Preppers LIVE: IF I DONT WHO WILL?!! w/ Chin Gibson (REPLAY)
Prepper Broadcasting NetworkAugust 27, 202400:50:1846.05 MB

Preppers LIVE: IF I DONT WHO WILL?!! w/ Chin Gibson (REPLAY)

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[00:00:05] [SPEAKER_03]: You're listening to PBN. You're paying back the stability here.

[00:00:56] [SPEAKER_00]: Yes, who created Dragon Ball, Dragon Ball Z, Dragon Ball GT, Dragon Ball Super and so on and so forth.

[00:01:26] [SPEAKER_00]: That pays homage to that side of things. You really gotta be a Dragon Ball Z nerd to know that reference.

[00:01:34] [SPEAKER_00]: But more importantly than that is this concept that we're gonna talk tonight about, which is if I don't who will.

[00:01:41] [SPEAKER_00]: Because we have the dark horse of the Prepper Broadcasting Network with us tonight.

[00:01:46] [SPEAKER_00]: A guy that you don't hear from very often and you won't hear from very often.

[00:01:51] [SPEAKER_00]: And if you want to get to know Chin Gibson and you don't know him, too damn bad.

[00:01:59] [SPEAKER_00]: Come to Prepper Camp and listen to PBN on Sunday nights.

[00:02:03] [SPEAKER_00]: But he did something that I thought was...

[00:02:06] [SPEAKER_00]: You know we're all looking for some kind of action to take. What's the right action to take?

[00:02:13] [SPEAKER_00]: Maybe you're formulating that in your own household, maybe at your job, maybe beyond, maybe in some kind of group.

[00:02:20] [SPEAKER_00]: I'm gonna let him tell it because that's the way a show like this should go.

[00:02:25] [SPEAKER_00]: But he did something that I really liked and I thought was important to bring up, especially now, especially in March.

[00:02:30] [SPEAKER_00]: We got a lot of time to act on it.

[00:02:33] [SPEAKER_00]: Chin, you with us my man?

[00:02:35] [SPEAKER_04]: Hey, Chin's up y'all. How you doing?

[00:02:37] [SPEAKER_04]: Hey, I sprung forward but is this Sunday or did I spring forward into Monday night?

[00:02:44] [SPEAKER_00]: It's definitely Monday night on PBN.

[00:02:49] [SPEAKER_00]: No, you can't say that because you were on last night. I heard you.

[00:02:53] [SPEAKER_04]: Yeah, Sunday night.

[00:02:54] [SPEAKER_00]: I heard you and you're in the multiverse now.

[00:02:57] [SPEAKER_00]: You're in a variety of different appearances which is great because we love some Chin.

[00:03:04] [SPEAKER_00]: Chin, the way I met Chin probably worth talking about real quick before we get into what you were up to.

[00:03:10] [SPEAKER_00]: I met Chin by voice which I don't know if that happens to a lot of people.

[00:03:18] [SPEAKER_00]: I don't know how many people in...

[00:03:20] [SPEAKER_00]: Well, you said you've met more than one person by voice which is pretty impressive I must say.

[00:03:26] [SPEAKER_00]: That's kind of an impressive thing.

[00:03:28] [SPEAKER_04]: Well, we're walking around Prepper Camp. You just have to listen.

[00:03:31] [SPEAKER_04]: So many of my friends in the universe are podcasters or authors.

[00:03:41] [SPEAKER_04]: Between doing audiobooks or podcasts, I know what they sound like and I know basically what most of them look like.

[00:03:48] [SPEAKER_04]: But I could listen and hear people and I could just key in and say hey.

[00:03:52] [SPEAKER_04]: I'd have the leg up on them because they never knew what I looked like.

[00:03:56] [SPEAKER_00]: Yeah, that's pretty creepy. Oh God, I never thought about that.

[00:03:59] [SPEAKER_00]: I quit. Take it away Chin.

[00:04:03] [SPEAKER_04]: James, I've been listening to you for years man.

[00:04:07] [SPEAKER_04]: For like years. I was mowing the lawn way back when I was a newlywed I think.

[00:04:12] [SPEAKER_04]: Listen to you.

[00:04:13] [SPEAKER_00]: That's crazy to even hear.

[00:04:14] [SPEAKER_04]: Yeah, right?

[00:04:15] [SPEAKER_00]: Because it feels like I've been doing it for like three years.

[00:04:18] [SPEAKER_04]: Just like with Sarah. I mean now you guys are real world friends.

[00:04:22] [SPEAKER_04]: We met podcasting and writing books and stuff.

[00:04:27] [SPEAKER_04]: But the internet actually brought people together to be real world friends.

[00:04:31] [SPEAKER_00]: Oh yeah, it does that.

[00:04:33] [SPEAKER_00]: I mean we talk bad about a lot of things that are technological that have really...

[00:04:40] [SPEAKER_00]: I mean my whole life and the greatness therein is built off of the back of internet connection, Wi-Fi.

[00:04:48] [SPEAKER_00]: I mean my longest client, and I don't want to divulge too much information about him,

[00:04:54] [SPEAKER_00]: but my longest client suffice it to say is Eastern European and lives in Eastern Europe.

[00:05:00] [SPEAKER_00]: You know what I mean? It's like yeah, I'd run into him sure.

[00:05:05] [SPEAKER_00]: In Richmond. So you know it's done a lot.

[00:05:08] [SPEAKER_00]: So tell us about your adventure Chin.

[00:05:11] [SPEAKER_00]: You had yourself a bit of an adventure that I think we all need to consider.

[00:05:16] [SPEAKER_04]: I left. I lived in Charleston for a couple decades.

[00:05:22] [SPEAKER_04]: And we decided, the wife and I decided we wanted to get out of the city

[00:05:26] [SPEAKER_04]: and kind of get back to our roots in the woods.

[00:05:30] [SPEAKER_04]: So we moved to a very rural part of North Carolina.

[00:05:35] [SPEAKER_04]: Since I've been here I've been trying to find my way, right?

[00:05:39] [SPEAKER_04]: And find purpose and stuff.

[00:05:41] [SPEAKER_04]: So I've met with the sheriff, I've met with some of the local town mayors,

[00:05:46] [SPEAKER_04]: and talking with a neighbor he got me involved in going to the county political party meetings.

[00:05:54] [SPEAKER_04]: Not like picketing or anything but just going to the meetings.

[00:05:58] [SPEAKER_04]: And that's where I found out about...

[00:06:00] [SPEAKER_00]: You were doing Palestine ceasefire stuff, right?

[00:06:03] [SPEAKER_00]: Yeah, you know me.

[00:06:06] [SPEAKER_04]: I was super gluing my hands to the pavement.

[00:06:09] [SPEAKER_04]: There you go, that's the spirit.

[00:06:11] [SPEAKER_04]: Don't try that in this small town, I'll tell you that much.

[00:06:16] [SPEAKER_04]: There's a lot of 4x4s running around.

[00:06:19] [SPEAKER_00]: They don't break for super glued people on the highway?

[00:06:23] [SPEAKER_04]: It might not stop, you know.

[00:06:27] [SPEAKER_04]: So anyway, the only thing I did with elections was go in and...

