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May 26, 2025 - Pearly Things - Pearl Davis
02:29:32
Happy Memorial Day To Our Girls In Green (Call-in Show) | Pearl Daily

Terrence Poppy and hosts argue the military’s 17.7% female workforce—peaking at 24.1% in the Air Force—undermines combat effectiveness, citing higher injury rates (30–40% infertility for women), failed Marine Corps mixed-gender tests, and alleged preferential treatment in leadership roles. Callers like Terrence (33 years in service) and OMAC claim women’s physical limitations (62% failing push-ups) and false accusations disrupt missions, while Poppy’s documentary What’s In It for Men critiques systemic exploitation of men, linking 74% of divorces to women-initiated cases and $200K custody battles. Their broader message: modern policies marginalize men, threatening military cohesion and societal stability. [Automatically generated summary]

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All YouTube guidelines.
So today is Memorial Day and thank you so much to all of the men that have sacrificed their lives for the safety and the security of this country.
On this channel, we do respect the military over here and I'll always say that the military is a man's world full of jobs for men.
Men also accept hierarchy and authority much better than women.
And the fact is that so many women are in our military really is the scariest thing to me.
I thought the goal of the military was to win wars, to be an effective fighting force.
So how can the military effectively fight when almost one in four soldiers are held to a standard that's lower than the rest?
Because currently women make up 17.7% of our military.
The Air Force has the highest percentage of women at 24.1% with the Navy at a close 21.3%.
Has letting women into the military been a benefit?
I really would argue that it has not.
Women don't fight in combat and they still don't do the dirty jobs that men do.
It's sad that a woman that is a secretary in the military gets paid the same as a man who has to rifle into combat.
And it's gotten even worse in modern times with women in the military and social media.
We're finally able to see how much less capable women are in the military than men.
Social media and feminism has military women acting like complete hoes on social media.
Why do we see female soldiers dancing like strippers in their military uniforms?
So that's what we're going to talk about today is women in the military.
Looks like the website still isn't going.
You guys, you might have to double check that the key is the same because it doesn't look like it's going.
Let's make sure the other ones are going.
I don't think either are going.
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What?
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We're on rumble now.
Yeah, I don't think YouTube's going, though.
the yeah it's the YouTube's not going let me see if I can make it go live on YouTube
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Cool.
I think we're going.
All right, what up, guys?
Welcome to another episode of Pearl Daily here on the Audacity Network.
Sorry for the late.
We had some tech issues.
All right.
So today, happy Memorial Day weekend.
Welcome to another episode of Pearl Daily.
So whether you're tinkering with yourself, today is Memorial Day, so thank you guys very much for all the men.
You know, Harbor Freight.
For the security.
And you can be confident knowing that at Harbor Freight.
On this channel, we do respect the military over here.
We work just as hard as you do.
Because the only thing that's more satisfying than a job well done is a job well done, well under budget.
Whatever you do, do it for less at Harbor Freight.
Okay.
For the security.
And you can be confident knowing that at Harbor Freight.
Okay, now it's gone.
All right, I think we're back.
You're all good.
All right, what up, guys?
Thanks for bearing with us here.
You know how it is.
Please like the video on your way in.
So, as I was saying, today, Happy Memorial Day, we're talking about women in the military.
Now, I never really understood why women try to be a man at things that we clearly can't do like men can.
But I do want to say thank you to all the men who have served and sacrificed their lives for the safety and security of this country.
On this channel, we do respect the military over here, and I will say that the military is a man's world full of jobs for men.
Men are stronger, faster, they have a quicker response time, and they get injured less than women.
Men also accept hierarchy and authority better than women.
And the fact is that so many women in our military, there are very many, there are lots of women in the military now, and I really think that's scary.
That's scary to me.
Because I thought the goal of the military was to win wars and effectively fight.
But how can the military be an effective fighting force when almost one in four soldiers have a lower standard than the rest?
Women currently make up 17.7% of the military with the Air Force.
God help us.
But not all women, not all, has the highest percentage of women at 24%, with the Navy at 21%.
And has letting women into the military been a benefit?
I would argue not.
Women don't fight in combat and they still don't do the dirty jobs that men do.
And it's sad that a woman that is secretly in the military or that's a secretary in the military gets paid the same as a man that is to carry a rifle into combat.
And it's gotten even worse in modern times with women in the military and social media.
We have been able to see how much less capable women are in the military than men.
Social media and feminism has military women acting like complete whores on social media.
Why do we see female soldiers dancing like strippers in military uniforms?
I don't know.
We just really can't help ourselves.
So that's what we're going to talk about today: women in the military.
So here are some women talking about basic training.
Now, we're just going to smash the patriarchy, as you can see, and let's see what they say about the grit and the toughness that they're putting in.
All right.
Six thing they don't tell you about basic training.
You don't do shit.
And when you are doing shit, you're not doing shit.
You're not.
No PT in the morning.
When you go to the gun range, guess what?
You're going to shoot for 30 seconds and then you're going to sit there all day for 10 hours and look in the fucking sky.
And you better hope and pray you don't fall asleep.
Another thing is, I didn't know I was going to shit the way I do.
Every chance I get, I'm in that bathroom.
Why would they say that on the internet?
Can you imagine this happening in corporate America?
Complaining about the food?
That's what we're really good at.
We're really good at complaining.
Truly.
And I ain't gonna lie.
I love shit and it gives me time to think.
But damn.
I don't remember the last time I pissed.
You are going to eat.
And if you think you're not going to eat, you're going to get fucked up for not eating.
Because their sole purpose is to make your back big so that they can talk shit about how big your back is.
Now I knew it was going to get smoked, but I didn't know my arms was going to be like Serena Williams.
I've been in a pro position for like hours.
When I get in that dress, yeah, I'm going to look like Ho.
So get ready for your guns.
Shit.
The first 72 hours are bullshit.
But after the 72 hours, it's kind of fun.
Low-key.
I'm not going to lie.
I had a good time.
Little bit.
I didn't know that sometimes your battle buddies' draws is going to be tangible.
Listen, when they tell you, my God.
Laundry rooms, they weren't.
I promise they weren't.
Make sure you put them in the dryer.
Make sure they fully dry.
The rules still apply the way they did at home.
No, no crunchy draws, no tangy draws.
Wash them because I think I done smelled the worst of the worst.
They don't wash their ass.
This is so unprofessional.
This is who we have representing the military.
Now we have, as you know, women take our jobs like very seriously.
I got to turn the sound off because of copyright.
So obviously, when we make videos about doing work, we're not going to focus on our looks.
We're not going to focus on our outfit of the day.
We're going to focus on the job, right?
I'm going to stop it.
We're not going to do that.
That would be so unprofessional to just, you know, put if the military, if she's working so hard, why does she need a full face of makeup?
Do you know what I mean?
Aren't you there to serve the country, not serve looks?
Oh my gosh.
and then we'll put in, yeah.
All right.
Let's see who's next.
We got military women dancing in uniform.
We got to turn off the sound here.
Yeah.
So now we got, let's see.
I'm sure it'll be a professional, like military dance.
Oh my God.
She's shaking ass.
Oh my God.
She's shaking ass in uniform.
This is what our tax dollars are going towards.
Oh my God.
All right, let's see what's next.
Oh my God, they're shaking ass too.
Why would that?
Oh my gosh.
Next, we got she's for real.
I know you guys are thinking wood, but you guys are missing the point.
This is very unprofessional.
This is not a very professional.
Stop thinking.
I know what you guys are thinking, all right?
Stop it.
Stop.
Don't ask what her ad is.
Stop it.
Let me make sure the website's going.
Okay, the website still is not going, guys.
So, okay, let's see what this lady says.
I'm working on it.
Oh, I gotta turn off the sound.
She's still shaking ass.
Oh my God.
Do you know, it's like, we're like, respect us.
We'll say, respect us and stop harassing us at work.
And then it's us at work.
We're like, you perverts.
Then we post stuff.
It's the audacity, man.
All right.
So now there's a study that came out.
We have the results this morning of a one of us.
There's a study that came out that pointed out the obvious that women are at a disadvantage in combat.
I don't know why we needed a study to tell you that.
I could have just went to any gym and figured that out, but hey.
A kind Marine Corps experiment that will help determine the future of women in combat.
The study compared men and women fighting side by side.
The final report released yesterday says men performed significantly better and got hurt less often.
Jan Crawford is in Washington with a story.
Jen, good morning.
Well, good morning.
You know, we spent several days in the California desert back in March watching this experiment, talking to the men and women who volunteered, and now the results are in.
And for those arguing that women should be able to perform all the same combat jobs as the men, the news is discouraging.
It was as close to war as you could get.
An unprecedented scientific study.
Men and women enlisted Marines side by side for months of simulated battle.
Six.
And throughout, researchers watched and recorded their performance to help determine what impact women would have on combat.
Even then, the women realized they were at a disadvantage.
We discovered water is wet, the sky is blue.
Women can't do what men can do.
It's not that we can't carry the weight, we can carry the weight, but it's the pace, especially when we're matched up with the males.
You're looking at our size, and we have males that are almost six foot with longer strides, and it's hard to catch up with.
I like how she's saying it's the strides and not the strength.
I'm six foot.
I can't do anything against a six-foot guy.
Then keep up with him.
That is what the results show.
In almost every area, the all-male units performed significantly better than those with both men and women Marines.
The men were faster in each tactical movement, had better accuracy, and were quicker.
They registered more hits on target and had a noticeable difference in their performance of overcoming obstacles and evacuating casualties.
The Marines commissioned the study after then Defense Secretary Leon Panetta in 2013 ordered the military to open all combat jobs to women.
We must open up service opportunities for women as fully as possible.
Most branches are ready to comply.
Just last month, two women passed the Army's toughest test to become Army Rangers.
We can handle things physically and mentally on the same level as men, and that we can deal with the same stresses and training that the men can.
The women rangers said the standards should not be lowered.
When the Marines we talked to agreed, they told us few would want these jobs.
But if there is just one who can do it, she should get the chance.
It takes a special person, a special drive, a special mindset, a special heart to do this.
There's not many of us.
And it goes the same way for the men.
Now, the Marines will make a decision sometime this fall on whether they will seek an exception that would allow them to keep units like the infantry, all men.
Nora?
Be interesting to watch as this moves forward.
I think she said it about special mindset and heart, regardless, men or women.
It's tough.
I agree.
Jan, thanks again.
We have the yeah.
Do you know what's crazy?
There is a study that came out that said women speak like 10,000 words more a day than men.
And it's like academia always comes after common sense by like 20 years.
You could have asked any husband, who talks more, you or your wife?
And he would have given you the answer, right?
But, you know, they put out these studies to tell us the sky is blue, water is wet.
Okay, so next we're going to talk about a former Bragg soldier pleads to the killing of another soldier in Fayetteville in 2021.
A former Fort Briggs soldier was emotional Wednesday in a Cumberland County courtroom as she apologized for shooting and killing another female soldier.
She was found sitting outside her ex-boyfriend's home in 2021.
I am truly sorry from the bottom of my heart.
So sorry.
A tearful Tiara Vinson, 28, said as she pleaded guilty to second-degree murder for fatally shooting Keelia Olivia Horton, 22.
If I could go back and do it over again, I would have handled things differently.
According to the assistant director attorney Kara Hodge, on Wednesday, at Wednesday's plea hearing, Vinson, who was pregnant with her ex-boyfriend's child, went to the house of Ferdinand Drive on May 7th to discuss an abortion with him.
The prosecutor said that's when Vinson arrived.
She shot Horton after finding her sitting in the driver's seat of a car in the driveway.
Horton was pronounced dead at the hospital.
Wow.
Some of the residents in the West Fayetteville neighborhood of single-family homes witnessed the slaying.
One woman who was washing her windows at the time told 911 that Horton had just pulled into the driveway that Vinson drove up, got up, and shot her, according to the autopsy report.
The mother of two was hit five times, once in the neck, once in the left arm, twice in the torso, and once in the chest.
The autopsy record record stated that Horton was in a new relationship with Vinson's ex-boyfriend.
Vinson's attorney said that the hearing at the hearing that Vinson had once lived at home but moved out when they broke up.
He said the ex-boyfriend, who was also a soldier, wanted Vinson to get an abortion.
But when she went to the clinic for a procedure, she was so upset the doctor was unable to proceed.
I wonder, did she have the kid?
On the day of the killing, Conlon said Vinson had gone to the Ferdell Drive home to tell the ex-boyfriend, if that's what will keep our relationship together, I will get the abortion.
The things women will do for Pookie, man.
Conlon said Vinson gave birth to the child while in custody in the killing.
Oh man, that's her following Vinson's emotional statement at the plea hearing.
