X SpaceJune 25, 2026·2.5 hours·with @Dykes4Congress

Lessons From the Campaign Trail

Ian Malcolm introduces Tyler Dykes to discuss lessons learned from his congressional campaign.

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Chapters — 12
  1. 0:00Campaign Trail LessonsIan Malcolm introduces Tyler Dykes to discuss lessons learned from his congressional campaign.
  2. 7:13Tyler Dykes' Campaign JourneyTyler Dykes recounts his congressional campaign, highlighting financial disparities and establishment opposition.
  3. 18:07Infiltrating the EstablishmentTyler discusses the challenges of working within the Republican Party and the prevalence of establishment-minded individuals.
  4. 22:27Third-Party vs. Republican StrategyTyler explains why a third-party run is unfeasible and advocates for building a nationalist caucus within the Republican Party.
  5. 36:26Debate Exclusion and Campaign ObstaclesTyler details how he was blocked from televised debates and the organized efforts to suppress his campaign.
  6. 49:49Campaign Funding & Political LevelsTyler breaks down the financial requirements for different political offices and the advantages of starting at the state level.
  7. 57:22Super PAC StrategyTyler outlines his plan to launch a Super PAC to fund future campaigns and support America First candidates.
  8. 1:11:17Campaigning for America FirstTyler explains how to engage voters on sensitive topics by framing issues as pro-America and anti-foreign influence.
  9. 1:23:33Trump's Betrayal and Third-Party DebateThe panel discusses Trump's perceived betrayals and the ongoing debate about the viability of a third-party movement.
  10. 1:40:53Tyler's Full Political JourneyTyler provides a detailed account of his political awakening, military service, J6 arrest, and congressional campaign.
  11. 2:02:00Immediate Goals in OfficeTyler outlines his top priorities if elected, including dismantling power structures and cutting foreign influence.
  12. 2:13:23Motivating Voters & Future OutlookTyler discusses strategies for engaging young and older voters and expresses optimism for future political change.

The Transcript

Ian MalcolmAlright Joanne, I thought I would start us off with something a little outside the box. Now I have a sneaky suspicion, Joanne, that you're gonna be able to name that tune as well as the artist behind it, but let's, let's give it a go.

@joann_marieYes, I can! Oh my god, I'm so excited. I've gotten like three. Oh my god, it's, it's Alanis Morissette, "You Learn," and thank you so much for helping me. Thanks again, Ian and Tyler for being here. I always love when you come. And guys, please repost this space, and if you guys quote on it, I will also repost it, and it's such a great song, and thank you so much for having me.

Ian MalcolmYeah, no, absolutely. I thought that you live, you learn, it would be a good little, little jingle here to kick off this, this space on the lessons learned from the campaign trail, and what a cool concept to be able not only to host a space with an individual who ran And for Congress, but now to be able to look in the aftermath, what, what can we take from it, from this experience? What were the ups, what were the downs? what are the, the lessons perhaps to apply going forward? Although I, I do have to say, so Joanne, I was excited for that song, I thought it'd be very fitting, then I had to look, as I always do, into the roots of the artist, and, I guess I'm afraid to say, no. You betcha. So get this, Quite,

Ian MalcolmI, I'd like to say surprisingly, but I suppose it's not the case. so Morissette, was the daughter of Georgia Marianne, and Alan Richard Morissette. Okay, so far we're there, except for Georgia Marianne, whose actual name was Fairstein, while Alan was French and Irish, hence the last name of, Morissette. Georgia, and this is directly off Wikipedia, who- Fled Hungary during the anti-Soviet uprisings in nineteen fifty-six was of Jewish ancestry. Surprise, surprise. So Alanis Morissette, a quarter Jewish, according to Wikipedia. Nonetheless, really talented musician, and had some, if, if you think about it, in a way, isn't it curious because she was one of the early people of essentially what would ultimately become the Me Too movement, spoke out very aggressively about some of the horrors that she saw in Hollywood So kudos to where they are due, and certainly quite the talented, singer, had some rather controversial songs, and I suppose we could associate that with the Usual Suspects, but nonetheless, called out the early renditions of what would become, Harvey Weinstein and all that insanity. Weinstein, also, yeah, same, same tribe. But to get us right back to the, you live, you learn, right? Perhaps, at times, Tyler, you screamed because of the absurdity of what you were against in your race, and so- For those that weren't here during the prior space where we talked about your campaign, the things that were going well, what got you into politics, if you wouldn't mind, maybe give us just a quick little recap on yourself and your, your interests in politics, and then what we can do is kind of dive into some of the experiences that you had throughout the campaign, maybe after recapping the most recent events and kind of what it was like in the, the closing hours of that campaign cycle.

@dykes4congressYeah, and again, thank you guys for having me on, for helping promote the campaign while it was going. It actually, we showed up and did quite well, all things considered. the number one person who ended up winning, I think they spent about a million dollars. The number two person who went to the runoff spent eight hundred thousand dollars, and I spent twenty-five thousand dollars. So, all in all, I'd say we did quite well despite the results. So, for those who don't know, my name is Tyler Dykes, and I ran for you- U.S. Congress to replace Nancy Mace as she was retiring to run for governor, and it was just insane from the get-go. I'm telling you, like, the amount of opposition from the establishment wing, the Republican Party, was absolutely absurd The very first thing they tried to do was to actually ban me from being on the ballots and passing laws in the state house to try to remove me. Not me by name, but of course it was targeted.

@dykes4congressbut let's talk a little bit about why. So very briefly, I am a nationalist, I am a Christian, I am not a Christian nationalist, I would not say that I am that, but I am both Christian and a nationalist. I believe in fighting for America and for the American people and for the American people that is the people The heritage people that have been here for generation after generation. And you can become an American, but we aren't supposed to be open for the entirety of the Third World to just flood into our country and convert us to different faiths or religions. I stand opposed to Zionism and to the influence of Israel over our politics, and I stand opposed to APAC and all the different kinds of levers of influence they have. I, first started to get aware when I traveled overseas for a year and I saw the impact mass migration had in Europe. Came back home, saw the exact same impact happening here. I attended the Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, protesting the removal of our Confederate monuments. Later on, I joined the Marine Corps, where I served honorably, did a year and a half active duty, three years ish on the reserves, and it was during that time in the reserves that I entered the US Capitol In January 6, 2021, and then was later, while I was in the third year of running my IT business, I was arrested for Charlottesville, released from jail after pleading guilty, and then arrested by the FBI inside the county jail for January 6. And then I got out with a pardon after five months federal prison from President Trump himself, gave me a pardon. And then we all witnessed how everything just went to absolute shit after Trump got in office. It was so good at the very beginning, the first three months were perfect, were amazing, and then striking Iran, and then no deportations, and all this stuff sort of spiraled. So I decided to run for office. I ran, because I went and I heard all the people that were running for this position in South Carolina's first federal congressional district, and I heard everyone speak And I didn't like them. They were all Zionist or pro-immigration or basically they were liberals pretending not to be. But there's one guy in particular who made it to the runoff, whom I despised, because he's this boomer man who's, sort of an old boy style, guy, which is okay, except for the fact, you know, and I like sort of a lot of the old boy sort of stuff, except for the fact that he says that because he grew up poor and now he's super rich, that he's proved- The American Dream still works, so we don't have to change every-anything. Any- everything is perfect just the way it is. Don't change a thing. He's the establishment person, and that's exactly how he campaigned. So I resolved to enter the race. I entered the race to run against him, and because I have a good voice and I can speak, and when I went out and did speeches talking about my J-6 experience, people told me that I should use my voice to talk to people, to communicate our ideas, and to get the word out there where- Matters to the general population. And so, I ran, I ran for office, I ran, I went hard, I campaigned, I did door knocking, I passed out flyers, I did events. I think I did about fifteen to twenty events the last month or so of the campaign. The last week, I did six events. and so it was just, it was busy from start to finish. Some, the notable things though was just the amount of opposition I had from the very beginning. Being openly pro-white, being openly anti-Zionist, being an open nationalist, it, it drew the complete unified opposition of every single aspect of the Republican Party First, they tried to pass a bill through the state house requiring people that in order to be a candidate for office, you have to have voted in two of the last three primaries. I couldn't vote in the primaries because I was in federal prison during last primary. in twenty twenty-four. And so they knew that it would, they knew it would be knocking me off the ballot. I went and I spoke out against that bill, and I helped organize the grassroots to oppose that bill and successfully managed to kill the bill and prevent it from being passed out of committee. After that, they tried to pass an internal party memo within the Republican Party in order to make it so that nobody, unless you voted in all of the last primaries, you couldn't run. That failed because there are still people in South Carolina that have good values. Then it came on just again and again where my events would get canceled, where I was told that Lindsey Graham himself had taken an interest in my campaign and specifically reached out to different places where my events were being hosted. And got them to cancel on me last minute. This happened multiple times. There were also a number of times where I was actually physically assaulted while door knocking. There was one event that I went to, which was a big Buford County party rally event, about a month before the election, where one of my volunteers was physically attacked, punched in the face, knocked on the ground, and the pizza we were handing out to promote the campaign, they stole it and, and then tried to sabotage us every step The way. And then the last bit of, of, attack that they did to prevent me from getting the word out was the televised debate. They specifically blocked me from being able to attend the televised debate, and I couldn't go and speak at the debate that we did end up having. And, which was just ridiculous. And, so the person who won this seat, her name is Jenny Honeycutt, and, the first time that I heard her speak, we were standing on a candidate forum stage, so it wasn't a televised debate, there were crews there recording it, but it was just like a candidate where they ask you questions. And, I distinctly remember this question I was asked. It was basically, "With regards to Department of Defense policy and finances, will you..." Do you support additional funds and troops being put in the Middle East in defense of our greatest ally, Israel? That was the question. And, while I spoke up very strongly against the idea that Israel is even an ally and the fact that we have to stand for America and for American values and get out of the Middle East, Miss. Jenny Honeycutt, who's now the representative for South Carolina's first district, gave a passionate speech saying it was our holy duty to go to war with Iran on behalf of Of Israel, and that we are called to support Jews and the chosen people, and all this other rhetoric, and gave a very rousing speech about how we have to bomb the entirety of the Middle East on behalf of Israel. Her words, almost word for word, that's what she was saying. And, she did a media blitz right towards the end. She spent something like a hundred thousand dollars last week and, managed to cinch up the nomination and become the next representative. So for the numbers, I spent between twenty and twenty-five thousand dollars, and,

@dykes4congressduring that, I managed to get about a thousand votes, which is pretty good. Jenny Honeycutt, Mark Smith, number one.

@joann_marieH-H-Honan Tyler, I'm so sorry. if the space crashes, Ian, we'll, we'll open a new one, but I think he just reset. I just cut

Ian Malcolmthe audio just cut out twice, it's just, it's wild the number of issues that we're having, today. So, apologies, Tyler.

@dykes4congressIt's all good. Did you guys hear what I was saying?

@joann_marieYes, yes, you were perfect. It was, it was just Ian that maybe it was gonna crash, but I think you saved it, so it's good. Okay, go for it then.

@dykes4congressYeah, so I spent about twenty-ish thousand dollars. I got about a thousand votes, so I spent roughly twenty dollars per vote. The number one person got somewhere around fifteen thousand votes for the leg of it that I was on, actually a bit less than that, and they spent nearly a million dollars. And so you do the math there, but it's somewhere like a hundred and twenty dollars per vote that they spent in this race. And, and so it was just, there was a huge amount of money and finances and power that was being used in this race against me. there's also the fact that they were going to redistrict, and because Nancy Mace was going to re-enter the race if they did redistricting, because it would push back the date of the primary, they specifically, the senators The South Carolina state senators from my district were the ones that led the charge in killing redistricting in South Carolina, specifically to prevent myself, Nancy Mace, from being in the race and gaining any traction, so that they're chosen establishment candidate would have a better chance of getting in. So there were all sorts of things happening at the state house, involved with the federal government, and then you had all the local parties, and then you had all this action specifically to try to stop the message. And despite all of that op-opposition, despite not being able to get the message out there, there were still over a thousand people that agreed with what I had to say, uncompromisingly nationalist. Now, I'm thinking if just ten percent of the people that voted for me end up joining my campaign Campaign and helping me in the future. That is a team of a hundred people right here locally. You can make waves with that many people working. So overall, I learned a whole hell of a lot. I got a lot of experience about how to actually run a campaign. I figured out who to trust and who not to trust, and, yeah, so that's sort of the bare bones of who I am, how the campaign went, and, what it's all about. So.

@g0dfr0yTyler, can I ask you a question, sir? Hit me with it. Yeah, so first of all, thank you for following me. Sorry it took me so long to follow you back, man. I really appreciate it. And thank you for all you're doing for our people and, all you're doing for this country, man. You, you put yourself out there for it, and we really appreciate it. my question for you is, did you have people who were in the establishment or just establishment-minded people that- Said stuff like, "Hey, I'd love to support you in public, but I just can't for X, Y, Z reasons." Did you see people, did, did you have any backchannels with people that, that were supporting your message but they weren't willing to,

@g0dfr0yput themselves in harm's way politically? Did you encounter anything like that? and is there more support from, people buried within the establishment that just aren't willing to be bold enough to do what you do?