[00:06:33] [SPEAKER_04]: I was joking, I pulled a lever back in the day when it was literally pulling a lever.

[00:06:40] [SPEAKER_04]: And this year I volunteered to be a poll observer.

[00:06:47] [SPEAKER_00]: Yeah, this piqued my interest when you said that.

[00:06:50] [SPEAKER_04]: I never thought about the people that work at the polling location to actually facilitate...

[00:07:01] [SPEAKER_04]: They're paid but they're paid like when you're a juror.

[00:07:04] [SPEAKER_04]: You know, you get paid a couple bucks, it doesn't even buy you one.

[00:07:07] [SPEAKER_04]: So at least in our county, they're paid but they're not really paid anything to talk about.

[00:07:14] [SPEAKER_04]: But those people are basically volunteers.

[00:07:17] [SPEAKER_04]: You know, there's three judges, there's a couple poll workers,

[00:07:22] [SPEAKER_04]: and then you can have up to three observers per party, political party.

[00:07:31] [SPEAKER_04]: And I was like, well let's just start easy.

[00:07:33] [SPEAKER_04]: I don't want to be like too...

[00:07:35] [SPEAKER_04]: All the rules and regulations and stuff.

[00:07:39] [SPEAKER_04]: As an observer, you're just kind of being there watching.

[00:07:42] [SPEAKER_04]: If anything crazy happened, like if a busload of people come in

[00:07:46] [SPEAKER_04]: and they just looked at a place and you just didn't feel comfortable,

[00:07:51] [SPEAKER_04]: then that's where my role would have really come into play.

[00:07:56] [SPEAKER_04]: Yeah, so that's what I did.

[00:07:59] [SPEAKER_00]: So when you say my role would come into play, what does that mean?

[00:08:02] [SPEAKER_04]: So as an observer, like I said, there was two observers plus a floater, an at-large observer.

[00:08:14] [SPEAKER_04]: So as a dedicated location observer, I was assigned a four hour block.

[00:08:23] [SPEAKER_04]: So I was told when to show up and what time I could leave.

[00:08:28] [SPEAKER_04]: And I was given basically free rein of the voting location.

[00:08:34] [SPEAKER_04]: I could walk around, like if you were at the little kiosk voting, I could be walking around you.

[00:08:40] [SPEAKER_04]: I'm not allowed to record your voting.

[00:08:46] [SPEAKER_04]: I'm not allowed to interfere with your voting.

[00:08:51] [SPEAKER_04]: But I could take notes, which I did.

[00:08:56] [SPEAKER_04]: And like every hour they would call out the tally of votes,

[00:09:06] [SPEAKER_04]: not who they voted for but a total sum of votes.

[00:09:10] [SPEAKER_04]: So every hour I'd write that down.

[00:09:13] [SPEAKER_04]: If there's a ballot that was cast incorrectly or did not feed into the machine,

[00:09:21] [SPEAKER_04]: that ballot had to be handled in a certain way, like disposed of, and the voter could get a new ballot.

[00:09:28] [SPEAKER_04]: So I mean, I just took notes every time something like that happened.

[00:09:32] [SPEAKER_04]: I would just write it down just in case if there was something that got called out,

[00:09:39] [SPEAKER_04]: at least I could say at this time I witnessed this event happen.

[00:09:43] [SPEAKER_04]: So you basically are there kind of like a witness in case you get called up.

[00:09:51] [SPEAKER_04]: Like if you think about it in court, you're just a witness.

[00:09:55] [SPEAKER_04]: And then if anything happens and they get called up, they would ask you for your what you saw.

[00:10:05] [SPEAKER_00]: The thing about this that really intrigued me, first of all, it was, you know, I always joke around.

[00:10:12] [SPEAKER_00]: Maybe I'm not joking, but I always say on there that maybe we all should run for office because I know it would be better.

[00:10:19] [SPEAKER_00]: You know, it's like having good players on the sidelines.

[00:10:23] [SPEAKER_00]: That's like the American theme of politics anymore.

[00:10:26] [SPEAKER_00]: It's like your best players are sitting on the bench and we're carting out the AOCs to represent the people.

[00:10:32] [SPEAKER_00]: Huh?

[00:10:33] [SPEAKER_04]: Who wants to get dragged through the mud? Who wants their private lives?

[00:10:37] [SPEAKER_04]: Yeah, exactly.

[00:10:38] [SPEAKER_04]: You know, people picketing outside your house and all this other crap.

[00:10:41] [SPEAKER_04]: Who wants that?

[00:10:41] [SPEAKER_00]: No, I mean you're right.

[00:10:43] [SPEAKER_00]: That's a good point.

[00:10:46] [SPEAKER_00]: And that's all valid.

[00:10:48] [SPEAKER_00]: So what I liked about this idea is that maybe we can get more people involved in the process.

[00:10:55] [SPEAKER_00]: But you see that's kind of base level thought when it comes to this.

[00:11:01] [SPEAKER_00]: What really got me excited was what would the 2020 election have looked like if the PBN family, even if it wasn't every listener, even if it wasn't every host?

[00:11:16] [SPEAKER_00]: How would we have discussed the 2020 election outcomes if we were or at least a large portion of us were doing exactly what you're going to be doing?

[00:11:28] [SPEAKER_00]: Right.

[00:11:29] [SPEAKER_00]: In other words, if we had, I don't know, 100% I don't know what happened in that election.

[00:11:37] [SPEAKER_00]: But I would have loved it if you were at a place and if Sarah was at a place in Texas and Dave was at a place in Virginia and you guys could come to me and say, I didn't see anything or yeah, it was a little...

[00:11:50] [SPEAKER_04]: Yeah.

[00:11:51] [SPEAKER_04]: So when we were like, we went to a little training session.

[00:11:55] [SPEAKER_04]: It was like a two hour training thing just and they gave us a handout on what we can do, what we can't do, just the basics.

[00:12:02] [SPEAKER_04]: And we were given a website address, which basically if you type that in and I had it like a hot button on my phone, but it would take you to a website that was a form.

[00:12:16] [SPEAKER_04]: And you would fill out like on that form, it was how to report an issue.

[00:12:22] [SPEAKER_04]: So.

[00:12:23] [SPEAKER_00]: Screenshot.

[00:12:25] [SPEAKER_04]: Yeah, yeah.

[00:12:26] [SPEAKER_04]: It was how to report an issue and it would be like your name, contact information, the locate where you were, what you noticed, time just like a little...

[00:12:39] [SPEAKER_04]: And it was just a simple way.

[00:12:41] [SPEAKER_04]: So they would receive the information consistently no matter who, you know, it's not like I typed an email this way.

[00:12:49] [SPEAKER_04]: You typed it this way.

[00:12:50] [SPEAKER_04]: You were flowery.

[00:12:51] [SPEAKER_04]: I just said two words and fired it off.

[00:12:55] [SPEAKER_04]: It was consistent reporting in from the field.

[00:12:58] [SPEAKER_04]: And I also was given a hotline, a phone number so we could all call a phone number and report something as well as type up a quick...

[00:13:09] [SPEAKER_04]: And you could put pictures or notes or attachments or anything you wanted to that form.

