Sean Patrick Nye, a digital privacy advocate, argues society is trapped in psychological warfare via propaganda—from 9/11’s "pull it" command to Epstein files and Venezuela-linked Sitco deals—while tech giants (Apple, Google, etc.) profit over $1T annually by monetizing user data through third-party brokers. He exposes alleged surveillance backdoors, like the FBI remotely wiping iCloud footage, and compares U.S. systems to authoritarian regimes, urging Christians to resist "Luciferian" control by adopting open-source tools like Graphene OS or mark37.com’s encrypted devices. With violent crime declining but resilience fading due to over-parenting, Nye insists proactive privacy measures—separating identities, avoiding data-hungry apps—are essential to protect freedom and reject systemic manipulation. [Automatically generated summary]
You know, when you say we're at war, do you think we're at war?
I think we've been at war for thousands of years.
We're constantly at war.
Because when a lot of people talk about war, they picture bombs and blood and tanks and sand, desert, Iraq, Libya, Afghanistan.
That's the kind of conventional warfare that people think.
So when you look at somebody like, yeah, we're at war, they look at you like you have an appendage growing out of your forehead.
Right.
Yeah.
Yeah, it's psychological warfare.
And I don't think people fully understand what psychological warfare is and what brainwashing is, nor do they actually read history and understand how propaganda works and that we've been propagated for hundreds of years at this point.
I mean, every major kingdom understands the power of media and the power of words and influence and controlling the printing presses, controlling the messaging that's sent out.
It's just fascinating to me how that paradigm is just foreign to people.
They don't understand that that psychological warfare is absolutely critical and has been at play for from day one.
Like our forefathers of the United States used the printing press in order to propagate ideas.
Yes, they were talking to people in taverns and whatnot, but controlling that printing press was absolutely critical.
And now we have devices in our pockets that are feeding you that information all day, every day.
To capture people's attention, a lot of times bombs have to be going off.
You know, Epstein files have to be dropping.
People have to be assassinated.
Somebody like Edward Snowden blows the whistle.
They're living in exile.
You know, Julian Assange is arrested.
Turns out that whole warrantless arrest was quite the deal now that we have these revelations of the Epstein files.
But to get people's attention, you know, in 2026, it's like the information superhighway just moves so quickly that people have this like constant edification.
They want to know something.
Boom.
They've got it in their hands.
I have multiple phones over here.
I've got, you know, laptops and computers everywhere.
I've got a TV to tell me what to do, how to think, who to vote for.
So that's part of the war.
Like they want you so distracted for with all this information, the new, new thing.
Every day there's a new revelation.
There's a new something.
You know, what happened to 9-11?
Like, we know definitively now that 9-11 was a sham.
What do you mean?
The Twin Towers didn't fall by themselves because of the heat, right?
That was a control system.
The Dean didn't just get lucky with this insurance contract.
Right.
So that's him on record talking about pull it, right?
Like all these things have come out light of day, right?
Even JFK assassination stuff and who was involved with that.
All this stuff has now seen the light of day.
And yet we don't see people out on the streets demanding accountability.
We don't see people out in front of the White House or out in front of Congress.
That's how powerful the information is because, for example, you know, you mentioned Larry Silverstein.
He's on record saying pull it, the Third Trade Center falls.
No plane hit it.
It's kind of the same.
Not as many people died, but the same infrastructure was in place for Paul Singer with our current situation in Venezuela.
Yeah.
Because he acquired Sitco through this.
It was like a forced acquisition at gunpoint in a Delaware court presided over by an APAC judge.
And so he just stroked a check to Donald Trump and effectively rented the military.
Special forces to go in there and kidnap Nicholas Maduro, a sovereign nation in the Western Hemisphere, and his wife, put him on an aircraft carrier, parade him around for the propaganda pictures on the aircraft carrier, and then try him in a civilian court in the SDNY, affording him constitutional rights.
The whole thing is fake.
But now here we go.
Paul Singer forces that oil deal, the acquisition.
Now we control it in Venezuela.
And guess what just happened yesterday, by the way?
The first shipment of oil from Venezuela to Israel was completed since 2020.
I did hear that.
But that's nothing new.
Like private interests have been renting and using our military for how long?
For probably from the very beginning.
But walk outside the studio and ask somebody, you know, how did this benefit America?
Well, we got all the oil.
We got all the oil.
It's all benefit to America.
Well, no, it's going to Israel, actually.
What about the Panama Canal?
Oh, yeah, BlackRock has that.
Oh, the rare earth minerals in Ukraine that brothers are fighting against, Christian brothers fighting and dying.
And BlackRock controls that.
So it's like people look at you like you're nuts when you mention, hey, we're at war.
And they're like, what?
No, we're not.
The peace president is in office.
Yeah.
Yeah, that's the psychological warfare aspect.
And it's hard for those of us who are awake and have done the research, done the homework, are systems thinkers who understand why and how people operate the way they operate.
Understand that it doesn't take hundreds or even thousands of people to be in on it.
Just like a military apparatus.
You have the generals and the admirals at the top who understand what's going on, and then they feed the orders down the command line.
And the people, the grunts who are out there actually shooting the bullets, they're just told, here's the objective, go after the objective, and don't ask why.
So when people say, well, you know how many people would have to be in on it to pull off something like 9-11?
I'm like, really not that many.
Probably maybe a dozen.
Same with Charlie Kirk.
Same with Charlie Kirk.
So all of these things.
So it's super frustrating for me when I talk to people who are like, well, what do you mean we're at war?
When I've been at this for 30 years, understanding what's happening and trying to educate people.
But let me say this.
More and more people are waking up every day.
They truly are.
And they're starting to recognize what's going on.
And the conversations that I was having four years ago when we were first starting our business, digital privacy, digital security, talking to people about, do you know your phone is listening to you?
People were like, yeah, so what?
Not a big deal.
I don't care.
I don't care.
It was really the answer.
Now, when we ask people, literally 99 out of 100 people are like, I'm not okay with this.
I'm not okay with my phone being a mobile tracking device or my car being a mobile tracking device.
So people are starting to wake up.
I think they're starting to ask the right questions.
They're starting to get angry enough, you know, mad as hell that they don't want to take it anymore, but they just don't know what options they have.
They don't know what solutions are available.
They feel like we're just being bombarded and we're losing and there's nothing we can do about it, which is part of the psychological warfare.
This goes back to what we were talking about the other night.
This is part of the plan.
They want you to feel helpless.
They want you to witness firsthand someone getting shot in the face and having that person who did that shooting walk away scot-free.
Because then that makes you who witnessed that feel totally like, well, I can't go up against that.
If I go up against that, I'm just going to die.
So I may as well just be a servant and just do what I'm told.
Isn't that what January 6th was all about?
We will crush you if you petition your government to redress your grievances.
If you have a problem here, and if you want your country to not be run by Satanist pedophiles, or whoever it is, you would like your country to be run morally upright, based on the founding principles and values, the spiritual alignment that America is all about, a nation founded under God.
If you go and voice that, if you say, hey, I think my elections are fake and that these are installations, I feel like I have no say in the political future of my country.
Your government just demonstrates, well, we will kill you.
We will crush you.
We will beat you.
We'll geo-fence you.
We'll track you down.
We'll come to your house in the middle of the night, paint your whole family with laser dots, including your children, embarrass you, force you to lose your job, the house to foreclosure, the cars to repossession, you lose your marriage, you're going to prison indefinitely because you are a terrorist.
Without due process, without due process, they don't need it.
They wrote themselves a permission slip to strip you of your constitutional rights because you're deemed an enemy combatant of the state.
You're a terrorist.
And they're doing that now with Project Esther.
See, the Heritage Foundation, they authored this 34-page thing that if you question or criticize Israel or its policies or its influence over our government or all of our bureaucracies, well, then you are a Hamas support organization.
You are a Hamas support network, and there, by extension, you're a terrorist.
So they've written themselves a permission slip to what, drone strike you?
They've already shown that they'll go into a sovereign nation in the Western Hemisphere and kidnap a president.
So how long is it until, with that precedent, Benjamin Netanyahu sends his goons from Israel to come and grab me and try me in some Talmudic court of Noahide?
Everything in Time00:11:35
Yeah.
But the information people are getting, and you talked about the phone spying on us, because the information that I'm getting, if my phone is listening to me, is going to be targeted and catered to me.
So I'm constantly trapped in this algorithmic bubble of edification that I'm getting immediately based on my wants, my wishes, my thoughts, my desires, so people can't get outside of that.
So it even goes beyond that from a psychological warfare perspective because, you know, I journal.
I've been journaling since I was 19 years old.
So I can literally pick up journals and I've been journaling almost every day since I was 19.
So I can go back to when I was 19.
I'm 45 now.
And see where I was at.
I can see where I was at, what I was thinking, what I was doing.
And I can watch this evolution of thoughts and how I've evolved and devolved and then evolved and devolved.
But even with that, if I know everything, every email you've sent, I know every text message you've sent, I know everything you've bought, I know all the conversations, I know everywhere you've been, I know everything about you.
I know exactly what to say to trigger you and get you to do certain things, say certain things, respond to certain things.
From a marketing perspective, it's freaking brilliant because I can then make sure that your eyes are on my platform longer so that I can get more advertising revenue.
But from a mind control, it's even more brilliant because then I can start to manipulate, manipulate you and control you, right?
And when I'm doing that, not only through that device, but I have all the other mechanisms, which we've already outlined, the media and the financial systems.
And I then have you completely captured.
And I have you doing things where you don't even know why you're doing them.
You firmly believe that this is the truth when you have no backing to it whatsoever.
Then, well, of course it's the truth because this is what I learned in school and this is what has been regurgitated to me over and over again as the truth, like with 9-11, right?
Whereas someone like me, who at age 14 started to wake up and ask the questions and then I saw 9-11 and I was saying, this is clearly a controlled demolition.