@dykes4congressYeah, it was actually, surprising and a bit demotivating actually, just the sheer number of people in elected offices even in the state house and county council positions, in different leadership positions throughout the Republican Party in various different counties. How many of them supported me and said that I was the best candidate and they wanted to help me, but that they couldn't because they couldn't risk being associated with the message, and they would essentially lose Any and all power that they had if they came out and publicly supported me. And so publicly they ended up supporting other candidates, instead. And so it was very, very interesting to, of course, meet with these people, and they could have just been lying, of course, but I spoke with them, I looked in their eyes, I tested them a little bit to see where their heads were at, and they were fully aligned. And it's actually because of that experience, I'm completely and totally opposed to any idea that we can just infiltrate the establishment. The, the way that power works is it is so tied up there that if you aren't directly going against the system, the power that be, if you try to just go in quietly and keep to yourself, your ideas to yourself, and just be behind the scenes, functionally you'll be no different than the enemy, because you won't actually be able to do anything that matters. So, yes There were a number of people that did support me that were within the establishment, and it was actually disappointing how many of them that there were, well, well over a dozen, I would say, people with positions of power. See,

@g0dfr0yoh, sorry, I was just gonna say, see, that, that's, that confirmed my theory that I think there is an absolute groundswell of support for nationalism and America only, America first politics, and of course, anti-Israel politics. But that if you go through the, if you go through the apparatus of the Republican or

@g0dfr0ybe sucked out of such movements, and I think that we're right for a third party, movement, a third party candidate And, I, I really do appreciate you running as a Republican. Do you, do you foresee yourself running as a third party candidate in the future, based on what you experienced here? Yeah.

@dykes4congressYeah, absolutely not. I, I don't foresee that I will ever run as a third party candidate. you, you will be more likely to have a violent revolution than you will to run as a third party candidate. That's just the way that the system works here. it's just so difficult to get anything done with all of the power structure. You need to have a much higher percentage of votes in order to even be on the ballot as a third party candidate. Essentially, if you're not all Already going to win the election before you start running for office, you don't have a chance of winning as a third party candidate. It's, while it might be like twice as hard for me to win as a Republican, as opposed to if I were like an establishment person, it would be ten times harder as a third party, and it's just, in, until such a time that the, the structures of power changes, third parties are just completely impossible. it would be better, in my opinion, to create a caucus A group or an organization that helps organize people run for office as nationalists and essentially function as a third party within the Republican Party. That would actually be, not only possible but doable, in my opinion. and so no, third parties are out in, in my experience here.

@g0dfr0yGotcha, thank you. No, that's a positive takeaway too, and I-- just the fact that The fact that you had people within the establishment having backchannel conversations with you, supporting you, tells me everything I need to know. I, I do think the sentiment is there, it just needs to be harnessed properly, like you're saying. So,

@g0dfr0ythanks, man. Really appreciate. I know there's probably other people that wanna speak, and, I appreciate you answering my questions. Thank you.

Ian MalcolmYeah, yeah, and, and Tyler, we'll go to, him in just a second, but I'm kind of curious, that idea, one of the things about

Ian MalcolmI'm convinced that what we need is continued exposure of these ideas, like Godfrey was saying. I believe there's an extreme sense of, of rising nationalism that is very, very frustrated with quote unquote MAGA and its, essentially, it, the back that it turned on the American people, right? And as a result, I feel like it just needs an author to vocalize these ideas in a large forum, and obviously, you getting up on a stage in the opportunity to be a part of a- A public debate, debate that would be publicized, would be put out and broadcast to hundreds, thousands, maybe hundreds of thousands of people, right? Those are the, the monumental opportunities that we need for this sense of rising nationalism and essentially anti-Zionism. So I'm curious if you could walk through how that debate came up, how you were informed that you wouldn't be allowed to participate, if there were parameters that were given to you that they tried to use to justify that decision, and, and what you were able to do or not do? To try and overturn that decision.

@dykes4congressYeah, no, it was, they basically didn't even release the parameters, and I had to talk to somebody that was running-- So there were the people that were running the actual debates, then there was someone associated with the people running the debate, then there was the friend of the person who was associated with people running the debate. So that third person is the one that I talked to and was able to actually get in contact with and just try to figure out what it was they were saying to justify Not including me in the debate stage. And they basically said, "Oh, well, you know, because there's no real, public polling, because no one's released any of the polling." They've basically just come up with, it's the amount of money that you have is, is essentially how they were choosing it because there were ten candidates that were running, and if they had all ten people show up, it would take too long, and so they just had basically the five people with the most money because they just didn't quite have enough time to be able to choose everybody, and that's the way that they were choosing with regards to who was most likely to win, would be those five. And, It was, I, I did my best to overcome it. I reached out to the people that were actually leading the debates, and it was just complete silence, just, ghosted. Nothing. there, there was nothing I could do short of breaking down the doors, the debate stage, and forcing my way onto the stage that I would able-- be able to get a voice there. they just completely locked me out, and there was no getting past it. That was, essentially what, what happened there. They, they don't under any circumstances want anybody like us to ever be able to speak our voices to where the public can hear us. And the only way you're gonna be able to actually break through their blockade is if you have so much motion and have so much traction and so much popularity that it is impossible to ignore, and then they'll slander you and attack you the way that they're doing to people like Fishback. Of course, he had the added advantage of being a multimillionaire with hundreds of thousands of followers before he started to run, and having the right ideas and speaking very charismatically. I'm sort of basically figuring it out as I go along with very little money, very little influence, very little connections, and building it as I ran. And so having to build the base while running for the first time, was an experience. Oh, let me tell you that it was an experience. Having all the- People reach out, try to join the campaign. There were at least four different instances of people that like said that they wanted to help me, and then immediately tried to screw me over or steal information and then tried to extort me for money. It was a learning experience to be able to figure out the right ways to be able to actually vet people who claim to support you. So that was useful. But, yeah, the, the whole thing with the debates was just, it, it was just organized from top to bottom to ensure only their chosen candidates got to say.

Ian MalcolmNo, understood. And, and, so on that real quick, one thing that you mentioned was that, you suggested Fishback had millions of dollars and hundreds of thousands of followers prior to running, his campaign. I wasn't necessarily familiar with his backstory. I, I know he's obviously supported a lot by Nick Fuentes and some others, but where did you pull those data points from? And if, if so, I'm just trying to kind of add them to my repository of, of understanding the landscape.

@dykes4congressWell, you know, I, I just pulled the amount of money that he had, quite frankly, just out of thin air, because he was working as a hedge fund manager or something like that. He was very heavily involved in finances, and so I'm assuming that you work in that kind of career, you have plenty of money, to go off of. So I don't have any stats for that. but I remember him when he was first going online and started to speak. The first time I heard of him was like three months before he announced that he was running, and Fox News, he had a platform, he had like a hundred thousand followers plus, and, and so I'm assuming on the money aspect, obviously I could be incorrect there, I'm just making an assumption based on the fact that, that he worked in, it was like a hedge fund or an investment company or something like that, something to do with managing money at a very high executive level, was the last job that he had before running for governor, as far as I'm aware of. If anybody has a different idea, please correct me.

Ian MalcolmNo, no I, I, I went and I was trying to-- any time somebody says something that I'm, I'm ignorant on, I always, I, I try to expand my knowledge base as best I can, and it, it does suggest, some of the financial backings, I was working for something called Greenlight Capital, Capital and Azoria Capital, does look like they were managing a, a decent amount of money, for what it's worth, the public records suggest that he has a, a four hundred thousand dollar condominium in, Washington, DC,

Ian Malcolmand Honest assets under management, something between thirty-five or thirty and thirty-five million dollars, which is a, a pretty small fund, but nonetheless, access to pretty big dollars, so a, a reasonable comment to make. Again, I'm not, not certain about the accuracy of it, but, as always, I will try to question and poke if I ever see anything that I think might be a little bit rough around the edges, but I, I appreciate the, let's say the clarification there, Tyler. So that, that being said, it's fascinating though,

Ian MalcolmAnd the fact that they were basically looking at these five candidates, let me ask you. So you were saying if, if you had enough, either capital or, I guess what Nick Fuentes and the Groypers would call enough motion, I think that's the, the, the trendy term of the day, right? If you had enough motion that they wouldn't be able to ignore your message, that perhaps you could have gotten onto that debate stage, now that would have been the big televised debate. Were there other opportunities that you were or weren't given as a result, perhaps, of some of That you take relative to other candidates?

@dykes4congressWell, I wasn't given anything. I had to take every opportunity. I had to force my way into any and every position to be able to have events, to be able to go to candidate forums. for every candidate forum event where all the candidates spoke, that I was able to go to, there were like five or six of them that, I didn't even know about until after they were over, because they had reached out to all the other candidates to organize it. Well, I wasn't invited. And, so basically the, the only way to get past that is with the ground game. It's with having your own team of people, with being able to knock every single one of the, of the voting doors, being able to knock thirty thousand doors in the last month leading up to the election. You need a team of a hundred to two hundred people to be out, go out there doing that, volunteering. That is probably the only way I would have been able to overcome that, with Out having an absurd amount of money. And so one of the things I learned is that the average amount of money spent in a US House race that wins is between one and two million dollars to win the Republican primary, which is just insane to me And so if anyone is thinking about following in my, footsteps and running for office, I actually highly suggest starting out with the state house. At the state house level, there's only about two thousand people that vote, a lot of the time even less, and a lot of times people run completely unopposed. And so you could go up against an incumbent who's never run a real election campaign ever in their life. And so that would be a great, a great way to be able to sort of get through the door and be able to get some real- Power. but even at

Ian Malcolmthis and, and Tyler, for, for those that are less familiar, because I, I do think it's really important that those of us in this movement, we understand the machine, right? So the, the, the variance between a governor versus a congressman versus somebody working in the state house, can you kinda just give everybody a quick little overview of the difference there between the seat that you were running for as a congressman versus that in the state house?

@dykes4congressYeah, so basically the state house is ba-is the state's congress. And so fir- you have the two branches of government, you have the, or of the legislative branch, right? You've got the House, and you have the Senate. And you have the bills generally start in the House, they pass the House, they go to the Senate, if they pass the Senate, then it goes to the governor or to the president, and then it passes and becomes a law for the state. So the governorship is basically like being the president of the state The House, the State House and the US House are very similar, just ones for the whole country and ones for just in the states. and then you have the State Senate, which is very similar to, of course, the US Senate.

@dykes4congressthe difference is staggering though in the amount of people in each district. The amount of people in a US House district is, I think, about seven hundred and fifty thousand, people in a federal US House district And in a state house district, it's only about sixty-ish thousand people, that you need to reach out to in order to run for election. So it is much more doable on the state level as opposed to the federal level, especially given just the insane level of cooperation that the establishment and that the government has to crush things at the federal level. It is much easier to get past that at the state level.

Ian MalcolmYou know, well stated. And, and, and it's one of these things, right? I, I feel like we're building this, this community, and I, I gotta give, Fuentes credit, right? He talks about the reality that we can, we can notice all these problems, but if we don't figure out how to garner control or power or some kind of, I guess you'd call it motion, right? That it's, it's, it's somewhat, futile. And so I think it's really helpful for people to recognize exactly what Tyler just suggested about

Ian MalcolmRight? If you're in a community where that might be the case, right, and you're passionate about these realities and trying to change the, the world, right? We might not be able to, to, to get to the presidential level tomorrow, right? But we can take steps to run in local offices that they can have monumental significance for local communities. I think it's a really wonderful, thing to, to, to make sure we mention there, Tyler. so, so when it comes to, let's say what your, your aspirations are ahead, right? Now you've,

Ian MalcolmWere you able to share it with, Azapac, with Dr. Rechtenwald? Were you able to share this and get this through to the likes of Bill Zarian or other candidates that might be running in local office? And what might be your intended next steps in terms of what you're looking to do personally, politically, et cetera?

@dykes4congressYeah, no, I've definitely talked with, the Aspac guys and Lori and Michael and all of them, and a couple of other people that have run or are going to be running in twenty twenty-eight. but, but the biggest thing when it comes to running is you need to have a team of people that you trust that can go out there and do a lot of that kind of work with the door knocking, have those volunteers in place already, and you also need to have funding. And so the next step for me here Is, is to, of course, now that the campaign is over, is to go out and find a job that can actually pay the bills and then save up some money and do some fundraising. Where I will be launching my own personal super PAC, in the near future. Gotta get the website and the video and advertisement going and get all of the legal paperwork set up for that. But I'll be launching my own super PAC, that way I can accept unlimited donations from any American citizen inside America. And, once that is set up I'll be able to actually accept large donations, and I will of course use that to advertise and to promote,

@dykes4congressgenuine America First Patriots within South Carolina, and then once it comes up to twenty twenty-eight, I may decide that I wanna run for office again, and should that come, I will resign as the president of the PAC and, pass it over to somebody I trust to run it and to manage the money for me, and then I will run for office again in twenty twenty-eight. And, the dollar amount fundraised will really determine what that position will be. But, in order to even run at state house level, well, and, and

Ian MalcolmTyler, before you do that, just on that idea of the super PAC, again, I think there's a, a lot of, pieces of the, the machine here, right? that individuals might not be as, as familiar with as, as others that have been kind of following, politics for a while. Can you kind of walk through the concept of the PAC and as the PAC, for example, with Dr. Recktenwald versus the super PAC that you

Ian MalcolmAnd how you would intend to kind of build that and, and let's say build that war chest in the coming year or two that you could then use to self-fund the next steps that you might take?

@dykes4congressYeah. So a PAC or a political action committee basically is a way for companies and individuals to give money to a cause, and then that organization can then pass that money out to different candidates or to specific candidates running for office. This is a way that APAC is able to funnel in so much money Money, because they are a, a, a PAC where they can spend an unlimited amount of money. Thanks to a Supreme Court case of Citizen United, super PACs specifically can spend an unlimited amount of money in specific races, even though federally they are only allowed to directly contribute five thousand dollars per campaign. And so they can directly give to you five thousand dollars these specific kinds of PACs, and then that kind of PAC can also go and spend a million dollars dollars on their own advertising for you, and it says, "Paid for by this PAC." And, it's essentially it's a way for wealthy people to funnel their money into politics. And, I very much so hope that there are enough of us now that are nationalists that know the truth, that would want to help contribute to that, and, so I'll be starting my own super PAC. Now, as a PAC, I won't be in conflict with them because they are a multi-candidate PAC, as I understand it. So they can't spend legally, they can't spend an unlimited amount of money,

@dykes4congressin races and different things like that. They can give to other PACs or they can spend up to five thousand dollars per candidates, legally speaking. And so, and also if somebody goes and donates a million dollars To Aspak tomorrow, saying they really like that they support me, Aspak can still only spend five thousand dollars of that on my race and on my campaign. So by starting my own super PAC and then passing it off to somebody that I trust, I can essentially have unlimited donations from anyone in the country to be able to run again. And having that kind of infrastructure is very, very, very important for being able to run for office.