[00:13:17] [SPEAKER_04]: So imagine you were talking about 2020.

[00:13:19] [SPEAKER_04]: Imagine if the PBN family was all spread across the country witnessing they kicked us out because there was a leaky water pipe or some crap like that.

[00:13:30] [SPEAKER_04]: It all that that might have not been as effective scheme if more people were witnessing and reporting it.

[00:13:44] [SPEAKER_04]: And the party that was felt offended by that action could have taken action sooner.

[00:13:53] [SPEAKER_00]: Yeah.

[00:13:55] [SPEAKER_00]: You know what I'm saying?

[00:13:55] [SPEAKER_00]: I just think for the overall health of the nation that we should have more influential people at the polls.

[00:14:04] [SPEAKER_00]: You know what I mean?

[00:14:05] [SPEAKER_04]: So it was by county, right?

[00:14:09] [SPEAKER_04]: So I think if anybody wants to get involved with this, check with their county political party organization, right?

[00:14:18] [SPEAKER_01]: Yeah.

[00:14:19] [SPEAKER_04]: And that's how I got involved.

[00:14:21] [SPEAKER_04]: I went to a county party meeting and they're always looking for volunteers to do this, that, you know, put out signs or knock on doors or all that kind of stuff.

[00:14:32] [SPEAKER_04]: And then they're also looking for poll workers, which are the paid people, or poll observers, which are the volunteers.

[00:14:39] [SPEAKER_04]: And I said, well, you know, I don't really want to be too involved in rules and regulations on my first go around.

[00:14:50] [SPEAKER_04]: I'd like to just test the waters and see what it's all about.

[00:14:53] [SPEAKER_04]: So they set me up with this.

[00:14:56] [SPEAKER_04]: And I think if we, I mean, I was there to witness anything.

[00:15:03] [SPEAKER_04]: If someone from my party, political party, did something wrong, we were told to report it because they would rather it get dealt with right away than to be a big splash in the news, right?

[00:15:17] [SPEAKER_01]: Oh, yeah.

[00:15:18] [SPEAKER_04]: This person, you know, cast two ballots.

[00:15:22] [SPEAKER_04]: Well, they didn't cast two ballots.

[00:15:24] [SPEAKER_04]: One ballot was kicked out.

[00:15:26] [SPEAKER_04]: It was scrapped.

[00:15:28] [SPEAKER_04]: There's all kinds of forms that the poll workers had to fill out to scrap a ballot.

[00:15:33] [SPEAKER_04]: And then they were given a second ballot.

[00:15:35] [SPEAKER_04]: And that was the only one that was actually read into the machine and counted.

[00:15:40] [SPEAKER_04]: So, you know.

[00:15:42] [SPEAKER_00]: Yeah, it's a it's this weird volunteer job that I never would have thought of in a million years.

[00:15:49] [SPEAKER_00]: And if people got involved now, I don't know, you know, let's say like, I don't know how many of these positions are available in the entire country.

[00:16:01] [SPEAKER_00]: But I feel like if people got involved, the right people got involved in this, people who could be vocal about the process the way that you are right now, it would do exactly what we need in this country, which is build confidence back in the voting process.

[00:16:22] [SPEAKER_00]: Because I feel like neither side of the voting class right now is going into November.

[00:16:28] [SPEAKER_00]: Like, I think everything's going to be on the up and up in 2024.

[00:16:32] [SPEAKER_04]: It's the highest number at the end of the night.

[00:16:34] [SPEAKER_04]: They're the winner, right?

[00:16:35] [SPEAKER_04]: Yeah.

[00:16:36] [SPEAKER_00]: Yeah. And I mean, this is what we need as a nation right now.

[00:16:39] [SPEAKER_00]: What we need as a nation is something authentic.

[00:16:43] [SPEAKER_00]: You know, a politician can't do it.

[00:16:45] [SPEAKER_00]: I don't care who it is.

[00:16:46] [SPEAKER_00]: No politician is going to be able to get up on the television and say, the voting process is sound.

[00:16:53] [SPEAKER_00]: Trust me, we've done the work.

[00:16:55] [SPEAKER_00]: You know what I mean?

[00:16:56] [SPEAKER_00]: It'll never work.

[00:16:58] [SPEAKER_04]: Like for like me, I'm pseudo retired kind of sort of whatever.

[00:17:03] [SPEAKER_04]: So I could actually take the time to do it.

[00:17:05] [SPEAKER_04]: But take a day off and go, you know, like even people that are working could could take it.

[00:17:11] [SPEAKER_04]: And you become part of the event, not just, you know, like a bystander who goes in, throws a switch and then leaves.

[00:17:20] [SPEAKER_04]: You know what I mean?

[00:17:21] [SPEAKER_00]: Yeah. Oh, yeah. It's got me thinking.

[00:17:25] [SPEAKER_00]: Pardon me.

[00:17:25] [SPEAKER_00]: It's got me thinking to feel it out a little bit and maybe rather than do a political sort of pundit podcast here on PBN, it's got me even thinking about seeing how many like poll workers I can fish out to come do a podcast throughout the political season.

[00:17:50] [SPEAKER_00]: Because those people are the people.

[00:17:52] [SPEAKER_04]: These people like all the early voting, all that.

[00:17:56] [SPEAKER_04]: I mean, I could have I could have been an observer during early voting as well.

[00:18:00] [SPEAKER_04]: I actually did it on the day of like Super Tuesday.

[00:18:04] [SPEAKER_04]: But, you know, they have poll workers because, you know, like if you go to vote early, there's the poll workers are like the people at the computer that check you in and and, you know, what part of you see that ID?

[00:18:18] [SPEAKER_00]: Yeah, yeah, that. Well, some places everywhere I vote, you got to use ID still in Virginia.

[00:18:26] [SPEAKER_04]: So, yeah, we have to have it here as well.

[00:18:30] [SPEAKER_00]: But as evil and racist as it is, I have to show my ID.

[00:18:36] [SPEAKER_04]: Try to go get a six pack at the 7-Eleven.

[00:18:39] [SPEAKER_00]: Yeah, right. Exactly.

[00:18:41] [SPEAKER_00]: Gray guys like us still get guarded.

[00:18:43] [SPEAKER_04]: Yeah, which is more important for the function of this country, the six pack or the voting every two years or whatever.

[00:18:52] [SPEAKER_00]: No doubt about it. Yeah, I think that would be I think that would be a project worth undertaking if only as a service to the nation.

[00:19:00] [SPEAKER_00]: You know what I mean? To be able to say like this podcast is talk to X amount of poll workers between, you know, April and October.

[00:19:10] [SPEAKER_00]: And this is, you know, these are the people and this is what they see.

[00:19:13] [SPEAKER_00]: This is what they do. It's not this mysterious sort of, you know, it'll get people talking to each other like so.

[00:19:25] [SPEAKER_04]: And in our voting precinct, there was I was one of two for my party there at the same time.

[00:19:33] [SPEAKER_04]: There was actually nobody there from the other party observing, which was I thought kind of strange.

[00:19:41] [SPEAKER_04]: But for the workers, so there's three judges, one from each party and then there's the head judge,

[00:19:54] [SPEAKER_04]: which is so you'll have like two for one party, one from the other party and judges.

