Summary
âž¡ The text discusses the struggles and disrespect faced by American troops, particularly under various political administrations. It highlights how the troops were often left impoverished and their sacrifices overlooked. The text also delves into the Gulf War, discussing the strategic decisions made and the corruption within the military. Lastly, it touches on the speaker’s personal experiences with cancer, which they believe is linked to a cancer virus in the medicine they received during their service.
âž¡ The text discusses the perceived lack of respect and fairness in the Senate, with senators allegedly treating people rudely and not allowing them to answer questions. The speaker believes this makes them unfit for office. The text also touches on the issue of taxation, suggesting that people are overtaxed and not adequately represented. Finally, it mentions a personal project to rewrite the Declaration of Independence in modern language, and criticizes the government for allegedly causing harm to its own people.
âž¡ The speaker shares his experiences of financial struggles during his early military career, including a time when he wasn’t paid for several months. He also talks about his father, a former boxer, who taught him boxing from a young age. The speaker mentions his own success in fights, attributing it to quick knockouts and an offensive mindset. He also shares a humorous story about tricking his fellow soldiers into using a fake Iroquois war cry.
âž¡ The speaker shares his experiences in the military, highlighting the fun and challenges of service. He criticizes the leadership of various presidents, arguing that their rules of engagement and policies led to unnecessary harm to soldiers. He also alleges corruption within the military and government, including drug running and misuse of funds. Lastly, he reminisces about his time as a company commander, praising the efficiency and discipline of his unit.
âž¡ The speaker shares his experiences in the military, highlighting the importance of good leadership and teamwork. He discusses his time as a platoon leader, his experiences with racism in the military, and the challenges faced during the Gulf War. He also emphasizes the adaptability of soldiers to different climates and the unity within the military, regardless of race. The speaker concludes by praising the effectiveness of the Abrams tank during the Gulf War.
âž¡ The speaker discusses a military strategy that involved maintaining a safe distance from the enemy, allowing them to attack without risk. They also share controversial views about former President George Bush and his wife Barbara, suggesting they were involved in dark activities. The speaker further discusses gender characteristics and expresses concern about men participating in women’s sports. Lastly, they touch on the topic of potential political coups and express their support for President Trump, criticizing those in the Senate for their perceived incompetence.
âž¡ The speaker discusses his belief in God as a loving father, emphasizing the importance of a personal relationship with Him. He suggests changes to the Lord’s Prayer to reflect this view. He also talks about the benefits of a healthy lifestyle, including walking and using Lifeway products like the X39 patch, which he credits for his good health at 72. He ends by expressing gratitude for his friends and his faith in overcoming challenges.
Transcript
But you had. You got cancer during Operation Desert Storm. We’ve talked about the last show. How was, you know, probably from, you know, the shot and so forth that we all had to get. He worked as a test engineer for various DoD contractors, ordained as a priest and subsequently as a bishop in the underground Orthodox Church. An exorcist with over 30 successful exorcisms now and over 40 miraculous healings. One of the two West Point plebes who lived in the haunted room rooms 4714 in 1972. So claim to fame. You have a lot of them. And we’re going to talk about a lot of that now.
We’re not here to beat up on the Democrats. We’re going to talk about that. We’re here to beat up on basically this privileged political class that comes in and really screws with the military and makes our jobs extremely difficult. We could win these wars. We could win these wars quickly. But these guys come in and hamper us and, you know, cut us out and so forth. And we’re going to talk about that, guys. So it’s gonna be very good. So, Bishop Jim, thanks for joining us today. How you doing? I’m doing fine, Michael. It’s a pleasure to see you again.
And thank you for having me as a guest on your show. Yeah, it’s an honor. Definitely, definitely. It’s my honor, too. Yeah, we, we talked a little bit yesterday. I thought we’re gonna just talk about a maybe one or two subjects and we’re going to go into that. That’s, that’s worth the whole show. But we’re gonna, we’re gonna kind of build up to that. And once we started talking, I was like, oh, my God. We, we, you know so much about a lot of stuff behind the scenes. And just a few minutes we were talking before the show, you revealed even more.
So, wow, what a, what a gold mine you are for, for information. I’ve been called a lot of things. Some of them begin with mother, but never a gold mine. Yeah, exactly. Absolutely. All right, so the, the, let’s start kind of at the top. So you’re in. And you know, the late 70s. 76. I come into 78. So 76. We’re talking about the time frame where they had the boat lift, the Mario boat lift. I think it was Cuban boat lift. Yeah, that was in 1980. And, uh, I was the seventh person to be deployed to Fort Jaffe.
And I had two jobs. I ran the worldwide military command and control system during the day. And that was a top secret nuclear logistics and war planning tool. And I also ran the emergency operations center at night. Wow. Being the lowest ranking officer on the totem pole, they, you know, they pretty much told me what to do. And they kept themselves a lot more comfortable than I got. And a couple of days into it, me and a couple other officers went into the compound with cartons of cigarettes. We had this great idea, we went in and we found the ladies of the night.
Fort Chappie is in Arkansas. Bill Clinton is the governor, Right? Yeah, Fort Smith, Arkansas. And this is in late May, early June. And so we decide, you know, we didn’t want to touch these women, but we knew that, you know, if they would do that for money and they wanted cigarettes, they’d give us all the information in the world. And they told us who Castro’s 87 spies were, exactly who they were pointing them out to us. And we shared this with an MP company commander and exactly when they were going to do a revolt, a riot.
And we, you know, it was three infantry officers. And we taught the MP company commander, who was a reservist, how to plan a, a quelling like infantry officers would. And it was quelled in 15 minutes. Wow. And we thought we’d done a great thing for President Carter. You did. And they, they write, they rioted on a Saturday at 1:00. It was over by 1:15 and yeah, that’s pretty amazing. And the following Tuesday, Hamilton Jordan, or Jordan spelled like Jordan, showed up and gave us letters of relief from the President of the United States because we consorted with prostitutes.
Wow. Almost everyone in the US park police and the US Marshals. We know the lieutenant in charge of the US Marshals never needed a shot of penicillin but most of the others that were deployed there needed at least three shots of penicillin. That’s how they. But they never got in trouble. Carter seemed to have a great dislike for military officers. Wow. And that’s that. We kind of talked about that before. That’s very surprising because he was a military officer. He was in the Naval Naval Academy grad. And he worked for the, you know, Admiral Rickover, I believe it was.
He put. Assigned him to do studies on the nuclear submarine program. What. And you had some insights on that. What was. What was that? And this might be. My last assignment was a joint assignment, and my commander was a naval captain. And two of the guys that I got to know pretty well. One was the top gun the year they had the big tail hook scandal. And he was there with his wife to get an award as the top gun. And they delay. He was nowhere near any of the misbehaving. And his promotion was delayed for 18 months to commander from lieutenant commander.