And then they found the passport from the, you know, the guy who flew the one of the guys that apparently flew the plane on the street.
And people believed it.
I'm like, and I was told I was the crazy one.
So I'm the crazy one?
How are you believing this?
But it's because they just, every news channel, I remember being in the gym, every single TV had Fox News on, was preaching this same propaganda all day long.
That's your conservative brand of Zionism.
Right.
So like, none of this stuff phases me anymore when all the news, the new, new things are popping up.
And my wife is like, did you hear this?
Did you hear that?
Did you hear Charlie Kirk got shot?
And I was like, Who's Charlie Kirk?
No.
I was like, I'm surprised it took him so long.
Really?
You were like that?
Because for me, it was like, well, this guy is the biggest shill for Israel.
Who would have the motive to kill him?
Certainly it wasn't some transgender furry who had a problem with Charlie's stance on the issue.
You know, it wasn't some radicalized weirdo.
So I was tracking his starting to shift, right?
Him starting to ask questions.
Yeah, I wasn't.
I had written him off.
But okay, so as far as like my neighbor is concerned, his name is Mike.
He lives a super clean life.
You know, like he literally stays inside of his house.
He raises his family.
He goes to work.
He comes home, works with his hands, does projects.
He's in his garage all the time.
Like he's literally involved with nothing.
He just, he doesn't pay attention.
If I told him the same thing that you just told me about his phone controlling his thoughts and his mind, he'd be like, yeah, I live a clean life.
Who cares?
This is the attitude that you get from a lot of people.
And although there is a large amount of people that I believe I attribute to this, like Overton window shifting are waking up, those factions are pocketed and they are a limited hangout.
You know, you've got X, maybe on Truth Social, but that's propaganda for the president who's not implicated in the Epstein files, despite his name being there 38,000 times.
Everybody's guilty except for him.
I saw Alex Jones saying something about, well, this guy's guilty and that guy's guilty and this guy's guilty, but not Trump.
He was an informant.
Well, you're an informant because you're compromised because you're participating in the same activities and you're already on the inside.
So when it says that you're finger banging a 13-year-old, well, the chances are pretty good that you probably did that.
So, I mean, if somebody like Mike is saying, well, I don't really care.
What of it?
So there's two ends of that spectrum.
And I've heard every excuse under the sun as to why people don't care, shouldn't care, whatever it might be.
One is, so what?
Like, what do I have?
Why do they care?
If they're tracking me, so what?
The other one is, they're tracking everything all the time anyway, so what's the point?
So there's two ends of that spectrum, right?
So what?
And so what?
Because they're already tracking everything.
You can't get away from it, right?
So on the one end of it, the reality is this.
We're up against companies.
So five companies alone, Facebook, Microsoft, Apple, Google, and Amazon, collectively, every year, every year, make over a trillion dollars.
Those five companies.
They spend tens of billions of dollars every year on candidates, causes, and organizations that are diametrically opposed to our values.
They literally want people like you and me dead.
Dead.
We're not even the useful eaters that they want to keep around because they can enslave us.
We're asking the questions.
We're pushing back.
They don't want us to exist.
Anyone who actually is supporting the Second Amendment, and we don't have to get into that argument with what's going on right now, but anyone who's supporting the Second Amendment, they don't want any of those people to exist either.
And we know that from their actions.
We know that from the people that they support.
Tens of billions of dollars.
They make that money by selling your data.
So you may not be participating.
Well, I didn't even pay for my phone.
My phone was free.
Your phone's never free, right?
You're still paying it as part of your monthly contract.
They take your data, they sell it to third-party brokers.
And that's why when you see advertisements for the things that you just talked about.
Even if your phone's off.
Even if your phone's off, they're making money.
So they're making money off of you, which they're then using that money, which is ammunition, for them to then go support candidates and causes that are literally trying to kill you.
That's the clown world, like up is down, left is right, that drives me insane.
That's like literally feeding the companies that are trying to kill you.
It makes no sense.
It makes absolutely no sense.
And then the other end of the spectrum where people are like, but they can see everything.
They can track everything all the time.
So like, what's the point?
I can't escape that.
Well, you can.
There's little things that you can do.
That's like saying, there's no point in me even trying to eat healthy whatsoever or take care of my body or exercise because I'm going to die anyway.
Or there's no point in me actually having some raised beds and like chickens and like trying to do what I can to like grow some fruit trees outside because the chemtrails are there all the time.
They're going to spray poison.
So what do I do?
Become a nihilist?
And I just live in a bunker?
Yeah, you just wave the white flag and give up.
And just give up?
Like, so what did I do?
Right?
No, I'm not going to do that.
And even if you could live in that bunker and you could have turret gunners outside protecting you, but if someone has enough means and motive, they're going to still be able to find you and kill you, just like they did with Maduro.
They spent a lot of money and a lot of time finally capturing that guy.
But the reality is this: the vast majority of people, Stu, have absolutely zero, zero situational awareness when it comes to these digital devices.
None.
They're literally walking into stores, waving their money around, saying, I have $500 cash on me.
I'm unarmed.
Please rob me.
And they don't even know it.
They don't even realize that they're doing it, but that's what they're doing.
So they're like blowing their digital heads off all day, every day, because they have no situational awareness.
And this is the question.
If I went to you, Stu and I said, Hey, I want to carry a firearm on me.
I want to.
I want to protect myself.
But I'm really afraid of guns.
I'm not gun savvy.
I know that if I pull the trigger, it goes boom, but I'm kind of afraid to be around them.
I really don't understand how they work.
What gun would you recommend that I carry on my person all day?
I would recommend that you don't.
And if you do, please stay away from me.
Exactly.
That's literally how we feel when we talk to customers.
When they say, I'm not tech savvy, I really don't understand how any of this stuff works.
How do I become private?
Like, well, you have to get educated.
Learn how these things work because these devices are literally the most sophisticated, technologically advanced things that have almost ever been created that you're now carrying around in your pocket.
You called it a weapon of war.
It is a weapon of war.
It is a psychological warfare weapon, and it needs to be treated as such.
And that's every app.
That's like everything that these phones are doing.
Correct.
It's not just listening to you so that it can target you with the next fad diet or workout routine so that you can, you know, shred body fat.
That's what it's designed to do.
It's designed to keep your attention.
So you're doing so many things on this, and everyone knows it.
You know it.
We walk outside.
People are staring at their phone.
If you have a second of free time, people are sitting there doing this, playing games, scrolling, whatever.
Like people have, you know, at our age at 45, we grew up in an era where we didn't have those things.
There was one phone in my house attached to the wall.
I remember the day that we replaced the cord on the wall so we could actually bring it from the kitchen and I could bring it into the bathroom and close the door and have a private conversation.
Did the exact same thing.
Right?
Yes.
Yeah.
We all super long cord.
And then you got to replace it because you stretch it so far that it won't go back to its curly cue.
Exactly.
I think people need to start simple.
We've been sold this paradigm that technological advancement requires that we give up our sovereignty and our privacy.
But people still beg for it.
You know, because then it was like, oh, the cordless phone.
Now I can walk away from the base.
I got to stay relatively close because it'll get fuzzy.
Then came the cell phone.
Remember the big brick phone?
Oh, yeah.
My mom had one in her minivan, man.
I thought we were the coolest thing in the world.
I just pretended to be on it, going down the road, just held it up to my ear.
I think I was, I don't know, I was like 10, 11 years old.
I don't remember exactly.
Holding it up to my ear in the minivan, like, I'm on the phone.
I'm important.
And then they beg for more and they beg for more and they want more and more.
So the problem is not the technology itself, I believe.
It's who controls that technology.
It's just like the firearm.
The problem is not the firearm.
It's who has access and control of the firearm.
Common sense.
It's the same with AI, right?
If you give access and you give ownership and control over AI to literal Luciferian psychopaths and you expect something positive to come out of it, every movie we've ever grew up watching talked about how horrible AI is going to make our futures.
Like every single one.
I can't think of a single movie that looked into the future and talked about how AI was going to improve our lives.
Technology's Moral Compass00:04:45
And even when it started that way, that robot turned evil in some capacity.
Right?
And yet we're now living in this paradigm where somehow we've just accepted this as like, well, this is normal.
The man against machine.
But the machines are controlled by man, and the man that's controlling the machines wants you dead.
Right.
So we have a bunch of men who are Luciferian psychopaths controlling companies that want us dead, that are producing technology that we all are clamoring and desiring because they control the methods and means of communication and media and education.
They own all of this stuff.
So when we start to break out of that paradigm and we say, wait a second, what?
What's happening right now?
How does this device actually work?
What's happening?
It's no different than when you start saying, wait, what am I eating?
I'm eating poison.
So wait, the meat that they're selling me at the store isn't actually real meat, or those animals were being fed like literally garbage.
Or hormones, or they were injected with, you know, God knows what.
Right.
So when you start to learn that stuff, you start to wake up and you're like, I need to do something.
You find a pig farmer.
You find a pig farm.
You find somebody that has chickens.
You get eggs.
You get raw milk.
You get beef from somebody that you trust.
Exactly.
But that doesn't take overnight.
That's not like tomorrow everything's better.
It takes time.
You have to learn.
You have to do some discovery.
You have to get educated.
Yeah, I told Marie, I was like, look, we need to do this sourdough bread thing.
It took forever.
Finally, we start doing the sourdough bread, and now it's like, we're doing like flour tortillas or sourdough, you know, tortillas for the tacos.
Like everything tastes, it tastes wonderful, by the way.
For any of you out there, you're not doing sourdough.
You're missing the boat.
Or even just making your own bread at home.
It doesn't even have to be sourdough.
It can just be regular bread.
Yeah.
Sourdough is the best.
Go look at the ingredients on a loaf of bread across the street of the supermarket.
I mean, there's like 6 million ingredients, at least 271,000.