Ian MalcolmNo, that's really well stated, and, and it's, it's actually a fantastic overview, Tyler, for a lot of individuals, again, that might not be as familiar with the process, how this works, the monetary limitations that exist. And it, it, it's for-- kind of in recap, it's one of the big challenges with APAC, right? They've basically figured out how to, move around and navigate some of the limitations that are designed so that candidates can't just receive endless slush funds from certain groups and interests, and yet they- Of course, bypass that, they avoid FARA registration, all those other kind of things, right? So it's, it's an insane aspect of this that I wanted to make sure that we were able to touch upon. I really appreciate the, opportunity for you to kind of walk through that. now, now one little piece, you mentioned that if you do determine, so let's say you, you raise a million dollars or you raise ten million dollars, that it might influence the position that you would then run for, can you kind of walk through what you think some of those thresholds might

Ian Malcolmto be essentially relevant for any of these, prospective openings.

@dykes4congressAll of the amounts vary, of course, but to run for the state house, you generally need a minimum of twenty thousand dollars, but winning campaigns, it's about fifty thousand dollars that you need. For the state senate, that becomes closer to five hundred thousand dollars. for the US House, that's one to two million dollars, and for US Senate, that is upwards of Five plus million dollars in order to win that race, and then for governorship, it really depends, it's like between one and six million dollars that you need in order to be able to run for that position. And, and so all of those, i-it is very, very difficult to compete when you don't have that money, and, and in order to build up from the grassroots, again, it would take hundreds of people, working just in this district in order to be able to overcome that kind of money. So another thing- That I'll be doing with the pack is I'll be going out and speaking and organizing, holding events, holding marches, doing demonstrations, recruiting people to be volunteers, and building up a large list of people that can help get the word out who all operate locally within the area that I'll be running in. And so, that'll be a, a secondary part of it as well, so that even if we don't have the money, let's say we only raise ten thousand dollars, but we have four hundred volunteers, then I'm gonna run for US Congress again. So really, it, it sort of just depends how it shakes out with regards to how big the organization gets, how much funding it can get, but that's sort of the, the bottom line there with the money.

Ian MalcolmNo, really, really helpful, for that take. And, and I, I guess the last little thing, 'cause you did mention that you're looking into commercial opportunities in case anybody is listening that might be in, your proverbial neck of the woods and/or is looking for somebody, remote that might be able to, to offer you some kind of commercial position. would you mind kind of just giving a little bit of your expertise, your specialties, or the things that you'd be interested in doing outside of the political landscape, again, just

Ian Malcolmmight know somebody that they might be able to put you in touch with.

@dykes4congressYes, I am, looking for work, so if anyone is hiring, please let me know. and so a lot of the things that I'm good at, obviously, I'm great at speaking, sales is something that I'm quite good at. I have experience with car sales and with different kind of manufacturing sales. I ran my own IT company, and I started it myself by going out there and advertising it. I got very good at marketing and advertising. And then I also got really good at doing the on-the-ground stuff myself as an IT technician. So I'd be like a level two technical-wise in IT, for those of you that are familiar with that. additionally, I am, very capable when it comes to electrical and construction. I've had to oversee a number of projects where we actually had to do rewiring, complete rewiring, and replumbing of a lot of various different homes and offices in order to be able to get the devices, like cameras, smart cameras, installed and security systems. And, and I also, of course, am six five and, two hundred and forty pounds and work out regularly, so I can lift pretty heavy Hefty weight. And, pretty much I'm just looking for anything that can pay the bills and help me save up money to pay for all the lawyers needed to, launch my pack. And so if anyone out, is out there who's interested in hiring me, please let me know. I am interested in doing anything as long as it can meet those requirements.

Ian MalcolmNo, much appreciated. And, Joanne, I feel like we're in, can't remember that dating show with Charles Wolery, I think was the guy's name back in the day. you Tell us about yourself. No, Tyler, I, and I say that just to add a little levity, but I, I, I do think in all sincerity for anybody listening, if you are looking for an individual, to provide a, a professional support, it's a pretty strong resume you just heard from a, a patriotic individual who's been out there trying to do what he can to fend for, the interests of, of his community and his citizenry and all of us, in the present in this political arena. So, so lots and lots and lots of

Ian Malcolmwith that being said, I know we've got a, a number of really wonderful patriotic folks up here, including Mr. Godfrey, who I wanna thank sincerely for being up here as a co-host. of course, the co-host is with the most is, who has named that tune three straight days, gotta love that. but also Coyote, Hippie, so many others. Wanna call out Mr. Collins down the listener panel, an absolute superstar and, author and architect of, JQ Radio. so lots of love to him. But,

Ian MalcolmAny thoughts for, Mr. Tyler, Dykes and all the wonderful things he's been doing on the political front?

@g0dfr0yyeah, I mean, I, I think it's the main thing is to keep fighting and to stay in the race and to keep being a voice for nationalism, for America first, America only politics, not to give in. I, I know there's a lot of pressure to, to give in and to, to quit and, and there, there, you can't fight the system and, It's important to stay in the fight, and what you're doing is the right thing. I do disagree with you a little bit on the third party aspect, but the fact that people like you and Dan are coming to the Republican Party to shake it the hell down, to shake it up, to, to, to, to smash this Israel first, a zog agenda of the party is what we need, and, we're here to support you all the way through. Thanks for what you're doing. I don't say this lightly, you're doing God's work.

@dykes4congressThank you, and God bless you.

Speaker 1Yeah, I, I thought that it, I like what you just said right there, man. you, you're not scared to get your hands dirty, and, and, and you don't mind doing labor. That's rare, especially nowadays, people wouldn't have said that out there. I don't know how far you are from North Carolina, but I know somebody, and I'm gonna talk to Ian later about this. but I

Speaker 1think more so like the, you know, the JQ or whatever like people wanna call it, this, this, you know, anti-Zionism thing, this is something serious that people need to, to, to take a look at that. Ian, you did a fantastic job, as, as always, right there on your question, and I appreciate, hearing you on that, Tyler, but, but I think that I'm gonna talk to some people and, and it's gonna be kind of hard because other people got, you know, way different beliefs than

Speaker 1it's time-- there, you know, there's a, there's a shift occurring right now. A lot of people are getting away from this stuff, and finally people are, are, are waking up to it. And, you know, a lot of the people up here, man, y'all, y'all been seeing this for a while. But what, I, I guess that's more of a question, Todd, what do you think about having to, you know, the, the political side of, of having to talk to, you know, some of the people but just that little ten percent, it's kind of nervy or whatever, but you gotta kind of move around it. Is that difficult or is it just a part of

@dykes4congressit? It's unfortunately a very big part of politics in Republican primaries, especially because the average age for people that vote in these primaries is like sixty-five, and, and that entire demographic is so thoroughly brainwashed that, you have to be very careful around that issue, when you're speaking with them. One on one when you're out campaigning. And, if you frame it as just being generally like pro-America, anti-all foreign influence, not China, not Israel, not Ukraine, not Russia, get 'em out of our country, people tend to listen very heavily with that, and you can definitely make waves and get the point across that like, we don't want any foreign influence, not from any nation, anywhere on earth. I don't care how much that you like them, I don't-

@joann_marieDid he cut

Speaker 1off?

@dykes4congressHe- He got

Speaker 1cut off. No, I-I feel the, the air for a sec. It's, I feel that it's not really like, you know, having a conversation with somebody like me or anybody up here. It's not that hard. And, and the whole thing about it is, is, you know, their, their little thing and their little hang-up with that. but, but things are shifting up, man. And, and you got a Gen Z coming ahead that everybody's paving the way to. I really am, am, am

Speaker 1Like he's laying down the foundation and, and making it to where people can, you know, step right up and, and, you know, and, and seem normal and feel confident with all this, and this is the way that things are evolving, because, you know, the, the, despite what people have heard, like, you know, the people that have been talking about these things, they haven't been wrong. they're still talking about it, and, and, you know, a lot of people are pl-probably plugged in now that weren't, three

Speaker 1How things are going and, and I really am excited about that. But it's great job, Ian, honestly. I'm gonna talk to you about something, on, on the back channel and, and push it. Hey, Joann.

@joann_marieHey, Kajori. Thank you so much for being here. Tyler, can you do a mic check really quick? If not, I'm gonna recycle you. Tyler? I-I'm just gonna recycle you. We can't hear you. Okay.

Speaker 2In the meantime,

@joann_marieguys, please repost this page. Hold on, hold on, just one second, keep it. please repost this page, and if you guys go to it, I will also repost it and follow Ian and Godfrey and Tyler, of course, and Cody and everybody in the panel. Tyler, can you do a mic check now?

@dykes4congressYes. Can you hear me now?

@joann_marieYes, welcome back. Go for it.

@dykes4congressOkay. Awesome. I didn't hear the last like minute or so of what anyone was saying 'cause my internet, I guess, was cutting out. Could Please repeat. No, I was just saying, you know, you're,

Speaker 1it's like you're well-spoken, and, and, you know, you're paving the way for the, the Gen Z, and they're, they're coming through, and there's gonna be a lot of, a lot of changes right there. So I think it's a, it's at a very pivotal, point in history. And, and I, again, I'm, I'm very impressed with you, you're, you're willing to roll up your sleeves and go do whatever great listening to you. Stay plugged in and, and come around, man. These, these spaces are-- you can get a lot more off these spaces than people think, man.

@dykes4congressYeah, thank you so much, I really appreciate it. And thank you guys obviously for, having me as well and giving me this opportunity. And we'll see what happens. Tyler is

@joann_mariesuper smart. He went to Cornell as well, so he, he's really smart. I, I was gonna ask,

Speaker 3Tyler a question too, since, we follow each other, it's good knowing you, first time talking, man. when you say that you wanna build another party within the Republican Party, I mean, I think we've heard this tune before, we came to Ron Paul back in twenty twelve, two thousand eight, nineteen eighty eight. And, you know, he had large, large supporters behind him, libertarian movement and all that stuff, and from time to time, the establishment always, you know, get their way, and there's saboteurs and there's agents of, of chaos who- Plagueate and somehow they turn the wheels of all these people who are on board on what you're saying that, that's good, but then they go around and they play that two-faced role, you know? They're, they're this person today, but tomorrow they're something else. And I don't know if you noticed, but, you know, since Charlie, Charlie Kirk, what happened to him, and everybody who- Really took the mask off on, you know, going with certain narratives that we all really don't believe in.

Speaker 3my question is how, how can you prevent that? How can you spot that? And what do you do about that on these infiltrators? Because, believe me, when you're hot, heh. When you're up there and you're being noticed by everybody, you're also noticed by the enemy, and I think everybody would notice that. So,

@dykes4congressso I heard two questions, I guess, sort of the whole idea about the third party, what about Rand Paul and everything he did, and then how do you deal with infiltrators? So the infiltrator one, really, you just have to test them. You have to not necessarily give them the opportunity to screw you over, but you have to give them a little bit of an opportunity for them to- To think that they can get one over on you and see what they do, see if they're trustworthy, see if they actually try to screw you over. And the, because the vast majority of saboteurs and infiltrators are absolutely brain dead and very short-sighted, the vast majority of them will take the very first opportunity to screw you and, get benefit from it that they can. And the ones that are smarter, you have to be smarter with reading them, but it all comes down to reading them The individual person, looking at them, testing them, making sure they're not going to screw you over, but it also comes down to you just can't ever trust anyone in politics too much, and so you always have to protect yourself so that even if the worst should happen, and your best friend betray you, that you'll end up being okay. And, and the third party thing, my, my counter to you there is, that we never really saw a whole lot of organized action with regards to promoting other candidates. We didn't see a whole lot of unity, even with regards to like Thomas Massey and his run for office. he isn't endorsed to anyone else that is running. They're not really explicitly being anti-system the way that I am. And it's my perspective that anyone that is, not explicitly opposed Into the system twenty four seven, you are going to eventually get co-opted. And, so that's why I believe that my perspective, or at least sort of building up new people to run for office and to organize together, that that, that's not infiltrating the system, that's fighting the system, that is sieging the system and taking over various castles across the country.

Speaker 3Correct. Correct. But when you got-- and we've seen this before. And what happened to Massey, it's a good thing that you brought that up, is when you got the opponent though, who can either out of the blue or just been waiting for the right moment, roll in millions of dollars. I mean, versus a grassroots movement of people putting in what they can and still survive, but versus the opponent that can just- Like that,

Speaker 3you know, have hundreds of millions of dollars, and then they're running the campaigns all day, all night. You know, they're, throwing out books out there like literally the following day, stacks and stacks and stacks of books. You know, I work in a warehouse and I see it getting sold literally the following day. It's all happening within,

Speaker 3it's just so fast. And yet with grass movements, it, it moves per week or per month, and it takes time. You see what I'm saying? I don't know, maybe I'm wrong on this, but

@dykes4congressour ideals are distinctly revolutionary. We want to completely reform and change the system and actually make it work for the American people. Our entire apparatus has been co-opted by foreign agitators and infiltrators that want to destroy our country. Almost all of the elites are being controlled by these people. And, and so my message is, did you think that leading essentially a political revolution, that it was gonna be easy? Every single political change that has ever happened in human history has fought the powers that be, has fought millions and millions of dollars, and they won. When the colonists fought back against the British, we faced the entire might of the British Empire and won. The various different nationalist movements of- Of Europe that won throughout the various nineteen hundreds, did so at great odds. You can even look at, like, even a lot of the communist figures, like Mao Zedong, for example, did a long march and ended up with like three thousand men facing down a million and ended up winning. How? What do all of these people that were successful, what did they all have in common? They refused to back down, they refused to quit, and when they failed, they reassessed and they tried and fought back again anyways. And, so we have to take that spirit of persistence and apply that here. So yes, they have millions and millions of dollars, but we have more people, we can organize better, we can talk to people better, we can get boots on the ground better, and ninety percent of the youth are with us. So We keep fighting, we keep on promoting it, we keep on growing the way that we're able to organize. It is just a matter of time before we win.

