
And um that basically kicked off a arms race in the entire region.
And even back uh um the CIA even told Kennedy, they advised him when Kenny made the decision to go after Ben Gurion and tell them, hey, you need to stop this nuclear program.
It's because his advisors told him, hey, look, if Israel gets a nuclear weapon, it's going to embolden them to um to escalate uh tension in the Middle East and create a lot of problems for us geopolitically.
And Kenny knew this back in the 60s.
That's why he tried to stop him, and then he gets killed, and then bam.
Now they got the bomb, and we've been ramifications of it ever since.
Also by developing it with South Africa, which had nuclear bombs at one point, but then decommissioned them.
So there was a think of test in the Indian Ocean that was like we're a massive plume of energy release that nobody knew what it was, and we now, and lots of people now suspect it was an Israeli nuclear test in cooperation with the South Africans.
It's almost like and then we in fact we've definitely all knew the fact they had it.
How and there's also one so based on the fact of my other part of my question, what was your opinion to the fact of someone trying to sneak in a either nuclear material or nuclear weapon in general into the United States based on current border security from anyway from either the north, south or from maritime?
Smuggling it in or out.
In not so much, um, but out.
We've you know, there's been many uh I remember one case I did where there was an Iranian guy that um was smuggling out like fighter jets schematics out of the United States, and um we were able to get them under the espionage act because um when it comes to like the espionage act, it doesn't even have to be classified, as long as it's like defense information or NDI national defense information, um you could be charged under the espionage act.
So I remember that was one.
But as far as like bringing in it, not so much, but definitely there, you know, people are trying to steal secrets from us all the time, all the time.
So good stuff.
Who's up next to the next or sorry?
Thank you.
Thank you.
Of course, brother.
Uh I've been blowing your content for a while now, and uh you did a couple breakdowns.
Um did a breakdown of uh when you caught a guy um when you were still working on the border trying to meet up with uh kid or whatever.
I think he was an agent.
You also broke down uh believe it was Operation Broken Shield, if I'm correct, yeah, when they did uh the corrupt cops.
Um I just wondered how big of an issue is uh corruption on the southwest border with uh you know agents letting things and stuff go through, and uh have you ever worked on cases like that?
Yeah, um it definitely corruption on the southwest border because there is a lot of money to be made um, you know, by letting loads through.
Um it's not like super super common, but you know, at least you know, a couple times a year, you're arresting dirty CBP or border patrol agents.
Um I remember one case where we arrested, and I that's the one I think you're referencing, where a border patrol agent from like um what was it, like the Del Rio sector?
Came all the way to like the LaRoe area to have sex with like a 15-year-old and his it was undercover and and mom.
Uh but now it definitely happens.
There's like a um border corruption task force um in a lot of these major areas.
Uh one in the RJV, Laredo, El Paso area, because it definitely does happen where you know people are getting paid off to allow loads in.
It's not that common, but it definitely happens a few times a year, I would say.
No worries, man.
Sean, anything?
Good.
Uh hey, Myron.
Uh, I love watching your content.
Uh I have a couple questions.
Uh first question.
Um, I know you covered the Syria aspect um with Israel and everything.
Um, we know after Bashar left, uh we was deposed by um IDF and then uh a couple rebel groups backed by Turkey and then the Uzbeks and whatever.
What do you think is there is next for the Golden Heights?
Because I know that Israel so far has taken past control of the Golden Heights and that they want to um effectively make like a fake civil war where it's between the Alawites and the and the Sunnis and try and like push this propaganda of this former ISIS leader being a good guy, which I personally don't think is is uh a very good take.
I mean, I get how they're all back, but what's your opinions on like the future of that region?
Yeah, no, I I mean this was their goal the whole time.
So I find it very suspicious that right after the Israel 11 ceasefire, um, these bulls kicked off and basically took area over within a week.
It was absolutely insane.
Um and I think that was all strategic, right?
Russia was obviously weakened from their conflict with Ukraine, so they couldn't use the air power that's kept Bashar al-Assad in power for a very long time.
And the rebels were able to systematically take over the country in like two weeks, roughly.
Um I don't and I don't think that's by you know uh uh just a coincidence, as everyone would say.
So yeah, man, I think Syria is gonna continue to stay destabilized.
Uh Bashar al-Assad is gone.