Horton's cousin friend and co-worker, Lonnie, gave a victim impact statement speaking directly to Vinson, who sat feet away from her at the defense table.
Lenhart said her cousin was not a confrontational person and that Vinson's deadly decision left several children motherless.
Her four-year-old daughter still asks about her.
You should have left her alone.
At the time of the killing, Fort Briggs officials said Horton was a motor pool clerk assigned to the 525th Military Intelligence Brigade.
She was originally from Birmingham, Alabama, and joined the Army in June of 2017.
According to her obituary, she is survived by two young children, her parents, a grandmother, and the hosts of aunts, uncles, nieces, and nephews.
Sergeant Vinson, who hails from Norfolk, Virginia, was a parachute rigger assigned to the 3rd Special Forces Group.
She'd enlisted in January of 2014.
As part of the police, Superior Court Jug Gail Adams sentenced Vincent to, she only got 17 to 21 years.
Women can just commit crimes, man.
First-degree murder and discharging a weapon in an occupied vehicle.
All right, so this leads me to my question of the day.
So we're going to put a Zoom link in the chat and you guys can give your experience.
Do you think that women should be allowed in the military?
If so, what roles?
Do you think we should be allowed in combat roles?
And if you served in the military, I'd love to hear from you.
What was your experience with women?
So we're going to put them both chats.
Please call in.
Let me make sure it's in here.
And then we can talk about it.
But for me personally, I just don't know why as a woman you would want to be in the military.
I don't know what good that would really do for you, my opinion.
But call in.
Let me know.
Maybe I'm wrong.
Maybe women are instrumental in the military.
Just make sure it's pinned.
Yeah, there we go.
They're saying no in the chat.
Women shouldn't be allowed outside of the home.
James, how do you really?
We can't go to the grocery store?
For real?
All right, that's extreme even for me.
All right.
What?
We got three people in chat.
Okay, do you want to put in Doug MPA first?
Sure thing.
And then if you make him a mod, he usually, or like him on the Zoom, he usually lets people in and out because he knows the people calling in.
Got it.
Is he on or no?
He's in the call.
Doug MPA, how's it going?
I'm good.
Can you hear me?
Yeah, I can hear you.
Can you hear me?
I can.
We're back up and running today.
So what do you think?
Should women go ahead.
A camera in the Zoom is off.
So all I can see is an icon for approval.
I can't see you.
I don't know if that's going to look up.
Okay, so go ahead.
Do you think that women should be in the military at all?
I think that women should be in the military, but combat, definitely not.
No way.
I was thinking, I have two trains of thoughts on this.
Sometimes I think that we should let women do all the things that we think that men, like, you know, all the things we think we can do.
And just, it would be hilarious to watch.
Well, I used to, you know, I'm six foot three and I'm like 235 pounds, right?
And so a lot of times when I see female police officers, I just laugh.
You know what I'm saying?
But one of the things I like to watch now is body cam footage, you know, because remember, life is never going to be fair for men.
So feminism is women advocating for life to be as unfair for women as it is for men.
That's equality.
So it used to be just men getting body slammed by the police and karate shot.
Now you see women getting body slammed by the police too.
And you need women to do the pat downs and to arrest other women so the male police officers can protect themselves.
So I used to be like, women shouldn't be cops, but now the increase of crime weight for women, we need more women police officers to protect male cops when they have to pat down stuff.
And I think it's the same for the military.
If there's going to be female soldiers in the military, there has to be women to do law enforcement in certain roles and stuff like that to protect male soldiers.
But combat, no way.
No way.
Actually, I think I know what can fix the Zoom.
But could you, if you have any military experience with women, could you tell the audience?
Because I think I know what button it is to get the thing on.
Hold on.
I was not in the military.
But here on Pearl's channel, thank you to the men who've served this country.
We respect the military over here.
The men have to make the ultimate sacrifice and risk their lives for God, country, community, and family.
So thank you for all who have served.
And then, yeah, but I didn't serve the military.
My mother and father did, but I didn't.
But I've heard friends say that, what's the saying that women in the military are like a welfare check or something like that?
And also, I would think that women, even female soldiers, men have the expectation to put their lives on the line for their female soldiers.
There's still the expectation of chivalry.
And I think a lot of female soldiers would still think that their lives are more important than their male soldiers and see the male soldiers as expendable.
If you have any military experience, let me know it.
Call in and let me know if that was your experience with.
I've heard that military women just sleep with everybody.
That's what I've heard about military women.
I've heard they just throw it back with literally everyone.
Okay, we're going to let it our first caller.
I'm going to text my cousin to call in.
He's in the military.
Will, are you there?
Will, you're on mute.
Text my cousin.
Give me one second.
I'm listening.
Once Will going twice.
Aiden.
One more second.
Okay, Will.
I'm going to come back to you.
What is his name?
Hello.
Oh, yeah.
Will, are you there?
Yeah, I'm here.
Sorry.
Go ahead.
So, what do you think about the topic?
Do you think that women should be in the military?
Do you think that women should have combat roles?
Were you in the military?
And if you were, what was your experience?
Oh, yeah, I'm in the military.
I'm in the National Guard.
I recently got back from basic training.
I would say there are men that shouldn't be in the military, let alone women.
So that's my opinion with that.
And if there's going to be women in the military, they should be segregated because there's so much sexual harassment problems, always these accusations.
So that's kind of my opinion.
Was there any women in the military that you found helpful when you were in it?
Well, there were drill sergeant women.
Well, like women, like trainees?
Not really.
I mean, I would say they were more of a problem.
I felt like they were more, you know, you could talk to them, but I was kind of scared of them.
You know, I didn't want to get accused of sexual harassment.
That was my biggest fear.
Is that a common thing with soldiers in the military now?
Yeah, they got this thing called sharp.
Like, it's like I remember one of the Liam, can you?
I'm talking about.
Sorry, my kids.
But yeah, like we were sleeping in the middle of the night, and one of the guys went sleeping with a shirt on.
And there was a female drill sergeant.
They woke us all up because he wasn't wearing a shirt.
You know, like, he, like, the male drill sergeant, like, she should sharp you for what you did, you know, and it was just, oh, it was kind of crazy.
I saw this video where they have these male recruits and this stereotypical, you know, short 250-pound B-W drill sergeant was yelling at these guys.
I'm your mama now.
You're going to do what I say, blah, blah, blah.
And the only reason why she's getting away with it is they had two male drill sergeants behind her.
But she's dressing down these male soldiers.
But the only reason why she could do that is because these two big old huge male drill sergeants were behind her, ready to do something if anyone said anything back to her.
How sad is that?
Yeah.
Well, there's some that you have to take seriously because you got to obey them.
But there's others you didn't because if they don't smoke you, you're kind of like, okay, yell at me.
I got you.
I got what you're saying there.
And Pearl always says that one of the biggest differences between men and women is that men are benevolent and women aren't.
The fact that these guys would let a woman talk to them, like any of those guys could stop her talking like do they have a choice though?
I mean, like the consequences if they don't listen.
You know what I mean?
Yeah, but every person has their limit, though.
You know what I'm saying?
I mean, she has to, a female joke sergeant would still have to walk the line.
Understand what I'm saying?
Because most men have that limit.
And remember, men have the threat of violence between us, but we don't have that with a woman.
So, yeah, but I'm just thinking.
I would say you kind of got a high office.
Like, you're ordering all these men around.
They got like a little confidence booster.
Something out of it.
Someone in the chat says, I'm an active SOCOM operator.
Women should be encouraged to join reserves to roll in other teams that aren't combat roles where others are relying on their decision-making skills.
Yeah, I mean, they could do HR.
That's a common job.
I.T. there's a lot of jobs in the military, but infantry.
I don't think they're in the infantry, actually.
They're not in there.
Okay.
Well, thank you for calling in.
We'll call in anytime, okay?
Yeah.
Oh, thank you.
I'm a big fan.
Thank you.
Bye-bye.
Thanks for calling in.
If you see Terrence, I think he might be in the.
I'll look for him.
I don't know if he's there or not.
I just messaged him to come on.
Okay.
Next, we're going to have Nathan.
Nathan, are you there?
Nathan.
Nathan?
Nathan going once.
Nathan going twice.
All right.
I want to put him back in the waiting room.
And we're going to let in guys make sure to like the stream, please.
And hit that super chat button if you want to donate to the channel.
Mike, are you there?
Mike?
Yeah.
Hey, I'm here.
Hey, Mike.
Hey, Mike.
I can hear you.
How's it going?
It's good.
Yo, I was in the Marines like 15 years ago.
I was in Afghanistan.
And, well, let me say first, there was like one exception.
This chick was a powerlifter.
She was like outperforming some of the men.
But it's like 15% of women actually excel.
And I would say, you know, the inverse 15% of men are, you know, need to step it up.
But they're huge whores.
In Afghanistan, like, you're not allowed to have piercings, right?
But this chick had her titties pierced.
And she was showing the staff NCOs and shit.
And they were all about it.
But, yeah, there's a lot of – a guy I know married an Air Force chick.
They were both married and cheating on their spouses with each other.
It's crazy out there in like a combat zone where there's no supervision.
It's crazy.
Wait, so how do they get it in in a combat zone?
Be YouTube friendly, please.
How do they get it in?
I never engage in it, so I don't know.
But from what I hear, like they would go to the Air Force, they were all in on it.
Like there's like, I don't know how many in the Air Force, probably eight to a room.
We have like 16.
We have eight double bunks or eight single bunks, but just two in a bunk.
But they would clear the room and they would do like fucking group stuff.
It was like another dude, my friend, and two friggin Air Force chicks.
Dang, they were just all in the same room, huh?
I guess.
I wasn't there, you know.
They got to know each other real well.
They're married.
They have a kid now.
But yeah, in a combat zone, we weren't even in a combat MOS.
But like, it's crazy.
I wouldn't want to know what it's like outside the wire when there's like no MPs and shit like that.
It's crazy.
I'm no for women in the military at all.
Expand on that.
Why?
Well, one, the military is overbloated anyways.
But two, the sexual dynamic of the place changed.
When I first landed, it was all men and it was bro time.
Two chicks came in with a replacement unit.
We like overlapped units.
Two chicks came in with the East Coast people and the whole work environment changed.
The sergeants are all flexing because they're just trying to get a crumb, right?
They're trying to get a whiff.
So I don't want to say distractions.
It's not a distraction, but when there's a woman in the workplace.
It changes the dynamic.
Did you ever have it that like you couldn't speak as directly because there was women there?
I never, I wouldn't say that.
But I tell you what, though, when me and this chick got promoted to corporal and she said something and I had something else to say like in front of like junior Marines and she friggin she's like, let me talk to you outside.
It was like having a girlfriend, right?
But that's the only thing.
I never felt like I couldn't say what I want to say.
It was more, and they're all 18 too.
Like everybody enlists right out of high school generally.
There's exceptions in their 20s.
So like, what's a 21-year-old chick in the military going to do when there's a 90 to 10 ratio?
Like, what do you think?
Did you know that there are so many young women joining the military, there's actually a wait list for a lot of MOSs because so many women are trying to join the military.
Now, why do you think that would be?
The college benefits are really good.
100% true.
100%.
Because over here, we always say that modern women are going to keep going to these high-priced institutions to get degrees that nobody cares about, to get jobs that aren't going to make them any money.
Women are finally waking up to see that they're getting crushed by student loan debt because 70% of the debt of the student loan debt is women.
So they're still going to go.
They're just going to use tax dollars to do it.
And also, they can get all the benefits of a soldier never having to go into a combat zone.
Well, not to get too sidetracked, but they'll also offer out-I don't know if it's citizenships or just green cards, but there's people from American territories that will enlist in the military just for those benefits, too.
So it's, I would rather give my tax benefits to at least American women personally.
I'm not a sexist, I just am a realist.
Okay, cool.
Cool.
Well, thanks for calling in, Mike.
Really appreciate your viewpoint, Michael.
Call in anytime.
Yeah, please call in anytime.
All right.
Thanks.
See you guys.
See ya.
Hey, I'm going to let in Jet Village.
Jet Village.
Yeah, go ahead.
Yeah, so I did eight years in the National Guard.
I was in tanks, so I was in a combat arms position.
So there were no women.
But when I went to boot camp, I went to Fort Knox, Kentucky.
And there were a couple units there that had women, had women drill sergeants.
And the women drill sergeants are the worst because they feel like they have to prove something.
They have a trip on their shoulder.
So they go in a little harder because they have to command that respect, you know, because they don't get it, you know, naturally.
It's just not going to happen.
So I think that women should only be in certain positions, obviously, not in combat.
We didn't have them in tanks.
I can tell you that.
But they were like in positions like logistics, you know, things like that, truck drivers, you know, just to help out with combat armed positions.
