0:00
You can't support a family on a single income unless a single income is, you know,
0:03
exorbitant. It's very high. That was the American dream. It was that you have a family.
0:07
You go to college, you get a job, you find a spouse, you get married, you have kids, you give them
0:12
the the future that you had, you prolong that dream for them. That doesn't exist anymore.
0:16
We're not allotted that same dream. And it's because what we've done as a country is we've
0:21
prioritized the asset holders over those who are trying to achieve those assets, right? So we
0:26
have a K-shaped economy right now. Okay, guys, we are rolling. All right, we are at Amphus,
0:37
day three here with Brayden, who just had a successful book launch and his mother Sam,
0:42
who's with the Parents Demand and Justice Alliance. That's a joy to us. How have you guys
0:45
ever done a show together? We've done a couple interviews together. We've we've had a-
0:49
I don't usually let him say anything. It's true. I just sit there and try to look good,
0:53
which is weird because that's kind of her job, but you know, he was very, I was spoken on our last
0:57
one and I appreciated it. But it was fun. It was a lot of fun back at SAS. And now this one with
1:02
30,000 people they have- Look at this, Max. It's crazy. You can't even walk through the crowd. It's so
1:06
desks, it's desks. Yeah, look at what Charlie's built. It's incredible, right? It really is amazing.
1:10
This legacy that he's leading. And the feeling here of people just here to be supportive of Charlie
1:15
and what his mission was and stuff. That's inspiring. I know you guys are having your battles.
1:20
Talk to me about the parents demanding justice aligns. What's going on with that?
1:23
So we've got we got some situations in our schools where they're putting
1:27
in front of the kids and some parents are they are offended by that or they don't want that for
1:32
their children. And unfortunately they bring it to the school boards and the school boards are
1:37
on board with it. And so they've targeted the parents. So they've gone after them. They've
1:41
trying to destroy their reputations. They launch campaigns to leave lots of negative reviews on
1:47
their businesses or they go to their employers and say you have to fire this person.
1:52
We have one professor who lost all of her extra professorial duties because the school board
1:57
went after her because she remarked that they had a book in the school that they were putting
2:02
in front of children. And of course the first step to grooming a child is to show them because it
2:08
desensitizes them to the fact. And that's what they've been doing. As a parent, did you have a
2:12
no rule in the household with your children? I didn't have the rule. They just they didn't have
2:19
access to stuff, right? Yeah, I know you want band. I think we talked about it last time. Yeah,
2:23
oh, I would be in total favor of a complete band of because it's not so much that you know,
2:28
look at only fans. 10% of Gen Z is on only fans. I think there's 1.4 million total creators,
2:34
1.2 million of which in terms of women, there are some male creators too, but 1.4 million female
2:38
creators are only fans, 1.2 million of which are in generation Z, which is roughly 10% of the
2:44
entire population. But you have a problem with men consuming it too, right? And I bring the men
2:50
who are consuming it more than the women who are creating it. I blame both parties because both
2:54
parties are a fault, but the women are fulfilling the need, right? There is a demand for it,
2:58
and there's young men. Money. And they go to school and they learn that money is the highest value,
3:02
and so anything to make money and it's like the easiest way to make money. It is. And it's
3:08
really is the ultimate end goal of the feminist movement, which started with men and women are equal.
3:14
They should be equal. They should be treated as equal. They're equal in the eyes of God. They
3:17
should be equal in the eyes of society. And then it devolved into, you know, it started with,
3:22
you should be able to work a job. You should be able to vote. And now it is, you don't even need
3:25
to work a job. Just go sell your body online. It started with women or objects. And that's terrible.
3:30
We should fix that into now women or objects, but they control their hours. So it's not a bad thing
3:35
anymore. And it's it's terrible for me because nobody should be inherently treated as such. And yet
3:39
these unfortunately, people are devaluing themselves in the eyes of society. Well, and because because
3:44
the industry is so prevalent, it legitimizes the the the treating of women in that way, the
3:51
objectifying of when it legitimizes it. So as long as it's monetary, it's like cool. Yeah. As
3:58
long as they decide it for themselves, it becomes acceptable. Here's a crazy part about the woman
4:03
think it's easy money to make money on OnlyFence, but not a lot of them make money. So they're selling
4:08
their body. I've never tried it. So I can't count. Yeah, I speak to the top. God, I have the top
4:13
OnlyFence girls on my show sometimes. So they talk to me about it. And most women don't make that
4:18
much on OnlyFence. No, they probably most don't. And then there are the few that are like raky.
