You can listen to the #2245 – Rod Blagojevich using Speak’s shareable media player:
#2245 – Rod Blagojevich Podcast Episode Description
Rod Blagojevich is a former Illinois governor, removed from office in 2009 and imprisoned for corruption in 2012. Following his sentence commutation by President Donald Trump in 2020, Blagojevich has worked as an author, speaker, and political commentator.
https://x.com/realBlagojevich
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
This interactive media player was created automatically by Speak. Want to generate intelligent media players yourself? Sign up for Speak!
#2245 – Rod Blagojevich Podcast Episode Top Keywords

#2245 – Rod Blagojevich Podcast Episode Summary
In this episode of the Joe Rogan podcast, several key topics and themes are discussed. The conversation touches on the limitations of mainstream media and the importance of alternative platforms like podcasts for sharing unfiltered stories. Joe Rogan and his guest discuss how podcasts allow for more in-depth exploration of topics that might be censored or ignored by traditional media outlets. This is exemplified by a mention of Tucker Carlson’s podcast, where he interviewed a controversial guest, something that would likely not have been possible on mainstream television.
The episode also delves into the idea of continuous growth and the absence of a definitive endpoint in personal and professional endeavors. Rogan emphasizes the importance of enjoying the process rather than focusing solely on achieving a specific goal, highlighting that success is an ongoing journey without a clear finish line.
Additionally, the conversation includes a critique of how mainstream narratives often omit crucial details, leading to a skewed public perception. The speakers mention figures like Barry Weiss and Glenn Greenwald, who are praised for their honesty and comprehensive storytelling, contrasting them with the selective reporting seen in mainstream media.
Actionable insights from the episode include the encouragement to seek out diverse sources of information and to remain skeptical of mainstream narratives. The overall message is one of valuing authenticity and transparency in media and personal pursuits, advocating for a more nuanced understanding of complex issues.
This summary was created automatically by Speak. Want to transcribe, analyze and summarize yourself? Sign up for Speak!
#2245 – Rod Blagojevich Podcast Episode Transcript (Unedited)
Joe Rogan podcast. Check it out. The Joe Rogan experience.
Showing my day Joe Rogan podcast by night, all day.
How are you, sir? I’m good.
see you. Nice to meet you.
I really enjoyed you on Tucker Carlson Shah. Shout out to Tucker. It was a very eye opening podcast. And, you know, whenever someone is, convicted of, you know, any any political figure, any person of power that’s, convicted of corruption, you automatically assume that they’re guilty.
And after listening to you on Tucker’s shah, I was ai, oh, Jesus. Like, it was such an eye opening podcast and such a disappointing one too. Sai disturbing to hear your version of the story which was so different than the version that was, you know, put out on the media and it was just, oh, corrupt politician goes to jail.
Sai went to jail, he must be guilty.
hear your takeout and you’re like, oh, god. It’s very disturbing. And, I just wanted to show you this just before we get rolling. Biden just released a bunch of people, multiple Chinese speak, and an individual convicted of possessing child pornography. I think he’s he’s released how many people has he, pardoned today?
Saw number of 1500. He’s going ham. Yeah. Everybody can get their sign your checks, send them in. Let’s go.
Wow. Possession of child pornography should be ai you shouldn’t be able to pardon for stuff like that. It’s like there arya certain things. It’s like, come on.
You know, I spent almost 8 years in prison for politics, not for crimes. I’m happy to answer any questions you have about any of it because I didn’t do it. It was all politics. But the first 3 years, almost 3 years, they put me in a higher security prison, and I’m in there with Crips and Bloods and Gangster Disciples and seen a lower cartel drug.
They were squeezing me and pressuring me because they wanted me to basically say I did something that I didn’t do. They wanted me to plead guilty of noncrimes.
So they wanna scare you by putting in UN with dangerous people?
Yeah. And, and they really punish me because I fought back in a way that no one really does except for Trump. I mean, I was fighting back when they brought those charges against me everywhere, and I was calling them criminals. And they are What
did they expect you to do? They expect you to just take a sentence, a lower sentence Right. Confess?
They tried me twice after the first trial where they failed to convict me on their fake corruption charges. They were floating 18 months. And, you know, there were a lot of people in my team, like my lawyers, who thought that might be the prudent thing to do because you really can’t beat these people.
The system is rigged. And when they really wanna get you, they’ll just keep trying you, and they’ll get their judge who to work with them, and they’ll they’ll ultimately convict you as they did me by using unlawful standards to criminalize things that are legal in politics and government.
So the prudent thing, the safe thing was to, you know, cut your losses and, you know, take the short period, prison time. But I felt you know, I wasn’t a businessman. I suppose if I was a businessman facing something like that, you’d make a business decision. You cut your losses.
You realize they’re bleeding you financially. You can’t afford lawyers. This is gonna be an endless thing. It was already 3 years at that point that we have been fighting it. But I was the governor twice elected by the people.
And, you know, Sai did these votes don’t mean a lot to some people. It sounds like a bunch of bullshit to say Sai swore on the holy bible as the governor to preserve, protect the rule of law, the constitution. I just couldn’t do it. And I knew it was all bullshit. It was all corrupt.
They knew it was all corrupt, and it was all a an effort to try to get me to to admit it. And if I admitted it, then the truth would never come out. They can never be exposed for what they did. And because I wouldn’t do it and I fought back because if I’m right, and I know I am, and they were doing to me what they ultimately ended up doing to Trump, weaponizing their own controlled power and unlimited resources to criminalize political things.
If the truth comes out, they’re gonna be facing some sort of accountability, hopefully, one day. Hopefully, now with the new administration, they’ll reform the laws. And
We saw that the head of the FBI just stepped down.
Yep. And Josh Patel is gonna come in and he wants to clean house. Let’s take it back to the beginning. So I know they were bugging your phones, but you kinda knew they were bugging your phones. Right?
You know, when you come out of Chicago politics, which is a politics that probably has a larger proportion of corruption than It’s how
Other places. Yeah. Yeah.
The mob was involved in that.
Yeah. That that’s well done. The River Wards made the difference. Mayor Daley, the first mayor Daley was holding back those the counting of those votes until he saw what Southern Illinois Republican area came up with. And once those votes were counted, then he he let those river awards come out. And Giancana, people like that were really instrumental in electing Kennedy.
And then when Bobby Kennedy started going after Giancana, they as the attorney general, they felt betrayed.
I mean, apparently, the father made the deal. Right? Yeah. But with meh, it was, I always felt that there was a possibility that not only would they be listening, but that somebody would set you up. And through the years in politics, people would. They’d come to you and offer you things that you knew were illegal, and, you didn’t do it because it was illegal.
But, also, you felt this could be a setup. This could be the FBI trying to entrap you into doing something.
And that’s a common thing?
So when you for what was the first charge that was brought against you? Or if you could just bring us back to the moment when you knew they were coming after you.
I was elected the 1st Democratic governor in Illinois in November 2002 after 26 years of Republican governors. I first learned that they began to look into my administration and people around me in December of 2003. And I had been governor for 10 months, and they were already looking.
And I knew it, which meant we gotta be super extra careful because these people are scrutinizing us. On the one hand, I felt good. That put puts pressure on people around meh. People are doing work for me to do the legal things and not cross lines. I never imagined that the FBI and the Department of Justice and these US attorneys who come out of the best schools would be so corrupt and dishonest.
I felt like, okay. They’ll look and see how we do things. If we make some mistakes along the way, we’ll make adjustments. So they chased me for 5 years. And by the time they taped my phones, it was no surprise.
There was all kinds of pressure at that time because they’ve gotten a guy who was close to me and Obama, a guy by the name of Tony Oresco, who they probably convicted him of things that weren’t crimes either. They were squeezing him to say things about me and Obama. He wouldn’t do it.
They put him into solitary confinement for 3 years to get him to to in invent crimes against us. He wouldn’t do it. This guy’s a stand up guy. Obama sold him out, and he did more for Obama than he ever did for meh. But I knew all of that.
And so at the time when they began wiretapping my phones, which is late October 2008, everything I talked about doing with regard to the appointment of Obama’s successor to the United States Senate, I felt it was very possible they were listening. How could they not? Because they were chasing meh. They so much wanted to get me.
And, Obama and I both were, in their crosshairs in the very beginning, but I think the politics of the changes is political fortunes improved, and he looked like he was gonna be the next president. And these people, these US attorneys meh appointed by the president. And these were Bush appointed Cheney appointed prosecutors.
And it’s very unusual that the previous administration’s prosecutors stay in office. When the new president comes in, they leave as you see with Trump and the other party’s people come in. But these people stayed in. And when they arrested me, what they wanted me to do was to basically say that I was guilty of trying to sell a senate seat, and I was trying to sell it to another guilty party who was the guy who started the whole thing by the name of Barack Obama who want to buy that senate seat because that’s where the whole thing began.
It was Obama on election night. He sent an emissary to me to suggest a political deal because he wanted this woman named Valerie Jarrett to be appointed to his senate speak. The governor appointed him
for a saloni. Hold that thought. Mhmm. Jamie, there’s feedback. You hear that? You hear that ai that it was on the last podcast too. Really? Yeah. It’s gone. Oh. Just ended. Alright. What was that?
On Mike Gordon’s couch himself.
Yep. That’s it. Okay. Alright. We’re back. So Obama was sai how did he try to negotiate? Like, what when he wanted this person to take his senate speak, like, what what what what was said? How did it go down? How how do things like that work?
He used third parties, emissaries.
So they’re not. People. So he doesn’t have to meet with you, so you can say Obama asked meh. You have other people, so it’s plausible deniability.
To some extent, that’s part of it, of course. But there’s other dynamics that also it’s just a little bit easier to kinda test the mood of the other person if you have a third party who both the people like or respect. In this particular case, it was a labor boss by the name of Tom Balanoff. He came up to me election night in November 2008.
That was the election you voted for Obama. You and I are both guilty of vatsal. And I was there that night. Chicago was magical, you know, historic, and it was great. It sai that ai Meh, you know, crossed a significant barrier.
A black person can be elected president of the United States. Every black child growing up can now look and say, one day maybe I can be that. You know, there’s the American dream and opportunity. So in that sense, it was a beautiful thing. So this Balanoff guy comes up to meh, and he says, Barack called me last night.
He said I was pumping gas in this gas station in the South Loop arya, downtown Chicago. Barack called me last night. He said it was around, even told me the time, like, around 6:30 or 7 at night, and he asked me to come to you. He would like you to appoint Valerie Jarrett as his successor to the senate. He wanted me to know what you want.
I wonder if I can come and see you so we can discuss this. I said, sure. Call me tomorrow. Now that’s totally legal and appropriate. He’s not suggesting anything illegal. Obama just wants to make a political deal. But what happened was they criminalized it against meh.
sai They criminalized Barack Obama trying to force his pick for senate seat and you accepting it.
Obama wasn’t trying to force it. He was trying to make a deal to persuade me to do it.
Or what would you get out of that?
That’s what we discussed for 6 weeks, and the FBI was talking about that. And we discussed all kinds of crazy ideas, a lot of good ideas. Spent 2 days talking about the possibility of appointing Oprah Winfrey. What? You might appreciate this. Yeah. I know. She’s from Chicago.
remember when Trump won? There were there’s like, was NBC or one of these fucking people tweeted out, this is our our president, and it was Oprah?
Yeah. To see how you ai that. 1 like, a major network tweeted out, this is our president. Wow. I was like, okay.
So we spent 6 weeks talking about all kinds of ideas because this was, to quote me, fucking golden. I’m not giving it up or not that we got a chance to do something with this. And all of these ideas and thoughts were discussed with my governor’s lawyer on all those calls largely because I knew these people were chasing me.
I wanted to be sure whatever decision I made, it was legal. We didn’t cross lines or make a mistake. Maybe I missed something. And, you know, you this was unique, and so I Ai explored all kinds of ideas. I even speak one conversation. I think you might appreciate this.
They played this at court in my first trial. My wife’s sitting there, loving, dutiful, devoted, faithful wife, sitting in a courtroom every single day at both ai, and the media’s in there every day. And they could do whatever they sana, these prosecutors. The judge was their guy. And so they’re, you know, they’re playing all these tapes out of context.
They’re not allowing me to play tapes we want to fill up the context. They only play 2% of the tapes and denied 98% of them. To this day, those tapes are covered up because all kinds of people are on those calls. There wasn’t anything illegal about it, but, you know, Rahm Emanuel, Harry Reid at the time was the Democratic leader, every possible big time Democrats on those calls with me.
But to go back to some of these crazy ideas, you know, I was trying to appoint someone who was black but not in politics. I was looking for a military hero of some sort. Everybody wanted me to make them senators. You can imagine in politics, I wanted to think outside the box, and we were testing all these Ai, including Oprah.
And I’m talking to my lawyer, Quinlan, and I ai, hey.
There it is. NBC. Nothing but respect for our future president.
If that’s the case, I’m gonna do what Ellen DeGeneres did. I’m gonna move to England.
gonna move to England. I’m just gonna mock NBC. So what does it say? Yesterday, a tweet about the Golden Globes and Oprah Winfrey was sent by a third party agency for NBC Entertainment in real time during the broadcast. It is in reference to a joke made during the monologue and not meant to be a political statement. We have since removed the tweet. Right. Okay.
Sai, anyway, so I’m I’m at the first trial. They’re playing these tapes, and they had to give you these transcript books sai you can see in writing what you can actually hear when they play the tape. Mhmm. And by then, I’d gotten used to trying to know what was coming so I can brace myself. You know?
And, you know, they pick all the unflattering stuff, but but none of it’s criminal. And if you add it, you put the rest of the calls in there, it fills it fills out the context.
So in this one particular call, I asked my lawyer Quinlan’s name. Hey, Quinlan. What’s the rule again on residency requirements? How old do you how long do you have to live in Illinois to be a senator? And he said, just one day. And and you gotta be 30 years old, and you could be a you could be a naturalized citizen or American bryden citizen.
So I say because we were not finding the the black military hero. Why doesn’t somebody go to California? Ask Halle Berry if she’d like to be a United States senator. She comes to Illinois for one day. I’ll make her a senator, and maybe I could fuck her.
Well, they play this, you know, in court.
There’s my wife sitting right there. You know?
And I look ahead, and I’m looking at the clock, and there’s, like, 10 minutes to go before noon where the judge is gonna recess for lunch. And I’m thinking if I could just get there before they play this tape, I could at least pre you know, kind of prepare her for what’s coming.
And I made it. And so I tap her on the knee, and I kinda showed her the book. And I said, look. I was just kidding. And her reaction was, what are you? 16?
Well, that’s the same thing as, like, the grab them by the pussy comment.
Guys talk like that. It doesn’t mean they mean it. Guys talk like that all the time for fun. It’s not you know, you could say it’s misogynist. It’s this. It’s it’s just shit talking. It’s what guys do, and they know that the other person doesn’t mean it. That’s why it’s funny to say.
Yeah. And let’s face it. Most of us like that stuff.
Yeah. We like joking around about stuff like that.
No doubt. It’s fun. And the other fucker.
And everybody would laugh. And even if you ever never did anything or never even intended to do anything, you’d say something like that to get a a rise out of your friends.
So years would go by, and I’m sitting in prison. I’m making one of my nightly calls home, and my wife’s on the phone. And, that Billy Bush tape came out with a slimy thing to do to Trump. Right? It comes out. Everybody’s writing him off as a president. He can’t win, Pressured by his party to get out of the race.
And my wife was, you know, offended by it, and she’s telling me you have 2 young daughters. How could you possibly defend this? And I said, let me take you back to a day in court. Okay? Before you judge somebody else, look at your own husband.
And I told her about that Paley Berry thing
And what I said. And I said, this is, you know, as you explained it. And I think people have to realize that so many of these things that are taken out of context are taken out of context for a reason. It is to mislead the public and prejudice them against things.
And that the context aspect of it is very important because there’s such a difference between a statement and someone tapping a phone while people are having a private conversation and talking shit.
There’s just and did they read it or play it when you said that?
Yeah. Yeah. People talk shit. Like, you can’t pretend that that’s what they actually meh, You know? It’s one thing if you get someone planning a crime, but everyone knows that people talk that way. You just pretend they don’t because they don’t in a professional setting.
Yes. Look, I spent 2,896 days because of what they did and how they did it.
So if you just went along with whatever they asked and didn’t ask for any political bartering, you think nothing would have came of this?
Oh, no. No. I would have oh, you mean just political
If if they came to you and said Obama would like you to put this person in as sana, if you just agreed to it, you think none of this would have happened?
No. I think they were gonna do whatever they did to get me no matter what. Why? Because they had spent so much time and money, 5 years.
But why did they do that? Why did they why did they come after you?
I think that, I think part of it has to do with the a lot of it has to do with the actual US attorney. His name is Patrick Fitzgerald. He and James Comey are real close. It’s this sort of Ai, DOJ type people who’ve become part of the today’s Department of Justice, and they’d feel like they’re a power center in of their own right, that they’re this new political place in American government.
They are so dangerous to our freedoms in this country. I think it was largely that he had gotten he had convicted, the previous governor, Republican governor Ai, of crimes that he had committed when he was the secretary of state of Illinois. And so now he could be the first guy in history to get 2 straight governors. And I think it was that.
I think he wanted to leverage Obama to keep him in office so he can finish the job and get me after investing 5 years, and he came up with nothing. That’s why they infected the crimes from those conversations. And if anybody doubts this, and I fully understand why people would, the question I’d ask people is, will you tell me what side is lying?
The side that refuses to play 98% of the tapes that they made or the guy that’s saying play them all, warts and all. There’s unflattering calls where I say stupid things or, you know, I’m angry or whatever the case may be. I’m using profanity. They replayed those. But play those tapes.
What are you hiding? The side that’s hiding is the side that’s lying, and they’re hiding it to this day. They covered up all those tapes. They wouldn’t even let me play them in court in the second trial even though they promised that I would could play them if I testified at the saloni trial.
And so I got up on the stand, Joe, and the judge had promised on the 20th May 2011. I thought this was the day I’d be vindicated. He said, look. If he agrees to testify, he can play the tapes to corroborate his testimony. Because I was a lawyer, and I was also a prosecutor at the state level, Cook County prosecutor.
And I know how the system works, and I know that if you get up there and you’re saying certain things and one side has tapes of you saying something, you’re saying stuff, but you don’t have tapes to corroborate what you’re saying. The prosecutor is gonna simply tell the jury in closing argument.