They were in the kitchens, obviously, stuff like that.
You know, but that's about it.
Did you ever have a female Joe Sergeant?
I mean, I've encountered like one or two just like walking around on space, but it, I mean, it wasn't an issue.
Because, like I said, I wasn't a part of their unit, so it wasn't like they could say anything to me.
You know, I wasn't in their unit.
So did you ever have any male friends that had a female Joe Sergeant?
And what'd they say about having to have a female Joe Sergeant?
It is a different dynamic.
Well, I know you said command respect, but what are the guy soldiers think about having to get bossed around by a female Joe Sergeant?
I can say most of them did not like it.
Most of them hated it.
You know, of course, you know, things.
They didn't feel like they should be bossed around by, you know, a woman, a woman drill sergeant, especially a woman drill sergeant that doesn't have the experience that they should have.
You know, they're kind of just chewed into that position because of DEI or something.
Believe it or not, DEI does happen in the military.
So that's more of the reason why they don't get the respect, you know, is because they're kind of just thrown in there and they're thrown into positions that they shouldn't be in.
You know, so are they harsh?
Like you said they feel like they have something to prove.
What do they do like specifically?
Like, are they do they yell more or what do they do?
Oh, yeah, they'll they will come down on you harder than they would like the female soldiers, obviously.
Uh, make you do more push-ups, you know.
Um, that's pretty much the worst of it.
I heard, you know, obviously take you out, roll you out, but that's just typical stuff.
That's you know, you're gonna get that from just about any drill sergeant.
But um, the thing with the female soldiers is or the female drill sergeants is like I said, they just, especially with the male, they're working alongside the male drill sergeant, so they don't get that same respect.
So, that's why they feel like they have to go harder or push harder or discipline harder than the male drill sergeants do.
It's just that's just how it is, you know.
That's just how it is.
Have you ever had a gym teacher in school that was fat, or or have you seen a fat personal trainer?
Yeah, that's what it is.
Yeah, pretty much, yeah.
Honestly, if you have a personal trainer or a gym teacher who you know can't do push-ups or can't run or anything like that, like why are you gonna respect them?
And most female soldiers can't physically do what the men can do, and honestly, because I was talking to one of my female friends about this, she's pretty high up for one for this company, and she's understanding why young boys don't look at women as like leaders and stuff.
And I said, Because us men, from women who were little, we know that if there's if there's four men and two women on a boat and the boat is sinking, and there's a lifeboat with two spots on it, the women get to get on the lifeboat, and the men have to try to survive.
That's what it boils down to.
Yeah, that's true.
No, naturally, um, yeah, we were raised, you know, especially me.
I know, like, I got a strong father, a very strong father, and we all he leads and he leads by example.
So, even when I was in boot camp, you know, and I've seen it, it's the same thing.
No, us men, we lead, that's you know, and that's just all to it.
Yeah, you have a female sergeant yelling and screaming at you, but then if something's too heavy for her to lift, hey, can you lift this for me?
It's like, wait, hold up a second, you know what I'm saying?
Do you know what?
I think the men should get the lifeboats.
I really you hear about how, like, on the Titanic, a billionaire went like you're telling me if it's Trump or Melania, we're really not saving Trump.
There was a billionaire that died in Titanic.
I'm like, You really you guys put like we're gonna put a kid over the billionaire?
Like, I'm not trying to like just like the old woman, she already had like she lived her life, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Um, the RMAC says women have a special get out of combat card that no one talks about.
Yep, it's called getting pregnant, right?
Exactly, yeah.
We need the women to have kids, that's that's it.
All right, Jeb Bill.
Thanks for calling in.
I really appreciate it.
All right, thanks, guys.
Call anytime.
I think Terrence is on the line.
Yeah, I see him.
I'll bring him in.
He's connecting audio.
Okay.
Make sure to like the stream.
Yeah, subscribe if you haven't already.
We are almost to 2 million.
We're like the 3,500 away.
So, I know we've been if you haven't already.
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His audio is connecting, Terrence.
Your audio is connected.
There it is.
Are you there?
Terrence, are you there?
I can see his sound's connected.
I'm here.
Woo!
Hey, Terrence, how are you?
I'm doing good.
Just chilling.
What do you think about women in the military?
It's a bad idea.
Can you tell them your military experience for those that don't know?
I was in from 1986 to 2018 across three wars.
I was the infantry soldier, airborne paratrooper, airborne ranger, forged in the fires of the regiment in a green beret.
The last 10, 12 years of my career, I was civil affairs and Intel analyst.
And was there one woman that you thought was a good soldier in your whole time there that was helpful?
Yeah, you know, my idea between a good soldier and a bad soldier is simply this.
A good soldier will do what you will try to do what you tell them to do.
They don't have to always succeed.
You know, it just is what it is.
Bad soldiers don't even try.
And I can't stand those sons of bitches.
So, and, you know, I mean, towards the end of my career, I mean, I was the acting first sergeant, a team sergeant, training sergeant.
I worked in operations.
And I filled out somewhere between 12 and 18 separation packets on a bunch of these female soldiers who were just constantly pregnant, failing height and weight, failing PT, and none of them got thrown out.
But the male soldiers, you have to do a separation packet once you fail.
I think it's two or three PT tests in a row or height and weight or whatever.
And those guys were out within 120 days.
And on top of that, I lost a lot of good NCOs who just got out of the army because they were basically passed up for promotion.
And a lot of these guys, they had EIB, CIB, which is a combat infantryman badge, airborne wings, air assault badges, two or three tours of combat.
And literally, some of these women were barely passing PT.
We're talking 62% on the push-up, 62% on the sit-ups, 62% on the run, which is pathetic.
It's literally a D-plus average.
And these women were getting promoted above these guys, and they just got out of the service.
And you were talking about the guy before you was talking about sexual harassment and sexual assault and all that bullshit.
All of, like, in my entire 33 years, I've heard of two actual beat-down rapes, and those guys should be buried under the jail.
I have no sympathy for those guys.
But a lot of these women, they sleep with their upper chain of command or NCOs above them so that they could go, you know, they want to have an easier time or what have you.
And the minute they get busted, you know, the dudes get crucified.
The woman gets a pass every single time.
It's such bullshit.
Well, don't they go further than that and say she was like coerced or something?
Oh, yeah.
All of the sympathy goes to the female soldier and the other dudes just get crucified.
So, I mean, when I was my last 12 years and I had, you know, females in my unit, I would not allow them to come into my office to speak to me.
If they wanted to talk to me, I need to have at least one female NCO there or we did it in the conference room that had mirrors or windows.
So they couldn't really hear what you're saying.
But, you know, everyone can see what's going on.
I did keep a nanny cam in my office that saved my career because I had a first loot female first lieutenant try some bullshit, made some accusations.
And I had to, you know, they're going to run me up the flagpole.
They already give me the negative counseling.
You know, they're, you know, and the counseling had all these recommendations like, you know, remove from my position.
You know, it was just bad.
I went back and I burned the CD.
I came in.
I put it in the battalion commander's laptop.
She saw it.
And all of a sudden, everyone wants to backpedal.
And I'm like, yeah, and I'm like, no, no, you gave me the counseling.
And this is going all the way to the top.
I'm sending it to the Department of Defense and my senator.
You guys are going down.
Fuck you all.
Damn.
So, yeah.
Did they get fired or did anything happen?
Oh, yeah.
That first lieutenant got reassigned somewhere in Illinois and then later she didn't make a promotion to captain.
The battalion commander, I filed five or six IG complaints on her because she was totally incompetent.
And she was running the unit like a knitting circle.
Everything was emotional decisions.
It was just a shit shit show.
Absolutely.
How many, and is it pretty typical for the women to just get like passed around in the military?
Oh, you're talking about mattress backs?
To be honest, that does happen.
You know, I tried to talk a lot of guys, you know, because I was running, I was AGR for an Army Reserve unit, and we had like 170 soldiers, three company or two companies at the time.
And I was hearing all of this craziness that was going on at the hotel rooms where the BAQ where they stayed during drill.
And I literally had to pull all of the male soldiers into a room.
And I said, listen, bro, if I hear any more of this, I'm going to burn you to the ground because you're going to ruin your goddamn career, possibly ruin your life.
And then it's going to negatively reflect on me.
And I'm not having that.
But yeah, it happened.
Yeah, that's what I've heard.
I've heard they like.
I've heard they like to.
That's crazy, though.
I think you've told me that story before, the nanny cam.
So you would have lost your whole career if you didn't have that.
Yes, I would have lost my pension.
I would have lost everything.
Holy shit.
Did you see anybody lose everything because they did something like that?
How many men did you see that happen to in your 30s?
Like, roughly.
Well, first of all, the women just make an accusation, right?
And then there's an EO complaint or an IG complaint, and they have to investigate that.
That takes anywhere from six months to 18 months.
And while that's going on, you're flagged for all positive, you know, you can't go to school.
There's a lot of stuff you can't do.
A lot of guys, if it goes more than 18 months, a lot of these guys can't re-enlist and they're out of the service.
So it's like an indirect way to just get these guys out of the service, despite the fact they're completely innocent.
And they just basically say, oh, it's unfounded.
Instead of like busting these women to E1 and running them out of the service, they get a free pass.
They make these accusations.
They just get free pass after free pass after free pass.
And it's really aggravating.
Yeah.
Doug MPA, you got any questions for him?
So I know that the personal lives of female police are just a mess.
Is that the same with female soldiers?
Because I know you say they sleep around, but what about the ones that actually get married, try to have kids?
How does it affect the female?
Because we're stopping.
Don't date female soldiers, guys.
Don't do it.
But so why would you recommend to not date a female soldier?
And then what are their personal lives like when they actually try to have like a relationship or a marriage?
Well, first of all, that almost never works out.
These women, you know, and it's the same thing for male soldiers trying to get married, have relationships.
You know, the career gets in the way.
The job is very anti-marriage.
And, you know, it jacks up men just as it does women.
Military people get married a lot for the job being in.
Oh, yeah.
I got off.
Do you guys do it every like, like you guys get in at 18 and you're married six months later?
Yeah, that happened a lot.
I myself, I didn't get married until I was like 30, 31.
Yeah.
But yeah, I saw a guy.
And the main reason that happens is these guys come into the service.
They literally left their house with their mother and then they want to have that home feeling again.
So they get married really quick and it's just an absolute shit show.
These women pull a pin on the fat grenade.
They just get all stupid.
And these guys get ruined by it, you know?
Absolutely ruined.
And another thing, I've seen so many soldiers get out of the service because they got divorced and she took the kids back to whatever state she came from.
And then the guy gets out to chase his kids.
So we're, you know, we're always retraining guys to fill these positions when, you know, if we had a JAG Corps that defended soldiers in divorce, you could probably retain a lot more soldiers and save more DOD money in training and replacing these guys.
I remember back after 9-11 when that whole thing popped off and there's a surge in military recruitment.
And a bunch of my friends joined the military.
And before they got deployed to the sandbox, they all found some chicken and got married real fast just to have my girl back home, my wife back home.
I'm talking, these guys would marry, would meet a girl and like six months in, she would marry the chick.
Especially when they found out they were getting deployed.
They're like, I'm going to get married before I get deployed.
It's like, come on, man.
Are you serious?
Yeah.
Now, I did a couple of comedy lectures.
I did one on deploy a hoy where I tell these soldiers, I literally, it's like an senior NCO class and how to not get screwed over when you deploy.
And, you know, and then I made administrative violence one and two to try to educate these young guys.
But a lot of these young guys, they're thinking with the wrong head.
There's not a lot of nerve endings there.
They're not making rational decisions.
There's no depth perception when you have one eye in the top of your head where all the bad decisions come out.
It's true.
100% true.
Yeah.
It is just an absolute.
And I know the Ranger school, the women that graduated Ranger School.
I had a lieutenant colonel, a captain, promotable, and then some E6s and E7s contact me on the down low and tell me the deal about that whole thing.
And they were trying to push that through.
And I think that was Obama towards the end of his, you know, abomination bullshit.
But you can't tell me a 38-year-old single mother of two made it through Ranger school, not by the standard that I went through.
And that school almost broke me.
I literally watched guys walk until they had compound fractures in their legs.
You know, we had one guy die of heat stroke.
No way.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Well, no, it happens.
Listen, if nobody dies in training, you're not training hard enough.
That's just the way it goes.
And what I heard from these officers and NCOs is these women in Ranger school were sent to the rear for four hours every three days to do personal hygiene.
They were allowed to recycle the phases multiple times.
They removed a lot of stuff from the school that would normally get people hurt.
They took it out so these women would not get hurt, like hand-to-hand combat.
Like when I did hand-to-hand combat in Ranger school, I was kicked in the temple and I had to get four stitches in my head.