[00:19:58] [SPEAKER_04]: And then the poll workers, I think, have to be one from each party.

[00:20:02] [SPEAKER_04]: So we have this mix of all parties in the same room working for the common cause.

[00:20:10] [SPEAKER_04]: Right. And in mine, you know, in rural America, we all got along.

[00:20:16] [SPEAKER_04]: One lady from the opposing party brought in cookies and put them in a little lunchroom and we all got to eat them.

[00:20:22] [SPEAKER_04]: You know what I mean? It was so what I'm saying, if we all can get together and spend time together,

[00:20:27] [SPEAKER_04]: it might help ease some of the wounds that the country is feeling right now.

[00:20:32] [SPEAKER_00]: Oh, it would definitely. Yeah. Getting together in general.

[00:20:35] [SPEAKER_04]: You know, a at a computer and making posts and little jabs and yeah, it doesn't it's not healthy actually,

[00:20:46] [SPEAKER_04]: you know, working together and doing things together kind of I think it's a little more healthy.

[00:20:52] [SPEAKER_00]: It's so hard to be who you are. In the digital world, no, no, no, I think it's I think that's who you actually are.

[00:21:03] [SPEAKER_00]: Really? Yeah. Yeah. When the pressure is on and you're standing in front of somebody you don't know,

[00:21:08] [SPEAKER_00]: you know what I mean? Like that's your human incarnation.

[00:21:12] [SPEAKER_00]: The guy that you are when you're logged in as anonymous 35417 on Twitter,

[00:21:18] [SPEAKER_00]: that's a different thing. Like that's a dark shadow of who you are.

[00:21:24] [SPEAKER_00]: You know what I mean? That's like I'm going to just mess with people to school.

[00:21:29] [SPEAKER_04]: If you had a problem, it usually happened on the playground, right? Yeah.

[00:21:33] [SPEAKER_00]: Now it happens like 24 7. Exactly. And it wouldn't happen if it happened in real life.

[00:21:41] [SPEAKER_00]: I mean, how many people would argue with people that they argue with every single day of their life

[00:21:48] [SPEAKER_00]: if they had to do it face to face? They wouldn't do it. No. You know what I mean?

[00:21:52] [SPEAKER_00]: Just think about your career. Like how many knockdown drag out political arguments did you get in in your entire career?

[00:21:59] [SPEAKER_00]: You know what I mean? Whatever it was, it's like it doesn't happen.

[00:22:03] [SPEAKER_04]: We were all cordial in the office. It wasn't worth trying not to, you know?

[00:22:10] [SPEAKER_00]: Yeah. I think that has a lot to do with it is a lot of people are masquerading as warriors in the evening on social media.

[00:22:18] [SPEAKER_00]: You know what I mean? Like showing the world this side of themself that doesn't really exist

[00:22:23] [SPEAKER_00]: because when they're in front of people who they think they disagree with vehemently,

[00:22:29] [SPEAKER_00]: they're like, you know, your kids are really good football player. I like him. He's good.

[00:22:34] [SPEAKER_00]: He's got good integrity. You know what I mean? Like those are the conversations that you have with with people.

[00:22:39] [SPEAKER_00]: It's not like, you know, I noticed you had an Obama bumper sticker on. Let's fight.

[00:22:47] [SPEAKER_00]: Just doesn't work that way. So this would give baseball hat. Yeah, exactly. Exactly.

[00:22:52] [SPEAKER_00]: I wear I've been wearing this M.A.D. hat.

[00:22:57] [SPEAKER_00]: This mad gear company reached out to me on Instagram and they make these really cool.

[00:23:02] [SPEAKER_00]: They're a competitor now of ours, Chin. We're going to have to sabotage those bastards.

[00:23:07] [SPEAKER_00]: No, I'm just kidding. Lizard Tears dot com.

[00:23:13] [SPEAKER_00]: It's not it's not a thing yet, but it's kind of a thing. It will be soon.

[00:23:17] [SPEAKER_00]: It's a new hip retro. Yeah, you guys are going to dig it.

[00:23:20] [SPEAKER_00]: I just don't have the time to promote it right now.

[00:23:22] [SPEAKER_00]: Now I'm taking on another podcast on top of it also.

[00:23:26] [SPEAKER_00]: Oh, the lines, the lines of projects, Chin.

[00:23:30] [SPEAKER_00]: But anyway, it's it's got a nuclear bomb going off on it.

[00:23:35] [SPEAKER_00]: They do all kinds of like digital.

[00:23:38] [SPEAKER_00]: What is it like? 32 bit artwork that has to do with nuclear bombs going off

[00:23:43] [SPEAKER_00]: because it's the M.A.D. representation is mutually assured destruction.

[00:23:49] [SPEAKER_00]: But that's one of those baseball caps that when I go pick up my son,

[00:23:53] [SPEAKER_00]: I notice a lot of people looking up, looking above my eye line.

[00:23:57] [SPEAKER_00]: I think they're more concerned that it says M.A.D.

[00:24:00] [SPEAKER_00]: and it's a white guy with a shaved head right now, like more than anything.

[00:24:05] [SPEAKER_00]: But yeah, exactly. Nobody has ever said a word about it.

[00:24:09] [SPEAKER_04]: Let's get in the car. Move away. Move away. Yeah, that's more like it.

[00:24:12] [SPEAKER_00]: Right. Nobody's ever been like, let's discuss politics now.

[00:24:17] [SPEAKER_00]: So I think you're I think you're on to something, man.

[00:24:19] [SPEAKER_00]: I think you are legitimately on to something.

[00:24:24] [SPEAKER_00]: And how do you think people would feel, though, right?

[00:24:27] [SPEAKER_00]: If I because finding these people would be tough.

[00:24:31] [SPEAKER_00]: To bring on as guests, you see, well, it probably would have to contact

[00:24:38] [SPEAKER_00]: the offices, right, the Republican and Democrats of certain.

[00:24:42] [SPEAKER_04]: I don't know. I think you would have to make connections.

[00:24:47] [SPEAKER_04]: I don't know that you could just like cold call the offices.

[00:24:50] [SPEAKER_04]: I mean, you might know that you'd be able to just cold call.

[00:24:54] [SPEAKER_04]: They say, hey, we'd love to.

[00:24:56] [SPEAKER_04]: You might be able to like the coordinators.

[00:24:59] [SPEAKER_00]: I could press release. I can write a damn good press release.

[00:25:02] [SPEAKER_04]: It's probably. Call around to the offices and ask to talk

[00:25:09] [SPEAKER_04]: to like the volunteers, coordinators. Yeah.

[00:25:11] [SPEAKER_04]: They're about this role because they're all having hard times getting

[00:25:17] [SPEAKER_04]: Like I actually I was four hour block, but I worked an eight hour block

[00:25:25] [SPEAKER_04]: because they didn't have anybody back filling behind me.

[00:25:28] [SPEAKER_04]: So I'm like, well, you know, I got chocolate chip cookies here.

[00:25:32] [SPEAKER_04]: I can eat a couple more.

[00:25:36] [SPEAKER_00]: So so you're thinking there might be a ton of help to be had across the nation.