Speaker 3I like that, I respect that. I hope you win, brother. So you got my support on that. Thank you.

@smith86nMalcolm, I'm a fan.

@joann_marieThank you so much, JP. Smith, welcome. Go for it.

@smith86nOh, Jesus Christ died on the cross for the dead of sin, for a lot of people, me and others. And, met Moses in the desert, and I gotta find out when and why. Oh, it was something that was going on with, I think everyone knows the Prince of Egypt by now.

@joann_marieI'm, I'm so confused.

Ian MalcolmI'll, I'll, I'll be a little more blunt. What are you talking about?

@smith86nRandom stuff from the Bible that had details.

@g0dfr0yGet, get to the point or get off the stage, please.

Ian MalcolmSmith, did

@g0dfr0yyou know the

@smith86nhuman head weighs

Ian Malcolmeight pounds?

@smith86nWhat?

Ian MalcolmThe human head. The, the human head weighs eight pounds, Smith.

@smith86nI wasn't thinking about that.

Ian MalcolmDo, do you know how I know that?

Ian Malcolmbecause the little kid in Jerry Maguire tells it to Tom Cruise. I don't know if it's actually accurate or not, but that's what he says. Fantastic movie.

@smith86nOne second. Tom Cruise asked me for my social security number. That's a, another reason I don't know. Was this before

Ian Malcolmor after Zenoo and the Scientology gods came down and, and, abducted you?

@smith86nOh, oh, oh, that's a good way of putting it, thank you. Yeah, it's been in the probe, ain't it? Yeah. They,

Ian Malcolmthey probed you?

@smith86nYeah, probed you. It's not so sad. But,

Ian MalcolmIan, a, a guy who looked a lot like Ian Malcolm, apparently, was in a movie where a guy talked about getting probed by the aliens. They, they abducted him. Yes, it's called Independence Day. Do you know what movie that is?

@smith86nYes, it's yours. Independence Day. Before that was Brazil, which same cast as the X-Men.

Ian MalcolmThere you have it, ladies and gentlemen, Smith has connected, seven degrees of Kevin Bacon, and, we've somehow lined it with Jerry Maguire. So, lots of interesting trivia there. Tyler, I bet you didn't know we were gonna go this direction, but, Smith, I appreciate you for stopping by. That was, that was quite interesting. and, and we'll go back to Tyler for some facts that perhaps have a little bit more relevance to the conversation.

Speaker 1Yeah, great.

Speaker 1Yeah, what's your stance on, drugs, Tyler? Like, the, the drugs are, drugs are a big problem or whatever around, around some of the parts of, of America?

@dykes4congressYeah, no, I mean, it really is an issue, especially a lot of the opioids and that entire epidemic being pushed at us by, I won't say what kind of doctor, but, you know, there was a Jewish doctor. There, there are just a lot of that going on, and, but a huge part of it also is that the fentanyl is manufactured in China, it's given to the Mexican drug cartels, it's smuggled over the border. And so we could get rid of ninety-eight percent of these drug overdoses overnight if we actually just enforced the border and deported the illegals. Crazy, but that's how all the drugs are coming in that are causing these kind of problems anyway. I don't use drugs of any kind. I, don't smoke. I don't fall If you smoke weed personally, but I'm against it personally.

@dykes4congressyeah, so that's sort of my stance there. It's causing a lot of issues.

Speaker 1You know, I'd, I'd like to bend your ear for a sec. How would you appro- I, I've been trying to, so there, you know, we gotta fix this party or start something, I'd like the, things aren't kicking it. And, and the identity politics that have just poured into the, the conservative party, it's just beyond me, bro. I can't deal with the,

Speaker 1the You know, a lot of the tribalism, like the Save Act, I, I, I don't know how people looked at that, sized it up, and didn't see like, okay, this is, this is crazy ridiculous. It's, it's obvious the thing, just to, to nuke the filibuster or, or, or whatnot. I think they're gauging, gauging in on it. But the, the thing is, it's like trying to talk to people. People don't, they don't stand for anything. They don't care, but they don't have their, their, their values. They haven't read the Constitution. They, they, they're so quick to give up, on an amendment that was written, by the forefathers, because they don't wanna get labeled and, and whatnot. How do you approach some of these people like it's like ninety percent we agree, but that ten percent it just, it drives you crazy

Speaker 1Kind of separated everything, and as people kinda, everybody's kinda, evolving into it, you know, Ian's done great on that Godfrey, they, they've done great on kinda just, you know, going to talk to some of the people that, that are, that are morons. But do you have any advice on, on like, how to, I don't know, how do you talk to these people that, that just, they're just cucked out, like when it comes to To, you know, certain, certain geopolitical places.

@dykes4congressYou mean like the, the older crowd? Are you talking about those types of people, or you're just talking

Speaker 1like- Yeah, damn, and even like the Gen, Gen X, like they're good people, you're like, "Oh, we're gonna go vote, they're gonna vote Republican," but you just can't have the conversation when it comes to certain things because they're just, they, they can't criticize or, or something's always, weird. It's, it's real frustrating, man.

@dykes4congressIt, it really is, but the main thing is you just have to frame it in a way that doesn't trigger their brainwashing, their programming that they already have built in. You have to basically sort of gauge where they are in those issues, and then if they're very, very entrenched in that mindset, you just have to get them to think, "Is their worldview correct? Would they ever be willing to accept new ideas if they got information that said..." their existing ones were wrong. And unfortunately for a lot of people, they will never change their minds unless forced. And, and so when it comes to those people, you just have to move on, move on to, to the next person. And, and basically you're looking for somebody that is willing to have an open mind or a conversation. And, those are the people that you can win over. but the people that will never change their minds, you can still win them over to the cause. You just- Have to make sure that it is put in a way that they themselves see a benefit for themselves and for their family by supporting you, to where like if they vote for you, there'll be less crime in the neighborhood. They vote for you, they'll get an increase in pay because the employers have more money, that kind of thing.

Speaker 1Very, very well said. I found a, a, an effective tactic is kind of like, if you win their friends around, like if their friends are able to, to accept the, you know, whatever you gotta say or, or listen to you, then you can kind of win those hard cases in. But just, truthfully, I think that this is gonna be, there's gonna be a mental health issue, i-in the next, five, ten years. and I'm serious on that, and, and

Speaker 1I'm, and I'm But thank you.

@joann_marieThank you, Samak Jodi. Just super quick, you guys were talking about the drugs, and I read this story a couple of days ago, and it's wild. So the DEA permitted hundreds of thousands of fentanyl pills to hit the streets of New Mexico to beat appeal to prosec- prosecutions. Like it's, it's insane, guys. So I posted it in the purple pill so that you guys check it out. This insanity needs to stop. but that's about it. go for it, go for it.

@g0dfr0yThank you. yeah, I just wanted to talk about kind of what, hippie was talking about a little bit and kind of what coyote's talking about. Look, there, there is a cancer in the Republican Party, and that is Donald Trump and, and the mega-syop. it's a neocon-Israeli syop. And, and people have got to realize that. People have to realize that that party is dead. The Republican Party of Tom Cotton, of Ted Cruz, of Lindsey Graham. Of Chip Roy, of all these treasonous Israel first traders, and JD Vance is dead, and yet you have Tucker. This is what flips me out. You have Tucker, who is, I believe he's genuine when he's criticizing Israel, when he's calling Gaza genocide, when he's calling Trump out for being a traitor in his own way, he comes out and simps for JD Vance. And if I can communicate one message to anybody, and you, some of you probably heard me very impassion-- very passionately on my space the other day, say, "We can't keep doing this shit. We can't keep falling for new candidates." We can't keep falling for saviors. And Tyler, I'm not accusing you of any of that, by the way. I'm saying on a broader sense, the old Republican Party has to be smashed. We can't do this dance anymore. We can't pretend that we need to go vote Republican in the midterms, otherwise they're gonna trans our kids and, and they're gonna turn the frogs gay and all this stupid shit. And I think they created that stuff as a weapon for that very reason, among other reasons, by the way, and I could go on, on that. But, but we can't keep doing this dance again, and this is why I bring up a third party candidate. I think that in the twenty twenty-eight election, if we even have elections, and I, I'm still not convinced that we are

@g0dfr0ywe need a strong third party candidate. JD Vance is a cock to Israel. He's not condemning to, two nineteen, two twenty-four or six o two, two, two nineteen, two twenty-four, the same thing. he isn't calling Gaza a genocide, he isn't talking about cutting aid to Israel. He's gonna do the same thing again, and we as the American people have to say no. We're not going to play this game anymore. We're not gonna do it again. We want off this ride, and we're not doing it. And, in saying that, it is my sincere hope that somebody like a Dan Bilzerian, if he weren't to win his Primary or somebody like that would step in and be a serious third party contender to shake this system down. What are your thoughts on that on a national level? And what are your thoughts on, on my thoughts about the whole Vance psyop and how they're trying to trick us again?

@dykes4congressYeah, I'm not a, I'm not a Vance, supporter by any stretch of the imagination. There are a lot of times that he could have taken the opportunity to distance himself from a lot of this stuff, like striking Iran, and he just didn't. He, spoke out in favor of it even before, the, the November general election, after he was the Republican nominee at the Republican National Convention, he spoke about the necessity of striking Iran again. So he, he's never been, someone that I would consider Considered genuinely America first from the get-go, that, that much is obvious. And, so you know, maybe there's, something valid to be said for, a third party candidate, but again, there's just so much more structure already there with the two party system, and you have to work ten times as hard and have ten times the money in order to run as a third party candidate. Now, let's say that somebody runs or is thinking about running third party, and they put their full might behind And someone running in the Republican primary and that person loses, then running as a third party, I would say would be appropriate, even if you're not going to win, it would be necessary. But just because the primaries are so much earlier than the generals, because there's so much work involved with that, so much more structure, and you can actually get on the ballot, it, it, the entire system is designed specifically to stop third party candidates. Like, I think it was in the, what was it, the nineteen- Or even the eighteen seventies or something like that, around the time of the Populist Party, and then you had the Bull Moose Party and Teddy Roosevelt, that sort of idea of populism became very, very, very popular. And, then the Republican and the Democrat parties got together afterwards. They laid out the Populist Party platform in front of them, and both each of the Democrats and the Republicans took exactly half of the ideas from the Populists and then used it to divide the- Coalition they developed and crushed it. That's how the Democrats ended up with workers' rights, and that is how the Republicans ended up with pro-second amendment. The populist party had both. And, and so it was, a, a deliberate destruction of the third party that was successful. Since then, no third party has gotten above, I think, ten percent, popular support because they are very good at dismantling third party candidates. And again, if there are no good Republican pres- Presidential people that win the nomination, by all means, go third party. So

@g0dfr0yyeah, that, that, that's my fear. I don't mean to cut you off, is that they're going to try and shove JD Vance down our throats and give us that bad batch of potatoes to eat in twenty twenty eight. And I, what I'm saying to everybody is, hell, no, no matter how Republican you are, you can't accept that. I agree. You can't give in to that because that's what they're gonna try to do, and we need to be able to stand behind A third party candidate, even if they're not going to win, because I don't think that there's nobody that I've seen that's going to come up through the Republican Party primaries that is going to be truly America first. And, you know, just one thing about Donald Trump real quick is that he, he did exactly what you're saying right there. He was designed to suck the wind out of legitimate populism in America, to, to subsume that energy Take it and rip it apart. That was what he was designed to do. He was designed to rug pull the people in the Tea Party movement, legitimate constitutional patriots in America, and what I'm, I'm just saying is that We need to make sure that never happens again, and we can't-- and, and I know you're agreeing with me, but I, I just can't reiterate enough, we can't fall for this JD Vance psyop and even the Tucker psyop at this point. If he runs and wins, I think he's probably a psyop. I, I don't trust anybody at this point unless they prove that they're real.

Speaker 1I'd say something on that, and you're, you're, you're right on that, on the, on the populism. So populism comes in, and it does exactly what, you know, we're, we're kind of seeing. I, it's, it's at a unique time though, Tyler. I do believe that, I personally believe that the-- this is what people want. They want to hear somebody talk real. They want to, get back to the Constitution, adhere to the Constitution, and, and somebody who means it. So if somebody could run on being real and doing the

Speaker 1It, it, it, it broadens it. The tickets, gonna be, you know, Republican, all that, all that two party stuff, I, I just, it's, it, it is, it is crazy, but I, I do understand, the, the importance of it. I think that being a constitutional conservative, you know, you're running on nationalism already, like, like that's, that's a good ring right there. Anybody that's running, like a constitutional conservative, federalist or something like, that is what's

Speaker 1The kind of people, that is very dedicated to this, man. It, like, we hurt whenever, some of this stuff goes, foul because we have a lot of fixing, to do in this country. And with that comes an opportunity, of everything being in disarray to kind of, you know, come in here and, and swoop in with some different stuff. And, I mean, who would have ever thought that Dan, would be, would be running? And, I mean, he's, he's raised eyebrows. it

Speaker 1I'd tell you on that, man, just, you know, take it for what it is on the, a-and, and just do the right thing. We gotta get back to, to doing the right thing. That's what I like about the people up here. We want free speech. We don't wanna mess with our guns. We don't wanna, you know, mess with the, the Tenth Amendment stuff. all these other things, that are extra, like we don't want federal overreach. A-and, you know, we don't really want like too You know, politic in and all these, but, but it's understandable if you got somebody that's good, like the better they are, the more bullshit you can kinda keep up with it, if that makes any sense.