And they literally sewed me up on the side of the PT pit and then sent me back in there.
That's the kind of training you're doing.
There's actually a documentary on that whole thing.
And these politicians are like, you will pass these women through Ranger School.
You will do it.
I know.
And listen.
They went into the situation knowing that they would eventually pass.
Correct.
So they would show up and they did just enough.
And they could barely pass or maybe do like 70%.
They pass them anyway.
And here's another thing these women don't seem to understand is if you want to perform at those higher level RPMs that men can do, it is damaging to their bodies.
A lot of these women are sterilized for the rest of their goddamn life because they wanted to go play with the men.
It physically wrecks them.
Yep.
30% of female soldiers experience infertility.
No way.
I didn't know it was that high.
Holy crap.
Yeah.
It's no joke.
It's no joke.
The women have seven times the knee injuries.
You know, torn ACLs, MCLs, as men.
Back injuries, the whole deal.
And a couple occasions when I was running land navigation when I was in civil affairs, I had a couple female soldiers not make it back to the rally point by the index time.
And I had to go looking for these bitches in the woods and drag them back.
One of them was like, I'm just so lost.
I'm like, you were in the class.
I saw you do the math.
You know how the whole thing works.
And they just.
I mean, just keep going with it.
I can't believe they become infertile.
I did not know that.
Yeah.
It's like, what, 30%, 40%?
It's like, yeah, about 30 to 40% of them are infertile.
Some of them can recover it if they catch it in time.
But listen, you want to play around at the infantry standards.
It is, man, it is hard.
It's no joke.
And this is the general infantry standard.
You have to be able to do 12-mile road march, full combat gear, three hours or less.
Once you finish that road march, you should be able to dig a fighting position, arm pit deep to the tallest man.
Okay.
And the next morning, you might be required to fill in your foxhole, walk another 12 miles, and that pace can continue until you die, get wounded, or hostility stop, or they rotate you to the rear.
And women can probably do a 12-mile road march and keep up once, twice.
But if you're doing it day in and day out, the women don't recover like men because they don't have the magic elixir called testosterone.
Yeah.
And it wrecks them.
It really does.
Can you do me a favor, Terrence?
Yeah, what do you need?
My cousin's on the line.
Can you warn him about military women?
He just joined.
Okay.
Well, first of all, I mean, hold on.
He's not on.
It's Aiden.
I'll let him in.
Yeah, I'll let him in.
Here we go.
I want to hear this.
Go ahead.
Aiden, what's up, buddy?
I'm driving right now, so sorry for any lack of focus.
Aiden, are you trying to go in the military?
I'm currently in the military.
What do you do?
I'm a – my technology – like actual job name is Machinist Mate Nuclear.
Are you in the Navy?
I am.
Okay.
Well, I mean, I always recommend guys go in the Navy if they want to learn a trade.
I get it.
Are you planning to make your career out of it or what are you doing?
Yeah, I probably will.
How many years have you been in?
Just about two.
Two years.
Okay.
What rank are you?
I'm an E5.
So you just made the equivalent of sergeant after two, which is a good accomplishment.
I got you.
What was your rank when you came out of training?
E3.
Okay, and how long was your training?
Boot camp was 10 weeks.
Okay.
And then my A school was about three, two months.
And then I had two other schools after that, which were about six months each.
Okay.
So you spent about a year and a half in training?
Yes.
All right.
So a year and a half in training, and you've been on the job six months?
Not quite.
I'm reporting to my boat, Carl Vincent, in a few months.
All right.
So you got promoted to E5 basically because they're short people and they need the people.
Because an E5 is technically an NCO grade.
Yes, it is.
Okay.
So that's what happened.
And listen, you're going to show up there, and you're going to have to deal with some of these female leaders who are emotional.
And instead of focusing on mission completion and making your time hacks, they're going to pull bullshit on you like, oh, well, there's a process that you have to follow.
You know how many times I heard that?
I've heard that from virtually every female commander I've ever had.
Listen, I'm not the guy.
When you need something done, you call me the popster and I make it happen.
May I ask what branch you were in?
I was in the Army.
Army?
Yeah.
What was your job?
Well, I was an infantry soldier, an airborne paratrooper, airborne ranger, Green Beret, Intel Analyst, and then a civil affairs at the end.
Okay.
So I've been around the block a few times.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And I'm just going to be honest.
If you get a female commander or female NCO over you, you need to be on guard.
You cannot allow them to have any openings to put a knife in your back.
Because say you get everything is going good and you get six, you're six months out from re-enlisting, and all of a sudden somebody makes an accusation and there's an investigation and it takes more than six months.
Guess what?
You're out of the service.
Yes, that's actually happened to one person.
I just know.
So my advice, my advice is simply this.
Stay in, do your enlistment, right?
If you want to continue on, go in the Navy Reserve or go to the National Guard and focus on making actual money, stacking cash.
Because you don't want to be that guy who's been in the service 14 years and some false accusation and now you're a decade and a half of your life is flushed down the toilet.
Yeah, I think right now my plan is to do my contract and then go civilian sector of my job.
All right.
That's all you can do.
And listen, you know, you're going to see the world.
You'll probably catch V D once or twice in some port somewhere.
I'm just telling you, the way it works.
Women love the uniforms, you know.
I know.
They love the ribbons and the brass.
They hate the life.
Yeah, we're like, ooh, a uniform.
Listen, when I was, you know, 25 and younger, I was tearing it up.
They do.
And then I just got sick of it and I stopped dealing with their bullshit.
But that's actually how it went down.
Listen, you show up with a green beret on, women like, get wet.
That's the way it used to roll.
Yeah.
Well, I don't wear no green beret, but.
How old are you, Aiden?
I am 20.
I'm about to turn 21.
You are right in the dick-thinking zone, Aiden.
Yeah, bro.
Don't get married.
He's such a good kid, too.
Don't get married.
Don't have any kids until you're 35, man.
And no single mothers.
The worst base rats are the single moms hanging around the base, man.
Don't marry.
Don't get married.
And definitely.
I had a friend who made all the typical mistakes a lot of these younger soldiers made.
He went in a year into it.
He was 20, and he married a single mom who was 27, who had a kid when she was 17, right?
And so they're together for two years.
He gets off work.
He says, hey, honey, how you doing?
He goes upstairs to change his uniform.
He comes downstairs, and the police are on his front porch.
And this woman, his wife, is crying under the shoulder of this MP.
So then they're like, well, you have to go to the barracks because she said that you were, you know, she did a call against you.
So he packed up his stuff because, you know, you have to go to the barracks for 72 hours, right?
Packed up his stuff, and she cleaned out the house while he was in the barracks.
And then not only that, she divorced him when her son was 10, and he had to pay $500 a month in child support for eight years for a kid that wasn't even his.
Well, yeah.
Okay.
This is the way it works.
It's military and civilian.
All she's got to do is fool you for two years in one day that the child is yours, and you're on the hook for child support for the rest of the kids' teenage years.
That's right.
18 to 21 years.
That is slavery.
That is the actual definition of slavery.
And it's dished out all the time in divorce court.
I talked to probably 40 or 50 guys a year that has happened to.
And in the past 16 years, probably 700 to 1,000 guys.
Jesus.
Yeah, it's a cluster fuck.
And I myself, I am glad that men aren't getting married.
The marriage rates are 5.1 to 6.3 out of 1,000.
That is the lowest it has ever been since the Civil War when we started tracking that statistic.
Yep.
Yeah, there's no point.
There's no reason for a man to get married.
No, the juice is not worth the squeeze.
And the military still pushed his.
Because remember, the military wants you to get married because the odds of the children of a military family joining the military increase exponentially.
Actually, that used to be true, but the secret is out now.
Oh, is it really?
A lot of these guys who have been thrown out of the military on bullshit have told their families, don't go in the service.
And if you do, do one enlistment and get out for your GI Bill.
Do not stay in.
And they're not.
And like you're like, for instance, the recruiting numbers were really high after Trump got elected.
But what they're not telling you is they lowered the standard.
You're getting a lot of, you know, so-called substandard soldiers who couldn't get in because the standards were higher.
And they lower the soldiers.
I would agree with that.
From my experience, there's, at least in the last few years, there's some people that should not be in the military that are in the military.
I was like, PT standard-wise.
I knew a guy that could do 10 push-ups.
And just from that standard alone, I feel like, I mean, there's a lot of other standards, but some people can't do their job well.
And it affects more than just them, especially in my field, because we're working on nuclear reactors.
It's hard to mess up.
It's easy to mess up, but you can't mess up.
And some people are not as well equipped as they should be coming out of boot camp.
Well, listen, if you're screwing around with the nuclear reactor, you are literally messing with something that could sink the entire ship and bake everyone on that floor with radiation.
That is not a job that you want to have DEI hires doing.
I'm sorry.
So, yeah, I mean, we need to enforce the standards and, you know, bring in the highest quality people we can.
And the best way they're going to do that is you're going to have to get rid of these, the women.
I shouldn't say get rid of the women soldiers, but segregate them because it just causes, it's more trouble than it's worth.
Aiden, how have the women been doing?
Like, because I know when I FaceTimed you the one time, there was like a couple women in your unit or with your friends and whatever.
Do they ever hold you guys back?
Or do you like notice a difference?
Not really.
I mean, most of the women in the nuclear field are pretty smart, like all professional for the most part.
I mean, you have some outliers that are definitely like, I've seen some get kicked out, but I've also seen an equal number of guys get kicked out.
But there's a it's it's hard to say with numbers, but I would say most of the time in my field, they're all coming to learn.
Like they have the right mindset.
At least that's the ones I'm around.
They all have the right mindset and they want to learn.
They want to be there to learn and to work.
So I haven't seen them hold us back, or at least from my, like, I'm not on a ship right now, so I can't say on like a big scheme.
I've only done work on like training ships.
So, but from my experience, not as much as I expected.
Cool.
I don't know.
I mean, I've I'm going to be honest, 85% of the women that were in civil affairs shouldn't have been there.
You could not depend on them.
You had to, you know, when you told them to do stuff, there was a greater than likely chance that it wouldn't be done at all.
And you always had to, you know, have other people there and waste resources and time to check behind them.
And I just, it just bothered the crap out of me.
How would you see?
I have another question.
How would you see women soldiers treat other women soldiers?
I always say that women can't stand each other, man.
Oh, that's absolutely correct.
They hate each other.
Yeah, like 50% of women polls say that they'd rather work for a man than a woman.
90% of paralegals say that they'd rather work for a male attorney than a female boss, a female attorney.
And most medical assistants say they'd rather work for a male doctor than a female doctor.
And it's the same thing in the military.
I've had, let's see, one really good female commander, but she had four brothers.
All right, so she was a class on herself.
The other two female commanders, their hearts were in the right place.
If your heart's in the right place, I will move mountains for you and I will make you successful.
And what I mean by heart in the right place is they don't show up and just punch the ticket just to get it over with, get their command time, and then go up the chain.
They cared about the soldiers.
They wanted soldiers to succeed.
They went to bat for their soldiers to make sure they were squared away or protect them from other commands.
Because I have seen female commanders go after other soldiers and other units because I don't even know why.
Maybe it's rumor control or something.
That's another thing women do really well.
They are really good at rumor control as in a bad way.
Do you think that's because of mentorship?
Like, as they were making their ranks, they had a bad mentor that kind of put like this bad bug in their ear.
Or do you think that's just there?
Well, women have show up here on this universe with the base programming.
Yeah.
You know, and they're highly social creatures.
They need to have the society to survive.
And, you know, they have no problem taking shortcuts, rumor control, assassinating your character.
I mean, I've had two EO complaints just for making women meet the standard.
You know, do you want to make this like a panel show?
We can bring in a couple more people.
Sure.
That's fine.
I don't care.
Sure.
Okay.
So I'll bring in OMAC.
I saw him in the chat.
And then you bring in AJ.
And then we'll bring in Clue because he is a friend of the channel.
Let's go.
So we'll start with OMAC.
How are you doing, buddy?
OMAC?
OMAC.
Going once.
Going twice.
I'm going to put you back in the waiting room.
OMAC.
Also, guys, like the video.
Let's try to get 500 likes on this.
I wasn't talking to you, Terrence.
AJ, what's up, buddy?
How's it going?
AJ?
See, you said his name?
Hey, Clue.
Clue, are you there?
Clue.
Can you hear me now?
Yeah.
Yeah, we can hear you.
What's up, guys?
Hey, are you from a military?
No, no, but, you know, I have a lot of military friends and family and man chicks in the military are basically a one-legged man in a butt-kicking contest.
You know what I'm saying?
You're useless.
And like, there's an old clip from Fox News, like, in 2000.