Go back at jury room and see how many times you hear what he testified to corroborate it by those tapes. And if you don’t find any tapes, then you know who’s lying. I knew this. But when the judge said I can do it on the record, I felt beautiful. I’ll testify, and then we’ll play the tapes to back up my testimony. So I get up there. I testify.
Then when it’s time to play the tapes, the judge won’t allow. It was a setup. And then the prosecutors does does exactly what I knew they would do if those tapes weren’t heard. He says, go back into the jury room and see how many times he talked about the the Madigan deal because that was the big deal I was about to make before they arrested me.
You won’t hear a single tape. Even though there were a 102 conversations on that subject, they were all covered up, and the jury didn’t know those tapes existed. It’s it was a total fucking frame up in a rigged criminal justice system in a court that was rigged, and that’s today’s America.
And why what happened to Trump is so important. They did it to him in those different courts where he they got the convictions for things that weren’t crimes.
Yeah. There’s multiple things that have changed our ai, and one of the big ones is him being elected because that means they dropped those cases and all that weaponizing in the justice system didn’t work. If it did work, that is such an insanely dangerous precedent to set. When you see things like the documents case or the real estate case, which is the most disgusting one, pretending that Mar a Lago that somehow another someone was a victim because he overvalued Mar a Lago even though he paid all those loans back and the banks profited from it.
There was no victim at all. And meh, they ai him this fucking insane amount of money and try to say that Mar a Lago was worth $18,000,000. Shah is just such a slap in the face of anybody that understands. First of all, anybody understands property values in that area. It’s preposterous to say that place is only $18,000,000.
It’s a fucking enormous property and the most expensive real estate in the United States or one of the most expensive places for real estate. And there was just so many of these cases over and over and over again that just right in everyone’s face and very little pushback. No pushback from the media at all.
They went along with it as if these 34 felonies for a bookkeeping error that is essentially a misdemeanor that’s passed the statute of limitations, and now you’re marking it up as a saloni, but you can’t even identify the saloni. The whole thing is madness. And all these news organizations, because they don’t like Trump, are going along with this insanely dangerous precedent.
Because if that goes through, well, what happens if Republicans get into office and you have some new Democrat that you really love, and this Democrat is a real challenge and a threat to the Republican, and they start doing the same fucking shit that you did? Or is that what you want you want us to be a banana republic just because you don’t like Trump?
I mean, it just shows you how many people were willing to sacrifice all of their ethics, all the things that they believe in, what the bill of rights stands for, what the constitution stands for. Fuck all that. We don’t want this guy to win. Throw it all away. And then you throw everything away. Then we have no freedom of speech.
We have no nothing. It’s all gone. The whole thing is so it’s so mind boggling how shortsighted people are in the name of wanting their side to win.
Well well said. I don’t wanna sound like an egomaniac, but I gotta tell you, they got away with it with meh, and they got emboldened then to say we can do it to a democratic governor, the 5th largest state in America. We can get away with it. Non fucking crimes that we make up shit and call them certain things that are sexy sounding, sale of the senate speak.
That eventually was reversed by the appellate court. They could never uphold that unlawful standard. Free fundraising requests where there was no quid pro quo. I got convicted of that. None of it was personal corruption. Nobody sai it even took a penny, and they gave me 14 years because I was fighting against them and exposing them.
Sai it started, I really believe, with meh. And they got away with it with me and some of the same people, Comey, Fitzgerald. Those people were doing it to Trump with Russia collusion stuff. Yeah. And some of the same people then went on and have been doing it as part of a, get this, organized political campaign that came right out of the Oval Office, out of the the Democratic National Committee, the DNC, into the DOJ.
They’ve corrupted the Department of Justice and the FBI, and they’ve corrupted the rule of law and the constitution, and this is no small thing. And just because Trump won, because the American people are beginning to get it, doesn’t mean we’re safe. The Trump administration, god willing, is gonna do something very serious about this.
Sai there’s anything that he this administration could do to make America great again is to protect our rights and our freedoms and to hold the people that do this accountable and make an example of them, not to be vengeful, but because it’s just and because it sana a it sends a message to these unaccountable prosecutors have who have no check and balance that if they do this and frame innocent people, they’re gonna be treated the same way as a dirty cop who plants a burger weapon to frame an innocent meh.
this guy, Andrew Weissman, on CNN. He’s got a big spot at CNN, the legal expert. You ever see this guy? No. Anyway, he was a former US attorney, and he made his name by destroying Arthur Andersen, a company that had all these people working for him in accounting company nationwide, one of the biggest accounting firms in America.
He used a standard that wasn’t lawful to get convictions on them. Eventually, United States Supreme Court took the case, and they ruled ai to nothing, unanimous, that the standard that Ai used to prosecute Arthur Andersen was an unlawful standard. But the damage was done. That company went bankrupt. All those people lost their jobs, and this Andrew Ai gets promoted and becomes this legal expert and scholar on CNN.
That guy, Fitzgerald, Comey, and people who do this, Jack Smith, Alvin Bragg, Letitia James, they ought to go right to fucking jail.
What was what were they accusing this company of?
Obstruction of justice, that they were destroying, records and stuff. But and that would have been a crime had they had they done it after they’d been subpoenaed, but they weren’t subpoenaed. They had a right to do whatever they wanted with their records before anybody compelled them to to produce them. It was obstruction of justice.
And what was the accusation? Like, what were they, trying to get them on?
Saying that they were destroying documents and evidence. About what though? About, the the ai work for Enron, which was a real scandal.
Ai saw the smartest meh in the room. Yep. That meh? Like, jeez. And who doesn’t believe in conspiracies? Watch that.
Jeff Skilling was in the prison with me.
Yeah. Wow. Yeah. He was a he got a big sense. And then, eventually, they found procedural wrongdoing, and he was able to reduce it down from something ai 26 years to 14. But he was there with me saloni with meh and socks and mister b and v and g and all kinds of guys.
All kinds. I’m writing a book about it. You know? It it’s a story that starts with 1 president, ends with another. And there’s a government prison with gangster ai, seen a low cartel drug dealer, pedophiles. That’s what I meant to tell you. I was in there with something like 400 pedophiles Jesus. Murderers, bank robbers.
do they do with the pedophiles in jail?
They’re a protected class in prison because everybody would fuck them up because of the nature of a lot of their crimes. Some of them are worse than others. Some are like this guy that got pardoned by Biden, which is unbelievable, whether into child pornography, but some were far worse than that. They harmed children.
Correct? Do they protect these people?
You you get more than canceled if you even say something bad to them. You can’t offend them. You can’t call them a name. What? They that’s their way of policing the other inmates who hate them and resent them. Really?
Because the the peep the thing that people always loved about pedophiles going to jail is, like, oh, there’s gonna be some jail justice.
Well, there is, notwithstanding their policy, the BOP’s policy. The guy that was, Jared, the guy subway guy Mhmm. He ended up going to the same prison I was in after I worked my way out of the that higher security prison, the one behind the barbed wire fence and got to a camp.
Jared got to my prison because it’s a pedophile. It’s a prison that has a lot of pedophiles. Out of out of the 950 guys roughly that I was in prison with there, There were about 3 to 400 pedophiles, and then there were drug dealers, bank robbers. Some guys have committed murder that were 2% white collar, skilling one of them, one governor, me. Right? But those pedophiles, the sex offenders, if you can’t call them pedophiles.
And the derogatory term allowed to call them pedophiles? Can’t call them pedophiles, and you can’t call them. That’s the inside prison name for these guys. It’s a Chomo? Chomo.
So I’m there day 2 in prison. I got 14 years ahead of me. They gave me a 14 year sentence. I mean, Trump pulled me out of there after 8. And, I’m in there saloni day. As as you can imagine, I write about this in the book.
I mean, it’s a hard experience, a long, hard journey. It’s heartbreaking in so many ways for me and my family and hard. But, you know, I’m learning the ropes, and the all my fellow inmates there. And, I’m hearing this phrase, this term. It’s called, you know, chomos, fucking chomos. You know?
That guy you know, he’s a chomos. They’d say that, and I’d say, what’s that? And they they told me. And so I was with one of my, the, case manager or somebody. They were giving me more of the information I needed for the stuff I had to learn as a new inmate. And I mentioned, so who are these Chumos?
And then she goes, you can’t say that. It’s not Chumos. It’s and she whispered it. It’s Chummo. But you can’t say that. That’s strictly forbidden here.
If you say that, you’ll go to the SHU. Now and so what’s that? I have to ask her. Well, the SHU was, speak housing unit, s h u. The the vernacular was SHU, solitary confinement. And the way they police the inmates and punish them to varying degrees is you get thrown in solitary confinement.
So if you just say Cholmo, vatsal land you in solitary confinement. How long? Maybe a week. Shit. Jeez. Yeah. That’s so how Yeah.
That’s so crazy that they protect pedophiles.
Yeah. Now I I’m I don’t wanna sound like I’m too liberal or something, but they have to. Because if left to their own devices, these guys would get so fucked up by the general population who are outraged by their crimes and are also outraged by the fact that a lot of them a lot of them got special treatment in their sentencing.
So you see this guy that Biden just pardoned or gave clemency to. Let’s hope it was just clemency and not a pardon. My god. But these sex offenders are getting lighter sentences than the drug dealers or the bank robbers. And if you look at a system of punishment that’s supposed to be just and fair, hopefully, always tempered with mercy, You’d like to think that there’s equal application of the law and that there’s some sort of fairness and that when you measure the victims of the certain ai, that that should be a part of the sentencing.
So drug dealers would argue a lot of it ai and they’re right. Their stuff was nonviolent. These guys really harm children. The ones that touch children, not the ones who just looked at at the pornography.
How did they justify you being in this high security prison? Like, why would they put you in with pedophiles and murderers and gangbangers? Why would they do that? Obviously, to squeeze you, but how do they how do they how do they pass that through?
You get anybody who gets a sentence of over 10 years has to do ai, and you can’t be in a camp. So and if any and certain people can’t be in camps. For example, any kind of violent offender cannot be in a camp. Pedophiles cannot be in a camp. That’s good. And camps don’t have, you know, fences. There’s not iron gates that lock you in.
I mean, I went from a 50,000 square foot governor’s mansion to a 6 foot by 8 foot prison cell. I mean, it’s real prison like in the movies. Those iron gates shut you in, you know, and you’re restricted in your movements. And you’re with some badass guys. You know?
I mean, they’re interesting guys, and I met a lot of guys I really liked. But, they did it because they purposely gave me a sentence above 10 years to force me to go into a shithole prison and to try not just squeeze me, but to punish me. And the punishment was because I had the temerity to fight back. You know, who is this guy?
He was only twice elected governor of the 5th largest state to challenge us, and I fought back. And, you know, frankly, the beauty of it is that had I not fought back the way I did, Trump would have never known me. He saw me on television fighting back. I mean, I fought back in ways that predated him the way he does. And it wasn’t by design.
It was just Sai felt like, Jesus, I didn’t do anything wrong, and they know it. This is politics. And, you know, this is wrong, bad for our country. I can’t give into this. And by the way, if I’m right, they are criminals. I have to fight back. And so I was on all these TV shows, everything.
And Trump saw me in the David Letterman show, I think. And, and ai the way, when they do this to you and they arrest you like they did, they arrested me at 6 o’clock in the morning in my house. And, it was a super sensational press conference. It was international news. Back then in December of 2008, there were 2 assholes in the the 2 biggest assholes in the world were me and Bernie Madoff because they arrested him, like, a day or 2 after me.
I remember this. Wow. And, and it was you know, I Ai just had to fight back, and so I was. And but you can’t make a living. You you have they they threw me out of office, and you learn who your friends are in politics and not a single one of them.
You know, they all ran for the hills to protect themselves. They all voted to throw you out and, because the politics of it was was bad at that time.
Boy, that’s a time where podcasts would have come in handy. Yes. Imagine you can go on a podcast and just lay out the whole case and exactly what’s going on and even play tapes. It would
Can’t play tapes. I’ll tell you why.
You could never because they were recorded?
Because they put a court seal on it. They arrested me. They play me saying this is fucking gold, and I give it enough for nothing. But they don’t play what comes after it.
Right? If it says I want a $100,000,000 in a Swiss bank account, which, by the way, the current governor Pritzker would called me to ask me to make him senator because he inherited $1,000,000,000. That’s the one you’d sell it to. Right. But if I said that, that would be a crime, but there was none of that. They covered that up.
So they get they go to court a couple of days after I’m arrested, and they go before their judge, and they get a sealed order. They put a gag on it so the tapes cannot be played publicly in court, and you I can’t talk about what’s on those tapes Wow. Unless it comes from my independent recollection. I can’t release them. It’s a crime.
You can’t talk about what’s on those tapes unless it comes from your own personal recollection. Right. So you can Yes. Talk about the tapes. You just can’t play ai. Correct. And you can’t quote them.
I can quote what I remember personally, and I remember some of it, of course. But
At least you could have laid out your version of it so people could hear it, and it would put pressure on them.
And I was doing it not on podcast, but I was doing it on the Today Show, Good Morning America, CBS Morning, Nightline, Dateline.
shows is there’s it’s such a short segment.
You don’t have enough time to lay out the environment, how it works, what what really goes on in politics, how you know, what is what’s normal for how these deals are ram.
Well said. Yes. Exactly right.
So this person that Obama wanted, whatever happened to that person?
She became, like, a top adviser for Obama in the White House. Now there’s a school of thought. There’s a theory that may that’s plausible. Obama publicly said he did not send this labor guy to meh. But Balanoff, the the emissary, in two trials testified twice under oath that he that Obama called him.
Obama then was interviewed by the FBI the day or 2 after I was arrested. And if you lie to the FBI, they call them 3 o twos, these interviews, it’s a crime. But I’ve learned that the FBI is really the FBI ai. And you sit down like I did stupidly. You talk to these people. They say you lied and you say they lied.
Who are you gonna believe if you’re a jury? Right? It’s a big mistake to ever trust them, to be honest. So my advice, anybody out there who’s getting chased by the FBI, don’t talk to them. And I I thought they were the good guys, so I sat down and talked to them. Well, Obama talked to them.
And every defendant is entitled to relevant evidence that could help him or her defend themselves against criminal prosecution. But to this day, they would never give us Obama’s 3 o twos. So did Obama really send this guy like that guy testified ai? Or did Obama not do it like he publicly said he did? He said he didn’t do it. So somebody’s lying. Somebody broke a law.
Either Balinoff’s lying and he purged himself at 2 ai, or Obama is lying on those FBI 30 twos, or he lied, which is a crime, or he lied to the public, which all too often politicians do all the ai, and Obama’s one of them who does it a lot.
He does it a lot. Balanoff, this guy, what would be his motivation for saying that Obama wanted you to do that?
The theory is, among a lot of political insiders who know how it works, that he was an emissary for Rahm Emanuel, who became Obama’s chief of staff. He’s a member of congress. I had a pretty good relationship with him. He’s all over the FBI tapes
with me. And so that Obama never said anything about it, but Rahm Emanuel said something to him.
Rahm Emanuel asked him to do it and instructed him to tell him that Barack himself had asked him to come. This is just a theory. A theory. And the theory is plausible in that. What would be the motivation for Rahm to do that? Was that as the new chief of staff with Obama and in the power game of politics, which is something he knows real well and I know, is people wanna be close to the king.
And Jarrett Valerie Jarrett was Michelle Obama’s best friend, and she was a threat to the influence of of Rahm and others. And if you get her kicked upstairs to the US sana, she won’t be in Rahm’s way to have more of a voice and more say in Obama in the direction of Obama’s administration.
Now this is a theory. It’s a theory.
So what’s day 1 like in prison?
Mhmm. I write about that in detail in my book. It’s like chapter 3 or chapter 4.
Have you published this book yet?
No. It’s coming out. It’s gonna come out, I hope by spring. I hope I get it done. I’m almost done.
You have a publisher and everything?
So I’d it’s interesting, the politics of the publishing companies. I’ve presold about over 8,000 already. I haven’t even put it out for presale yet. I’m about to do it. Blago something books. Rod Blago books or something. Haven’t done it meh. But, but I presold some to people, you know, friends and others, about 8,000 of them already.
So it’s helped me be able to, like, self publish and create my own little publishing company. And the reason I’m compelled to do it is because I’ve gone to some of the New York publishing houses, and they are so anti Trump that if you say something nice about Trump and he comes across really well in my book.
I was on his show. He was great to me. He’s a kind guy. I’ll tell you stories about him if you want. He pulled me out of there.
You know, I love Donald Trump for a lot of reasons, of course, because he gave my daughters their father back. So he I write well about him. He comes across very well. Obama doesn’t come across so good. He doesn’t come across as evil, but he comes across sai very selfish, very, you know, calculating politician who missed an opportunity to be a great president instead of ai our country and who’s a snake and an Ingrid and who sold out his friend Saloni Resco who bought him a lot.
This guy bought him a lot next to a mansion that he bought after he was elected in the United States senate. Obama’s, at that time, only had $750,000 they could afford for a mansion. They wanted to buy the adjoining lot in this real upper class neighborhood called Kenwood, Ai Park neighborhood in Chicago ai Obama’s library.
And they didn’t they couldn’t afford the other lot, so they but he went to his friend Resco. Obama did. And Resco is a kindhearted person, and he wants to help his friend Obama. So he pays, like, 7 he pays the list price, like $750,000 for the lot. The Obamas paid less for the lot with the improvement on the big mansion. Obama now is running for president. That comes out. He’s gotta fix his political problem.
He goes to Resco, and he says, I gotta put a fence between the lot and the mansion. So I could explain to the media that, it’s your lot, not mine. Right? And he prefers he asks for a wrought iron fence, not just any old fence, not a chain link fence. He wants a wrought iron fence because it matches the mansion. And then he has Resco a bill for $13,000 for the ram wrought iron fence.
And then when Resco suffers for 3 years in solitary confinement because he won’t lie about Obama or me, he sends a letter to the federal sentencing judge saying they’re squeezing him to say stuff about both of us. Makes the front page of the Chicago Tribune in August 2008 that he won’t do it. They put him in solitary confinement for 3 years.
For 3 years, he saw the sun 1 hour a day. And then when he got out of there, he does he tries to do a burp beep, and he faints because he’s so skinny and so weak after 3 years of that. And this fucking Obama did nothing to help him. Jesus. It’s unbelievable. So opposite of the kind of guy Trump is.
I mean, I didn’t do anything for Trump, but he helped me. He just sai something wrong. And I think he I think he kinda liked me on Celebrity Apprentice. He liked the way I was fighting back. I know that. But he fired me on that show and freed me from prison. He’s historic.