And then when they do the testing on how much glycophate is in that stuff, like literally the weed killer stuff that causes poison or causes cancer, it's like astronomical in these loaves of bread that we're buying for them.
And not only is it just allowed in your food, but it's like it's put there intentionally.
They want you dead.
They want you hooked up to the big pharma western medicine industrial complex waiting for your next vaccine, waiting for your next booster shot.
So when you wake up to that, you're like, okay, maybe I shouldn't eat the poison.
Maybe I shouldn't just mindlessly walk through the grocery store and just grab stuff and throw it in the bin or like let my 15-year-old like just throw whatever he wants into the bin because it's poison most of the time.
Maybe I should do some homework and research.
Maybe you have to pay a little bit more for higher quality stuff.
That's a process.
It's the same thing with the fire.
Like if I get a new, I got a new shotgun two years ago.
I had to go to the range and I had to practice shooting that thing.
I had to practice loading that thing.
I had to learn how to use that new tool.
It took time.
It took education.
I have to spend the time because it is a weapon and it's a tool, like any tool.
You get a new chainsaw.
If you've never used a chainsaw before, you're going to have to learn how to use that tool or you're probably going to hurt yourself.
I lost the tip of my finger because I started using a log splitter and I had never been trained how to use a log splitter.
And I was going like two and a half hours into the log splitting and someone asked me something and I turned my head for a split second and I learned.
Did you even feel it?
Huh?
Did you even feel it?
I really didn't at the time.
At the time.
So it was just quick.
It was gone.
It was off.
It crushed it and then I yanked my hand out when I saw what was happening and tried to get it out in time.
Didn't get it out in time.
So part of it stayed crushed in the thing and the rest of it was out.
But what I learned was a hard lesson, which is I probably shouldn't have been at it for three hours splitting logs and I probably should have gotten some education on this thing before I started.
I got a buddy.
He's a grown-ass man, which I can't believe that you have to learn this lesson the hard way, but you don't stick your hand into a moving snowblower to try to remove some obstruction because it turns out you're going to lose several of your fingers.
That just happened recently.
But yeah, sometimes people have to learn the hard way and with technology creeping up on people and them being passive or apathetic or complacent and being, you know, these are the people that were like five years ago, like, I guess I just don't even really care.
There's no way to get away from it who are now coming to you or they're saying like, hey, this is real.
Like they're attacking us through this technology and I have to figure out a way to get away from this.
Just as I got away from the poisonous food on the shelves at the grocery store or at the fast food places, just as I woke up to who's responsible for 9-11 or Charlie Kirk, I'm waking up to this and I want to do something about it, but how do you escape it?
Yeah.
So first is the education.
Unexpected Threats to Brain Devices00:03:25
You have to get informed.
You have to get educated.
And then you start learning the different levels of it.
So you have the hardware itself.
There's different threat vectors in the hardware itself.
Then you have the operating system, which is like the brain of the device.
And if you're giving that brain of that device to Google or Apple or Microsoft, it's really their device.
So you're basically saying, I'm paying money to have a device that is controlled and owned by these big tech companies.
And they're just monetizing me throughout the process.
So they're making even more money off of me.
So that's the operating system layer.
And then on top of it is you have applications.
And then from there, you have the network.
So at our business, we focus a lot on education and training.
So we have mountains of training and education because people have to get educated on this stuff.
Anyone who comes to you and says, Stu, use this device and you're safe is lying to you.
That's literally like me going to grandma and saying, grandma, buy this laptop or I'm sorry, buy this firearm and you're safe.
She's not safe unless she gets trained.
She's going to do something stupid, guaranteed.
Double op buck, hip shot down the hallway.
You're good.
Right.
It is a great home defense weapon, though.
It can be if it's a good idea.
Especially for people who are a little bit less trained.
The 20-gauge shotgun?
Yeah.
100%.
12-gauge Remington 870 Express, double-op buck, just right down there.
This is what my wife got.
She went with my buddy, who was a former Ranger, to go get a gun.
Too many holes to pack.
I thought she was going to get a little pew-pew, and she came home with a 20-gauge shotgun.
That's good because if you're woken in the middle of the night and you're kind of like half asleep, Then all of a sudden you go from half asleep to now, bang, you're under stress in a crisis, elevated heart rate.
You forget about your surroundings and you rely on training and instinct.
If you don't have training with the firearm, you are going to lock up.
This is why when people are like, and I hate to keep harping on this, but this is something that I've just been just like laser focused on.
When people are like, well, how could it be that Tyler Robinson couldn't take that shot?
Dude.
He's in broad daylight.
There's 3,000 people there.
He's never handled a firearm before.
You know, he's never been seen with a firearm before.
His heart rate elevated like that.
Like I've been in training situations where they intentionally elevate your heart rate and then you watch your grouping go like this.
Well, it does that just based on somebody flipping the lights off unexpectedly.
So the instructor on the range, he had somebody standing over there and just had the lights went out just unexpectedly.
So you have all these law enforcement guys, bounty hunters, you know, canine guys, tactical operators who just the lights go out and their heart rates elevate and then they turn them back on and they say, put five rounds down range.
Now go.
And you do it and your grouping widens just a little bit.
That was the lights going out.
Imagine now you're being shot at or you're in front of 3,000 people and you're going to take out Charlie Kirk.
No.
It just, the impossibility of that is almost guaranteed.
You're not going to hit your intended target if you're Tyler Robinson.
Well, the same thing with this.
You can't understand it if you don't have training and if you don't instinctively say, I want the prying eyes of this satanic Luciferian regime off of my life and I don't want them to be able to attack me because just as much so as they can pull information from your phone.
Silver Backdoors: 90s Legacy00:05:32
I mean, is it beyond the realm of possibility that they can put things on your phone?
No, that's what they do.
Somebody like me.
100%.
Hey, look at these pornographic images on Stew Peters' phone.
Right.
Yep.
This is where, like, when I meet folks like you and have these conversations, I'm so, this is why I was yelling at you last night.
I'm so passionate about getting folks like you who I know are on the front lines of this war, who are speaking truth to power and truth and love.
You all need to start protecting yourself in this domain.
You know how to protect yourself in the physical realm, but in the digital realm, you're wide open, bro.
You are wide open.
Everybody is.
But the vast majority of people are.
The good news is that there are now tools that can help.
And you don't have to be a programmer to know how to use them anymore.
Like it used to be five years ago.
You needed to know how to code in order to use devices like Graphene OS on a phone or like Linux on your laptop.
Now it's so simple and so easy, they just work.
You don't need to be a coder.
And we have a team of people who are there to support you along the way as you have questions to walk you through why is this happening?
Well, here's why.
And here's the tutorial.
Here's the video to walk you through how to get through this, right?
So you have a team of people who can support you through that process.
That didn't exist five years ago.
So explain this to me.
So I've got my two iPhones.
One of the numbers got out there.
Too many people have it.
I've got my other one that's super private, but it's not really all that private, is it?
No.
It's not.
If it's on an iPhone, it's not.
It is.
And it's really convenient because it links up to my two different MacBooks, one here at the studio, actually two here at the studio, one in this office, the other one, and then one at home, because I don't want to bring my laptops back and forth.
So everything just like links together.
It's all, you know, in the cloud, as they say.
Right.
But who owns the cloud?
All the cloud is someone else's computer.
So who owns that computer?
Well, if Apple owns that computer, Microsoft owns that computer, Google owns that computer, Facebook owns that computer, any of these companies, then you're really just giving your data to the enemy that we're trying to fight.
It's like, it makes no sense.
So what devices are you talking about?
I mean, like, is it hardware?
Is it phones?
Is it computers?
What do you do?
How do you fix this problem?
All of it.
So it's all of it.
So you load a different operating system onto the device, which now makes that device your device.
That means Google, Apple, Microsoft, which I'm going to tangent here, by the way.
I was in Silicon Valley for 20-some odd years.
I saw how the sausage was made.
I was in meetings in these data center facilities, which became my expertise.
I wrote a whole book on that industry.
It was basically data centers for dummies.
It's called the Data Center Co-Location Industry Playbook.
It's like the de facto book that anyone coming into that industry reads that book just to learn about that industry.
So the Lord's blessed me with the ability to take complex stuff like a data center, which is pretty friggin complicated, and to dumb it down so that average people can just understand what's happening here.
These things are popping up all over the place, dude.
All over the place.
They require a lot of silver.
A lot of power.
A lot of power.
Generated by silver.
AI takes a bunch of silver.
Munitions a bunch of silver.
That's what you were talking about when you were saying that.
Yes.
100%.
That's where silver is going to go through the future.
The data centers are going to, yeah, I mean, and so now I got people predicting like over $2,000 for silver.
Yeah.
And you're going to see retracement.
Of course, it's a red money investment.
So you're going to see that.
So where I was going with this, in meetings, where I can say definitively and talk to anybody who's in OSINT, or Operations Security Intelligence, they will tell you, Microsoft has backdoor deals with our government, has for since the whole antitrust case went down when we were kids.
Remember that?
Since like the early 90s, early 90s.
You were awake at 14.
Yeah.
So is Apple.
So has Google.
So have all these companies.
They all have our government, which is, again, brilliant by our government to go to these companies and say, if you're going to operate in our country, you're going to have to give us backdoor access into these things.
So as you have any foreign company or country running a Microsoft Windows operating system, we have our intelligence agencies who can access that laptop and see exactly what's going on in that laptop.
That's been happening for decades, Stu.
Decades.
Think about that.
It has, yeah.
And it's brilliant.
But this is exactly what the CCP does.
This is exactly what Syria has been doing.
This is exactly what Israel's been doing.
Every Israeli intelligence or startup company is actually controlled and run by the state government.
They have that same control access into anything that they do internationally.
It's just, it's national security, Stu.
We have to do this for national security.
Patriot.
For America to compete internationally, we have to be able to do this.