@dykes4congressYeah, and my message to that is just nobody is coming to save you. It is up to us to save ourselves. So it doesn't matter if the president agrees with everything that we say, he's not gonna do anything. It doesn't matter if Trump was everything that he promised. It wouldn't matter if he did promise to do mass deportations and actually carried it out to decouple us from Israel. It is up to each and every single one of us to take that responsibility onto ourselves and to fight for our communities, for our families. Families, and to do everything we can to organize locally to make those changes actually happen. And so, yeah, I'm, I'm completely with you. Like, obviously, vote for whoever the most base person is in, twenty twenty-eight, and then once you get out of the voting booth and you're done putting your check in to donate to the candidate, go out there and campaign, talk to people, change people's minds, organize, get a team of people together that you can trust, build community, build businesses, everything Must be done to make a change.

Speaker 4Locally. Locally. Yes.

@dykes4congressI like locally.

@joann_marieThank you so much, Tyler. I loved everything you said. Okay, we have a new person on the panel. Raheer, welcome. How are you, my friend?

Speaker 4Yeah, I, I, I just got, I got in, whenever, Ian has a space or Godfrey or you, Johan, I always like to come and listen, and, it is great to see the change in the American politics where people are calling out things for what they are, and especially online, some people You know, that early on maybe it was about making money, and now they're realizing, "No, it is serious, and it's about something serious, and it's about the freedom of your country," and they're coming along. So it's good to see that. And, all I say is, from as a Lebanese that understands what freedom is and fighting for freedom is, I say, "Freedom is expensive, and it's, it takes courage and it takes sacrifice." You, you're not gonna, you know? You, you have to put yourself out there. So I don't know the story of Mr.

Speaker 4Dykes here, but I can imagine how rough it is with these, Zionists thinking they're losing their grip, so they're gonna be vicious, and they're gonna be, yeah, they're gonna play all their dirty games, but, Good on you, sir, for, for trying and, and good on, you know, the, the rest. And I see also Aguilar is, is moving for that. There's Azapac, there is, Dan Belzarian. I think the momentum is there and, all the powers to you. That's all I have.

@joann_marieThank you so much, Fred. And Tyler's story is amazing. It's Do, do you wanna do a, a quick recap on, on your story, Tyler? I know, I know you did it like really, really quick today, and last time it was, but it's, it's just so brilliant, and there is a lot of people new in the space that maybe they want to hear it, because it's really cool.

@dykes4congressYeah, sure. Do you want more like a five minute version of, I guess my history, my views, and all that stuff?

@joann_marieSure, that would be amazing.

@dykes4congressYeah, so again, for everyone that's in here, my name is Tyler Dykes. I ran to replace the retiring Nancy Mace from US Congress. She was driven out, my opinion, because she opposed Trump and the Epstein files. He deliberately endorsed her opponent for governor in order to drive her out of politics, and I ran for her open US House seat. I, started out my journey in this space by going overseas in a gap year program. I got accepted into UNC Chapel Hill, where they tried to enforce this anti-white narrative on me to basically admit that everything my ancestors ever did was evil and wrong. I refused to do that. I went over, I went to a different college, I took a gap year, and I went overseas to Spain. I learned how to speak Spanish, I got to talk with a lot of the locals, but then I got to see the problems with mass African and Middle Eastern migration all over Spain. I then flew from Spain after doing a marketing internship there, and I went to-- after four months in Spain, I traveled a bit around Europe, and then I went and I spent several weeks in London, and I saw it was even worse, where I was the only person who was either white or who spoke English for entire areas of the city. I then flew to Dublin, Ireland, and I saw the same thing there, the same thing in Scotland, Berlin, France, Portugal, Spain, everywhere the same, mass migration destroying those countries. This is back in 2016, 2017. Then I, flew back home and I went to the Unite the Right protests to fight back against the tearing down of the Robert E. Lee, the Confederate statues, of the Stonewall Jackson statues, and I fought back and I participated in fighting against Antifa, against their desires to destroy everything that made America in the South to begin with. I then went to Cornell University as a biomedical engineer, did one semester And I realized just how bad, how communist that it is at Cornell, with my biological engineering professors telling us that we need to ban guns and be more like England, that we need to-- in the English classes, we need to write slam poetry talking about why the genocide of white people in Haiti was a good thing. And, so I dropped out after a single semester, and taking twenty plus credit hours, including chemistry, physics, calculus, biological engineering. Don't recommend it, was very difficult, but, I was just not gonna stay there with how left wing they were. Dropped out, and I ended up joining the United States Marine Corps. Did a year and a half active duty, went into the reserves, and was while I was in the reserves that I went to the Capitol on January sixth, twenty twenty-one, the so-called storming of the Capitol. After all that, shortly afterwards, I had my business start to take off, and I went full time running my IT company doing business-to-business, IT and business consumer IT services, so building server rooms, doing cybersecurity, doing printer cleanups, and installation of security cameras and computer systems. And I successfully had managed that, and was in my third year of managing that, when I was arrested for Charlottesville for carrying a tiki torch and charged with use of a burning object with the intent to intimidate. During that time, my lawyer conferred with me and said that they knew that I was at January sixth, they just couldn't prove it. If I take the plea deal for Charlottesville, they won't go after me for J six. I said okay, I took the plea deal for Charlottesville, and then I was arrested by the FBI anyways in county jail for January sixth. After I got out on the ankle monitor For a year and a half, I, then went into federal prison, spent five months in federal prison with eleven illegal alien cartel members from South America. They were my roommates, and they told me about all of the evil things they did in South America. I got pardoned by President Trump in January of twenty twenty-five. I got out, and I began speaking about my experience with prison, with fighting back against the system, with fighting for our people. And, people said that I could speak, and they told me that I should run for office, and so that's exactly what I did. I ran, even though that the odds were difficult, even though they opposed me every step of the way. I saw person after person drop out of the race, I refused to drop out of the race. I stayed in the race, I stayed in to the very end, campaigning for nationalism, for the ideals of the American people, for independence from foreign influence, an end to immigration, and to actually make life better for the American people. And, I ended up losing to woman with one plus million dollars in the race, and, that's alright. And so I ended up getting about a thousand votes in the race for US House My opponent ended up getting about fourteen thousand, ish, and then made it to the runoff, and, I spent about twenty dollars per vote, and so if I had had a hundred and fifty thousand dollars able to spend in this race, I likely could have won because of how efficient and effective I was being with the money that I had. And so it was a huge learning experience. A dozen infiltrators trying to destroy the campaign, attacks in every level, and yet I overcame them. I learned, and now my mission is to teach other people exactly what I learned, how to overcome it, how to analyze a lot of the data and information so that you can run for office and you can win at the state level. And, and then I'm planning on staying active in politics, looking for a job for right now. So I can make some money, save some money, and launch my own super PAC, and then you will see me again running for office in 2028.

@joann_marieIsn't this story wild? It's, it's crazy. I love it, Tyler. It's, it's amazing. I, you've, you've gone through so much. Sorry, I think Ian wanted to say something. Ian?

Ian MalcolmThere we go. No, no, no. I, I, I mean, I just, I'd love the overview, and I, I just wanted to welcome Mr. Rabbi Malias to the, to the program here. And, Tyler, every time I hear you go through that, it, it, it's kind of one of those things that I think a lot of, listeners probably get goosebumps just because it, it kind of defines patriotism in a lot of ways, right? And, it, it does give me a lot of optimism,

Ian Malcolmright? Enough is enough. and so I, I think it's incredibly inspiring and, and, you know, really, I guess, kind of excited about what it's going to bring tomorrow as a result of some of the things you guys did yesterday and today. But, Mr. Malia, I, I, I know you weren't here for the earlier introduction of Tyler. I don't know if you were in the prior space, prior to the election cycle, concluding, where we talked about what he was doing on the campaign trail. unfortunately,

Ian MalcolmAnd kind of are relaying those, but any thoughts on, on what you heard there from Tyler and his background?

@malleusigYeah, no, I would say it's, it don't worry, it's if you didn't make it to office in your first shot, that's pretty much the best you can hope for anyway. and the more people that are just running, even if you don't win, the more people that are just running and have Sane interests in mind, the more you normalize the process and whether or not you may get into office or not, you're at least normalizing it for the rest of us and for more people to step in and, and then you can form a coalition as well. I mean, there's, there's all kinds of

@malleusigelections. One of the things I've learned is that elections are one of the least, Efficient ways to make change. They only happen once every two or four years anyway, and there's all kinds of mechanisms in place to co-opt you before or after you get in, so, but again, it doesn't hurt at all to have quality people that are sane and aren't dedicated to destroying the country they, they claim to serve.

@malleusigso glad to have you and glad to support you however I can, and, I hope that you make it.

@malleusigAlso, also, I feel a little bit cheated. I thought Dyches for Congress was gonna be something completely different.

@joann_marieI love having you here, Rabbi. And we have Big T now. Big T, welcome.

Speaker 5Hey, salute.

@joann_marieHi girlfriend. Can

Speaker 5you hear me? Sorry, yeah.

@joann_marieYeah.

Speaker 5Well, salute to the space, and salute to Tyler for, being a,

Speaker 5a candidate, at least, at least to have the balls to run, you know what I mean? And, and do something that, a lot of people just speak about and say, "What if I was there? And if I had that position?" So, and, and, and what I've learned is, man, you know, the- The, the best thing about that, that, that position that, that you're learning, that you're trying to, to get to,

Speaker 5if, if you would have made it your first run, and I assume this is your first run,

Speaker 5I, I would, I would say you would have took it for granted, you know what I mean? and, and this, this way, you're gonna, you're actually gonna lace up your boots, bud, and you're gonna tighten up your game And you ain't gonna lose a second time. You know what I'm saying? And it's not, and, and I don't mean, and I don't mean to, to use the word losing as, as, as, as loosely as I am, but just not to be a, a winning candidate, because you are a winning candidate, because your name was on the ballot. Look how many people on this space, and their name wasn't on this ballot. You know what I mean? Like, I'm just using that as an example. But,

Speaker 5I, I, I But I, I can, I can assure you, you know, as long, this is the secret that I've learned, and I'm gonna give you this advice, and maybe it might help you, and it may not.

Speaker 5A lot of these Polls take, take place where in schools, right? This is what I've picked up, and even though, mind you, a lot of people know my history and I, I don't vote very much. I, I mean, I couldn't vote for, very long because of my history, I, they took my voting rights away. But I've picked up a lot about it because I am a part of the community and I've changed my life around. But,

Speaker 5when they do vote, you know what I mean? a lot of them take places in schools, right? I So what, what happens? A lot of these, a lot of these family members that, that are voting are always bringing their kids to school and stuff like that. And for you, the, I think the cheat code, and I always thought this to myself, I was like, I think I figured out the cheat code to be a politician. Man, forget all these community events and stuff, it's just visit school by school, man. You know what I'm saying? And just be, h-have a rally in each different district, you know what I'm saying, in schools with these kids and get to learn, you get to the kids, you're gonna get to the parents, you know what I'm saying? And once you do that I think, I think you, you, you got the rest of it figured out. But I just think that, that's, that's something that a lot of people haven't thought about, you know what I mean? And, and I'm telling you, it's a, it's a little cheat code that I, that I peeped out in the game. I was like, if they're out here shaking hands in the school in the morning or in, in the afternoon, these people are gonna, are gonna take that and, and resonate with 'em and, and that'll gain

Speaker 5'em

@dykes4congressThank you, I really appreciate that.

@malleusigI would just, I would just say like, if I, if I would, and again, I'm not you, and I don't, but I would, I would take advantage of every chance that I get. To use this campaign as an educational mission, because you're gonna get one of the most valuable things you're gonna get, and you get this whether or not you win, right? You get a platform to speak 'cause you have to, people want to, you know, your po-what your positions are, and use every opportunity you can, not just to give your opinions, but to educate people with the facts,

@malleusigwith the information they need to know to make the correct decision about who to vote for, how to live their lives, and to keep themselves safe and that is probably first and foremost the most, or the greatest benefit you can bring to people, during this campaign.

@dykes4congressYeah, I agree. And, all the campaigning is done in South Carolina for the primary till twenty twenty-eight. But yes, I agree.

Speaker 5That's a hard, that's a hard state anyway. You know what I mean? It's a If, if that's where, where you're doing, if that's where you're running for, and I'm sorry, if, if I'm jumping in, but that's, I salute you, you know what I mean? 'Cause that's kind of this lady, that's like, not everything is, is, is city oriented, I think. You know what I mean? If I'm, if I'm wrong, please correct me.

@joann_marieWait,

@dykes4congressi-is

Speaker 5South

@joann_marieCarolina where Lindsey Graham born again? Yes. Dude, what is happening in South Carolina? What the fuck?

Ian MalcolmHe, he has- He's, he's one of the worst. It's, it's like Randy Fine and then slightly less terrible, is, is Lindsey Graham.

@dykes4congressYeah, you guys can hear me, right?

@joann_marieYes, yes, yes. Sorry, go for it, Tyler.

@dykes4congressNo, i-it's because Lindsey Graham has- About twenty-five million dollars, and the-- and he spent more money than everyone else running combined in this race. And then the, the person running against him spent four million dollars. So they were outspent four to one, and they only lost by like eight thousand votes. And, and so the, the big part there was just the flood, the absolute flood of money, fake news ads, very similar to what they did with, House Massie. It worked unfortunately on the, populations in South Carolina, and that's why Graham won.

@joann_marieAnd, Tyler, you're a little bit rubberbandy, so just get closer to the modem. And have you looked into Black Core? I don't know if they use it in North Carolina, but they have been using it in a lot of countries to push propaganda and the fake news and all of those things, by, by candidates that support Israel, and it's, it's insane. I'll, I'll post it in the purple pill, but I don't know if they used it over there. I mean, they probably did or something similar, right? But, yeah, it's, it's absolutely wild. And, Jared, welcome. Go for it.

@jordanm10724168Hey, everybody. so yeah, you just asked about South Carolina. So, I have a master's in political science, and one of the papers I wrote was on something called the devolution paradox, where- People tend to want, greater federal control for certain things, but local control for others. And in, and in my research, I found empirical support for the idea that the South is different. And this is like, so in the past, political science used to posit that there are political cultures throughout this country, and the political culture of the South is considered what they call traditionalist. So unfortunately, in the South They will keep electing the same people over and over and over and over till they drop dead. And, you know, but I have to say, looking at the results, I thought about it and I was like, "Okay, no, he won, but he won fifty-six percent. That's, that's actually a good sign, because even with, with, with what I just said, he didn't win that big.