He fired and freed the same guy. Evan Lincoln didn’t do that.
Do you have hope it’s gonna be overturned Mhmm. In an appeal? Like, what are you thinking when you get in there?
Yeah. Boy, it’s a great question. Look. The hardest period during this whole thing was the months after the conviction to the day that you surrender because now you know you’re going away, and you’re fearful it’s gonna be long. In fact, days a couple of months before the sentence came down, I’m jogging. I’m running through the neighborhoods, and I see that was newspapers back then.
It’s a newspaper box, front page, big tyler picture of me. I see it. I’m running past it. I saw the headline briefly. I came back running a place.
I see it. 30 years to life. The prosecutors are asking for 30 years to life on me. Life.
I never took a penny. They don’t even say I took a penny. It was all talk about politics. So Ai you know, that I got home faster. That that sort of stuff quickens your pace a little bit. You know? Yeah. But though that period was the hardest. The moment I stepped into bryden, Ai write in the in my book, that one advantage of crossing the threshold in the prison was that with every now, with every tick of the clock, you’re one second closer to this nightmare, this Kafka’s nightmare finally being over, one second closer to coming home to your daughters and to your ai, even though it might be 14 years and one less second.
You know what I mean? But you’re you’re at least it’s starting now.
You’ve hit that bottom, and now you’re trying to meh climate back up just from a time point of view. But that first day, I’ll work backwards. I’ll never forget the first night after that long, long day that I that I went through. You know, the media was covering me like I was OJ Simpson.
They were at my house at 6 5:30 in the morning when I kissed my little girls goodbye. My little Annie Saloni was 8 years old at the time. She’s in her pajamas, sai she hugs and squeezes me. And my daughter, Amy, she was a sophomore in high school. She was 15. And we’re all in the foyer.
It’s all dark because you got all these media trucks around your house. We live in a neighborhood, a normal neighborhood, just not gated, and they’re all over the place. And so they look into your house, so we had to keep the lights off, Kiss my wife goodbye, my 2 daughters.
Hardest thing I’ve ever do did was saying goodbye to them. But you gotta be strong for them, and you can’t you can’t show those assholes in the media that you’re dying sai. So you gotta be strong when you step out. Sai ai of film footage of that when I left. And there’s a helicopter that follows me, news helicopter from my house all the way to O’Hare Airport in Chicago. Like, I was OJ Simpson in that white Bronco.
I called the chapter ai white Bronco moment. And, and then when I got on the at the airport, there was this big gaggle of media there. And then when I get on the plane, these motherfuckers ai on the plane. They bought tickets. So I can’t even, like, you know, get give it a second to think about what just happened, me saying goodbye to my family.
And I’ll be gone for, worst case scenario, 14 years. But if I behave myself, it’ll be 12 and a half years. Right? Good behavior. And then I land in Denver, and they’re there. And so I’m trying to leave the plane. They’re all waiting there at the gate.
And then they the people in Denver were really nice at the at, the ai. I think it was United Airlines. And they got me out a side door, and they they had a car waiting. So I was able to leave. And for a moment, I thought I was away from the media as I’m about to drive to prison. But, no, they caught us. They got up.
They caught up with us. And I got there a little bit early to prison, so I told my one of my lawyers who was driving me, you know what? We’re ai a half an hour early. I’m already giving him 14 years. I don’t wanna give him 30 minutes more. Let’s stop for a cup of coffee or something.
So Sai went to this little restaurant, a little fast food place called Freddy’s in Denver, the Denver area, Littleton, Colorado. And, it was really surreal because, you know, people knew who I was, and they were really warm and loving. I’m signing autographs. You’d never know.
I’m about to go to prison for 14 years. And and then the time came to to walk in, and I learned later that Trump was watching this because it was all live on television. And and he had tweeted about it that day. I mean, I I got a million reasons why I love Donald Trump. I was so alone.
Everybody, a prominence in politics and government and in the media, you know, were, you know, you were calling me all these nasty things. And here’s Trump, the only guy with who had, like, a some authority and had a following. He was the only guy saying, like, positive things about me.
They were compassionate. Didn’t he wasn’t necessarily saying. He was saying that I denied it and I wasn’t you know, I’m entitled to a, you know, presumption of innocence. But there was compassion with Ram, and he tweets that day. You know, I learned later. I didn’t know what that meant. I learned when I came ram.
They tweeted that I see him walking into prison against 14 years. Murders and rapists get 4 years. Do you think this is justice? I don’t. Just a loyal guy to a guy that was on his show because I don’t really know him that well.
But just just as to me sai a lot about who he is as a person. But then I walked in, and I get greeted by all these inmates. And I was a people ask, were you afraid? I wasn’t afraid of anything. You know, my life was so, you know, beaten down by what they did.
I was so disillusioned. I was angry. There was bitterness, but I was mostly heartbroken and sad. Missing my children, fearful meh children, my wife. They were left alone.
I couldn’t protect them. People knew where we lived. The media made sure that everybody saw where we lived because they were always in front of our house. I was worried about their safety. I knew I had all those years to do.
And, now I’m in prison, and all these guys are watching me coming into their world on live television. So I had 2 things going for me in terms of how my my stock with the fellow inmates. Number 1, I was a quasi you know, sort of a so I was a celebrity inmate. They just saw me coming to the prison.
Nobody gets walks into prison live TV. And the bigger part the more important part was I got a what they call a 14 piece. That’s the vernacular of how inmates talk. He got a 14 piece. Means he didn’t snitch on anybody.
See, anybody who gets a long sentence means they’re getting punished because they wouldn’t talk about anybody. The guys ai walk in with light sentences become immediately suspect by the inmates. It’s the culture there as snitches, and they hate the snitches. Snitches are bitches who meh stitches. Right? That’s what they said. Sure. So I walked in there, and I had immediate street cred with those guys.
And they were they were nice to me. They actually gathered together what little beans they had and and went to the commissary to get the necessities ram my 1st speak, toothbrush, toothpaste, shower shoes, just a gent very nice kind thing to, you know, me. These were drug dealers and bank robbers and, you know, tough ai. I’ll tear it up. Tough guys.
You know, their gangs would be tattered on their heads and stuff or on their, you know, ai.
Did you have to join a gang?
I write about I write about how the crucial officers wanted me to actually join the the white group, the Aryan Brotherhood guys.
The correctional officers. Why why did they want you to do it?
So I in this one of the chapters, the early chapters, it’s, I wasn’t in prison for 27 hours before I broke my first prison rule, and they called me in Maple Goyevich, you know, report to the lieutenant’s office. And I had to be they explained to meh. This sai the my first full day. There was a my saloni day there.
It’s after my first full day when I walked in, and I got a chance to see the prison yard. And I walked around the yard with a couple of black ai, 1 of both from Illinois, 1 from the south side of Chicago, gang banger drug dealer. Name was Slim. And another guy named Walter Hill from East Sana Louis, Illinois. And, I was their governor, and they were really nice to me.
And we walked around the track, and we were talking about and I was interested in the facilities. You know? One of the things I was determined to do in prison was to work out a lot and to read a lot. And, eventually, I read the ai a lot. Like, if you wanna talk about that at some point because that was so meaningful to me.
But they called me in the next day because the word got out that I was walking the track with black ai, and it was explained to me by the the authorities there that prison’s a very segregated place, that the that the unwritten policy in order to keep order is that people need to be part of their their own cars.
They called it. The euphemism for gangs in prison is cars. What car do you ride with ride in? And that they thought that for my own safety, that, number 1, I shouldn’t be, you know, walking around with black guys. I need to be part of a car, and I need to join the white car and go see these 2 guys, Cole and Sadness. Sadness. Sadness. Sadness.
His name was I thought it was Sadness too. Exactly. Because I’m looking around. Who’s sadness? Who’s sadness? I’m looking for sadness. Right?
His name was Sandness, and Cole was the leader. I think he was from Texas. And, they so they told me that I should go see them. And so out of respect for the the police officer, the correctional officers, I I said, okay. I’ll go see him, but I made it clear to them. Listen.
I don’t give a fuck because they told me, look. When you get into a conflict with somebody, and it’s inevitable because you’re in prison with a bunch of guys for a long time, there’s gonna be all kinds of disputes. You want the window open. The other guy wants it closed. You didn’t put the weight back in the weight room like he would have wanted.
There’s all kinds of shit that’s gonna have the conflict that develop between guys living close like that. The way we keep order is we keep the races and the and the different ethnic groups separated. They all become part of their individual cars. You sit with them in a commissary. I mean, at the cafeteria, they call it the chow hall. You, you work out with them. You walk the track with them.
You ai to the other groups, but you don’t really get friendly with them. Because if you have a conflict with somebody, your car will protect you, especially if it becomes a conflict with somebody from another race or another group of people. In the prison I was in, there were a lot of black guys, a lot of Latinos, a lot of guys from Mexico, seen a lot of drug cartel people, a lot of Native Americans.
There were Pacific Islanders, and, of course, white guys and sex offenders. They were their own group. And so they all pretty much, you know, rode in their own cars, the separate cars. But I told them I’m not look. I don’t fear anybody.
If somebody wants to fucking kill me here, in some ways, ai put put me out of my misery. I’m not gonna be doing some, you know, ai thing like that. It just you know, it’s racist. I’m not doing that. I’m sana whoever’s nice to me, I’m gonna be nice to them. And I speak your rules. I won’t sit with the black guys or with any Latino guys.
I’ll sit with the white ai. But I’m not gonna unless you’re ordering me to tell me and telling me I can’t walk with those guys or talk to these guys, I’m gonna keep doing it. And they sai, well, we can’t do that because this is an unwritten way that we operate and keep order in prison.
And then they told me something, which I respected. They said, look. You’re not in the real world here anymore. This is not a place where you could be a civil rights advocate or an activist, a civil right activist. This is prison.
You don’t have the same rights here that you have out there. We can’t order you not to have relationships or conversations with people from another race, but we can’t order you to, you know, to stop doing stuff that could be counterproductive to us keeping safety. So if you’re gonna sit with somebody outside your race in the chow hall, that’s a direct affront to us.
And there are measures that we can take to make sure that you don’t do those sorts of things. And I respected the fact that they said it was to keep order and it was the culture and pretty much everybody in the prison system accepts it anyway. Eventually, I sat with some of the black guys as time went bryden, and we actually made a little an elder black guy by the name mister p.
He was originally from Chicago and from Detroit. He was ai the most respected inmate. He got a 25 year sentence. He looked like Morgan Freeman, the actor. He was a lot like him, actually. Very mature, responsible. He was the guy a lot of the guys went to for their legal questions because he knew everything.
A real nice man and a gentleman. And by the time I got there, he had already done, like, 20 something years. So he was close to going home. Ai stay up late at night with him talking in that in the, in the, dormitory portion of the prison where you you where I was first before I got my cell.
But it was important to him that before he left, after 20 something years, that he could actually sit at the ai hall with a white guy. And he liked me because I was, you know, the from Chicago. And, so we did that one day. And I thought it was good. We you know, it was probably I was there probably a year and a half by the time we did that. And I sat there, and everybody looked at us.
You know? We’re sitting there. I’m sitting at the black table. And then this great movement for civil disobedience and civil rights petered out. No one gave a fuck. Really?
Yeah. Yeah. It didn’t matter at all.
Well, was it because that guy was so speak?
Yeah. I think that was a lot of it. Mhmm. And, you know, I you know, that’s not everybody likes you. Some people really dislike it, and there were guys in prison who really didn’t like me. But for the most part, I had a lot of you know, I I had little approval ratings after I got arrested before before and as they were investigating me when I was governor, but I had pretty high approval ratings in prison with my fellow inmates.
So, how did you get into the ai? Because that that was a big part of your conversation with Tucker.
Yeah. You know? Well, you know, so that that first night, you know, when they it’s the stark reality really hit me that first ai. When around 10 o’clock at night, I hear this big boom, and then you hear the gates shutting because they were now locking you in. It’s all ai, and it’s loud. Fuck. And then the lights go down. The lights are out.
Now suddenly you’re you’re swallowed up in blackness and darkness, and we’re locked in. Iron bars. You can’t get out. And here I am with all these prisoners, inmates. You know? And I just left my family at 5:30 in the morning. I’m not going home tonight or tomorrow night or next week or next month or next year.
Right? God willing, I win my appeal, but that might be 3 years. But even that, I was fearful after seeing their criminal justice system, how rigged it was. Deep down, I knew I was a dead man. I knew that from the beginning when they when they did what they did. I just felt Sai had to fight.
Do you think there’s anything you could have done that would have gotten you out of all of this?
I could have plead guilty and got less of a sentence. There’s no doubt about that.
But what about if you just when they came to you with that senator, if you sai, sure. We’ll hook that up. It
no. No. No. I I don’t think that was They
were still coming for you?
And they wanted me to they wanted me to snitch on Obama. And they they arrested me at 6 in the morning, and they that’s sai I read about that too in my house. SWAT teams. 24 member SWAT team around my house. I’m the sitting governor of the 5th largest state in America. I’ve got a security security detail of my own.
But if 4 hours later, I’m in their while I’m in their custody, it’s good cop time, and they’re not being nice to me. You know, you’re not a bad guy. We hear all these tapes. You’re just a part of Chicago politics. We think you can help us.
We’d like you to talk about the Obama. We know he wanted to make a deal with you. Stuff like that, they’re telling me. It sai clear what they wanted to do. And I I said, look. I didn’t do anything wrong. And as far as I know, he didn’t either.
There’s really nothing to talk about. And and then they their mood changed, and they sent me to another facility, and they put me in this little cell. And, they had me next to this angry guy that was all fucked up on PCP or something. It was ai a raging or wild animal to send me a message. You know? And, they I think what they they were never gonna go after Obama.
But what they wanted to do was they wanted to go to him and say Ai was willing to cooperate against Obama and then leverage that and have Obama then that tell him, look. Just leave us alone. Let us get this guy. Keep us in office. We just get sworn in on January 20th. Don’t bring in new US attorneys.
Don’t bring Democratic US attorneys and keep us Bush US attorneys here. And, you leave you stay out of this, and we’ll leave you alone. That’s what I think.
Yes. Moves and counter moves and
People arya used as pawns.
Correct. Their political power centers, and here’s the danger to the American people and to our democracy. They’re not supposed to be that. They’re supposed to do justice. They’re supposed to go out for a real crime.
They’re not supposed to be a political power center.
You know, Democrats, Republicans, independents, libertarians, yes. House members, senate members, the executive branch presidents, yes. The Supreme Court and the courts, yes. Checks and balances. Ai Fathers had the wisdom to create a system like that because they know the corruptibility of man. Power corrupts sana absolute power corrupts absolutely, so they divided power.
That’s the beauty and genius of what they did in this country. They did not foresee coming out of the executive branch would be this tumor, this cancer that really started picking up steam in the 19 twenties, federal law enforcement, and that it would grow and that the tactics and the methods they used to go after Al Capone or later on, you know, Carlos Escobar and El Chapo and people like that that they would actually use against governors and presidents.
They didn’t foresee that. The problem is as a practical matter, because they have such power, the politicians are scared shitless of them. They don’t wanna stand up to them because they’re afraid these people will trump up shit against them and just make shit up or get something they might have may have done and made it bigger.
Knows how the game is played, so everybody has to play the game. Correct.
And then when you get you’re the one on the wrong end of it. All your friends in politics, they run for the hills. They abandon you. And then all of a sudden, they’re kissing your ass the day before you’re arrested, and the next day, they’re maligning the shit out of you.
Isn’t it ai of the same thing? Ai mean, that’s what they do whenever anybody gets in trouble in Hollywood.
Yeah. Yeah. Well, that’s just cowards.
lot of cowards, and a lot of people have a reason to be cowards. It’s fearful. They’re scared. Yeah. It’s a dangerous system, especially the justice system. It’s it’s seems very dangerous. And and this is not to malign good people because there’s there’s I know people I’ve met people in the FBI.
I met great people in the CIA. I know them. They’re great people. That’s it’s it’s just what you were saying. Absolute power corrupts absolutely.
And when people get into positions of power and influence in this this chess game, so it’s getting played, they can make all sorts of rationalizations if there’s no checks and balances. This is why there has to be checks and balances and there has to be oversight to keep people from their own devices, to keep people from their own horrible instincts that we have as human beings, especially if you’ve done some shady shit because other people have done some shady shah.
And that’s how everybody sort of work their way up the ladder. And then all of a sudden, you get to a position where, like, hey, you’re you’re gonna have to do something that you really don’t agree with, but this is how the game is played. And then next thing you know Right. Rob’s in jail.
Yeah. It’s like your chief of staff and your governor’s lawyer and all your friends who your people have worked in with you and and got rich on you.
Their choices I have to look at my little boy who’s 3 years old and his future, or do I protect, try to defend my boss?
Of course. And they make the decision, understandably, for their families.
Yeah. Well and I think a lot of people go into whether it’s politics or law enforcement or into the federal government. There’s a lot of people that go into with very good intentions.
But then you see over time, they get corrupted by the environment that they’re in.
That’s right. They become part of a buddy system. It happens with politicians all the time. You get elected back home in Austin, Texas, and they go to Washington. You get co opted by the system because you’re young and you don’t really know or you’re new and you don’t know.
They show you the ropes, and the ropes are controlled by that deep state, that establishment, you know, of of the long term members of congress, the people in the different agencies, the staffers. Mhmm. And it’s a whole different world there, and it’s basically them against us. There there is a deep state in state government, federal government.
It’s really almost Given law enforcement.
I mean, especially corrupt law enforcement. Did you ever see that meh? What is it? District ai? Is it pre precinct 75?
The 57. Is that what it is? The ai or the 57? There’s a gentleman named Mike Dowd. We had him on the podcast as well. And, you know, 7 ai. 75. On 1st day, he’s a cop. He watches the cops kill a guy. And, you know, they they essentially say to him, he jumped.
Right? And, like, he was ai, okay. He jumped. It’s ai one of those situations where, like, okay. I guess this is this business that I’m a part of now.
I wanted to be a cop, now I’m a cop. Yeah. And then he runs with it. Next thing you know, he’s selling drugs and kidnapping people. It’s a fucking crazy documentary. He’s a fun guy. I mean, it’s, obviously, did terrible things, went to jail, but the documentary is so fucking crazy.
The ai. Right? The 57? 75. 75. 75. Why can’t what am I you just told me. That’s it.