And if it was, if we could trust the people who had access to that data, I would be probably relatively okay with that.
I'd be like, that's really frigging smart.
That's really good plan, right?
But when we have Luciferian psychopaths in control, I don't trust it at all.
It's actually really like, it's big.
When you try to think about the complexity of all of this, there's room, like Unit 8,200, rooms all over the place.
Unlocking the Grift00:12:42
These people are, it's their whole job is to spy on you.
But it doesn't take individual people.
You know, so you were telling a story about some guy who wanted to preach the gospel to the FBI agent listening on the other end of the book.
This is how people imagine this happening.
Yes.
Yeah, I don't know.
I don't want to say it's ego or what it is.
It's just a lack of understanding, right?
They just don't understand.
They think that because they're someone on the front lines, you know, like you, you have a dedicated FBI agent who's literally listening to all these phone calls.
No, that's not how it works.
All of that data is being fed into a database onto a server.
Everything's being transcribed and they're looking for certain keywords.
And when those pop up, someone's going to get pinged and they're going to look at it and be like, oh, is this something that we want to pay attention to or should do anything about?
Yes, no, no, right?
That's how it works.
So the reason that we wanted to talk to you is because that actually kind of started happening.
You know, where I would get a phone call or not get the phone call.
Somebody would try to call me.
My phone would never ring, but somebody else would pick up the phone.
And it wasn't like a missed dial.
They were going to my contact in their phone.
And then it was multiple people inside of my network, my organization, people that work very, very closely to me, where it started to fan out to them.
And then pretty soon, multiple people were getting these random women that were answering the phone or other dudes that were answering the phone, like guys, and it was never coming to me.
And then they would text me and they'd be like, who was that?
Who just answered your phone?
At first, they thought it was a joke, like I was playing a joke on them.
And I'm like, what?
I'm at work.
I'm in the office.
But this continued to persist, which actually spawned, you know, the remedy was to go get another phone, set up a completely different iCloud account.
So now I have two iCloud accounts.
And then, of course, there goes all the convenience of everything.
So I'm already like pulling away from the idea of convenience over safety, convenience over privacy.
Like, I don't even give a damn about convenience anymore.
I just want to make sure that, you know, and I wouldn't call it ego.
I just like, I went through this experience.
Somebody was intercepting my phone calls for whatever reason, whether it be nefarious or some kind of a rerouting issue where there was a technical difficulty, but I don't think so because it was happening to multiple different people calling me.
So, you know, at that point, I was like, we got to get somebody in here.
We got to fix the situation.
So the unfortunate reality is just as Microsoft, Google, and Apple, we have ATT, Verizon, and T-Mobile.
T-Mobile, yeah.
Those are the three carriers in the United States.
They control 99% of all of the phone calls, text messaging, and data in the U.S. Three companies.
Everyone else that you hear about, from Mint Mobile to US Cellular to Patriot Mobile to Yufani.
That's the one somebody said, yeah, you need to get Patriot Mobile.
So we can dig down that and we can talk about that.
They're a good company, but you have to understand why.
Because they support the troops, right?
Because they support the 2A and they spend a lot of money.
Like, that's good, but the more important thing is...
They're neocons.
They're not...
They're not owned by Google, Apple, Microsoft.
They're not owned by Verizon, ATT, or T-Mobile, which 85 plus percent of all the, they're called M-mobile virtual network operators.
They're just resellers.
Resellers.
Resellers that are owned by the war-loving pro-Israel, right?
Exactly.
Yes.
They're the ones that are sending propaganda to your 18-year-old, your 17-year-old, your 16-year-old, getting them all hyped up, pumping their heads full of propaganda about how cool it is to go dress in camouflage and go over and kill sand people.
Go America.
America F.
Yeah.
So if you're going to then switch your phone number to a carrier, you want to work with a carrier who's simply going to say, hey, we're now activating this new number on your network.
Not, hey, this new number that we're activating on your network is Stew Peters, who lives at this address and has this email account and this social security number and this credit card number that he used to.
Does that make sense?
So you're adding a layer of obscuration between you and your number.
I'm not attached to it.
Does that mean that it's impossible for someone to identify who you are to that number?
No.
Just like layers of physical privacy, right?
You can put security cameras out.
You can have your lights on outside at night.
You can do different things that make it harder for people to find you.
Put a fence around your property, gate your driveway.
Simple things, like basic situational awareness.
People aren't doing that in the digital domain.
They're literally like, my doors are open and I've got, you know, my safes are unlocked in my house.
Come on in.
Take whatever you want.
There literally are people like this, though.
They leave their doors unlocked.
My dad leaves his door unlocked all the time.
Just walk right in.
Well, who's going to come in here?
Who wants to spy on my phone?
Yeah.
People probably definitely do.
You should say, Dad, unfortunately, because of me, people definitely want access to you.
Right?
I've told them.
So with that understanding of the carriers, simply changing, getting a new phone number from Verizon doesn't solve the problem because then you're still tied to that.
And even if you do get a brand new number, you're probably still going to get these stupid spam text messages from some people.
Yeah.
How are you?
I literally get three, four of those a day, right?
Do you want to go golfing?
Yeah.
Who are you?
Are we still on for dinner tonight?
Oh, you've got those two?
Oh, yeah.
All the time.
I literally get a number of people.
What is that exactly?
It's a phishing campaign.
They're just phishing.
They want to get you to start engaging in a conversation, and then it all leads to their funnel is to, it's some kind of crypto scam or financial scam.
That's what they all funnel towards.
They're building a relationship, building rapport.
They'll send you some pictures.
They'll make you feel like you have a friend.
A lot of it is just bots.
Have you dragged out these conversations?
That's where it goes.
This is all known stuff.
I can send you some books that document here's a lot of people.
I've never really responded until today.
I was like, oh, yeah, hey, what's up?
Don't respond, Stu.
Please don't do that.
That's a bad idea.
So, okay, so I went and got the new phone number and I went and got a new iCloud account, but I'm still hooked up to the Matrix because I'm still on Verizon and I'm still, you know, on an Apple phone that's, you know, all my so.
Right.
So you need to exfiltrate your data out of Apple's universe and you need to start owning and controlling your data.
So you put that on a server that you own, you control, or that's owned and controlled by people who have the same values that you have and that are going to fight to the death to defend your constitutional rights.
What's left of them, right?
Like this is the whole parallel economy concept.
And if we truly want to start building a parallel economy, and as Babylon is crumbling, which it's crumbling right now, and more people are waking up, they need to know where they can go to.
So I've spent the last four or five years of my life trying to find who these companies are.
And I get really pissed off when I see grift companies out there.
I see companies that call themselves, you know, the, what was Candace Owens' phone company?
Are you going to name them?
That she was, you want me to?
I totally can.
You can go to my website.
I mean, I want my viewers to know, like, you know.
I think the up phone is a big grift.
I think it's a massive grift by Eric Prince.
And he sells it, buy this thing and you're safe.
Well, no, Eric.
You need to know how to use that thing.
A. B, who actually developed that thing for you?
And he was super proud when he first launched this phone.
It was developed by a former Mossad, former Mossad, intelligence crypto guy, or not crypto, but cyber guy, who created the Pegasus spyware that was used to hack into everybody's phones.
Yes.
That's what he touted.
And I'm like, I'm sorry.
Hold on a second.
You want me to trust a phone developed by a Mossad cyber intelligence guy that is closed source, which is important to understand, open source and closed source.
Closed source means you have no idea what's happening on there.
And recently they said, well, no, we've open source.
Excuse me.
Explain closed source.
Open source means I literally have the blueprints to my home.
I can see where my electrical is, my plumbing is, where all the walls are, all the doors are.
At any given moment, I can see what's happening in my home.
And anybody and everybody has access to it.
So I can have a community of people say, hey, Sean, just so you know, your garage door is being unlocked for 30 minutes between 2 a.m. and 2.30 a.m.
That's a problem.
Someone's going to be able to get into your garage door.
You should take care of that.
I can then make that fix, push it out to the community, and the community can then verify and say, oh, that fix was made.
By the way, that fix is really good.
You might want to think about doing that over here.
This would make this area more secure too.
And then I can say, that's a good idea.
And I can make that fix.
And then they can say, oh, that actually is really good.
So it's transparency.
You have full transparency.
Do you really want that?
In technology, 100%.
But in the case of your home's blueprint and your security measures, probably.
Not in my home.
No.
Hey, guys, tell me how I could be more secure.
Right.
Yeah.
So with Microsoft and Google and Apple and the vast majority of technology companies, they're all closed source.
So you really have no idea.
We've learned over time what's really happening because there's whistleblowers and there's just the reality of like hacks that occur.
And when Microsoft pushes out an update and they say, hey, we closed this loophole.
Trust us.
We're just supposed to be like, okay.
There was a banking fraud.
There was a leak of banking data.
There was a data breach.
That's what they always call it.
A data breach at Citibank.
Only 4 million people were affected by this and it was immediately rectified.
Trust us.
Right.
And by the way, we're going to give you a free account to this new dark web monitoring service that they make money on after the two-month free trial or three-month free trial.
So they then make money off the fact that they lost your data and you have no recourse because you have no service level agreement whatsoever.
It's like, it's all a scam.
But that's where open source and closed source is important.
So your technology is open source.
Yes.
We are absolutely 100% advocates of open source because it can be vetted.
It can be verified.
Well, there's people that hang out on the internet looking for you to try to F me over and they'll be like, yeah, no, no, no.
And they'll alert me or alert the community.
100%.
Yeah, because it's their people.
People are tribing up.
Yes.
They are.
They're doing it physically.
They're moving out of the cities.
They're going out into the country.
They're taking care of themselves.
They're raising farms.
They're raising animals.
They're growing food.
Homeschooling their kids.
Yes.
Yes.
Amen.
Hallelujah.