And the thing with a lot of these dictators is these dictators end up keeping the country in peace.
As much as people hated Saddam Hussein and you know, Bashar al-Assad, etc., they kept the the place relatively stable.
Um, but obviously Israel seized on a move uh on the moment.
They destroyed all their you know weapon capabilities as the rebels were uh moving through Syria.
And this Jelani guy even said it like, oh yeah, we're not gonna, who is the literally a former Al Qaeda guy beheading people and stuff like that.
That's the new leader of Syria.
He's over here saying, Oh, yeah, we're Not gonna attack Israel, we don't really care about it.
So I think that they were 100% funded and backed by the United States and against Israel because they've been trying to get Bashar al-Assad out of there for a very long time because Syria is a critical um component of the acts of resistance to move weapons through Syria for um Lebanon and Hezbollah.
So by them getting rid of him, they were able to really weaken um the resistance up in Lebanon.
So yeah, dude, a lot of propaganda, 100% Israelis were involved in it, and this is what they've been looking for.
And and I think you know, the reason why, guys, I think that we're very close to war, and I think it's very important for people to know this, is that we've never had Iran in a position than they are now.
And with being weakened with the pager attack, and their uh their main brass getting assassinated, Hassan Nasral, etc.
being killed in airstrikes, and then you have uh the Houthis getting bombed right now by the United States, uh, like crazy, and then we have um Bashar al-Assad basically fled in Syria is you know in in shambles, Iraq has been destabilized for a very long time.
Like Iran has never been weaker, so I think Israel's looking at it like yo, this is our ability to get our death shot and get rid of these guys, and they want to take it.
And I would not be surprised if they tried to do a false flag or something else like that to ensure that there's a war.
I mean, we've seen them them do it with the Levant affair, we've seen them try it with the USS Liberty.
Um 9-11, you can make the argument that Israel is involved in that.
There's a whole bunch of coincidences that aren't necessarily coincidences in 9-11, where at the bare minimum, Israeli intelligence had four now that the 9-11 attacks are gonna happen.
Bare minimum.
So I wouldn't put it past them for anything.
I mean, literally, the uh motto of the Mossad for decades was um by deception, we create war.
And they know that the IDF isn't a capable military where you can invade on the ground, their intelligence or what do the the do the best for them, and they have a fantastic intelligence opponent, whether it's Shinbet, Unit 820, Mossad, um, and this is what they do.
They they start wars by doing false flags.
So happens all the time.
Well, I mean, I totally agree.
Um, what you said about like uh in other streams like the acts of resistance of resistance and how like um Iran is kind of like put into a corner where they like have to act.
I mean, we know you saw what happened like yesterday with um Trump bombing the Yemenese um and it came out that they were like civilians and like a tribal thing.
Um uh I think chat has been asking this.
Uh I want to say first uh shout out uh council club.
What's your uh opinions on big H. Oh yeah, no, definitely I think one of the most lied about figures in uh in history.
I definitely think one of the by far one of the most lied about figures in history.
Um, you know, obviously this is a very taboo topic to even talk about, but um, you know, I find it interesting that like the narrative this is what I this is how I look at it, right?
So we've been lied about, we we've been lied to about so many different historical facts.
You know, I just don't put it past the government or mainstream media to lie to us about something like this.
Like we know that they lied to us about a lot of the facts on October 7th, right?
And this is in 20 with advanced technology and cameras everywhere, and they still lie to our face.
So we can only imagine all the lies we're told about World War II.
So am I saying he's an angel?
No, but I do definitely do think that there were things that were embellished and lied about um on him, and I do think he's one of the most lied about figures in history for sure.
So that's why I'm like kind of doing my own independent research on it and finding out a lot of things that they don't want us to know.
Uh thank you, Myron.
Shout out to OSS and keep doing what you're doing, Mike.
Shout out to you, my friend.
Real Gs.
Always question the narrative, man.
Always be looking because that dude, one thing I learned is that they've lied to us about so many different things.
It's absolutely wild.
The fuck is wrong with women.
I'm sorry.
What the fuck is wrong with women?
What is wrong with women?
Oh man.
Okay.
I was waiting for someone to ask a question about feminism.
So, well, for one, I think they need to go back to the kitchen and they suck at everything.