Can you hear me?
Hello?
Can you hear me?
Oh, sorry.
Go ahead.
Yeah, we can hear you.
This is the first time I'm using Zoom.
I'm sorry.
Go ahead.
Adrian, go ahead.
There's an old clip that you guys can find of this chick who was an officer in the Marine Corps, and she was arguing against women being in combat because she tried and she ended up being sterile and having permanent injuries and breaking down.
So, and she had made a point that all these chicks that are trying to be in combat have never ever gone through the training.
She was saying that she's only done a fraction of what the male Marines do.
So she was advocating against women being in combat and combat roles.
And she even said in the interview that women are actually promoted at the same rates because the feminists argue that women don't get the right promotions because they're not in combat.
So think about how insane that is.
We have a military where men and women get paid the same, even though the women have a lower standards to get in.
They have access to all the same training, all the same promotions, and they will never really have to go on the combat and claim that they're equal and that it's an effective fighting force.
It's just absolute foolishness.
You know what I mean?
I don't think that women should be in the military at all, personally, you know, or police officers or firefighters.
It's just a liability, you know?
It is.
Hey, I actually think that they can be assistants in all of those jobs and do the front desk.
So not even them because remember back in the 1900s in the early 1900s, even secretaries were guys.
Remember who was the guy from the Christmas story with Scrooge?
Remember, he was Scrooge's like they can like get coffee or something.
Yeah, but even they still cause discord.
Yeah, yeah.
Or there was a guy that I know, he was a Marine.
In his first year in the Marines, there was this one girl.
She was a barracks bunny, and she was letting all these dudes smash.
And my one friend was in his room chilling.
And his friend goes, Hey, yo, man, we're going to go to What's Your Name's Room.
And they're going to come on ride a train and ride it.
You know what I'm saying?
He said no, he didn't go.
You know, all eight guys that showed up to that room, she said an SA charge.
All of them got put in jail and all of them got discharged.
Holy shit.
You know, okay.
Clue, are you there?
Uh, yes, I'm here.
Can you hear me?
What do you think about women in the military, buddy?
No, no, because when the shit hits the fan, we're built as men, we're built to handle a sudden change in things.
We got to switch over to this.
Women, they, they, they panic in these situations.
I don't think they would be good on the front lines or in combat.
No, they can help us behind the scenes.
I think Pearl mentioned that.
They can help us behind the scenes, but actually on the field, hell no.
Nope, The Marine Corps ran the test.
You guys pull up the article.
They actually ran mixed units against an all-male unit.
And mixed units, they failed and everything.
And guys, remember that it's the intangibles.
Not only are the women not as strong, they don't have the, they couldn't huck with the packs for long enough.
So they were getting injured.
They were hurting their ankles and knees.
They were getting tired and slowing the units down, right?
Like they were a complete liability.
Exactly.
They had 50-50 men and then an all-male unit.
And the all-in-lawing unit beat them in everything.
And now they want Transformers in the...
Oh, don't do this, don't.
Don't do this.
Don't do this.
Please don't do this.
Think about it.
Do you ever think that maybe we should just let women try to do these roles so they can fail and maybe stop asking?
All they really got to do.
But would that hurt the government, though?
The United States if we do that.
All they really need to do is enforce one standard for combat.
Don't make two standards, one for male, one for female, just one.
Yes, I agree.
That's what the rest of the rest of the world does because you see that mixed combat, you know, the male unit versus the mixed combat unit, but that's how combat would go against any other nation in the West.
Yeah, and it's crazy because they wouldn't have a person who's bipolar or a person that has any type of like other mental disorder hold a gun or like fly a plane, but then they'll let transform formers in the military.
Like, why?
No, God.
Well, they're non-deployable.
Oh, I didn't know that.
Okay.
Yeah.
You can't send those guys forward to do combat when they have to take all of those drugs every single day.
Yeah.
And then if they get the surgery, they got to ran the banana up the wound to keep it open.
You know, listen.
That's the truth.
It's the truth.
That's too real.
China and Russia, and then they're just laughing.
They're laughing.
You know what I mean?
Because I would say the last like 14 years, our military has really gone away from focusing on being effective and deadly.
You know what I mean?
And whereas all of our enemies and people just don't like the fact that we have them are just looking and just saying, this is the best time for them to strategize against our military.
It's insane.
It doesn't make any sense.
So if I'm shot and the only person around is the female officer, I'm going to expect her to carry me to the medevac.
Not going to have to.
Will that happen?
Yeah, you're crawling, man.
No.
When I was in Iraq.
You're done.
You're crawling or dying.
Here's go ahead.
When I was in Iraq in 04, I got assigned some shit-ass duty and I needed a truck on a daily basis.
And they assigned me this female E4.
And I literally went to the Sergeant Major and I'm like, I don't want her.
I'm going to pick my own driver.
And he's like, why?
I go, because she's a female.
The sergeant major was like, hey, you need to be careful with that.
I'm like, no, I'm a 200-pound man with my full kit on.
I'm 230-ish.
That woman can't carry me anywhere.
She can't even drag me 20 feet.
I'm a dead man.
Yeah, there was a guy that I was talking to, and he was talking about how, you know, he used to like to stand up to shoot the M660 from the hip.
You know what I'm saying?
Just because, you know, America, you know, back when he was in.
But they noticed that the women couldn't pick up a fully loaded M60.
So they said, now you have to put the, what's the, what's the thing called?
We have on the ground and it props it up.
The bipod.
Yeah, yeah.
Now you can only shoot it with a bipod.
So it's, so it's fair.
And then my best friend, he was in the Navy.
He was a corpsman.
He was on the medical ship on the head medical ship.
It's like the U.S. U.S. Mercy or the USS Mercy.
Dude, you guys know the ratio of men to women on medical ships?
There's a lot more chicks and they're nurses and medics and they're all 304.
So you got like 50 dudes smashing like 400 chicks.
It's crazy, dude.
Well, first of all, they're HOEs, which is a horizontal-orientated entertainer.
But guys, here's the main question.
Are women built to die for their country?
No.
No.
Women don't even die for their families and their children.
They're not going to die for their country.
They're screwed off the bat.
There's nothing more important to women than their own selfish desires.
We all know that.
Not their kids, not their country, not their family.
Nothing.
Hey, guys, I'm going to clue AJ.
I'm going to drop you guys off.
I'm going to bring in two more people, okay?
It's salute, Doug.
Bye, guys.
Bye.
Have a good one, guys.
Thanks for calling in.
It says, according to the U.S. Department of Defense, in 2021, women make up 17% of active duty forces.
That is scary.
I'm going to let OMAC because he said that he's here now.
And I'm going to try Nathan again.
OMAC, are you there?
Yeah, can you hear me?
Yeah, there you are.
And then Nathan, are you there?
Thanks for calling it.
Make sure you turn off the, there you go.
Nathan, are you there?
Can you hear me?
Yeah.
So we're going to do OMAC first.
I'm here.
About women in the military.
Were you in the military?
And what was your experience?
And then if you have any questions for Terrence Poppy, or Pearl, you can hit them with some questions too.
Yeah, so I spent about a year and a half in the Army Infantry, Loving Bravo.
I got kicked out after a year and a half, actually, due to a sharp report that was a he said, she said case.
Oh, my goodness.
Yep.
It's very common.
So I've got a couple of stories about women in the military.
So I was in 2014, 2015, did my basic training at Fort Benning, Georgia, and then I was a medical hold over there because I broke my leg in basic.
But so I got to Fort Carson, Colorado.
And during that time in 2015 was when they really started talking about putting women into combat roles.
So the brigade commander decided to do a little test.
And he took, volunteered women from all over the post to conduct a 12-mile ruck march.
And then Vollin told a bunch of us infantrymen to do the same along with them.
And that day it proved to me, you know, everything I needed to know.
Not a single female that volunteered to do that made it across the finish line.
Not a single one of them.
Holy crap.
No, that's actually very common.
Yeah.
That's about normal.
I can't tell you how many times we go to the field and we'd have these females and I would bring extra gear because I know they're going to get fucked up.
Oh, yeah.
The crazy part is there was even this small little guy from my platoon that conducted the ruck march with us.
And the first time we were in the field with this guy, we did a two-mile ruck march to go set up our fob with the strikers.
And he fell out after a mile.
He broke down and cried and somebody had to carry his ruck.
But this guy completed that 12-mile ruck.
Yeah.
That's about normal.
Yeah, it is.
And it is, and we also, like, Pearl is talking to a guy named Arvis and trying to get him on her documentary.
And he has the in for all of the guys that have been screwed over with the sexual assault, sexual harassment shit in the military.
A lot of these guys, they don't, like, some of these guys are in prison, and they weren't even allowed to question their accuser.
A lot of them were not allowed to show evidence that would have exonerated them.
And this happens on the regular.
No way.
Oh, yeah.
How is that possible that they couldn't show evidence?
Well, because they have in a military court, it's different than civilian court.
Yep.
And you don't have the same constitutional rights and protections in a military courts martial that you do in a standard court.
You are guilty until you're proven innocent.
Correct.
You're guilty.
The only thing about my case, though, was it was just a straight he said, she said case.
Didn't even go to court-martial.
I got called in to CID one day, and they said, Do you know, you know, such and such a soldier?
I won't say her name.
And I was like, oh, well, yeah, I know what this is about.
She actually came to my barracks room.
She was a friend of mine.
I knew her for a while.
And she came to my barracks room and wanted to talk.
She had gotten an Article 15 because of insubordination is what I think it was.
I'm shocked.
Wow, woman speaking about it.
And then after a little while of talking, she wanted to stay the night.
Now, mind you, me and her had also hooked up previous to this.
A big mistake.
Oh, yeah.
Believe me.
In the past 10 years, I've had a lot of time to think about it.
And then, so she wanted to stay the night, but then she climbed into bed with me.
I didn't ask her to.
And she put her ass against my crotch.
I didn't ask her to.
So as a 20-year-old single private in the army, I know the deal.
That'll get you.
Oh, yeah.
But here's the thing.
It didn't even go very far.
There was no penetration or nothing.
We didn't even actually have sex.
But they found me guilty of what they put on paper as abusive sexual contact.
Oh, my gosh.
Of course.
So the Army lawyers that I talked to about it, the advice they gave me was you could try to fight it in a court martial, but if you are found guilty still in the court martial, a couple of things would happen.
A, you'd be sent to the brig.
B, you'd have a dishonorable discharge.
And C, you would have to register as a sex offender for the rest of your life.
Or you can take your licks, get a chapter 15, and get out with an other than honorable.
So I got out with the other than honorable.
Yep, that sounds about right.
And so would you recommend people go into the service after you get that kind of treatment?
Absolutely not.
That's exactly why they're not making their recruiting goals.
Because the secret's out.
And I just, I think also part of it is, you know, when the general sentiment of the country is that all men are bad, you know, why fight for these broads?
Why?
That's right.
For what?
Hey, look, right now, what is that stupid thing that they basically bring up?
If you're in the woods, would you choose the bear?
Would you choose the man?
And then they go, they would choose the bear.
Do you know how stupid that is?
Yeah, I know.
Absolutely delusional.
It's actually stupid.
It's like, oh, so you're more worried about the man than the bear that will maul you and eat you alive.
Okay, gotcha.
Whatever.
Yep.
Well, I mean, if my story could be a testament to men's strength, I mean, not to say that I'm any pinnacle of masculinity, but so the reason why I broke my leg in basic was because I had stress fractures that I ignored.
I wasn't going to be no sick call ranger.
So I ignored the stress fractures that I had, and it progressed into stress fractures.
And eventually, it got to the point where I could barely train.
And so eventually, during the last FTX of BASIC, I ended up getting in a fight with another guy and it broke my leg the rest of the way.
Holy shit.
That happens.
Ome season, Nathan, we're going to drop you off because we're going to bring two more people in.
But thanks for calling me and calling anytime.
Okay.
When I was in BASIC, when I was in BASIC in AIT in the infantry school, I had 13 fights.
13.
That's the difference of today and the 86 when I went through.
Wow.
Yeah.
Jag48 and Dan.
Dan, are you there, Jack 48?
Yeah, I'm here.
Let's start it off real quick.
Cool.
All right.
Yeah, I'm here.
So we'll start with Dan.
What do you think about women in the military?
Did you serve?
And if you did, what was your experience with women in the military?
And then you can also ask Terrence, Pop, or Pearl any questions.
Dan?
Dan?
You talking to Jag or who you talking to?
To Dan.
Can you hear us, Dan?
Did you get it out?
Jag, go ahead.
Yeah, so talking to Jack.
Yes.
Jack, go ahead.
Yeah, so I'm active duty right now.
I've been in the military for 15 years.
I'm a combat control in the Air Force.