Because of tail hook. Because the tail hook. Even though he didn’t participate, he was there, doesn’t know tail hook. It was basically a sexual scandal where the. The pilots basically had this party every year. And there was sexual impropriety. And some. Some women complain finally. And some of these guys got in trouble. Yeah. But they. They punished everybody that was there. Yeah. The innocent. Yep. That’s military, you know. Yeah. Well, you know, Carter was like that too. Remember when you were a young, young troop and I was a lieutenant? I was over in Germany when we went to the field and we went to the field a lot.
We weren’t allowed to start. I was in a mechanized unit. We weren’t allowed to start our tracks then because we didn’t have any fuel. We weren’t allowed to fire our weapons because we didn’t have any ammo. We couldn’t do a lot of training because we didn’t have a lot of troops. We were really undermanned, and we were supposed to be 90% minimum because we were the front line of defense in Europe. And when we went to the field, we didn’t eat our sea ration lunch meal. We’d get a hot breakfast in the morning and a hot breakfast or hot dinner at night.
If there was enough food. The officers always ate last, and sometimes we had to go hungry. But that was just a big city back then. That’s the way it was in the fleet too. Yeah. Yeah. And when we got back to the rear, we would give our C rations to families because families were starving. Yeah. And I remember my battalion operations officer, a really fine major who’d done three tours of Nam and had an Ivy League master’s degree. So, you know, we’re talking about a real stud here. Yeah. He had a wife that survived cancer, God love her, and two kids.
And he was so poor with the way Carter was paying us that he qualified for food stamps as well. Yeah. And I know you as a, an enlisted man. You had, you qualified for food stamps. I was just above that line as a singer. That time frame, if I had a family, I would have, but I never lived off base. Later I did. I, I had, I basically had a wife, but I had a little bit more income from being a hard hat diver, so that helped out. But yeah, there was a lot of guys during Carter’s time frame.
I remember when I first came in, in the 78 that were living on food stamps. Almost all the list of guys, uh, that had families were on food stamps. Yeah. And when you live overseas, about the only plaque where I was at the time, the only place you can really go shopping is at the post exchange. Yeah. Because you don’t have enough money to shop on the German economy. Yep. And during Carter’s time, he changed the PX privilege so it was no longer a good deal. It basically charged the same prices that Walmart did while our troops were starving and hungry.
They couldn’t afford to go to Walmart. They didn’t have enough money for Walmart. And then Carter made him even poorer. And it was, you know, it was terrible. He, Some of these politicians forget that we’re their sons and their daughters and we’re the ones that are brave enough and love our country enough to put it on the line for freedom. And some of these people in Washington just abuse us. Yeah. And that should offend every one of the American people because we’re your sons and daughters. Yeah. And we’re the ones that are willing to make the ultimate sacrifice if necessary to keep the freedoms.
Yeah. And we’re very disrespected by the Democratic Party and by the rhinos, but yeah, almost all the way through. The only time it kind of changed for it for the good was during Reagan’s time frame. Yeah. Yeah. And then it basically slipped again under Clinton. And then the Bush. Bush came in, the Bushes, I guess. So we had one Bush for one term and that was a disaster. And then we had, you know, Clinton come in. Then the Bush number two, little boy Bush came in. He gave us a lot, but he took, he gave with one hand and he took with the other.
Yeah, he sure did. We, we would get like, oh, we got more VA benefits and more this and this, and then we’d lose others behind the scenes. And you know, it was like that. It was, it was pretty sad. We, we definitely, because of Bush and Obama, we lost the retirement health plan. That was really good. We weren’t paid any extra money for the fact that we have to buy Medicare now. We used to be able to do Tricare for Life. Yeah. Now Tricare for Life is like a third insurance. Exactly. You know, and they didn’t, they didn’t tell us that while we were freezing our butts off at the, in the full gap or doing some of the things that you did or some of the things that I did that I can’t talk about.
Sure. Yep. You know, but I have an interesting perspective on the, on, on the Gulf War, and I’d like to share that with you, Michael. Sure. Yeah. General Schwarzkopf when he was a major and Lieutenant General Waller when he was a captain and another captain named Hughes all worked for, all worked in the Third Corps headquarters under General Patton’s son, General Patton, who took particular interest in these three and taught them how his father did things, which. That’s amazing. And that’s one of the reasons we did so well in the Gulf War. And another thing that happened was General Waller said a timeout on Larry King Live and said we needed to refit the tanks with a 120 millimeter gun.
Now, I led a study at Fort Leavenworth as a senior captain, very junior major to study what to do with the M1 tank against the future Russian tank. And our study group came up with the 120 millimeter gun, which was a great solution. And because of the corruption of the military, I was told if I stuck with that solution, I would never see a promotion again. But if I would do a different solution, I would get promoted. I wouldn’t dare sell out our country like that. But that gave us a mile of standoff distance on the battlefield between what the enemy tanks could do and what our tanks could do to kill them.
So why do you think, why do you think they approached you for that? Was that basically help the military industrial complex instead of actually helping the troops? Well, yeah, it was one of those, you know, the sneaky thing about it is that, yeah, Bush, you know, there was all sorts of estimates that there would be 3,30,000, you know, US soldiers put in body bags. And one of the rumors before the war started was that they had to get all the body bags over there. They were. Didn’t have enough. And dupuy, who does this analysis based on the single shot probability of kill, which is an advanced differential equation which I just absolutely love.
Basically using his equations, we would suffer about 100 casualties. Wow. Which is what we did. Wow. Because it was a much more accurate way to determine the outcome of a battle of maneuver instead of a battle of attrition. You know, I, I just want to like, you know, give you kudos all the, all you academy grads. I remember I was a senior listed at the Naval Academy for one of the companies there. And the, the brilliance of the academy cadets was astounding to me. I, I, When I was in the SEAL teams, all the academy grads that came through became officers.
They were stellar. All of them were studs all the way through. And I was like, what is going on there? So I got to see it is, it’s quite incredible. But they, like you’re talking about, they try and take that away from you, try and press you like Carter, you know, gave you a rep and for doing the, you know, doing a great job, saving probably the, the country from, uh, extreme embarrassment. Uh, and then here you are coming up with, uh, you know, the, the perfect gun, which would be incredible, uh, in the Iraq, Iran war or the war that we had with, uh, uh, Iraq.
Uh, unbel. Believable. Unbelievable that, you know, you get reprimanded or, and, and pushed down. I saw that throughout my career. Very frustrating. Yeah. And it was one of those things that I also write, the tactic of how to employ it. And there was a certain three little agency which I know you’re familiar with, that tried to lampoon me. But, you know, good analysis is good analysis. You can’t, you can’t beat it. And I’ll. If it had been flawed, they would have definitely flogged me and done all sorts of nasty things to me. But they had to.
They made sure that I could do 20 and no more. And that’s okay. I have the satisfaction of knowing that I have friends who were in tanks who got hit, whose tanks got hit three and four times. And all it was was a loud noise. Wow. And the tanks that fired at them. Got to go see what judgment is all about. Because we, you know, the battlefield was lethal and we had a bunch of good guys, and I got the Gulf War Syndrome from the shots and the medicine they gave me to counteract what the shots did was laced with a cancer virus.