@jordanm10724168but I'm, I'm curious if Tyler knows what the messaging was for Lindsey's, Miss Lindsey's opponents. And do you think that maybe they didn't push hard enough on, you know, the pro-Israel worship, the war? What, what do you know about that?

@dykes4congressYeah, no, I, actually knew personally everyone who was running against Lindsey Graham, most specifically, of course, with, Mark Leno and The Toxin Lot, call him on the phone a lot, messaged him. he, you know, actually ran a really solid campaign, he put millions of his own dollars in. But again, the big thing is that Trump, endorsed Lindsey Graham, and then Lindsey Graham spent fifteen million dollars in, you know, MAGA headquarters, South Carolina, saying, "Look at me, I am Lindsey Graham. I stand for traditional conservative values. Trump endorsed me, vote for me." And then he spent fifteen- Fifteen million dollars in TV ads at primetime Fox spots, and then spent five million dollars in social media attack ads, calling, Mark a, like, a, like a drug addict and like just making things up about him.

@dykes4congressand so the, it's just very difficult to overcome both the Trump endorsement and tens of millions of dollars.

@jordanm10724168You know, Tyler in Alabama, I'm sorry. Tyler, Tyler?

@joann_marieTyler? Your rubber banding, can you either get closer to the mic or I don't know if I should recycle you?

@joann_marieOkay, I'm, I'm just gonna recycle you. Just, oh, go for it.

@dykes4congressNo, I was, I was done speaking there.

@jordanm10724168Well, can, can Tyler, I don't know if you heard, you know, in Alabama, the Trump Endorsed candidate for Senate one, but he was running against this, young Marine who, you know, initially was all pro-Israel rah-rah, but as the campaign went on, he started to like, you know, express a little distance between that foreign policy that Trump has been promoting, and that gave me some hope. But the Trump endorsed candidate won, unfortunately,

@jordanm10724168and the guy who won said, "I can't tell you how many times..." my, you know, voters in this district, especially older people, said how important Trump's endorsement was. That was pretty depressing to hear. But it's the reality, the Boomers vote, the young people don't. We gotta find some way around this.

@joann_marieAnd I love your southern accent.

@jordanm10724168Yeah. Oh, thank you. I love yours too.

@joann_marieHahaha.

@jordanm10724168But thanks, Tyler, for being a warrior and for, you know, having the courage to do this. We need more young men like you.

@dykes4congressThank you. I really appreciate that. And, and yeah, we need to get the young people on board more, but it just comes down to being active in general. Just the young people are demoralized because things are going downhill, so it's time for us to get organized and actually start changing things for the better. And the more that things begin to change, the better and the more and more people- People will jump on board, so that's what we have to do.

Ian MalcolmTyler, I think that's so spot on, and it, it's the very, I, I suppose it, it's one of the most challenging pieces of this puzzle, but at the same time, it's one that should be very encouraging for everybody, and what I mean by that is we are slowly building the, the snowball, right, that becomes the eventual avalanche, and, you're even seeing it on the timeline as people are starting to speak a little bit more directly, a little bit more You go into rooms where, they were traditionally a little bit more MAGA focused, right? It was very stuck within the left-right paradigm. They're starting to say, "Hey, guys, I think there's a weird triangulation of interests that might not be aligned with Americans." And so, you know, a lot of people still feel kind of stuck. They, they look around and they, they feel like the rooms that we have, which are certainly suppressed, that they're not really-- they're not generating enough volume or velocity to make a difference. But I sincerely think you're out there, right? You're a great example as whether it's you or Casey Puch or all the way up to Dan Bilzerian, right? You're making waves that are slowly kind of creating the, the, the flutter of the butterfly that becomes the, the hurricane, right? Analogy after analogy, right? The more that we get individuals that are just willing to talk honestly about what's going on, the easier it becomes for the next domino to kind of fall, right? And so we, once upon a time, we were, I don't even know, one in a million people here on the Twitter sphere that, that kind of, you know, we got the bigger picture, and now maybe it's one in five hundred thousand. But tomorrow it's one in a hundred thousand, and then it becomes one in ten thousand, then it becomes one in, one in a hundred, right? When we get to the point where one percent, and then five percent, and then ten percent get what's going on, each one of those little additions becomes easier and easier and easier. And, and so I do sincerely believe you're out there, you, Bilzerian, all these guys, taking kind of the, the slings and the arrows, right? You're, you're the, the, the tip of the spear. out in the political world, and so gotta give a lot of, of kudos to you, and just know that you're essentially blazing a trail, for so many others to follow. So it's, it's, it's incredibly, in-exciting times.

@dykes4congressYeah, and thank you guys for the amount of support that you've given to me and helped me out and be able to actually get the message out there. So I really appreciate that as well.

Ian MalcolmYeah, absolutely. And, and I, I wanna go back to, to Rabbi really quickly. I know we've got, a couple other individuals that requested, so we'll certainly bring them up. maybe get a couple kind of closing remarks here and, and additional thoughts, and, and maybe we'll start with Rabbi, kinda go through everybody up here on the panel, and then come back to Mr. Tyler for his kind of closing sentiments on kind of the lessons learned and what he envisions will probably come over the next year or two as a result.

@malleusigOh, me? I don't have anything to add to that. love to talk more about the, the actual issues that you're running on, but, it sounds like you're trying to close out the space, right?

Ian MalcolmWell, in, in the, I mean, feel free to take it in the direction you want, Rabbi. I just, I, I didn't have any additional inquiries, so I was gonna kinda go around the room.

@malleusigOkay. Ta- Tyler, if- I would ask you right now, what is your What is your, the number one item on your agenda once you get into office, the, the day after you're elected? What would you say?

@dykes4congressImmediately get rid of the power structures that stop real change from happening. Get rid of the speaker of the House, replace them with someone who's America first, and then once that is done and things can actually start to change, immediately stop all immigration and enforce remigration of illegal aliens and those here on visas, and immediately cut ties with foreign influence, specifically of Israel.

@malleusigThe second one is good. The second, the first one, I don't think you're gonna be able to do that. You can't pull that off as a congressman. But I like your energy. So, but, yeah, the second one definitely, I'm with you on that. I think that, the number one thing we need to do is we need to, we need to make America America again. We're, we're no longer the United States.

@malleusigwe have become slowly a third world country in both our population and in the, the character of our elections. I think that the Joe Biden's, win in twenty twenty was, I think the, the first time I ever heard anyone accurately refer to America's elections or America as a banana republic because of the way that the elections were handled. and we need to get that American character back again. So, I'm with you on that. Good job.

@malleusigYeah, are you gonna do anything, are you gonna try anything in terms of the Federal Reserve or banking, or you just wanna like, kinda like play it safe for a little while and let, and try not to, try not to invite too many assassination attempts in your first term?

@dykes4congressYeah, no, I, I expect there'll be a lot of people that try to go after anyone that makes a change, but you know what? That's just part of the, part of the risk. You go up against the system, you, get enemies. That's just the way it works, and it's a risk that anybody who's trying to get involved in politics needs to accept.

@malleusigAll right. Good, good. What are you gonna do if they, if they, if they pull a Bernie, if they pull a Bernie Sanders on you and they The little boy in front of you on camera.

Ian MalcolmWasn't that wild, people forgot about that rabbi, that accusation that was made.

@malleusigYeah, I think it was more than I, I think it was probably real. I mean, obviously I can't- Well, and you

Ian Malcolmsaid it, I, I just emphasized it 'cause I know when you said it, it sounds hyperbolic or like comedy, but there, there was a full-on accusation made by a, a victim who said precisely that.

@malleusigNo, this shit is real. This shit is, people have been talking about it for ages, and, and, it does seem to be that you-- it does seem to be that our government is, is, it's gatekept, and the, the price of admission, or the price of meaningful admission, seems to be you need to, you need to desecrate something that is beloved of God, and, really hope that, really hope that we're at a point now where it's, it's so open that that, that structure begins to fail and people, good

@dykes4congressI think I'll, quote Jesus here in response to that. Better that you have, I believe it's a millstone, hung around your neck, and for you to be flung into the sea, than for you to hurt one of God's little ones.

@malleusigExcellent answer. Excellent. Very good. I like this guy.

Ian MalcolmOh, Ty-Tyler's wonderful. a-and, so, so very glad to have him back, after the campaign trail, and it was really interesting to get lessons kind of throughout what the experience was like. And, Rabbi, he basically got, blackballed essentially from the, the debate segment. They wouldn't let him on air. and it's, it's very clear why that would be the case, I would imagine, if he was up there and got a single question, everybody in the room would be like, "Wait, how

@malleusigSo what you do in that case, if that happens, you record the debate and then you re-edit it and you insert yourself digitally into the debate with your own answers and, oh, look at that, unlimited time 'cause no one interrupts you. And then you release it on YouTube.

@joann_marieThat's a great idea. I'm,

Ian MalcolmI'm going with, with Mr. Make Line, awful again or, I apologize, wrong again.

Speaker 6Thanks, Ian. Tyler, thank you for your service as a, military veteran, and thank you for trying to, reform the political system. One thing, I had a question as you were going through your bio that wasn't clear to me. Is your position that you were-- and I apologize if this is a somewhat critical question, but I just didn't understand your part of your bio. Was your position that you weren't? At J sixth as alleged, and that you didn't do the things that were alleged against you, and has your position changed on that?

@dykes4congressOh, no, I was there. I absolutely went in, I absolutely went into the Capitol, I absolutely had a riot shield that other people pulled out of the cops' hands. When, one of the riot officers went to smash it on a woman's head, the crowd reached in, pulled it out of their, the officer's hands. I picked it up, and the officers began attacking and hitting with pepper spray. Spray and going after the crowd, unprovoked, the doors opened from the inside and I walked into the Capitol building, walked out thirty minutes later and handed the riot shield back to the officer and returned their property, and for that they charged me with robbery with a deadly weapon, a thirty-year charge, and I took a plea deal down to non-violence, resisting a federal officer. And so that was a ridiculous, insane charge. It was a case of overcharging. The only crime that I actually committed I committed was picking up litter and trespassing. I should have been convicted of a misdemeanor charge and forced to pay two hundred and fifty dollars. Instead, I had my life destroyed, I spent time in federal prison, and they tried to kill me by sticking me in a room with a bunch of illegal alien cartel members. So I don't regret a thing, and I would absolutely do it again because we need people that are willing to stand up against government overreach, the likes of which happened in

Speaker 6twenty twenty-one. And is, is, so is, are the Photos that they, that they show of you in your charging document, those are photos of you? Is that, is that your stance?

@dykes4congressOf course they're photos of me, but obviously they're still photos. But, regardless, like, why, what, what are you trying to say here? It's like, oh no, someone protested against the government, everyone hate that guy. What's your, what's your- No, I wasn't,

Speaker 6I wasn't saying anybody should hate you at all. I, I just wanted to understand your position, 'cause earlier you said that you took a You were there and it wasn't clear what occurred.

@dykes4congressThat was for trying to unite the rights.

Speaker 6Yeah, no, I get that, I get that. But the, the-- So you're saying the photos, even though the government alleges that they show you struggling to open doors with the crowd and grapple with, with the police and take that riot shield, your point is someone else took the riot shield and you just, you just took it from them?

@dykes4congressEssentially, yes. But that, that isn't what was, what I mentioned earlier. I think you maybe misunderstood or I didn't explain it well enough.

Speaker 6And

@dykes4congressthe, I was in the Charlottesville jail. My lawyer told me that he was approached by the prosecution, who said that the government knew that I was at J6, they just couldn't prove it. And so if I took the plea deal for Charlottesville, they wouldn't prosecute for J6. They lied to me, my lawyer lied to me. My lawyer knew that the judge and the prosecution were among Antifa that day, and he didn't inform me despite knowing, and I took the plea deal at Charlottesville under that essentially,

Speaker 6coercion. And as part of that, they-- As part of that, they asked you to admit that you were there? No.

Speaker 6Okay. So again, okay.

@dykes4congressThis is just what my lawyer told me, how I responded, and then the result was me being arrested inside the county jail on my release date by the FBI, being put in handcuffs and carted off to federal prison.

Speaker 6And I don't dispute whether you were overcharged, but my, my only question is Some folks would say, "Well, there were people in, in the crowd who were provocateurs, and they did things like help the, help the riders enter the Capitol, and those are the, those are the bad people." But there's a photo that appears to show you moving one of the crowd control gates to allow people in, and if, if we didn't know that that was you, some people would say, "See, that's a provocateur. Where's that guy?" But, but now, now we're finding out that that, that that person was you.

@dykes4congressYeah, no, I, I, I think that you're not being genuine here and you're just trying to sabotage this space. clearly the picture I saw, the one you posted, you can see that there are thousands of people behind me as I'm looking over at this barricade here. Like, come on, man, like, what are you trying to accomplish here? What's your goal?

Speaker 6I was just asking if you were there and what your stance is today on what you, what you did or didn't do versus what you were charged with. My

@dykes4congressstance was, the government needed to be First Amendment rights, and I was fighting to make things better for the American people, and I don't regret it, and I don't apologize. Did you

Speaker 6remove a crowd control barrier to help the crowd get into the Capitol?

@joann_marieMike, like, he has, he has spoken that he wasn't in January six, and, and he's been honest about it. So, yeah, that's about it. And thank you so much for the work. Thank you. Alright, Andy, welcome, go for it.