Well, the problem is with the feminine, the women in combat roles is the fact that in the last five years, they've been basically changing the standards to where women basically change the PT test.
It used to be like a standard test.
It was called the AFSOC.
Now it's called the SOCOM.
It's called Operator Fitness Test.
It's just like deadlifts, but it's actually easier than it was before.
So, and it's like everyone passes it now.
Back in the day, if you're out of shape, if you're overweight, you're not going to pass the test.
Nowadays, like if you're in semi-decent shape, you know, anyone could pass the test.
So the problem is like they basically open the window up so wide that there's no, you know, they gave it a cooler name and they added some different things to the test.
It takes half a day to do it, but it's actually not difficult at all.
What is that?
Is it you said it's like deadlift?
It's like how many pounds?
Yeah, they have.
So, yeah, so it's like the maximum.
So starting out, you have a three-mile ruck.
It's not hard.
It's three miles.
It's like an average 15-minute mile.
So it's 49 minutes for three miles.
It's a joke.
It's a 60-year-old.
It's 60 pounds.
I kind of walk faster than that.
Yeah.
So in training, so in training, you do a 15-mile or not three miles.
And so, but then they change the test.
They just open the standards up.
So it's, it's three miles, 60 pounds, and then it goes into like suicide sprints after you have a big rest.
It's only 300 meters.
And then you have, you know, pull-ups.
You have How many pull-ups is it?
I think the minimum is like 12 and the max is 16.
So, and then you have an agility thing.
You had to do like basically, you basically have kettlebells in each hand.
You run 100 meters, do that twice, and then the max deadlift is 360.
I think the minimum is like two something.
Yeah, it's two.
Yeah, so that sounds about right.
And then you finish it up with the suicide sprints.
It's only 300.
It's only like down and back six times.
And then you do a fin, which is a swimming in a pool with fins on.
There's nothing to it.
So it basically, but anyone can pass it.
If you're not marvelous obese, if you have semi-good genetics, you will pass the test.
So it's basically a freaking joke.
And that's that's what that's back in the day when I first joined.
It was hard to, it was, you had to like stay in good shape to pass the test.
It was a three-mile run and then, you know, like 60, 70 push-ups each, you know, 16 pull-ups.
And then you had the fin and the swim.
But now it's just a fucking complete joke.
And it's only because of they were trying to, they give it a cool name, they added some cool exercises, but there's no actual, you know, like you can take this, the skinniest, weakest dude ever, and he'll pass that test in the military.
Like there's no, there's no issue there.
And that's basically there, so they're basically rebranding.
It's a branding thing where they're trying to open it up to more people and, you know, specifically females when it's not even, it's not even, it's not coherent.
It doesn't make sense.
If you actually wanted to make it, make it the standard legitimate, you would still have the cardio and the strength.
And the strength isn't even fucking, it's not like anyone can do a trap bar deadlift for 300 pounds.
It's not that much.
You know what I mean?
Like most grown men can do that without even training for it.
So that's that 300 pound, that has to eliminate a lot of women, though, doesn't it?
Well, yeah, it does.
It does.
300 is nothing.
I used to be able to do 300, but that was, but that was a lot for me.
There weren't many girls on my team that could like, I barely got that.
Like when I got into the Rangers.
Yeah, but if you train for three months, you'd be able to do it, right?
Yeah.
Well, I don't know.
Maybe not now, but back then, yeah.
Parents, go ahead.
When I transferred over to the Rangers from the straight leg infantry, I had to do the PT test and I had to score a 275 or higher just to get considered.
And it used to max out at 300 points.
So you have to be damn near close to perfect on everything.
Well, there is a point system.
Yeah.
You do have to score semi-good, but then you have people that haven't been in the pool for two years and they can still pass the swim.
Like, what is that even testing?
You know what I mean?
Correct.
Correct.
And, you know, when I did it, there's the 275 and the PT test.
You had to do a minimum of eight pull-ups.
You had to do a 12-mile in three hours or less.
And it had to be supervised by a senior NCO or two senior NCOs or an officer in NCL.
They needed to do the combat swim test.
And that was above and beyond just the PT test.
So it was fairly difficult.
Yeah.
So we used to have like a standard where it was like, you had to be in decent shape just to pass.
You couldn't be like a fast slob, right?
Nowadays, in the last few years, they've changed it and they give it a cool name and they changed the test.
It's objectively easier than new tests.
There's no if or ends up about it.
So what you're referring to are the slobaholics.
Yeah, no, it's like it's they it like if you had to run three miles and a seven minute mile pace, which isn't that hard, but you can't be like a you can't be a morbidly obese and keep a seven-minute pace for three miles, I don't care like that's not gonna happen, and then you have to do a whole bunch of pull-ups and and set-ups and push-ups, and then a fin all back-to-back, like that has some level of uh competence, right?
Versus there's no cardio, you know what I mean, besides besides a couple sprints, and then it's it's easy.
Like my 12-year-old daughter can do, can pass the test that I do, it's insane, it's insane, dude.
Yeah, it is.
Let's say Dan, Danny, there, yes, hey, Doug.
How you doing, buddy?
So, what do you think about the topic?
Should women be in the military, or what's your experience with women in the military?
Uh, no, we don't have one guy that says let him in, go on, God, and um, there's a few reasons just uh physical things, everybody talks about physical things.
Um, that's not what's important, it's about it's a team effort, right?
And I think that this is the thing that people outside the military will relate to as well.
Uh, when you take people who are different from the rest of the group, it changes the dynamic of the group, yep, yeah, and um, specifically when you put women into a group, uh, it changes the way and it changes several dynamics, right?
There's guys that like the women, it tears the men apart.
What's every guy ever gotten into a fight about them, yeah, yeah, and uh, you know, I know that there's probably people who obviously there's people who disagree, and uh, if it helps, I will make my argument.
I mean, when I first went in, certainly I thought, yeah, everybody should have a we shouldn't be discriminating against people, right?
Everybody should have an equal shot at what they want to do in life, but that change after you've done it, you see the difference that it that it does to guys.
It's just uh it's not good.
Um, you need a very tight team, and I think you know, Terrence, you know, brother, you probably understand what the infantry world especially understands.
It's like everywhere you let women in, they want to change the culture to suit them, they don't adapt to the culture that they move into and sleep with their boss.
Well, one of the two the um you know, the reason why guys fight it's not just a you know, we're fighting one-on-one.
There's a reason why they have 20-year-old guys that hold the line, uh, they have to believe in their bosses, but they also have to believe in each other, the guys to their left and their right.
Uh, the reason why guys run into houses and grab their friend who got shot in the face is because they love them.
You can't really introduce women into that, it would it does several things to the dynamic, right?
I mean, people want to save women, who are they gonna they're always gonna save a woman first, right?
Yep, and um, that's really the bottom line is that it changes the lethality and the dynamic of the team.
I mean, and of course, there's all these other things, and and and there's so many other problems.
I mean, my mind got changed after all the things I've seen personally.
What I went through with my career, I got Me Too'd after four years.
What happened?
Well, there's still a legal argument up in there.
Okay.
So I won't get too specific about it.
But, you know, I'll say, you know, all it takes is one commander.
And he said, she said, like, what you're hearing over and over again, that stuff happens all the time.
Yeah.
And it literally just takes some one person to say one thing.
I've had female commanders, you know, put bar of re-enlistments on male soldiers, and there was no formal proceedings.
I mean, yeah, I was a lieutenant for four years.
I saw both sides of it.
It happens a lot.
Yeah.
And, you know, for a few years, I was going to let it go.
When I got out, I was so angry and destroyed by the whole thing.
Obviously, it completely turned my life around, you know, upside down.
I got zeroed out of all that.
And then I went to Ukraine because I missed doing Marine Corps stuff.
And I met a lot of guys that were kind of like me.
And that kind of made me decide.
I think it's some experiences from there, I think, helped or reinvigorated me to revisit this.
Are you completely out of the service now?
Oh, yes.
Do you want to go back in?
No.
I hate to say that.
Like I said, I missed, or maybe I missed, maybe I misspoke.
I said I missed doing Marine Corps stuff.
I didn't miss the Marine Corps, not after I got treated the way I did.
Well, the Marine Corps historically treats their people like shit.
I was there for the first Fallujah fight, and they took 30% more casualties because the Marines fight stupid.
Sorry.
Well.
Yeah, I don't know if I want to make a joke there, but, you know, it's, yeah, you know, sometimes the way to do things is the hard way.
But with the Marines, it's always the hard way.
That might be true.
You know, I can't speak to that.
I didn't go to combat, John.
I didn't get deployed and it was peacetime.
No, I was at the alternate talk at Abu Ground Prison.
Abu was taken.
I mean, Fallujah was between five and six miles away from us.
And I was invited to leave the talk because they were keeping track of all the casualties.
And I'm literally looking at all the combat lanes and they're keeping track.
And the Marines are taking 30% more casualties.
And you can hear it on the radio.
Like, oh, we're taking fire.
We're assaulting.
Like, what the fuck?
Call up a tank.
Call in a helicopter.
Do something other than that.
And it was, and I was getting really upset.
And they're like, hey, Mass Sergeant, you need to leave this room.
And I'm like, okay.
Well, I've never been to combat there.
And I think, you know, there's, you could speak about it a lot more intelligently than I can.
You know, all I did was train work across the other services.
I mean, I even saw how other countries fight.
I mean, if you're not done.
There's definitely different ways to do it.
Look here, sir.
If you're not done, go on the National Guard.
A lot of times you can get back in the guard.
What is OTH?
Other than honorable?
Yes.
All right, you can get that upgraded.
Well, that's the thing I'm working on.
You know what?
I don't know if that's the answer.
I don't know if it's in my heart quite at this point.
I don't know.
Maybe.
Well, I'm easy to find if you want to ask me questions, sir.
Just run redoculous.com.
I'll shoot you an email for sure.
All right.
Stay on, Dan.
I'm going to bring Donnie Tyler.
Donnie Tyler is our last caller.
We're going to bring him in.
And Donnie, are you there?
Yeah, I'm Donnie Tyler.
Yeah, so what do you think about the topic?
Oh, I've never been in the military, but I'm a longtime listener of Pearl and Terrence Pop.
And like the last caller, I was kind of of that opinion of give everyone a chance.
Let's not have any unfair rules.
But as far as I'm concerned, the only badass woman I'm ever heard of is Harriet Tubman.
Everyone else, they aren't real freedom fighters or real warriors.
They're just bitches demanding something they didn't earn.
I have no problem with someone who is a genuine, honorable warrior who wants to fight and protect the innocent or fight and defend for their country.
But I just can't stand a lot of women.
And even being around conservative women, wait, I'm sorry, I can't see the video.
We can hear you, though.
Keep going.
Yeah, we can hear you.
Oh, I can hear you now.
I wanted to say real quick: I'm a big fan of yours, Terrence.
I saw that video you did 10 years ago in honor of that.
I believe it was your commanding officer who self-deleted.
Yep.
And the thing was, when you actually dive deep into veteran deletions, it has more to do with what they go through at home than what Klaus, Charlie, or Ahmed did to them over there.
Yep.
My research, when I was studying the suicide phenomenon between 2007 and 2010, 70%, 60 to 70% of the suicides had a contact with family court or divorce court within five years of their self-deletion.
That's very brutal.
Yeah.
And, you know, I did that Purple Hearts final beat.
I got some emails from the public relation at the Pentagon telling my stats were wrong, and they gave me a bunch of a leave-it-the-beaver stats.
And I was just like, just pound some sand.
I don't believe anything you say.
Sorry.
I want to commend you for your service.
As I understand it, you served under President Bush when he went to war with Noriaga in Panama.
Yeah, I jumped into Panama in 89, December 20th, 1989.
Yeah, I got ran over on the drop zone.
It was pretty brutal.
Sounds worse than it was, though.
I guess one question left out is: do you think a lot of these current conflicts are even worth fighting?
I mean, I was thinking of your answer, Terrence, when you said what to do in the Middle East when you were here.
I don't know if we could say that here, but it's pretty funny.
I mean, it's controversial, but I can't stand how a lot of people are scratching their head going, why won't young people join the military?
And they go to the dumbest reasons.
Like, yeah, I'm not a fan of the trannies, but that's just that.
That's just don't say that word, please.
I'm sorry, the transformers.
One and done.
You can't say that specific word, okay?
Keep going.
Sorry, the Transformers, the Decepticrats, the Auto Trad Cons, the Squad of Cons, the Mini Simps.
Sorry about that.
Wow, you get in trouble by YouTube for saying that word.
Yeah, boy.
Oh, I'm sorry.
Sorry.
All right.
Well, I'll be brief.
A PS.