[00:25:41] [SPEAKER_04]: You might be. Yeah, you might be able to get

[00:25:44] [SPEAKER_04]: able to write articles or get interviews because they want to use your soapbox

[00:25:52] [SPEAKER_04]: as a way to get the word out that they need more help.

[00:25:55] [SPEAKER_00]: Here's a question. I'm almost thinking this thing should be a standalone.

[00:26:02] [SPEAKER_00]: In other words, rather than it be a podcast that pops up on PBN,

[00:26:07] [SPEAKER_00]: maybe we do it as a standalone altogether. Yeah.

[00:26:10] [SPEAKER_00]: You know what I mean? I have.

[00:26:12] [SPEAKER_04]: I would I would you could almost do two things.

[00:26:15] [SPEAKER_04]: If you want to do that, to talk to get interviews.

[00:26:20] [SPEAKER_04]: I would also try to find some kind like you don't have you have your monthly challenges.

[00:26:26] [SPEAKER_04]: We need to get the PBN family out there. Yeah, I agree.

[00:26:31] [SPEAKER_04]: I agree here in your county.

[00:26:33] [SPEAKER_04]: I mean, I am not one to go knocking on doors.

[00:26:36] [SPEAKER_04]: Like we said in the green room, I'd rather be a support staff on the outside of the stage

[00:26:42] [SPEAKER_04]: not in the spot. So like I'm not going to run for office probably.

[00:26:47] [SPEAKER_04]: And you know, I but I've been trying to find ways to help ways to get involved and ways to network.

[00:26:55] [SPEAKER_04]: Yeah, I dig it. Other thing that's happened since. Hold on one second.

[00:26:59] [SPEAKER_00]: Hold that thought. Let me run a quick ad.

[00:27:01] [SPEAKER_00]: I'm going to let these dogs out there too damn feisty right now

[00:27:05] [SPEAKER_00]: and refill my coffee and then we'll get get back to exactly what you're about to divulge

[00:27:10] [SPEAKER_00]: because I know it's going to be cool. Give me like 40 seconds.

[00:27:17] [SPEAKER_00]: Quick question. When's the last time you practiced with your firearm?

[00:27:21] [SPEAKER_00]: My last trip to the local gun range cost me over $200.

[00:27:25] [SPEAKER_00]: It's time to add the I target pro to your firearms training routine.

[00:27:30] [SPEAKER_00]: I target uses an app that runs on your phone and a laser bullet that goes into your own firearm.

[00:27:36] [SPEAKER_00]: Right now, save 10 percent with the offer code prepper.

[00:27:39] [SPEAKER_00]: When you purchase the I target pro system at I target pro dot com.

[00:27:43] [SPEAKER_00]: This is the perfect dry fire tool for our monthly training routines.

[00:27:48] [SPEAKER_00]: That's the letter I target pro dot com offer code prepper.

[00:27:59] [SPEAKER_00]: Man, that I target is something PBN family stuff one. No joke.

[00:28:05] [SPEAKER_00]: No Jokey. That thing is special. All right, chin. That's all I needed.

[00:28:09] [SPEAKER_00]: I needed to kick them dogs out of here and refill my black beard.

[00:28:13] [SPEAKER_00]: The pirate coffee mug up for this next half. Those beasts.

[00:28:18] [SPEAKER_00]: I had those beasts. Nobody heard that. We I was muted.

[00:28:23] [SPEAKER_00]: I was muted. They are my beasts, though, man.

[00:28:27] [SPEAKER_00]: You wouldn't even believe it if you saw what goes on in my bed with those dogs.

[00:28:32] [SPEAKER_00]: I've got a king size bed, man, and I'm relegated to like a well, actually,

[00:28:38] [SPEAKER_00]: I mean, a lot of them treat me as though they're blankets.

[00:28:42] [SPEAKER_00]: I'll wake up draped in pit bull. Right. You know what I mean?

[00:28:45] [SPEAKER_00]: But yeah, they are beasts like the rest of us brutes.

[00:28:50] [SPEAKER_00]: Anyhow, let's get back to the topic at hand.

[00:28:53] [SPEAKER_04]: You got to love the canines. Yeah.

[00:28:55] [SPEAKER_04]: So so what I was saying by going to these volunteer meetings and to the county,

[00:29:02] [SPEAKER_04]: you know, political meeting, it wasn't really a rally or anything.

[00:29:06] [SPEAKER_04]: It was just kind of a meeting and they would have people come and speak at it and stuff.

[00:29:12] [SPEAKER_04]: I met people in my voting precinct, so basically my community,

[00:29:17] [SPEAKER_04]: my local community who were like minded.

[00:29:20] [SPEAKER_04]: We actually ended up exchanging kind of phone numbers and emails and I asked it stuff.

[00:29:27] [SPEAKER_04]: I asked it and emergency comes. Yeah.

[00:29:32] [SPEAKER_04]: So but that all came out organically.

[00:29:36] [SPEAKER_04]: Just it's not like I went, but they were talking about sheep and raising goats and raising chickens.

[00:29:43] [SPEAKER_04]: And I mean, it just happened. It just happened.

[00:29:45] [SPEAKER_00]: Jones had a very familiar outcome when he went to the Chamber of Commerce,

[00:29:49] [SPEAKER_00]: when he was getting ready to get real deep into prepper TV.

[00:29:53] [SPEAKER_00]: He went to some meetings there, met some business owners, met a bunch of people, and they were all cool.

[00:29:58] [SPEAKER_00]: Yeah, I think rurally that's probably going to be pretty common.

[00:30:03] [SPEAKER_00]: You have to I have to imagine if I my meetings will be a little more diverse.

[00:30:10] [SPEAKER_00]: But I bet there'll be a lot of cool people there.

[00:30:13] [SPEAKER_04]: And it could be I mean, people love the garden that remember the grandparents gardening or whatever.

[00:30:22] [SPEAKER_04]: And you're going to network with people.

[00:30:24] [SPEAKER_04]: You're going to find either there are a plus or a minus, right?

[00:30:29] [SPEAKER_00]: But at least you'll well, you'll never preppers we do.

[00:30:32] [SPEAKER_00]: I do think we have a duty to rescue also.

[00:30:35] [SPEAKER_00]: Yeah, I mean, I do a lot of rescue work.

[00:30:40] [SPEAKER_00]: And what I mean by rescue work is I talk to people like a normal human being supposed to, you know, you can do that still.

[00:30:48] [SPEAKER_00]: It doesn't have to be like before we get into this conversation, who do you vote for in 2020?

[00:30:54] [SPEAKER_00]: So we have put up. Yeah, there you go.

[00:30:58] [SPEAKER_00]: So we have normal conversations and then I'll just slowly.

[00:31:02] [SPEAKER_00]: You know, the one good thing for me is people ask what I do for a living and I can't I have no ability to get around it anymore.

[00:31:10] [SPEAKER_00]: You know what I mean?

[00:31:10] [SPEAKER_00]: I used to be able to like.

[00:31:14] [SPEAKER_00]: Well, I used to bandy about depending on the setting and say I'm a writer and I write blogs and ebooks and stuff.

[00:31:19] [SPEAKER_00]: Now I just get right to it because then I can have I have enough work experience.

