DispatchJune 09, 2026·3.3 hours·with @Dykes4Congress

Congressional Contender To Displace Nancy Mace @Dykes4Congress

Ian Malcolm introduces Tyler Dykes, a congressional candidate, and discusses the need for actionable political steps.

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Now playing · Introduction to Tyler Dykes' Campaign
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Chapters — 14
  1. 0:00Introduction to Tyler Dykes' CampaignIan Malcolm introduces Tyler Dykes, a congressional candidate, and discusses the need for actionable political steps.
  2. 6:57Lessons from Casey Putsch's CampaignIan Malcolm analyzes Casey Putsch's Ohio campaign, highlighting the challenges of running against well-funded candidates and the importance of shifting the Overton window.
  3. 15:29ASAPAC's Endorsement of Tyler DykesDr. Recktenwald explains why ASAPAC endorsed Tyler Dykes, emphasizing his anti-Zionist stance and alignment with their values.
  4. 25:21Tyler Dykes' Radicalizing BackstoryTyler Dykes shares his personal journey, from a gap year in Europe to Charlottesville, Cornell, the Marines, and January 6th, leading to his run for Congress.
  5. 50:20Key Issues in Tyler Dykes' DistrictTyler Dykes outlines his primary concerns for his district: mass immigration, cost of living, and crumbling infrastructure, proposing solutions like tax cuts and ending H-1B visas.
  6. 58:56Navigating District DemographicsTyler Dykes discusses the demographic makeup of his district, primarily retired boomers, and how he plans to garner support despite the prevalence of MAGA and establishment Republicans.
  7. 1:13:44Supporting the Campaign: Donations & OutreachTyler Dykes details how listeners can support his campaign, emphasizing financial contributions, virtual clipping, and local door-knocking efforts.
  8. 1:38:22ASAPAC's Strategy for Congressional SupportDr. Recktenwald discusses ASAPAC's efforts to support candidates like Thomas Massey and their approach to endorsements and financial contributions.
  9. 1:44:02Tyler Dykes' Approach to Zionist CriticismTyler Dykes explains his strategy for addressing the Zionist issue, balancing direct criticism with focusing on economic concerns for his audience.
  10. 1:51:20The Zionist Occupation of the USDr. Recktenwald details the pervasive Zionist influence in the US, citing examples like anti-BDS laws and foreign aid, and encourages listeners to read his essay 'The Zion Dawn'.
  11. 2:13:20Debate on Israel's Role and US AidA heated debate ensues regarding Israel's relationship with the US, foreign aid, and the impact on American interests, with Yitz challenging the anti-Zionist stance.
  12. 2:36:40Overcoming Voter Apathy and Rigged SystemsTyler Dykes and Dr. Recktenwald discuss the challenges of voter apathy and perceived rigged elections, emphasizing the importance of grassroots efforts and community organizing.
  13. 3:00:00Tyler Dykes' Christian Faith and ValuesTyler Dykes shares how his Christian faith influences his worldview and political policies, emphasizing direct action and sacrifice.
  14. 3:16:40The Brewing American RevolutionDr. Recktenwald and Ian Malcolm discuss the current political climate as a 'second American Revolution,' emphasizing the need for political and cultural resistance against tyranny.

The Transcript

Ian MalcolmWell, all right, everybody. Good to see everyone in here. Miss Joanne, hopefully the audio is coming in for you loud and clear. Is that right?

Speaker 1Hi, I'm sorry. Yes, it sounds great. Sorry, I was making the little post with your name and Tyler. Oh, no, you're the actor.

Ian MalcolmSorry for catching you off guard there. And very excited for... Today's chat for a number of reasons, one of which is because we often get accused essentially of talking about a lot of these issues, but not trying to produce, let's call them tangible, actionable steps that we can take as a society, as a people, as a civilization to try and fix some of the wrongs that obviously are plaguing the world.

Ian MalcolmAnd one of the key things that we need to do in order to try and bring that about is to figure out, well, On the political side.

Speaker 1Did he cut off?

Speaker 2Sounded like he cut off.

Speaker 1Oh, okay. I'll message him because maybe he can hear us. Hold on. And thank you so much for being here, Tyler. And guys, please repost this space. Follow Ian and Tyler. And thank you everybody so much for being here. Oh, okay. Let me message him. Hold on.

Ian MalcolmIs that working okay?

Speaker 1Yes, you could hear us. Okay.

Ian MalcolmYeah, no, no, no, totally. So I was just saying, obviously, you know, we have Dan Bilzerian as a candidate and certainly pushed as we could for Casey Push out in Ohio against Vivek Ramaswamy. And unfortunately, of course, Casey, he lost to Vivek, which frankly was a very, very tall mountain to climb, a literal billionaire, former presidential candidate.

Ian Malcolmand protege of Peter Thiel and best buddy of J.D. Vance. So a pretty tall order. And yet, if you think about it, Casey got 18% of the votes with $120,000 and basically a Twitter handle. And it is pretty incredible to think about the fact that, you know, that 20% versus 80%, roughly, that sounds like a lot. But magnify that by 50% and it's a 30-70 split, right?

Ian MalcolmKeep going up 40 to 60, right? You can quickly see how perhaps with a couple million dollars and maybe with a couple more months to prepare and to formally launch his campaign, Casey could have put up a maybe sizable fight and perhaps even won. And there are a number of influencers that really value seemingly the America-centric policies that I think could have come to his aid and

Ian Malcolmyou know, perhaps the lack thereof, it really dented the push that Casey could add. And so as a result, trying to bring attention to any and every candidate that is willing to come on to these conversations, willing to try and present their ideals. And when I say that, I mean not just for their congressional districts or the governorship that they're running for in the city, the state, the district, et cetera, but also for the nation.

Ian MalcolmBecause what we need to do is to figure out how we are going to present an image of what could be that is going to become more and more increasingly popular. And we know that the younger generation is looking for an out. They're looking for a change. They're looking for a drastic shift in the direction of the country. Right.

Ian MalcolmBut that starts with all of us and with talking in our communities and trying to find people to represent us on the political front within those communities, because otherwise it's just going to be more censorship, more propaganda and more of the same slop, which is now. As a result of speaking of Casey Putsch, it's what Ohio's Ohioans, it's what they have, right?

Ian MalcolmIt's their options. They've got Vivek Ramaswamy, the H-1B scourge that is going to be brought in with him and essentially a slave surf labor class or the Jew that's on the Democratic side. Those are the two options now for Ohio. And it's really unfortunate, right? And so we need to go out and find those candidates like Casey, who was a viable option.

Ian MalcolmWe need to highlight them as best we can. And we need to recognize for what it's worth that perhaps the success is not just in the victory. And I think this is really important for us to think about. And I see that we've got Dr. Rechtenwald up here, who I'm so humbled to have with us. Right. And he's spoken about this extensively, as has Dan Bilzerian.

Ian MalcolmRight. This is not a one and done thing. It's not going to be electing one candidate. And frankly, there's probably going to be a lot of people that are going to go up against this machine and will not win. And we can't tether our either emotions or our egos or our clout to whether or not we win those elections. What we need to do is to win more and more hearts and minds by force functioning these conversations to the masses, by demanding that the candidates are discussing these issues.

Ian MalcolmAnd in doing so, we shift the Overton window, whether on an individual election cycle level, it's a win or a loss. Right. And I think that's one of the great things about Mr. Bilzerian's campaign is he's got such a big megaphone that he's going to force function these conversations. into that Overton window one way or another.

Ian MalcolmAnd so with all that being said, I'm really excited because I saw Tyler. He was in the ASAPAC space with Mr. Bilzerian just the other day and Dr. Rechtenwald. And so I thought, what better opportunity than to bring more attention to a candidate who's out there, who is aligned with ASAPAC and all the wonderful things that Dr. Rechtenwald is putting forward, and to see if we can't get a few more ears, a few more eyeballs, a few more follows.

Ian Malcolmin the process perhaps also understand how we could support that campaign whether it is through direct donations or other things again that's completely at the discretion of everybody that's listening i don't chill or i don't promote uh any money going anywhere i'm merely trying to just bring attention and information as best i can but with that being said what i would love to do since we do have dr rechtenwald is perhaps have him uh share any of the color or additional commentary on what i just suggested this idea of getting behind candidates independent

Ian Malcolmof the win or the loss and tying our ego to any of those individual efforts, because this is not, you know, this is not a skirmish. It's not a battle. This is an intellectual and a spiritual war. And it's going to require lots and lots and lots of those little skirmishes, those big battles. And as a result, we need to buckle in for the marathon that is going to be.

Ian Malcolmkind of overturning this Zionist plague that we have that has just completely captured the United States. But Dr. Recktenwald, any thoughts on the subject or maybe a little bit of information on ASAPAC and all the things that you've done either with Tyler or some of these other candidates, and then we can introduce him.

Speaker 3Yeah, certainly. So it's great to be here and thanks for having me up. And it's great to see you again, Ian and Joanne and Tyler. Great to see you. And I see some of the other regulars that I notice here. Here's the thing. Here's why we endorsed Tyler Dykes. Because he gave the Nazi salute in a crowd. No, he didn't give the Nazi salute.

Speaker 3Allegedly. Allegedly. But they went after him for that, and we said, oh, that's it. We've got to get behind this guy because they're calling him a Nazi. And he didn't do that. It was a fist bump.

Speaker 3the thing is like we're up against not only like a a wood chip or a buzz saw i should say uh they're also utterly immoral and you know we're talking about uh facing an enemy a ruling class enemy that is in fact you know genocidal and uh utterly uh amoral and uh completely uh anathema to our our national interests and completely against our better you know against our our our they're against our uh excuse me i'm getting distracted by something our best interests they're against our best interests and uh so we're gonna have it's gonna be a battle like like ian said we're gonna be putting people up against you know real

Speaker 3And in many cases, you know, it's going to be a loss because we're talking about people that are being funded by a pack and other packs, other Zionist packs to the tune of millions of dollars. We're up against a tremendous amount of money. So what we need to do and the reason why we we got behind Dan Bilzerian after already endorsing a candidate against Randy Fine.

Speaker 3is that we needed a vanguard candidate who will help clear the way for the rest. And that's what we think Dan's particular campaign will do. Now, the reason why we endorsed Tyler is because he's in totally aligned with our values. That is completely against all foreign aid. And in particular, the extortion of money from us

Speaker 3of American taxpayers to benefit Israel, so-called, and to aid and abet them as they commit mass atrocities in the Middle East and elsewhere. So Tyler, we love him. We're totally behind him. He's a model candidate as we see it. And I love his platform. We don't get behind everything that all the candidates are for. Like, for example, we don't weigh in on cultural issues, things like that.

Speaker 3But we are constitutionalists and anti-Zionists. And Tyler is certainly anti-Zionist. He's proven that over and over. And he's, I think, an inspiring candidate who has a real shot if we give him a shot. It's up to us to get him in the game. It is a real shame that Casey Putsch was, you know, derailed somehow along the way.

Speaker 3I think the Zionists derailed him somehow. And he had a lot of momentum going for quite a while there. And then all of a sudden, it got derailed and he started spiraling down. And then, you know, you saw the result. He lost pretty handily. Although he did get almost 20% of the vote without having any real money. So that's amazing.

Speaker 3So if we can do that, we can win these races. We can get... on the board. And once we get on the board, then we start to build a small coalition of anti-Zionists in office who then make a name for themselves. And the fact that they exist reverberates politically and has a tremendous influence and impact. So that's what we're looking to do.

Speaker 3I have no real news on what ASAPAC's up to today, other than what you already mentioned, that we recently endorsed Dan Bilzerian, and we're running billboards and TV ads against Randy Fine in Florida, and we'll be doing that elsewhere across the country. So that's all I have. I'm anxious to hear what Tyler has to say, and thanks for having me.

Ian MalcolmNo, and thank you for being here, Dr. Recktenwald. It's always an absolute pleasure. Throughout this conversation with Tyler, please jump in at any point and add any additional color because I know there's a number of other candidates across the country that you might want to add some thoughts on or sentiments from. But with that being said, let's go to Tyler.

Ian MalcolmAnd what we'll do is to learn a little bit about Tyler, his background. I'd love, Tyler, for kind of the story on how you got interested in and then perhaps, I don't want to use the term obsessed with, but passionate about perhaps politics. and what it was that maybe spurned you on to throw your name into the ring and to really action on that passion, right?

Ian MalcolmBecause there's a lot of different things that could have perhaps set you off, so to say. So I'd love to get the backstory on all of the buildup, and then we can talk a little bit about once you did throw your name into the ring, what that's been like, and what some of your major campaign platforms and policies might be.

Speaker 2Well, perfect. Yeah. Thank you so much, Ian, for having me and Joanne and Michael. Thank you so much for speaking so highly of me as well. It really means a lot. And I don't know how much time, how quick we're trying to keep this space going, but I'll go into my backstory here about as quickly as I can. So I've been sort of an activist, not really, for the better part of 10 years.

Speaker 2So 10 years ago, I was graduating high school and getting out there to explore the big wide world. I got a scholarship to UNC Chapel Hill for a gap year program to be able to go abroad for a year and really experience the world. But as I went and experienced this gap year fellowship that they had there, I was instead told that the only way I would even be able to go on this trip.

Speaker 2would be if I basically signed pledges to go against my privilege, that if I acknowledged the crimes of my white ancestors and the fact that I am evil for being straight and male, and the whole point of it was trying to indoctrinate me to hate myself. And I didn't want to do it, and I wasn't going to do it. So I decided not to go there, but I did want to take a gap year anyway.

Speaker 2And I just so happened to get accepted to the Ivy League of Cornell University in Ithaca, New York. I sent in a request saying, hey, I want to delay for a year and I want to go abroad and I want to do this gap year thing by myself. And they said yes. And so I went and I took a little flight and I went and I spent four months in Spain, three months in Madrid, the rest of it traveling around the country.

Speaker 2And while I was there, I had a great time. I really learned Spanish. I got really in-depth and detailed look at the Spanish life and the Spanish culture and people. But then I began to see a lot of the patterns. This was in 2016, 2017, where I went down into the southern end of Spain. And despite speaking Spanish, I couldn't understand a word that anyone was saying or what any of the street signs were saying because it was all in Arabic.

Speaker 2Everything was in Arabic. Arabs completely taking over large parts of Seville, foreigners everywhere. And so that was just an insane experience to me at the time. Had never experienced anything like it. Grew up upper middle class in a little white town. Had never seen anything like this. I traveled around a good part of the rest of Europe to Lisbon, Berlin, London, Dublin.

Speaker 2All of Western Europe had the exact same problems. It was... impossible to miss. And so then after experiencing that sort of like that culture shock, I then went and I flew over to Romania, to Bucharest, where I spent four months and I learned what it was like when you had a single culture, a single people where they actually cared about Christ, about their faith, and they actually cared about each other.

Speaker 2This is a dirt poor country, even worse off 10 years ago than they are today. This is just a country that is not doing well financially, and yet in every single way that mattered, to me, they were richer than America was. And that, again, being an 18-year-old that I was at the time, 19, it was a shock. So I flew back home, but towards the tail end of that trip, I began to sort of see all the different stuff that Trump was doing, all the different actions that he was taking.

Speaker 2And I began to see him as the possible future, the way for us to save America, to remove the foreigners, to remove the foreign influence, the way that I had seen it destroying all the places in Europe I'd have been. So I came home, starting to see the truth, and I begin to hear about this rally that's happening. in Virginia to stop the Confederate statue from being torn down.

Speaker 2This statue and this rally would end up being a very much so a turning point, as it would turn out to be the Unite the Right rally at Charlottesville, Virginia. So I drove up there. I attended the rally, and I held the torch. And numerous mistakes were made by the organizers in a lot of ways. I can go into detail if people have questions.

Speaker 2But the main one the following day, the day of the actual rally, the biggest mistake was being in a leftist area with a bunch of people that hated us and trusting the police to do their jobs. I ended up getting attacked. I was carrying a yellow Gadsden flag. They grabbed me, a group of Antifa, pulled me into their crowd.

Speaker 2And because I had fought with them the night before and won in self-defense, they decided they did not want to get into a fight with me. So they pulled out canisters of acid and bear mace. Thank the Lord, I was wearing three layers of clothing. I was wearing like a windbreaker jacket, a polo and a t-shirt. I had sunglasses on, pants, the full nine yards.

Speaker 2They completely covered my entire face, my entire head with the bear mace and they splashed the acid on my chest. Now I screamed and stumbled away and I just immediately started ripping my clothes off. And despite that, and there's pictures of this too, I can dig them up. It burned through all three layers of clothes and started to get onto my skin and make my skin get all red and started to be burned.

Speaker 2And so I had that happen and I'm blinded from the bear mace and I'm stumbling around and I managed to get back to the group and they lead me away and they spend 30 minutes, people that were friendly, 30 minutes pouring milk and water into my eyes. trying to make it so I could see again, be able to see what was going on, while this group of Antifa went off somewhere else.

Speaker 2And after about 30 minutes of having this being poured into my eyes, I could finally see, and I look up, and I see a large group of policemen standing nearby that watched the whole thing happen. And they did nothing. I eventually went back home, and went to Cornell for a semester. And now this is like just such a radicalizing experience.

Speaker 2I'd never thought the police could stand there and just let that happen. So I go to Cornell and I'm thinking, okay, at least that's behind me. I'm going to be an engineer now. I was majoring in biomedical engineering to cure Alzheimer's, to develop the cures for the future, the future of humanity. And yet in every single class, they cared more about

Speaker 2left-wing indoctrination than they did in actually fixing anything. The most notable example was when I was in course my gen ed English class and the Jewish professor decided that it was more important to teach about a particular view of the Haitian revolution, where you would have to write slam poetry about why the Haitian massacre of the entire white population of Haiti was a good thing and that they deserved it.

Speaker 2And if you took any other view other than that, you would get bad marks for it. Just total indoctrination. So after a semester there, I decided I'm not going to go to a communist school. So I dropped out. Spent some time thinking, what is it that the true leaders of this world do? What is it that every great man of history has in common?

Speaker 2What is it that they do? And all of them, I realized, they all joined the military. And so that's exactly what I did. I enlisted in the United States Marine Corps and I went and shipped off to boot camp at Parris Island in the district that I'm running for now, funnily enough. And I trained to be an air defense controller and to become a Marine, to learn that discipline that I needed to be successful.

Speaker 2I did about a year and a half active duty, went into the reserves. And then while I was in the reserves, I launched my own business. And went up to the Capitol on January 6th. Now, I had seen lots of protests. And, you know, sure, Charlottesville went bad. January 6th went bad. But I had been to 20 or 30 protests at this point.