I always wondered, Pearl, a lot of people, a lot of the feminists on the right and the left like to pick on you, but I think they're scared of you.
Like, because you like, you could, you could take out anyone, like, like, give them some boxing gloves.
Like, you, you could mop the floor with anyone.
You know what?
I got offered, I got offered a good amount of money to box by it was like Aiden Ross's team.
They wanted me to put on some gloves.
I'd train you.
Do you know what?
I just didn't feel like doing it.
No, I got you.
I just felt like it was like a waste of time.
I didn't feel like training for months.
Like, I just, yeah.
One of my big regrets is that I didn't take up boxing because, well, I don't want to dox myself, but I'm about 6'4, 6'5.
I didn't know I was actually taller than Muhammad Ali until he died.
Like, float like a butterfly, sting like a bee.
Muhammad Ali wouldn't get in the ring with me.
You still can't, Donnie.
What are you talking about?
Well, I'm old now.
30 is the new 65.
And you're 30?
That's a you can box.
I know, man.
We talk at the time.
Yeah, I retired from the ring at 32.
Yeah, go out there.
You know, here's the thing: go out there and start and see if it's for you.
Just do some amateur stuff.
Yeah, go for it.
Get in the ring once or twice.
Well, I guess my amateur.
I don't want to take up too much time.
I guess there's one thing I'd like to ask you, Terrence.
It's just I've noticed, I've noticed I've fallen into kind of a downward stuff in a way.
Like, like, I don't know.
Like, in a way, I've kind of given up on life.
Like, not too morbid, but I don't know.
It's like you're dead inside and you're waiting for the funeral.
No, no, no, not that far gone, but it's like, have you ever like failed at something you wanted to do?
And that's like you couldn't trust yourself.
Yeah.
I mean, that has happened a few times.
The best thing to do is, you know, pick some activities to rebuild your confidence, and that'll help you to drive on.
Yeah.
And you only fail when you truly quit.
So.
And are you, have you ever been married?
Me?
No, no, no, no.
Okay, sorry.
Do you have any kids?
Sadly, no.
Wait, hold up.
Hold up a second.
So, like, some of the best advice I ever got was: if what you have doesn't make you happy, think about all the stuff that you don't have that makes other people miserable.
You've never been married to some bitch.
Yeah.
You don't have any kids out of wedlock.
You don't have a woman holding you emotionally hostage to see your kids.
You don't have a criminal record.
There's a lot of things that a lot of other people have that are detrimental to their lives that you don't have, man.
Well, I've never been caught for anything yet, but hey, even better.
The downside is there are a lot of guys who never have kids.
One of my closest friends passed last year.
He was only 33, and all he wanted was a family to come.
I mean, he was never going to get it.
He was kind of a sub-five with schizophrenia.
Yeah.
He got deleted in a car wreck, but what part of the country do you live in?
What state?
I live in New Jersey, close to New York City.
Move.
Jersey.
Yeah, get the hell out of there.
Move right now.
Pack the grass.
The grass isn't always greener because you listen to a lot of track hunks who say, go to Orlando State.
Everyone over there is better.
Listen to me very carefully.
If you're in a job that's literally stressing you out or that's getting you down or you're in a relationship or you're fat or something like that, the most important decision you can ask yourself and you have to have an answer, yes or no.
Is this working?
Yes or no.
Is your situation working for you right now?
Yes or no?
No.
Well then if you can say no, if it's not working, all the rest of it's easy, but you have to make that decision.
Accept that decision.
This is not working.
Now you have to figure out something else and change your situation because people will refuse to answer that question and just sit and stagnate.
If what you're doing is not working, all the rest of it's easy.
You have to make a change.
And I just noticed New Jersey, it's on the East Coast.
It's cold.
You have to listen to that New Jersey accent, which is probably the worst accent in the United States.
How do you know?
New Jersey weather, we get the four seasons.
In fact, a base earth science teacher actually had told us, if you actually understand geology, the New Jersey, New York City area is actually geologically one of the safest places on planet Earth.
No earthquake activity, light hurricanes, like don't have to deal with tornadoes or volcanoes.
Yeah, but how's that happening?
You have to deal with progressive liberals.
Yeah, and liberals everywhere.
But I guess it's like, it's home for me.
So it's like, it's not really a location thing that's really the problem.
Like it's more me reacting to setbacks.
And like, even though I hate liberals, they're not the real cause of my problems, to be honest.
Okay.
Outside of taxes and gun control and stuff like that.
You know, the stuff Aaron Clary would talk about.
I got you.
Because it's not like living in a red area is like a paradise.
It's like a land flowing with milk and honey.
There are no.
Have you been to Texas?
Only once.
Only one.
San Antonio, Austin, Dallas.
I've always wanted to see the Texas Ranger Museum, see where the Buffalo Soldiers and the Texas Rangers fought the Comanche.
So take a trip.
Take a trip.
I recommend Dallas or San Antonio.
And I'm telling you, pack your stuff and move.
All right.
I'm going to get going because the queue probably has a lot of other guys who want to get on.
Thank you for your service, Terrence.
And I appreciate what you've done.
If you want to talk, just send me an email.
Yeah, please.
I have no problem helping you out, man.
Okay.
Thank you, Doug.
Thank you, Pearl.
Thanks for calling.
Call in anytime, okay?
All right.
I'm hoping that guy figures it out because he's only 30.
He has his whole life ahead of him.
And I tell guys, when you hit 35 and you've put work, all you have to do is get a highly valued skill, highly valued trade, highly value education, and don't get married and don't have any kids until you're 35 and the whole world opens up to you, man.
The whole world opens up at 35.
I'm living proof.
You don't, you don't think so, Terrence?
Oh, I mean, 35, I guess, is, I mean, to be honest with you, you get out of high school, get a really good trade, don't ever get married.
It's just not worth it.
You know, even if you do get married, there's a high degree.
You're going to watch your kids grow up and fast-forward, or you're not going to get to see them at all.
You're going to get wrecked in divorce.
You know, 80% of divorces are filed by women, 90% if they're college-educated.
85% of the time, she's going to get custody.
I've seen women get custody, been convicted felons, active prostitutes, women in drug rehab.
It's absolutely disgusting.
And I'm just sick and tired of throwing these dudes in the dirt because they're killing themselves because they're getting married and getting just destroyed by the system.
And there's.
Oh, yeah.
I would never recommend guys get married.
What I'm talking about is if you make yourself your ability to be able to smash increases exponentially after you hit 35.
I would never say get married.
I've been married and divorced, Terrence.
I know all about that.
I would never tell a guy to get married.
No way.
But bang them and clang him and keep them moving.
All right.
Well, thanks for calling in, Terrence.
No problem.
It's a pleasure to have you on here.
So call in anytime.
I know you stream, I think, around the same time.
Well, I usually do Tuesdays, Thursdays, and then I have a supporter stream on Sundays.
Okay.
So I'm not on as much as you.
Maybe I should try to figure that out, but it just is what it is.
Yeah, and I'm hoping that those guys that talked to you, I'm hoping they reach out to you because I've seen some of the stuff you do, Terrence.
You do really good work, man.
So thank you for all the work that you do, buddy.
Don't make it weird, bro.
It's all good.
Terrence is a legend in this space.
Are you I won't say where, but are you do you like living in the state you're at?
Me?
Yeah.
I'm just mainly here because my mother's here.
After she passes away, I might make some changes.
We'll see.
Where are you thinking?
I was just wondering if you'd recommend a city where you'd tell them to go.
Well, if I make it to 65, more than likely, I'll be somewhere near the Gulf of America hanging out on a fishing boat until I expire.
Nice.
Like Mexico or something?
I'm not going to Mexico unless I want to have a final gunfight with the Mexican drug cartel.
Cool.
Yeah.
Okay.
But, you know, we're up to 562 lives saved since 2009.
I probably undercounted because the first 225, I didn't keep an immaculate account.
I gave out numbers multiple times, the same number to multiple people, stuff like that.
But, yeah, I'm just doing this to keep guys alive.
And hopefully I can get more.
There's so many more guys out there lost in the sauce.
Yeah.
Well, thank you for all the work you do, Terrence.
It's all good.
Any final words for the show today?
I mean, to the audience watching?
Well, don't drink and drive, don't drink and swim.
Wear a condom, travel in packs, and maintain your situational awareness.
And just play the long game.
You have no idea what the future holds for you, especially if you're willing to work for it.
You know, stay in the fight.
And if everything else goes to shit, just live out a motherfucking spite.
Things get better.
Cool.
Thanks, Terrence.
Doug MPA, what are your final thoughts today?
There is a young soldier playbook that a lot of young soldiers make.
I wasn't in the military, but I have a couple of friends who made the same mistakes.
Guys, don't get married, don't have kids, no single mothers, and avoid women with a whole bunch of debt.
There are too many women out here who need help.
They need help.
And if you're helping them, they're fine with you until they don't need help anymore.
So avoid all these women and don't be afraid to have these conversations about their debt, about their previous history.
Your emotional, mental, physical, and monetary health is at stake.
Absolutely correct.
Okay, well, thanks for calling in, guys.
Announcements for the channel.
I was actually running the math.
As you guys know, if you want to donate to our divorce documentary, I wanted to give you guys a breakdown of what I'm trying to raise money for and the different price brackets that I've been given.
So first, I want to show you guys, just to close out the show, I'm going to replay the trailer.
Just for those of you that have, I know we've shown it a lot on the channel, but just for the people that haven't seen it, actually, Terrence came up with the title for this.
It's called What's In It for Men.
And basically, it's about all these commentators who are asking the question, why are men dropping out of the military?
Why are men dropping out of school?
Why are men not getting married?
And it's basically asking the question, well, if that's true, what's it's a very simple answer.
Men are asking the question, what's in it for them?
So I'm going to play the trailer and then I'm going to, we're going to talk about the different quotes I've been given to get this done and how what we're trying to fundraise for.
Viral online.
It's a very simple answer.
Oh man, hold on.
I had another tab plan.
Sorry, guys.
Okay.
Now we'll go again.
Clip going viral online.
So there's this clip going viral online of a dozen women being asked the following question.
Do we need men?
Most answered very quickly, no.
Because men are useless.
This headline from The Hill, it caught my eye.
Most young men are single.
Most young women are not.
Young men have fallen faster than any demographic in America over the last 40 years.
It's a different world now.
Like we don't need men the way that they used to.
The future is female.
Men and women are drifting further apart and society is crumbling because of it.
A fascinating debate has broken out about the value of marriage.
You've kind of got the TradCon versus Red Pill thing.
This men's rights crowd that sometimes just goes too far the other way.
Oh, you need to stop acting like grown boys and infants and actually become men.
Marriage is a bond and it's a sacred bond.
It's a machine designed to extract resources from you.
Now many of the red-pilled have taken the position that it's bad for men to get married.
Hannah Pearl Davis or just pearly things.
One of the most controversial faces in all of the internet.
She goes on to say that marriage is a terrible deal for men.
Because if me and you were in a business contract, you would never sign a contract where I am paid to leave.
Gee, what could go wrong there?
74% or something of divorces are initiated by women.
Men have everything to lose, primarily their own children.
Men get killed by the courts and by divorce laws.
I had no idea that courts of family law were courts of equity, not courts of law.
Because in family court, you don't need evidence to accuse someone of abuse.
You need no evidence.
When you guys say get married young, a lot of these men don't know what they're signing up for, and you're not going to be there when their entire life falls apart.
I interviewed them on the other side.
I didn't meet my son until he was 15 months old.
How much did you spend trying to get him back?
The legal fees alone was about $200,000.
Before you know it, you're homeless.
You're literally just thrown out onto the street.
We absolutely reinforce bad behavior from women.
Wives are taught to leave their husbands, and then daughters grow up without their fathers.
Family is the foundation of a society.
Every problem in society comes from single mother homes.
A lot of women will just chase this negative rapid hole of happiness, endless happiness.
Feminism's biggest failure is in lives to women.
We tell women to date as many guys as possible.
We tell them to put off family in a marriage.
You are allowed to leave your perfect husband.
You are allowed to end a relationship with a really great boyfriend.
Oh, freeze your eggs.
Have an abortion.
What?
You're evil.
I don't think there's anything else in life that we actually ever go into preparing to fail.
Like if you have the mentality of this is going to go wrong and be pessimistic, naturally the outcome is going to be that it's going to fail anyway.
It's self-sabotage.
That's the thing.
Like women are so willing to leave marriages because they're not happy.
This is not about happiness.
The most important thing is the children.
And the problem is we have a modern society where it's me, me, me.
My feelings leave when I feel like it instead of doing what's best for the kids.
This myth that we live in an age of male privilege.
Where's my male privilege?
They think, well, men have all the rights.
They have all the power.