@froemelandyI mean, yeah, just about not giving these candidates a fair shot. I mean, we saw with Casey Pugh, they didn't let him on a debate stage, and they're not gonna let James Fish back onto a debate stage. So, yeah, that's, I mean, they're doing the same thing that they did with the Democrats, like when RFK was running as a Democrat, they were like, "No, we're not gonna let him debate Biden," 'cause, I mean, let's be honest, if they put RFK on a debate stage against Biden, everyone would have realized, "Holy crap,

@froemelandyI was raising the question, are they even gonna let a challenger debate JD Vance in twenty twenty-eight, or are they just gonna install JD Vance without even letting someone debate him on that stage? Like, that's a question we even have to ask. The fact that we're even asking this is crazy. Like, are they gonna say, "Oh no,

@froemelandythis guy's an antisemite because he doesn't wanna give money to Israel, so we're not gonna platform him with a debate." Like, I mean, the fact they're even asking this, especially after the Republicans rightfully called out the Democrats Their shameful primary process in twenty twenty-four, and now they're doing the exact same thing where they're just installing candidates without debate. Like, let's, come on, let's have a legitimate primary, let's see what the voters want, and settle it that way. But you can't have a legitimate primary without a debate. Like, I remember back in twenty sixteen, they'd allow Republicans to debate that were polling at one percent, and in twenty twenty, they'd allow Democrats to debate that were polling at one percent, and even obscure fringe candidates, like, there were random House of Representatives members Remember that no one ever heard of were allowed to debate and go on that stage against Joe Biden, and you had random scare Republicans that could debate against Trump when he was the front-runner. Like everyone had a shot, and now that's just unfortunately not how it works because they're like, if we actually give someone a shot, they could actually surge up in the polls and win. Imagine if just someone with a decent-sized social media following running on an anti-Zionist platform on the Republicans, so they ran on the closed borders, mass deportations, but added The anti-Zionism to fund all Israel went up on the debate stage and ran. Imagine if someone, let's say, I don't know, Harris and Smith from Infowars, well, formerly Infowars or something, decided to run and he used his social media platform, he got on that debate stage, got some viral moments, like I'm just throwing just some random influencer out there as an example, and just started going viral, like they don't wanna even take that risk, like, but,

@froemelandyagain, that's just an example of anyone, like It's like that's the issue, like, will they even let someone debate JD Vance in twenty twenty-eight that is legitimate opposition and not controlled opposition?

@dykes4congressYeah, it's a great question. We'll have to see what actually ends up happening in 2028. I imagine that we're gonna have what Ted Cruz and, Marco Rubio also be on the debate stage. I don't think they'll have that many

@froemelandyrun because that's just gonna split the Zionist vote three ways, and then if they did that, and then there was an actual challenger against them, that would split their vote too many ways, so they wouldn't risk that.

@froemelandyThey might, they might just have Ted Cruz kind of as like the Zionist candidate fall boy to make it look, to put him out there and get like five percent of the vote as like an embarrassing clown to make Katie Vance look America First, but they wouldn't ever have all three of them out there, 'cause that would split the vote so many ways, it would actually make it very easy for an America First candidate to win.

@jordanm10724168They keep trying to make, little Marco happen.

@froemelandyIt's never gonna happen. He was pro-amnesty and tried to pass an amnesty bill with Democrats in 2013 with the Gang of Eight in the Senate. So the second someone brings that up, you think people will vote for him in a primary? Come on.

@jordanm10724168No, I agree, but the MAGA people who still believe in Trump, think for some reason that little Marco is like Boy Wonder, it's just weird.

@froemelandyThe people that like Marco are like the full-blown Zionists. That's not- That's like the Miriam Adelson and it's a lot of Israeli influencers, like Laura Loomer kind of likes him and Mark Levin, but in terms, like, I don't really see much organic support for him. It's the people that are fully sold on the war, like, not the MAGA people brainwashed into the war, like, people who have always been pro-war, and that's not gonna be enough to ever win a primary.

@jordanm10724168But isn't it interesting that little Marco has kinda kept out of this whole peace agreement thing, like, he's kinda been quiet?

@froemelandyYeah, Mary, I mean, he's been paid for by Mary Matalin. I mean, back when Trump was still based in 2015, 2016, Trump rightfully called him an Matalin puppet before Trump became an Matalin puppet himself. So of course, you think Mary Matalin's gonna let him speak out against the town now he's her bitch.

@joann_marieAlright, thank you so much, Andy. We have Mike Langrong again. Go for it.

Speaker 6Yeah, thanks for giving me a second chance to ask a question. So, a question for also for Tyler, and Tyler, I apologize, I know my previous question was very sensitive for you 'cause it's something that had a huge impact on your life, but again, I just wanna say thanks for your service and thanks for answering my question.

Speaker 6the other question I had was This kind of, and, and you tell me if I get this wrong, 'cause I-- this is my first time listening to you and hearing about you, so, so if I'm wrong, please correct me. But it seems like candidates like you and people who are similar to you have diverged from Donald Trump. There's like a splintering on, or a, I guess, a divergence on the right or within the America First movement. Is that, do you- How do you think about that? Do you think of that as, like, what is your stance towards Donald Trump? Is it he's gone too far, he's lost his way, or is it he was wrong all along? Or, like, like, is this a disagreement among fellow travelers, or is this like a frat, like a, a break, you know?

Speaker 6Does my question make sense?

@dykes4congressRight. Within the Republican Party and within the MAGA movement as a whole, Trump has betrayed the promises that he made in twenty twenty-four, that much is clear. And even a lot of the boomers in South Carolina are very frustrated with the failures that he has done and with the failures to actually have deportations, improve the economy, the basic things we've wanted since twenty sixteen have not happened. And so- So it, it is absolutely a break within the MAGA fascist movement, as you call it on your profile, in opposing fascism.

Speaker 6And do you think that there's-- for people who support democracy and who wanna see like more local control over the candidates that are elected, less influence of money, like you talked about the influence of money in politics and how it affected the races you were in, is there an opportunity to maybe- Form broader based coalitions of people on the right and left, whether you supported Trump originally or whether you opposed Trump originally, is there an opportunity to form a broader coalition of voters that maybe focus on a return to just democratic principles and trying to make it so that, hey, just because you get twenty-five million dollars from out of state, you don't automatically win, right? Is, is there an opportunity to do that? 'Cause I'm, I'm, what I'm wondering is, some of us who have opposed Trump for a long time, there is an element of "I told you so," right? Like, whether, whatever your politics are, right or left, some of us knew that Trump ultimately would betray his base. And then when it occurs, shouldn't there be an element of, "Hey, maybe those critics of Trump

Speaker 6ha-- you know, were onto something, and maybe there are things that..." Could join us together that, that would allow like a return

Speaker 7to democracy so that whoever's elected, whether it's on the right or the left, at least it's not simply because twenty-five million dollars poured in from out of state. You, you know what I'm trying to say?

Speaker 8Yeah, I would say, you're probably the most intelligent communist that has come into this space. yeah, there would be opportunities abound, but every single time that I have reached out to people on the left and tried to do something to make a difference, I've always gotten backstabbed and betrayed by them every single time, one hundred percent of the time, no exceptions. Quite unfortunately, there can be no peace or quarter with the radical left such as yourself, and, you, you are not- Part of our coalition and never will be until you change your underlying mindset. You hate Trump because you think that he was trying to make America, different or more like how America is supposed to be, and you fundamentally hate America. And, you might try to deny it, but that's the fundamental left-wing worldview, is that you hate our people, you hate America, and you wanna see it go up in flames, and you oppose anybody that tries to stop that. My perspective is that Trump isn't Anywhere near far enough to stop the destruction of our country. And, so congratulations on such a skilled con-concern trolling on your part. please go tell your anti-fa friends that we have no interest in working with the likes of you.

@joann_marieThat was awesome, thank you. Alright, Kaitman. A hit dog

Speaker 7will holler.

@joann_marieOkay. We're gonna go to the next person, thank you. Kaitman, go for it.

Speaker 9Yeah, I haven't met Tyler before, but I like the cut of his jib. I think he's onto it, and that line of questioning before about moving a crowd control barrier was probably the weakest attempt at a takedown I've ever seen. But I like how Tyler sounds, and I'll be interested to ask him about the thirty-nine trillion dollar debt. What are we gonna-- We had Doge come and go, there was a lot of talk, a lot of fraud, waste, and abuse talk, but no action, so... How are we gonna get control of this bloody debt

Speaker 8situation? I, I love this question, and I am so very prepared for this question. we spend over three trillion dollars a year giving away free money to people. Two thirds of the free money we give away are to people that aren't American citizens. We could literally eliminate the deficit entirely overnight if we just said no more free shit for non-Americans. Literally overnight, we could have a budget surplus, and if we just cut down the amount of superfluous spending by like ten percent, we could have the budget paid out and completely removed by within about twenty years. And, so yes, it would take a while, it would take time But again, if we just stopped giving away free stuff to foreigners, we could fix the deficit overnight.

Speaker 9Does this mean we're being parasitized from within? And, absolutely not. Is it suicidal empathy if you wanna go down the spiritual team C, team M, team J, or we-- Is it spiritual or is it something else?

Speaker 8No, I, I would say it's no longer suicidal empathy, it is looting stage. It might have been suicidal empathy five or ten years ago, but at this point, it's, the boat looks like it's sinking and people are running to grab the jewels and the chests out of the back before the boat sinks. That's what's happening. And, in my perspective, maybe we should just, you know, put a patch in the boat or build a better boat. and meanwhile, you got a lot of people that are just running trying to loot us for everything we have.

Speaker 9Well said, man. Thank you. I'll just stay tuned. Thanks. Thank you.

@joann_marieThat's right.

@g0dfr0yThank you. And yeah, sorry, I, I knew that guy was a Marxist and I would have jumped in, but I was in a bad service area. I could tell he was just, playing the role of the, trying to pretend to be one of us, and he was a Marxist, so thanks for kicking him off the stage. my question for you, Tyler, is When do you think the bill comes due for Trump with the, with either the Boomers or American general? Now, I would argue it's already come due. He has a twenty-seven percent approval rating. I think that his support is a hollow social media construct, and I don't believe that Thomas Massie lost. I think they flat out rigged the election. I, I can't speak on North Carolina.

@g0dfr0yBut my question for you is, is, is this. I think the issue when people are really gonna realize that Trump is, is a snake, even the boomers, is election fraud. He's caught himself in a real rat trap. He, he knows that he can't prosecute who actually inflated Biden's numbers, which was Israel, because he's working for Israel, and he needs the same rigging apparatus in place for people like Thomas Massie, and he very well may use the same rigging apparatus in place for the midterms to keep anti-Zionist candidates out and to stop a blue wave if we do have midterms. So My question for you is, and, and I think what, and, you know, I predicted early on what they're gonna try to do, so they don't have to prosecute anybody, and they can give the illusion that they've solved election fraud is blame it all on China. And in, in a, in a scenario that even I could have never predicted because it's so absurd, they're actually pivoting toward blaming some of it on Venezuela. So do you think that After the January sixth rug pull, you know, blaming the pipe bombing on a mentally slow guy who's into My Little Pony,

@g0dfr0yhim letting the clock run out on COVID, the Epstein cover-up, calling it a hoax, do you think that this is the final dam breaking when he's revealed as a fraud, pardon the pun, on election fraud? Do you think that is when the boomers are finally going to come around, or do you think the cult is strong enough to let him- Play the role of carnival trickster and get past this.

@g0dfr0yMy perspective

Speaker 8is that it, it takes a lot of work to do election rigging, and it is so much easier just to pay twenty million dollars to run ads in TV, especially for the people with this level of wealth. And so I, I actually don't think that, Thomas Massie's primary was rigged. I just think that they put in such an insane amount of money in to essentially to trick people. And, unfortunately, he just didn't have the apparatus to be able to overcome that. The people, what was it? Even with sixty-four and under, if just people under the age of sixty-four could vote, Thomas Massey would have won. And, it was just such, a turnout of people that were over the age of, like, seventy voting that really caused him to lose. And unfortunately, they're the ones that are the most indoctrinated. I think that should the day come when people- People, of course, are going to be winning widely where we start to see a lot of anti-Zionist candidates start to win, they will absolutely at that point start rigging elections. But at that point, you just have to have so much motion and have so much success and be so well liked that it would be impossible for them to rig it without it being insanely obvious they did so. And, and so, you know, why, why rig an election when you can just ban them from speaking, shut down their social media? And spend a million dollars in their opponents. If they can't speak, if they can't get the word out, it'll be difficult for them to win. And so the, the point where we need to start worrying about election rigging is when we have, an incredibly well-developed, long-lasting boots on the ground presence, and all of the polling says we're going to win, and then we lose. That's when you know that election rigging happened. And, and quite unfortunately, it was never really the case with, Thomas Massey. He had a lot of Support, most of it came from out of state. He had a lot of people that were door knocking, but it was organized sort of at the last minute. He didn't have anywhere near enough money to overcome twenty million, and even with all of that, he still came very close to winning. And give it another five or ten years for the younger generations to grow up and for the older generations to pass on, that'll begin to really change. And, will the boomers come around? Yes, but very, very, very, very slowly. And, it's happening Here in South Carolina, a lot of the older generations, a lot of the boomers, are starting to be like, "This isn't right. Why is this happening?" And they're just so disappointed with, with Trump right now. So people are coming on board, but younger people are more aware of what's going on, and that,

@g0dfr0ythat's the- Gotcha. just sorry, do you mind if I re-ask the main crux of my question, which was- I, I think the reason why Israel rigged the election in twenty twenty, I, I've totally changed my opinion on it, is because they needed Biden to come in and flood the border with illegal immigrants, that was the number one reason. But number two is I think they, they have, and I, I'm still not ruling this out, they have a plot to install Trump in for a third term, and in order to do that They needed to rig the twenty twenty election. They needed to inflate Biden's numbers to such comical amounts of eighty one million votes and be so obvious in places like Antrim County, Michigan, where there was thirty five hundred votes that flipped out of nowhere. I could go on and on. But that is my contention as to why Israel rigged twenty twenty. And it also plays into the myth of Trump returning as the conquering hero and Trump the victim, Trump the victim of the deep state, that's the third reason. But

@g0dfr0yknowing that, and knowing that one of the core issues of his boomer voters was solving election fraud, but most importantly, providing them with the red meat, right? Putting people in jail for life, for thirty years. For rigging the election, and he's not gonna be able to give them that, because that would require going after people in Israel. That would require going after tr-traitors

@g0dfr0yin America who are working with Israel to rig the election. And so instead, he's going to blame it on the Chinese boogeyman, and more comically, Venezuela. So my question is, in doing so Is, is this the dam that breaks? Is this when he finally exposes himself to even the boomers, where they're like, "Okay, that's it, this guy really did lie about everything. I'm out. Epstein was-- Epstein wasn't enough. J6 wasn't enough. I am out." Do you think this is when the dam breaks?