Speaker 2And almost every single one of them went perfectly. There was an anti-mask protest in Hilton Head, for example. that successfully got the mask mandate removed that I was a part of. I went into Georgia. I went to the protests in Georgia, stopped the steel rallies, where we were successfully able to get people in with cameras in order to watch the polls being counted.

Speaker 2And so when they said, go up to the Capitol and make your voices heard, I thought, this is great. I'm going to do just that. Instead, the whole thing was a setup. Very similar to Charlottesville. They deliberately instigated conflict. They shot tear gas and the explosive grenades, the sound grenades behind the crowd, pushed people forward and deliberately let people into the Capitol and then rounded up everyone after the fact.

Speaker 2Two years go by and it is 2023, March of 2023. And I find out and I get arrested.

Speaker 2for having a warrant for my arrest for Charlottesville. Did they go after the people that bear maced me without cause? Did they go after the people that threw acid at me? No, they went after me for carrying a tiki torch, for holding the torch the night before with the charge, burning of an object with the intent to intimidate.

Speaker 2Excuse me.

Speaker 2Coming over strep throat here.

Speaker 2And so they charged me with that. They put me in a Charlottesville jail. They refused to let me out on bail. And then my lawyer came to me. I found out later that the prosecution and the judge were associated with Antifa the day of that rally. And my lawyer knew about it, didn't tell me. And so he comes over and he tells me that it was implied to him that if I accepted a plea deal for the Charlottesville charge,

Speaker 2that they wouldn't go after me for January 6th. They knew I was at January 6th. They just couldn't prove it. If I pled guilty to Charlottesville, they wouldn't do anything. So I said, fine, I'll take the plea deal. Four months go by. I'm getting released from jail. I'm in the Charlottesville jail. I'm looking out the window through the prison bars, and I can see my parents and their SUV parked right outside the door.

Speaker 2And then as I'm about to walk outside my release date, two FBI agents come in. they arrest me for january 6 and bring me to federal prison right there in the jail drag me off take me away and uh i was pretty broken i uh i was depressed i didn't even know what to do they uh wanted me to become a rat and i refused so they put me in solitary confinement until i eventually got out on bail a year goes by where i duke it out in court

Speaker 2The business that I had built, I had built a business doing IT work for people where I would fix their computers for businesses. That got shut down. The banks shut down my bank account. Truist shut down my personal and the business banking account. Lost everything. All my finances gone. I eventually get sentenced, sent to federal prison in September, October of last, of 2024.

Speaker 2And I spend about five months in federal prison. Now, I'm sure that when they did what I'm about to say, that they meant to kill me. Because they put me, having been accused of being this neo-Nazi domestic terrorist, they put me into a room with 11 cartel members from South America. Now, this is where God had a hand in my life because of my Spanish trip before and my speaking Spanish.

Speaker 2They actually respected me for it and then did nothing to hurt me. And I had a very, very easy time, much more than I should have while I was in prison. And I think that they fully intended for me to get jumped by these guys because of everything they were saying. And so I do my five months and then I get pardoned by President Trump.

Speaker 2I get let out January 21st at two in the morning. I'm walking on the street. There's a big crowd of people cheering. And I'm thinking to myself, yes, Yes, Trump is finishing his promises. He's gonna do what he promised. He's gonna fix the issues. He's going to keep us out of foreign wars, remove foreign influence, do mass deportations.

Speaker 2And this pardoning me the very first day, that's just part of the promises being kept. And I was excited. So I got a normal job and I decided I just stay out of politics. I'm not gonna get involved. I'm never gonna do anything again. Trump's gonna fix everything and I can just rebuild my business. And then the visit from Netanyahu comes.

Speaker 2And then we strike Iran. And then the attacks start to come. And then no more deportations. And then all of the things that were promised that we were going to do, suddenly they're impossible. They're politically inconvenient. And so it was during this time that I was invited to speak because of my January 6 experience.

Speaker 2I spoke at this constitutionalist group. And I finished off with this whole crowd full of 60 to 70-year-old retirees, basically, all GOP members. And I finished off my speech by saying that either the Republican Party will actually do what they promised to do or a new movement will rise out of this ashes and will burn it down and they will be the ones that will fix this country.

Speaker 2And to my shock, I got a standing ovation at this crowd of boomers. And so they spoke with me afterwards and said, hey, if you want to run for office, we'll support you. And that was about September of last year that I began to think about running. And then in October, no, November of last year is when I officially announced my campaign and began to run for Congress, primarily to carry out the promises that were promised to us in 2024.

Speaker 2Mass deportations, end foreign influence. keep our money at home, and actually make life better for the American people, not for everyone else on earth. So that's my story, and that's why I'm running.

Ian MalcolmWell, no, I love that backstory. And when it comes to the state of the state of the district that you are campaigning for, can you give us a sense of some of the things that you think are most problematic that would be within the, let's say, the control of an individual that would be taking this seat on that you're vying for?

Speaker 2Absolutely. I would say that the number one biggest issue, number one and two, are mass immigration and the cost of living. Like, these are just huge issues. To the point that people that go to the College of Charleston, which is within my district, it's from Hilton Head, Bluffton, Somerville, Charleston. If you're familiar with South Carolina, it's that whole area.

Speaker 2And in Charleston especially, It's so expensive where you have these college students, these kids, really, that are living five people to an apartment and each of them have to spend a thousand dollars a month for rent. And this is not in a good area. We're talking like five thousand dollars collectively in the ghetto, pretty much.

Speaker 2And that's like the bad area of Charleston. They're spending that much money. And then you go and you look around. There are foreigners everywhere. It's insane. And so that would be the number one thing that I'd want to address is affordability. You have to lower taxes. You have to remove the property taxes, lower income taxes.

Speaker 2But more than that, if we stop sending all of our money overseas and actually spent it within our home districts, we'd be able to eliminate a lot of these issues. Another one that everyone talks about for the district is infrastructure. Roads, bridges, highways, they're all crumbling. They're all just being destroyed. Well, a big part of that is because South Carolina is the fastest growing state in the country per capita.

Speaker 2We have the highest rate of people moving here in relation to our population, more than every single one of the 50 states. And it also takes 10 years to start building a single bridge or a single road thanks to ridiculous overregulation at the federal and state levels. And so one of my goals in Congress would be to completely eliminate

Speaker 2all federal oversight for construction regulations, and leave it back into the hands of the state. You do that, you also eliminate the property taxes and lower income taxes, you'll have a massive influx of money and infrastructure for the area. But on top of that, you have to deal with the H-1B visa problem. H-1Bs, opt visas, worked visas, all of them need to be ended.

Speaker 2And that is up to U.S. Congress. These people come here. And they have no love for America. They hate America and Americans, but they have the opportunity here. They can't get anywhere else. And so all these employers end up hiring these foreigners, hiring these illegal aliens because the cost of living has made hiring an American unrealistic.

Speaker 2And so from my perspective, we have to hit this from two sides. We have to hit it in the finance side with the lowered taxes and the lowered regulations. And we have to hit it from the immigration side as well so that there aren't too many non-Americans that they can hire. And it's affordable for the business owners to be able to hire them.

Speaker 2And one of the taxes that I hate the most is payroll taxes. When I ran my business, I had five employees. I'd pay them between $25 and $30 an hour. And after taxes, they would be getting like $1,600 a paycheck. Well, before taxes, I was paying grand total to have that employee $3,100. for that paycheck and that my employee would only get $1,600 of it.

Speaker 2And so you have these taxes, insurance regulations. We could literally double the pay for the average American overnight just by getting rid of a lot of these ridiculous regulations and eliminating the payroll tax. And then if you double the wages for Americans, it would be very easy to deport the foreigners. Because now these business owners can actually afford to pay a living wage.

Speaker 2And so I think that would fix all of the issues that we have here in this area, if that was the case, if we were able to get this done.

Ian MalcolmNo, that's so well stated. And obviously, mass migration has been one of the things that, I mean, it's been plaguing the nation for, at this point, decades. And it's really come to a head the last maybe 10 years, because people are seeing not only the absurdity of the Biden administration and the mass unfettered illegal migration, but now H1Bs, right, that are being supported by even the likes of Donald Trump, of Elon Musk and the rest of this technocrat, quote unquote, conservative ink, maybe con ink is the better term.

Ian MalcolmAnd so when it comes to that, I'm kind of curious because the district that you're looking at in terms of the demographic makeup, can you give us a little bit of a sense of the division right now that might exist between either, let's say, heritage, traditional white Americana that certainly would relate to a message that you might be pushing versus those that are not necessarily illegal migrants, but that are, let's say, of other demographics that might be, I don't want to say repelled to, but they might be averse to that type of rhetoric.

Speaker 2This district is very, very interesting. I would describe it as the retirement community of the South. would probably be the best way to put it. Almost all of the demographics here, it's like 80% white retired boomer, I would almost say, is the demographics here. Almost complete retiree, with the only exception being the Charleston City Center, where most of the foreigners and most of the younger people are all around Charleston.

Speaker 2And so it's actually been really interesting. It's been very interesting, the amount of support, actually. that I've been able to get from a lot of these retirees. It's actually given me a lot of hope that we can make changes. I go out on this stage at Republican primaries, like these candidate forums, proto-debates, basically.

Speaker 2And I get out there and I talk about Israel's interference in our elections and AIPAC and how we need to cut off foreign aid. And then I have people coming over to me at these official party events saying that they agree with me, saying they support me. I have a minimum of two to three people at every event I go to at Boomer events come over to me and unprompted tell me they just watched Nick Fuentes in their free time before I even get on stage, before I even mention Israel.

Speaker 2These are like 70-year-olds that are coming over to me and telling me this. And so right now, I would say there is such a growing movement of people waking up where Israel is committing so many war crimes in the Middle East, where the immigration is so in our faces. that even the baby boomer generation is beginning to wake up and realize what a mess we're in.

Speaker 2And so when I get out there and I'm speaking to people, I am consistently shocked by how much support that I have. And additionally, for my race specifically, I don't need a huge amount of the vote in order to actually win. There are 11 people in this race and it is a runoff race. That is the way South Carolina works. So the top two people who get the most votes

Speaker 2They will go on to the next stage. And then there will be another election two weeks later. And then whoever gets the most votes there wins the election. Well, with 10 people in this race besides myself, all of them pro-Israel, all of them just stop illegals, nothing more, all of them very establishment type people, that splits the establishment vote 10 ways.

Speaker 2So if I can just concentrate that 15 to 20 to 25 percent of people that already agree and get them to come out, get them support, get them to vote, I actually stand in almost a guarantee to make it to the runoff. And then from there, it'll be much easier to actually make it be the Republican nominee.

Ian MalcolmVery well stated. And it's interesting because it seems like that demographic would then very much align with some of these traditional American talking points that I think are growing certainly in the alt-right wing, but they often go against the MAGA crowd. And so I'm kind of curious, you mentioned the retirement center of, I guess you called it the Southeast.

Ian MalcolmI'm curious what percent of those Republicans, and obviously this is going to be a very loose number, but what percent directionally do you think are still really tethered to the Trump MAGA traditional movement that at this point is very... not just pro-Iran war, but they're also clearly very subservient to these foreign interests and efforts that are demonstrably misaligned with the needs and the necessities of your average American.

Ian MalcolmIs that retirement community, if you go down the streets, you see Trump flags everywhere, or is there a lot of pushback against perhaps the Iran war and some of the other things being done by the administration?

Speaker 2There is a surprising amount of pushback. It definitely isn't the majority, but there is a surprising amount of pushback. And more than that, though, at least here in South Carolina, it's more like a three-way war. You have the rhino Republicans. You have the establishment. They may as well be Democrats, right? They still have all the pro-Israel.

Speaker 2They're pro-Israel, anti-Trump. You have that wing of the party that has a lot of power in South Carolina, where they deliberately sort of rig primaries by... going after people that try to run and prevent them from running in primaries. They tried to do that to me. They tried to do that to three other people in this race so that their chosen rhino person could win.

Speaker 2So you have that wing that has all of the power, but not a whole lot of support. Then you have the wing, which is like the MAGA wing, the Trump fanatical, Trump can never do anything wrong ever. They worship him almost, not entirely. And then you have that wing. And then you have the wing of people that are not really like radical, but they're starting to understand what's going on and they're willing to speak with me and to vote for the things that I'm saying.

Speaker 2And so if I had to break it down, I would really put it at like 30% like establishment rhino for the Republicans. I'd put it at like 35, 40% of like the MAGA, maybe 30%. and then 20-ish percent of people that are beginning to realize what's going on. And I apologize if my math is off there. That's just sort of like the bare-bones idea of what I'm saying, if that makes sense.

Ian MalcolmNo, it definitely does, which kind of brings me to the next question. When it comes to the demographics, just to lay it out there, so you've got this rather traditional... Americana, it's a retirement-based community with the exception of the downtown area. When it comes to that downtown area, I'm curious, do you have, in your assertion, do you think you have any shot of that portion of the demographic or you really focus more on the older segment, which would actually be, ironically, kind of the inverse of the campaign that Dan Bilzerian, of course, is running down in Florida?

Speaker 2Yeah, Florida is a very different race. The biggest issue, though, is that young people just don't show up for primaries. And so and then meanwhile, you have the retired boomers that show up to every single primary every single year for the last 20 years. And so at least all the political campaign consultants and all the people that get involved, they always tell you, go after the four fours.

Speaker 2Those are the people that have voted in the last four Republican primaries. And if you get like 20% of those people to support you, you're pretty much guaranteed to win the election. But I absolutely do think that I can get the young people, that we can get them together and get them to start taking action. I've spoken at a number of TPUSA events across the Charleston area.

Speaker 2And while the leadership of the organization is not friendly, The membership almost completely is. Every single time they're like shaking my hand, they're supportive of the things that I'm doing. They want to help me. It's amazing. So I definitely think that even though it is mostly retired here, I think that the college students especially are very supportive of the things we have to say and could very well make a difference if they come out to vote.

Speaker 2More likely what will end up happening is that will rally the young people, and they'll help out the campaign more than they will with voting. They'll go out and door knock. They'll put out yard signs. They'll pass out flyers. That'll be probably the most likely way that the youth will get involved in this campaign, more so than voting.

Ian MalcolmWell, and can you speak to that a little bit? Because I'm very curious. The thing that I'm very optimistic about hearing so far, your strategy and the way that you understand the landscape, it certainly sounds as if you've really done some of the reverse engineering of what needs to take place to have the outcome that you would ultimately intend on.

Ian MalcolmAnd I just say that because a lot of people that kind of throw their name into politics, you know, they look at it as a popularity contest and they try to decide the way that they can go out and do that, but they don't necessarily slice and dice all the demographic data to be able to understand where should I prioritize my time and my efforts.

Ian MalcolmAnd so I'm very enthused that you've of course done this, which would bring me to that next question around, That younger audience that you're envisioning can help with the door knocking to get the older demographic that are probably going to be more of your voters, you know, to assist in that cause. What can people that are listening right now that might happen to be near your district or whether they're completely elsewhere, what could they do to try and help bring attention to both the campaign or potentially to get behind you, whether it's in a virtual fashion, a financial fashion or anything else that they might be able to do to support you?

Speaker 2Absolutely. The biggest things that anybody can do, regardless of location, is obviously to be able to help contribute to the campaign. This race matters to everyone because this district, it's not just about representing this district. Every single decision that I make will impact all of America when I am sitting in the floor of the U.S. House of Representatives.

Speaker 2And so it is very important also to prove that somebody with my background who has fought for the right who has been to prison, who has gotten out, who has continued to fight, just my very presence in Congress will send shockwaves throughout the establishment. And I could get nothing else done except sit there in the room and it would change things for the better.

Speaker 2And so the biggest thing that you could do to help out is go to my website, go to VoteTylerSC.com, V-O-T-E-T-Y-L-E-R-S-C.com and hit the donate link at the top. Every dollar counts. Helps. One of my opponents has $3 million of his own money in the race. Another one of my opponents, who's the entire backing of the establishment, he has about $600,000 in the race.

Speaker 2The next guy has about $500,000 in the race. And then so far, I've put in about $15,000 of my own money, and I've managed to fundraise about $8,000 or $9,000 besides that. A good chunk of that, of course, thanks to ASAPAC here, who has helped me out. And so right now I am fighting like a 30 to one ratio or with my money, I have to be 20 times as effective with the current funding.

Speaker 2So every single dollar that I get disproportionately helps me to fight these people. That's number one. Number two is virtually. If anyone in here is a good editor or knows any clippers that can do a lot of the clipping stuff to help get my name out there, that would be huge. I'm thinking of starting a group chat for people where I just put in my videos of speeches that I do, and then they go and they clip it and share it around.

Speaker 2That would also be really huge for getting the word out.

Speaker 3Hey, on that note, before I forget, Tyler, is that we have, as APAC does, the best videographer on the internet working for us. Oh, that's amazing. Yeah. They do great clip work for us. So let me figure out a way that we can get that done for you.

Speaker 2Thank you. That would mean a lot. Because also, like I said, I have a very lean campaign. I can't spend a lot of money for a videographer. So if you could help me with that, that would be huge. And then for people in the district, the biggest thing that you can contribute with is to go to the webpage and put in your name, the contact form, or message me.

Speaker 2And I'll start setting up some door knocking teams here pretty soon. So if you're willing to come out to come to my events, meet with me. I've got a number of events that I'm doing next week. But as we get rolling, as we continue to hold events and I continue to go on all these different places and speak to people, we will need to go out and door knock.

Speaker 2That'll be the biggest thing. The easiest way, the most best spend of the money is to go out and print 10,000 flyers. And then have a team of people go to all of the four fours and door knock every single one of their houses, explain who I am, hand them a flyer and move on to the next one. If we can do that, we will win this thing no matter how much money that my opponents throw away in advertising.

Speaker 2And so that'll be the biggest thing, the biggest help for people that live close by.

Ian MalcolmNo, that's really well stated. And for what it's worth, I see a couple friendly faces in the listener panel that are absolutely wonderful when it comes to video. I want to give a big shout out to Mr. Bandman, who makes some of the best. And for anybody who hasn't seen him, he's somewhere floating around there in the panel.

Ian MalcolmClick on his profile, give him a follow, because the work that he does that I've shared a bunch of, the... the COVID videos, the tech videos, all those things where you see all the individuals that zooms in on their Wikipedia page. He's been doing that for a year, two years now. He's absolutely incredible. And Tyler, I'll certainly connect you two guys along with Valeck, who does wonderful video work and so many others.