And that’s how I got cancer And I’m almost, I believe I’m cancer free now. But I still have one more yearly check to do next later this year. And based on my PSA numbers, which is basically a very small fraction right now, 0.21, I’m pretty sure I’m cancer free. But I was my sickest from radiation, which I had to do when my late wife was dying, and she died of complications from cancer and from dialysis. And the thing that finally killed her was the first vaccine. Oh my God. Beautiful woman. It’s a shame that she was treated so poorly by our medical system.
Yeah, well, that’s intent. They want to, you know, they, they basically if we go all the way back to the, I guess, Cuban missile crisis, that’s when the CA came in and they, they wanted to weaponize the polio vaccine. Up until that point, cancer was like extremely rare in the United States. If you got cancer like every doctor throughout the current country wanted to, you know, examine you, like, it’s just so rare. But once the polio vaccine came out and the CIA basically laced it with cancer like you’re talking about, they don’t put it in every one of the vaccines, but they do put it in some.
So it’s not easily traceable. But they did it for the polio vaccine and then cancer exploded throughout the U.S. well, this is my belief. I have no proof of this, but this is my belief because they’re all serial numbered. There are certain individuals they target with certain serial numbers. Yeah. Oh, wow, that’s interesting because I just learned from someone about these LA fires and up and down the coast here and up in North Carolina that people that supported Trump are the ones that got targeted the most. Oh, of course, yeah. But you know, one of, one of the things that really bothers me is I listened to a couple of the Senate hearings and you know, there are some people with questionable morals really going after Pete Hegseth, a great, great soldier, as you know.
Oh yeah, one of the, one of the finest that ever lived who would have laid down his life to save them and they can’t even treat him with an ounce of respect. I that. Good point, good point. And I think that shows what little respect they have for all Americans. And the, the Senate is supposed to follow the Robert’s Rules of Order. That’s their rules, which they adopted from the first session of the Senate that they would conduct business and they would say the, the five gentlemen from the state of. Or the commonwealth of. Or the lady from this great state of.
And that’s how they would address each other. Yeah. And then they, they get former soldiers or some person they disagree with politically and, and they couldn’t be more rude. They don’t let them answer. And we as the American people have a right to know what their answer is to an honest and fair question. Because if they get, if they get confirmed, there are Attorney General or they’re our Secretary of Defense. We’re the American people. This is who they all represent. And the fact that these senators don’t even follow their own rules, I believe my personal opinion is, makes them unfit for the office that they’re in.
Hear, hear. Yeah, I totally agree. And you as a. One of the finest non commissioned officers of your era and me as a, as a commissioned. As an officer and gentleman, we would never tolerate anybody treating anyone like that anywhere under our command or under our authority. That’s just totally unacceptable. I mean even if, if it’s the worst soldier or seaman in the world, the person still gets the full respect that’s due their rank and their position and their willingness to serve. And you know, we may have to take good, strong administrative action against them or legal action against them based on what they do, but we still treat them with ultimate respect.
Absolutely. And these senators who can’t do that shouldn’t be in their office. I’m really embarrassed by my senator from Virginia and what he’s doing. And he doesn’t necessarily have the cleanest record either. He’s a hell of a lot richer now than he was when he first started politics. And all he’s ever done is politics, just like the rest of them. Yep. They, they get their hands greased with the money to, you know, vote a certain way or promotes a certain bill or something like that. So that’s, that’s all got to stop. And you’re even about how you would like to, you know, modernize some of the Constitution builder rights basically not necessarily change anything, but modernize it so that people can understand it and it could be utilized in a more efficient manner.
What, what, what are your thoughts on that? Well, I’m uh, personally rewriting the Declaration of Independence for. To a more modern language without leaving any of the important stuff out. And you know, I’m, I’ve asked you and several of our friends to review it because it’s not one thing that just one man should do, but I believe. Well, for example, one of the complaints that I’m a direct descendant of Charles Carroll who signed a Charles Carroll of Carrollton. One of the complaints that was on the Declaration of Independence, which he signed, which was so brilliantly penned by Thomas Jefferson, was the king.
George should make war against the colonists, against the American people. And then you look at Lahaina, what’s going on in la, what happened in North Carolina. We have our federal government making war against its own people. Yeah. They’re supposed to do represent us in the common good. And yet I can show you a list of 100 additives that are in our foods that cause all sorts of diseases and cancers and hardening the arteries and, you know, why would you put fluoride in water when it doesn’t do anything for the teeth, but it destroys the brain, destroys the immune system, and it destroys people’s ability to critically think.
You can’t be doing that for their own good. You have to be doing that for control. So I think it’s time to look at this again. You know, everybody remembers the first couple minds of it, but there was a list of, you know, 20 or so absolute grievances. One was the taxation without representation. Do we really feel like we’re being represented in Washington or in the state capitals? You know, rhetorical question. But we sure are getting taxed. You know, we get taxed when we get paid. We get taxed when we spend money. If we die, we get taxed.
We got to put. We buy a house, we get taxed on the property. We buy a car, we get taxed on the. I’m buying a car and not one. Afraid if I fart in public, I’ll get taxed. Taxed for that, too. And the New World Order love to tax me for that one. Yeah, tax. Tax me once on it. But why you’re taxing my property over and over again every year. And it goes up and you keep taxing my car. I’ve already paid you tax once. And you’re like, you know, I have to pay every year that I.
You know, it’s like, it’s insane. So that tax, I think, is coming, but, you know, we’re. We’re more taxed now than we. The Revolutionary War, supposedly, I think there was a lot of other things that were involved there, but that was supposedly about taxation. That was the theme. That was the thing that got everybody motivated, at least the ones that fought. Not everyone fought. They were on the patriot side. Of course. You had, you know, people that fought for the king, you know. Yeah, those that were patriots, like your, you know, your progeny. Yeah. Your ancestor, rather.
Yeah. He’s basically, you know, considered a terrorist. All of the signers of declaration Independence. Almost all of them lost all their land, burned, hunted down and killed a lot of them. So it’s, you know, we’re kind of like, we’re kind of like there again. Yeah, like you’re talking about. Like we’re talking about they, they hunt us down. You were given cancer, probably by design on purpose to silence you because you were one of the up and coming that would have, you know, were already upsetting their control system. So they, they went out of their way to take you out.
And fortunately you survive because you’re here to talk about it and I’m here still to talk about it. But yeah, they do absolutely come after us. So back, back to Jimmy. Jimmy Cotter and you know how. Let me give a shout out to my cousin Abby Jones, who’s also a direct descendant. Oh yeah, he’s done some wonderful things to help people. Yep, outstanding. I wanted to get that in before I forgot because that wouldn’t have been right. But you’re back to Jimmy. Yeah. So what, what did, what happened to Jimmy? He got kicked. Kicked out of the, the program by having a Rick.