That’s a meh. Michael Dowd. Yeah. It’s fantastic. It’s a really good meh. And, you know, you just ai, like, Jesus. Obviously, the cocaine crisis in Miami is another great example of that. And one of the best documentaries about that is, Cocaine Cowboys.
Fantastic meh. Sai can’t recommend it enough. One graduating class of the police academy in Miami, they all either went to jail or were murdered. The entire graduating class. That’s how corrupt it was. Yeah. It was just off the charts, cocaine and money everywhere, chaos and murder everywhere.
Yeah. Yeah. You see that here again, the stuff we’re talking about, it’s so important that this justice system gets reformed. So excited about the fact that Trump the people he’s picking, Pam Bondi, he’s a great person, he’s got a good record, Patel. Because if we don’t trust the criminal justice system, when you tell me a story about those dirty cops, and I’m sure that’s absolutely what they were and that those who prosecuted them were right to do it.
Oh, they definitely were. Yeah. They were dirty cops.
if you don’t trust those prosecutors? Right. Ai. Suddenly, the whole system breaks down. You can’t trust anything. Ai much at stake in this. I failed to tell you what that first night was like in that first day. And I just should wrap it up very quickly. But, you know, there I was in this darkness and so all alone and so heartbroken, so fearful and worried about my kids and my wife and what it was like for them.
Imagining in my ai, my wife comforting my daughters as if I had died because I kinda did. I was gone. They were gonna grow up without their father.
So all of that’s going through my mind. And then I I reached for the bible, you know, that my wife gave me to leave for bryden, take with me to prison. They don’t let you bring anything else in, but they’ll let you bring the bible in. I’ve always had a belief in ai. I always believed in prayer.
I was raised in the Serbian Orthodox Christian Church, but I never read the bible. I was just so busy trying to get ahead in life. You know, I had to go out and make campaign promises, give speeches, kiss babies, shake hands, raise money. I tried Genesis. I get stuck at Genesis, so and so’s beginning sai and so. Ai put this on the side. I can’t right.
Now suddenly, here I am in this deep fucking dark valley, and I’m facing 14 years of this. I’m so alone. I’m not gonna fuck around with Genesis or Deuteronomy or Leviticus or any of that stuff. I’m going to something right away that might give me some hope. And I went to the 23rd Psalm. The Lord is my shepherd, I shall not want. It makes me lie down in green pastures.
And then I kept reading the Psalms, and I know the story of David. And I associate myself with him. I know I meh criticized and maligned by people in the media for saying I’m like David. I’m not saying I’m not. I’m not saying I am.
I’m simply saying I looked at his example, and I got strength from that because he was being chased by Saul, and he’s ai the caves for, like, 11 years or chasing him. Thinking he endured that, maybe there’s hope. And I’d read his Psalms because they’re just prayers to god is what they are from him, and they were helpful to me.
So I kept reading, and I went to Isaiah and the fiery furnace of affliction and how adversity and hard times is god’s way of testing us. It can make us stronger and better. We learned through those hard lessons, the fiery of you know, through the fire of hard tyler. And, of course, then, eventually, the gospels. And the best story of all in my mind as a Christian is the story of Jesus.
And and here he is in the Garden of Gethsemane, and he’s saying to god because he’s so afraid because he knows what’s coming, what they’re gonna do to him. And he says, oh, father, please lift this cup for me. I mean, I I get choked up just thinking about this. And he says, but no, god. No, father.
Not my will. Your will. And then he steals himself for what he’s gotta face, takes on all those suffering that he goes through and the humiliation, everything else. So I read it every day for 2,896 days, and I know it in a way I never knew it before. And I love it, and it it brought me so much closer to god. And there were moments as crazy as it sounds, and I’m not running for anything.
So I’m not here to try to, like, win Christian evangelical votes or anything. But there were moments years into the process, not those first early years because they were so hard. But after I was there for, you know, 6 year 6, year 7, and I’d read the Ai like that every day.
And I was really working out, and I was reading a lot of other books. And Ai get visits maybe a couple ai. You know, in the beginning, it was ai 2 or 3 times a year in the beginning. And then as time went by, it was hard for our daughters, and I would encourage them not to come because they were in school.
And we were hopeful that we get justice in the courts, and only another few more months the appellate court will come through, don’t come. So now suddenly Ai seeing less and less of them. But I’d have moments, and I was lucky because I was in Colorado, which is a beautiful place with great weather and blue skies and snow capped foothills of the rockies.
That’s where the prison was. And I and then when it would rain, there’d be rainbows. I believe these are godly things, and I’d sometimes get done with a run or something. And I’d walk through I’d walk that track stretching a little bit, and I’d see that beautiful rainbow. And I can almost feel the presence of god.
I know it sounds like bullshit, but people don’t know that. But when you’ve been beaten down so much and you’re so fucking alone, I looked for God, and I really believe I found him. And I feel like I’m at a place now ai I’m grateful in a weird way for that experience. I wish it never happened, and I have bitterness still.
And I hate the motherfuckers that did it to me, and I know I’m not supposed to hate them. I’m supposed to forgive them. I’m not that good a Christian. I hate them motherfuckers. They belong in jail. But I have to say that that experience, reading the Ai that way, maybe it serves a higher purpose.
Maybe in some ways, you know, it was it was good for me.
Well, I think you got the most out of that horrific situation in that regard. Right? And sometimes you have to experience horrific tragedy to experience incredible love. That’s a weird thing to think of, but I think this battle that we have constantly with good and evil and it’s a it’s a real thing.
And that it’s ai in your darkest deepest moments is when you you recognize a truth. There’s something there that we all every culture believes in a higher power. It’s very strange, isn’t it? Like, almost every culture, like, almost every culture has some sort of belief system about a higher power. This is something you could sai.
You you could be very cynical, and you could say that’s just human beings looking for order in an orderless chaotic place and that your creativity and your inquisition your your your inquisitive nature rather leads you to constantly search for a daddy in the sky. You could say that.
But I’ve talked to too many people that have had these sort of like, you’ve had these breakthrough moments in life where you you you come into contact with something by opening yourself up to it. And it’s so cynical dis to disregard that. Everybody wants to pretend that they’re smarter than they really are. It’s a terrible trait that we all have.
And that prevents you from and especially secular people, atheists, people that are, like, acknowledged atheists, prevents you from even considering the idea that there’s something to this that you’re not getting. And your simple little mind, your your your desire for order and to to look at this and go, no. You just live and you die.
Well, you you don’t really know. You should probably listen to some people that have had profound experiences because there’s been a lot of them, and there’s been a lot of them throughout human history.
And to just completely dismiss them as all nonsense, it’s just ai that’s such a cynical perspective on human beings. And then there’s also the fact that, look, I’m I’m not saying bad things have bryden done in the name of religion because they most certainly are.
People have been slaughtered. Wars have been started. People have been demonized and othered to the point where you’re allowed to kill them because they believe the wrong thing. It’s it’s not universally good, but it’s a scaffolding for ethics and morals that I think shapes society in a way that’s not really possible with just anarchy.
You know, you need law and order. You need something you believe in. Mhmm. That’s what keeps us together. Mhmm. But you could be a brilliant intelligent person who’s just unusually compassionate, live your whole life without religion, and still be an excellent contributor to society.
But, god, the people that I’ve met and one of the things about coming to Texas is Ai meet so many avowed Christians, so many so many, like, really proud and intelligent and vocal religious people. And they’re some of the nicest people, like, you could ever meh. Like, a real Christian.
Like, I’ve met some real Christians, like this, my friend, Saloni, who runs a homeless, like, a rehabilitation community here in Austin.
It’s ai the guy is just a real Christian. I mean, he lives with these people.
He’s just, like, really walking in the morning. He’s not doing it for money. He’s not ai have a megachurch. He doesn’t drive a Rolls Royce. He’s a regular person who really is acting like like the Christian from the Ai, like the best example Mhmm. Of a Christian from the Bible.
Bible talks about false prophets because people are human nature.
Yeah. There’s a lot of us who are false prophets.
Yeah. Well but, I mean, some of these we call them in prison jailhouse Jesuses. Some of these guys
they’d walk around their ai, tote their bible, and they were stealing. You know, and rip you off.
We we talk about that. We talked about that in terms of psychedelics the other day, the spiritual narcissism. I think the same sort of spiritual narcissism that encompasses these preachers that talk in front of stadiums, fill up people, and fly private jets, and drive Rolls Royces.
That’s the same sort of thing as a guru who wants to take you to the jungle to give you drugs or, you know, someone who wants you to join their sex cult or someone who wants you to join their yoga thing where no one no one works anymore, and you all grow your own food, and this is your guru.
You know, there’s a shit ton of documentaries on these folks.
That’s the false prophet.
a it’s a danger. It’s a real danger that we have in looking for someone smarter than us. It’s a it’s a normal pattern of behavior from tribal societies. All tribal societies had the wisest person who was the leader. This is the person that everybody trusted. He’s the guy with the most scars.
He knows where the food is. He knows how to get the fuck away from the enemies. He knows how to keep order, and he’s reasonable in how he governs the village and they and until someone overthrows him, that’s your guy. And we have this hierarchy that we look for in everything. You know. We really do. We we look for it in all sorts of things.
And if we find it in a false prophet, we’ll go with it. There’s some I bought a building out here, you know. Ai my podcast ram my comedy club is in a place called the Ritz Theater. It’s this beautiful theater from 1927. But before that, I had bought another building that was owned by a cult. It was a building called the One World Theater. I didn’t buy it.
I was under contract for it. I spent a bunch of money and got out of it because I watched the documentary on the cult. Sai was like, oh, my God. It was a guy who was a gay porn star and a hypnotist who started this cult in West Hollywood and then after Waco popped off, this guy had to escape from West Hollywood because they were looking for him.
Because, you know, the Cult Awareness Network and they started you know, after Waco, they’re like, Jesus Christ, how many of these cults are out there?
They they they were targeting this guy. So he changed his name, moved to Austin, and built this theater. And the cult had already disbanded a bunch and my friend Ron White, the comedian, told me because he had performed that they’d he turned into a concert venue, this theater that this guy had his cult followers build him so he could dance in front of them.
It’s a beautiful 300 speak theater, gorgeous place. And, this is the same thing. It’s just a person who convinced all these other people that he had the answers, and he was a hypnotist. He was really good at fucking with people and really good at, like, talking people into certain states of ai, and they all believed in ai, and they wasted decades of their life.
That’s literally in the Ai. That’s a false prophet.
That’s right. By the way, congratulations on your magnificent success.
And you’re a comedian too.
do a lot of different things. Yeah.
Yeah. Wow. You know, I was stuck when you were on the rise. So when I came home, I didn’t know who you were. I hope you don’t kick me out of the road.
No. No. I don’t care. I’m happy now that people don’t know who I am. Yep. When I can talk to someone, they don’t know who I ram. Like, this is great.
But it wasn’t long before I got home, I would sai, within a couple of days that I got this thing called an iPhone. What’s this? And this ai, Joe Rogan, had this big deal have on this podcast. I said, Joe who? And they told meh. It it’s remarkable.
That’s crazy. So you went to jail before iPhones?
Wow. What a fascinating blip in time that is if you really look at in terms of impactfulness, like a like a piece of technology that completely changed the world. Yeah. That might be one of the most input. That’s bigger than the laptop, I think. I’d say I think it’s the most impactful.
I think the invention of the iPhone is probably one of the most impactful things human beings have ever created. Not necessarily in a great way
But sometimes in a great way
There’s a lot of great things about it, but the invention of the smartphone, for all good or bad, you missed it, and that’s really crazy.
Yeah. It’s crazy. Can I go back just briefly to the spiritual end of that?
Just I I just wanna say that look. I consider myself I think I have testicular virility. You know what I mean? I think I can
Yeah. I really do. And I know I do.
And I have a, you know, just I have a certain toughness to me. But I’ll tell you something. I wasn’t strong enough to get through prison by myself. I needed god. And it was that, my love for my daughters and my wife, I could never possibly give, and I had to survive and somehow find my way home, however long it might take.
And I had to do it in a way where I could be so strong and be constructive and actually plant seeds for a better life later on where whatever I did, my little girls can see that, you know, god forbid, when tough times come because it comes to all of us. How do you deal with those hard times? Do you embrace the adversity, try to turn into something good, or do you just give into it?
And so that gave me the purpose I needed in prison. And I speak a lot of time not just reading the Ai, but reading all kinds of books because you got time. I mean, you got a lot of time. Ai read a book three times, and I talked to this about this to Tucker Carlson called Meh Search for Meaning by a guy named Victor Frankl, a holocaust survivor who had gone through things a 1000000 times worse than anything I went through.
He lost his wife, his family through genocide. He was at Auschwitz and survived it. But he said that the last of the human freedoms after everything’s been taken from you, the last of the human freedoms is our freedom to choose our own attitude in any given set of circumstances.
And that if you could find a why to live, you could find the how. And my why was my little girls and my wife. No matter how hard this was gonna be, I had to survive this. I had to endure it, and I needed to do it in a way where it would be the best possible way to do it that could help raise my daughters from afar because I didn’t raise them.
My daughter did. I mean, my wife raised our children, our little girls. And so that gave me real purpose. And I had those moments when despair would creep in. It’s very natural. I mean, a lot of blue moments as you can imagine.
I can never ever ever let myself get so down that I would not be, you know, active in any given day. I had to go out there and, you know, run those miles and lift the weights, do push ups, whatever it was, read those books, do the stuff I would write about because I love my daughters, and I’m doing it for them.
That was my purpose. Not running for government anymore. I’m not trying to be, you know, successful in the real world because I’m not in a name more. My success, I’ll measure by whether or not I’m strong and tough and I’m productive because I’m doing this for my kids. Does that make sense?
It does. Do you think the experience of being in jail is horrible as it is made you a better person?
I like to think that it did. I think I’m more humble. I think that was never good at that.
That ai that’s what bites people in the ass. I always say that about Trump. Like, that’s what that’s also why he kept running even though everybody was coming after him. Ai, you have to be a very particular type of person that has all those legal cases thrown at him. All those I mean, if he lost and he lost those cases and then he lost the run for presidency, he very well might wind up in jail.
They they can’t have him at 82 years old trying again. You know, they they’re not interested in because he became more popular when he was gone than when he was president, and people sort of, like, towards the end of the 4 years of Biden had, like, completely reversed. So many of my friends, me included, that completely reversed how they looked at him. Yeah.
And then also a lot of it was getting exposed to watching how this propaganda machine marches in step all throughout the media with everything. You know, me in particular having turned on me during the COVID years
For being someone who got healthy without taking the vaccine, and they wanted to get me removed from Spotify. I’m like, this is crazy. This is wild to watch. And that was, you know, minor league stuff compared to what happened to him and certainly compared to what happened to you.
But just I think people are less likely to believe mainstream narratives now, and we’re so fortunate we have other ways ai Tucker shah where I saw you. Ai, things that aren’t approved, you know. I mean, look, when Tucker was on Fox News, I’m sure there was a lot of things that he wanted to cover that he couldn’t. Mhmm.
Like, there’s no way when he was on Fox News, he could’ve interviewed that guy who says he blew Obama. Right. There’s no fucking way. Yeah. This guy’s Ai Carlson is such a wild boy. He’s he’s got a guy on for, like, how long was that podcast?
Find out how long the Tucker Carlson podcast was with the guy who claims he blew blew Obama. Because just even being able to sustain a conversation with a guy who wants to talk about smoke and crack and blowing Obama, how meh how many minutes can you do? I wanna know. Like, I’d I’d be hard pressed to think I could squeeze an hour out of that guy. Like, what the fuck are you gonna talk about?
How long is that podcast? 40. Yeah. 42 minutes. Alright. He hung in there as long as he could. But ai point is, I’m not in and out again.
I’m not standing up for him having that guy on. I’m not I’m not saying that was a good thing. That’s not what I’m saying. What I’m saying is that’s what he wanted to do. You know? I watched a little of it. Yeah.
That’s what Tucker so that’s Tucker with no one telling him what to do. Mhmm. The Tucker Carlson Shah, he does whatever he wants. He interviews whoever he wants. He comes up with the questions he wants. He has real conversations that didn’t fucking exist before. Mhmm.
And now that it does does exist sana a guy like Tyler, who was the number one guy in news to begin with, now he’s independent. Along with independent journalists ai Michael Shellenberger and Matt Taibbi and
Barry Weiss and Right. Glenn Greenwald. Glenn Greenwald. These people that are honest, and you know they’re honest. They’re always honest. They’re always giving you the full version of the truth, and it speak like wildfire. And then you look at the narratives that you see in mainstream media, and, like, you’re leaving so much out. You don’t you’re not talking about that.
You’re not talking about what, why people are upset. You’re not talking about what started it. You’re not talking about the government intervention that was behind it all in the first place. Ai was a planned organization, and Ai think they leave out everything because that’s not what they’re supposed to do.
What they’re supposed to do is sell as many stories as they can, but stay within a very confined narrative.
And most of that narrative is heavily progressive, left leaning until that’s not popular anymore. And when that falls out of favor, folks, when that becomes nonprofitable, they’re gonna go the other way. The country will move more right. It’ll be more right in the media even if it becomes profitable.
Well, that’s why what you’re doing I’m not here to kiss your ass, but I am grateful for being on your show. It’s very nice of you to have me so I can talk about my stuff. But, no, this is what you’re doing and Tucker Carlson and so many of you podcasters who are out there offering another place for people to get information in the free exchange of ai, in a free country that cherishes free speech supposedly, but no longer does.
And I think most people do. People do, but the government and the power centers are the
It’s just when it’s not convenient
you go. And the the fact that there’s these rules we we should have rules that that apply across the board if we wanna progress as a society. And one of those rules, the most important rule, the reason why it’s the first amendment, you have to be able to talk about things. Right.
You have to be you’re gonna get things wrong. You’re gonna be poorly informed. You’re gonna have biased opinions. Hopefully, someone who is more informed has a more objective and more honest opinion, more accurate opinion, and then you hopefully, you’re strong enough that that resonates with you, and you can put your ego beside you and go, you know what?
This is me wanting to be right. This is my ego. The the correct thing is what these people are saying. Let me tell you why I thought what I thought and how I was wrong Mhmm. And apologize. And if we that doesn’t mean you’re weak.
It just means you, like everyone else in the world, sometimes is wrong about things. Like, I have a friend of mine. I don’t wanna say his name. Very, very nice guy. Soup one of the smartest fucking people I know. And I have these fascinating conversations with him.