4:22
It's like, and it has managers and the managers manage their accounts. They take it up. Right. And
4:29
so they're those are the pimps, right. And so somehow we legalized. Yeah, but what I'm saying is
4:35
these girls are selling their bodies. Some of them are only make a couple hundred bucks. They're
4:38
nozzles. They're so prostitute. They're sold the dream of yes, you can have the money and the
4:43
financial freedom. And obviously it doesn't work. It's it's the same in any sort of industry,
4:48
just obviously with a little bit less respect, self respect. And you have, you know, the people
4:53
who are successful and those are the ones that are platform. Those are the ones that are given
4:56
the voice. And they're like, wow, look how much money I make. And young girls see that. And
4:59
they go, oh my gosh, I could have financial freedom too. And it's not even that bad. When in
5:04
reality, it is self destructive. Why do you need to drop parallels? But Hollywood.
5:09
Hollywood's this same thing. Most of the people in Hollywood work a second job. And they make
5:13
up a story about the people who have succeeded that it was somehow overnight. They were discovered
5:18
at a diner somehow and somebody just thought, I'm going to take this person and pluck them out of
5:23
you know, nothingness and make them a star. It is, it's the dream of all the young people. You ask,
5:28
you know, a decade ago, all these kids in middle school or even grade school, what they wanted to be.
5:32
And you would get answers like firefighter, astronaut, police officer, you know what I mean, chef,
5:36
like they had aspirations. They don't anymore. You ask a kid in middle school or elementary school
5:41
what he wants to be. And they'll say famous because they have this idea that anyone can become famous,
5:46
which is true to a degree. But what are the odds that it's going to become? But also that they
5:50
quit fame with money. And they quit money with success because they went to school and they learned
5:55
that money is success. That's the definition of success in school. And that's the, that's
6:00
I would say a foundational problem that we have in our culture today is that we've all gone to
6:05
school for 13 years. And we've been taught that money is the definition of success. And so if
6:10
you have to step on grandma to get that extra buck, that's that's fair game. I mean grandma's
6:16
she's expendable, but that money that's that's that's the proof of who you are as an individual.
6:22
And it's very sad because then when you reach an older age of you know 50 or 60 and you haven't
6:27
made so much money, you feel like a failure. Right. And you're it's a setup when we ought to know
6:34
that success is relationships. Yeah, I think money is a piece of it, right?
6:39
Right. The Bible says money is not the root of evil, but the love of money is. Yes.
6:43
Right. So that's where people fall astray is they get so sucked into meeting that that monetary
6:50
and don't get me wrong. I'm 24 years old. Nice. I want to have money to buy a house. I want to be
6:54
able to afford the American dream as it falls farther and farther out of my grasp. I can also
6:59
understand though that it's not necessarily how much money I can make, but what I do with that
7:02
money, right? Because you can have hundreds of millions of dollars. But if you are a terrible person,
7:07
then that money is going to waste. Nothing is going to happen with it. And this isn't you know,
7:11
some some you know, go give all your money away, go live homeless or whatever because you made
7:15
or what it's not a shaming of the people who are successful or are wealthy. It's more so the fact
7:21
that people who have the love of money is the root of their fiber, their very core being. That is
7:26
where it becomes twisted and that is where it can become dangerous. If you just sort of take money
7:32
out of the equation, success is really defined by relationship. It should be because at the end of
7:39
life, you're not thinking, I wish I made a better deal on that house or on that car or whatever.
7:44
You're surrounded by your loved ones, hopefully. And that's that's the definition of your life.
7:48
Yeah. Whereas and money is sort of secondary to that. It can factor into, you know, how well you
7:54
live and how you do in your life and stuff. But you can't buy friends. People try to, but yeah.