Then he went and got involved in the Democratic Party in Georgia and got himself elected governor eventually. And within seven months it was like he was a nobody. He was like unknown. And within seven months after they approached him and got him on the ticket, he’s the president. It’s like, what. Yeah, he was railroad, no doubt. And I was an infantry officer basic. When he got elected, I was in Fort Benning, Georgia and I had, I had made some friends with some people in Georgia and they all said they were voting for him because they wanted to get him the hell out of the state.
Oh, no, don’t do that. You’ll screw the country. You got him more in the state than ever. Yeah. So it was an interesting experience. So he wasn’t well loved in the state. Who lived in Columbus, Georgia? He wasn’t. Yeah. So when, again, when I was in a, when I was in the Navy during his, his time frame, it was tough like, like we’re talking about. Ate all my meals on base because I couldn’t afford to go out. The little, little money that I had was, was, you know, to pay for my Pinto car, you know, and occasionally I would go out with the guys and have a drink or something like that, but it wasn’t often and usually it was on base because it was cheaper.
So I ate all my meals. I lived in a, in a little tiny rack on the ship, but I was a hard hat diver, so I thought I was special, but I didn’t. I wasn’t making much money at all. It was. It was crazy. No, you were. You would have done better being on welfare. Probably. Probably. Yeah. Welfare paid more money than our. Than our soldiers and our sailors got done. Yeah. Now, during that time frame, Carter was shutting down a lot of stuff, a lot of benefits. And like we talked about, he even threatened to basically cut the.
We weren’t going to get paid in the Navy. He. He said, we’re. We’re not going to have. We might have to delay the pay. And I remember the. The master chief of the Navy at the time said, if you don’t pay, we’re not going to work. He ended up paying. So I went back just recently to find that, because every. We were all talking about. It’s like, well, he’s going to walk off. I mean. I mean. I mean, we’re. How can we do that? You know, so. But he basically called. He called, you know, the bluff of the President, of the president, and he went ahead and paid us on time.
And I went and looked that up recently, and they made it to be like it was. It’s not even. It’s not even out there anymore. They covered it up. Oh, that’s. That’s from a book. That was fiction. I was like, no, it wasn’t. I lived through that. I remember that, too. You do, too. There you go. Absolutely. Because by then, I was. My first six months, my pay records got screwed up, and I get paid. Oh, my God. It was pretty tough being overseas. And fortunately, I had some money saved, and I had to send some money back to Buffalo where my hometown, because my dad and my mom and my six siblings got snowed in and dad couldn’t work.
So I sent some money back home, and I wasn’t getting paid. So, you know, I was glad I had a savings. And eventually I got paid in June. I got there in January. Late November, I got early. Yeah. Late November, I got broken ribs, so I couldn’t go to Ranger school. So I ended up going to my unit right away, and. And then I get to my unit, I get deployed right away, which kind of saved me because I. When you’re deployed, you really don’t spend any money. And I didn’t have any money to spend, but I sent some home and I finally got paid and, you know, things were okay.
But I remember the panic that was going throughout the army when Carter said he wasn’t going to pay us. Yeah. Because everybody basically from the rank of O5 down was living paycheck to paycheck. Oh, yeah, yeah. Because there wasn’t enough in the paycheck to really save. And I had, I was very fortunate that I was able to save some money when I was a cadet. And during my 60 days leave, I did a little work and got a little extra money ahead. Just figuring I might have hit it, hit a hard time. I was a good enough electrician.
I could have been an apprentice. My dad was a master electrician after he left the Navy. And you, you would have loved working from. With my dad. He was the, during the World War II, he was the middleweight champ of the Navy. Oh, my God. No kidding. Yeah, I would love. He was quite a, quite a boxer. Well, tell us a story about how he taught you to box at five. Well, dad loved boxing and, and, and his great grandfather was the Bully of the Bowery, which was a guy named Charles Cotter, who was considered the first heavyweight champ of the world before John L.
Sullivan. So boxing is kind of in the blood. And dad just. Dad was a good athlete, but he loved boxing and, and he had really fast hands. I mean, his left hook was, was a killer. It was like a Mike Tyson left hook, but it was as fast as Sugar Ray Leonard’s. And so he was kind of a knockout, knockout artist. And, and you know, from the stuff that you’ve taught your troops that there’s a certain way to snap these punches where you snap your whole body and it really enhances the effect of that. Who. Of the person who receives it.
Transfer a lot of energy that way. Yeah, very good. And I start learning how to do that at age. My fifth birthday. My birthday present from dad was putting on the boxing gloves for the first time. Oh, my God. And it was something that, something that we did until I was 14. Yeah. Yeah. My son was learning jiu jitsu and, and Philippine martial arts and so forth that I think it was like maybe six or seven. So, yeah, it definitely makes a difference. So you, you said you’ve been in like eight fights or you’ve thrown eight punches and five of those were knockouts.
Since the time I was 18, I’ve been, I’ve been in five fights, 10 punches, five knockouts. That’s nice. That’s very good. Because you fight who wants to fight for a long time. Give a guy. I don’t want to give a guy a chance to hit him. Yeah. And it’s actually better for him. You’re not, you know, just deforming him by like beating him all the time. That’s that’s the way I learned, too. You know, I, I want to, like, you know, in the fight as fast as possible, not for my own protection and those around me, but also, believe it or not, for the person.
And it’s. And it’s kind of like Bruce Lee developed that one inch punch, and he developed it so he would. He would actually knock some sense into somebody. He would knock whatever was, like, causing them to fight. He’d knock it out of them. And I was like, that’s. That’s perfect. So that’s the way I, I. That’s brilliant. Yeah. Yeah. Soon as you get them off balance. Yep. That’s the end of it. Yeah. Because then they’re reacting to your punch, and it’s like, Then you’re, like, totally yours. And if you know, you know where to throw that last knockout punch, it’s done.
Yeah. I really don’t want to hurt anybody. No. Yeah. Honest. But really, I want to be in that position where I have to either. Yep. Very good. Very good. And, and you, as one of the great warriors, you know this. Yeah. But, you know, a lot of people don’t even. A lot of the guys, you know, that were in the SEAL teams didn’t know how to fight. So that was. That was kind of nice that I was able to teach a lot of guys how to fight, because a lot of people fight out of fear, and when you’re fighting out of fear, that’s when you.
You get hurt and the other person gets hurt. So if you learn to, you know, master that and get to the point where you’re. You have that offensive mindset, you in fights very quickly. And a lot of times they don’t even start because people look at you and they’re like, I’m not gonna mess with that one. When they see how happy you are to fight, they’re a little bit. Exactly. But that reminds me of something. Some of the guys were, like, badass. In the teams that had all these skills, I. I just went to a crazy level with my capability, and guys would approach me like, yeah, we should get together.
I was like, okay, that’ll be fun. Yeah, I’d like to play with you. And then they get this look like. And that we’d never fight. Oh, man. You know, I know what that’s like. I remember wrestling with this guy who was quite a bit bigger than me at West Point, and all I was doing was laughing. I was having a great time just pushing him around, using his leverage against him, and it so freaked him that he didn’t know what to do. He thought I was nuts. That’s better than having a, you know, fight. Let them think we’re crazy, and then, like, I’m not gonna.