Ian MalcolmAnd for what it's worth, and Dr. Recktenwald, to get your thoughts on this, I'm just kind of curious for the power of that type of, let's say a visual stimuli. right, that somebody like Bandman, and I'll put one of his videos up into the nest, just the power that that can bring when you can create a compelling 30, 60, 90 second clip that just shares a massive amount of information, either about some of these political challenges that our country faces or a specific candidate like Tyler or Dan Bilzerian or others.

Speaker 3Yeah, I mean, look, the video that we put out as a pack in November. you know, as a pack was just founded in August of 2025. And then in November, we put out this introductory video, and it went viral. So I mean, that's how we got our whole organization off the ground, to be able to be viable. And that video is just incredibly impact can be incredibly powerful.

Speaker 3This, you know, I mean, we're dealing with a digital age in which video and audio is premium especially video you know audio video material people don't want to read unfortunately i'm a writer so i sort of you know i'm not happy about the fact that people don't want to read too much but a lot of people don't want to read i know there are readers in here i'm sure there are uh but uh what i was saying was that the video is just an incredibly powerful tool and we got to get it we got to get another video

Speaker 3out for tyler we need to get an explosive video out for him uh so you know somehow we need to raise the funds to do that let's just ask people to give to his campaign so that we can put an extremely powerful video out for for uh tyler like a four minute video that tells the whole story i know he has other videos but uh we can get or if we have volunteers that that's even better

Speaker 3uh we've had we've at asapac we've worked with both volunteers and you know we've had to pay some people uh you can't get everything uh volunteer uh from volunteers although all of our artwork and everything like that our web work all that was volunteer work so it's incredible what volunteer work does um but um you know i'm i'm willing to try to help i i think we've maxed you out tyler so i'm not sure we're allowed to pay for anything else for you but

Speaker 3we can find out and get away get it make arrangements so that it gets done as long as it's not in coordination with my campaign you can pay for anything to benefit me you just cannot tell me that you're doing it and i cannot direct you to do it legally oh yeah i didn't say i was doing anything did i did i say i was doing anything we're not doing a thing there'll be no videos i don't know what you're talking about

Speaker 2No, you can do it. I just can't tell you what to say in the video if you were paying for it.

Speaker 3Yeah, I know. I'm aware of all this FEC stuff. The difference between our PAC and, say, a super PAC, we are a super PAC, but we are not functioning as one yet. But the difference is that we are allowed to coordinate with candidates and, of course, give money directly, which we've done.

Speaker 3When you're a super PAC, all you can do is advertise really against your opponent. You really can't even, well, you can do ads for your candidates too. But in our case, after we give X amount of money, and I believe it's 5,000 per candidate, that's all we're allowed to give. After we give that amount of money, we can't make videos to support a candidate because that's considered a contribution.

Speaker 3However, we can run ads against your opponent like crazy. That's what we're doing in Florida against Randy Fine. So we can run ads against Nancy Mace. And let me start looking into that, actually. Billboards and TV. And we'll just smear her to death.

Speaker 2That's not going to be hard. Clarify as well. the people in the race, Nancy Mace is not running for reelection. And so she, yeah, that's right.

Speaker 3Yeah. Yeah.

Speaker 2She's not running for her seat.

Speaker 3I'm sorry. I meant to replace her. Yeah. Against her, against her replacements. Sorry.

Speaker 2Yes. And the biggest person I'm running against right now has the full establishment backing. His name is Mark Smith. And he would be terrible for South Carolina. A complete Zionist advertises himself as the establishment party. He literally goes out and tells people, if you want change, I'm not your man. That's what he says.

Speaker 2And so he's like literally the worst of both worlds for the Republican Party. Mark Smith, that is my opponent.

Speaker 1I just want to have Tyler, your story is insane. Like I was picturing it as it was a movie. It's absolutely crazy. But I'm really happy that you didn't get demoralized and you actually saw everything. I was like, I want to do something about it. And I'm proud of you and you sound wonderful. So congratulations.

Speaker 2Thank you, Joanne. I appreciate it a lot. Thank you.

Ian MalcolmYeah, and Tyler, on this, I'm just kind of curious because there's always platforms and then there are, essentially intentions. And then there is what is feasible. And so I'm curious, let's say that this goes swimmingly. You're able to get the non, you get elected. Obviously, there's going to be some other pushback amongst either other individuals that might represent other districts, other challenges that you might face.

Ian MalcolmI'm kind of curious what you think could be the most successful wins and maybe some of those that would be the most challenging in terms of trying to implement some of the policies that you might otherwise want to implement. Were you able to just wave a magic wand and have them all come to fruition?

Speaker 2I have already begun to caucus and to work with other people that are running in other districts for their spots. And so the plan is that. every person who is America First, who wants to contribute, who wants to run, should run. And so I'm starting to network with a lot of these other America First candidates so that should enough of us actually get into office, we will actually be able to make a difference and to change things.

Speaker 2That is first and foremost. There are a number of them that are, of course, as a pact endorsed that I've spoken with before. And I'm certain that if we both get in or if we all get in, again, it'll be the same thing. And I just want to quickly say something about like what Alex Hormozy says. Yes, he's a whatever and a businessman and everything else.

Speaker 2But something he said that's really stuck with me is if there's a 1% chance of you succeeding, right? You try it twice, there's a 98% chance of failing. You try it 20 times, there's a 60% chance of failing. You try it 50 times, there's a 40% chance of failing. But if you just keep on going... Eventually, the statistics are in your favor where you are going to win.

Speaker 2And so that is exactly what I intend to do. Win or lose, I will be running again in 2028. And I fully intend win or lose to support all of the America First candidates for Congress. And then we can actually get in office and work. And if, God forbid, I am the only America first person in there, except for me and Thomas Massey, I'll just coordinate with him and caucus with him in order to actually get something done for the American people.

Ian MalcolmNo, that actually it's a nice segue into the next question that I was going to have for you, which is around either endorsements or support. You mentioned Thomas Massey and whether it's somebody like him or some of the other big influencers that are out there in the political world. I'm kind of curious if you have. any that you've either received support from or that you'd be interested in trying to connect with.

Ian MalcolmAnd I say that just because I know in this space, we might have either right now or in the future, people listening in that might be able to send some notes or messages and try and connect dots for you to make that possible.

Speaker 2Yeah, no, thank you. I got the endorsement of a couple of influencers on here. Leonardo Joni, who you saw, she just endorsed me and supported me just very recently. which is wonderful. I got an endorsement of a number of my other people that were J6ers, and they have endorsed me. A number of them have come out. David Johnson here in South Carolina is an example of supporting me.

Speaker 2And I have reached out to a lot of the big people. Of course, I reached out to Thomas Massey, Marjorie Taylor Greene, but they're bombarded with so many requests. I doubt that they saw mine. I would be more than happy to work with them, of course. And so, you know, we're really beginning now to ramp up and to really get going, really get off the ground.

Speaker 2And I've started to be contacted by some organizations like pro-life organizations and different stuff like that that want to support. And so we will have to see what happens from there. But yes, I am more than happy to get as much support from anyone wherever they want to offer it.

Ian MalcolmNo, and that's fantastic. And it actually brings me to the next question that I had for Dr. Rechtenwald, which is around the potential ties between ASAPAC and some of those voices like Marjorie Taylor Greene or Thomas Massey. I'm kind of curious, Dr. Rechtenwald, if there's been any attempts to try and bring those individuals into the fold, whether that's behind closed doors or maybe in a public forum, because I can just envision...

Ian MalcolmA number of big voices, big influencers, Leonardo Joni, obviously a wonderful one, that if you could get into maybe a monthly or a quarterly kind of forum, right, that it might be a wonderful way to be able to introduce folks like Tyler that have aspirations and might not be getting the visibility of somebody like Mr. Bilzerian and getting them aligned so that if nothing else, maybe Thomas Massey or Marjorie Taylor Greene or some of these others might be able to at least consider his platform and decide if they might not mind putting their name next to him as a seal of endorsement.

Speaker 3Oh, yeah. I mean, we're looking at helping Massey himself because actually his campaign, his candidacy is in jeopardy right now, thanks to the AIPAC plus the three Jewish supremacist billionaires that are funding his opponent. And that is, of course, Paulson, Singer, and Adelson. So those people are huge, but... And that's the sort of trifecta from hell, if you will, the trifecta from hell.

Speaker 3But we're working on trying to get a hold of Massey to help him. And so to do that, I've been working to get a hold of, through Buckley, Carlson, to get a hold of Tucker Carlson so that I could get on there. And then, you know, then it'll get much more broad recognition. Right now, we've been on some big shows. We've had some, you know, major appearances.

Speaker 3I was on The Young Turks. I've been on the, of course, I was on Jake Shields just the other day or yesterday. I think it was the day before. I don't know. And, you know, I've been on a number of other big shows that are Jimmy Dore and several others. So we've had some exposure, but it's I don't know that Massey wants our endorsement.

Speaker 3We're trying to find that out. We want to endorse him, but we don't want to endorse anybody that doesn't agree to be endorsed. We don't just go endorsing candidates because we want to make sure they feel it will help them. And we also want to help his campaign financially. And we're just trying to get a hold of his people.

Speaker 3uh to be able to do so and i have he follows me personally on his other account that is uh thomas massey and i've met him we met at the libertarian convention in 2024 when i was running for president he knows me very well he knows who i am uh but uh and we we took a picture together which used to be up on my profile but anyway we're trying to get a hold of him of course he's much more difficult to get a hold of him than he was even back in 2024 since he's become

Speaker 3uh such a well a kind of uh a lightning rod from one you know and a and the last stan you know basically the last bastion of you know america first uh belief and policy making in the whole country in the whole in the whole congress i mean it's unbelievable he's he's the only one we have So we need to get behind him, and we must support this guy because if he gets washed out, then we'll have nobody, okay?

Speaker 3What we're trying to do is add to what we have, not to lose. So we need to add people that can become a coalition with people like Thomas Massey, that can coalition with him, and then it becomes stronger, and then not everybody is out there as a lone wolf getting picked off like they're trying to do to him and like they did to Marjorie Taylor Greene.

Speaker 3So, yeah, I mean, we're very much behind Massey. We want to endorse him, but we have to get his approval to do it. I don't want to endorse him unless he asks us to, or he agrees to have us endorse him. And we want to give him money, but we need to hear from him first.

Ian MalcolmNo, it's very well stated. And on that side, Tyler, I'm just kind of curious for your... ideal scenario when it comes to either support or endorsement or how you would envision that going and and what is it that you are planning to do tactically whether it's in a digital version or out you know in your local community trying to drum up uh support as best you can for your campaign sure so the strategy right now is uh and the fact that i'm even willing to come out here is of course the reason there are 12 people in this race and despite all the negative fake news press coverage

Speaker 2I am pretty much an unknown. I was completely unable to have social media thanks to the arrest. I had to delete some of it. I was banned on other places. I had zero connections, lost most of my connections because of that whole mess. And so at this point, especially with how unknown that I am, any support, any news, any article is good.

Speaker 2All of it is good. If some Zionist newspaper writes a hate piece about me, that's a good thing. And so any and all endorsement I can get, any and all help that I can get, I am 100% in support of, with the main idea being to get name recognition out there. Because when it comes down to election day, it's quite unfortunate.

Speaker 2People don't vote for the best candidate. People vote for the person they've heard of the most. And so if they've seen 10,000 negative news articles about you, they're voting for you because you're the only name that they can remember. And so that's sort of my strategy for right now to get to that point, to get that recognition.

Speaker 2And so any and all help, any and all public support that you can give. please do so. I'm more than happy to accept it.

Ian MalcolmWell, and this actually, and it's interesting because, and I don't see him up here anymore, but I saw Yitz jump up here and I thought it might be a good time to pivot to this specific subject, which is kind of the Zionist angle, which obviously is a very, you know, it's a hot topic. And it's also a hot button topic in the sense that if you touch it, you're going to get flamed.

Ian MalcolmAnd we obviously saw that happen to Mr. Bilzerian. But the thing that's so curious is, It feels as though, and I think this is why Dr. Rechtenwald does such a wonderful job when he talks about these issues. It feels like it's becoming so overt and in your face and flagrant, especially with the genocide that took place, or at least what I would call the genocide of the Palestinians.

Ian MalcolmAnd as a result, when Bilzerian got brought on to TMZ, they thought, oh, we're going to roast this guy. And instead, Dan Bilzerian kind of made them look like absolute fools just by turning a mirror on them and saying, well, look at all these atrocities and look at Randy Fine's support of them. And so I'm curious because you mentioned that all press is good press.

Ian MalcolmAnd obviously, if you go out and you critique not only Israel, but also some of the other, let's say the Zionist angle, I won't even go into the cultural aspects and all the other pieces because I know it's not really the Azapak mission. But instead, if you even talk anti-Israel, that is going to bring a massive windfall of attention, albeit most of it will, of course, be negative.

Ian MalcolmAnd so I'm kind of curious how you're speaking to that subject, because we saw a very different tact from Dan Bilzerian, who's basically kicking open the Overton window, as opposed to Casey Push, who is much more, I don't want to say reticent, but rather he tried to very calmly, very peacefully, and very... It wasn't lightly done, but it was very just maturely delivered, his critiques of the Zionist influence in the U.S. government.

Ian MalcolmSo I'm curious where you're going to land between the two of them or maybe outside of either.

Speaker 2It has taken me a long time to even be willing to speak out about the Zionist issue in public at a lot of these events. And the only reason I've even been able to get to the point where I'm doing so has been the surprising support from a lot of these people in person. The amount that things have just changed, it's incredible.

Speaker 2So I'm absolutely calling it out, but that isn't like the number one main focus when I am speaking to a crowd of retirees, especially, right? The main focus there is gonna always be the economy, how we can fix the economy. But it's also related to like, why are we going to war with Iran when we could be spending that $200 billion repairing our infrastructure?

Speaker 2You say that to a crowd of retirees, they're going to love it. You say we need to cut out foreign influence. They love it. You say that we need to end all foreign aid to all countries, no matter what they are. They love it. And then when I'm speaking to a younger crowd, and then I'll say to all foreign aid, including Israel.

Speaker 2And there's been a number of times where I've actually gone up on stage, like at this recent candidate forum that I was at maybe a few weeks back, where I spoke out and this was a very much so a Republican membership party only. You had to be a registered party member to vote. And I got a grand total of zero votes because I stood up on stage.

Speaker 2And when I was asked the question, they said, hey, Tyler, Mr. Dykes, in light of the action in the Middle East, do you support standing with our closest ally, Israel? And I said, my answer, well, first of all, Israel is not our greatest ally. They should not be considered an ally. They should not in any way, shape, or form be in alliance with us.

Speaker 2If you want to talk about allies, let's look at Japan and Australia, because they're actually countering the current geopolitical threat in China. Whether or not they should be a threat is irrelevant. They're absolutely treated as one. And so if we want to have a greatest ally, how about Japan and Australia? And the boomers that were there at that particular event did not like that.

Speaker 2at all. And I actually had a number of people come up to me at that event and tell me that I was a hateful anti-Semite, that I just hated Jews, and that you have to support Israel or else you're an anti-Semite. And I just said, I don't care. I had to go out on stage and speak the truth. Because most of these people have never heard criticism of Israel their entire lives.

Speaker 2I, as much as anyone, like to shit on the boomer generation. It's fun. But then when you look down to it, The vast majority of them, not one time in their long 70-year lives have they ever heard one person in real life say anything negative remotely about Israel. That is how controlled their entire lives from their upbringing to the TV and the newspapers has been.

Speaker 2And so I might not have gotten any votes that time, but then I speak in front of the same people again and again and again. And then now they see something on social media and they start to think about it a little bit more. They think, maybe these aren't just crazy fanatics online because I met this gentleman here in a suit that spoke on a stage saying the same thing.

Speaker 2And so the goal is to keep pushing for the truth. And I am certain that with the amount of support I am getting, that we will bring people on board and that we do have a shot at winning this.

Ian MalcolmNo, very well stated. And I like the... the tenor that you're taking, and obviously I take a little bit more of a hard line in terms of the degrees of these issues when we zoom out from the political realm into some of these other aspects of culture, of technology, of the medical industry, etc. But I also recognize that the rooms that we host about these issues are essentially the bleeding edge of the spear.

Ian MalcolmI use bleeding edge because there's often a degree of that where anything that's bleeding edge is going to cut both the issue that you're pointing at as well as yourself. It's always going to be self-inflicting damage and is therefore, you know, it's not something that is going to be remotely palpable for the voter base that you're looking at.

Ian MalcolmAnd so I can appreciate that we need to be very tactful. We need to be very responsible with how we try to take this messaging out there and also that we exclusively focus that message through a prism or a lens. that can help to, of course, put you in a position to make the political impacts and changes that we would all like to ideally see accomplished.

Ian MalcolmI see Dr. Rechtenwald has his hand up, so let's go there. And then we will allow Yitz, if you want to have a question, perhaps, on anything that was just shared there by Tyler in terms of what I think is a very reasonably delivered and also a very reasonable stance on foreign interference or foreign involvement in the U.S. government.

Speaker 3Hey, yeah, thanks. So I just want to say to Yitz, hey, Yitz, you're probably a guy I would have defended as a kid. You know, you probably were bullied. I would have been there to probably protect you from the bullies, to tell you the truth. That's the kind of person I am. But anyway, to the point, I just want to say that, you know, as a PAC, our policy is we are more or less just a demarcation device.

Speaker 3It's a way of finding out, is this Is this candidate in the tank for Israel or are they for the actual constituents who they are running to represent? So, you know, and we don't care like how the candidates, you know, present their position on this as long as they hold firm to the position, which they have agreed to do when they sign.

Speaker 3They don't really sign. They answer our questionnaire that... We put out a 20-point questionnaire that asked them questions about this, and they swear these are the truths. And so given that information, we trust that they will stay true to that, that they won't take any money from any Zionist lobby or Zionist individuals, that they will not...

Speaker 3vote to send arms or aid to israel that's mainly that's what it is also there's bds and other things there's a number of other issues but uh once they you know complete that form and we vet them otherwise how they represent the position about israel and zionism is utterly entirely up to them we don't have any say in that and we don't try to so you have somebody like dan who's

Speaker 3You know, he's not just opposing Zionism as such. He says he is opposed to Jewish supremacy. I call it Jewish supremacism because I think it's an ideology and a belief. Supremacy means it's a de facto reality that Jews run everything or they have this dominance or superiority over everyone. Now, I do believe they are supremacists.