[00:31:24] [SPEAKER_04]: And I'm on my resume that I can tailor the conversation whichever way I need to.

[00:31:30] [SPEAKER_00]: That's nice. I mean, I can pull that off pretty well.

[00:31:32] [SPEAKER_00]: But I'll tell you when you tell people you write about how to prepare for the end of the world,

[00:31:39] [SPEAKER_00]: you get they tell you more than you just told them without saying a word.

[00:31:45] [SPEAKER_00]: You know what I mean?

[00:31:46] [SPEAKER_00]: You watch their eyes and some people will light up and be like, oh, that's really cool.

[00:31:50] [SPEAKER_00]: And some people will be like you'll see the fear and the caution.

[00:31:55] [SPEAKER_00]: And then they'll like calm it down and go back to talking you like you're a normal person again.

[00:32:01] [SPEAKER_00]: But you can get a good read on people at least like, you know, that's my experience.

[00:32:05] [SPEAKER_00]: But from there, you know, then you can start to feel people out and be like, you know, a lot of them.

[00:32:11] [SPEAKER_00]: Go ahead. I'm sorry.

[00:32:12] [SPEAKER_04]: How you register, right?

[00:32:14] [SPEAKER_04]: So that's going to be the party that you're going to be going to for the meetings and the so it's not like you're going into the other camp.

[00:32:22] [SPEAKER_00]: Oh, I see. So it's not a mixed bag.

[00:32:25] [SPEAKER_04]: Yeah. So so you basically know.

[00:32:27] [SPEAKER_04]: But like at the at the polling precinct that I was like, I know that the Dems, one lady raised sheep and they both had chickens.

[00:32:39] [SPEAKER_04]: I mean, you know, it wasn't so I think you'll be within similar minded when you go to the and I mean,

[00:32:52] [SPEAKER_04]: you're in the same neighborhood when you're if you work your own precinct.

[00:32:56] [SPEAKER_00]: Yeah. So yeah, my my precinct is a scary situation in terms of voting.

[00:33:04] [SPEAKER_00]: I don't know how I don't know how it could be so one sided.

[00:33:10] [SPEAKER_00]: But I saw the results from my precinct and it was like 15 percent Republican vote for the mayor.

[00:33:19] [SPEAKER_04]: Yeah. Ours was probably we were we were like I wasn't allowed to literally like checkmark because you couldn't you couldn't record.

[00:33:31] [SPEAKER_04]: Yeah, I was I was a solid 70 75 percent.

[00:33:38] [SPEAKER_04]: R's going down. Yeah.

[00:33:40] [SPEAKER_00]: I mean, that makes sense. Yeah.

[00:33:43] [SPEAKER_00]: But I think that, you know, things keep going in the direction they're going.

[00:33:51] [SPEAKER_00]: It's not going to matter as much anymore.

[00:33:53] [SPEAKER_00]: I don't think I don't even know if it matters as much anymore as it does as it did in 2020.

[00:34:01] [SPEAKER_00]: Right. Political affiliation, in other words, you know, because the Democrats are getting beat about the head and neck by the Israel supporters slash

[00:34:11] [SPEAKER_00]: transgender slash whatever other cause comes up that day.

[00:34:15] [SPEAKER_04]: Or a cake got stalled out, right?

[00:34:16] [SPEAKER_04]: Trying to get to the exactly exactly.

[00:34:21] [SPEAKER_00]: So I think it, you know, it's a blessing and a curse.

[00:34:25] [SPEAKER_00]: Jim, the chaos will bring us together because we will have common ground again.

[00:34:31] [SPEAKER_04]: But I was so if you're going to these events and you're so if you're working at the polling location, you're getting to meet people right from your community.

[00:34:41] [SPEAKER_04]: So if you see him at the gas station or you see him at the supermarket, you could say hi.

[00:34:48] [SPEAKER_04]: You could say what? Oh, man, I couldn't believe you came out.

[00:34:51] [SPEAKER_04]: What a crappy, you know, we have rain so hard that like downpour or what a gorgeous day.

[00:34:57] [SPEAKER_04]: We were so, you know, so there's like icebreakers there too.

[00:35:00] [SPEAKER_00]: Yeah, yeah, that's a good point. And it's a nice it's a nice thing.

[00:35:03] [SPEAKER_04]: But seen, you know?

[00:35:06] [SPEAKER_00]: Yeah, oh, definitely. And it's a nice thing to see people, you know.

[00:35:09] [SPEAKER_00]: Yeah.

[00:35:10] [SPEAKER_00]: With the with the world being as transient as it is, that's another thing that's gone that you don't realize is gone.

[00:35:18] [SPEAKER_00]: You know what I mean? It's like the whole seeing people that you know walking down the street because you know almost everybody.

[00:35:25] Yeah.

[00:35:27] [SPEAKER_04]: Yeah, like I went to the same high school as my dad did.

[00:35:31] [SPEAKER_00]: How how? Yeah, you know everybody. I know that was my neighborhood was just like that.

[00:35:36] [SPEAKER_00]: My neighborhood was generations old. Yeah, that's how mine was.

[00:35:42] [SPEAKER_00]: So everybody was we were like cousins with everybody.

[00:35:45] [SPEAKER_00]: You know what I mean? Like when dating age came around, we was like a questionnaire.

[00:35:51] [SPEAKER_00]: Her last name is Walls, not Walton. Is that OK?

[00:35:56] [SPEAKER_04]: One second. Right back to you. Yeah.

[00:35:58] [SPEAKER_00]: Let me make a couple calls. I never heard of her, but you never know before you get in too deep.

[00:36:05] [SPEAKER_00]: No, man, I think you're on to something, Jim.

[00:36:07] [SPEAKER_00]: I really do. And it's these are the types of things that are like hiding right under our noses where we're over here like like me.

[00:36:16] [SPEAKER_00]: Like let's get both guys off the ballot altogether.

[00:36:20] [SPEAKER_00]: That should be easy enough to do.

[00:36:23] [SPEAKER_00]: And you're over here like, how about we just go work in our, you know, you're telling me that the community guy supposedly, apparently, allegedly to go work in the community a little.

[00:36:38] [SPEAKER_04]: No, I like that.

[00:36:39] [SPEAKER_04]: I can't politicians like I am not kissing all the babies and shaking all the hands.

[00:36:44] [SPEAKER_00]: That's just not my role. Right.

[00:36:49] [SPEAKER_04]: But A, it lets me see more of the community and B, it lets me give something to the community to help it function.

[00:36:58] [SPEAKER_04]: Right. We were talking in the green room that I am not really going to be a volunteer fireman.

[00:37:04] [SPEAKER_04]: You know, just running up and down with a red light on the top my pickup.

[00:37:10] [SPEAKER_04]: Physically that's probably getting past me.

[00:37:12] [SPEAKER_04]: But I got to find ways to you know, I feel it's important to give back to your community.

[00:37:18] [SPEAKER_04]: So this was this was one way I thought I could do it.

[00:37:21] [SPEAKER_00]: No, man, it's huge.

[00:37:23] [SPEAKER_00]: That's a that you know, and I'm always surprised at the lack of service from some of the most depressed people that I know.