And then one day, he tried to explain to me why something works in the UFC, why something else doesn’t work anymore. I go, stop. Because stop. You’re gonna ruin my opinion of you. You don’t know what the fuck you’re talking about. Don’t say this. Don’t say this to me. Right.
I’ve been working for the UFC for ai fucking years. Don’t say this to me. You don’t know what you’re saying. You’re saying nonsense. He’s like, really? I go, yes.
This is total nonsense. Here’s an example why it’s nonsense. This guy violates that rule. No one can you can’t tyler. There there’s a specific group of movements that are all designed to fuck people up.
Any one pattern can be successful given the individual and his his abilities and his competency in whatever skill set that is. There’s no one skill set. You can’t run around saying one skill set trumps all. It doesn’t work like that anymore.
This that’s interesting. I think
is brilliant people. So this is a brilliant person talking out of his ass.
Because they’re people. They have their own prejudices and their biases. Right?
That’s all they like to be smart. Smart people like to be smart.
Exactly. They wanna be the smartest guy.
Always. They’re smart about some things. What is that? There’s, like, a a term for that where, like, really intelligent people erroneously believe they’re intelligent about everything?
Socrates called it conceded ignorance. And ai the way, they made him treat the hemlock and kill him because supposedly he was corrupting the youth of Athens in Greece.
was too. He was but he was also challenging conventional thinking Yes.
Which is what we’re talking about, which is necessary in a free society.
Yes. Yeah. Dunning Kruger effect. That’s right.
Cognitive bias with individuals with high competence in one area overestimate their knowledge and abilities in unrelated fields. Yeah. It’s exactly what it is.
Well, I I don’t have that problem.
It’s super common with really good people that are very good at things. People that are very good at things, any one thing, like, if you’re a wizard at basketball
You probably think you’re way better at playing pool than you really are. You know, there’s a Interesting. There’s a lot of, like, I’m the fucking man. You know, like, if if your guy just cracking home runs every day
And someone wants to play ping pong, like, motherfucker, I’ll figure this ping pong shit out in about 5 minutes, then I’ll start fucking you up. And it’s just not true, you know. And there’s a lot of people that are really smart people, unfortunately, and this happens with tough people too.
Tough people wanna pretend they’re the only tough person. They all wanna pretend that. Everybody has this weird thing where they think they’re different than everybody else.
And that’s what leads them to be champions, but that is also what makes it incredibly difficult to come back from a devastating loss for some of these guys.
they fight a guy and, you know, they’re they’ve been the fucking man for years Yeah. And all of a sudden, they’re in there with this ai, like, oh, my god. I’m getting hurt right now. I’m getting hurt and I’m probably gonna get stopped. And you see it in their eyes. You sai, they they can’t believe it’s happening. They never envisioned a time where this guy’s gonna knock them out.
And then they’re against the cage, and you see them getting lit up and you in my mind, I’m seeing the sparks in front of their ai. Because when you get hit, you see sparks. And if you get hit with, like, a big shot, like, you can’t you don’t know where anybody is for a couple seconds. Your legs aren’t working.
I’m seeing it in this person that thought they were so good, they could fight this other person. They didn’t see it the way everybody else saw it. Mhmm. You know, they didn’t see that they were past their prime or they didn’t see that this is a bigger weight class or whatever the the variables are that lead to, ai, a devastating loss.
Yeah. Like Durant and Hearns in the eighties, the the mismatch, the ai, and Hearns knocked him out in, like, the 2nd round.
Well, yeah, that was Tommy Hearns in his prime, meh, because you gotta realize Durant did go full 12 with Hagler
When Hagler was in his prime. Right. But Hagler had a respect for Duran that I think almost was unfortunate. Because, like, Duran
He’s too small. No. He’s smart. Ai wasn’t.
Just that haggler in his ai. Durant was, like, one of the legends.
mean, the the the quitting with Sugar Ray Leonard was horrible, and it ruined his reputation. But if you could just take that fight away
And look at every look at his bodywork. What he did to Ken Buchanan when he was a lightweight Right. People don’t even understand. Roberto Duran started out his career at a 135 pounds, went up and won the middleweight title. You have to understand how fucking crazy Roberto Duran was.
When he beat Davey Moore, was that super super welterweight? It was either 154 or 160. It was a Davey Moore who was in his fucking prime.
That was in LA, wasn’t it?
I don’t know where it was. I remember I watched it on TV.
June 20, 1980. Ram Leonard in Montreal. Do you remember that?
I love Duran. I met Duran once when he was training for that Davey Moore fight in LA. Mhmm. And, what you’re saying about martial arts and boxing, there’s so many life lessons, experiencing men in the ring. I’m not here to say that I’m some great fighter like you were, but I fought the Bryden Gloves when I was in high school.
For some time, I ever got my name in the Chicago Tribune.
Last time, they were saying nice about me.
See, that’s a hard thing to do.
You’ll learn about life because you’re no teammates. It’s just you in there.
It’s ai you won the Golden Gloves, that is a very I
didn’t win the Golden Gloves. I fought in the Golden Gloves.
Yeah. Even fighting. Yeah. Even just getting into the ring, having the courage in your fucking underwear to step through those ropes with those stupid shoes on and big pads over your head, and you realize you’re gonna throw your hands at some other dude who’s trying to KO you.
Yeah. Exactly. The other dude is trying to kick your ass.
It’s such a weird feeling.
How old were you when you started?
I started fighting when I was 15.
And what was the impetus? What got you interested?
Well, I got picked on a lot. I was a small kid. Right. And I was always moving. We’re always moving to new neighborhoods.
And we moved to this new neighborhood. Nobody really hurt meh. Like, I’ll be real clear about that. I got pushed around a little bit like teenage boys do to each other, but I didn’t like it. I didn’t like it at all. And so I was like, look, I’m not growing. So it’s like, what do I what can I do to to stop this fear that I have of conflict?
I was terrified of, like, conflict with kids because I did not know what to do. I had no training, no martial arts, and the only sport I’d ever played was baseball. And so, I started doing martial arts, and I became obsessed.
Yeah. Well, I first started with karate. K. I was going to this place called Esposito’s Karate in Newton, Massachusetts.
still be there. Yeah. He was ai the town legend. He was this black belt guy who was awesome, who, taught this, like, very popular school. But I it was hard for me to get there. I didn’t have a car. I was a kid, and so I would have to take a bus and walk a mile. It was, like, too much, especially in the winter.
But I found this taekwondo place in Kenwood Square ai Kenmore Square rather in Boston, and, the t would go right to it. I’d only have to walk a mile to get to the t Yeah. And then Ai get on the t. So I ai do that every day.
Exactly. Yeah. So every day, I’d walk a mile
After school. Yeah. Soon as school’s over
I go right from my house, I’d grab my gym bag Yep. And I go to the gym. Right. I went every day. Great. So then, like, when I was in high school, I was traveling around the country fighting in tournaments. It was the weirdest shit. It’s ai I went from being terrified of fighting to, like, fighting all the ai. Like, all the time we were flying to Ohio and, you know, I couldn’t drive.
was with all these other guys and there most of them were, like, grown men and we would all go and I was competing as a grown man. I was competing as a grown man ai I was, like, 15.
What weight class were you?
Well, I start I won the state championship the 1st year at 1:40, but it was way too hard for me to wait to it. And Ai was doing it like a moron. Right. The guys who do it today, they really know what they’re doing. I just stopped eating.
I just stopped eating and stopped drinking water. And then I’d get in the shower and Ai, like, shadow box in the shower when it was, you know, it was steaming hot. So I was trying to, like, drain my body of weight. Yeah. And then Ai have to fight that day, by the way. You’d have to fight the day
And you’re so ai. You’re you’re Yeah. Yeah.
So I won the states 1 year doing that, but I realized, like, I can’t do this anymore. And I also tried being a vegetarian. I tried a bunch of stuff. And then the next year, when I was 18, then I started eating. Then I then I went up to 150. I think it was 55 or 54. I forgot what the weight class was, but it was 50 something. I went up to that, and then I got way better.
I was much much much better.
What was a typical training day like? Hours. So when would you do it?
The whole day. It was all day. I would the moment I would get home from school
I’d usually eat something real quick, grab
my bag. Ai a banana? What would you do?
I didn’t eat good. I was retarded. I would eat a bowl of cereal. I was just like, that was
And I didn’t have a lot of guidance. My parents both worked. So Ai, you know, I’d fend for myself. Whatever’s in the house, I’d eat that. And then I’d get on a tea and head out and go train.
And so So how much time between the you when you ate and when you actually got working out?
So you got ai you were traveling, you’re digesting. Yeah.
Because it takes, like, an hour to get there at least. It takes, you know, takes, like, a half hour to walk and then 20 minutes on the train and then
So you got a trainer there? You got a coach? Yeah. You got other guys?
Well, yeah. Yeah. And then I started teaching. That was a big thing too.
did what would you do? What would your workout be? Would you
Well, you would always start up you would but mostly, we’d start with technique. Right? You would so so most of the time, you would start with just straight kicks. You would just practice kicks, hone I mean, you’re also warming up, so you go through a whole warm up routine. You’d practice your kicks, like, mostly just for form.
So you’d practice kicks, and then you would practice kicks with specific they would call it, like, a one step. Like, you would come at me with a thing and I would practice stepping to the side and countering, you’d practice that way.
Then you would do sparring, and we sparred almost every ai. And some of the sparring was fucking horrific.
Could we just spar like a rounds?
3 minute rounds Yeah. Generally. Yeah. Yeah. And you’re sparring, you know, all these people that are bigger than you, stronger than you, and Sai was a kid.
And then you would heavy bag work. Heavy bag work was always at the end. When you were exhausted, you’d work on your power. And then there were some days we just came in and only worked on technique. You didn’t spar. Those are good days. You could just only work on your power, like heavy bag work, drills, speak, speed drills, focus mitts.
Ai get out these pads, these paddles that people hold and you throw kicks at the paddles. Yeah. And you’re just all working on, like, making it so it just has no telegraph. It just goes off. You just you’re trying to have it just go go off like a switch.
And so you’re just constantly drilling it as if you’re competing, and then you’d go on the weekends, you go compete somewhere.
Would you run vatsal? Do any road work or the ai
ships? Yeah. I ran. I did. But, you know, honestly, I hated running. Yeah. And I spent so much time training already that my endurance was fine.
And I would do rounds in the bag. I always felt like rounds in the bag were part
endurance anyway because that was, like, what you were gonna actually do
But would you do, like, ab work and stuff with your core? Get that strong?
Yeah. I would do sit ups and I would do push ups and I do chin ups and shit like that, but not a whole lot of things. Most most of it was heavy back training and and sparring.
Yeah. That alone is a great word.
It was it was a like, quite a while before they started accepting even the idea of weightlifting. You know, a lot of, like Right. For a long time, boxers we’re just talking about
this the other day. The weightlifting.
Bert Sorin, with Sorinax.
was saying that, like, boxers were were told that if they lifted weights
They would be really stiff
Until Evander Holyfield came around. And Evander Holyfield kinda changed everybody’s opinion of it because he lifted weights, moved up to heavyweight from cruiserweight. It was awesome. Yeah. And I was ai, hey. Maybe maybe weightlifting just makes you stronger. Yeah. And then now they all do it. It’s ai funny.
Like, almost all those guys have some kind of strength and conditioning routine now. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.
So what do you do now? What do you to stay in shape? You’re you’re addicted to it because it’s your lifestyle.
Well, I think Sai I think I’m addicted to it for mental health reasons
too. Me too. I know what you mean.
I think doing something difficult is very important, especially if it’s, like, self administered. Do something really hard, and it makes the rest of your day easier. And it also is just, you know, Andrew Huberman has talked about this. There’s a specific area of your bryden.
And when you do uncomfortable things, that area of your brain grows. And when you’re sedentary and you’re not doing shit, you that area of your brain actually shrinks. Sai it it enhances your ability to do difficult things by doing difficult things regularly. So it’s not just, like, oh, I’m addicted to it.
It’s, like, no, it’s a ai. Like, you should do it. Like, you should do it. It makes your brain more resilient. Like, doing hard things.
Ai, oh, I like to just lay on the couch. Bitch, I do too. Everybody does. Everybody likes to lay on the couch. That’s not the point.
The point is it’s not good for you.
Listen. What you’re saying is so true. Again, back to my prison experience, among the things that helped me get through it was that emotional pain and the heartache that you’re feeling. Yeah. I found by throwing myself in a hard physical exercise really helped me get softened that, lessened that emotional pain and heartache.
And it it just made me feel less hurting. I hurt less by forcing physical pain on myself by running 10 miles, for example, on my 1st Christmas day because it was so brutal emotionally that I had to be at this shithole place for Christmas. You know what I mean? Yeah. So what you’re saying makes perfect sense to me.
obviously, your situation was very extreme, and, you know, you needed relief in any way you could find it through Jesus, through exercise, through everything, through constantly being more but for the just any person listening to this, do something hard. Right. Just make yourself do something hard all the time. Just trust me. You’ll feel better. Your life will work better. You’ll be able to handle things better.
You’ll be able to handle disputes better, conversations better, interactions with people better. Do something hard.
You’ll have more love in your heart, less hate.
Yes. Yeah. The friendliest people that I know are all killers. They’re all killers.
The friendliest people that I know. If you met, like, some of my friends that fight the UFC, if you didn’t know who they were and you met them, ai, they’re the most lovely people. Like, Daniel Cormier, my he’s the he does color commentary with meh. So it’s me and Daniel and this ai, John Annick, we’re all very tight.
Daniel was a middleweight champ or excuse me, light heavyweight champion and heavyweight champion. He was a 2 division world champion and was dominating in a weight class that in ai force, he didn’t even belong in heavyweight. He’s ai 511. He’s not a big guy. He’s just such an insane tank of a human being, and his wrestling was so insane, and his just will was so insane.
Dominated 2 different divisions. He was a killer. The nicest fucking guy you’d ever meet in your life. No. If you’re hanging around with him, you would never believe.
would never believe that he could pick up anybody in the room and smash them on their head. You would never believe it. You would think he’s just a sweetheart of a guy. Mhmm.
So because of my limited very limited boxing experience, I got to know boxers. And recently, I was Ai, helped Tommy Hearns helped Trump get Tommy Hearns’ endorsement. And he Hearns spent some time with me in Chicago, the nicest guy. This guy was such a fucking badass ai, as you know.
Oh my god. Tommy Hearns in his prime was an assassin.
Yeah. But on a personal level, gentle, ai fearing, soft hearted, shah you’re describing with the guys that you know. And a lot of the guys I knew from the boxing world in Chicago, a lot like that. The guys had a lot more success than me because I was just a a best. I was a middling guy who did it for 1 year.
But I know exactly what you’re saying. Can I say something about tough guys and Trump real quick?
To go back to Trump because the point you made, I thought was really interesting that you gotta have that kind of self love to endure all of that shit they threw at him, and you got to.
Well, you have to be a ai. He’s kind of a psycho. You have to be the type of person that tweets, I hate Taylor Swift.
know. I know. Maniac mindset. But without that, you don’t you don’t keep fighting. You like, they ai to kill him twice.
And one of them nicked his ear, and there was literally people online doubting whether or not he got hit. You see blood coming off of his sai. Yeah. People were saying it was staged so that he could avoid prison. I mean, I I heard prominent people say these things.
Some prominent woman tweeted that he’s only he he got shot because he’s trying to get out of jail, out of going to jail. Like, this is like, I don’t care what you were trying to say. That’s such an insane take on a former president who’s running for office again being assassinated.
You should be against assassinations. Assassinations are horrible. It’s against the law. It’s one of the most horrific. No matter what did he do?
He paid he paid off a lady? Is that what he did? Yes. You think he should get shot in the fucking head for that?
Like, what did he do? What did he do that you think he deserves getting shot in the fucking head?
And this complete lack of appreciation that the whole thing is rigged, the whole thing is corrupt. That’s not good for you either. It’s not good for anybody. Just because you label yourself a liberal, you can’t watch them throw the constitution in the toilet. You can’t just sit back and watch them because, yeah, that’s good.
They’re doing it against Trump. Oh, you got shot? Good. Arya you fucking crazy? People getting shot is good?
How are the how are the love people, the progressive people, the people on the left, how are they ai, I wish that guy didn’t miss? How are they doing that? Because that’s how lost we’ve gotten with this mainstream political narrative. They feed you what you’re supposed to think and you never have the ability to think it out through for yourself.
It’s like groups of people just going through the information and coming to a conclusion as a country. Instead, you have to be on fucking a car Yep. Like in prison.
And you gotta be with this group.
You’re in a gang. You’re just not in the Arya race.
You’re in the fucking left wing progressives. Right. And they’ll fucking turn on you. They’ll all turn on each other. They do it all the time because they’re all just scrambling for stature.
Joe, can I just say one more thing about Trump on this subject? Self love, personal toughness, for sure. But can I say something else? This man, I honestly believe this, truly loves America. He isn’t just doing this because he wants to be the president. He’s already been that, and he’s got all this great success. How do you live the life he’s lived? Give that up.
Go into that shithole business I was in that I know all too well to have to deal with all these phony fucking politicians and suffer these assholes, these duplicitous hypocrites in your party and the other party, which is what most of them are. Right. There’s a lot of good ones, but more of them than not are full of shit. They’re weak.
They’re cowardly, and they go along with the ai of trends that you were just talking about. Yeah. When you go through something what Trump went through and you keep doing it, it’s more than just his own self love. I truly believe he he has a genuine ai love in his country. I think in his mind, I’m guessing.
I’m putting this in his mind kind of thinking about my own kind of experience. He’s saying to himself, I’m gonna if I have to go down fighting for my country, I’m gonna do it. And I think that helps motivate him meh stronger and tougher when he is convinced that isn’t just about his ego or himself, but it’s something higher and bigger like what Meh supposed to be.
Does that make any sense?
It does. And anybody that would push back against that, I would say, listen. Before you even form an opinion, I want you to think about what happened when he got shot. So he gets tackled. He’s got blood coming out of his ear. Guns grow off. Guy behind him is dead. Guy got shot protecting his family.
He stands up and he throws his hand up in the air and sai, ai, fight, fight. Yeah. That’s not fake. Right. Like, that’s that’s in the moment after getting hit by a bullet, covered by the Secret Service. Guy behind him is dead. How many gunshots had rung off?
Ai shots between the snipers killing him, him shooting. I think he shot 3 times.
And then he fight, fight, fight. Beautiful. That’s in the moment.