Speaker 3that's another matter anyway dan runs on anti-supremacy jewish supremacy and we have candidates that won't even say they're anti-zionist per se we don't care as long as we know they are they have to present they they know how to present themselves to their various audiences and that's what we you know we're not trying to dictate that at all i just wanted to get that across and and you mentioned the and there was something you put you you mentioned uh something about how

Speaker 3In this current administration, the mask has really come off. And to that end, on that note, I would ask or encourage people to go to the AZA PAC website, aza-pac.com, aza-pac.com. There's an essay I have up on the front page called The Zion Dawn, The Completion of US Zionization. And that essay goes into... the depth of the penetration and occupation that we're under all of the indices of that all the indications of how real it is and uh i mentioned five at that uh con we went to a rally or not a rally i guess what was it a meeting conference uh tyler we went to that america first united yes uh and uh i was uh at that event i said you know uh

Speaker 3what we're dealing with is, you know, I gave five indications of how occupied we are. You know, first of all, they're planning or thinking about, or there's a bill proposed, I should say, to give IDF soldiers, US veteran benefits, IDF soldiers, to, you know, dual citizens, so-called, to give them benefits. That isn't, I mean, that's unbelievable.

Speaker 3Then, of course, now Trump, has made green cards contingent upon passing an anti-Semitism litmus test, as it were. This is just unbelievable. Then they want to make it, you know, we have 38 states that have anti-BDS law. 38 states. We have 18 of those states who invest in Israeli bonds. There's, you know, anti-BDS means that you cannot boycott the state of Israel or an Israeli company and get a contract or any kind of business with the state.

Speaker 3They'll just shut you down. So you can't boycott Israel. This is, of course, an infringement of our First Amendment rights because, you know... spending money is really an express you know it's been rolled by the supreme court but that is expression that is free speech and that's how citizens united got passed uh that's why we have these super PACs spending all these billions of dollars because of citizens united and in citizens united the lawyers that argued that case they argued that

Speaker 3speech that that spending was speech and and that and that uh since corporations are individuals they have every right to speak to anyone else and people should be able to spend as much money as they want or speak as excessively as they wish to uh and so that case got that case they won that case uh uh citizens united that that became law

Speaker 3The same law firm that won that case at the Supreme Court is opposing the anti-BDS movement. So they're enforcing the BDS movement, which is free speech. BDS is boycott, divest, and sanction. Anti-BDS means you can't boycott, divest, or sanction Israel. Okay, I'm sorry, anti-BDS means you're not allowed to do that. So the anti-BDS laws in 38 states say that if you boycott Israel, you can't have any business with the state at all.

Speaker 3Who knows what that could come down to? That could even come down to unemployment benefits in some cases. There's numerous ways this could go. The 38 states ban BDS. And then there's a number of other indications. Of course, I'm just trying to give very ephemeral ones. I should say, there are so many indications I could go on forever.

Speaker 3But these are kind of like salient things that occurred to me. There was a conference in the summer called 50 States, One Israel. 50 states, one Israel. And 250 state senators went over to Israel to get the tour, you know, to get the tour of the holy sites and to get the wall. wailing wall uh to do their willing wall deposition as it were and to do all of the uh you know obsequious groveling that you have to do in the face of israel in order to get money from the packs that support uh pro-israel candidates so you know they and then of course those state senators the reason they brought them over

Speaker 3was to make them enforce and even increase the anti-BDS legislation that they have in these states. So those are the indications that Zionism is completely overrun this country. We're under a Zionist occupation. These people are running the country. They have almost remote control over our military. I mean, if they say bomb Iran, there you go, bomb Iran.

Speaker 3If they say, you know, send us another 10 billion so we can kill more Palestinians, there it comes. It's just unbelievable. So that essay, Zion Dawn, you'll see it at azapac.com, aza-pac.com. And I go into great depth of all of the indications of just how Zionized the United States is.

Ian MalcolmNo, it's so well stated, Dr. Maldon. It's insane when you start to really... connect the dots and you recognize, even if we don't look at the macro level and all the things that are done subserviently for the nation of Israel, you just look at all of these strange connections that basically weave their way through essentially all the presidential families, their vice presidents, their cabinets over the last 30, 40 years.

Ian MalcolmAnd the prevailing winds are just undeniable. And it's getting to a point where for somebody to try and suggest that that is not happening. is so overwhelmingly incorrect that it is apparent that they're either brainwashed or that they are complicit in some kind of either cover-up.

Speaker 1Did he cut off?

Ian MalcolmYeah, he just went out.

Speaker 1Oh, okay. Oh, Ian?

Ian MalcolmYeah, every now and then X just decides to mute the mic, so I apologize. But yeah, the... The prevailing winds are so overwhelmingly obvious that anybody who's suggesting otherwise, it's very clear why they're doing so. Which would bring me, I know I said I was going to go to Yitz. I will go right to you in just a moment.

Ian MalcolmBefore I do, I would love to welcome the always wonderful Ms. Honeybadger up here and see if she's got any thoughts, questions, inquiries on either Tyler and everything he's doing with his campaign or with ASAPAC and everything that Dr. Echtenwald is doing to support candidates like him.

Speaker 4Oh, well, thank you, Ian. It's been lovely listening to the conversation. Well, I wish you the best of luck, Tyler. And also, just a question about South Carolina in general. Though the state of South Carolina, and I actually did live there for a few years, has always seemed to be very red, it seems that there's been sort of a stronghold of, I would say, GOP candidates that were more

Speaker 4How do you put it? Uniparty. And how what do you think are your chances of breaking through that? You know, and what is like kind of what is the current climate of South Carolina and what do you plan to focus on most as you know, during your candid candidacy in terms of who do you who do you who do you plan to. who do you want to reach the most?

Speaker 4Because it does, and I will say, I do have an ulterior to that. There's a lot of, you know, there's a lot of major colleges down there. There's a lot of small colleges down there as well. And it just, it really does appear that Gen Z is really ripe for your message. And, you know, it would appear that the best place for you to start is both, you know, is, you know, with the colleges, not only for the sentiment, you know, in terms of

Speaker 4them just being fed up with the way that, you know, the way that the country is going and particularly who we've been beholden to, but the job market when they're getting out of college as well. And, you know, how abysmal it looks. So, you know, I just was wondering, you know, what's kind of your game plan moving forward?

Speaker 4And thank you for letting me speak.

Speaker 2Yeah, thank you. So I heard three questions in there. I had one about how am I going to deal with the rhino unit party? Who's my target demographic? And then am I going to reach out to college kids, basically?

Speaker 4Yes, sir. Yep. Thank you.

Speaker 2Cool. So the Rhino one is actually a really difficult thing to get past because I have been kicked out of the Beaufort County Republican Party that I was a member of and a part of because I exposed the fact that the chairman of the party was actively colluding with one of my opponents to give them free information and to basically promote them.

Speaker 2There was a member of the Beaufort County Party that actually left the party to work on their campaign, brought a bunch of information over. The spouse for one of those people actually runs the Board of Elections and has influence in how the elections are done within the county. And so when I began to expose a lot of that connection and the fraud that was going on, they booted me from the party.

Speaker 2And then they told me I was not allowed to come to any more candidate events. candidate forums or debates for the party, period. And so they moved from privately trying to undermine me to publicly doing it. And that got a lot of attention in the media here as well. And so the biggest thing is just door knocking and social media.

Speaker 2That's how you overcome that. They have the institutional support. They're going to have a lot of the big business support. They're going to have a lot of these little, for lack of a better word, bourgeoisie committee rooms where they all go and sip tea and talk about the weather. That vote is locked in. They got that.

Speaker 2But we need to reach the people who are disenfranchised, the people that are sick and tired of betrayals by the Republican Party, the people that are even more in the MAGA wing of the party that hate to see how easily people sell out to the rhinos. And so the best way to overcome that is, again, just door knocking social media.

Speaker 2That's the best way. The second part of your question about the colleges, I absolutely would love to reach out to the colleges. In fact, if someone wants to message me and help me set up an event, I would love to do a Charlie Kirk style event outside the College of Charleston where I say Israel's committing a genocide.

Speaker 2Prove me wrong. So if there's anyone here with better organizational skills than me that can help me get that set up, please let me know. I would love to do that. And as being a Marine as well and the experiences I've had, I'm not worried about any of the physical risks that are involved with that. Plus, I got a number of friends that'll help me out.

Speaker 2So there's that. And then what's the general game plan? How am I going to reach it? What's the target demographic? With that, I got to get the four fours. of the people that vote in every primary. I need to get at least 20% of them. And then I need to really motivate people who don't usually vote because they're depressed and they don't think that anyone actually represents them.

Speaker 2And I need to reach out to those people as well, which again is through door knocking and social media.

Speaker 4Yes, the disenfranchised voters. And you know, it would seem, and correct me if I'm wrong, but it would seem that though, you know, There's a large amount of apathy, I think, especially now, and a lot of disenfranchisement among voters. Sometimes it would appear, and again, correct me if I'm wrong, that they're actually easier to get to because it's kind of like they're starting from so low to inspire them and to motivate them takes less energy than it would if they were already kind of engaged.

Speaker 4Does that make sense?

Speaker 2Yeah, but my biggest thing is that a lot of those people, unfortunately, and you see it every day online, they all say voting doesn't matter. I'll never go out and vote. I agree with everything that you say, but the elections are rigged. You'll never get anywhere anyways. That's what they want you to think. They want you to not lift a finger to save yourself.

Speaker 2They want you to be depressed. I mean, you have all these people that talk about a glorious and violent revolution. How can you have that if you don't even have people that are willing to take 10 minutes to go to the voting booth? Voting does matter. Voting is important. If for nothing else than to help connect the community, to help connect people one and another, to build up those bonds, to build up the infrastructure, to actually be able to make a difference even outside of voting.

Speaker 2Voting is just a way that you can see what's happening. It's a way that you can sort of judge how the public is feeling. That's all that it is. And so if nobody is going out there and fighting for their vote, for their voice, then, you know, there's no point. And so we have to make sure that these people that are depressed, they're not apathetic.

Speaker 2They care, but they cared so much they lost hope. They kept caring and then they got stabbed in the back and stabbed in the back again and stabbed in the back again. And then they're like, all right, I'm done. I don't want to do this anymore. I'm tired of getting stabbed. And then so how do you reach those people? How do I reach those people with my message and make sure that they know I'm not also going to stab them in the back?

Speaker 2And I guess the only thing I can say to that is the fact that I've been arrested, I've went to prison, fighting for the cause, fighting for our people, for our nation, and I did not break. And I came real close. I came real close. But I didn't break. I lost everything that I had and I am fighting anyways. And so if there's a time where I was going to give in and be a little rhino and do everything that they wanted, that would have been about three years ago when all this stuff was happening to me.

Speaker 2And so I'm going to keep fighting to the end regardless of what happens. And I hope that that encourages people to get involved.

Speaker 4Yeah, it certainly does. Thank you so much for your time. And, you know, it is a pleasure meeting you. And Ian, I just think you're doing a marvelous job with the interviews that you've been doing of candidates and giving, you know, a voice to these guys. I think that your reach and your, I say, your temperance in doing these has had a much greater impact than you probably realize, Ian.

Speaker 4So I want to just give you credit. And unfortunately, I guess we have to go to you. So thank you so much and have a wonderful evening. Thank you.

Ian MalcolmI appreciate the first part. I certainly laughed at the second. That was funny. But for what it's worth, the thing that I find so curious, and this is why I was asking Tyler about some of the abilities to get connected to some of these larger voices, whether it's the political folks like Marjorie Taylor Greene or Thomas Massey or some of the influencers on social media, because the weird part of the world today is that...

Ian MalcolmAn interview, if we could get Dr. Rechtenwald on with Tucker Carlson to have an honest conversation about the complete subversion of the US government and get that out to millions of eyeballs, it changes tomorrow. It really does. And so the mainstream media is captured. They're not going to allow a candidate like Tyler on to CNN or on to Fox News if he's going to say a remotely critical thing about Israel.

Ian MalcolmAnd so it's incumbent upon us then. to try and hoist individuals that are willing to try and honestly, maturely, professionally, and politically advance our cause to do anything and everything that we can to support them. And again, back to that notion at the beginning that we were talking about with Dr. Rechtenwald, there's going to be losses along the way.

Ian MalcolmAnd I say this, I'm not going to mention any names in particular. I don't want to have mass reporting from people that otherwise might agree with my sentiments on this. But the reality is, We need to be willing to support candidates that might be long shots. We should try and lift up their voices as far as we can, as loud as we can, bring as much attention to them as we can.

Ian MalcolmThe fact that Casey Putsch got 18% of the votes is unbelievable. And if we had have gotten more voices, if you had have perhaps had a little bit more money, if you had had a little bit more time, he could have defeated Vivek Ramaswamy, a literal billionaire who ran for president. That's how unpopular this narrative is.

Ian MalcolmAnd so we just need to do everything we can. And I see a lot of individuals that are seemingly online saying, well, I don't want to put my name next to a candidate who might lose. That would be embarrassing for me. That's the wrong way to look at this, right? You go to the gym and for anybody who's ever done anything to increase their physical fitness, you're going to get under a barbell and you're going to try and lift it.

Ian Malcolmyour personal record. You're going to fail again and again, and then you're going to do it. So don't fear falling down. Learn to do it and to scrape your knee and to stand back up and dust yourself off and say, I'm going to keep marching forward, which is what Tyler was saying. He might not win. If he doesn't, well, he's going to build up a reputation and a brand.

Ian MalcolmHe's going to do as much as he can to bring attention to these issues so that some of the other candidates have to discuss them. And if they don't, it'll be pretty obvious why. Right. So we are going to win. We just need to be willing to get dirty, to dust ourself off and to recognize it's not always going to be flattering.

Ian MalcolmWe're not always going to get a gold medal. Right. We are going to lose races. We are going to embarrass ourselves from time to time. We will get 18 percent of the vote and have a bunch of Democrats or a bunch of liberals or a bunch of maybe Zionists say, ha ha, look at that guy lost. But who cares? We're putting up a fight.

Ian MalcolmWe're doing what we can. And each day it gets easier and easier, just like it gets easier and easier to lift the heavier weights when you go to the gym. So Honey Badger, I really appreciate those comments. We will take a pause here for a second to go to Mr. Yitz. It seems like everything that's been presented by Tyler has been very, very reasonable.

Ian MalcolmBut Yitz, I'm curious for some of your thoughts and the perspectives of a certainly self-avowed Zionist Jew.

Speaker 5Thank you, Ian, for lending me the mic.

Ian MalcolmCan I say those with no criticisms or slurs intended in the use of those two words?

Speaker 5Yes. I've looked through, Tyler, your platform, and there are some things that I like and some things that I dislike. Some of the things I liked, for example, is to lower income tax, to remove property tax, to remove stock trading in Congress, to have terms for the House and Senate. And these are great ideas worth pursuing.

Speaker 5But then there were some ideas that I really much dislike them. For example, yes.

Speaker 1Oh, my God. They are not registered under Farage. You know this. Stop that, Anthony.

Speaker 5Nothing compared to Qatar. Qatar spends hundreds of millions more. institutions.

Speaker 3I see all those Qatari flags in Senate and Congress. Isn't it disgusting? All these Qatari flags and all these senators asking if you say America first or Qatar first and they can't tell you. They won't say it. It's unbelievable.

Ian MalcolmWait, wait, wait. Michael, this is a question for you off of the comment that Michael just made that's actually a brilliant one. Since there are so many Qatari flags throughout Congress, could you describe for everybody on the line what the Qatari flag looks like?

Speaker 5It's white and red, as I recollect. But there's many flags. There's Mexican flags, many different people proud of their heritage and ancestry. I have nothing against that. But I wanted to mention, Tyler, you mentioned about Japan and South Korea, for example, or NATO being greater allies than Israel. NATO, we spend $100 billion annually.

Speaker 5And in Japan and South Korea, we spend about $8.5 billion and have to station about 80,000 troops. In Israel, there's not one American base. And when our pilot is down in the mountains of Iran, the Israelis actually helped us recover them. They had our back. They're with us in every operation. All the time.

Speaker 2Can you tell us how many Israeli troops were in the front lines in Iraq and in Desert Storm?

Speaker 5Iraq actually had a revelator to do with Israel, Ariel Soren. Multiple occasions warned George W. Bush not to get involved with that fighting because it would strengthen Iran and would destabilize the region, and we would be stuck in a quagmire for 10 years. The countries that were pushing for that were actually with the East Iranians.

Speaker 1No, your microphone sucks. I'm so sorry, but your microphone really, really sucks.

Speaker 5I'll try to speak louder.

Speaker 1Yeah, there's like wind or something.

Speaker 5It might be the wind. The countries that were pushing the most for the Iraq conflict were the states of the former... ...Christian Zionists in this country. If they all voted in mass, they'd be the largest voting bloc in the country. It's not so much Jews or American Jews, American Jews or Israelis. It's more Christians who see the divine prophecies taking place and they want to support Israel.

Speaker 5If AIPAC was so powerful, what happened in 2015 with the JCPOA? You think we would have been able to stop that, for example? And, you know, like the Lavi jet. Israel could have had its own indigenous fighter jet, but it was halted due to American aid. which in many cases has become a liability and has degraded as well the autonomy.

Speaker 3You've been great. You utter ingrate. You people are unbelievable. You've been robbing us since 1948, and now you're complaining and saying it's worse that we actually are doing you a disservice? Fuck you, man!

Speaker 5Michael, Michael, we helped improve the F-35. We've done so much for America.

Speaker 6Israel's done so much for the United States. You are Jewish. You never help anyone but yourselves. Stop that false. No one here is dumb enough to believe that. So stop trying to lie that way. It just makes you sound even worse than you are. Try to be a little bit realistic. Seize and read the room.

Speaker 5Well, here's what I'll say. Here's what I'll say.

Ian MalcolmYes, could you summarize and just offer a pretty direct question at Tyler without a massive amount of color to build up to it?

Speaker 5Okay, okay, okay. So my question for Tyler and Michael, and for anyone else on this stage who wants to boycott Israel, the Israeli scientists recently created a cure for pancreatic cancer. Are you going to boycott if you get pancreatic cancer? You're going to boycott the Israeli medical? You're going to? Okay.

Speaker 1I am. You've been experimenting on the Palestinians to get all these crazy cures. So, yeah, I am going to boycott.

Speaker 3Yeah, I mean, I don't want my organs harvested either by you guys. So I'm boycotting everything to do with you. And I don't want any of your IDF soldiers living in my neighborhood at all. And certainly I don't want them getting benefits, U.S. veterans benefits. And I want to be able to boycott Israel because it's a First Amendment right.