This one’s crazy. He still thinks I’m nuts. And he’s probably right. Well, yeah, really. I mean, because we. We don’t think like normal people, so we are crazy. But we get a lot of stuff done. And those people that basically try and shut down, you know, the military, like, we’re talking about, we. I’ve always worked around them, and I. It sounds like you have done the same thing. What? What? What? Give us some other examples of how you’ve gone around some of the crazy stuff that’s been out there over the years. One of the things that.
Well, let me tell you. Let me tell you one of my stories. Definitely. You know, how when you go to the big schools, they always tag someone to be the student leader. You know, and I was kind of a crazy young man in my late 20s, and I was made one of the student leaders of the iftry officer advanced course, the course for captains. And, you know, I really didn’t want to be in the course. I mean, I wanted to be in the course, but I didn’t want to be in leadership, because when you’re in leadership, you don’t get to the I bar as soon.
So that being, you know, drinking with my buddies was a much, you know, telling war stories was much more important to me than hanging around with the staff and doing all that they had us do after hours, before we could, before I got to get off. So I got tasked with this thing to come up with a slogan for the army. And so me and two of my best friends got together at the I bar, and we came up with what we call this Iroquois war cry. Bohica, bend over. Here it comes again. But we had him convinced it was an iroquois war cry.
So we have about half the US and it spreads throughout half. About half the u. S. Army. Before the. Before the jig was up, we have all these people scooting. Bohica, sir. Oh, my God. And, boy, when that. When they found out what that was, I was in front of the commanding general’s office. I was in the commanding general’s office pointing my lip, not trying to laugh, as I was getting an astro and a local letter of reprimand for embarrassing the infantry school. But, you know, that was part of the fun about being. About being in the service, getting away with stuff like that and doing stuff like that.
It Was a lot of fun. Yeah. It just wasn’t. Wasn’t marching like an automaton. There was a. You know, it was like playing a sport. And the leaders were like coaches, and the leaders were like coaches, but. But also players themselves. And it was really a blast. Yeah. And. And we had guys that tried to make it more difficult for us. And being a soldier is hard enough. And when they don’t pay you right, and they don’t treat you right, they don’t feed you right. And Carter was cutting all these programs, and Bush would put money in one program and cut it another way.
And then Bush and Obama would give these ridiculous rules of engagement, which is one of the reasons we have so many wounded guys and gals, because, you know, they see someone putting in an iud, they couldn’t blow them away. Well, that’s the perfect time to blow them away. You blow them away. They don’t do it as often over there, too. Yeah, it was so bad. I was, I was, you know, working for the CIA at the time as an independent contractor security guy. And the, the regular army would have us defend them because they were told to basically stand down and take shelter.
If. If we had all done that, they would overran our base. But we, man, basically fought them off. It’s very, very sad, you know, and, you know, the military battle in a street fighter, the same in one respect. The one who takes the initiative usually does much better than the one that doesn’t. And then. And Bush and Obama, Bush number two. And Obama made it a crime to take the initiative. Yep. If. If General Patton in World War II and MacArthur and Nimitz and all these great. And Arnold and all these great military leaders didn’t take the initiative, we’d either be speaking Japanese or Russian right now.
Yeah. And that’s what I loved about Trump because he, he found the leaders that would take the initiative, and they did incredible things very quickly. Yeah. It didn’t take long with him. Yeah, we’re going to see that again soon. Yeah. But then he didn’t feed the. The military industrial con plaques with all sorts of money that had to get filtered through the Queen of England, the Vatican and other places, and back to the deep state politicians who were all yes men and buying islands and hurting kids. I mean, it’s a, It’s a disgrace what these guys are doing.
And they’re using soldiers as pawns. Yeah, yeah, I saw that when I was now in Afghanistan. So we’re. We’re hunting terrorists and we had these guys come in and basically were gonna run the drug program because they came in and basically we’re taking over the drug program from the, you know, the, the terrorist. Right. So who’s a real terrorist now? And so we had, we had, we’re like, we had guys come in, it’s like, okay, show us where, you know, the, the drug guys are. And we’re like, what, we’re, we’re here to find terrorists. And, and so they, they’re on our base, but they’re on a compartmentalized program after that.
So we could, what they were doing, but we kind of did. And then we started to see military troops regarding opium fields and all kind of crazy stuff. So we, we took down the Taliban for as long as we could. I, I don’t know what, what happened with how long, why that stood, Why. I mean, how long did it take us to win World War II? Like, you know, four or five years, whatever. And we’re in Afghanistan, which is like a, a piss ant country for 20 years. So obviously there’s something going on here. Yeah. Well, you look at that and you look at the rules of engagement.
Yep. And you look at the fact that here’s the government running drugs. Yep. Against the American people. One of the complaints against George III was he made war on the American people. And now we have our government out of control. There’s nothing wrong with the declaration and the real Constitution, but that’s been thrown out by these corporate a holes and they’ve made war on the American people. And if you say anything, you’re a conspiracy wacko. Well, you can’t look at the murder of John F. Kennedy and in understanding how small arms work and think that Lee Harvey Oswald, who was a FBI or CIA asset.
Right. Did the job. They had other assets do the job. Oh yeah, he was the patsy. Yep. And I’m an expert. I’m an expert rifleman. I can fire every infantry weapon as an expert. And I was able to do that my entire career. Never did anything less than Expert on the 14, the 16, the 203, the 79, the M60 and the M2 machine guns. Fun to fire? Heck yeah. Expert in all of them. Yeah. And I couldn’t fire that Russian piece of that Oswald supposedly used. Nobody could. It’s a, it was like a five dollar rifle.
Right. That you had to almost load each shot in. I mean, Jesse Ventura, as great, as great a SEAL as he was, the fastest he ever got the rounds off was eight and a half seconds. And he didn’t hit the targets. Yep. Because you could hit the target if you were lucky. And if you were about 10ft away. I mean, it was that bad of a rifle. And we’re supposed to believe that that kind of rifle hits this guy in the back of the head and blows the back of his head out. And. And when you say, you know.
And I have my grandmother. O’Connor and Rose Kennedy were first cousins. So I have a great love for jfk. He was my fourth cousin. And. And. And what they did to him and his. And what they did to Nixon was bad too. I have some inside poop on that. Yeah. Well, let’s. Let’s go into Bush. And you said Bush basically started the Gulf War. Oh, yeah. Remember? Yeah. That he told Saddam that he could take Kuwait. And then he told the whole world that Saddam did this unprovoked attack on Kuwait and we needed to go in and rescue Kuwait.