8:00
Yeah. And then if you look at if you look at very successful people and we see them,
8:04
the ones that are very successful who have a lot of friends appear more successful to us than
8:09
the ones who are just spending money and. Wow. That's an interesting point. It's true that relationships
8:15
are very boring, right? It's like you see a guy with 10 kids and a wife that loves him. That's
8:19
well. His kids all have kids and everyone comments, man, he's a rich man. This is true. It doesn't
8:24
matter what his bank account looks like. He's one. That guy is. Yeah. Yeah. He won the race. Yeah.
8:29
Last time you came on the show, we had a viral clip. You said the American dream is dead. Do you
8:33
still believe that? Yeah, wholeheartedly. The American dream was killed. You look at the median
8:39
age of owning a household today. The median age of household owners is I think 65 people could
8:45
check me on that. If I'm wrong, I'll take it back. But I believe it's 65. The median home buying
8:50
age for someone to first buy a home is 39. You can't support a family on a single income unless
8:56
a single income is, you know, exorbit. It's very high. That was the American dream was that you
9:02
have a family. You go to college, you get a job, you find a spouse, you get married, you have kids,
9:08
you give them the future that you had, right? You prolong that dream for them. That doesn't exist
9:13
anymore. We're not allotted that same dream. And it's because what we've done as a country
9:19
is we've prioritized the asset holders over those who are trying to achieve those assets, right?
9:25
So we have a K-shaped economy right now. Everyone who owns assets houses silver, gold, they're feeling
9:30
great because as we print dollars as inflation goes up, their value of their projects of their
9:35
other assets goes up as well. The people who can't buy those assets are being pushed out even more.
9:41
And so it's not that the American dream was dead is that we've intentionally made it harder for
9:46
people in my generation and the generation's previous. I mean, I think I saw a study that said
9:50
like 30% of Gen Zers will own a home. One third of people in Gen Z will own their home, the rest will
9:56
rent. And then Gen Alpha, the generation after me, it says that practically none of them will be able
10:00
to own a house. Wow. Why is that? Why is that something that is controversial for either side?
10:05
People should be looking at that going, we need to fix this. This is a serious problem. We should
10:09
work together to address these issues and make housing affordable and yet we're not. We're prioritizing
10:14
the wrong things. There's this new technology floating around that people cannot stop talking about.
10:19
It's called the light system. Before you roll your eyes, it's not some gadget you strap on or
10:24
supplement that promises the world. Every once in a while, I come across something that actually
10:28
stops me in my tracks and the light system is one of those things. This isn't a supplement, it's not a
10:33
biohack, it's a full on energy environment built to help your mind and body synchronize, recharge
10:38
and operate at a higher level. It uses light patterns, color frequencies, and coherent energy
10:43
fields, all the stuff that your body naturally responds to to create a coherent, energetic field
10:48
around you. People are saying they feel more clear, more centered, more light in their environment,
10:52
and honestly the science behind it is fascinating. I've seen a lot of wellness tech, but the numbers
10:57
coming out on this new study of the light system are actually insane. Researchers measured human
11:02
chic cells before and after sitting in front of a system and get this. A 30-minute session boosted
11:08
cellular conductivity by 61%. The study even showed increased conductivity in isolated DNA,
11:14
which is associated with stronger structure and better repair pathways. The result, more clarity,
11:19
more balance and more alignment. You could say $500 now if you go to the lightsystems.com and use
11:24
discount code Sean. Well you said it was intentional. Can you back up the intergenality behind it?
11:31
Yeah, we've opened the borders and allowed numerous tens of millions of people to flood into the
11:36
country and those people are receiving subsidies from the government which allows them to afford
11:39
the houses that I can't. We've also prioritized the shareholders of massive corporations and allowed
11:45
them to purchase single-family homes. Why does a Fortune 500 company need to own a starter home?