That’s in the moment. That’s right. Everybody loves America, including people that aren’t in America, which is why so many people are sneaking over to America. Okay? There’s not a whole lot of people sneaking into Libya. Everybody loves America.
It’s the shit. Why? But it’s the shit because of personal freedom. And And because you can be somebody here.
You could be Joe Rogan, a kid who’s 15, getting on the public transportation to do kicking and martial arts and become what you are. You can be me. You could be anything you want. Yeah.
You could be a doctor, a lawyer, an author, a painter, a musician. You could do anything you want.
No other place in the world offers it like this place.
Opportunity. Friend of mine from the UK. When he moved over here, one of the first things he said was in the in England, they try to push you down if you try to get ahead. Like, you they’ll try to dismiss you. It’s like tall poppy syndrome. They don’t want anybody rising above everybody else. Very discouraging.
Well, that’s the socialist mindset. That’s the new Democratic party today. Yeah. It isn’t about the celebrating somebody else’s success and saying, hey. I wanna be like him, or that guy’s success has actually created more opportunities for me to be better off than what I am now.
It’s instead pull him down so we can make everybody equal.
It’s generally very energetic people who don’t have any ambition. So they have all this energy, and they put their energy into this nonsense instead of, like, sorting your life out and pursuing something for yourself. There should be this is this is how it should all work. Everybody should have an equal opportunity to be educated and to pursue their dreams.
But we’re not going to have equality of effort. It’s not gonna exist. Right. Okay? I can’t tell you to do what I do, but I’ll tell you what I do, and you could either listen and pay attention. You could say, oh, look at all the effectiveness. Look at how he’s been able to do so many different things. How is that possible? Well, it’s all simple.
It’s all just hard work. Not everybody wants to do that. No. So if you want a quality of outcome and you don’t have a quality of effort, then you have tyranny. Because then you have people who are a bunch of energetic people who don’t have a lot of ambition, and they don’t have any talent and they wanna control people.
And they don’t like when people achieve a higher social status than them or economic stat they get angry. Why not me? There’s a lot of that. That’s a part of what the whole appeal to socialism. Of course, there’s ai the beautiful appeal that, like, there’s a lot of things that are socialist in this world that are great.
Like the fire department is essentially a socialist establishment. Right? We all pay for the fire department. We all agree that the fire department should act immediately when there’s a fire. We’re all paying into it, and it’s great. We can have other things like that too.
That should be how education is. That should probably be how the police force is. That’s all great. But as soon as you want a quality of outcome, you’re ignoring a quality of effort. Right. It’s of course, some people arya born rich. Of course, it’s not fair.
Of course, some people are born in broken homes, and it’s harder for them. Of course, The fucking game’s rigged. It’s not fair.
But everybody, even given the worst of circumstances, it’s they’re at least not stopped from pursuing dreams.
You see, in my life experience, what I’ve learned, the fun part, really more the fun part is the journey, less so the destination. When I look back on the success I’ve had in different places in life, like being the governor of Illinois, not so easy. Yeah. It was nice to be that and have that power and be able to do it for serve good purposes, but it was more fun actually trying to get there, working hard and overcoming the obstacles.
Yeah. And the competition of it all. Right? The quest. In any aspect of life, I think it’s frankly, embrace the quest. And if you love what you do and you pursue what you love, success will ensue. You don’t have to you don’t have to chase success. Just be great at what you do.
Hopefully. There’s no hold fast rules, but hopefully.
You know what? Will come. Yeah. Well said. But even if you don’t have success, the fact that you gave your best at something should be success a version of success that you can be happy with.
For sure, at least you learn from that, and maybe you could apply those lessons to other things. It’s it’s ai it’s not like there’s an end to this. And everybody wants to look at it like there’s some sort of a finish line. I’m telling you, it’s not real. There’s no finish line. Right. It doesn’t exist.
You should just enjoy this moment and enjoy the whole process of whatever you’re trying to do in life. Because there’s never gonna be a time where you’re like, Sai did it. It’s over. That’s not real. I’m here to tell you, someone’s had the number one podcast for, like, 6 years or something like that. Like, it’s that’s not real. There’s no end.
There’s no, like, oh, I made it. That doesn’t exist. And if it does exist, you’re missing out on the whole point. The point is you’re supposed to be getting better all the time at everything you do.
Physically, there’s gonna come a point in time when you can’t really get better at things because you’re getting old. But you can still do it meh. You can still learn more. You can still pursue hobbies and interests and dreams and things that stimulate you and work towards stuff.
It’s a better way to live your life.
know, some people never get a chance to understand that. And you you go through your whole life and maybe you’re following the guru who’s the gay porn star and then, you know, and then all of a sudden you realize, like, I’ve wasted my experience here. I’ve got I haven’t learned from it. I haven’t grown from it. I don’t have anything to show for all my time here.
I’ve just been making mistake after mistake, and I never really figured out how to control my mind, and I never really figured out how to discipline myself into action, and and here I am never figured out puzzles, and here I am. Fuck, you know, and those are the people who want equality of outcome. Those are the people who want equity. Those are the people that wanna shut all the look.
There’s a lot of hedge fund people that are pretty creepy.
lot of billionaires that are doing
shit shit shit shit shit shit shit shit shit shit shit shit shit shit shit shit shit shit shit shit shit shit shit shit shit shit shit shit shit shit shit shit shit shit shit shit shit shit shit shit shit shit shit shit shit shit shit shit shit shit shit shit shit shit shit shit shit shit shit shit shit shit
ai sure, we should keep an eye on people who wanna change the weather for sure.
But at the end of the day, we’re all just supposed to be human beings with an opportunity to try to succeed. It doesn’t mean everybody’s gonna succeed. That’s that’s what’s so crazy about this open ended agreement you have with life. You don’t know what’s coming up. You don’t want to know what’s next.
It’s just ai how do you respond to it when it happens? And for you, it’s one of the most difficult things that a person could go through, and especially because you feel you were innocent.
No. Yeah. And so I have purpose in life at this stage. You know, they took everything from me. They, you know, they passed laws saying I can’t run for anything in Illinois. Believe it or not, just me. It’s unconstitutional.
You could probably run-in Vegas and win you could be the king of Vegas.
I could the irony is it’s a good place, I I hear.
You could totally be the king of Vegas.
But, you know, I could I have a new beginning. A lot of my friends are retired now, you know, and they’re they’re retired, and that’s fine. But I’m excited about this new beginning I’ve had. It’s rebuilding my life. President? Yeah. The only ai I could run for federal office.
So I could run for president of the United States, but I can’t run for aldermen in the city of Chicago. You mentioned that?
Damn. You’re missing out on an awesome gig. Yeah. Wow.
But I have something to get up every day at and chase. You’re ai lucky that way.
Have any desire to be in politics anymore? Is it just too gross, or what do you how do you how do you think about it now?
My wife, who is a remarkable person I mean, she’s if I’m and I think about all these different heroes that I’ve ai, but that I’ve read about in history books. I think about my wife and her quiet way, her heroism, how she kept tyler home, you know, raised our daughters. They’re both good kids, our daughters.
My older daughter, Amy, is a therapist. Good education. She would like me to advocate for the Puppy Protection Act. I told her I’d try to get it out. What’s
the Puppy Protection Act?
Protects puppies. We love dogs. It’s something to have your listeners consider the Puppy Protection Act.
How does it protect puppies?
I don’t know, but it’s gotta be good. I haven’t didn’t read it.
Well, it ain’t even the protection But to me, that sounds like the Patriot Act. Well, it’s gotta be good.
Bernie Sanders was right on that. He was the only one who voted against that. I’m looking at him when that happened because I was with him in congress then.
Well, they named it the Patriot Act. How are you gonna say no to that? But, like, you name it the Puppy Protection Act.
Ai know? Like It’s got a good chance of passing with a name like that.
And ai younger daughter, she’s a she’s ai big Tyler Swift and a Swifty. They both arya. But they’re good kids. They’re honest kids. They do good in school like their mother. She raised them great without a father. And, they’ve suffered through the politics in my career and so public.
And the name is not a common name, Blagojevich. There’s just not a lot of us here. There are in Serbia, but not in America. Sai everybody knows who their dad is, you know, in in the political contact. So my wife, Patty, you’ll you’ll find this interesting.
2 days after I was arrested, which is the 9th December 2008, the Thursday of that week, Vegas was betting. They were taking bets. What are the odds the first lady of Illinois is gonna leave the governor of Illinois after she just got arrested?
And it was 9 to 1 she was gonna leave.
And she not only defied those odds, but she defied the stats, which is Could
Looking back, we should have. A 100%. Ai know.
Oh my goodness. They made so much money just, like, into your bank accounts.
It crossed my mind, actually. But Would
that be illegal? Maybe they put you back in jail
That’s what prevented me from even pursuing that. They might criminalize that. Yeah. Yeah. It’s a good question. But when a guy’s in prison for more than 4 years, especially when he has a long time in prison, in more than 90% of the cases, the wife or the significant other
So Patty defied all the odds. She’s made it abundantly clear if I ever run for office again, I’m doing that with my saloni wife.
You don’t have to. You know, in this day and age, have you what are you gonna do other than this book?
Well, I do different work. I do some business stuff. I’m I I try to I’m actually trying to do some public awareness on issues that are important, like some criminal justice reform stuff because I’ve learned the hard way how the justice system is. And there is a bias in the criminal justice system that disproportionately has impacted the black community in a grossly unfair way.
Have you ever seen any of my podcasts that I’ve done with Josh Dubin?
No. But I’m gonna tell me about that. That’s criminal justice reform?
Yes. Okay. That’s his main
Objective. And Yeah. Just through the podcast that we’ve done, multiple people have been released.
Yeah. See, that’s for him.
He’s always highlighting these, like, fucked up cases where people were innocent and, you know, ai, massive corruption in the prosecutor’s office. Like
You hear about these things. They’re so heartbreaking. Like, you you just can’t believe that someone would be willing to have people go to jail for 25 to life for something that they know Mhmm. Is a lie. Right. But you see it over and over and over again.
Right. The more common thing, Joe, is the over sentencing part of it. Those 8 years in bryden, I mean, the overwhelming number of the guys I was with, they did it. They were guilty. The prosecutors got it right. What they got wrong was these sentences are ridiculously unfair and wrong, and they don’t they’re not they don’t match up.
And you got a nonviolent offender who first time did something wrong, whether it’s a bank robbery or a drug offense or whatever it might ai. And they’ve given these guys 15, 20, 25 years because they have these one size fits all sentencing guidelines that the politicians pass. But every case is different.
Sentencing guidelines that the politicians pass. But every case is different. Every person’s different. Their backgrounds are different. Their cause, the reasons for doing things, they’re different. Right.
So the system’s broken in the sense that they don’t pro take into account other considerations than just these, like, formulas they follow. And so as a result, you got these people disproportionately black, but not exclusively, who are doing these long sentences for first time offenses.
Trump pardoned a woman named Alice Marie Johnson, first time nonviolent offender, drugs. They gave her a life sentence. It was probably a lot of drugs. A life sentence. And after 20 years, Trump pulled her out, saved her. And a lot of this came from the 1994 crime bill that Joe Biden sponsored and Bill Clinton passed.
The democrats ram this, the black community. Yeah. So I think I I do some of that. And then I my father came from Serbia. And I’d I’d I’d like to try to do what I can to raise public awareness about the place of Serbia in the Balkans because it’s a country that we bombed in 1999.
Ai States and NATO bombed Serbia without the United Nations approval the way Russia’s invaded Ukraine. And Serbia did we bomb Serbia? Because they were trying to force the Serbian government to give up a part of their country, Kosovo. Give it up. That’d be like NATO bomb threatened to bomb us to say give up taxes to Mexico.
And the Serbian government sai, we’re not gonna do it, and so the United States decided to bomb them if they didn’t sign an agreement that was made in France called the Ramblay agreement
would have put it up to a referendum. Now Kosovo
It there’s more there’s more to everything, but ram the the complication
Is the geopolitics of Europe and the Middle East because Serbius and the Balkans is sort of a gateway to the Middle East. It’s in Europe, but it’s a gateway to the Middle East since sai lot of the political dynamics internationally are ai play there. But the Serbs and the Serbian people were allies with the United States in both world wars. They love America.
They sana improve relations with America today after that we bombed them. The Clinton administration did that. Took that part of their country away.
They bombed Belgrade. They bombed all the big cities.
They just indiscriminately bombed the cities? Did they bomb military bases? Like, what
The electrical grid. They bombed military bases. This was May of 1999. And I went Jeez. I was a young congressman there. I was the only Serb Serbs are arya small group in the United States, and they don’t have any political clout. But Jesse Jackson, the reverend Jackson, and I went there because 3 American soldiers were taken prisoner by the Serbs during the war, and no one knew what was going on with those those soldiers.
And so reverend Jackson had this stature, and he was close to Clinton, and he went there. I went there because I speak the language because my father came from that country, and I was able to assist him in getting the release of the 3 soldiers. This was the Milosevic govern government at the time, and we got the soldiers home.
But what Ai what I’d like to talk about with regard to Serbia is it’s a it’s a country in the Balkans that follows a Judeo Christian tradition. It’s very much like Israel in a sense that it’s in a place where they they’re standing up for those sorts of things, and the Serbs have felt very betrayed by the United States for choosing to be on the side of countries that were with the access and with the Nazis in World War 2.
And those wars down in the Balkans and throughout Europe are wars of ethnic cleansing. All the sides do it. There’s no one side that, you know, is crystal clean on those issues. They’re fighting for borders and and they’re fighting for villages and places where historically one group claims they had a claim to and another group claims they had a claim to.
So these are complicated issues. But the United States decided to pick sides and force this country to give up a part of their country with a lot of significant religious monuments there. And this government that’s there today very much wants to reopen relations with the United States and have better relations. It’s a growing economy.
They’re doing very well economically because they’re good, hardworking people, and it’s interesting. In a poll recently of European countries, in this presidential election, Trump versus, Kamala Harris, the Serbian people had the highest support of Trump. Something like 59% of the Serbian populace supported Trump in the last election better than any other European country.
And so whatever I can do to be helpful to my you know, the place my father came ram. I’m Meh born. My mother was American born.
Sounds like you’re bucking for an ambassador to Serbia
Oh, no. Position. Oh, no. I’m not. No.
What if he gave it to you? Would you take it?
Unlikely that Sai would Come on. On. No. Unlikely Ai would take it. Come on. No. Unlikely.
No. Only if he only if he said to me, ai. I really need you, which he won’t do.
He’s gonna sit you down with a Burger King. No. He’s in the Big Macs. Right? He’s in the McDonald’s.
He likes McDonald’s. But there’s a new opportunity with Trump and his administration to rethink sort of our policy and some of those old relationships.
You no. You understand politics far more than most. Mhmm. What difficulties do they face in implementing real change? So there’s all these ideas, the Doge idea, the Department of Government Efficiency, you know, RFK taking over HHS. Right? Health and Human Services, ai does Sure.
And so then, Kash Patel, the FBI, Chelsea Gabbard. What is her
She’s the director of, National Intelligence. Yeah.
That’s a huge Huge. Huge position. Yes. So they all have these ideas to eliminate corruption or at least mitigate it and root out all the bad actors and find out what went wrong. Mhmm. Right? Mhmm. What what’s in the way of that? What would stop them from being able to do all that?
You’re talking about an almost immovable object. You’re talking about the deep state. You’re talking about entrenched interests within government and outside of government. You’re talking about what I call the political industrial complex. It exists in Washington. It exists in state governments like in Springfield, Illinois. It’s the usual people.
And the 2 parties are split on some issues, but they play the game within certain parameters. And if somebody wants to think outside the box and challenge that and actually try to shake that up and change the priorities of how it operates, frankly, to actually benefit the people more because the mindset there and I know this because I was a congressman for 6 years, I was a governor for 6 years.
The mindset isn’t what we can do for the people back home. The mindset really is what the people back home can do for us and for all the different special interest groups that operate and are launching up on this system. This is very real. It’s very real in every part of government.
It’s very real in the military industrial complex, which is something Tulsi Gabbard and, HEXF and the others who, if they get their positions, are gonna be addressing. The weaponized Department of Justice, very real. I’m living his testament to that and so is Trump. Very real. The bureaucracy that’s entrenched that you have a hard time moving.
These government employees, many of whom now are ai even going to the office. They’re working from home. They arya entrenched. They’re hard to move. So this is gonna be real hard. It’s gonna be constant war. They’re gonna fight back, and they’re gonna keep trying to do to Trump what they’ve been doing.
And I think the the opportunity for the Trump administration, for president Trump, is the first 6 to 6 months to a year because this time, he has a bit of a honeymoon with the voters. He didn’t get that in 2016, but this ai, he hasn’t. Right. He’s got wind at his back because that was a man.
He’s got that. But he’s gonna get no honeymoon from the Democrats. And, traditionally, presidents get even the other party will give them the 1st 3 to 6 months before they start pissing all over them. You know what I mean? Right. Trump and Lincoln are the only 2 presidents who never got a honeymoon. In Lincoln’s case, the southern states are seated and left.
Trump wasn’t quite that bad, but no one’s been treated as a new president as terribly as Trump has been treated by the Democrats in Washington because he’s a real threat to change things. And he’s a guy who’s actually trying to keep his promises. And these appointments, they’re very different.
They’re very unusual, but he they show he learned the lesson that you can’t trust those Washington insiders because they’ll infiltrate your government, and they’ll be the ones who will try to, like, not carry out your orders.
You know what you really can’t trust? Yeah. The people who make the polls.
Those those fucking people are they might as well be psychics. They might as well be that person with the neon sign that’s reading cards.
You guys were so off that it it was so wild because people were so emboldened by them being so off. You know, I’m sure you’ve seen a lot of these, hilarious videos of Democrats who arya absolutely sure she was gonna win. We’re gonna win this, and they’re all fired up and cocky and
Hooting and hollering and making fun of people. And then, bam, you see this landslide.
I’m pretty good at patting myself on the back. I was in that business, so I’m gonna pat myself on the back. I called it. I think I’m Tucker. And even before that, I was saying trouble’s gonna sweep all the battleground states.
But I thought it was gonna be a lot closer because I thought, you know, until she kept making blunders, like, she if she just never did any interviews and just only did speeches like that first one that she did, that first one she did, like, if you got something to say to me, say it to my face. The whole place goes nuts to meh, like, woah. Like, she was young and energetic in comparison to him, like, oh meh god.