No, I'm just kidding.
But all jokes aside, so here's the thing, right?
So, as we segue into the feminism thing, feminism has created so many problems in society.
If you look at every like problem that we have, modern problem we have, you can always attribute it back to feminism.
And my thing is this, right?
A lot of women don't know what they're signing up for.
So they'll sit there and they'll say, Oh, yeah, I want to get education, I want to make a bunch of make a bunch of money, become successful.
That's cool.
We don't tell them the consequences of that, right?
You have a finite amount of time to find, you know, the best thing that you can find.
You have a fine amount of time to have children.
And as you increase your what I call sexual market value, right?
Or your well, not even sexual market value because it's different.
But as you increase your status and your wealth as a female, your prospects go down.
But on the other hand, as a man, you don't have a timeline.
You can, you know, date younger women into your 40s, 50s, 60s.
Um, and on top of that, as you increase your value uh financially and status, you get more options.
So women end up lowering their options when they become more successful versus men increase their options.
Nice book.
I'm a I got you, man.
I've assigned that thing.
The real G. Um, so I think if we at least tell women, hey, go in this one with one eye uh open and understand that your success is actually going to hurt you when it comes to finding a family.
I think we'd be better off.
But we lie to women and tell them that they can have it all.
And this is, you know, the Cheryl Sandberg, Chelsea Handler, um, Gloria Steinem lie, which by the way, check their early life every single time.
Um this is the lie that we've told women with feminism with the whole sex in the city.
And I think women are now are slowly starting to kind of wake up and realize that you can't have it um all.
But uh man, I mean, this has been been going on for like 60 years, right?
The feminism is absolutely been going on for a long time, and it's a lie to a lot of women.
So that's my big problem with with feminism is it literally puts women in a very bad uh spot.
What's going on, Myron?
I've been watching you for about two, three years now.
Been in relationship for seven years.
My wife enjoys watching you as well.
Nice.
She agrees with everything I you say.
Nice, nice, not here.
Okay, well, shout out to you if I think from home.
She's at home with the kids.
I got a daughter and a son.
Nice.
Uh, what do you say to the women that disagree with what you're saying when I've been 25 years old, been in a relationship for seven years with a woman who's at home watching my kids and lets me be a man.
What do you say to the women that aren't listening to you?
Well, the they're they're doomed.
Right?
And this is why.
And bro, congratulations, by the way.
Like, that's what we need.
We need more nuclear families, we need more head of households, we need more men being men and more women being women.
So, like, that's literally what's led to this country, like, you know, going down the tubes is because we've lost a nuclear family.
So, shout out to you for having a family.
Um, something that's like underappreciated nowadays.
But, you know, the thing is this, what I've realized with women, right?
After talking to 3500 plus of them on my show, women put more care in how information is conveyed versus the content of the information conveyed.
When I talk with men, I can be very candid.
I can use foul language, I can be honest, I could tell them they're a loser, and they'll accept it because men put more stake in the content of the information and the meritocracy of the individual providing the information.
But women don't kind of adhere to that.
Like if you say it to them in a way that they don't like or it's rude or abrasive, they get offended and then their feelings get in the way and they don't want to absorb the information that you're giving.
So I give the information for the men because I do think that men are supposed to be leaders, and if you become that guy and you build it, they will come, right?
You could take a woman that's a feminist or have feminist ideology and feminize her quick and turn her back into a woman.
Um, but you have to be on point and have your masculinity point.
So it can be done, but you know, at this man, I don't think we're gonna go back.
Like um feminism is fair to stay, and I really doubt that women are going to um concede any of the uh land or territory they've taken when it comes to the progression through feminism.
So I think it's only gonna get worse.
And it's it's actually we're outpacing a lot of these studies that are saying, Oh, yeah, 50% of women are gonna be single by XYZ year.
We're outpacing that.
So I think the state of relationships is only gonna get worse.
See women dominating college attendance, we see women earning more money, we see women becoming more um successful, and though that's great for them, uh, that brings a lot of problems for them when it comes to mating because women have an issue with dating and being with men that you know are of lower socioeconomic status.
So when women have the leverage, what ends up happening is they don't settle, they want a better guy.
And the guys that actually are attractive to them don't want them back because all the women are chasing the same small percentage of guys.