Speaker 3OK? and i want to be able to say anything i care to say about israel without being some ad uh some uh anti-semitism czar coming down on me okay everything for jewish zionists right everything for jewish scientists old countries being run for jewish scientists Read my essay and refute it if you possibly can.

Speaker 5I do intend to read it, but Michael, why did Trump oppose Israeli annexation of Judea and Samaria?

Speaker 3He didn't. That was the whole point. He let them have the Golan Heights, of course. Not Judea and Samaria. They want to change the name to Samaria and whatever the other thing is. I really don't care. Here's the thing. Here's the thing. We're sick of you people. You're parasites. Get out of our goddamn skin. Get out of our finances.

Speaker 3Get away from our money and leave us alone. That's all we want.

Speaker 5Well, I'm glad I provoked you, Michael. But my question was to Tyler.

Speaker 6Why are you glad to provoke people that supported and freed you and did everything for you? Why are you so proud of being a... a reason for the world wanting to unite against you.

Speaker 2He likes to provoke people. That way he doesn't actually have to answer the questions and he can continue to spread his lies unopposed. That's why he likes to provoke people.

Speaker 3There were five, I counted, at least major lies that you told over the time you were- Sorry for yelling, folks, but I just, I can't abide this kind of like hosbra and absolute like ingratitude coming from this guy and this- this kind of dissembling, suggesting that really the aid may actually hurt us. Listen, why do you keep groveling for it then?

Speaker 3And as Netanyahu's saying, oh, we're going to cut off dependents from USAID at the same time as they're asking for a 20-year memorandum of understanding. That's false. That's false. You know it's false. Funding rather than just dependents.

Speaker 5That's false and you know it's false.

Speaker 3With a guarantee of some, I think it was... 10 times, basically $40 billion. This is nothing compared, of course, to the hundreds of billions it's costing us to fight Iran for your benefit and to fight and to send arms to slaughter, absolutely slaughter people in Lebanon and the Gaza Strip.

Speaker 5We don't want the whole Middle East going nuclear.

Speaker 3Wiping them out. The head of Jesus Christ, okay? You people are disgusting.

Speaker 5Okay, okay, okay. In the meantime, the radical Islamists, they actually kill Christians, actual Christians.

Ian MalcolmWait, wait, wait, but yes, hang on, hang on. Yes, yes, yes, yes. The radical Muslims, as you say it, are only at war and only say bring down the big evil that is the United States because it is acting as the attack dog for the obvious evil that is Israel. There otherwise would be no need for the conflict. There wouldn't have been for literally two and a half decades

Ian MalcolmAnd the United States at this point would have saved something in the 15 to 25 trillion dollar range, according to Grok, that literally could pay for almost the entirety of the national debt. Think of all the things that could be done to improve the lives of Americans. And instead, it's been done to build out the greater Israel project.

Ian MalcolmAnd so you can't say that the United States isn't bending over backwards for this nation that is smaller than the state of New Jersey and yet sucks up resources. as if it's the entirety of the continent of North America. It's infuriating. And then for what it's worth, I find it really ironic because we're trying to have a mature conversation about these things.

Ian MalcolmYou then chuckle and laugh and smile and smirk and celebrate that you infuriated Dr. Recktenwald, who's one of the calmest. most professional individuals on this entire application. It's almost as if that serves as an entire microcosm of the Israeli relationship with the United States that not only has taken just about everything, but that says not even a thank you for it.

Ian MalcolmIn fact, they sneer and snicker and spit on our people if they were to go over to Israel. And I can't tell you how many videos I've seen. One of which, oh, by the way, is an Israeli Jew laughing at Americans saying, Thank you for the iron dome. You say that you built it. You didn't build it. You just paid for all of it.

Ian MalcolmWe built it because we're brilliant. And then you look into it and you realize a lot of the engineers actually weren't Israeli Jews. So not only do they take the credit for the building of it, but they laugh about the fact that they didn't pay for it.

Speaker 5And then they say, ha-ha, stupid Americans. They were Israelis, but you gain a lot of benefit. There's our own-owned batteries that go to the United States all the time. We don't want it.

Speaker 3We don't want any benefits from you. Just leave us the fuck alone, all right? We don't want your benefits.

Speaker 6Can I ask a real question to Tyler? Yes, let's do that.

Ian MalcolmWe appreciate you stopping by, but we're going to try to move back onto a productive conversation. You infuriated some of the key speakers in the space. You laughed and smiled about it. And as a result, we're going to move on and try to be more productive without you.

Speaker 1But I love Dr. Michael's passions, though. I love it, seriously.

Ian MalcolmIsn't it so curious? Because, doctors, the concept there of just leave us alone. It's like we have a stalker that simultaneously has our credit card, right? So they're running around, running up the bill, laughing about the fact that they've done so. And then when we're like, can we just have our credit card back and leave?

Ian MalcolmThey're like, no, no, no. You have to stay. Please. You have to. If you don't, you're a bigot. Why are you so mean to me?

Speaker 6Did you ever see the, there's a documentary about it. It's kind of like a fish. It's a parasite living on the side of a shark. Well, that's exactly how they are. Because they can't get it away, but it still sticks on you.

Ian MalcolmI hope it's not a remora that you're referring to, because at least they cleaned the shark.

Speaker 6Yeah, no, no.

Ian MalcolmWe don't even get that. We literally have the remora, except it just poops all over us.

Speaker 6And gives us cancer.

Speaker 4We have a stalker that has our credit card. I'm dead.

Speaker 6I just have a small question. Well, a small question. It's kind of a question because I don't believe in voting, really. But I believe in good people that have good intentions and want to see the system change. I know people like Tyler would be interesting to see because they challenge the system. But at the same time, I hope, Tyler, that you...

Speaker 6have a realistic view on the perspective that maybe the voting will not work to a certain extent. Because I don't see the U.S. and Canada and all of the Western worlds making it to 2030 if this keeps going. And I'm just trying to be realistic with what we have.

Speaker 2I used to think the same thing, that we wouldn't make it to this year 10 years ago. Things have gotten... so much better in the past couple of years and accelerated so dramatically, it's insane. Another thing is the fact that, yes, I mean, there's all this idea about the voting won't work, but it's not because necessarily that they're directly rigged.

Speaker 2In my opinion, that happens occasionally, like with the 2020 election, not very often. Most of the time, they just spend money and use advertising to overcome. And so if they spend and put in a ton and a ton and a ton of money and they advertise and TV and radio and print and media, then they win. And so the hardest thing to overcome, the hardest thing about getting the vote out is the fact that we're owned by these oligarchs, by these huge corporations that just keep funneling money in from overseas to just buy the advertising.

Speaker 2And so we can absolutely overcome that with boots on the ground efforts. And so that would be my perspective. And as well, even if the voting doesn't work, you're not going to have any other type of solution other than voting if you do not have the grassroots connections. If you want to read something by like Al, for example, he said...

Speaker 6If you're ready, like you said, to put boots on the ground, this is the point that's important. Because the votes will get... with the boots on the ground more than the ID votes and all the rest. That's my point. If you're able to get enough people to follow you because you have good conviction, honor, and pride for your people, you will connect them.

Speaker 6And this is the type of community or collective effort you want. Because us voting, yeah, okay, we might get those. But if you get...

Speaker 3enough momentum and passion into what you're doing you might get a crowd moving in a momentum going that's even better than hoping for voting the word because that might really work can i say a word about this because this is a question that comes up a lot uh since we're you know as a pack is supporting candidates which means we're supporting or we're showing some credence in the

Speaker 3electoral system, okay? So yes, that's true. But I think what you just said is something that is, you know, one of my answers to people that say, well, you know, this is voting, we can't vote our way out of this or whatever, is that it's not just voting because it's not just political. If we get these candidates to win, it's more than political, it's symbolic, and that'll spill over.

Speaker 3into other areas of life, inclusive of our personal issues and our personal lives. And especially though, giving us the freedom to be able to think and speak freely and not be worried about these anti-Semitism czars coming after us in effect. Because they're breathing down our necks. I mean, they're making it very clear.

Speaker 3They're trying to make it impossible who criticize Jews or Israel. They said this very clearly with Trump making it a condition of getting a green card is that you're not anti-Israel or an anti-Semite. And they're going to be very, very, you're going to define those terms very broadly and vaguely on purpose. They define these things vaguely on purposes because anti-Semitism so-called is just a weapon that they use.

Speaker 3It's just one of their weapons.

Speaker 7buzzword control us and and to to enslave us as well well buzzword go ahead um i as um one of the people that look at this like we're not able to vote our way out of this my perspective is more and i guess this is my question is for both ian and tyler um For Ian specifically, what is it that you look for in a candidate that gets you motivated about voting for them after decades of being promised and candidates basically parroting what the people want, using it as a manipulation tool in my eyes at this point.

Speaker 7And then Tyler, what about you is different? Because from, I'd say 2016, 2020, 2020, like 2024, all of the, at least the last decade and much longer in my eyes, we've had so many different candidates who push the idea that they are different and that this time they're going to do what's right for the people. How are you different?

Speaker 7What, yeah, that's my opinion because like, We will hear it over and over and over. We're going to do what's right for the American people. You get into the office, and so quickly does that turn around.

Speaker 2When is the last time any of those candidates sacrificed for their beliefs, took the pain onto themselves to prove it? I mean, I went to prison twice for it. where they lied to me and manipulated me into accepting a plea deal just to arrest me inside the jail for daring to protest to try to keep the Confederate statues up, for daring to protest against corruption in the elections.

Speaker 2And so I fought the system, and in a lot of ways I lost, but in a lot of ways I came out stronger on the other side. There isn't a single other candidate in any race right now that has sacrificed to the level that I have sacrificed for this country. And, you know, you have a lot of people that were like, why sacrifice?

Speaker 2Because I served in the military and I went overseas. But they get hand selected and chosen by these PACs because of their experience overseas. They get paid off well before they ever start running for office. And so these people, they never actually truly had to give up something for their beliefs. And so for me, I've lost everything and I'm still fighting.

Speaker 2I lost my business, my finances. Most of my friends went to prison, got out, and I'm still fighting anyways. And so that for me, that's the biggest thing that sets me apart.

Speaker 7So I agree that getting, you know, a new setting up a new environment within our system makes sense. Right. And getting the right people and. Like I said, my issue is so often are we told the same thing over and over and over? And I appreciate what you have sacrificed and the idea of how that has impacted your motivation to want to do something and impact our country in a positive way for the American people.

Speaker 7And I agree that having a different culture there is a necessity. But like I was asking Ian specifically, what are you looking at and what would you advise to people like me to look for when you get motivated about a candidate instead of it being so easy for me to just automatically assume that I'm having smoke blown up my ass?

Ian MalcolmNo, and look, I think everybody has. And the reality is we live in the Truman Show. I mean, this is the matrix. They have basically given you red team versus blue team within the confines of that system. And in short, I believe that you can simplify it down to you either vote for, over the last 30 years, the Zionist conservative that is going to falsely present that they're going to support you financially as they basically support crony capitalism, the importing of slave labor, the outsourcing of anything and everything that they can.

Ian Malcolmincluding your armed services, which is going to send your army, your Navy, your everything over to blow up the Middle East exclusively for the benefit of Israel. And if you look at the clean break memo and who that was written for, who was behind it, who was responsible for it, who has supported it, who has funded it, it's largely the quote unquote conservatives.

Ian MalcolmAnd so they're not conserving your wallet. They're not conserving your military. They're not conserving anything. They are merely slaves to this foreign empire that are promising you nationalism. They're not delivering anything remotely close. And what better example could we look to than make America great again? That is the whole basis of his campaign was that it would be for the citizenry, for the nation.

Ian MalcolmAnd he's doing the exact opposite, most clearly via all the things with Iran and this war and this conflict, which is not just the present. Let's not forget that the 12 day war. He utilized our B-2 bombers, our most expensive, most revered piece of military technology, to go blow up Iran at the, let's say, behest of Netanyahu, whose people literally supported and voted for genocide.

Ian Malcolm66% of them in a poll that was conducted by Jews, of Israeli Jews, voted to literally mass murder everybody. I'm not saying the terrorists. I'm not saying Hamas. I'm saying every man, woman, child and the animals that were in Gaza. That's crazy. And so you've either been supporting the Zionist, quote unquote, Republicans, or you get the Bolshevik communist Democrats and they will open your borders.

Ian MalcolmThey will flood your cities. They will take all of your money to give it to essentially their surf class that the right wing is helping to bring in. Because after all, the people that they're blowing up in the Middle East, well, they dub them refugees and then they dump them into your homeland, right? And so you're either getting...

Ian MalcolmLGBT everything, the demoralization, not only of your people, your culture, but also the theft of your jobs, of your economy, of your prosperity, the increase in the cost of all of your standards of living. That's what the Democrats give you. The Republicans give you Zionism. Either way, you are getting enslavement under Jewish supremacy or Jewish supremacism.

Ian MalcolmI love the way that Dr. Recktenwald defined that, right? And so what do I look for? I look for anybody and everybody that's willing to say this is a problem, which is why I think that as a PAC, it is the foremost important thing that we can all politically support, along with the candidates that they vet, that they get behind, and that they're willing to put their name next to.

Ian MalcolmBecause I can't vet all of them, but I can say that Dr. Rechtenwald, who's been in politics a long time, literally was on presidential tickets, or at least the ability to run for president on some of those parties. This is a guy who knows politics ins and outs. He knows the legality of the management of the money that's going into it.

Ian MalcolmAnd so as a result, as a person, I just look for that and I look for consistency. And I don't know everything about Tyler. I certainly can't go back into his history and understand it all. But if he's been out trying to put up the good fight for heritage, what I believe are largely white Christian values, if he's been doing that for a long period of time and he's willing to honestly and earnestly do so while calling out the political movement that has largely undermined that, well, then that's what I'm going to stand behind.

Ian MalcolmAnd I... I apparently am in a feud with some of I'll just call it out for what it is with the Groypers, because I look at Nick Fuentes and this is not to go directly at him. I think he's a very smart guy. He knows politics better than almost anybody in his demographic. But I don't understand this idea of sticking it to the Republicans and voting Democrat, because what that's essentially doing is saying I'm going to stay within the framework that this system is set up.

Ian MalcolmI'm going to live in the Truman Show or the Matrix. I am saying let's bring that entire thing down. And let's be unwilling to support anybody that won't be honest about that dynamic.

Speaker 7Do you have any sources for ASAPAC that others can look into to do their research on? Sources? Yes, where to? Did you say sources? Yes.

Speaker 3Yeah, I mean, you can go to our website, ASAPAC, but you can look at the Federal Election Commission, the FEC website and see our finances. you can go to Open Secrets and see them as well. Everything is wide open. There's no dissembling or any kind of obscuration here. Everything is very, very transparent. I just wanted to say that, yeah, about the, you know, encouraging people to vote Democrat over Republican, it's just ridiculous because what you're getting then is probably what I call domestic Zionism.

Speaker 3And that is... policies that are basically being foisted on us by the same people, by these Zionists.

Speaker 7It's choosing between two evils, in my opinion, and we're left with the same result where we get fucked.

Speaker 3Yeah, absolutely.

Speaker 6It's a false fallacy. It's the false logic of choosing lesser evil. But the issue is that they are not looking at the logic or the realism of everything around it. It makes no sense. All the structure looks good, but it's all funded on lies. And I don't see how people are going to.

Speaker 7That's where the disillusion comes in for me personally and why I'm finding it difficult to get motivated or want to vote at all, because seemingly it's pointless. We're getting the same thing. We're getting shafted on either side.

Speaker 3I agree. That's why I found the fact. Look, we need a way to be able to distinguish these basically sap-sucking pricks who will just effectively steal our money and give it to a foreign nation or pour it into endless wars. Or we have to find a way to have a demarcation between Who is on that side and who is on the other side?

Speaker 3Who is anti-being robbed to pay for foreign conquest for another country? Who's against it? And the party doesn't matter as much as the conviction and the principles. And if the candidate has principles and has a principled stand, like somebody like, I think, Thomas Massey takes a principled stand and he's paying a huge price for it,

Speaker 3And now his primary is in jeopardy, but he has been a principled player. So there is the possibility. Now, as to the black thing about voting, if voting meant nothing, would the Zionist lobbies spend hundreds of millions of dollars on it? If it didn't matter, would they spend all this money?

Speaker 3would they go to the lengths that they do to get the candidates they want in the office? I think it does matter because it matters, but the game's rigged, okay? That's what it is. It does matter who's in there, but the game is rigged against us and our interests. It's the ruling class, which I believe is a Zionist Jewish ruling class versus the people.

Speaker 3And their interests come first unless we can upend of their representation in government.

Speaker 2Another thing as well, they rely almost exclusively on indirect power, on persuasion, on money, on buying people's loyalty. Our people have always used direct power, marching in the streets, organizing, connecting with people, getting things done in real life. They'll pay somebody to go and do something. We do it ourselves.

Speaker 2That is our biggest advantage when overcoming their corruption of the institutions. And voting, it costs nothing. And so, yeah, you go out, you vote, and you go vote for, turns out he's the wrong guy. At least you tried. Get out there, get people to go with you. Get connected to people in your community. Connect so that if something were to happen, you would be prepared.

Speaker 2But more than that, make those connections to where you have a community of people that are ready to fight back. in person, against the establishment, against the Zionists, against the people that want to enslave the entirety of our planet under their heel. And so that's the biggest thing. That's almost bigger than the voting.

Speaker 2It's about getting people to come with you to get things done in real life. And in this race, in my race, with Dan Bilzerian and a number of other places, we have the third position. We like to talk a lot also about how Trump betrayed us, and in a lot of ways he did. But he very much so also advertised very heavily how pro-Israel that he was.

Speaker 2He advertised very heavily that he would be the best president for Israel ever. And so it's like, yeah, we shouldn't have trusted him. But it's not like he didn't tell us a little bit that it was coming. That's something they like to do. I can think of maybe six candidates in the last 50 years that were openly anti-Israel and won.

Speaker 2Maybe, if that. And so it's an entirely different ballgame.

Speaker 3matters so much to get out there and vote because it costs nothing but more importantly to organize your communities together i think i might jump in real quick and then i'll i'm sorry that i'll bring then mark i guess you know if ian doesn't mind uh is that yeah not at all the voting is is is not just the voting it it it also shows the mobilization of people and

Speaker 3it can lead to further political action and social action and cultural action. It can embolden us to take our country back in other ways, not just politically, but culturally and so on and so forth. So voting is important politically, but it represents more than its political efficacy. It has more value than that. if it's built from the grassroots up a voting campaign like for a candidate or a movement can have a tremendous impact on the on on on the country and on our culture our society so that's all that's all i wanted to say on that and i think there's some people that are looking to speak but i'll let uh ian pull it up pull them up

Ian MalcolmNo, and I think, Mark, you wanted to jump in, is that right?