That's the future.
You homeschooling?
Yes.
How's that going?
Awesome.
Awesome.
I have been so pushing for that.
I just need to put my foot down.
This is what we're doing.
Can I tell the story that I told you last night?
Yeah.
So my 19-year-old, who's amazing, I mean, all my kids are amazing, but he made a comment.
He's like, well, we really need America is another civil war.
And my 12-year-old, who's reading a book called The It's called The Undisclosed History of the World or something like that, just got done with this chapter on the Rothschilds.
And so my 12-year-old literally said, well, if we do that, it's just going to benefit the Jewish bankers if we have another civil war.
And I was like, oh, my God.
Yes.
I've done so well with my protocol.
Did he read the protocols?
He hasn't read the protocols yet.
My 19-year-old has.
I haven't.
You should.
As of the time of I right now, I have not read it.
And I keep getting told by JD, now you're telling me a lot of people are telling me.
I don't know why I haven't read it.
I'm just going to read it.
It's a quick read.
And you'll be like, oh my gosh.
Yeah, because it's been like hundreds of years, right?
Yes.
Yes.
But it's fake.
It's fiction.
Yep.
The upsteam files are too.
Right.
Democrat hoax.
Yeah.
It's just, it's a fiction that's like played out almost to an exact T over the last 150 some odd years.
Like, that's interesting.
Okay.
So, if I'm unplugging and I'm decentralizing and I'm open sourcing and I'm doing all, what does that actually look like?
So, it looks like first you're doing an audit of your digital life.
Auditing Digital Life00:03:10
Like, you have to just sit down and spend some time because you have to exfiltrate your data.
It's like, it's like moving your house.
Ideally, to do that efficiently, you don't just be like, we're moving and start grabbing stuff and throwing it in boxes and then figure it out later, right?
To efficiently do that, you have to say, okay, what do I depend on?
What are the applications and tools that I absolutely depend on?
Document it.
Yeah, I got an email.
I got a message.
I got to communicate.
I need a calendar.
You know, I mean, it's just like the regular stuff that everybody else needs.
You have a team that needs to communicate, documents that you need to share with each other, maybe collaborate and work on together, like all the things.
Not everyone needs that stuff, right?
My dad, he has very simple needs.
There was a guy who had video footage, I think, from 9-10 at UVU.
And the FBI was like, like he went to the FBI and he was like, hey, I've got this footage and I think it would really help you.
And they're like, yeah, well, delete that footage or something.
They told him to, he was like, I'm not deleting this.
And then they did.
Yeah.
Like remotely from his camera.
It was gone.
So what most people don't realize is the data on your phone is backed up to the cloud.
And if the cloud is owned by Google or Apple, which the vast majority, 70 some odd percent of US phones are iPhones.
It's not the way internationally, but in the US, it's 70%.
So likely our FBI went to Apple and said, we need access to this iCloud account.
And so they got access to the iCloud account and they said, delete, delete, permanently, delete, and removed it.
And then he's like, why isn't this on my phone anymore?
They must have hacked into my phone.
No, they hacked into your iCloud account that's sitting on a server in Apple's data center.
And that's not hard to do.
And you don't have to be the FBI and you don't need an administrative subpoena or a warrant to do it.
Correct.
But if he had a phone that was running Graphene OS, and that data was on his device and not backed up to a cloud somewhere, because you can still, with that device, download iTunes or download iCloud.
You could still do that.
But now it's your choice to do that.
It's not just by default there.
So I could still download Google Maps and give Google access to my GPS and all the things.
But that's my choice now.
I'm now allowing them, giving them permission to do so versus that being there by default.
But if that guy had a phone that was running Graphene OS and that data was on his phone, and he didn't give permissions to any outside entities, there would be no way for them to get that off that device without physically taking that device from him.
You remember when, I think it was a couple years ago when the FBI, they grabbed Lindell, they grabbed all these guys, different people's phones.
Yeah, right?
That was after the symposium that Lindell had.
Yes.
And they said, we want access to your phone.
And they were like, okay.
Right?
What's cool about GrapheneOS is you could put in, it's called the distress code.
You could put in that distress code.
It nukes your phone.
Like all of it.
Faithful Father Influence00:11:59
All of it.
Nukes your phone.
It's gone.
It factory resets your phone, unable to get it back, any of the data on your phone.
Pretty cool, right?
It tells you the people who created this thing, they know what's up.
They understand what's at stake.
Now, you need to have the prudence to back up your stuff, because if you don't have what's on that phone backed up somewhere and you nuke your phone, you're going to lose all the data on that phone.
That's part of the training.
That's part of the training, right?
And people are like, but it's so convenient.
So convenient that it just automatically does it, automatically backs it up to somewhere else.
Okay, those tools exist.
You can automatically back it up to various companies who are not owned and controlled by Luciferian psychopaths.
Like, let's do that.
How about we choose to do that?
I just don't know why anybody would resist that.
Like, what is it that, what's the biggest objection that you have?
It's the same objection you have.
It just takes time.
It takes time that you think you don't have.
So at some point, you have to be like, you reach that point.
Did I say I didn't have time?
Two years ago, two and a half years ago, you did.
You did.
I'm too busy.
I've got too much going on.
We got too much going on right now.
I can't focus on that right now.
Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah, because James.
Yes.
Yeah.
Yeah.
That's everyone's excuse.
Who's in the world operating in the world?
Like, yes, it takes time.
But just like when people realize, well, I need to learn how to, it takes people getting assaulted or mugged before they're like, I need to learn martial arts.
I need to learn how to defend myself.
Then they take the time to go invest in that.
Or it takes one of their kids getting cancer.
You know, I mean, like, literally, you're here because we had this experience with my family.
Right.
So, like, I don't care what it takes for people.
I mean, at this point, after everything we've been through over the last couple of years, if you haven't woken up yet to what's really happening in this world, it's only going to take an act of life.
So, how do you deal with that psychologically?
You know, you have the answer for all of these panicking people.
You know, you have the answer for all these people that are like, they're waking up to this, and they're still walking around, like, but it's convenient.
And I don't have the time.
I move on to the next.
Like, I can only do so much, right?
I've spent a long time of my life trying to wake people up and having people tell me I'm insane.
I'm like, okay.
Yeah.
Well, that goes along with the territory.
I mean, it was the same with COVID.
Like, how many people that you love the most?
I've lost relationships.
I mean, COVID, you know, Charlie Kirk.
The election, Trump.
I've lost friends over Trump because I'm a realist.
Yeah.
These campaign promises were broken.
It's okay to say that.
And it doesn't, there's no path to them being fulfilled.
At all.
At all.
We're going the other direction.
We're going the opposite direction.
And all the apparatus for this, you know, totalitarian state takeover is like, he's building it.
And he's bringing Luciferian psychopaths on the technology side as his like homies.
Yeah.
Who were the first people he had in the White House in the Oval Office?
Sam Altman, Larry Ellison.
Yep.
You know, talking about bringing you your own AI mRNA concoction delivered to your door.
I mean, it's just insane.
And I mean, I think there's a tangent here, but RFK Jr., like, he's doing some okay things, but like he's literally wanting everybody to be wearing a watch, a watch that has the data, the health data, going back to the NIH.
So he's, he wants everybody now wearing devices, especially our at-risk elderly people, wearing these devices that all their health data is now being fed back to our government.
Yeah.
Because there's some nurse that's assigned to you that's going to call you and refill your prescription today.
Right.
Yeah.
That's not happening.
Because it's so convenient, Stu.
So to answer your question, what do I do?
I move on to the next.
Like, I'm here running this business.
It's not convenient.
Not like it's going to save your life.
Wearing this wearable medical device will actually save your life, just like the Patriot Act.
Right.
And that's digital ID, digital ID as well.
We need to have digital ID because it's going to make the kids safer from watching porn online and seeing horrible things online.
So we need to identify, you cannot be anonymous doing anything digital online.
We have to know who everybody is.
Like, we're literally, and Trump is like 100% all in on this.
He's all in on this.
I know it's a tangent, and this is like a tributary, but I like that.
Do you think he knows?
I mean, I honestly don't.
Like, I've read his books.
You can't have it both ways.
People are like, he's super smart and he's playing 6 million D chess.
Yeah.
And then they're at the same breath, they're like, well, he doesn't.
He's being, he's got bad advisors around him and he's being kept from this information.
Well, then you're retarded and you have no business leading the most powerful country in the world.
You can't have it both ways.
No.
Like, you can't believe both things at the same time.
And yet a lot of people do.
Right?
It's a cult.
It's a cult.
So what do I believe?
I believe that people need to do, at the end of the day, like the technology stuff, the health stuff, all that stuff, it all matters.
You have to be doing something.
We are called as Christians to be on the front lines of the war that we're in right now.
Whether that war is taking place internally with your spiritual self, take care of that first, that battle, and then you can move on to the spouse, your kids.
Like what you have in your control is what matters the most.
So if that means if God is calling you to then go serve in your local school board or city council, fine, great.
But how do you discern God's will, Stu?
Do you do it just by a hope and a prayer?
No.
You have to spend time in that relationship with God.
The vast majority of people who come to our team, because we are very Christ forward in everything we do, we pray with our customers.
And I hate, you know, it's kind of crazy to think about, but when our devices, some of our devices go wonky on us, we literally will pray over the devices.
Not all the time, but about 50% of the time, things start working again.
Like, it's weird.
It's crazy.
But when you realize the spiritual realm also plays into technology, like, why would it not?
Yeah, I very much believe that.
It's all encompassing.
God is everywhere.
So is Satan.
Exactly.
This is his domain.
So we need to be on those front lines with all the things that we're doing.
And in order to win this war, we have to spend time with God in scripture, in meditation, in prayer, in fraternity with other men and women.
Yes.
Surrounding our kids with other examples of men and women who are leading those godly Christian lives.