[00:37:34] [SPEAKER_00]: And some of the most sort of issue, issue concerned or sort of issue inspired people that I know.

[00:37:44] [SPEAKER_00]: Do you know what I mean?

[00:37:45] [SPEAKER_00]: I mean, like it would it would seem that if you're driven by your woes and your depressions

[00:37:52] [SPEAKER_00]: or if you're driven by your desire to want to help people all the way on the other side of the world,

[00:37:57] [SPEAKER_00]: that maybe you would spend more time in service.

[00:37:59] [SPEAKER_00]: I think that's a lot of what the depression in the country is about is that you know, you have to serve.

[00:38:05] [SPEAKER_00]: It's such a fulfilling thing in a world where things are not nearly as fulfilling as they used to be.

[00:38:15] [SPEAKER_00]: Day to day life, you know, because of our digital umbilical cords.

[00:38:22] [SPEAKER_00]: But I like it, man.

[00:38:24] [SPEAKER_00]: I appreciate you coming on and giving us the lowdown on it all.

[00:38:28] [SPEAKER_00]: I guess the best thing for people to do, correct me if I'm wrong, is to what is the office they contact?

[00:38:37] [SPEAKER_04]: Your your county.

[00:38:39] [SPEAKER_04]: So you could probably go to whatever political party you want to do.

[00:38:43] [SPEAKER_04]: Just type that party into Google, right?

[00:38:47] [SPEAKER_04]: And then and then drill down to talk.

[00:38:50] [SPEAKER_04]: Yeah.

[00:38:51] [SPEAKER_04]: Go down to your county office.

[00:38:55] [SPEAKER_04]: And I'm sure like our my county has has a website and then they have they typically have a monthly meeting.

[00:39:05] [SPEAKER_04]: They typically have fundraisers, which you know, whatever they like.

[00:39:12] [SPEAKER_04]: If you have like fairs and stuff that you usually have a booth at that like the fall festival kind of stuff.

[00:39:18] [SPEAKER_00]: Join the team. No, that's not it.

[00:39:21] [SPEAKER_00]: There's got to be like a violent take action.

[00:39:24] [SPEAKER_00]: What's that convention filing form?

[00:39:28] [SPEAKER_00]: Work in GOP politics volunteer.

[00:39:31] [SPEAKER_00]: There we go. Yep.

[00:39:33] [SPEAKER_04]: OK, so I mean there's there's state level, there's national level, there's state level and there's county level.

[00:39:42] [SPEAKER_00]: And but all of them initiated come November.

[00:39:45] [SPEAKER_04]: And I got involved through the county level because it was in my hometown here or, you know, my town that I'm living in.

[00:39:54] [SPEAKER_04]: And I went to a couple of meetings, a couple of monthly meetings.

[00:39:59] [SPEAKER_04]: And I said, yeah, I'll sign up to volunteer.

[00:40:02] [SPEAKER_04]: I don't feel like I could be a judge yet, but I'll be more than happy to be an observer that let me get my feet wet.

[00:40:10] [SPEAKER_00]: So there are so maybe the last thing we talk about before we head out is can you what's the hierarchy?

[00:40:15] [SPEAKER_00]: So if someone gets there and is like, this is for me, I'm going to the to the pole observer, all of fame.

[00:40:22] [SPEAKER_00]: But I work my way up.

[00:40:25] [SPEAKER_04]: So observers entry level and then a poll worker is like the people sitting at the computers typing.

[00:40:33] [SPEAKER_00]: OK, yeah.

[00:40:34] [SPEAKER_04]: I think they're all what to do.

[00:40:37] [SPEAKER_04]: Yeah.

[00:40:39] [SPEAKER_04]: Or they could be the person that helps you feed it into the tally machine.

[00:40:44] [SPEAKER_04]: Those are work people that you actually engage with our poll workers, poll observers are just wallflowers pit bosses.

[00:40:52] [SPEAKER_04]: Not allowed. Yeah, I'm not supposed to be talking to if somebody asked me a question like where do I go for this?

[00:40:58] [SPEAKER_04]: I tell them to go talk to a poll worker for instruct.

[00:41:03] [SPEAKER_04]: I'm not supposed to give any instruction.

[00:41:05] [SPEAKER_04]: I'm not supposed to sway them one way or the other.

[00:41:07] [SPEAKER_04]: I'm just there to watch.

[00:41:09] [SPEAKER_04]: If I see anything that doesn't match up with what I was told were the rules of engagement, then I report it to the.

[00:41:17] [SPEAKER_04]: So it goes whole observer, poll worker.

[00:41:21] [SPEAKER_04]: And then there's a judge and then there's what's the lead judge?

[00:41:26] [SPEAKER_04]: So there's two judges, one from each party, and then there's one superior judge over top of the two judges.

[00:41:38] [SPEAKER_04]: Roger.

[00:41:39] [SPEAKER_04]: Like if they had to vote on something, if something happened, then should we cancel this ballot or not?

[00:41:44] [SPEAKER_04]: They'll vote and you know, like a majority would, you know, there's three of them.

[00:41:52] [SPEAKER_00]: So yeah.

[00:41:53] [SPEAKER_00]: You know what I also like about this?

[00:41:55] [SPEAKER_00]: This isn't about like militant takeover.

[00:41:59] [SPEAKER_00]: It's just participation in the process is what we need.

[00:42:04] [SPEAKER_04]: It's what's supposed to happen in a court rate, a court of law.

[00:42:07] [SPEAKER_04]: They're not like the judge is not supposed to like be a political official.

[00:42:15] [SPEAKER_04]: He's supposed to say here's the here's the laws.

[00:42:18] [SPEAKER_04]: Here's how we're supposed to do it.

[00:42:20] [SPEAKER_01]: Right. Yeah.

[00:42:21] [SPEAKER_04]: Did you do it right?

[00:42:24] [SPEAKER_04]: So the judge is just there to make sure that the machine is opened and closed properly, that the tallies are being processed,

[00:42:33] [SPEAKER_04]: that the sheets, the paperwork is being processed properly, secured properly, transported properly.

[00:42:41] [SPEAKER_04]: And to give any guidance to the poll workers if they have a question.

[00:42:46] [SPEAKER_00]: Well, I mean, I didn't just mean the jury.

[00:42:47] [SPEAKER_04]: The triangle and then the poll workers and then the observers are are just the wall flowers pretty much.

[00:42:56] [SPEAKER_00]: Yeah, I didn't just mean the judges, though.

[00:42:59] [SPEAKER_00]: I meant the idea of getting involved in general seems more like the right thing to do and less like we got to get on the PTA to stop these perverts.

[00:43:10] [SPEAKER_00]: You know what I mean? That kind of language.

[00:43:12] [SPEAKER_04]: At least in my precinct, they were just trying to facilitate the vote, not which way to vote.

[00:43:22] [SPEAKER_01]: Yeah, yeah, I'm sure they can.

[00:43:23] [SPEAKER_04]: They were there to help people check in properly, get their ballot properly, understand how they fill out the ballot and then have their ballot, their ballot entered into the machine properly so it was tallied properly.

[00:43:37] [SPEAKER_00]: Yeah, I'd really like to see a lot of people get involved in this here at the network and then come, you know, Wednesday afternoon, no matter what happens in November.