Speaker 8Yes, yes, thank you. Yeah, my question is for Tyler. Tyler, it seems to me, South Carolina specifically, the trend seems to be that the 18 to 29 age group, the 30 to 44 are growing as a share of voters, but still represents a lower percentage of overall voters, it still seems that 65 plus will still be the primary voter group.

Speaker 8So that tends to be, and correct me if I'm wrong, that certainly seems to be a potential obstacle. And then that combined with the January 6th stuff, as I see it, those would be like two areas. of, you know, of challenges for your opportunity, how you want to see it. You know, what is your plan? And then just on the voter, on the age thing, you know, I'll just, you know, I'm Gen X, but as an example, you know, this morning I'm in the sauna, right?

Speaker 8And I'm talking to guys that are boomers and they're just, they're Fox News, right? And they, so they, that's what they've been indoctrinated as I used to be, right? I used to listen to Fox News. That's what I would listen to. And we all know, you know, that's all propaganda. So, What is your plan on overcoming those two specific areas?

Speaker 2Great question. And you're correct in a lot of regards. There are a few things you're missing. Number one, only about 10% of registered voters vote in a primary. 10%. So if I somehow manage to go out there and in my campaigning, I get just 10% of the people to support me. If I can get all of them to show up, I'll win in a landslide.

Speaker 2Obviously, that's not going to happen. But the biggest thing besides elections is voter turnout. That's the bigger thing. It's not necessarily about winning over every single person. It's about getting your people to show up to the voting booth to put down their name. That's the biggest thing. And again, it's like, yes, 18 to 29 is a lot less the vote share.

Speaker 2But if every single one of them showed up, again, it would be a landslide victory. And so you're correct there that they are not as big of a voting bloc, but it can be overcome through getting out the message to the people. And again, I have a lot of hope for the older generations. They are beginning to wake up. They're waking up slowly, but it is happening.

Speaker 2And on top of that, my race is very unique compared to every other congressional race for the most part. The incumbent, Nancy Mace, is not running for reelection. Her seat is open and everybody is trying to run in it. Like six different county councilmen, four major business owners and investors, a state house member, like anyone who has ever wanted to be a member of Congress that lives in this district is running.

Speaker 2But all of them are establishing people. All of them have the same views. All of them say the same things for the most part. And because this is a runoff state, I only need to have the second highest number of votes to make it to the runoff. And then once I am in the runoff, you get a lot more publicity, a lot more chance to get the name out.

Speaker 2It will be much easier to get that turnout at the actual primary election. So the goal right now isn't necessarily to just win this thing immediately outright. It is to make it to the runoff and then win it outright. And those are two very different strategies that I'm using for right now.

Speaker 8What about the January 6th stuff? How do you plan on using that in your favor?

Speaker 2There's a lot of support for January 6thers here. I'll just say that. Among the MAGA wing especially of the party and the America First crowd and the people that are aware, I get a lot of support. The only people that don't support January 6th like don't support me for January 6th, are also people that would not support me because of my stance on legal immigration.

Speaker 2The same people that won't support me on that won't support me because of my stance in Israel. And so I'm not losing out on anything by speaking about January 6th or speaking out against about these other things. And it's just another thing that sets me apart from the competition and from the other people that are running.

Speaker 2And so I'm not entirely worried about it. It can be something to overcome. But again, my race is so unique with the 10 or 11, however many people that are in the race, it's actually an advantage, not a disadvantage.

Speaker 8Okay. Thanks for answering my question. Good luck to you.

Speaker 2Thank you. I appreciate it.

Ian MalcolmWell, let's go to official Dre and see if he's got a question for Tyler.

Speaker 1And also, guys, please repost this space and follow Ian and Dr. Michael and, of course, our very special guest, Tyler. And also, if you guys go to it, I will also repost it. And thank you, everybody, so much for being here. Go for it, official.

Speaker 6I think Eva Brown had her hand up and you didn't see her.

Speaker 1Oh, yeah. I'm sorry. I'm glitching. I'll go to Eva right after official. Official, are you there? All right, who's not there? Ava, welcome. Go for it.

Speaker 9Hey, can you guys hear me?

Speaker 1Yeah, welcome.

Speaker 9Welcome. It's been a long time since I've talked to you guys, Ian and Joanne. This is my secondary account, so y'all can call me Erin. Ava's not my real name. Just a little gag for those chosen people. I came, actually, for the Jewish lives. I decided to stay for the grassroots politics. I'm not in the state of Ohio. Tyler, I wish you the best of luck.

Speaker 9I really wish I could have got him when that Jew was still here, but that's okay. We'll let it go. There was a lady talking. I'm sorry. I couldn't see her name on the screen. It looks like she's gone now. I just wanted to say to her, I mean, I understand the whole thing about being disenfranchised about voting. As a Gen X person, my whole life I've been disenfranchised about voting.

Speaker 9But grassroots seems to be the best way to go. Smaller, more local governments and trying to control those to spread out. It is hard through the NPC culture, this monoculture that has affected so many people's minds, which is a sad state of affairs. But it's like they diluted our voting, right? Like when it used to be just landowning men could vote, the vote mattered a lot more.

Speaker 9Now that they just let anybody come in the country, they give them a license. They don't want any voter ID. And they're just like, yeah, go right ahead. Here's a pencil. Have at it. It almost does feel like a joke, but we still do have to try until there comes a point where we are going to have to. What is it that Jefferson said?

Speaker 9Feed the tree of liberty with the blood of the tyrants. I mean, I feel like that time is approaching like really close. But, you know, I know a lot of people aren't there yet. They still want to see if we can bring it back around the good old fashioned way of at the ballot box. Yeah, that's all. I just, you know, I kind of jumped in a little late here, but I do enjoy listening.

Speaker 9And Tyler, I wish you the best of luck. I really do. I'm down in Georgia, so not much I can do for you.

Speaker 6I love those accents.

Speaker 9I think that, well, yeah, I'm from New York, so I don't, I wish I had that Georgia accent, y'all. I really do.

Speaker 6No, no. I know, I know your accents from New York, but I love the American accents. We have enough diversity in North America and America in general, in my opinion.

Speaker 9Yeah, we won't for long because, like I said, the monoculture, it's not just the U.S. They eventually want to do it to the whole world. They start with the West because we're the biggest threat. We're the ones who can actually think and we're able to stand on our own two feet. That was killing me about what that Jew was saying, like how, oh, they don't want our money.

Speaker 9Then give it back. Give back your free healthcare. Give back your free higher education. Give back your wall with the turret guns on it. Because guess what? We need all that over here.

Speaker 6And we're not getting it. And he sounds like Elmer Fudd. He really sounds like Elmer Fudd.

Speaker 9I was going for something else. A little bit more obscene. But, yeah, Elmer Fudd works. He did have a real bad lisp, though. Like, with the accent and the lisp. Like, yeah, no, that was no go. Anyhow. that's all I wanted to say. Thank you again, Ian, for letting me on the space. I appreciate it. I will still be here listening and I might tune in again when, uh, I hear some more shenanigans going on here.

Speaker 9Just straight out shenanigans. I'm waiting.

Ian MalcolmNo, please, please come back up. We'll, we'll treat you like the, uh, the female lifeguard in here. And, uh, we'll give you both the, uh, what is it? The carrot and the stick. You can use both of them as you see fit.

Speaker 3I gotta ask a question of Eva, Eva or whatever it is. And anybody else, uh, Do I owe the group an apology for screaming at you? It's because I could not ever. No, no, no.

Speaker 9I'm the youngest of nine children. My household was loud. I am always loud. I'm usually the person that's told, Hey, Hey, Hey, stop yelling into the microphone. I'm like, I'm not, I'm just talking. I'm just, so you're yelling was great by me. I mean, it made me feel like I was at home again.

Speaker 6No, but we're white. We're civilized people. So one of us. goes off the rack.

Speaker 9We're long past civility. They eat babies. We're long past civility. They eat babies. I'm sorry, but I hate this. I hate this. Oh, let's be polite and let's be civil and let's be cordial and let's use clean language.

Speaker 6Hey, Italian woman, I was talking, I was saying a joke. I was like, when one of us goes crazy, the rest of us just... kind of shakes him back to normal.

Speaker 9I'm also autistic. I miss jokes. I'm sorry.

Speaker 6I love you.

Speaker 9All right, guys. I'll be here all night.

Speaker 1Thank you so much for joining us, Eva. Official, are you back?

Speaker 10Yeah, I'm here. I'm here.

Speaker 1Okay. Welcome. Go for it.

Speaker 10I just wanted to say, Tyler, it's good to see you. Ian, Michael, everybody up here. And thank you, Tyler, for what you're doing, man. This is definitely a good step forward in the right direction. You got my full support. And, yeah, that's basically all I wanted to say, man. I didn't really want to say too much. I'm glad we didn't have too many Jews coming up here trying to interact.

Speaker 10You always got bold ones like Yitz. But, you know, sometimes you get tired of hearing those people, man. We do that every day. But it's just, you know, it's good to hear. what we really need moving forward to try to bring this country back to, I don't know, but bring it to somewhere different for sure. We're making definitely the right steps in the right direction.

Speaker 10I'm happy to be a part of it.

Speaker 10Yeah, I didn't really have too much, man. That was just about it. Thank you for the space, Ian.

Speaker 1I thank you so much for coming up, official. And I think it's like a fanboy of Ian. He's always here and he's always in the comments. Yeah, it's crazy.

Ian MalcolmIt's the psycho ex-girlfriend syndrome there.

Speaker 6Or the little cousin retard that follows you around and speaks weird.

Ian MalcolmI didn't say it. That was Machiavelli.

Speaker 10This is what I think it is, right? I think somewhere like in Mossad or the 8200 headquarters, like, they find different people on here and they just, we just, like, assign, they assign these house buyer agents to us and they just follow us around everywhere to try to, you know, like, are these people a fan or, like, are they assigned to, like, just berate me every day?

Speaker 10You know what I think?

Speaker 6Official. Official. I haven't been around since, like, before Gamergate. I would have to agree with you. And the patterns of behaviors are very obvious. Milo Yiannopoulos and a lot of the people that are around all of those people.

Speaker 6I'm just happy people are waking up because it's been a long time for me trying to call out Nick Fuentes, Ben Shapiro and all of these people. Finally, it seems that people are catching on that it's kind of a theater, like theater, like Rome.

Ian Malcolmsame thing so that's why I'm disconnected from the voting but I give a chance to a runner well and just to throw out when it comes to some of those individuals I don't think they're necessarily all bad actors or paid actors I think there's certainly something to be said however about the fan bases of some of those accounts and I say it just because there are certainly some voices on these social apps who have

Ian MalcolmLet's just say they've got support behind them that if nothing else, it just seems either at times out of alignment with the very things that they suggest that they support and or just very strange degrees of engagement. I remember there was somebody who did something about Ian Carroll, something about Fuentes where, you know, it was within like five minutes.

Ian MalcolmThey had a thousand or five thousand likes or whatever it was. And it just felt. abnormal. Now, that being said, I'm sure there are lots of people to play counterpoint. There's a lot of people that have not only followings of those individuals, but also notifications set for them. So I don't doubt that there's probably a whole lot, for example, with the Groypers of people who influence us to post something.

Ian MalcolmThey get an update on their phone. Hey, something just got posted. So obviously they engage with it very quickly. So that's a reasonable counterpoint. I always try to be balanced with these things. But What I will say to that is there are certainly within the mainstream media, there's lots of voices that are artificially propped up.

Ian MalcolmAnd similarly on social media, we know about the $7,000 campaigns with all the Zionist shills. And so it's very reasonable to suggest that there are people from both sides that are financed in some capacity. I've always been very overt. I've never received a dime or a dollar for anything I've done on this application with the exception of somebody...

Ian Malcolmdonating, quote unquote, or gifting a premium account so that I just have the ability to, I guess, have a little bit expanded reach and also can post videos longer than two minutes. That was a long time ago. Well, no, I've actually, there were two different individuals and one of them was public with doing so, the other that basically renewed the account.

Ian MalcolmI think it's somewhere, if I'm not mistaken, either August or September, it'll come back and I'll just, I'll go back to a normal account for a little while until somebody does that again. But With the exception of that, I've never received a dime on this application. And for what it's worth, you know what I'd really love?

Ian MalcolmIf there was some rendition, and I'm not asking Nikita Bier to do this because I do appreciate that people should be able to be anonymous in whatever capacity they like. But wouldn't it be curious if there was some kind of disclosure in terms of I am paid or sponsored or I receive monetization from X, right? Because if people are monetized, which I am not,

Ian Malcolmthere is going to be perhaps a bias for them to post things, not because they think that it is truth or it is the most pure rendition of their view of the world, but maybe because they want clicks, they want clout, they want the money that comes with those things. And wouldn't it be in some ways, while I appreciate that Elon has tried to, you know, I guess democratize the value that people generate from this application.

Ian MalcolmHe's tried to give people checks for it. Of course, unless you, are critical of Israel. But that's an admirable way to go about it and to provide some benefit. But I don't believe that that was ever actually done to incentivize people to use X and to use it honestly. I think what that was doing was incentivizing the exact opposite of it.

Ian MalcolmBecause what they basically got to do is say, oh, well, as long as you share the message, you can get monetized. You can make money. We will get you more bots, more followers, more likes, more everything. If you speak against it, well, then to that idea of the carrot and the whip, right? We will give you the whip. We will detract accounts or your following.

Ian MalcolmWe will take likes from your account. We will shadow ban and suppress you. We will suspend you. We will certainly not monetize you. And if you want to get monetized, then you have to apply through Authentics and give an Israeli tech firm your identification, right? Every piece of that is to the benefit of the machine. And so I do think Machiavelli, there's- You were labeled.

Speaker 6You were labeled. The majority of us on this app are labeled, and it's like a big idea. It's like the mouse experiment version internet.

Speaker 3Yeah, but that's how the whole internet was started in the first place. It was designed by the CIA to be a way to gather together what they call birds of a feather to identify...

Speaker 6different milieus of different groups and then track their behavior and that's exactly what's going on here absolutely well isolate the intellectuals then target the ones you have to take out to be able to silence a part of the rebellion until you devise and devise and delude and delude into people that have 67 iq

Ian MalcolmWell, and that's where I think it's going. And for what it's worth, we've done spaces on the famed Ashkenazi IQ, which I don't believe is all they've tried to crack it up to be. And I base a lot of that on a number of different things, one of which is the fact that in Israel, that's about 30 to 35% Ashkenazi. The average IQ is 93, which basically means if they have the famed 115 or 120 IQ, well, then everybody else in Israel,

Ian Malcolmjust on basic mathematics, has to literally have IQs in the 60s or the 70s. That would be the math largely behind that, right? And so I don't think that is actually the case. I would like to mock the Israelis as best I can, but I think the reality is probably that the Ashkenazi IQ is inflated. They use that to then justify over-representation in certain arenas.

Ian MalcolmAnd for what it's worth, in the debates that we seem to have with the Ashkenazis that come into these spaces... Either they are not as intelligent as they claim, or I am way more intelligent than I believe I am. It is one or the other.

Speaker 3They're always sophists now. They're always sophists, and these Zionists are sophists to the first degree. And they have this technique where they try to throw all these claims, many of them, and don't give you a chance to falsify any of them. And they put them out in rapid fire. I faced this with this Shabos Kestenbaum character when I debated him.

Speaker 3He starts spooing. I thought he was turned into a wind-up robot or AI bot. He started spooing all this stuff. Some of it didn't even seem even connected to the topic.

Speaker 6Yes, it's like an old sales car vendor. He's chosen...

Speaker 3I think they trained these people in Israel on advanced Hasbara techniques.

Speaker 6No, I think they're like that. I dealt with Jews as an arborist. And Lord, dear Lord, almighty Jesus, I never had to deal with people like that again.

Ian MalcolmWell, Machiavelli, I mean, it's proven fact that I am the fastest person, the strongest person. I'm also invincible, and bullets can't penetrate me, and I can fly through the air. Ergo, I am Superman, and if you don't believe me, you are antiseptic, or at least that's what I've been told to tell you, if you disagree with that assertion.

Ian MalcolmThat is kind of Dr. Echtenwald. It feels like, and that's why there was a long time when I would have a lot of these debates. And it basically became a meme of itself because I would keep saying to people, no pause. And if they wouldn't, then I would just hit the mute button because what would often happen is they would build an argument where A equals B and B equals C. So therefore C equals A.

Ian MalcolmAnd then you'd realize halfway through, well, A is incorrect. B is halfway correct. And therefore C can't be correct, but they just spew them out in such. let's say, a repetition or a heightened pace that you can't follow it.

Speaker 9It's the way Ben Shapiro talks. There's one thing, like, way back when, I never liked him, and it had nothing to do with him being Jewish. It's the fact that he's a rapid talker. And it makes it sound like he's saying something. Right? And you're like, oh, I must know what he's talking about because of how fast he says it.

Speaker 9But when you actually listen, it's like he's saying nothing but fluff. It's all bullshit. It's all bullshit. It's all tricks, smokes, and mirrors. It's like, it's ridiculous.

Speaker 6It's a little bit like Nick Point.

Ian MalcolmWell, hang on. We'll try and respect. When it comes to Shapiro, there are demonstrable lies that are in there. But you're, I mean, you're absolutely right. And the other thing that, Dr. Echtenwald, that I note in the delivery. is that there's almost always an appeal to the emotional side, which I think is rather effeminate, and it's almost somewhat female in nature.

Ian MalcolmAnd don't say that with any offense or slight to the women, right? But one of the fame that actually put him on the map was Ben Shapiro with his debate with Piers Morgan long ago on, I think it was gun control. where Ben Shapiro basically said to Piers Morgan in his very rapid succession of deliveries, he said, well, you, Piers, you just stand on the bodies of dead children to justify the retrieval of guns.

Ian MalcolmAnd you sit there and you're thinking, okay, so you're making the appeal to the emotion, but you're also doing so at a rate that I guess you're like a jackrabbit and everybody seems to applaud you, so you must be really intelligent.

Speaker 3And the other thing is it's totally ironic because he's also the supporter of somebody that... that mass murders children insanely. So there's always this gaslighting element too, right? So they're telling you something about you. Of course they do this, which they tell you something about you, or they tell you about somebody else doing something that they regularly are doing, acting like they're not doing it, but it's the people they're pointing to that are doing it.