Yep. And Bush was hoping that with the 105 millimeter gun on the tank that we would have the 30,000 casualties and that the Russians would attack Western Europe because our army was whacked and North Korea would attack South Korea because, you know, we were out. Put us on a three front. War week. And Bush wanted the world war to be World War iii and he wanted it to be nuclear. Wow. And the problem happened that this screwy major somewhere came up with this solution that Schwarzkopf and Waller ran with and it destroyed his plans. And shortly after the war, both General Waller, who I absolutely loved, he was.
I was his air operations officer when he was a full colonel. Wow. As a brigade commander. And he put. He jumped me 10 people up the list and let me command a company for two years. Oh my God. Just a lot. That company. That’s my company guide on in the back. Alpha Company first the 13th Infantry. Oh, that’s amazing. I had a blast doing that. Oh, I would have been a company commander. I would have paid to be a company commander. Was that I loved operating. I loved it. Yep. Yeah. And anyway, you know, your. Who was your first sergeant.
We talk kind of talk about that. The one that was my first sergeant the longest was a man named Or Hogarth, who was a jump master. Nice. Oh, we had. We had a blast. Oh, he. We our was so tight. That. Excuse my GI talk here. Yeah, yeah, yeah. You kind of slip into it with two veterans. Start talking. Be careful. That we have this big test called an rtep, which is, you know, glorified laser tag at Hohenfels, which is a national training center. And we’re attacking this Night objective. And I, and I’m a task force.
I have, I lost a platoon of tanks, but I got a platoon of anti tank weapons and a platoon of tanks. So I have about 180 men under my command and we consolidate on this objective which was timed out to be midnight. And midnight the platoons are running wire to the cp. Everybody’s starting to dig in and I mean really dig in. And Top is there with hot soup and coffee. We get the wire, they get a mermaid can, a hot suit and coffee. And by 6am when the generals came to inspect things, everybody’s in a foxhole with range cards, aiming sticks overhead cover perfectly done foxholes.
And we were the only company in the division that dug in and dug in. Right. And had all this stuff done. And that’s how squared away we were. You could, when we moved, you could have made a training. Anything we did, you could have made a training film. Right. And you know, every, and, and I was very lucky. I had great non commissioned officers and I was smart. You’ll make it break you. Yeah. So if you get good ones and you take care of them, boy, they’ll take care of you. No doubt. And I was smart enough to let them do their jobs.
Good job, good job. And I did my job of commanding and I let them do their job and praise them for their jobs. Yep. And our company was so good that we got tasked with providing a platoon to go to bad tolls for the sear training. And so I sent my third best platoon out of the three line platoons I had, which really kind of upset my battalion commander for a little bit. And then these guys come back with the best platoon of the quarter award, which is pretty cool. Outstanding. And I had the pleasure of telling them, hey, sir, I knew this was going to happen.
And he was a pretty good guy about it. But he understood that our company had their stuff together. And I was very fortunate. For about six months I was detached as platoon leader to the guys in Bad Tuls, the Green Berets. And I learned so much from them. How to be a soldier, how to be a leader. And well, I learned a lot about how to teach and how to lead from my dad who was, you know, a senior master chief during World War II. Wow. And he was one of the first radar repairmen. And my uncle Joe, his brother and breast best friend was one of the first navy frogmen and a frogman during Normandy.
God. Oh my God. You know that their older brother, my godfather was on the second wave of Omaha beach, walked In North Africa, he walked. In Sicily, he walked. On the Normandy, he walked across the ride. So when you get that kind of a, you get that kind of a privileged upbringing, you really do learn how to be a soldier. No kidding. Wow. That, that’s, that’s incredible. That’s incredible background. So, yeah, it’s, it’s good to see all that. Now. We, we talked about how, you know, we in the military, we were completely integrated. There was no racism and so forth in the military.
I, I had, I work with black guys throughout my career as a hard hat diver, uh, guys who were above me. I had no problem taking orders from. You know, we’re all one. There is color. There is no color in the military. And you were talking about how the KKK would come to your gate and they’d be outside your gate every day, or not every day, but they would be outside your gate, you know, protesting and so forth. Because here we have, you know, you know, blacks in the military, and they didn’t like that. What, what are your thoughts on that? So crazy.
Well, it’s important to understand that, like, people like Robert kkk Bird as brush, right column. He was the grand pooh bar of the KKK in West Virginia. And when I was deployed for the refugee operation at Fort Chaffee, Arkansas, just outside of Fort Smith, there were three, three hooded people with 12 gauge shotguns constantly in front of the front gate protesting the Cuban refugee operation. And, you know, being a kid from upstate New York, Buffalo, New York area, you know, I heard of the kkk, but I didn’t really believe it. Right. Believing was seeing. And, and, you know, Carter made sure that we were no longer able to carry sidearms.
Keep us safe. He’s the one that changed that rule. No kidding. Yeah. And when you sit in the SEAL teams, we, we had a sidearm. So that was only when you’re in duty then. But when you’re com. When you’re on the base, no, no weapons or anything. So that’s, that was very unfortunate. And you couldn’t travel in your vehicle, even in your vehicle. If they search your vehicle and you had a weapon in your vehicle, you’d be like court martial. So it, it was tough times. Yeah. And, you know, but I did have some jobs where I was a, a TS courier, where I was armed even on airplanes.
Nice. Very good. That’s. That was always fun, you know, being in dress, being in the greens, the.45 on my arm, my side, and a suitcase stuck to my left wrist. Yep. Yeah, I was, I was with the. The backpack nuke program. And I got the TS SBI clearance and. Yeah. Special privileges. Yeah. I. One of my jobs when I was a lieutenant was guarding one of those facilities with those. Really? Wow. How about that? I got the. I got to do a lot of terrorist stuff because of that, which was pretty cool. Yep. So here we have Robert Bird, who Hillary Clinton said was her mentor.
KKK guy. Of course, when that information came out, I mean, we all knew that, but then she. She made that comment, and then it leaked out finally that he was a KKK guy. And, uh, he. Everything got quiet on that. But that’s. That’s part of, you know, these guys, they’re all programmed with all that stuff in the. In the elite political class. All those guys are very corrupt. Yeah, they are. And, you know, it’s important that. For us to understand that the only time they’re nice is when they’re running for election. Yep. The rest of the time, they’re pretty nasty people.
And I have this general rule that I follow. If I wouldn’t leave my children or grandchildren with this person, I’m not voting for them, because I’m ultimately leaving them with this person. Yeah, good point. Supposed to represent us, not resent us. Yeah. But they push that racism so hard. Obama racism. You know, Biden pushed it. It’s like the Democrat Party, just like, except. And that’s how they keep a lot of people enslaved to the Democrat Party, I think. Yeah. Well, one of the things I observed that we were deployed the winter of 84. 85, which was the coldest winter of the century.
Yep. And in Germany, the average high was 20 below. We were out the whole time. Jesus. And, you know, it was miserably cold. And our black soldiers had more trouble with the. With the cold weather than the white soldiers because of what happened to the bodies. Bodies adapt to the climate when white guys are in really hot climates. Like you were in the middle of Africa. Yeah. And I ever had when I was on the UDT team and we did across the beach landings in Somalia, and we. I. We had like, sun hours where we would tan on the ship and stuff like that, because so we could be able to be in the sun as long as we needed to.