[00:43:54] [SPEAKER_00]: Yeah, we can at least we can at least not be staring at the black mirror and telling Google to tell us what really happened or waiting for what's the guy's name who did the mules thing

[00:44:07] [SPEAKER_00]: to tell us what happened. You know what I mean? The 500 mules. I can't, DeSouza, waiting on DeSouza to tell us what really happened.

[00:44:15] [SPEAKER_00]: You know what I mean? So if it was in other words, if it was such an issue that we rallied at the capital for it last year, I think the smart thing to do is to go,

[00:44:30] [SPEAKER_00]: OK, well things went poorly in 2020. What can I do to assure that things are better in 2024? And I think this hits the nail on the head. It's not tremendous commitment.

[00:44:43] [SPEAKER_00]: It's not like you got to be here five nights a week, you know, it makes sense.

[00:44:49] [SPEAKER_04]: You can sign up for multiple days if you wanted to because the whole early voting period, you could be there for that as well.

[00:44:55] [SPEAKER_04]: But it's just a four. You're you have a four hour block that you work. You're allowed to stay longer.

[00:45:03] [SPEAKER_04]: But if you leave early, then your your space is held open until the next block is supposed to start.

[00:45:11] [SPEAKER_00]: And I have to imagine that if you rolled into a place and things were seedy, you would probably know like right off the bat.

[00:45:20] [SPEAKER_04]: If I saw buses pull in like one after the other, after the other and do it because we had a station outside where people could vote outside if they couldn't facilitate getting into the building.

[00:45:35] [SPEAKER_04]: You could vote like a car was long or if they didn't have access, like if they were like had some kind of medical issue or something that they couldn't like walk into the building.

[00:45:50] [SPEAKER_04]: I got you. So that's what it was mostly for. That's my understanding.

[00:45:54] [SPEAKER_04]: So if I like bus after bus after bus, I might have got on that website and said, OK, at this time I saw a bus that had to have at least 50 people.

[00:46:06] [SPEAKER_04]: At this time, I was like, I saw a bus that had to have another 50.

[00:46:10] [SPEAKER_04]: You know, they might want to send somebody higher up to come over and look and see what's going on.

[00:46:17] [SPEAKER_00]: You know what I mean? Yeah. Oh, sure. Yeah. Yeah. That's an interesting one for sure.

[00:46:21] [SPEAKER_00]: But I meant just the atmosphere of the people you're working with.

[00:46:25] [SPEAKER_04]: Oh, yeah. It was it was very cordial. Like I said, one lady was bringing in baked goods.

[00:46:31] [SPEAKER_04]: So that always set the tone. We all like.

[00:46:36] [SPEAKER_04]: I think if you go ahead first started, we kind of like looked at each other like, are you friend or foe?

[00:46:43] [SPEAKER_04]: You know, but after the first hour, we understood what we were.

[00:46:48] [SPEAKER_04]: You know, we weren't at each other's necks or anything.

[00:46:52] [SPEAKER_04]: I wasn't there to to tattle on anybody.

[00:46:55] [SPEAKER_04]: I was there just to observe and, you know, and they got it.

[00:46:59] [SPEAKER_04]: They understood my feelings. Sure.

[00:47:04] [SPEAKER_04]: And it's just being courteous to other people's.

[00:47:06] [SPEAKER_04]: I know. I would roll in there with a well, you couldn't wear like political party stuff.

[00:47:14] [SPEAKER_00]: And we're stuck in this stupid loop.

[00:47:17] [SPEAKER_04]: My NASCAR let's go Brandon ball cap on.

[00:47:23] [SPEAKER_00]: We're stuck in this dumb loop where we're trying to figure everything we've already figured out again.

[00:47:29] [SPEAKER_00]: You know what I mean? Like just what you said, like just being cordial to people.

[00:47:33] [SPEAKER_00]: Oh, I can do that. We could just get along.

[00:47:35] [SPEAKER_00]: Yeah, right. Get along.

[00:47:40] [SPEAKER_00]: Oh, man. Well, I think that's a good place to wrap it up, dude.

[00:47:43] [SPEAKER_00]: I really appreciate you coming on.

[00:47:45] [SPEAKER_00]: I'm totally embarrassed that this is the first time you and I have had a conversation on air.

[00:47:50] [SPEAKER_00]: Just you and I. I think that's crazy, but it is what it is.

[00:47:54] [SPEAKER_00]: We've had many good conversations in real life.

[00:47:58] [SPEAKER_04]: So I don't know how Sarah Rangel began to do it once a week, but she's got superpowers and that and she knows whatever.

[00:48:05] [SPEAKER_04]: Jitsu karate kick.

[00:48:07] [SPEAKER_00]: Well, I like it because then I get to hear you once a week.

[00:48:12] [SPEAKER_00]: You know, otherwise it would be like this chin really exists or is he just a figment of my imagination at Prepper Camp?

[00:48:18] [SPEAKER_00]: Right. But I PBN family, you got your marching orders more and more on this.

[00:48:24] [SPEAKER_00]: I'll poke and prod you. Maybe we'll add this to the April routine and see if we can get you guys involved.

[00:48:30] [SPEAKER_00]: But yeah, I appreciate it.

[00:48:34] [SPEAKER_00]: Chin, you went out there up for November.

[00:48:37] [SPEAKER_04]: Say what? It'd be fun to have some PBNers lined up for November.

[00:48:42] [SPEAKER_00]: Oh, it'd be great, man. It really would.

[00:48:45] [SPEAKER_00]: And not only that, it would do them good.

[00:48:47] [SPEAKER_00]: You know, it's going to do you good to be a part of the process if you if you don't get the results you want.

[00:48:54] [SPEAKER_00]: And maybe even if you get the results you want, I'm the type of guy who I don't trust anyone.

[00:49:00] [SPEAKER_00]: So I'll be like, I don't know, maybe the Republicans did cheat. Who knows?

[00:49:05] [SPEAKER_00]: Yeah. You know, so if you're there, at least you could say, well, I know what happened in my office and I'd love it if all of you guys got involved.

[00:49:11] [SPEAKER_00]: And we could say, you know, here's 20 different perspectives from polling places around the country.

[00:49:19] [SPEAKER_00]: I don't know if you'll catch vans with boxes of ballots coming in in the middle of night, but I have a feeling there might be some guys out there with some nogs on that might be looking for that kind of stuff this year.

[00:49:34] [SPEAKER_00]: Posted up far, far away, but close enough to be able to be like, what's going on here?

[00:49:40] [SPEAKER_00]: All right. I appreciate you, Chin, in all in all levels of our relationship.

[00:49:45] [SPEAKER_00]: It's been a blast getting to know you.

[00:49:49] [SPEAKER_00]: And that's it, PBN family.

[00:49:52] [SPEAKER_00]: Preppers live a wrap on the Tuesday.

[00:49:55] [SPEAKER_00]: We will talk soon.

[00:49:58] [SPEAKER_03]: Thank you for listening to the Prepper Broadcasting Network, where we promote self-reliance and independence.

[00:50:04] [SPEAKER_03]: Tune in tomorrow for another great show and visit us at Prepper Broadcasting.com.

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