Speaker 3Of course, this is one of their obvious techniques. It's unbelievable. And I mean, we were talking about, of the rhetoric and the sophistry of these people it some of the claims they make they're they're not really they're not falsifiable in the sense that they're not fact-based claims they're not trying to say anything factual they're just making statements that can't be falsified that have no meaning really uh and but that have like you said sort of some sort of charge to them

Ian MalcolmWell, and on that, isn't it curious now that you mentioned that, Dr. Echterwald? I hadn't even thought about that. But that was a very famed interview with Shapiro, very young at that age, and Piers Morgan. And he accused Piers Morgan of trying to basically support gun grabs by standing on the graves of dead children. That was the move.

Ian MalcolmHe would say, well, look, you're using the school shootings to try and justify a ban on assault rifles, right? Now, isn't it curious? Because I think it's Ben Shapiro. who stands on the graves of essentially Auschwitz and all of these other things as a result of the Holocaust to justify the present. No, you can't critique what's going on in Gaza because of the Holocaust.

Ian MalcolmIt's essentially, it is the holy ground, I suppose, upon which not only Shapiro, but also largely Jewish supremacists have stood on for decades at this point to basically make themselves immune to any criticism. And that might sound hyperbolic, but we even saw Alejandro Mayorkas dragged in front of Congress where they said, we think you are actually committing treason because you're not doing your job protecting the border.

Ian MalcolmIn fact, you're seemingly doing the opposite. And he responded with, well, my family was involved with the Holocaust as if that has anything to do with anything. And so it's very bizarre.

Speaker 3What are you doing with that kid's foreskin in your mouth? My parents were in the Holocaust. Give me a break here. Don't critique our momentum, babe.

Ian MalcolmHey, we had the Holocaust.

Speaker 6Have you ever asked them how many Christians died for their liberation? Because they never respond to that when I ask it. Because they cry about this, that when I say my grandfather was in Croatia, he fought with the... the Germans, and after that he was at gunpoint to fight for the Russians, for Israeli liberation to communism, by the way.

Speaker 6You know, there's like, they get nervous with certain type of people. It seems like they are able to say stuff to people that are based in the U.S. more because of the Holocaust, because they don't try that with people from places like Croatia or like places that are still are able to comment the Holocaust without being a crime.

Speaker 6I can't say anything about it in Canada, but, you know, it's kind of weird.

Speaker 3Along these lines, if I may, I've been reading a lot about the history of Christian Zionism, and it goes further back than the 19th century. It goes back to... the Reformation, the second generation reformers. And you wouldn't believe, what strikes me most is when reading a lot of history, when it comes to this topic, what was said by so many people, it's incredible.

Speaker 3And then there was no, there was no, you know, like sort of, it was not verboten to say these things. This was just regular discourse. You could say whatever you wanted and there was no crime involved and nobody shamed you and nobody tried to take away your job or ruin your life or debank you or any of that. This was just the way it was.

Speaker 3I mean, if you look at the discourse, going back to like Martin Luther, the actual founder of Protestantism, this guy wrote two books, not just one, but two. The last of his books, of course, being The Jews and Their Lies, uh the most this book is so deprecatory but this was not like it didn't ruin the guy's reputation in fact it didn't it didn't do it at all voltaire similarly i mean he wasn't you know i shouldn't he's not a religious guy but he's similarly a very brilliant guy voltaire i mean the things he said and it was just well okay saying that's your opinion fine it wasn't like oh this is that's it for you buddy you're done

Speaker 3This was common.

Ian MalcolmDr. Recktenwald, to Voltaire, the comment, they have all the raging fanaticism and are born with it, just as the Germans are born with blonde hair. There weren't any punches that Voltaire held.

Speaker 3I mean, it's insane. And then, I mean, Martin Luther, I mean, this is the founder of a religious order. I mean, this is the founder of Protestantism. that all of Christian Zionism is really based on. And they don't know if they went back to the father of Zionism and looked at his last two books that they might, I mean, they've, I mean, of course, scholars have looked at him and said, you know, this is awful.

Speaker 3We disowned this part. This is not what we want. We don't believe this. But only since, guess, the Holocaust. Before then, There was a massive discourse. I mean, 19th century, that's my field, 19th century British science and culture. And you can't read hardly any author without coming across what would be dubbed today anti-Semitism.

Speaker 3So it's incredible. Even coming out of a Jewish writer, Benjamin Disraeli, who also was a prime minister in England, He himself made criticism statements you could not possibly make today without being ruined, as it were. So I'm just kidding. This is a history that needs to be written. It's like, what happened? How did that take place?

Speaker 3It's a very curious one.

Speaker 6Yeah, and knowledge is dangerously lost when you omit to say the truth and you just... get the history from the victors. We have to be cautious as people that say being civilized if we allow history to be literally changed for the last 20 years. Because a lot of the concepts that we are living out today, especially in psychology and philosophy, are very, very new.

Speaker 6The concept of silencing yourself for the detriment of your nation the emotions of a minority is out of this world logically when we when you think about this it doesn't make sense and it shouldn't be because it's destroying everything we and our ancestors tried to build

Speaker 1Very well said. Thank you so much, Machiavelli. And we have a couple of new people in the panel. Oh, Mark dropped again. Okay. Adolf Hitler, welcome.

Speaker 11Thank you. White power.

Ian MalcolmDo you have a question for Tyler?

Speaker 11Yes. So what do you think about the... The Jews kicking out the Christians.

Speaker 2When specifically and where?

Speaker 11I was just reading it today. It seems that these Jews have kicked out the Christians somehow. I don't exactly know where. I would assume Israel or some sort of land close to it.

Speaker 2I stand with... Christians every step of the way. It disgusts me to see the way that all of these people, all of these different people, unfortunately of the Jewish ethnicity, are spitting and attacking pastors. You can't wear a cross out in public. In the land that Jesus walked, it is now a risk to your safety to say that you support Jesus.

Speaker 2And so I stand completely with the Christians in that regard. And I think that we have to protect our Christian brothers and sisters, both here and overseas where possible.

Ian MalcolmAnd look, there's certainly a very strange piece of this, and we didn't really explore it, but I'm kind of curious, Tyler, for your thoughts on how your religion, if at all, factors into some of your worldviews and how that might influence some of the policies that you prospectively stand behind.

Speaker 2Absolutely. I have been a Christian pretty much my entire life. Grew up in the faith. but I grew up in the very non-denominational, just sort of feels good church. And then after I went to Europe and experienced the cathedrals and all the different kind of churches and stuff over there, I began to realize that non-denominational stuff wasn't really for me.

Speaker 2I wanted something more traditional, more grounded, more rooted. And so I began to go in that direction. And so... You know, I am absolutely a believer in Jesus Christ and believe that Jesus comes first and that Christ is king. And of course, what that means is that you can't allow people to misuse the Bible for their own advantage.

Speaker 2I mean, it just pisses me off to no end when a lot of these churches say, oh, turn the other cheek and that means you have to be a pacifist. No, Jesus took the whip through the temple and drove out all of the money changers. That is the example that Jesus showed for us. He died on the cross. He sacrificed himself so that we could live.

Speaker 2That shows that taking direct action and being willing to sacrifice yourself is the Christian way. And that is the exact opposite of pacifism. And so that is my belief in where it comes to the church and where it comes to my faith.

Ian MalcolmNo, and certainly appreciate that. And it's one, it's very curious because I like that you brought up the whip aspect of Christ because I feel like a lot of people, especially the Christian Zionists, they've been indoctrinated with this idea that Christ is the eternal pacifist, turn the other cheek. There is no such thing as righteous rage or anger.

Ian MalcolmAnd I think that that's just a gross misrepresentation. And that idea of sell your cloak and buy a sword and shield, it's like, well, that doesn't sound like a guy... who believes that you just eternally allow yourself to be a victim of bullies? No, not at all. And the reality is that while we should always lead with purity, with righteousness, we should try to always love our neighbors as ourself and God above, at least from my faith, God above all else, right?

Ian MalcolmThat doesn't mean that you have to just stand by idly while a group of people mass murder others. And I think that there's nothing remotely Christian about that idea, yet alone the idea of funding, the people that are doing the mass genocide and the raping of their prisoners that not only do so, but then they get their politicians to debate the legality of them doing so.

Ian MalcolmAnd then simultaneously say, even though we debated whether or not it was legal to be done, it also never happened. That was just a conspiracy theory. We were debating something that had never happened. It's like the degree of lies is just insane. And so I appreciate that, Tyler. And I know we have another speaker up here, very excited to have Orwellian up here with us.

Ian MalcolmAnd I see that Emily Graham also has a question prospectively for you, Tyler. But Orwell, very curious, always love having you in here. Any thoughts on the subject or any question for Tyler and his campaign?

Speaker 12Yeah, what's going on, guys? What's going on? I came in a bit late. Busy at work. It's bridge season. And for those of you who know me, I build bridges for a living. America doesn't build itself and Jews do not participate in manual labor. So here we are. So with regards to this, I feel pretty confident about this one because we're not, you know, we're not, we're not.

Speaker 12unseating an incumbent so to speak this is this is a replacement for a step down um with regards to the candidate um i i your your bio on on twitter alone um says more than enough for me to support you taking nancy mace's place um and and i can't even vote in that district so I don't know, man. What are we doing here, Ian?

Speaker 12What are we doing? What are we doing? How are we spending our time? Are we going out of our way to prop up candidates that, well, would serve our interest as opposed to what the alternative has been in pretty much every congressional race? You see what's going on with Thomas Massey. This thing here. I feel is going to be a little bit less of a tug, and I'm rooting for this man.

Speaker 12Let's get him over the finish line. How about that?

Speaker 1Orwellian, you should listen to this face. His life story is literally like a movie. It's wild, and it's just so inspiring. Tyler seems like a really cool candidate.

Speaker 2Thank you. I appreciate it. Thank you, Orwellian, for the support as well.

Speaker 12Tyler, absolutely. And one of the things, man, when we get into this midterm type of stuff, it does get exhausting. It gets tiring. It's difficult for people to follow, even in their own districts, let alone with the nonstop, constant drumbeat of foreign money being pushed into our systems to distract people from what's really important, right?

Speaker 12So Forgive me, I have fallen victim to, well, that same thing. I get busy with life because I don't have a choice, because I'm funding foreign wars and I'm paying for things that, well, I'd really prefer not to, but don't seem to have a choice unless, well, I start to reach out. start my own grassroots campaign in my own area and support people like yourself, Tyler, that would actually serve the people rather than serve themselves.

Speaker 12So again, I've got a little bit of research to do just specifically on you, but your bio alone has got me curious. For everybody listening right now, and I'll land it here.

Speaker 12Politics at large on the national scale is very difficult. It almost never feels like anything gets done for you no matter how hard you vote. But where you can actually impact change, where you can make a difference and where things matter is in your district, right? If we're talking about national and then at your local level, most importantly with your sheriff.

Speaker 12with your sheriff. So everybody do your due diligence, figure out who it is that is going to be your overlord. If you don't pay attention, do not fall asleep at the wheel. We have work to do. I'll land it there.

Speaker 8I'll make a point. That's a interesting point that he made. Cause I think a lot of us are here. Like I would never have been in a space like this probably a year ago. Right? Like I, I like politics, obviously I vote, but but I've never been this involved to this extent where I'm learning, you know, candidates there are in the state and not of my own.

Speaker 8And that's just kind of where we're at right now. And I think that it does raise a good point is, you know, there is a lot of education needed for people like me to really understand, you know, the grassroots efforts, understand how someone like Tyler could possibly get elected, you know, and how would I, would I could...

Speaker 8what impact that I could have, right? Being a state not of his. But yeah, I mean, that's a good point. I think that sort of thing needs to make its rounds, right? Like how does one organize in an area? How does one get the word out? How does one penetrate the boomers that are stuck on Fox News that don't know otherwise, right?

Speaker 8Other than just talking to them face to face. That's just a good point. I think it's a good point that I think there's a lot of education needed for people that haven't been part of the political scene and now are kind of forced to figure it out.

Speaker 8So by all means. All ears.

Ian MalcolmYeah, and Cesar, did you want to hop in and pose a question for Tyler before we go to Emily?

Speaker 13Hi, guys. Hello from Switzerland. Actually, I heard about the Rhino Party. I guess it's the third way or third party in the U.S. I've never heard it before.

Ian MalcolmYeah, Rhino refers to the Republican in name only, essentially individuals that run on that type of platform but then don't deliver in terms of the policies or the actions that they actually take.

Speaker 1That sounds very easy, sir. Also, with your little Rhino emojis there, you were like, how can I join you?

Speaker 14Yeah, I just wanted to let you know I don't have anything to do with any party. I just choose it as a new symbol, national symbol, national animal for the new Roman dynasty. Because I'm Prince of Rome. How?

Speaker 1All right. Well, we're not talking about like the actual animal right now. But thank you. Thank you so much, Cesar. Emily, welcome. Go for it.

Speaker 1Is she talking?

Speaker 10Is Emily a real person? She got nine followers. I don't know.

Ian MalcolmWe will remove Emily. We'll move on to the next clickbait that might be the account. As we get ready to wind down the space here, Tyler, I'm just kind of curious. for some kind of parting remarks, things that, again, people can do if they haven't been in here earlier when you were making suggestions on ways they might be able to support the candidacy, whether they are local in terms of geographic dispersion or if they are elsewhere, if they're remote, how they might be able to get behind you, support you, and or share some of your ideas and ideals.

Speaker 2Yes, thank you. For a bit of the closing, I'll just briefly go in like for two minutes for my history, just a little bit for all the people that join us later on. I think initially there were like 60 people that were in here, and now there's 126. So for those people, just a little bit of background. I come from a well-off, upper-middle-class family, but then I went to college, and they tried to get me to indoctrinate me to hate myself for being born white, male, Christian, all of it above.

Speaker 2I went overseas. I saw the problems with immigration. I came back home. I fought to try to stop the statues from being torn down at Charlottesville. And then I went to college for a semester, hated how communist they were, dropped out, joined the United States Marine Corps. I started my own business while I was in the reserves, and I went to January 6th.

Speaker 2Got arrested, went to prison, but I also went to jail for Charlottesville for holding a tiki torch. charged with burning of an object with the intent to intimidate. They pressured me into accepting a plea deal, and then I was arrested in the jail and sent to federal prison while I was being released from jail for that.

Speaker 2Went to prison, spent five months in federal prison in a room with 10 illegal alien cartel members from South America. Got out with a pardon and then started speaking, realized that I could speak, and now I'm running for office. The things that I want to accomplish, I want to end immigration, all of it. Close the damn border.

Speaker 2No legal immigration, no H-1Bs, nothing. Close it. That's one. Two, mass deportations of every single illegal alien, full funding. Three is we have to completely cut payroll taxes and property taxes so that business owners can actually afford to hire the Americans. Now there won't be any illegals for them to be able to hire.

Speaker 2And then, of course, focus for South Carolina on infrastructure. Those would be my biggest policies for affordability and immigration. I'm opposed to Israel's influence in our elections and to Zionism, and I think we need to fight back against that completely. And so if you agree with even most of those things, I am the only candidate in this race that believes those things.

Speaker 2And so you need to support me, especially with a lot of the stuff happening in South Carolina. There's some redistricting going on. I won't get too much into it, but I might have a way bigger chance to win this than you might expect. There's a lot of stuff that's changing with regards to that. They're going to remove some parts potentially of the more liberal areas of the district.

Speaker 2So it might be much easier for me to win. We will see. there's a real good shot that I can win this thing. How can you help support me? I'm going to ask you, if you do not live in the district, the two biggest things you could do are help support me financially and help do clip farming and take the clips of my speeches and promote those.

Speaker 2That is huge. That is the biggest thing for getting attention because the mass media will not report on me. I go to a candidate forum and I am the best speaker there and I get the second highest number of votes and the media doesn't report on it whatsoever. And they report on every other candidate that showed up. And so getting the word out there, showing those clips, that's huge.

Speaker 2And then helping to fund my campaign. Right now I'm looking to get about $5,000 additional. 3,000 of it will help to buy out all the voter data for the state. 1,000 of it will help to get all of the donor data. for the district, not for the state, for the district. And then the remaining thousand will be used on Facebook ads in order to reach the older generation where they are.

Speaker 2And so if you can help contribute any part of that, that would be huge. And then if you live in the district, help me to door knock and organize door knocking. That's the biggest thing you can do. And so in closing, I want to fight for the people of America. American is a people and it is us. It is our heritage and our home.

Speaker 2I had ancestors that fought in the French and Indian War and the Revolutionary War and the Civil War for both the North and the South. And we have to honor our Southern heritage, our American heritage, and the heritage of our ancestors. And we need to do that while stopping Israel from wiping us out with foreign hordes and mass migration.

Speaker 2If they had their way, they would genocide every race on earth except for them at once. And they're only starting with us because we're the ones that are most likely to stop them. So that's my views. And if you agree, please contribute. Please volunteer. Please help me. Because even if I only get 25% of the vote, it will send shockwaves through the establishment.

Speaker 2And I think we can get a whole lot more than that. So again, that's Tyler Dykes. That's my name. Go to VoteTylerSC to help contribute or sign up. And yeah. Help me to be the new person who's taken Nancy Mace's spot. Thank you, everybody.

Ian MalcolmOh, I absolutely love that. And speaking of clips, I'll have to take that latter segment and see if I can't get Mr. Valeck to put that together with some visuals just to support the cause. And that idea of the clips... You know, things can go viral so quickly if you just got the right message, the right messenger, and a passionate individual that stands behind them.

Ian MalcolmSo, Tyler, very excited for the campaign. I see that Orwell has his hand up, and then we'll go to Dr. Rechtenwald and Ms. Joanne for any parting remarks here.

Speaker 12Yeah, hey, I appreciate it again. And Tyler, very well laid out. And it sounds like you're going to run a strong campaign. What I would like to do here is ask you a quick question and prepare you for the fact that these questions are going to be asked. You mentioned the Tiki Torch party in South Carolina, right? You were hemmed up in that.

Speaker 12And what you will be asked and what I'm going to ask you is how do you square the circle with that with regards to your constituency? with the recent revelations of, well, the SLPC engaging in what they engaged in. So we did not have the... The necessary supply of racism in order to meet the demand, right? So it was manufactured.

Speaker 12You may have been hemmed up in that. I am not trying to pin you down, but what I am doing here is asking you a question that you will be asked frequently, and I'm just interested in hearing how you would respond to that.

Speaker 2The SPLC paid $125,000 to one of the organizers of the event.