So guys like you that have a family that have you know women staying at home, that's great because now I know that your kids more than likely are gonna become successful, they're gonna come from a two-parent household, stable household, they're gonna understand the dynamics of men and women.
Like it's so powerful to like like me, I have a two-parent household too.
Like seeing my mom and my dad together and seeing my dad being a man and my mom being a woman, um, you don't appreciate as a kid, but as you grow up, you realize like, oh man, going back in 2020, highset, like this is so important to see my dad doing what he's supposed to do.
And a lot of those characteristics have kind of been instilled in me where it's like, hey, you got a leader, you're responsible for your woman.
If she wants to work, she does it electively.
You know, it's your job to provide for your woman.
If she wants to work, you know, she does it from an elective position versus a mandatory position.
So, yeah, man.
We need more guys like you, bro.
I have another question when it comes to like the masculinity Jews with the porn hub and all that.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So I was scrolling on X. You know, there's a lot of truth on X plus a lot of lies, too.
Yeah, for sure.
And I seen that majority of the Jews own poor a lot of the stuff that destroys masculinity in itself.
What percentage of that do you think affects men in the long run, like watching all that nasty 304 bullshit?
Yeah, man, I I think pornography is literally one of like the biggest killers uh of of this century, man.
Like, and the thing is that it's so ubiquitous, it's so easy to access, and it's so um problematic because we end up getting guys like guys that like are addicted to it, man.
And what's up happening is they're like, oh, I could just bust the nut and I don't gotta go out there and produce or do anything.
And it's just it's just horrible.
And then when you look at, yeah, who who pretty much are the you know pioneers of porn is all the same, right?
So yeah, I I think it's a problem.
I think I'm glad that some states are like banning it where you need to be able to um try DN and stuff like that, and that's keeping a lot of people off.
But people are always gonna have access to it, man.
And I think it's probably one of the worst um inventions alongside social media that we've had in modern times is you know, free pornography.
It's terrible for for young men.
And any guy that's in here that's like addicted to porn, man, like, dude, get rid of it, man.
Like it's it's not gonna benefit you whatsoever.
Like it takes away from your productivity, you're you're gooning all the time like a moron.
It's it's just not worth it.
It really isn't.
Like, you know, become attractive, increase your sexual market value, go out and talk to real women, you know.
Don't want to go into porn, man.
Yeah, I appreciate that, brother.
Hello, I'm back.
You I'm back again for interesting ones for this one.
Times personally because of the nuclear power, but also because of the time and culture.
I I personally believe and I'll argue with you to the end of the earth.
You do not believe this, and most gen mostly, not just talking about you, but anyone in general, that America's golden age, if we had to pick one, if we the world went boom mostly because of Israel today, I would say the 50s and 60s were America's golden age.
Do you say that's true because of the nuclear family and everything like that?
I agree.
That's the thing that made me want to vote for Trump.
I'll vote for the person who make that more likely.
Yeah, I mean, you don't have a country we don't have the nuclear family.
That's the backbone of any thriving society nuclear family.
So, yeah, we we need to get back to those um to those traditions.
You know, and like I said, and this is why I'm such a harsh critic of feminism because feminism has effectively destroyed the the nuclear family.
Like women, what ends up what's ended up happening thanks to feminism is average women no longer want average men, right?
So that's that's what's created a lot of the issues here.
Well, we have a dating marketplace where most women most men are effectively invisible to most women.
So and there's a bunch of reasons for that social media, dating apps, etc.
It's all made uh the dating landscape far worse uh for men than for women.
And it's it both parties are losing because on one end, women have this like they think they have all this choice, but in reality they just have a bunch of sexual suitors, and then for men, they're basically ignored by a majority of women.
So both parties are kind of losing in their own right in different ways.
One other thing for this one that's turning making feminism even look more so it's about all the issues of people trying to, even though biology class like to say they're wrong in every concealable way of why feminism is supporting people who are trying to change their gender, which is scientifically improbable in every way, which also is not helping them in the slight.
Uh man, mental illness, dude.
There's two genders, and I I mean the fact that I mean that should you you know what's interesting?
Like Trump and Vance campaigned on common sense.
Like, I just to bring things back, like the fact that a presidential candidate was campaigning on common sense, that should tell you guys where we are in the state of affairs in the United States.