If all they see around them is you and you're the only example of a godly man, then all the other examples they see, they're going to start pulling information from.
So if we're not surrounding our kids with those other examples, we're failing our kids.
We have to start building those communities.
So that's we, if your kids grow up watching you pay attention to your physical health, to your fitness, to the things that you're eating, by virtue, when they, you know, grow into their own adulthoods and they become independent, they will carry that on.
It's a generational change.
You're impacting your family generation if you're a present father.
You've probably heard the statistics, but over 80%, I think it's like over 85% of kids who have a father, specifically a father, who is practicing a faith, doesn't matter what faith, those kids, 83% of those kids, will start practicing that faith.
It's over 90% for Christian men.
If they see their father every morning or every day in scripture, in meditation, in prayer, they then start following that faith too.
90%?
Yes, 90%.
So those are stats like, look those up yourself.
Have your fathers do the research yourself.
Like, that's facts.
This is why, what percentage of youth who are incarcerated right now have fathers?
I would say a very small percentage.
Very small percentage.
They don't have that father figure.
So, if we know that our kids are looking to us for examples, they're watching our behavior.
Of course, they are.
That's what I learned the most as a father.
I watch my kids do stupid stuff.
I'm like, why are they saying this?
Why are they doing this?
And then I would stop for just a flash of a second and be like, because they saw me do it.
Right?
It's the perfect mirror of yourself.
So you learn about yourself through this.
They're watching everything you're doing.
So whether it's your health and fitness, whether it's the technology you're using, we can't yell at our kids and say, you shouldn't be doom scrolling or you shouldn't be wasting so much time on the computer when you're doing the same freaking thing.
They're watching you do it, yeah.
They're watching you do it.
And then you're the hypocrite by telling them not to do it.
And related to this is, you know, those who want to track and monitor their kids everywhere that they go.
Well, we have so many customers like, well, what's the best tracking app for my kids?
Because I need to make sure my kids are safe.
Did you actually know that in the United States, Dude, and this is documented fact, not in all cities, but in the vast majority of cities, crime has actually gone down over the last 25 years.
Since we were kids, it's gone down.
There's less violent crime.
Yes.
Yes.
That's BS.
That's what the data says.
That's what the data says.
But 10 years ago, I loved going to Chicago and going on the architectural boat curriculum.
I didn't say all cities, Stu.
I'm not going to be caught dead going through Memphis, especially after certain periods of time.
Same thing with Chicago, certain cities.
But across America, there's less violent crime, especially in towns like the one we're in now.
Less violent crime.
So if that's the case, right?
My parents told me, probably told you, get the hell outside.
I don't want to see you until dinner time.
Go away.
I don't know what my mom was doing when I was gone, but we disappeared.
We just went away.
My dad couldn't tell you where to find me.
He's on his bike somewhere.
He's out in his boat.
He's down fishing.
He's under the bridge.
He's, you know, whatever.
He's with his friend.
Right.
Didn't have phones, didn't know check-ins, no pagers.
None of that.
Did you get in trouble?
Did you get in trouble, Stu?
Did you do some stupid stuff?
Yeah, of course.
Of course.
I did too, right?
Did I make mistakes?
100%.
Did I hurt myself?
I did.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah.
Big time.
Right.
I could have died several times.
I still have a rock lodge in my elbow.
Right?
Yes.
Could have died, right?
Like, that's reality.
Our kids need to learn how to handle those situations when they're kids.
This is why we have a bunch of crybabies who think they're bunnies running around.
Yeah.
Because they've been coddled and protected.
And oh, you think you're, you know, a bunny?
Yeah, I mean, if you see failure coming, you know, if like if you see a stumble coming in your son's life, sometimes it's better to just stay quiet and let him stumble.
You know, a lot of parents would step in and be like, hey, I see that this is about to happen.
You know, don't go there.
Don't drive this way.
Don't do, you know.
Now, if it's life-threatening, come on, of course.
But these little things like, you know, relationships or turning in assignments late or forgetting their boots.
You know, it's wintertime in Minnesota.
Yeah.
I have reminded you for six days in a row to take your boots.
Here they are this morning and I'm looking at them and I know that you're going to forget them.
I'm not going to remind you because I know that you're going to go outside for recess or whatever or you're going to go play football with your buddies and your feet are going to be soaked and they're going to be frozen and cold.
Minutiae Matters00:15:14
And guess what you call that?
Natural consequences.
And I bet you won't forget your damn boots again.
And then guess what?
They don't.
I mean, these are the lessons that we have to learn firsthand by having a negative experience with the choices that we made.
Right.
So I think we're dealing with a lot of adults.
And right now I'm having negative experiences with the technological choices that I've made.
So we have a lot of adults.
And like, it's mind-blowing to me how many 60-year-olds, 70-year-olds who are interested in this stuff.
They want to do this stuff, but they're so addicted to the convenience that, like, if they find out that they can't, you know, send a certain type of emoji to somebody to someone, they're like, they're out.
They're like, this is too complicated.
Okay, well, buy those.
This is too difficult.
Those are people that I want alongside of me storming the gates of hell, anyways.
100%.
So that's where our mentality is: we want to work with those who understand what's happening in the world and want to be on the front lines.
If you want things to be spoon-fed to you and so freaking stupid, simple, and easy, we may actually get there.
The more users we have, we can make the technology a little bit more convenient and easy to use.
It's not that it's really not, it's that you just have to learn how to use it.
We're going to get there as we have more customers and more users.
But at some point, you have to accept it.
Like, I need to learn this thing.
So, company-specific stuff, you know, like where do people begin this process?
So, we've found that by simply having a 15, 10-minute, 15-minute, 30, up to 30-minute sometimes goes longer, especially if we're praying with people on our calls, which we do often.
Free free digital privacy consultation.
When's the last time your Verizon rep was praying on the phone with you?
Yeah.
You know, they're in India.
We literally do it daily.
And we get text messages and we get phone calls and we get emails from customers who, you know, thank us.
You know, we've saved their life because all we did was talk to them, ask them a simple question: when was the last time you read your Bible?
And they're like, you know, I haven't even thought about that.
But I probably should go back to that because I'm dealing with whatever they're dealing with.
Right?
The current thing.
So, 30-minute free digital privacy consultation.
Just go to mark37.com.
It's literally on the top.
You can't miss it.
It's free 15, 30-minute digital privacy consultation.
Click on that thing.
In fact, we're setting up a site for you.
So mark37.com forward slash SPN.
Okay.
Right?
Go there, that landing page.
Your audience for the next month is going to get 10% off everything and anything that they come across on that site.
We've got the phones, we've got the laptops, but we want to talk about laptops.
We have laptops.
Yes.
Tablets.
We've got all kinds of other fun things, like those mic locks.
Yes.
Why didn't they know any of this?
They have phones and tablets?
We've got it all.
So I can just redo everything.
Yes.
I mean, I can go completely off of this government matrix grid.
Yes.
Everything that I'm doing, not just at home, but in the studio as well.
Yes.
And we're going to make it as hard as possible for the assholes to gain access to your data.
And that's what we want to do.
We don't want it.
Like right now, they don't have to do a darn thing, Stu, to gain access to your stuff.
Well, yeah, because my user agreements and my permissions and my, you know, my check marks and the I agrees and all of that stuff, there's apps that you download just for like collages, putting things together.
If you read the terms of service, they are collecting.
Yeah, okay, fine.
All we're doing is allowing you to make a collage, but we are selling all of this stuff to these people who do this, who are selling it to these people who do this.
Right.
Ultimately, making collages could cost you your life.
It's the same thing with the same thing with the weather.
Weather apps are notorious.
They're the worst of collecting.
Everybody wants to know the weather.
And selling your data.
So I'm sure they get a huge premium.
All kinds.
So the consultation is key.
We do migration support as well.
So for those who are like, okay, now I know what direction I'm pointing to.
For some people who like, they're like, I just want to simplify my life, which that's okay.
It's okay to simplify your life, right?
I have.
So flip phone.
I was telling Brittany this morning, like, I'm just so much more of a homebody now than I ever have been.
So a flip phone may even be the best solution.
You have those?
Yes.
This is what I've spent the last couple of years of my life doing, Stu, is trying to find the solution so that people can live a digitally sovereign life.
You were talking about guys like me, you know, and there are a handful of guys who I would consider to be, you know, bona fide fighters, you know, in the current war that we're in, which is why I started our last conversation: like, do you think we're at war?
Yeah.
And they, you know, they realize that they got to get off the grid as well.
They've got to protect themselves.
They have to, and you're not off the grid necessarily, but you're locking your data's lock and key.
You know, if I'm getting photographs from Mitch Snow about his experience on Fort Wachuca, if I have videos of Erica Kirk and Brian Harpole at Fort Wachuca, I'm going to decentralize that immediately.
I'm sending it out to multiple people.
Amen.
That's what you need to do.
And, you know, but at the same time, I don't want other people to be able to get into my phone and delete it or into the cloud and delete it or to intercept it or take it or do whatever.
So I know all these people that would want to do this as well.
Okay, so you were talking about like generals in the fight.
You know, people who are out here at the tip of the spear information super highway.
We're like breaking information.
We've got pictures.
We've got videos.
We're sharing with each other.
We're decentralizing.
We're making sure that people have it, but we want to protect ourselves.
At the same time, realistically, I have to be on X.
I want to be on Instagram.
I want to blow up on Facebook.
It's necessary.
We have to reach these people.
I mean, otherwise, they'll never know about any of this, including Mark 37.
They'll never know anything about it.
So, how do you cross these barriers while staying protected?
Great question.
And there's a concept of living in the public and living in the private.
So you have phone numbers, email addresses that you might need to use if you break your arm and you have to go to the doctor and you have to give them certain information.
You can give them aliases.
You can give them certain information that you know that, like, okay, I know this is going to be shared.