Speaker 2in exchange for them passing along all of the information of the people that once. That's how people were docked so quickly. It's because they purchased the information. They did not fund any organizers. They did not fund anybody for making the events happen. They infiltrated and they used money and financial coercion to get information to destroy the right.

Speaker 2They've always been working against the right from the beginning. And I see this recent revelation of the SPLC being, oh, they're funding the right. That's just another way for the kosher conservatives to try to discredit anybody that stands against Israel.

Speaker 12I appreciate the response, Tyler. And you know what? Not a hiccup from you on that. And that's the type of strength and conviction that's going to be necessary in this fight in your district and in every other district.

Speaker 12shudder when they're asked a tough question. I'll land it there, man, and I appreciate you. Thank you. God bless.

Ian MalcolmWell, and let's go to Dr. Oh, sorry. Go for it, Caesar.

Speaker 13I hope you walk on the footsteps of William Wallace. May your way be free without stones.

Ian MalcolmHow? Well, all right. Appreciate the sentiments there. And William Wallace, a wonderful callback. The retelling of the fictional rendition with Mel Gibson, a little leeway there in terms of the actual history, but beautiful sentiments from it. Anybody that has not watched it, highly encourage it. And while you're at it, watch The Patriot.

Ian MalcolmAlso a little bit of liberty taken creatively in terms of the storytelling, but beautiful sentiments. And it's something that I feel like, Dr. Rechtenwald, I'd love to direct this one to you. I sincerely believe that the United States is going to go through essentially a second revolution. The first obviously breaking its ties from the British crown and now prospectively breaking ties from the actual money changers that owned, curiously, a lot of the British crown the last time we did this, right?

Ian MalcolmAnd so I'm kind of curious, Dr. Recktenwald, for your thought on this revolution that is brewing. We are in the early phase of it. And I often tell everybody in these conversations, not to have any fear of speaking these truths, even if they're doing so anonymously like I do, because it doesn't mean that we can't have a massive impact on the zeitgeist, and it was the founding fathers and the Federalist Papers that were written anonymously, because obviously speaking against power had all of these prospective setbacks, which is why I always call out not only that individuals should be very...

Ian MalcolmNot cautious, but they should be very thoughtful before they decide to go mask off, if you will, and to speak about some of these issues, which I know you guys courageously are doing. But that also we should support those individuals that do, like yourself, like Tyler, like Mark, like so many others, that are willing, if nothing else, to at least just have an honest discussion around what is clear overrepresentation and a clear abuse of the United States government.

Ian MalcolmSo, Dr. Recktenwald, kind of curious. Are we in the earliest innings, if you will, if not the first batter of the first inning of this very long baseball game that is the second coming of the American Revolution in its spirit?

Speaker 3Yeah, that's a great question. And I think I already answered it in advance. If you look at the ASAPAC video, the inaugural video that we put out, which is on our website, It begins with Revolutionary War imagery, and that's the narrative that we're talking about because the video starts off and says, I say in that video, the United States of America did not, and I'm sort of paraphrasing my own video here, but the United States of America did not begin with a revolution against tyranny in order to be under the,

Speaker 3tyrannical rule of a foreign nation. And so then we begin the imagery in the background. It's all revolutionary war imagery. And that's absolutely what I think that we're involved in. We're germinating right now. And I think it's already having effects. A revolutionary spirit is already bubbling over. And that, in fact, yes, there's going to be it's not going to be violence.

Speaker 3It's not going to be. guns and bayonets and and uh and so forth it's going to be resting away the power from these people through various means and i think the political element of it which is the only one that i'm oh well the primarily that i'm dealing with with azapac is just the political one is to displace these people who basically have no connection to america and this is why i'm so proud to be

Speaker 3that we've endorsed and that we've supported and still do. Tyler Dykes, who is so eloquent and such a principled speaker and such a principled candidate. What he's saying is absolutely spot on. The way he handles controversy is brilliant. I think that's true. I agree with Orwellian here that you've got to be able to take on these very vexing, difficult questions

Speaker 3uh questions that they're gonna throw at you and and the the answers that tyler gave are just fantastic uh and we don't have to apologize okay we're not the ones who are mass murderers or supporters of genocide we're not the thieving bastards these people are they're the ones that owe everybody in this world an apology so we don't go on an apology tour with these people at all okay i'm not gonna be i'm gonna have my i'm not gonna be moralized to

Speaker 3from you know mass murdering genocidal um pedophile pedophilic uh maniacs no sorry i'm not gonna take my cues from you people shut up that's that's my that's my stance with them and so um yeah we we are in a revolutionary ferment here i think absolutely and it's going to be multi-pronged the political prong is the prong that i'm working on mostly and i do not

Speaker 3uh at all discredit in any way other prongs of this battle cultural educational uh propaganda you know in a neutral sense etc all that is very important so anyway it's been great and uh love tyler everybody support him please And give him, you know, look, give him at least something to show that you care. It doesn't matter how much, just a dollar, five dollars, something to show you care to keep his momentum going and his spirit high.

Speaker 3We need to get behind him because he's the kind of person that he's leading this revolution with us. So let's do it. And thanks so much for having me up here. Appreciate it.

Ian MalcolmNo, as always, it's humbling to have you here. And Tyler, any comments on what Dr. Rechtenwald just said?

Speaker 2Just thank you for the support. A decade ago, something like this was impossible. The amount of support from the population, from people coming together to actually speak the truth, it is so inspiring to me as well, because this just could not have happened even a couple of years ago. So yeah, just thank you guys for the support.

Speaker 2and I'm going to keep on fighting no matter how this goes.

Ian MalcolmVery well stated. And I'm trying to get Joanne, not sure if she's having a technical glitch or not, but while we wait for her for some final words, Orwell, any thoughts on Tyler, on Dr. Rechtenwald, and all the amazing things that they're doing with ASAPAC or the rest of the space?

Speaker 12Yeah, no, just in general, ASAPAC... absolutely 100% stand behind it. The one thing that I wanted to say to Tyler is just, you know, anybody that steps into the fold, right? You may not be a politician, but you're going to become one, right? But don't allow them to make you become one. We're not giving these people any quarter, right?

Speaker 12We're not giving them quarter. Tyler's words speak, he speaks for himself.

Speaker 12Give no quarter. Just remain honest like you are, bro.

Speaker 6You sound honest. Don't lie to yourself and be humble always. It's always our damn pride that wins us. It's always something that we omit to admit ourselves or humble ourselves. So don't be afraid to ask anyone anything, but always remain honest at any cost. You might sound silly. They might laugh at you. But you better be laughed at a little bit than lie like the rest of them.

Speaker 6Because that's what people are tired of.

Speaker 12Yeah, and the thing is, when I landed here, is just do not be subverted by the subversives. Do not allow yourself... to be hamstrung, compromised, wrapped up in any type of controversies that you're not well-versed in. Stand on your laurels like Tyler seems to be doing. and and don't deviate from it don't let them i mean politics is a dirty game and that's what they do they throw low blows they're going to try to come at you with a lot of what about isms and what if isms and this that and the other thing and none of that is worthy of of energy or attention i think honestly it's best just to ignore that the political game when you play it

Speaker 12seems to to require it's like a prerequisite that that you're willing to entertain some of the most asinine and stupid questions imaginable right as as somebody coming into politics not being a politician but you're going to end up being one whether you want to or not don't even entertain that don't entertain it don't don't give it don't give it the light of day

Speaker 12at all whatsoever if if you're capable of doing that you can withstand anything and when you've got an army of people like us standing behind you to support you well you'll know you're not doing it alone you're gonna feel the pressure it's gonna come at you and it's gonna suck but you're not alone shout out to anybody that's got the balls to try to affect change

Speaker 12to try to affect change in any way that they can. And if it happens to be throwing your hat in the political arena, knowing that you might be committing, well, political suicide without the politics, right? You might be destroying your actual own life. Like if you're putting yourself on the line for the people, that's something that most human beings are gonna stand behind.

Speaker 12You're gonna unite a lot of people. But yeah, definitely, definitely, I'll land it here. Just do not. Don't even entertain these idiots and their stupid asinine questions. All the gotchas should be well known from anybody that pays attention to geopolitics. Anybody that's getting paid to shine shekels is going to ask you the same three or four gotchas, and they're going to hope that you bite on one of them.

Speaker 12Bite on none. Give them no quarter. I'll land it there.

Speaker 6Or if you respond, be snarky and funny. They can't manage that.

Speaker 12Actually, that's a really good point because they don't. They melt down. It's almost like they malfunction. They're not capable of handling that. Like, wait a minute. What is this?

Speaker 6They get nervous. Honesty and being snarky is the most scary thing for a Jew. because they're not used to. If you go aggressive against them, they love that hatred. But if you look at them and just have a snarky smile and respond something wise, they will get sweaty nervous. They will be scared of you.

Speaker 12Oh, they found me out. The jig's up. Shit. Shut it down.

Speaker 6Exactly.

Speaker 12no and no but i'll land it here man tyler i i support you i'm gonna i'm gonna make sure i do know some people in your district um i'll do what i can uh to support you on that level um and and again like it was mentioned before anything that you can do to help somebody that is fighting the exact same fight that we're fighting do what you can to support these people man woman doesn't matter i i don't care who's doing it if you are going to affect change in this

Speaker 12absolute idiot like we're living in idiocracy right now it's disgusting anybody that's trying that's antithetical to the status quo right now and and really stands for something and isn't just talking a good game yeah support them in any way that you can even if you're not in their district i'll land it there and and tyler man best of luck to you i'm i'm i'm confident that uh

Speaker 12It shouldn't be an issue. You should be a shoo-in. You just keep doing what you do and speaking like you speak. There's not a hiccup when you're asked a tough question, and you just carry that energy, man, and nobody can touch you. God bless.

Ian MalcolmThank you. Well stated there, Orwell. And really appreciate everybody coming in here for that exact idea, to celebrate, to support, to do what we can, to bring visibility to. Right. And it's a challenging thing because obviously we're going to get suppressed and shadow banned. They're going to remove our space from the spaces bar at the top of the.

Ian Malcolmthe screen on your phones, all those kinds of things, right? They're trying to minimize these conversations. So feel free, this is of course recorded, share it with anybody and everybody. And like I said, Tyler, I'm gonna work and see if I can't get some little clips from some of the segment that you kind of walk through with some of those campaign foundations, right?

Ian MalcolmI think it's really important that we try to make those as viral as we can. I'll do whatever I can to support, as I always will for any of the individuals that Dr. Rechtenwald gets behind, because I do, I think that this is, it's an existential crisis. Right. There's a lot of people right now who are saying, well, the Trump administration, they faltered.

Ian MalcolmBut I mean, I guess we just got to look to the Democrats. And it's like, well, then you're going to just get open borders for Iranian refugees that will arrive after Donald Trump blows up Iran. Right. That's inevitably the outcome of the left wing. Right. So so that is not a solution. The only viable solution we have. is to inform anybody and everybody that the country is controlled.

Ian MalcolmBoth sides are just two wings of the exact same bird that is supported largely out of Israel and is funded by the likes of Miriam Adelson and a whole bunch of other multi-gajillionaire, largely Jews, from Mark Zuckerberg to all of the rest of them, right? We are living under a technocratic rule where the thing that stands in opposition to global hegemony of this group

Ian Malcolmis first and foremost, a strong, stable, homogenous United States. And secondly, is the people that not only are homogenous, but are willing to stand up in a healthy fashion and say no, which is why they're trying to deracinate essentially everything that is right now that we have loved, that was spectacular. And isn't it ironic that Tyler started down this path because he went to say, no, you can't tear down American history.

Ian MalcolmYou can't take our statues. You can't desecrate our presidents, their iconography, and their lore. It is beautiful. The American story is one that should be revered. It is one that is spectacular. It has brought freedom and liberty to lots of people. It has cherished the idea that all men are created equal. And look, there were missteps along the way.

Ian MalcolmThere were individuals that were enslaved. We can look into slavery. Wouldn't it be really weird if it was disproportionately run by the same group of people that have us essentially enslaved today, right? But we can critique, and we participated. The American heritage, it does have some blemishes, but it also has some spectacular beauty.

Ian MalcolmIt is downstream from the Enlightenment, from the Renaissance, and it has brought the world a lot of spectacular things. But that all stopped a couple decades ago. And since then, America has essentially exported nothing but tyranny in its cultural, let's say the homogenous geo, what is it? It's the globo, H-O-M-O, of all culture everywhere, which is not actually even American.

Ian MalcolmBecause after all, what is it that America is essentially exporting to the Middle East at this point? It's LGBT everything? It is modernity for women? where they can be on OnlyFans? Is that the heritage of our nation? Is that what we should be excited to export elsewhere? Do you think Iranian women are lining up, excited to go slave away at a nine to five that they can then maybe decide they no longer want to have because instead they can make more money on OnlyFans?

Ian MalcolmIs that really what we're celebrating? A nation that is riddled right now with all kinds of legal and illegal drug addictions, is riddled with suicides, with individuals that are obese, morbidly obese, all kinds of other epidemics left, right, and center. And yet it is our culture that we are going to try and export everywhere?

Ian MalcolmAnd we're the heroes for doing that? No, we should stand up. And one of the bedrocks of the thing we should be standing up for is freedom of speech, which ironically the same machine is trying... to shut down. And do you know why? Because they lose every argument that is had, which is why Dr. Rechtenwald absolutely eviscerated.

Ian MalcolmWhat was his name? Chavez Kestenbaum or something like that? What a ridiculously ludicrous name, right? It's almost as wild as Shlomo Kramer. What a wild name that is. A literal multi-gajillionaire Jew technocrat who on live television said, you know, I think there's a time and a place to rein in the first amendment. I mean,

Ian MalcolmFree speech is great and all, but we should really have some restrictions on that. No, we shouldn't. Kick rocks, Shlomo. Go back to Israel. We are done with all of that. We are going to use our free speech to demand that you never infringe upon it. And if you think that you are going to, well, then you are a terrorist or you're committing treason.

Ian Malcolmone or the other. Or perhaps you're just another extension of Mossad and 8200 and all of these other infiltrators that have absolutely subverted the United States of America. This is over. We are done. To make it a little lighter, to go back to that psychopathic stalker that has our credit card and is peering in our windows.

Ian MalcolmThat's over. You don't get to spend our money. You don't get to abuse our military. You don't get to steal it from us. You don't get to desecrate our culture, our civilization, our heritage, and our Christian values. We are done with all of it. And that's why, Tyler, you are going to win. I will do anything and everything I can to bring attention to your campaign, to those that are championing these ideas, and that heroic Dr. Michael Rechtenwald gets behind.

Ian MalcolmThe man is an absolute legend for our cause. And I sincerely believe there's a not-so-distant future. We're back to the revolution. that we will be viewed as the freedom fighters, much like the founding fathers that blazed a very uncomfortable path that, oh, by the way, was not necessarily supported by an overwhelming chunk of the colonials.

Ian MalcolmLet's not forget the founding fathers and those that wanted to fight for the independence of the United States. It was a small select group of intellectuals that ultimately begot a movement. And that's why we have to be intelligent with what we're doing. We have to support intelligent candidates. It's not about hating anything.

Ian MalcolmRadical, violent, extremist language will get us nowhere. Pragmatic, thoughtful, loving attempts to make a better tomorrow for everybody is going to be eternally attractive to everybody. And so as a result, just do your part. Do your little piece of the equation. Tyler, continue doing everything that you are doing, my friend.

Ian MalcolmLet's make sure that we do a follow-up on this so that we understand how the campaign is going. If there are things along the way that we can do to bring attention to you, certainly just keep us posted. As always, the exact same to you, Dr. Echtenwald. And as I see him in the listener panel, a big shout-out to Uncle Haas, who I know has been working in some of the back channels with Dan Bilzerian, helping to advance that forward because at the end of the day...

Ian MalcolmIf we can get the likes of Bill Zarian into office, the likes of Tyler alongside him, we will build a coalition of people, little by little, that will blaze that trail for all of us to follow in. Because if we have heroic individuals willing to take the slings and the arrows that are coming their way every single day merely for speaking the truth, well, then maybe people like myself will feel a little bit more comfortable to take off a mask.

Ian Malcolmknowing that there's a not so distant future where they won't be able to say, you no longer get a bank account, you don't get a job, you can't participate in the digital economy merely because you criticize a foreign nation. I can't think of anything that's more patriotic than trying to defend your country from subversion.

Ian MalcolmAnd yet we are labeled literally by our own politicians as the intellectual terrorists that are speaking out against that. That is wild. Patriots have become terrorists and terrorists have become patriots in the eyes of the media and the politicians. Those days are over. We are going to win. I look forward to that day.

Ian MalcolmWe're going to continue having these conversations as best as we can. And so, as always, I want to wish everybody a good morning, a good evening, a good afternoon, wherever you are in the world. Certainly, God bless, especially to Dr. Rechtenwald, to Joanne, the co-hostess with the mostest. Everybody give all of these people a follow.

Ian MalcolmAnd certainly to Mr. Tyler on his campaign. So God bless to all of you. Godspeed on all of the things that we are going to do going forward from here. And speaking of which, I just want to give a special shout out. I know Diligent Denison is running a space. Pretty interesting subtopic that he's been going into. It certainly touches upon some of these issues that we've been discussing in terms of Israel and its attachment to the United States and its intelligence agencies.

Ian MalcolmAnd I give that shout out, not just to call out the space that he's doing, but also because he's an individual that a year ago referred to me as literally the it's the Jews guy, right? He would let me on his panel. And before he would let me have the microphone, he would say, I'm going to let Ian talk, but he's going to end up bringing in Israel in some capacity.

Ian MalcolmAnd yet here he is. And he's now putting up posts, a massive account that holds some of the biggest spaces on X. And he's like, you know what? There's a lot of entanglement here. Something is really wrong. And I say that because we are going to continue winning the hearts and the minds of anybody that's open to discourse.

Ian MalcolmAnd so, Tyler, knock on those doors. Do it digitally. Do it in person. Do it lovingly. And just vie to all of the people that you speak with that you can best represent them to make a better tomorrow that ironically will look a little bit more like the not so distant past. Because to make a better future, we need to revisit the history and how we got into this big mess that we're in in the present.

Ian MalcolmWe will make our tomorrows better than our todays. They will certainly be more aligned with the yesterdays that we all once enjoyed. I look forward to that future with all of you, to shaking hands, to embracing lovingly at the thing that we've built in that not so distant future. And until then, I wish everybody again, just God bless for everything that you are.

Ian MalcolmGodspeed on our adventures going forward and the best of luck in all of those endeavors, Mr. Tyler.