99 genders, uh, we have these people that are trying to read books to kids uh in drag attire, like absolutely wild.
So, you know, I think I think a lot of Americans woke up and realized like this is where we're heading, and they're like, hey, we need to go back to common sense, and that's where we're.
But I think the fact that they even had to campaign on saying we have common sense shows where we were as a nation.
So, you know, do I agree with all of Trump and JD Vance's policies?
Of course not, right?
I'm very critical of their foreign policy when it comes to Israel and the Zionist lobby.
Um, you know, we'll see what happens with this tariff situation.
Um, and we're not getting the M grace that we wanted, but I do think that we're in a better position now than we would have under uh a Kamala Harris and Biden organiz uh uh administration once again.
Yeah, if those two if those two dinguses won based on how much Biden was giving freedom to Israel and that one, I my personal opinion of Kamala won our country would have been basically dead at the very least.
We've been under the thumb of multiple foreign powers, not just Israel.
Well, yeah, I mean, is if a lot of people um funny story, Kamala Harris was actually in Ukraine a few weeks before Russia invaded.
So was that?
Four days before?
Yeah, there you go.
So she she gave a bad blowjob, clearly.
So she fucked up.
Who's up next?
Yeah, too much teeth.
Facts.
I'm here to ask a question.
Uh Jake Mole told me to ask.
He said, Who's your favorite author?
And uh he wants to know what chapter of Minecraft you're on.
Uh wait, who's my favorite author, and what was the other one?
What chapter about the chapter of Minecraft that you're on?
Oh, I'm still going through it.
Um I'm on um I'm on the J part, going through uh, you know, controlling the banks and the politics.
It's crazy, man.
Like there's a lot of parallels in that book that are kind of standing true to today.
So, but I haven't finished it yet.
I've I've been like slacking since I've been streaming every day, but I definitely am going through it.
I'm uh I'm gonna follow Kine two chapters a night, you know.
So anything else?
Uh I just want to shout out uh Castle Club and crypto mindset.
So I just wanted to say thank you for every um all the advice that you gave me, and I truly learn a lot from you.
And um, thank you again.
Awesome, bro.
Uh I'm good.
Hey, man, I hope you the markets are down, man.
So we can definitely get some Ethereum for cheap.
Yeah, man.
And guys, like this uh hey, anytime the markets are crashing like this, man, like look at it as an opportunity, guys.
Like, don't look at it like, oh my god, I'm oh it's like, no, man, like when there's blood in the streets, it's time to eat, and this is where you can like really make some um great moves with the markets crashing.
So, bro.
So, given the rise of uh certain movements like the incel movement and the black pill movement, what are your message to all the young men that are looking to follow such movements?
Good question, bro.
And this is something that doesn't get talked about much.
Now, the black people movie, guys, for those that are unaware, it's basically a movement where guys are saying, hey, it's hopeless, it's done, women only care about looks, you know, I'm gonna forever be an incel and I'm cooked.
Now, here's the thing.
It's really on you how you move, right?
Like, you can take the information and decide to be, oh my god, it's over, pessimistic, I'm never gonna get a girl, I'm forever alone.
Or you could take the information, adapt to the new sexual marketplace, understand that being average is no longer acceptable, and increase your sexual market value and get your money on point, go to the gym, etc.
And I tell guys all the time, you don't make money and go to the gym and become successful for women.
You do it for yourself so you don't have to tolerate the fuckery that inevitably comes with women because what you'll realize is the lower your sexual market value, the more you have to tolerate bullshit from females.
But the higher sexual market value, the less you have to tolerate BS from women, and women are far more likely to tolerate BS from you, right?
You want to have multiple girls, you want to um have certain worldviews or whatever, you'd be amazed at how much women will bend to your whim if your value is high enough, right?
Girls that sit there and say, I would never share a man.
Well, if you're that guy, you'll she'll be a part of you know, two or three other girlfriends and they're going to Disney World together, trust me, I know.
So you can make happen, it's just about having a positive outlook.
Now, with that said, I'm a big proponent of men having choice.
So if you want to be monogamous and have like a traditional conservative Christian relationship, right?
If you want to have multiple women, great.
But my thing is I want you to be in the driver's seat of your life, and having a black hill mindset is just gonna set you up to take a lot of L's and just be negative.