And then you have private phone numbers, private email addresses, and you can even start to get private credit card numbers that you use for certain things that you put certain parameters around.
So you can have your primary credit card number, and then you can have like alias credit card numbers that have certain dollars amount tied to them that you only use for like Amazon or you only use for certain things that you buy, right?
You can start to separate out your life so that you know that, okay, when I'm going to step into the Matrix, I'm going to use these things and operate in the Matrix.
But for all my other stuff, I'm going to use something else.
But you have to be smart about it.
I have the same.
I have public and private.
I don't share my private stuff with people who are in the public domain.
In the Matrix.
In the Matrix option.
Yeah, when you go back to the real world, that's when you pick up your privacy.
Right.
Your private phone, laptop, tablet.
So I make sure that those who I'm communicating with are running Linux on their laptops, are running Graphene OS on their phones, right?
And then the applications that I'm using, because we could be using, well, I'm using an encrypted signal, bro.
Right, a signal.
It's encrypted, right?
That encryption is useless if I see what you see on your end because I can gain access to your operating system.
It renders it pointless and useless.
Right?
So if I'm communicating with Brittany or Alex or Frankie or anyone else at the network or my family, my kids, they have the same technology.
They have the Graphene OS.
They have.
Right.
And you have to be getting smarter about how you use these things.
I was just talking to a missionary who does work in Pakistan of all places, which is pretty gnarly right now.
And they're like, well, we're safe.
When we go and have our prayer meetings, everybody throws their phones into the bathtub, turns them off, and throws them into the bathtub.
Yeah, daddy's home.
Lock up your phone.
Shabbat shalom.
And I was like, guys, that's a really bad idea because all of these phones are communicating with each other.
And now they all know that these people who have access to these phones were all together in the same location.
This place repeatedly at this time.
Yes, and like, but the phone was off.
And I'm like, yeah, but you already know that when your phone's off, it's still listening to you.
This is like why I feel like I'm taking crazy pills.
But it's also why I know the Lord has called me to do what I'm doing right now is to educate people on how this stuff works.
Like, again, all I'm trying to do is get people to just learn the basics.
Like, just basic digital privacy 101 behavior will make you exponentially safer.
So what does this look like?
People get a hold of you.
They go to mark37.com slash SPN.
And if you already have some savvy, you're already figured out, you'll be golden.
If you have questions, we have a mountain of tutorials, FAQs.
Every question you have, anyone has, we've already heard it.
Guarantee you, we've already heard it.
We've already answered it.
So if you want to spend time with us on the phone and talk through us, great.
Please do your homework first and like get a little educated on it so that we can make the best use of both of our times.
So are you sending me a phone and a tablet and a computer?
I go to mark37.com slash SPN.
Buy all that stuff.
We buy it there.
You send it to me.
And then what about, like, do I keep my phone number?
Do I get a new one?
Great question.
All this stuff.
You can keep your phone number.
But as we had the conversation before about the network service providers, you may want to think about getting another number with a different provider that's not, you know, owned and controlled by psychopaths.
Yeah.
Right.
That's going to be a little more private and make it harder for someone to steal your information, steal your data.
But you can keep it.
So you could literally take the SIM card out of your current phone, put it into your new phone.
You don't want to do that until after you set up the new phone.
So long as it has connection to the internet, you can start to load it up.
Talk about the stereo thing.
Again.
Okay, so explain this to me.
Like I'm so I've got my phone, I've got my number.
Right.
But because when I went into Verizon, it was attached to me, if I transfer that, it's still always.
Yeah, I mean, just think about it.
Your history tied to that number is not going to just automatically disappear.
Yeah, yeah, no, of course.
But what about the data that's on my phone?
You can migrate.
You can migrate that data.
And that can't be stolen, spied on, hacked, monitored, all that.
Once it's on the new device, on your current device, it's already right.
I know.
I mean, now I feel like dirty.
You should be carrying these things around is like, you know, you have digital poison in your pocket all day, every day.
Not only that, but like they're sitting next to me in the car.
They're rolling with me to work.
They're listening to what I say to my family.
Like they're storing my data.
They're sending it to God knows where.
And especially a guy like me.
Stu, do you have a smart TV in your bedroom?
You do?
Look up and see if that smart TV that you have has a camera and has a microphone or a microphone.
It might.
And if it does, super easy to hack into those smart TVs.
This is like, again, blows my mind.
People don't even think about this.
It blows my mind that I haven't.
You know, it's like watching me while I sleep.
Yeah.
It's like the blueprints of your home being on Zillow.
You said that to me the other day.
You're like, well, can you see the inside of your house on Zillow?
I went home and looked.
Yeah, you can.
Yeah.
You should pull that down.
You can request that.
People do their banking on their phones.
You shouldn't do that.
No, you shouldn't do that.
Just because this is, so just some quick wins for your listeners.
Just because you can do something from your phone doesn't mean you should, right?
A lot of those things that you were talking about, Instagram, Facebook, all those things, you should be doing that on a Linux laptop, which means you now control, own your laptop in your home.
You don't need to have that on your laptop instantly available all the time.
If you need to do the uploads, if you need to take the videos, you can take the video from here and then send it through your laptop.
Or you can set up what's really cool.
We haven't dug into all the other cool tech, but there's something called private spaces on your phone.
So you can set up like a quarantined environment within the phone so that it doesn't see and have access to everything else.
So, you know, we're traveling.
I have to take flights.
I have to travel around.
I have to get here.
Right.
So it was convenient for me to download the American Airlines app.
I had to give that app certain permissions.
I put it in a quarantine environment on my phone so that that app now has no idea who my contacts are, any other applications that I've installed on my device, or really anything about this device.
It's isolated.
It's by itself.
Yes.
The only thing it knows is that it itself is on there.
Correct.
So the people are like, well, I have to use Uber, which I would say, please don't use Uber.
Get a friggin taxi.
There's not taxis in a lot of towns.
I do a lot of traveling.
You really do have to have Uber.
I mean, if you're a guy like me.
Now I'm going to Mexico.
Obviously, that's a taxi.
But you go to LA, which I recommend that nobody ever does if you can avoid it.
But if you want to go see a Jimmy Door show and that's where he's playing and you want to shake his hand, you got to go there.
It's Uber.
I mean, this is the only way to get around.
So you can quarantine that as well, too, right?
Well, there's so this is where the homework comes in, right?
Like if you just do a little bit of homework, you can find local taxi services that are not Uber, and you can get for less money someone on speed dial who's going to be wherever you want them to be, whenever you want them to be there.
What I normally do is if I get an Uber driver that I like and he has a car that doesn't smell like a dirty, you know, sock, I just ask him for a cell number.
Hey, you'll make more money.
We're not going through Uber.
Pay cash.
Yeah, pay cash, boom.
Yeah.
So just put that guy's phone number.
So there's like hacks, right?
So we can teach people and we have articles upon article education training.
We can do sit-down private stuff for people, which is what we're likely going to be doing with you, right?
Or we can sit down and have like go through the full audit, get you set up, make sure you're fully migrated, and then be on call for support if you need that support.
Something else I want to say.
I asked you if you had to be on Wi-Fi for this phone because there's other phones that try to claim to be pretending to do what it is that Mark 37 is doing.
You have to have Wi-Fi.
Well, you're not going to have Wi-Fi when you need comms the most.
You know, I mean, Wi-Fi is going to not be there.
So you don't need Wi-Fi.
So just think about this logically.
You have to then have a data plan with a carrier, which so at some way data has to get out of that phone.
But if you have a new number that's not attached to you, then it doesn't really matter because you're just putting this new number on that carrier's network, but it's not necessarily tied to or associated to you.
Keep Looking For Updates00:14:02
They don't know who you are.
There's no history there.
Correct.
Yeah.
Correct.
So, but you don't need Wi-Fi in order to run the equipment that you have.
No, you don't need it.
But if you want to, you know, use an application that requires access to the internet.
Well, yeah, of course.
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah, but they easily hook up just like any other phone.
Right.
What I'm saying is if I'm out in the middle of the lake and I don't have Wi-Fi, I can still make a phone call.
I can still send a text message.
Yeah.
Well, this other phone, you couldn't do that.
Gotcha.
So I was like, wait, what?
Yeah, no.
When I'm out on the lake, I want to be able to, if I need to, make a phone call, let the family know when I'm going to be home or that I'm still alive, but the fish are really hitting, so I want to stay out for a little while longer.
I couldn't do that.
So then it's just like, well, I'm going back to the iPhone, have to.
Yeah.
Have to communicate.
They make you feel like you're trapped.
You're absolutely not.
Why Mark 37, by the way?
So it comes from scripture.
Our mutual friend, James Charles Phillips, and I were actually doing a Bible study in the morning together.
Oh, that guy missed that guy.
Constitution Cowboy.
And we were reading Mark 3.7.
It's right after the Pharisees and the Herodites basically got super pissed at Jesus and tried to call him out because he healed a man on the Sabbath and he made him look like morons because he was like, really?
So if your calf or whatever it was, your sheep or whatever gets caught in a ditch on the Sabbath, you're not going to help him?
You're not going to help him?
Like, what is wrong with you people?
And it says, and he went down to the sea and the multitudes followed him from all over.
And actually, I have it open right here.
And I think we're in those times right now.
So the multitudes followed him from all over.
So think about this.
All over.
All over.
They left everything.
And everywhere.
And everywhere.
They left their jobs, their families.
They didn't know what they were going to eat, where they were going to sleep, where they were going to go to the bathroom.
Blind trust and faith.
Blind trust and faith.
And they said, something's happening.
This man is doing miracles.
He's preaching a gospel of truth and love that I've never heard before.
We have to go.
We have to go see this.
And they just trusted that he would provide, that something miraculous would happen.
And it did.
I think we're in those times right now where people are starting to wake up and they're like, holy crap, this illusion that we live in is not doing it for me.