I got super dark and probably as dark as any. Any other person in Somalia. I was really dark. So it does make a difference. But if I had gone from Somalia to Germany during that time frame, because that was like in the. It was the early 80s. Crazy times. Yeah. Yeah, it. I would have. I would have froze to death. Oh, yeah. And. And all the black soldiers ended up a little bit lighter at the end of that winter because they didn’t get any sun. All they did was freeze. The bodies started to adapt to the climate they’re in.
Interesting. All descendants of Adam and Eve. The only reason they’re racist is because the human body adapts to the climate. Right. So racism is absolutely the stupidest thing in the world. But people will figure out anything they can do to divide people. And gosh, you know. You know, in this, in the. In the military, the only thing you see is the color of the uniform. Yeah. All my guys were green. You got, you know, you have navy blue. That’s it. I’m just, you know, I’m just glad that we’re all a little different because that gave us this unbelievable synergism to cover all.
All possible bases. Yeah. So here we here. Here we go into, you know, the Gulf War now, and we have, you know, we all had to get shots. Some people get sick from that. Like yourself. Yeah, that’s as part of the military way. They pincushion us with vaccinations and stuff. But you guys did amazing work in the Gulf War, which basically, I think you said they’re like 42 battalions or something, that there were. Saddam had 42 divisions in the U.S. army and the air support from the Air Force and the Navy. I don’t want to disrespect them at all because they did wonderful things too.
Oh, yeah. And the allies that. And the few allies that actually fought destroyed 40 of 42 divisions that Saddam had. Incredible. And. And they did it in four days. And. And a good portion of that was that. That 120 millimeter gun on that Abrams tank. Yeah, We. We only lost four tanks. Wow. One hit a landmine and they actually killed one with an artillery shell. Huh. But they didn’t kill any with other tanks because we had an entire mile of standoff distance. And what we did. You know, when you. I’m just going to explain this for the people because I know, I know you get it, Michael.
No matter how big a force is against the force, the only part of the force that really matters is what part of the force can engage. And we could engage at twice the distance they had to be. So as long as we maintained that standoff distance, that extra mile, that we could kill them and they couldn’t kill us. We were the only, really the only killing force on the battlefield. So we could kill at will as long as we maintain that distance. So we would find them, maintain that distance, let them try to close in, we’d back up a little bit.
And then when there was, they were sufficiently dead, we’d move forward very quickly and get on to the next battle. And that’s, that’s basically what we did. And there was no defense against it. That’s incredible. And so then you, you basically broke Bush’s plan by having that 120 millimeter gun there. There were 30,000u.s. Troops didn’t die, only 100 like that. One brilliant petition in your group figured out. Incredible. And you know, and that stopped nuclear world War III back then. Wow. And you know, Bush had public support for the war. He did it. He did a great PR Job on it.
Yeah. But he really wasn’t honest about it. And if people knew the real George Bush, they would be appalled. And I have a. And I, I got this second hand, but second hand from a friend who, who’s been hit with stoner. And we both kind of know what that’s like. Oh yeah. Who used to have a national radio show guy named Stu. And he got it from Otis Johnson, who was the CIA op, kind of known as a super spy. And I know you can’t say much about that, but he had to get Vice President Bush’s signature on a document that dealt with national security on December 21, 1986.
And he found Vice President Bush under the Denver airport. And putting this out might get me killed. I’m not suicidal, but I’m going to tell the truth. I want people to understand how bad this guy is. He had a black hood on and black garb, and there were 12 men and a being that Otis described as Satan. And they were sacrificing a baby on the winter solstice. And Bush, with blood dripping down his face, signed the document. Otis got out of there, told Stu. Two weeks later, Otis committed suicide with two in the back of the head.
Now, I don’t know. I can’t reach that far back and I’m pretty limber. And you know, a gun barrel is pretty long. So. And how he hit, how he did two perfect shots, controlling the second shot is just miraculous. So, you know, and it was labeled suicide. So usually when you impact the brainstem, all nerve function ceases immediately. Yeah. And so that we know that he was murdered. And, and after, you know, Stu told a few of us and then he put it on on his radio show. And right after he put it on on his radio show, he was stone art.
Oh. And it’s not fun. But I think it’s important for us to know who these people are. Yeah. George Herbert Walker Bush was one of the lead Satanists in the world and we all thought he was a Christian. And Barbara Bush was, his father was Aleister Crowley, according to what I’ve been told by people who would know, you know, that Big Mike, Obama’s partner, is, is a man. Do you think that Barbara Bush was the man? My personal feeling, well, you and I both have studied people. We know the physical characteristics of men and women and that the skeleton, skeletons are different.
We have these CRO Magnon eyes, we have Adam’s apples. If there’s an apple as a stem is a kind of a smart ass Irish expression. The ring finger, this finger on a man is always longer than this finger. The pointer, you know, on These, you know, one at every 10,000 women will have a one male characteristic. And maybe one out of every 100 million women will have two male characteristics. But when they have more than two male characteristics, they were probably born a man. And based on that, I believe that Barbara Bush was born a man.
I could be wrong, I don’t know, but I know Big Mike has all eight male characteristics. And you know, this part of the head is one eighth of my total height. On a woman It’s 1/7. This part of my head is 1, is 1/3 or less of my shoulder width. And on a woman, her head width is 2 1/2 her shoulder width. Look how broad her shoulders are. Look at the Adam’s apple. Look at the CRO Magnum, look at the CRO Magnum eyebrows. And it’s not a flat head. That looks very masculine to me. A woman’s waist in a man’s waist.
I always thought she’s not the most attractive woman, but you know, she’s the President’s wife. So I, you know, I respect, respected her. But you know, now that we’re starting to see that there’s some serious issues with these, with these people, I, I, when I, when I do a double take now, I’m like, oh, no, not even, not Barbara Bush. And maybe we’re wrong, I don’t know. But I hope in her case we’re wrong. But yeah, I do too. But uh, I mean, we all need to look at this where, you know, uh, same thing with President Macron, you know, his, his partner.
I’ve seen pictures of where it looks like she’s got a package, all right, she’s got a bathing suit on. You can see a bulge down there. I’m like, okay, so. And they show pictures of where she, like, walks and she sits down. She sits down like a man sits down. You know, we spread our legs because we, you know, make room for, you know, that. That package we got there. Yeah. She. I’m. I’m like, wow. So there’s. There’s some people out there that are about to expose that, I believe. And have you ever seen a. A clip of Justin Trudeau running? Oh, no.
If he doesn’t run like a prissy woman. Oh, yeah. Even a strong woman, but a prissy woman. It’s hysterical. Yeah. Well, you know how very feminine, rather weak, skinny women run. That’s exactly how he runs. My late wife had. Was a wonderful runner. She had a stride like Wilma Rudolph to the great Olympic. Olympic champion. And she was a woman. And. And watching Ruma Wilma Rudolph run, that was a thing of beauty. Yeah, I agree. I agree. I agree. Yeah. It’s just. It’s fantastic to. To see great athletes run. But we’re seeing now, you know, men are moving into women’s sports, which is horrific.