And it's it you're gonna just sit there like, oh, I give up, right?
You're just gonna have doom and gloom.
And I think that is something that's very common uh amongst young men.
And I'm here to tell you guys in my 20s, I wasn't getting that many chicks either.
I was like struggling, I was on the southwest border by myself.
I was, you know, just working all the time, etc.
But I think for young men, I think one of the most important things you guys need to realize is you have time, okay?
Your 20s is when you're gonna be at your lowest value as a man.
And I'm telling you guys this as a dude who went to college, just like you guys, I remember sitting in those same seats up in Northeastern University in Boston, Massachusetts.
Right.
I remember being broke.
I remember um, you know, being um, you know, naive and not understanding how the real world worked, etc.
Um, and then like, you know, gradually becoming a man and figuring out that like as a man, you gain your value from experience, competence, making money, getting your status up, and there's nothing wrong with taking your time for that.
Um, but for all the guys that have like a black pill, pessimistic mindset in your 20s, trust me, if you do the work, it does get better.
Men age like wine if they do the work.
But that's the key is they gotta do the work.
Feeling sorry for yourself and whacking off the porn and saying it's over, I'm cooked, like that's not gonna help you.
And um, that's really the main thing I want guys to know.
Thank you.
Yeah, no worries, man.
Okay, thank you, everyone, for asking questions to our to our speaker up here.
And thank you, Myron, for answering the questions.
Absolutely.
Okay, Sean said one more.
So I'll I'll answer everybody's questions.
I'm hey, man, I'm here.
So as long as you guys want to ask questions, I'm I'm here, man.
And the show goes on.
We're not Hollywood over here.
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah, mine's quick and his.
We're fucking people.
Yeah, my quick.
Now that you've taken the challenge of uh speaking on college campus, is there anyone you would like to challenge or like to see speak on a college campus to?
Yeah.
Um I'd be happy to, you know, I think me and Nick Fuentes versus you know, Charlie Kirk and Ben Shapiro would be pretty good.
We could talk Israel all day because I think this is a conversation that you know traditional conservatives that are, you know, in the right wing can no longer run from this topic.
I think the great awakening is here, people are waking up to our greatest ally and how they don't really give us any strategic benefit, despite the claim that they do.
Um and I think we need to have this conversation on one of the biggest stages.
And um, yeah, dude, that's that's what I think.
I think that'd be a great discussion, great debate.
I think I don't think they'll accept it for obvious reasons, um, because I do think that the Israel position is an indefensible position when it comes to American foreign policy.
But I'm just glad that people are waking up and realizing that our greatest ally isn't really necessarily our greatest ally.
Thank you.
Thanks, man.
Okay, quickly.
Yeah, I'll I'll hang out as long as you guys need me, man.
So hi, uh given your expertise regarding relationships with women, I just want to ask you what are some non-negotiable that you you know you would find when you get into relationship with a woman.
Question.
Um I think it's very important that your woman is cooperative and listens to you and obeys you.
And I know for some women in here, some people that might hear that that might be like, oh my God, obey.
That's so messed up, misogynistic.
But I look at it like this.
So, as you guys know, Donald Trump is the most powerful man in the world, right?
He's the president of the United States, um, really of the chief world power, right?
Commander in chief.
When he got shot at at Butler, Pennsylvania, he wanted to stay there and pump the fist and say, you know, fight, fight, fight.
But guess who dragged them off?
Secret Service, right?
And the reason for that is because the Secret Service is responsible for his safety.
So if you are responsible for someone's safety, that means you have a degree of authority over them, right?
So I think with men and women also need to understand is if you want a guy that's gonna be a dominant, assertive, strong man who's gonna protect you like he should, by the way, um, he needs to have some degree of authority over you.
If he tells you, hey, look, we're gonna do this, or hey, I need you to do this.
Um, instead of women saying, Oh, well, I'm not gonna do that, blah, blah, blah.
Well, that's not a want because if she ends up not listening to you and then doing something and herself in a precarious or dangerous situation, um, this is someone that you want beside you because she can't follow you.
And, you know, I think there's a reason why women are looked at as helpmates in all the biblical texts and every civilization that have always been, you know, the man is supposed to be the head, the man is supposed to be the leader.
And women are attracted to this.
It just simply works.