Privilege patriarchal system that we have.
Why doesn't our society care about men's rights?
I have no friends, no wife, and no social life.
Men are alone in this situation.
Men are homeless.
Men are thinking about eating guns.
I've seen so many men on the brink of suicide and they didn't do anything wrong.
How are you equal if the men are the ones that have to fight and die to defend the country?
The men are the ones that build and maintain all the infrastructure.
Women are helplessly dependent upon men.
The so-called deaths of despair from suicide, overdose, to alcohol, three times higher among men than among women.
Culture is telling men, you are no good.
You got to get your act together.
I think men have failed themselves.
What kind of a man are you?
What kind of a woman are you going to attract?
If men are in trouble, so are women.
Everybody knows this is a huge problem, but nobody wants to admit it.
Every single woman at the table said they wanted a man.
500K, 500, 300K, 300K, 200K.
Am I crazy?
Everything is really set up against you to fail as a man.
If men make less than women, women don't want to marry them.
So you know who wants more economically and emotionally viable men?
Women.
I don't want to be an independent woman anymore.
I don't want to be a strong, independent woman.
I'm over it.
When is it going to be my turn?
Where are we meeting the men that don't stop?
I can't keep having these same conversations.
The only simp here is you, Pearl.
You sent for women.
I think you said for women.
She's a provocateur.
She says stupid stuff, but Pearl is right about this.
It's already happening.
It's just not out in the open yet.
Now it's just hookup culture is going to be our fairy tale ending because men don't want a wife and women can't find a husband.
The future, if everybody follows your path, is there is no future.
If you go into population decline and our economy goes into decline, civilization will crumble.
The American story does not end well.
This is an existential crisis failing young men.
All right, so you guys get the idea.
I don't know.
I can't hear my playback.
Can you guys hear me?
I can hear you.
Okay.
Yeah, we can hear you.
Okay, so you guys, basically, I got a quote from the same team that made What is a Woman?
And it's ridiculously high.
Oh my God, it's so high.
Basically, we've raised around $50 for this documentary.
Okay.
With the private donations and the GoFundMe, which I think is around 22 total, it's about 50.
That's what we've raised.
Pretty good.
I'm very grateful for every dollar you guys have given.
Now, the next question I have is, who do we hire to finish it?
Challenges we've come across.
We were demonetized for a year and a half.
That made us put the whole project on hold.
Now we're remonetized.
So the better the channel does, the more likes, the more watches, the more people that sign up to the website, the closer we can get.
So I wanted, my initial plan was I wanted to get the same team that made What is a Woman?
I mean, they made one of the most popular conservative documentaries.
And I had, I have a really big, I don't want to say the name, but a really big conservative distributor interested.
But it's kind of the issue we get into is the chicken and the egg.
I don't have a finished documentary for, I just have the trailer.
And they don't really want to pay to finish it.
You know what I mean?
You see the challenge.
And these things, the thing that you guys don't realize about documentaries is they're just not always profitable.
If I'm being honest, they put on a lot to make.
Now, the quote I got from the, because, you know, it's like, this is such a good topic.
And I think this would do so well that you, in a way, you want the best of the bests.
But we'd have to raise to get the What is a Woman team between half a million to a million dollars to put that out.
And I just, I'm going through this.
And I mean, like, what would that be, right?
That means you get a full-time director.
You get the best, like they have all the distribution stuff figured out.
But I just think that's a lot of money.
And, well, we're not really close, right?
So I don't even have the choice to get them at this point.
So, but what I think a more realistic goal, the quotes I've gotten from other people, now there are low people that tell me they can make a documentary around 50, but I got to be honest, guys, the work I've been, there's a certain quality that I just would only put out.
And the stuff I've seen so far, it just hasn't, they don't have enough experience that I would feel comfortable giving like you guys' hard-earned money to, right?
But what I actually think is going to be the best option for the documentary and like most cost-effective is there's two people I would like to hire full-time.
And they're both very good at what they do.
And I'd like to hire them full-time for a year.
And I'd like to just do this all in-house.
I don't see why I need to, I have good cameras.
I don't really see why I need to bring this out up.
And I want to bring in two people in-house full-time and just use our stuff.
Like I just don't see the point of outsourcing stuff.
It's gotten me in trouble before.
It's wasted.
I don't really want to talk.
But anyways.
But basically to have their salaries covered, because what I don't want to do is hire somebody and then there'd be extra costs, right?
So like if I have 50, let's say you hire someone 50 grand divided by, let's say, 6,000 a month for someone full-time.
Wait, hold on.
50 grand divided by 6,000.
I'd like two people.
I'd like one would be a director and one would be a full-time editor.
The editor would still be up in the air, but I want somebody in-house, in person, and I can see exactly what you're doing because I've taken some L guys.
And this, people just love taking your money.
I swear.
So, sorry.
That's what I think I'm going to go with.
And what I'd like to do is I'd like to raise for these two salaries around $300,000.
And I do think this is doable.
It sounds like a lot.
But I haven't really put any marketing into this.
I haven't really met with any super wealthy, like this is crowdsourcing.
I know people are saying they're broke in the chat.
I know.
Crazy.
I mean, so I'm thinking if we could raise this just ourselves, I think if I could get in front of the right people, we could get to that number.
And the reason is it covers the two salaries for a year.
I don't really want to, I don't want to say how much it is because you guys are, people will just say, oh, you could do it for a lot.
That's what, that's, that's what I'd like to raise.
So I'm not hell-bent.
I could change my mind, but I really think at that number, we could get it done in six months to a year.
And yeah, that's, that's what we're trying to go to.
So the link to that is in the description.
If you guys do want to do a private donation, it's just pearlythings at gmail.com.
So the distribution methods, people, I'm just going to be open about what we're trying to do.
So I have two options for distribution.
And this is just, I'm just telling you guys, I'm new to the documentary space.
I've done a show, but that's a completely different industry.
And basically what I've heard from the industry is like most documentaries are passion projects that don't make money if you go the distribution route, which is wider reach.
So like, for example, one of the one of the distributors is a huge plot.
Like this person is, I don't want to say, but they're way bigger than me.
Like it would be a very, but they would take 50% for the first six months.
So it wouldn't really, I don't know, like if an investor comes in and takes 20%, how profitable is that?
It could be, right?
I don't know.
But 50% is 50% is a big nut.
I know.
And I'm not in this.
I'm not trying to finish this for the money, but so I do think if this person, they're so big, it would be such huge visibility for the issue that I would, but I'm just being honest that if we go that route, the profit, like, it's just, it would be a passion project.
Now, the direct, you have higher margins, but lower people on the website.
Or we can just put it on YouTube.
But to make back 300K, I did the math and it would be, you'd have to get like 8 million views, which is a lot more, which we could, right?
I don't know.
But, you know, I'm trying to be open and transparent here, maybe even to my detriment.
I don't know.
But I'm just, I like to let you guys are donating.
So I'm letting.
Right now, I've just been, I paid for the trailer, which did actually, I forgot to subtract that from the chunk of money we raised.
I'm not gonna, it was pretty expensive because the what is a woman team did make this.
But it wasn't terrible.
Like there's still most of it's left.
So could I launch a Kickstarter?
Well, is Kickstarter going to be different than GoFundMe?
I mean, I think it's a little confusing having a bunch of different links.
But could I sell it to the Daily Wire?
I mean, I've talked a lot of shit about the Daily.
I don't know if they'd want to buy it from me.
This is kind of a hit piece on them a little bit.
You know what I mean?
Like, they're kind of clipped up in this and not.
That would be my concern is they have a, like, the Daily Wire pushes marriage.
So if I was to sell, I don't think they'd want it.
Is my, that's the problem.
And I want you guys to understand in media, you make $8 from women, you make $2 from men.
There's a reason this stuff, women make 80% of consumer buying decisions.
Because men, you guys, I mean, even I'm talking about this documentary and you guys are like, I'm broke.
I know.
You don't want to, women spend money on things that don't make money.
Men don't, right?
So that's why this stuff oftentimes doesn't get finished, right?
So, but I really, I think my number one, I want to do it in-house.
And I want the editor in person.
Because a lot of people have emailed me.
They want to edit.
Are you going to be here in office 40 hours a week?
Otherwise, please, I'm not.
Unless you have a crazy, like you've done some big names, I'd maybe like, what is it?
I would think about it.
But I need you in per I need you here, okay?
I've taken a few L. I've taken an L on this in the past.
So I'm just not going to do that again.
Don't try to convince me because I'm just, it's no.
It's, it's, yeah.
So I am going to get this done.
I, I, we will raise it eventually, but that's about how much I need to finish it.
Um, the route I think I would probably go self-produced if we don't take the distribution would probably just putting it on YouTube.
Um, but I do think if we went with this big name, it just probably would be a passion project for visibility.
And um, I do think this big name could potentially get us into like I don't want to say Netflix because I don't know.
I wouldn't be shocked if they had the connections to go there.
Um, anyway, so that's that's where I'm at with the project.
Um, well, if you want me to assist, just let me know what you need.
Um, do you have $300,000?
I wish I did.
Do you have 300?
Could you bail your ex-wife for it?
I wish.
I wish.
Ask Matt Walsh how he marketed his documentary.
I've heard he has a Pearl Bikini poster in his man cave.
Well, the Matt Walsh, they have the like Wright brothers fund all their stuff.
So they're like, they have, they know billionaires.
That's how they did it.
But the problem is you have to understand, guys, a lot of these rich guys, they make money off of women.
A lot of people in society make money off of women.
And I was explaining to my, I was actually explaining to my dad the other day.
I was like, dad, you make money off of women.
He's like, no, I sell software to men.
And I, because my dad's in like, he sells it to like HVAC, plumber, that sort of thing.
And I'm like, but dad, who pays the plumbers?
It's not the men.
Men fix their own stuff.
And I'm like, you get paid by women.
Everyone gets paid by women.
But yeah, I mean, I don't really think, I really just think it's really just getting to the 300K mark.
We can get it done.
We're going to get somebody in-house, full-time editor.
That's what I want to do.
Well, I guess we'd have to find, we'd have to pick and find the editor.
But I may be moving in these next couple months.
And I got to pick the city.
So it's been, I can't pick, I'm fairly certain I know where I'm going, but this isn't.
I'll know by the end of the week.
So I'm not going to, I can't start the find the editor because my first question is, what city are you in?
You know, are you willing to come here if you're not?
I'm sorry.
Yeah.
So that's what's going on.
So if you want to donate to that, I believe it's the second link in the description.
Oh, first, first link in the description or second.
Other thing too is we're doing a community.
Moving to where I just said I'm not saying yet, but I will tell you soon.
So we're doing a community.
This also supports the documentary.
So if you guys join this, because really any money we make as a company, like we're going to put into this.
So it's pearlinvite.com.
And basically, it's a one-time purchase.
You're in it for life.
And my goal with this is to make a community on school.
And all the people that do interviews on the channel, Terrence Popp's administrative violence is on there.
We had a PI teach you how to catch your girl cheating.
If you want to get married, he can help you look into her.
And really, it's just, we're going to raise the price at some point, but it's essentially when we bring in all these big guests onto my channel, they're going to give courses on crash courses on different things.
Andrew Wilson did how to be traditional.
We brought in a PUA that filmed.
He's not up yet, but this guy's a demon.
If you want to know how to have, like in a good way, he's a good person, but he's very good with the ladies.
I'll say.
If you want to know how to get laid easier, your dating apps, how to have a couple girlfriends at a time, and not catch, you know, immoral, not illegal.
That's all behind the paywall.
The PUA stuff isn't up, but it will be.
So really, I just want to give you guys pragmatic advice on the school community because there's just a lot of BS out there.
And my only incentive here is to, you know, it's a male audience.
So my only incentive is to have you guys, to give you guys the most useful stuff.
And I do, someday I'm going to interview some big names.
Like, and it's, it's going to be cool.
So it's a one-time buy-in.
You, you really, you have to apply because we're going to do in-person events.
And I got to make sure you're not weird.
You know, I can't in the nicest way possible.
The internet's a weird place.
Yeah, Steve M says the SEO class.
Yeah, I did also a course on how to be a YouTuber, Shiv, if you want to improve your business with SEO.
But I'm done.
I'm done selling you stuff.
That's it.
Anyways, thanks so much for watching, guys.
Please like the video and subscribe to the channel.
As soon as we raise the 300K, we really can get a move on.
I think if I got to 150, I would feel comfortable hiring someone.
I think, like, because that's the salary for a year.
And who knows?
We maybe could get it done in six months.
I don't know.
But yeah.
Anyways, guys, like the video.
Please subscribe to the channel.
Please ring that notification bell.
Thanks so much for watching.
And I'll see you guys the next time.
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