Speaker 8If you're not opposed to a lot of the things that he's been doing at this point, like getting rid of Thomas Massie for opposing Epstein, those people aren't never gonna come on board. Like when he said, "If you wanna release the Epstein files, then you're an enemy," I'm like, "Okay, message taken." And, so no, it'll be, if you, if you aren't aware at this point, it'll be very difficult, and I don't think election integrity is going to be the thing that finally gets people, I really don't.

@g0dfr0yGotcha. Yeah, no, thanks for weighing in, and I, I think you are right, but I do think this one's gonna bite 'em in the ass, and I can tell how nervous they are because they're not revealing any information, and you have John Solomon making the most cryptic hints. I think they're gonna try to wait till To do it, and it's, I, I do think it's gonna fall flat on their faces, but you're right, the cult is so strong, it may overcome it.

Speaker 8Yeah. Alright, guys, I think I can take like one more question, then I'm gonna have to go this evening, unfortunately, being that I'm on the East Coast here.

@joann_marieYes, thank you so much, Tyler. I, I love it when, when you come to, to, to our spaces. Alright, Gaetan, go for it!

Speaker 9Oh, lucky last. you're optimistic about anyone over fifty being turned, but I'm more pessimistic. I think anyone over fifty is cooked. They're just locked, they don't understand freedom, they just think, "Pay eighty percent tax and let everyone else do your thinking for you." So, do you wish to give me a ray of hope or talk me through the demographics, the twenties to forties, the forties to sixties, the over sixties, what's your strat? You, you said you haven't given up on them, but.

Speaker 9Yeah. Give us a rundown.

Speaker 8Yeah. The, the big problems, especially in American politics, is that young people are aware but don't show up, and the older people show up but aren't aware. And so if we could reverse that, that would be absolutely fantastic. but that's the, the big issue right now. And so the way that you break through the awareness for the older people is it has to be in person. You have to- Do things in person, reach out to them in person. Social media bans anybody who is right of center. I myself was unable to run Facebook or YouTube ads, which are the two places you need to win primary the most. I was blocked from running political ads. And, and so the only way I could overcome that was in person, and I actually had a lot of success in person changing minds, a lot of success. I just couldn't get in front of enough people, for the amount of money that I had. I- I needed to spend hundreds of thousands of dollars running ads or knock on twenty thousand doors, and I just didn't have the apparatus in place to be able to knock on twenty thousand doors. And, for the young people, it's about motivating them to show up and to organize and to build businesses and build an economy that is separate from the system more than anything. And to get people that are younger to participate and change. And, so I think that's the main strategy. It's talk to the older crowd in person, and then motivate the younger crowd and inspire them to believe that we can actually change things for the better. And if they believe that they can change things, they will get involved. That's my perspective.

Speaker 9Yeah, very well said. I couldn't have said it better, and that's a great strategy reminder, thanks.

Speaker 8Thank you, that was a great question. And, with that, Ian and Joanne, if you guys have anything else to close out for the evening, if you guys wanna stay on longer, that's fine. I'm gonna have to go here though in a couple of minutes.

Ian MalcolmNo, and, and certainly appreciate, Tyler, the time that you were able to spend with us. for anybody that didn't listen to the first portion of this space, I certainly recommend that you go back and do so, as it was absolutely wonderful to get from Tyler, Overview of not only some of the lessons learned, but also the funding mechanisms, what he anticipates doing next in terms of creating a super PAC that he will then use to try and self fund a campaign, how that whole system works between PACs and super PACs, and who can donate where. And I think this, this, these are the kind of things that we need as takeaways to try and understand how do we start to bring together a, a real political movement in opposition to this machine that we talk about so extensively. That we need to try and mobilize some kind of efforts to slowly dismantle in a righteous, political, logical fashion that is based on righteous indignation of that which is evil and the attempt to try and build something that is going to be better, for tomorrow for everybody. And so with that, Tyler, I wanna throw it back to you for some kind of closing remarks here, if you've got any that you would like to throw out, and then what we'll do is come back to Mr. Godfrey and Joanne, the co-hosts with the mostess, for some,

Speaker 8Yeah, I think I've said pretty much everything that I wanna say throughout this podcast, but again, nobody wins the very first time they run for office, and if you do win, it is rare. Generally speaking, you have to run multiple times for lower office, and then you slowly work your way up. So I really went straight for the big leagues, and quite frankly, I was actually quite successful for the amount of opposition that I had, for the amount of inexperience that I had, and managed to push through the Very end, anyways. And, so I think change is coming to America. I think that the youth are finally taking action, getting things done, changing things, and I think that, the system's very, very afraid. They wouldn't feel the need to shut us down, to physically attack us, ban our bank accounts or social media. They wouldn't do any of these things if we weren't going to win without it. They wouldn't have such a heavy hand if it wasn't necessary. They wouldn't be overplaying themselves To such an insane degree if our work didn't achieve anything. And so we are winning, we are making a difference, and every single time the system steps out and tries to smash us down, that's just another domino on our path to victory. So we will win, we will get there in the end. It will take time and hard work and persistence and effort, but we will win in the end, that is a guarantee.

Ian MalcolmNo, very well stated there, Tyler, and I, I do think that's That's the approach that we need to take, one that isn't based on the path that is easiest or the assumption that, the only thing that matters is winning, but rather trying to move forward the needle to try and slowly reverse engineer this machine for the benefit of essentially everybody else around us, right? Selflessly. and, and it's, it's curious because obviously there's a pretty big prominent voice in the right wing kind of dissident space that has basically been advocating for supporting only those candidates that are essentially on the downhill, easy- Paths to victory, I think that's the wrong way to go about things. We should support those candidates that are in this for the long haul, that are trying to take those little steps, as uphill as the battle might be. there's nothing wrong in a loss, but there's certainly something wrong in the unwillingness to even attempt, right? So, I, I certainly have immense amount of respect, obviously it was gonna be an uphill battle, but you did so very, let's say, graciously. And with that, I wanna go, I, I see Andy has

Speaker 10I mean, yeah, this is a bit unrelated, but I mean, I think we all know in this country that there is a systemic discrimination against white people. I think we all know that, and we all know who is behind that. I mean, just watching basketball today, they literally allow Caitlin Clark to be punched in the throat by a black lesbian, and they don't even call a foul. And this shit has been happening for years, and nothing changes. The fans are completely up in arms, calling out the team, the league, or agents for doing nothing to protect Protect her, and then they missed another foul call, and then she's now out of, had to sit out the rest of the game with a back injury, and this is just goes to show who's really in charge of our country. Yes, of course, the WNBA, it has a Jewish commissioner because all these sports leagues are run by Jews. And, and

Ian Malcolmboth teams are owned by Jews, right? Yes.

Speaker 10The Beaver and Mercury are both Jew ran. I'm, I'm not

Ian Malcolmeven kidding, Joanne. And, and, the Mercury also has a, a Jewish,

@joann_marieBecause you finally made a WNBA post and Andy's like, "Yeah!

Ian Malcolm" I, I did it, I did it because Andy primed me. I'm, I'm gonna be honest.

Speaker 10No, dude. Like, the, the fans are freaking up in arms, and it's like, "Oh, yeah, finally, maybe you're realizing that they don't want Caitlin to succeed, like I realized this two years ago." But it's like, it's, this is just, I mean, when have we ever seen an a-athlete literally getting, like, this is basketball, and

Speaker 10Wild, like I don't even know what the fuck this is. And like, like the team is literally doing nothing to protect her, and then the coach is like, "It's unacceptable that you don't protect her stars." Yeah, where were you at the beginning of last season? Like, yeah, maybe you shouldn't have also given her bad advice to add a bunch of muscle so she could play. And this isn't a WNBA

@joann_mariespace. Yeah,

Speaker 10but this just goes back into society with how white people are treated like absolute shit in this country, and we're just expected to take it, and no, we're not gonna take it anymore. We're not gonna take this Jewish system where we have to accept scraps and be treated as lesser while we get assaulted, whether it's Alyssa Thomas punching Caitlin in the throat, whether it's black people who think Oh, they can punch a white person at school because the white person said something offensive to them. No, we're not just gonna accept and take this crap.

@joann_marieAll right, amazing, thank you, thank you so much, Andy. Godfrey, go for it.

@g0dfr0yYeah, thank you. I just wanna say thanks for holding this space. Tyler, thanks for coming by. it's a marathon, not a sprint. Keep running, keep fighting. We're here to support you with everything you're doing, and, I hope you inspire other people. I encourage you to connect with other young people, encourage them to run. And the most important thing, let's encourage our young brothers and sisters to vote. We've gotta get out and vote. We've got to get past this boomer wall, this boomer mind control wall. Sorry, I'm walking outside, but, great work, brother. once again, you're doing God's work, and we appreciate it.

Ian MalcolmYeah, absolutely. Hey, man. Thank you. And real quick, I, I saw that, I guess it's Ball 27, had put his hand up, happy to, get a couple little remarks in here before we wind things down. Ball kinda caught the tail end of the space, but if you wanted to make any comments to, to Tyler, certainly feel free.

Speaker 11Yeah, I just wanna say, Tyler, again, like, like with the other folks, I, I appreciate what you're doing, I also appreciate that you're what you're doing is, it's definitely gonna help America. America isn't serious need of anybody really at this point, where, where they simply don't have any influence for a foreign country. Their main, their only influence and their only focus should be is, is America first, and you're definitely standing with it. And I appreciate your work, man. God bless.

Speaker 8Thank you, man. I really appreciate you. God, God bless you as well. Thank you.

Ian MalcolmAnd, and let's, let's bring it back to the co-hosts with the most. Before we do, I just wanna recommend everybody give a follow to all the wonderful panelists that we got up here. the always wonderful, very strong-willed Mr. Godfrey, absolute hero out there in the, in the Twitterverse. but so many other wonderful panelists as well. I always love when we get to see Jared's peace talks in these spaces. Fantastic like I said before, I, I see a lot of, wonderful voices like Colin down there in the listener panel, and of course, to Tyler Dykes, certainly running for Congress, doing a wonderful job. Out there bringing attention to these issues, and then coming in here to educate us on how we can either get involved, encourage others to do so, or maybe with those that are getting involved, like, Dan Bilzerian, how do we take some of the learnings from Tyler and make sure that they are relayed over to the Bilzerian camp and others? we'll certainly continue doing that, but before the last little parting remarks, I'll toss things over to that co-hostess with the most, as we're always so thankful for, Miss Joanne, any thoughts The day or anything else that, that Tyler and the rest of us have been doing.

@joann_marieYes, no, Tyler, always wonderful hearing you. And guys, for those that weren't here, like, listen to his story, it's absolutely amazing and inspiring, and also it's so interesting. So, thank you so much for doing what you're doing and for trying to make a change and Yeah, no, it's, it's really inspiring, and Ian, always, thank you so much for hosting these, these spaces to give a voice to really

@joann_marieimportant topics, but also to people that maybe don't have a voice if, if you didn't give it to them, you know? And it's- I don't know, it's really inspiring. I, I love being here, I love the, the change that you're making, and, y-you all of you guys are absolutely brilliant, so thank you. I, I love this community, and thank you, Tyler. and we will win. Thank you.

Speaker 8Amen. Thank you for having me.

Ian MalcolmWell, and with that, I just wanna thank again everybody for stopping by. we are gonna continue, of course, these conversations, trying to get to the bottom of both the present and the past insanity that, we unfortunately all find ourselves on, as well as any and all individuals taking steps to try and make the world a better place, in this case, like Mr. Tyler, obviously his connections to Dr. Recktenwald, who we were speaking with a little bit earlier, with David Nietzsche. if you didn't get to stop by for that space, I certainly would recommend going and listening to the playback. We basically walked through with Mr. Nietzsche both the philosophical as well as the religious ideas around morality, what does it mean to be a good person, and how do you be a good person in the face of an oppressive machine that is infringing on, if not trying to obliterate, your rights. So essentially, how do you defend yourself even if need be in forms of kinetic, activity against an oppressor? That was basically the conversation. Was wonderful with him. Like I said, certainly I would recommend individuals listening to it if you can, in the event that, that you are looking for something tomorrow, we do have a couple additional conversations coming your way. In this case, I'm excited we're gonna be speaking with Open, the JFK Files, that is his handle. We're gonna be talking about Project Pinto and the Israeli theft operation that obviously has implications and ramifications to this very day. So excited to have that discourse with him. It's something that we had to schedule a Good ways out. He's a very busy individual, so be excited to bring that to you, along with all of these other pieces of this puzzle, right? The history of yesterday, the political actions of today with individuals like Tyler, and all that is in between to try and make sure that we make the world a better place, and that when we do grab and garner power in the political arena, that we can frame ourselves properly and righteously. That's why we talked about morality with Mr. Nietzsche earlier today. So we're gonna try and do all we can to Best to line and inform everybody and anybody that's willing to listen, which on X these days, man, it becomes more and more difficult. But we're gonna do what we can, and at least we get to have the discourse, right? At least Elon is giving us that opportunity, so I will continue to thank him for this platform. I'll thank all of you for being here and being part of this discourse. As always, I wanna wish everybody out there, good morning, good evening, good afternoon, wherever you are in the world, certainly God bless for everything that you are. Are Godspeed, certainly Tyler Dyches, Godspeed on your adventures, those that we will take collectively. We will see you all in that next space, again, talking about Project Pinto. We'll be here tomorrow in what they used to call the same bad time, same bad place, here on Twitter. Lots of love to everybody out there. God bless, Godspeed, and good night.