And then they all got behind her and the you sai the wind behind the sai of the media. They were all moving in march step. They were all marching together. They were all telling us,
She’s number 1. She’s gonna fix it. And I thought it was working. I really did. I was like, this might work. Yeah. Which is I was fascinated to ai. I was fascinated to see the whole machine turn in support of her. The people that had mocked her approval ratings just 6 months ago. Yeah. Yeah.
They’re making fun of her and how she’s largely been ai, and and then all of a sudden, she’s our answer.
Yeah. That was propaganda. It was wild. Yeah. It was wild. They were propping her up. It was really thin. They they did that with Obama. They got away with it then. They propped this guy up to be this demigod that he’s not.
Did you see Jill Biden, dunking on her
In that speech today? Was it today?
I think it was yesterday.
talking about joy. Is that the one?
Oh my god. Yeah. It’s amazing. Yeah. Jill Biden, like, subtly does a Kamala Harris impression, and the audience knows it. And the audience starts laughing. Yeah. Which is just ai, what sai wanna be a fly on the wall. I would have loved to see how the like, it’s essentially a coup went down.
That’s right. That’s right.
It’s the first time ever someone who didn’t get elected Correct. Through a primary
Is somehow or another the representative for the Democratic Party. It’s a little kind of dangerous. If you really think about it in that regard
Right. And it’s lies. It’s based on lies. And it’s
Not the will of people, and they’re they’re just lying to you ai to you.
They’re hoping that your compliance that you showed through COVID and everything else That’s right. They’re hoping that’s gonna go along with this, and you’re just you’re not gonna stand up and go, hey. Why don’t you have a primary? You know, what about Shapiro? What about what are all all these different people? What about them running? Let’s see what their solutions to these things are.
She’s already said she’s not gonna do anything different. Like, this is kind of crazy. Like, what what are we doing?
Right. They took away the rights of the people and the Democratic voters to choose their nominee. Did you meh
Crazy video of this poor girl. She’s, like, hysteric, and she’s talking to Kamala Harris. And Kamala Harris is talking to her, and she’s like, don’t worry. We’re gonna win. We’re gonna win. And she’s, like, saying this to this poor girl, ai, a college girl. It’s like Yeah. Full of anxiety and all freaked out and just I just get so upset when I watch that because, like, who what what got in your head that got you thinking that some horrific end to women’s rights is coming?
I’ll tell you what happened. You’ve been lied to over and over again by the establishment, Democrat party, and their allies in the media that that was a that’s a very serious threat. Ai daughters are fearful of some of this and that Donald Trump is this rotten guy, and he’s not those things.
They’ve been demonizing him for so long, and this is on purpose. This is part of the political strategy. And, eventually, most of the people saw through it. And you don’t give yourself enough credit. But when you had Trump on here and then you eventually made your decision, you swayed a lot of people and made a real difference in that election.
So thank you for that because I think that’s part of saving America before America could become great again, which is a good thing, isn’t it? Why wouldn’t America wanna be great again?
Well, it certainly should be. I mean, it’s all And
it is great, isn’t it? Why do the Democrats seem to think America’s not so great? We’ve had a lot of problems. There’s wrongs in our history, of course, in the original sana of slavery, Jim Crow and segregation, and the treatment of black people in America. That’s all very real.
They’ve been screwed. But ai of it all, this is a country that offers the opportunity we talked about and corrects those mistakes. The problem, I think, in some respects today with the Democrat party is now it’s a question of reversing. It’s no longer does judge people, but not by the color of their skin, but by the content of their character. Now it’s Let’s overcorrect. Let’s overcorrect. Exactly.
I think it’s a cult. I really do. And, I think the Republicans didn’t do themselves any, justice by reversing Roe v Wade because I think wanting that reversed is what put this fear in everyone that you’re coming after women’s reproductive rights. That that that that men based on religious ideals are gonna tell women what to do with their bodies.
That’s if that didn’t happen, I think it would have been an even bigger victory for Trump.
Because I think that was one of the most important subjects when it for women, it was one of the most important things that they were willing to draw the line on because they know where that goes. They don’t you as soon as you let someone have control over what you can and can’t do with your body, just like just to a smaller extent, but, like, we’ve talking about with COVID, with so many different things.
When people have power and control over people, they abuse it and they manipulate
And if you all of a sudden have laws, so whether these were unfounded fears or not, women were worried that people would get data from their fertility apps. Right? So you have ovulation apps, and these ovulation apps you’ve you say when you had your period and it keeps track of when when you’re ovulating.
That if a woman had one of those apps and was living in a state because Roe v Wade’s been reversed where abortion is illegal and then she travels to another state and has an abortion, that she could be prosecuted based on the laws of the state, which is to me, that’s terrifying.
Giving people that kind of power over other people, especially if they’re doing something that’s legal in that state. The whole idea of states’ rights is supposed to be first of all, we’re all we don’t need passports to travel from state to state. Ai? But every state is essentially almost like a little different country that speaks the same language. Right. This is a very different country than California.
You know, I lived in both places. Yeah. You know, there’s there’s other places. New York’s a very different country than this, but we all agree that we can travel back and forth.
So then you leave me the fuck alone. You if I’m not you don’t know what I’m doing in this state, and I don’t want you check if if someone has a miscarriage and then they go visit a state that has abortion laws and then they get visited by jack booted thugs that think that they can oppose the law and put some girl in jail to send a meh.
That’s fucking ai, and that I think cost a lot of votes. And maybe it’s a wrong perception, maybe it’s an extreme version of it, and I’m exaggerating, but I don’t trust people. I don’t trust people that have power over people. And I think the less power people have over people, the better. I think if if you want people to have less abortions, make more birth control available.
Make it available everywhere. You know, education, but that’s not gonna help because kids are crazy. You get horny, go nuts. But there’s a a lot of people that make mistakes that if a man could get pregnant, if men could get pregnant, I always said abortion would be an app on your phone.
We would we would have them meh the gas station. We’d get abortions everywhere. Like, there’d be no babies. It’s, you know, it’s a very complicated decision for someone to make, and, you know, Joe Biden ironically said it best a long time ago. He said abortion should be legal and rare.
I have a long history as a Democratic governor and congressmen supporting a woman’s right to choose. I haven’t changed my view on it. I’m a huge Trump supporter, but I haven’t changed my view on it for the same reasons that you just explained. Not to mention the fact, who am I as a man to tell the woman what she could do with her body?
Yeah. No. Ai is very complicated. And the people on the other side, the the pro lifers, these are good people who
Genuinely believe that this is the killing of a baby. What Roe v Wade had claimed had said in this decision, you know, it broke it down into trimesters. And within the 1st trimester, that’s a life and being, but it’s not a human being. And that’s always seems sensible to me.
And but the idea of government doing what you just described can you imagine a guy like me who’s gone through what I’ve gone through with the government, what it did to me and to my ai, that being sympathetic to what you just said Yeah. About the fear women have? It’s very, very real.
I don’t think you should let the government ever be involved in the choices you make with your body. Yeah. I don’t think that. And I understand the pro life perspective. Yeah. I get it. I get you know, I’ve talked to very intelligent reasonable people that believe that life begins at the moment of conception ai in the case of rape.
Oh, like, okay. I don’t agree with you, but I I understand where you’re coming ram. And I could put myself in your ai, and I could I could see that. I could I could see how you would think that. I could see how you’d say 2 wrongs don’t make a right. I could see it. I just don’t agree with it.
And, you know, I don’t agree with it because I would not wanna be a woman carrying a rapist baby. I don’t give a fuck what you say. And if you wanna impose that on a person because you have a different set of beliefs in a person, where does that end? Where does that end?
It gets fucking weird. It gets weird when you let people control people. Think about how many people were yelling at people to wear a mask outside. Where’s your mask? People are fucking weird, man. When you give them any kind of control over people, I don’t trust them. And that’s not ai a pro abortion position.
That’s a pro, I don’t trust people and their decision making ability and their abuse of power decision. That’s what that is. That’s my position.
Yeah. And a lot of those people who were demanding those masks and would deny your right to choose whether you have a vaccine or not, the same ones who are very much pro choice when it came comes to a woman’s right to choose, but they don’t apply the same standard to other things.
fast. That inconsistency. My body,
Ai? Yeah. Right. Exactly.
Which I agree with with fucking everything.
You know, if you wanna get face tattoos, I wouldn’t recommend it. I have a bunch of friends who have face tattoos.
don’t. Jelly Roll’s got a bunch of them. I love that guy to death. Post Malone’s got a bunch of them. I love that guy to death.
Listen. I did all those years in prison with ai like that.
Lot of nice guys with face tattoos. How many fighters I know with face tattoos? Yeah. Fucking great guy. Sean O’Malley. Shout out to my man, Sean. Face tattoos, awesome guy.
There’s a guy in prison named Crowe. He was clearly a Dodgers fan. How did I know he had a tattoo? Dodgers right on top of his head. And I sang to this guy and about a 110 others at the GED graduation of my prison band, g Rod of the Jailhouse Rockers.
Oh, wow. Yeah. That’s hilarious. Yeah. Did you record anything?
No. They didn’t allow that. But,
that’s too bad. That would have been amazing tapes. Yeah. Meh that on the Internet?
But you couldn’t allow that. You couldn’t get that in. You know? Damn.
Meh them let them have YouTube channels.
you know how great that would be? YouTube jail channels? YouTube look. Tell tell the jail, listen. You can make profits off of this. Once you split the profits with the inmates.
No. You got though look. I met a lot of guys. A lot of these guys are are not bad guys. They broke the law, and they should be held accountable and have justice, but also mercy and a chance at a second chance.
Absolutely. Redemption. Please, let’s have
We don’t have enough of that.
Rehabilitation. What whatever happened to that?
That? Some of these guys have such good hearts. There was this bank robber in bryden, Michael Torres. Good guy. His name is Sai. Robbed a bank.
Because he put socks over his face when he robbed the bank? Is that why?
You know, I don’t know that. But I have a chapter about him because I taught history with him. He he loved general Grant. He wanted to be a lecturer in my civil war history class. But what he did was he robbed a bank in Central California. Appreciate this. His father was a Pentecostal minister.
And he walks into this bank. His father taught him to always respect the values of respecting your elders. K? So he storms into a bank with an assault weapon, shouting motherfuckers, everybody go to the side. I’m robbing his fucking bank. I’ll kill anybody and blow your heads off.
If you don’t comply, ai know, you you don’t follow my orders. He didn’t say comply. Right?
So they all scatter around, but he spies out of the side of his ai, this little old lady in a corner trembling, standing there. And at that point, he ai her, and he puts his bank robbery on pause, puts it on hold. And all of a sudden, he goes from this doctor this mister Hyde character where he’s screaming motherfucker with his assault weapon to a gentle doctor, you know, Jekyll Jekyll.
Right? Goes to the woman, calms her and soothes her and tells her, ma’am, don’t worry. This won’t take too long. No one’s gonna hurt you. I I won’t be long. Let me get you a seat.
And so some guy sitting in the chair, and he says, get up motherfucker, or I’ll fucking blow your brains out. And he ushers her to the seat.
Then it goes back to the bank robbery, gets all the money, stops by, says goodbye to her, leaves, didn’t plan his getaway so good. They get him within, I don’t know, 10, 15 minutes. Didn’t take long. He’s apprehended. He’s got no defense. There’s all these witnesses who saw it all.
So his lawyers correctly say, we better just ask for mercy. Don’t even pretend you didn’t do it. Plead guilty. Prosecutors want 20 years in prison for socks. Okay?
And they’re mostly always get what they ask for, these federal prosecutors. The defense lawyer recognized the judge was, like, 83 years old or something. They bring this little old lady in as a witness in what they call mitigation, a mitigation witness to say that Sachs, the bank robber, had some good qualities.
She tells the story about how kind he was to her in the midst of this bank robbery, and the judge gave him 10 years. Wow. So he’s his kindness to the old lady and respecting the values of his father saved him 10 years. And he was a great guy to do prison time with. If you gotta do time in prison, Sock was your kinda guy. Fun. And he lectured in my class, and he talked about general ram at Shiloh.
And he kept telling these guys, the motherfucker was a badass, dude. This guy was a badass, dude.
That’s hilarious. Yeah. There’s good people that make bad choices.
Yeah. And we if we gotta throw people away, that’s crazy. There’s so many people Ai sure that you met that have a lot of potential. And I’ve met a lot of people that have been in jail that are amazing people.
Amazing people. They’re very resourceful, very enterprising, very smart.
One of my favorite guests that I’ve ever had on is Freeway Ricky Ross.
Tell me, is that the singer?
No. Yeah. No. It’s the real one. The real Ricky Ross who was selling cocaine from the getting it from the government and selling it in South Central Los Angeles and and not even knowing, like, what he was a part of the funding, the Conchas versus the Sandinistas.
the eighties. The whole Oliver North thing.
Right. That’s freeway Ricky Ross. He was a legend. He’s making 1,000,000 every speak. Every week, 1,000,000 of dollars. Couldn’t read. Right. Couldn’t read. Was a tennis player, really good tennis player, but not good enough to be pro, but illiterate, goes to jail, becomes a lawyer in jail, teaches himself to read
Was it state prison or federal prison?
I believe it was federal prison.
I believe it sai federal prison.
Goes to jail and finds out that because he understands law, that they had used the 3 strikes rule incorrectly
And that it’s supposed to be 3 separate incidents of felonies. This was 3 felonies in one incident.
He got himself out of jail.
Oh, he’s in a long time. How long was Freeway Ricky Ross in? But he’s the nicest guy. He’s funny. He’s like, you told me this guy didn’t deserve a second chance?
He’s a young kid surrounded by drug dealers. He’s the only people that had any money. Life sentence was reduced to 20 years. Ai think he did 20 years. He got out in 2009.
He’s back in LA. He just did the podcast recently. How how long ago did he do it?
Was it last year? I feel like it was this year. Yeah. Yeah. No. It was this year. What what what month?
You know what I’d like to do in my new beginning? Make enough money where we can have financial security for my family and my loan. I was making 6 I was making $62 a year every year for 8 years. Right? I’m I’m a lawyer. I went to law school. Like, this is what I get for college.
For in jail? What do you get paid for?
I was a tutor for my first couple of years in the high higher prison. And then when I got to the camp, you know, orderly where you ai floors, you sweep floors, worked in the library for a while. I had all kinds of jobs. Worked in the gym.
How rude is that? They give you a dollar a day.
The worst job was the in the kitchen. And, I write in the book about the day, it looked like I was gonna go home in August 2019. Trump was pulling me out, but he’s getting all this pushback from the politicians. And he had a problem because he had called Zelensky in Ukraine, and the Democrats were gonna impeach him over that telephone call, which was absolutely the right thing for him to do because there was evidence videotape evidence of Joe Biden talking about Burisma and Hunter Biden, his son, at prosecuting firing the prosecutor, or he’s gonna withhold a $1,000,000,000 of federal money, US money, to Ukraine.
Yeah. That’s probable perhaps probable cause of a crime, but it’s at least reasonable enough for the law the chief law enforcement officer, the president, to ask this guy, would you look into it? That’s all he did, and they impeached him over it. So now I’m on hold. But what it looked like I was coming out, it it was I was literally transferred out of my camp, and they said you’re going home.
Trump’s sending you out, sending you home. Ai had to go back. Understandably, Trump did the right thing for political purposes. The White House did. But they put me back in the kitchen. The one of the cops there felt like, who’s the who’s this guy think he is?
Some, like, special inmate because the president almost pulled him out. We’re gonna show this asshole. He ain’t no big deal. They put me back in the kitchen at 4 o’clock in the morning. You gotta be there.
You go you wake up at 3:30 washing pots and pans for 8 hours a day. They call me the governor of the dish pit. Right? Oh. Yeah.
So that paid 5.25 a month.
But here’s what I like to do. I wanna be successful, make money. Ai are good. Have a best selling book. Maybe, God willing, who knows? I’d like to meet your ai, Rick Ross, and others. And I’d like to have a foundation that actually does something meaningful, like maybe some sort of vocational training, culinary training for inmates who are coming home, have no opportunities to learn a skill that they don’t teach in prison, but they should.
You should talk to Josh Dubin as well.
Yeah. Well, yeah. Yeah. You’ll help me get a hold of him? I love I love that. Absolutely. Yeah. I feel like that’s my calling. I feel I should do that.
Yeah. I’ll connect you guys. Yeah. I love that guy to death, and that’s his main quest in life Mhmm. You know, to help people. And then he’s got so many stories of these people getting out and doing incredible things and helping other people as well. Yeah. Turning it back around, giving it back, trying to work and educate these young guys and also trying to stop them from doing bad things.
Like, just give them some life skills sai they can make good decisions instead of bad decisions. Because some people are just like, there’s a reality of being trapped by your circumstances. And it’s if you have not experienced that, and you and luckily, I haven’t, and I’m very fortunate, but there’s a lot of people that do.
And to discount that is fucking crazy. And we take people, we just put them in cages, and we forget about them. And it’s convenient for us, and just lock them up. Just lock them. Lock everybody up. Like, stop locking people up.
What we need to do is understand that we lock more people up than anybody anywhere, and it doesn’t make us safer. What we gotta do is get to the root of why so many people are getting locked up.
That’s right. We’ve ignored that. We’ve ignored that. We it’s ai we’re we’re constantly cutting cancerous tumors off. We’re not going, hey. Why do we keep getting cancer? Like, what’s is there something we could do different?
There’s a lot we could do different. Think about the just the money that we have sent to Ukraine. Imagine if that money just went to rehabilitating the cities in North America.
What how much good could you do with $200,000,000,000 in America in a year?
You wanna hear a real cynical thing about the Democratic Party? Don’t ai, I was a Democratic governor. I was the first one to endorse Obama. I supported Nancy Pelosi in the house. Okay?
I support her stock trades.
I didn’t know about any of those.
You go to Saloni speak tracker?
ever seen it? Oh, it’s so good?
I’m not really a stock market person. I don’t pay attention. But I do know people that are very invested in the stock market, and Pelosi speak tracker is legit. Like, you could find out what she’s buying
That is really, really interesting. Well, if I wanna
She’s a really good stock bryden, Rod.
I’m gonna do that tomorrow because I told you I sana
I don’t know how she has the time considering she’s so busy serving the people. But, you know, if she was just a pure, stock trader, she’d probably be the biggest of all time. She’s that good.
Gotta know. Because she doesn’t have
the inside information shah has,
is it? No. No. No. She’s a psychic. She’s got talent.