I'm seeking something more.
And so I think we're in those times.
And as we were reading through it, we were actually at that time trying to figure out what we were going to call the name of this business.
And as I kept looking at Mark 3.7, I was like, Mark 3.7, something about this is just speaking to me.
And then it dawned on me, like, I'm a geek, and there's something called Leet Speak, L-E-E-T speak.
That's where numbers equate to letters.
So every number.
So hackers and coders used to communicate just by typing numbers in.
So they could have conversations with each other just by having numbers.
Didn't have to have letters, right?
The number corresponds to the letter in the alphabet.
So what letter do you think the number three corresponds to?
C. E. Also, E.
So just turn it around.
Oh, got you.
Okay.
E.
I was thinking third letter in the alphabet.
So the number seven, what do you think that also looks like?
An L.
It's a T.
It is an L. Upside down.
It is an L.
But a one is also an L.
Yeah.
Right?
Or an L.
So M-A-R-K, and different numbers have different letters, right?
But M-A-R-K-E-T spells market.
Thank you.
So market.com.
So it's one of those things where, as I'm looking at that, I'm like, that's like the FedEx logo, where if you look at the FedEx logo and someone points out the arrow in the FedEx logo, you can never unsee it.
Never unsee it.
But prior to that, you're like, I have no, I don't see an arrow.
An arrow?
Yeah, where is it?
That's all I see is the big arrow now.
So with Mark 3.7, as you look at our logo, like that's the intentionality behind it is we want to be a marketplace for all things sovereign tech.
Have you figured out the Stew Peters logo yet?
I haven't.
Is there something?
You guys just have to keep looking.
I'll have to keep looking.
Yeah, let me know when you find it.
Very, very well hidden, very subdued.
This is how you propagandize, you see.
But you have to.
You have to propagandize because people have just been, yes, they have been just beat over and over unrelentingly.
That's a whole nother tributary.
All right.
So mark37.com/slash SPN.
They're going to get 10% off laptops, 10% off iPads, 10% off the phones.
Support services.
Support services.
They can have the coaching call.
They can do the training with you.
They can pray with you.
That's like, that's unbelievable.
They can do all the research, the FAQs, order the equipment.
A lot of people probably are able to just migrate without all of the extra thrills.
The vast majority of our customers, because of the tutorials that we have, we've invested a lot of time and energy into this.
They disorder and you never hear from them.
You never hear from them.
Are you guys growing?
Yes.
Congratulations.
Two years ago, you said that, and I remember the call because it was like a FaceTime thing.
And then shortly thereafter, Constitution Cowboy James Phillips kept saying to me, like, you got to get this ghost phone.
That's what he was calling him, a ghost phone.
You got to get off the grid.
You got to get this ghost phone.
They're listening to you, Stu.
They're spying on you.
I think this is what we were really, really heavy into.
Actually, it was more than two years ago because I think we were really heavy into COVID-19 at the time.
Two years ago, it was like October 7th.
Things really started to heat up.
It was like three years ago that all this conversation had.
So, yeah, he's like, you got to get this ghost.
So, for a comparison from then to now.
We've made things a lot simpler, easier for people to get up and running.
So, you know, obviously we've learned over time, like, where are the hurdles and the roadblocks, like what's preventing people from making the switch?
And a lot of it is just really having the tutorials and the training.
How does the equipment compare to some of the latest and greatest?
Like, could I still have great pictures?
Yeah.
Can I still do high-quality?
So the platform for the phone is a pixel device.
It's a pixel phone.
And people are like, Pixel, that's owned by Google.
Like, you're using Google hardware.
Well, yes, but we're ripping all of the Google software off of that device.
And we're loading a brand new operating system onto that device.
So Google has no access to this device.
And because it's open source, we can look into everything that's happening on that phone.
And we have, at this point, a community of hundreds of thousands of people, not customers, but people using this type of operating system who are hawking it, looking for are there dial outs, going back to Google, like checking the network and seeing what data packets are.
Has there ever been any history of that?
No, not with Graphene OS.
There has not.
So it's a Pixel platform, which means if you want the new thing and you want the super sexy camera, we can do that for you.
It's expensive.
It's like $1,500 for like the brand new Pixel 10, you know, Pro Max Excel with a terabyte of storage.
But like 99% of people don't need that.
An iPhone.
Right.
I mean, people are paying that all day long.
Right.
They're willing to pay that.
So the basic, like I run a phone from 2019.
It just works.
I'm not going to upgrade it because I don't need to.
If people want to or have to have the latest thing, though, they can.
They totally can.
The price ranges on the phones are like 400 on the low end up to sky's the limit on the high end, as we were just talking about.
On the laptops, they're like 500 on the low end to, again, sky's the limit if you want super sexy, brand new thing with all kinds of RAM and storage.
Tablets are around $600, $500, $600.
We're trying to keep things as affordable as possible.
So like navigation, all that kind of stuff, that's independent of the whole system, too.
So you keep them from looking into your whereabouts.
So navigation is key because the navigation tools that most people are used to are owned by Google.
Waze is owned by Google and Apple.
There are open source navigation applications that are private and secure.
Remember the company Garmin?
Yeah, of course.
So Garmin's whole existence is based on the paradigm of someone using their tool that's in the middle of freaking nowhere.
It has no dial back to home.
You download the map ahead of time.
And with a GPS, it can show you where you are on that map.
That's it.
So these new applications and tools that are rolling out work in that same capacity.
So you download the map.
You download the map.
Right.
And it's a one-directional flow of information.
So, yes, I can still see if there's a traffic jam.
Yes, I can still reroute and I can see, I can have a sexy Irish lady talking to me, giving me directions.
Love that.
Yeah.
I have all the options.
Like all these applications exist.
People just don't know that they're out there because we don't have billions of dollars of budget to market and propagand everybody everywhere.
Put it on the Super Bowl.
Right.
But I mean, we're scaling and growing.
We want to build more of these tools, more of these applications, make it even simpler and easier.
Like imagine.
It's just part of tribing up.
Like, you know, I become a customer.
Marie becomes a customer.
Brittany, Alex, Frankie, you know, I get phones for my kids so that we can stay in communication.
Everybody that's important to me that I want to talk to, what is the most important thing to have in a time of war?
Comps.
Yes.
And ask anyone who's been in the military.
And do they want secure comms?
Right.
Does your military use comms that can be manipulated or intercepted?
Will they do everything that they can not to do that?
Ask the guys on the USS Liberty who are out there just trying to listen to other people's conversations.
How did that go down?
Yeah.
So, again, I'm really glad you brought that up.
So think of this logically.
From a comms perspective, we're at war.
Comms are absolutely essential.
They have full access to all of our comms.
Do you think they're going to tell us that they have access to all of our comms?
Why would they do that?
They want to keep saying, it's convenient.
These are not the questions you need to be asking, right?
So if we're at war and I give you a tool to go fight in that war and I tell you the GPS tracking device and cameras and picture on that weapon that you're going to use is being fed to the enemy that you're about to go fight.
Would you?
I would never pick up that weapon.
Hell no.
It doesn't matter how effective it is.
You're dead.
I can still use it and kill you.
Never going to have the opportunity to do that.
Right.
Never going to have to do that.
They know my position everywhere going.
Yet everybody's running around, literally using a tool that is controlled and owned by the enemy that we're trying to fight.
It's so frustrating.
And then we're communicating with one another the plans that we have and the things that we're going to do.
Yes.
You want to know why these people are always ahead of us?
Right.
100%.
Because collectively we're factioned off.
We're in these groups.
They know that I communicate with you.
They know that I go to the same place for church every week.
I dump my phone in the bag, you know, with everybody else.
I don't do that.
But this is the idea.
These phones come together.
I'm associated with these groups.
And although be it, maybe somebody's not assigned to me looking at me, me, maybe.
But, you know, if somebody ever wanted to look into that historical data, it's right there.
Yes.
So like, let's just get smarter.
Let's just get smarter fighting this war.
Please.
All right.
So mark37.com slash SPN, 10% off all the stuff.
I really appreciate it because, you know, there are a lot of so-called solutions out there.
These people present themselves as the, you know, kind of the answer to all of these things.
You look into them and they're not.
Yeah.
And it's closed source.
Like you said, I didn't even know that.
I had no idea that these people were closed source and that this was literally designed by a foreign intel operative.
Yes.
And there's no such thing, by the way, as a former, former Mossad, former CIA, former, yeah, no.
I didn't know that.
And then there's other ones that tell you that they're the solution, but you can't make a phone call without being on Wi-Fi.
So I mean, it's like, I just want you to give final pitch.
Give final.
Why do I need this?
Why does she or he need it?
Well, I would say first, get right with God.
Spend time in the Word.
Like, that's the most important thing.
Period, end of story.
And if you do have the time and you're ready to make a commitment, you're like, I've had enough, jump on our website, mark37.com.
Please, we're here.
You can register for a call.
We will spend time with you, get to know you, figure out exactly what the right tools are for you specifically so that you can go live your life effectively and have control over your data.
Does that mean that you're never going to get spied on ever?
It depends on you.
You have to get trained.
It's like, am I never going to get beat up?
Well, if someone bigger than me who's more trained than me comes after me, they're probably going to be able to kick my ass.
So you have to get trained.
You have to get educated.
Make it happen.
No more excuses.
We have no more excuses.
We have no more excuses.
We have no more time for excuses.
We have no more time for excuses.
Excuses are like buttholes.
Everybody has one and they all stink.
Amen.
I appreciate it.
Thank you so much.
Take back control right now.
You ever notice this?
You talk about something and seconds later, it's in your ads, in your feed, everywhere.
That's not random.
Your devices track you.
Your apps listen.
Your data is harvested, sold, and weaponized.
Why are you still feeding the big tech machine?
If you're serious about protecting your family, your work, and your freedom, it's time to go ghost.
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