It’s. It’s unbelievable. You know what? All the craziness that’s being forced on us now. So Trump has said that he’s going to turn all that around. There won’t be any men in women’s sports anymore. So we. We have a lot of work to do going forward. As a man of the cloth, I fully believe that God made only two genders. Yeah. For a reason. So we reproduce. Continued species. Yeah. Well, you know, if everybody was gay, the world would exist. One generation. Yeah. It’s a mess. So now we’re hearing reports that there may be some kind of.
And we. We could have figured this out. I think everybody else has been talking about. I’ve been talking about it for a while that there’s like, two militaries. There’s a deep state military and a white hat are, you know, the good guys. And just recently, we had exposure that there seems to be these groups of former military and professional, you know, like State Department types that are colluding to perhaps run a coup on President Trump and his team when he gets in office. Have you heard anything about that? Well, I’ve probably heard the same things you’ve heard.
Yeah. And it doesn’t take much of an imagination to understand that the people who want to put us in the Matrix. And I’m going to meet the original author of the M. Matrix soon, so that’ll be kind of an interesting thing to. For me, because I love the Story. People that want to put us in the matrix hate Trump because Trump’s trying to make sure that we’re not in the matrix. And, you know, just look at the people that are in the, in the Senate. Do you think that they should run anybody else’s life? They can’t even run their own very well.
And you have these dumbasses trying to be total control freaks. They can’t walk and chew gum unless they do exactly what their handlers tell them. We don’t need people like that in charge of us. And one of the greatest gifts, the greatest gift that God gives us is life. And the second is free will. And if we surrender our free will, we shouldn’t surrender to the dumbest people around, that’s for sure. Or the most greedy people around, or the ones that have the most evil intent. I mean, if you’re going to surrender your free will, surrender it to God.
God you can trust. Everybody else, you better be careful about. Absolutely. So you, you have your own rumble Channel. What’s, what’s your. If you do a search on God wins, you’ll find me there. God does. God ultimately wins. And you know, God is the most amazing Father. And recently I was inspired and I’m sorry we didn’t talk about this, to make a couple of slight changes in the Our Father. And I’d like to put that out publicly for people to consider. You know, when Jesus called Father, he called him Abba. And abba can mean father or it can mean Daddy or Papa.
And I believe that when Jesus was talking about his father, he was talking about daddy or Papa. Our loving heavenly Father, he’s everywhere. So who art in heaven, He’s. He’s everywhere. So why just confirm him? Confine them to heaven. Don’t put God in a small box or. Loving heavenly father, hallowed or holy be your name. Your kingdom come, your will be done on earth as it is in heaven. I mean, that’s going to happen. That’s prophecy. Give us this day our daily bread or our super substantial bread, which is a little bit different. Some translations say super substantial.
And super substantial bread is the bread of life, the bread of true holy communion. Give us this day our super substantial daily bread and forgive us our debts. That’s more than our trespasses. Our debts are even more. Forgive us everything as we forgive those of everything. Give. Forgive our debtors and leave us. Not when we are tempted, boy. When we’re tempted, that’s when we need God the most. God’s not going to lead us into Temptation, that’s. Then he’d be doing Satan’s work. He’s not going to do that. Leave us not when we are tempted and deliver us from evil.
I think that’s the way our Father should have been translated. And I think when you understand that he’s our loving father and he wants what’s really good for us and he wants that personal relationship with us. And the word ecclesia, which is where we get the word. Church has nothing to do with a building or an organization. It has everything to do with a group of like minded people who get together for a common purpose. That’s a real church. And going to real church, discussing the readings, loving God, letting God talk to us. We got one mouth, two ears.
That’s the ratio we should have with God. We should talk to them and we should listen twice as much. Ah, nice. If everybody did that, we wouldn’t have any of the problems we have in this world and we would have good nutrition, good healthy bodies. We could all live to be 120 like Moses. Moses was the ultimate infamy. He started walking at age 80. He walked for 40 years in a harsh climate, eating only the things that God provided and drinking what God provided, the way God provided it. And he didn’t have an hmo, that should tell us something.
And we get back to stuff like that. Michael, I think the happier and healthier and the better off we’re going to be. Well, we started it right here, so I, I think it worked out. Do you, do you want to end with, with a prayer? Yes. Thank you Father. God, thank you for all you give us. Thank you for the friends I have like Michael and Tracy Jo and Brad and Chuck and Mark and a list so long I couldn’t say to everybody. And I am so blessed, Lord, to be in your service. And I pray that everyone gets to know you as that loving father who cheers for us every time we do well and hopes that we continue to do well.
There’s no bigger cheerleader than God. And God, I thank you for all that you’ve given me and all that you’ve given my friends like Michael and help us grow more and more in love with you each day and each other. Amen. Amen. Oh, that was beautiful. I know you’re also, you use Lifeway products too. So we kind of encourage everybody to, you know, if you’re inspired by Jim, to like go, to go hang out with Jim and do life way with Jim. So it’s, it’s a great product. And Jim, you’ve benefited a lot from it and talked about it.
So, yeah, let me. Let just add a little something to it. Nice. I’ll be 72 next month. I’m 6 foot 1, 199 pounds. I’m trying to stay under 200. I can still wear my dress blues from when I got measured for them senior year at West Point. I can bench 320. I’m in good shape, and I couldn’t be in good shape without having a good immune system. And the X39 patch has given me an amazing amount of T cells. And these T cells have helped me fight all sorts of diseases. Most men my age can’t walk and chew gum anymore because they can’t walk.
I walk two to three miles every day, and I lift three times a week, and I do heavy chores, and I’m as healthy as a horse. And I’m convinced that I’ll live well past 100 unless someone shortens my life on me. I stay away from doctors because every one of them has a solution that also comes with side effects. And I believe they unknowingly give us medicines with side effects. A light wave patch has no side effects. All it does is energize the body to do things the way that God has designed it to do. So if you want to beat a terrible disease, put on an X39 or.
Or an X39 and an X49 patch. And, you know, follow Michael’s advice about, you know, he’s one of the experts in this. He took patches like this when he was a seal, helped him recover faster. Boy, the sooner you recover, the better you feel. It’s the most wonderful product, and you’d be nuts not to use it. Yeah. Well, that’s great. Thanks, Jim. It’s great having you on. Thanks. Those last words of, you know, knowledge and advice, they definitely are a great product. And we appreciate everyone that’s involved with it because we’re keeping everybody healthy through this war they are waging against us.
But we’re going to win. We’re old, we’re all veterans, and we’re gonna, we’re. We’re motivating people, keeping everybody focused, and we’re gonna get through this. All right, thanks a lot, Jim. Oh, thank you, Michael. It’s been an absolute pleasure, and thanks, everybody. We’ll see you guys next time.
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