It's how we've run civilizations for thousands of years, and how we've been able to get past, you know, primates and animals and destroy, you know, and be able to have human innovation was through this this um this social setup.
So I think the number one thing is the woman needs to follow you, she needs to submit and obey you.
And because you're supposed to be the protector provider.
Um and then from there, everything kind of goes from there.
That's where you kind of dictate your terms.
Now every guy's different.
Some guys, you know, are okay with their girl um going out to bars and clubs.
I'm personally not.
You know, some guys are okay with her having guy friends.
I'm personally not.
Um, but I think it's important that you have your boundaries and you state your boundaries to her.
Um, before you become her boyfriend, by the way.
Do not give her the commitment until she this uh aligns with your belief system.
She should be asking you out, and I know there's people like wait, hold on, that doesn't make sense.
Um, but there's a there's a reason for that.
But um I think the biggest thing is that you need to decide what you want from her, and she needs to comply.
And if she doesn't, goodbye.
And I think that's the biggest problem is that a lot of guys just take what they can get and they'll tolerate whatever bad behavior comes from the woman just because they want put uh you know access to vagina, and that actually makes you less attractive by doing that.
So having boundaries and standards is extremely important as a man.
Thank you.
No worries, man.
Guys, you're the boss, don't forget that.
Men lead, women follow, despite what feminists try to tell you.
They want a guy that tells them what to do, not the other way around.
Uh I have one more question in regards to a good bank account with interest rates.
Um, Josie told me to ask how many Jews were killed in the Holocaust.
Ah, man.
271.
This guy.
No worries.
Uh fresh is he's in France right now.
He's in the UK.
Yeah, he's in yeah.
I don't know if he's in the UK.
I think he's in France right now.
But he's a he's in Europe.
Yeah.
No, he's posting on his on his ex and stuff like that.
Uh, I was gonna go, but like, dude, they can arrest you for tomato in America.
Isn't that crazy?
Isn't that wild?
Yo, the United Kingdom is a failed nation, bro.
Absolutely failed, cucked.
You know, they lost the war in 1776 wearing red jackets like idiots, and now they're pissed off at me, bro.
It's like, what's going on here, man?
Over some tweets.
Okay.
So that is the end of our QA portion for tonight's event.
Yeah, I'm fortunate be a kicked out of the room in a minute.
So you want to close off some final thoughts, and yeah, we'll have a few last announcements.
Yeah, um, guys, uh, thank you for having me.
Uh, it's always fun to, you know, talk with guys and girls and uh in college, right?
I I I could see a lot of you guys are a bit more based than I thought, right?
I thought it was gonna be like a woke out woke day, like oh, you're a massagist.
I know that there's some protesters outside, but uh but uh glad man, it's cool to talk to you guys.
And uh I'll hang out if you want to take pictures or anything else like that.
And um, yeah, man, thanks for coming, guys.
My gains X on all the platforms, Twitter, YouTube, uh banned on Instagram right now.
We'll see if we get it back.
But then it's just a common occurrence, right?
Getting banned all the time.
So yeah, Myron Gaines X everywhere, and then obviously Fresh and Fit as well.
We go live Monday, Wednesday, Friday, um, 8 p.m.
And then we do the after hours with the girls if you guys want to see me lose hair follicles and get more grays, uh, fresh and fit after hours.
So yeah.
Thank you, brother.
Thanks so much.
Everybody give a big round of applause.
Thank you.
Thank you so much to Myron for coming out to this.
This was I think this is your first campus talk, right?
Yeah, this is amazing, Kyle.
Great questions during the QA.
Lots of informative and great stories too from the border.
So hope everybody enjoyed it.
And again, subscribe to Fresh and Fit and Myron Gaines X. That's his personal um account on X and YouTube.
Uh and if you want to watch this debate, it will be up or sorry, the the debate coming up at the University of uh Asheville, that will be announced very soon.
And lastly, hope everybody has a great day.
And we hope that you come to our next event.
Thank you so much, everybody, for tuning in at home, and thank you everybody for coming here.
Uh, if you are a dinner or backstage ticket holder, we're gonna do the meet and greet next.
So we're gonna have everybody go out, and then everybody that's here for the meet and greet uh can s will come back in.
So just hang out in the lobby if you're here for the meet and greet.