Ah. She gets it. I got you. She gets it. In any event, we were talking about what? Criminal justice reform? What were we talking about? Yes. Oh, and the black community in particular, in the cynical part of the Democrat party. And it really started here in Austin from a guy from this area here in Austin, Texas named Lyndon Johnson.
And there were so many good things about his Great Society programs, but he was motivated by politics. Yes. There’s poor people that we must help, but it wasn’t just that. He said, this will ensure that we get the end vote for a whole generation. We’ll get the end vote.
say it like that. He said the whole word. Right?
And that’s how the Democrats have approached the black community ever since.
And it’s, yes, we’ll help only so much, but we’re not gonna give the tools or the means to be able to have the same kind of chance at opportunity in the economy where you can actually get up and get out of the neighborhood, get out of the hood, get out of the poverty, and join the middle class, you know, have a business, those sorts of practical things that most everywhere else in America, we have those chances, but, ironically, not in the black community because the Democrats don’t wanna leave. They cannot afford to lose 90 to 95% of a safe vote for them if they’re free.
Well, I think they lost a lot of it during this election because a lot of black folks looked at all these illegal aliens that are coming in here getting all these benefits and getting put up in the Roosevelt Hotel and getting free food and getting EBT cards. And they were like, what the fuck is this? Like, what about us? Like, there was a lot of people in Chicago that were up in arms about that.
Well, that Very right. They’re a 100% correct. This is, like, a 100% evidence that these people who are pretending to be on your side don’t give a fuck about you.
That’s the reality of it. Now if Trump can demonstrate that he gives a fuck Right. It’ll change the whole narrative. If he can do real things while he’s in office, and he seems like a guy ai motivated to do real things. And the just if you could just get 10% less people winding up in jail, imagine what that is. Imagine what that is.
10% more people that are contributing to ai, and that’s a minor goal. That’s ai a that’s a totally doable thing. That’s not unrealistic at all. But if you can get 10%, with 10%, probably would give birth to 20 or 30 eventually. I think people would ai, like, oh, there’s a path that I can get my children into that will give them a real secure future outside of this.
And then you’ve gotta do something about law enforcement. You’ve gotta mitigate all the gang activity and violence. You can’t have people growing up thinking that violence is the way and that drug dealing is the way and shooting people is normal. You gotta you can’t let that flourish and grow. You can’t let that happen, and they, for whatever reason, have never fully addressed it.
They’ve never addressed it with the kind of resources that we address so many of our problems.
Because of the politics and the old Republican Party, they were fine with it. Just let the black community be where it is. Let the Ai have it all those votes, and we’ll just scare the shit out of white suburbanites. Tell them that those gangbangers in the south side of Chicago are coming out to your suburb. Right? And they get votes that way. Right.
Trump is a very different guy, and he’s rebuilding this Republican party. It’s a political realignment, and he got more black votes than any republic Republicans candidates gotten since 1976. He’s still a long way from
Well, I think the whole he’s racist narrative just died.
That is such an outrageous accusation by project people that project because they’re racist. Some of these Democrat policies Yeah. They’re dressed up as being pro black, are fundamentally anti black. Look at the education issue. Schools suck. I went to public school in Chicago.
I wasn’t exactly setting the world on track.
Making the schools better, they lower the standards.
And they just pump all kinds of money into it, and they they they need money. But they don’t deny a mother, a single mother with a young child in the black community, a chance to have some some choice where she might wanna send her child to school. Yeah. So they’re they’re locked into that special interest politics and control of the teachers’ unions that have that kind of influence.
You should there should be some, like, real concerted effort to raise the standard of all schools, all of them, like, significantly. And, again, I keep going to Ukraine, but if we’re a country that’s ai, what are we? A $1,000,000,000,000, 3 how many 1,000,000,000,000 of dollars in debt are we?
ai, whatever it is, Whatever crazy number
in my head. Yeah. Whatever the number is. Right. How do we we have so much money to send to all these countries in foreign aid. We just gave a $1,000,000,000 to Africa in case they get hit by storms, you know, for natural disasters. What how much would it cost? How much would it cost to fix every school in the country? How much would it cost? Would it you can’t it can’t be done. Okay.
Are you telling me it can’t be done with $39,000,000,000,000? If we if I gave you $39,000,000,000,000, do you think that you could fix every school in the country? I bet you could. I bet you have a lot of money left over. Okay. So let’s forget the 39,000,000,000,000 because that’s ridiculous. But what’s the number?
Ai, how much would it actually cost to just with, like, proper planning, a real strategy, and hire the best professionals you possibly can, compensate them well with a goal entirely focused on fixing the education system in Meh, taking our standing where we are internationally, which is very low now, and raising it back up to the top.
How do we do that? How much how much would it cost? Just help me out. Help me out. It’s not insurmountable.
Like, if I said 39,000,000,000,000, you’d be like, yeah. You could definitely do it. Hey. You could definitely pay people so much money. Yeah.
You can’t do it for 39,000,000,000,000. You know why? Why? Because there’s all kinds of entrenched obstacles that won’t let you do the necessary reforms to make the teachers teach the kids better. Of course. Okay? So it’s it’s money is a part of it. Sure.
But it is less of a part than actually having some sort of system of accountability so that there’s actually results that is it isn’t unfortunately, in the education system, at least in places like Chicago, for example, the public school system of which I come from, It isn’t the the priority of that union, the teachers union, is less the children.
It’s all about their members and the teachers. And so they resist any kinds of changes that would maybe make for the classroom environment to be more conducive to teach a ai. Things like merit pay, which is controversial, but they resist even out of hand the chance that maybe you provide bonuses to teachers who are successful in raising up a child’s test scores.
And then test scores alone aren’t the best evidence of whether or not a child is learning. So there’s there’s a complicated things. You have to have the money necessary to do it, but it doesn’t have to be an astronomical sum. They’ve gotta change the way they are teaching our children.
And I think you can learn from other countries and see what other countries are doing successfully and try to bring that here. The problem you get is the politics in America and the Democratic Party is controlled by many different interest groups in the teachers’ unions, the l the Education Association.
Those unions have an unbelievable amount of sai, and Democratic candidates are afraid of them, plus they need them to win. So they’re the complications are more administrative than they are money. And the concern of taxpayers that you keep throwing money, good money after money that’s not working is a legitimate one. And I look.
I I could’ve done more on this issue when I was governor, when I had that power. We put a lot of money to the schools, but it was hard for me to be able to get accountability in the politics of it.
So you think that even if there was some sort of executive order or some sort of bill that gets passed where they concentrate entirely on raising the standard of education at whatever it costs. Ai, this is this is a priority for our country. The more people that we have that are highly educated, the less losers, the less crime, the less everything.
The more people participate, the better the dream gets, the more competition there is. We all we all strive. Rising tide lifts all boats. Right. Let’s fucking go.
If they did that, you think the teachers’ union would be the biggest impediment to actual success?
The teachers’ union would be the the, well, 1st place. But they see the the way the special interest group in government both the special interest groups work in government is they build coalitions. So the teachers union is a powerful group. By themselves, they they would have a hard time stopping that, but they would enlist the support of other groups that they have supported in some of their issues.
And suddenly, you’ve got not just the teachers unions, but you got the the AFL CIO. You got, you know, the United Auto Workers. Right. You got all these different unions lining up. And then couple that with some of the, you know, some of the more progressive interest groups, the LGBTQ perhaps.
The women you know, the, what’s the pro choice group that’s Planned Parenthood. Those are organizations that are they have those alliances with the unions even though their interest their issues are far apart. The concerns they have are very different, and they don’t match up. But they’ve got these coalitions.
So you have to get over all of that in order to be successful, not to mention the fact that you’ve got, you know, natural resistance to, you know, significant change. But if you’re looking for a place that’s crying out for major reform, all you gotta do is look at the performance of kids that come out of public schools in poor neighborhoods and say there’s something really wrong here.
And it’s black kids who are disproportionately getting screwed.
And then there’s also the factor of their growing up in crime ridden neighborhoods, and they’re probably not getting enough nourishment. Right. There’s a lot of factors that would also inhibit your ability to even absorb information, the stress and the the trauma. So what you really gotta do is fix all that in cities. That’s another thing.
Like, how much would it cost to significantly put a dent in crime in all cities and do it in a way where people didn’t think you’re sending the military in to clean up and, you know, it’s not a militarization of cities. Like, there’s gotta be a way to do it. How much would it cost? How much?
some of that money towards more police, and that’s the another ai, but you need that. Gang vaguers in Chicago outnumber police officers 75 to 1. And where’s what’s the crime? It’s in those poor black neighborhoods
And the Democrats are, you know, motherfucking cops and police. So stupid. But not in their neighborhoods is where the crime’s taking place. It’s in those poor neighborhoods. They’re the victims of the crimes. It’s so upside down. It’s so wrong. Yeah. But you know what’s happened?
They’ve they’ve because of the politics of things and their their relationships, they’ve ignored or at actually butchered common sense. And one of the things about the Trump administration that offers hope is that there’ll be a restoration of common sense, in in terms of its approach to things.
And one of the good things about this last election and with podcasts like yours and these other alternative places where people can get information is that you can think outside the box and start to do new things that are different as opposed to the same old things that give the same old results.
And I would suggest that if you wanna stop crime and end the mass incarceration in America, educate the kids when they’re young and give them a chance to have the skills they need so they can do something other than sell drugs?
Absolutely. The question is how would you do it? If you were a part of the administration, if Donald Trump heard this conversation and said, you know what? I think he’s I think he’s right, and I think we can do something about it. What would you do?
On education or on something else?
Well, it would first be it’s it’s both of her connected. Right? Crime and education. Yeah. They’re they’re connected. Yeah. And the lowest income
Most crime ridden communities has the lowest education levels. Right? Mhmm. So they’re inexorably connected. Mhmm. Sai, without you can’t you can’t just deal with education without dealing with ai. So you’d have to do both.
Right. I think I’m an expert on the crime part of it. Yeah. You know? Because I’ve flipped I’ve seen it from both sides. I’ve lived at Yeah. Both places. I think, you know, I look. I’m I’m happy to volunteer my services and to share my experience. But I think on the issue of weaponized prosecutors and the corruption of the DOJ, I think I don’t think anybody knows that subject better than me.
And I think I I I’m happy to provide any kind of free advice or suggestions I can have.
So that’s sai job you sana?
But in addition to that, I would say
What job would you take? Like, if you call what’s the dream one? If you what’s the dream conversation?
No. Well, it’s not that it’s not a job. You ask me what would I do. Right.
But isn’t there, like, a title that will allow you to do what you wanna do?
I don’t know. But I’ll just sai, it isn’t just that, though. See, I think I can bring my own experience from the time I had in prison with my homies in there. Yeah. Like I sai, yeah, most of all did it.
Homies. You’re ai one of the few former governors with homies. Like, legit. You can say that unironically.
If my friend Speak, know, Joe Namor is listening, shout out to Joe Namor or Walter Hill or Gee, Gregory Ai, drug dealer from South Side of Chicago.
Imagine any other guy who is a former governor saying homies and having it be authentic.
Because a 100%. Sai if You
Yeah. Like, for real, a guy who hadn’t done time to say my homies, like, shut the fuck up. Those guys you play pickleball with?
Right. Shah up. But you have actual homies.
Yeah. And I’m try I try to help them as much as I can now with within my limited ability. But the way I can really help is I I think I can bring a perspective on how merciless our criminal justice system is and how we do have a country of mass incarceration and how this woman, a black woman, wrote this best selling book called The New Jim Crow and how it’s an excuse and a reason to discriminate against black people based upon their felony convictions, how they go to prison, but they’re not guided to actually learn the skills they they could use one day when they get out of prison.
All these things are can be corrected. I feel like I can be helpful in something like that.
I think you’re the purse perfect person to ask us about. What how do you feel about private prisons?
I I don’t I Ai don’t know enough about all the details, but I’m very suspicious of that, the profit motive in private prisons. And a lot of the, for example, the commissary stuff that’s been privatized, things along those lines. I don’t know enough about about that. I my feeling is probably not, but maybe you can do some version of that by sai by contracting out to some private companies to come in and educate inmates, which might be interesting.
Bring some private companies in that could teach vocational training, particularly culinary skills, which is very much something that where you can get out of prison and have a chance to get a job, maybe get your own restaurant, start your own business. Practical things. Privatize some of that. That might be worthwhile. That could work. But as it is right now, government doing it, they’re not doing it.
By the way, if you want an argument against, you know, socialized medicine and I believe health care is a human right, and I believe I was the health care governor. I frankly think, Joe, even though I’m the only governor impeaching Illinois history, they won’t even let my portrait up there in the state capitol. I’m the only one. Really?
I feel like I was the best governor in Illinois history for the shit that I did for regular people, health care for every child, free public transportation for our seniors for the disabled, mammograms and pap smears for underserved women. And if we find cancer, we get it treated and save their lives. This thing called open road tolling where commuters can go without, you know, having to pay tolls.
They’ve got a transponder where they can go all across the country with the first in the country to do that. All kinds of stuff where an average citizen sai, this governor of Blue Hueb, he did this for me. I can’t think of a fucking thing any of my other governors have bryden for anybody Sai know.
If you can think about what is the you know, what has governor Rex done for me that I feel in real life? So I think I did those things. And,
sai but I to brag on myself, I just got off message. What were we talking about?
Well, we were talking about what would you do. Yeah. What would be your dream jobs?
And helping along the lines of that and, again, even volunteering.
But you were talking about criminal justice reform because, like, who would know about it more than you? Correct. Yeah. Yeah. Correct. Ai a lot of sense.
You gotta go to congress. You gotta change those laws. You gotta undo some of those guidelines because the judge these judges are required by law to whack a guy because he fits certain criteria, but they don’t look at the other stuff in his life that this guy’s never had a crime before, that he’s got a family, that he’s actually done good works.
Those things still take into arya taken into consideration when they have these guidelines that the judge judges have to follow. They were pushed by prosecutors to give them the tools to go after, you know, criminal behavior.
How much of an effort once you actually get inside is there to rehabilitate you?
Almost none. Maybe none at all. None. It’s adult babysitting.
But is it all, like, self motivated? If you do wanna improve yourself, it’s self motivated.
Yeah. And there’s resources where you can do that. I mean, there there are places where you can learn. Not enough vocational stuff, not nearly enough, but you can do that.
But there’s no guidance in terms do you get counseling?
So that is guidance in some way. No?
I mean, like, ai, what? They they don’t teach you anything. They’ll, you know
Well, in your situation, you But
they didn’t teach the other guys. I mean, I Right. Know enough about that to know that they weren’t getting any kind of guidance. The counselors are just giving you guidance on how to deal with the world we’re in. No. That place.
And, also, no no motivation
to try to improve yourself or to figure out why you got in there. Yeah. There’s some
motivation. So, ai example, or to
figure out why you got in there. Yeah. There’s some motivation. Ram, for example, I’m seeing a jailhouse rock before a 110 inmates who, the day before, I see in the yard, are all muscled up. They’re all big muscle guys. They got tats all over. Right? And they got interesting hairstyles. Uh-huh. You know, some of them Fuematsu, you know, they look like Genghis Shah. Some of them. Right?
You got these racist Nazi guys with swastikas tatted on them. Right? And they’re all of a bryden, on this particular day, they’re wearing caps and gowns. And here meh, the former governor of Illinois, once thought about, believe it or not, as a presidential candidate, I’m about to sing Jailhouse Rock to these guys. Right?
The warren’s there. Oh my god. We practiced for a year because there was a way to get out get your ai out of prison was embracing music, and they have a music room there with good acoustics and good and there was a a guy who was had the head of the music department, an inmate, a drug dude who was went to Berkeley, the music school in Boston.
Really great musician. His name’s Ernie. I don’t wanna say his last name to embarrass him. Great guy. He was like my music mentor.
And I learned that if you practice singing, I’m not a singer, but you can actually improve. And it was like a way where we would practice for hours a day where I wasn’t in prison for those 5 hours. You know? I was Mhmm. Focusing on trying to get good at something. Right? Right. So there we arya year later.
We shah auditioned and won the gig for the jailhouse rockers to perform before the GED graduates. And there’s the warden, all the brass in the prison, 110 of these badass guys. They had an outside guest speaker to give a motivational speech. I’m stepping up about to sing my first song by Clint Black called A Better Man. You know? Leave in here a better man. You ever hear that song?
Yeah. So but before I do, I catch the warden, and Ai been told ai before that the warden has the power in a federal prison under certain circumstances where he could actually release an inmate without the court. And in one particular case, some guy was slicing up another inmate, almost killed him, and a third inmate intervened and stopped the fight and saved the guy’s life.
The aggressor got more criminal charges against him and got sent to an even higher prison. The victim, thank goodness, ai. Fucked up. He was bloodied up and all the all of that. The 3rd party that intervened, the peacemaker, saved a life. The warden sent him home. Wow.
had the power to do that. So I was told this. Now suddenly, I’m about to sing Jailhouse Ai. Right? There he is. I figured, I think I’ll go off the program and ad ai a little bit because I’ve been on stage before. I know how to do that. So I look at the warden, and I say, I’d like I’d like to dedicate this song to the warden. Please release me.
Let me go ai I don’t wanna be here anymore. Right? That’s hilarious. Nobody laughed. You laughed? Nobody laughed.
The woman’s staring at me vatsal all the inmates don’t know what to make of it. They were afraid to laugh. You know? That’s hilarious. But GED is one way where you can get a reduction. You can get good ai. So you can spend less a little less time in prison.
They’ll give you maybe, I don’t know, several months or maybe a year off your sentence or something. So there are some incentives.
Yeah. Something like that. There should be more of that.
Yeah. Listen, man. You had a wild life, and, I’m glad you’re out.
And I’m glad I listened to you on Tucker, and I got a different sense of who you were than what the narrative was that I saw over the media. Shah. Obviously, I don’t know what happened, but, you know, I think you’re a good dude. I enjoyed talking to you.
I appreciate you, Joe. God bless you, and congratulations on your
great success. Too. And, this book, is it done? Is it almost done? Do you have a publisher? We we ai glossed over that a little bit.
Yeah. So it’s Vindication Publishing, my own little publishing company. I presold 8,000 books. So so far, so good. The reason I have to do it myself is the New York publishers don’t like the good Trump stuff.
Do you, have an audio version that you’re gonna do?
I’m gonna do an audio version.
You’ll do it. Right? Absolutely. Okay.
Alright. How’s it going? Yeah. Alright. Thank you.