11:51
They shouldn't need that at all. Also before the housing bubble, we prioritized low-income people
11:58
with no income mortgages. So they purchased the homes that they couldn't afford which skyrocketed
12:04
the price of homes and bust the market. So that was a whole upheaval of the market way back then
12:10
which sort of precipitated all this. It was all intentional. The whole plan with that was you
12:14
look at the bubble, where is housing gone since then? Nowhere but up, right? That bubble popped
12:19
and it dropped for a year and it skyrocketed up. The rates in 2007 aren't even comparable to 2025
12:27
and that's what we're looking at again except we're not looking at a pop where a bank is going to go
12:31
under because they're giving subprime mortgages and terrible loans to people. We're looking at a
12:35
pop in the sense that we're going to print a bunch of money and houses are going to become even
12:38
more expensive. So we're not even going to get the opportunity for a quick rush to get something
12:42
cheap. It's just going to go up. And then there's the secondary inflation that nobody really talks
12:47
about that he sort of alluded to in that a century ago a young man could get a starter job,
12:55
a starter position basically and support a family of four. That was actually doable.
13:01
That was doable. My grandpa. It wasn't like the lap of luxury. It does. My grandpa had five kids,
13:07
five kids. So a family of seven, he supported on a middle school teacher's salary and a golf course
13:12
manager during the summers. They didn't like live luxuriously. You know what I mean? They weren't
13:15
flying private or anything. But that was a family. He owned his own home. He owned his own home. His
13:19
wife raised and have to work his wife. She stayed home. She took care of the family. They built a
13:24
house. They had a little area on neighbors. And that's so that was the American dream. And they've
13:29
been priced out. The youth have been priced out of that not by just inflation of the the banking
13:36
kind I guess. But by the inflation of the fact that women are working and diluting the job market
13:43
and so jobs are just less expensive. It's easier to hire, right? And it's even easier to hire
13:48
children. Now you need now you have to have two people working in order to afford a family of five.
13:53
Well, one person is able to. Yeah. And that's also a deterrent to having children. Absolutely.
13:59
Also, the deterrent to having children is this idea that money is the highest value. And you
14:04
shouldn't have children until you have a ton of money. And right, this idea that if you if you don't
14:10
have all your savings and everything in order, you shouldn't have children, which it's prolonging.
14:16
We're prolonging having children because we tell everybody you need to be financially successful to
14:20
get married. And then they don't want to quit their careers so they don't want to raise their
14:25
children. Yeah. Because they've been trained to love their career before they love their children.
14:30
I mean, it's very sad. It's the destruction of the family. Well, we're prioritizing late marriages.
14:34
Two, right? And so imagine if I am 26, 27, 28, 9, so you're out. And I build my own stuff.
14:40
And my future wife is also building her own stuff. We never fully merge because neither one of us
14:44
wants to give up and that sacrifice because marriage isn't, you know, compromises. If you
14:48
compromise, you'll have regret. It has to be a sacrifice. And neither one wants to make the sacrifice
14:52
because both of us have been conditioned by society to go achieve that level of success before
14:57
doing anything else. Let's talk. If you don't mind just briefly about sacrifice because we don't
15:01
understand the word sacrifice because in school, we're taught that sacrifice means a loss.
15:07
But it's not. You sacrifice something for something. So it's a net gain because otherwise if it
15:13
wasn't for something better, it wouldn't be a set. You wouldn't do the sacrifice. You would, you
15:18
would say, no, I'm not going to sacrifice this for that. So what he's talking about is you sacrifice
15:24
the self to the marriage because the marriage is greater than each of the selves separately.
15:31
But we don't look at the world that way anymore. We think sacrifice and we experience loss before
15:36
we even make the sacrifice, right? That's what she's saying. Well put, yeah, I think it's needed
15:41
though on both sides, right? Little sacrifice. I've seen stats on a lot of women are in debt from
15:46
college and then the male will have to, when they get married, inherit that debt, sacrifice.
15:50
Well, there was a post I saw just yesterday, a woman got a $40,000 loan. That same loan by the time
15:56
she paid it off cost her over $100,000 to lay off. That is $70,000 in interest. It's usury.
16:03
It's usury. And by the way, where would, who convinced her to get that loan? Yes, who convinced
16:08
her to get that loan, who gave her that loan and who charged her that interest? The government,
16:12
that is intentional decision that the government has designed in our schools. It's a system of debt,
16:18
usury and enslavement, sadly. Yeah. And usury is forbidden in the Bible. The entire idea of
16:26
Christianity, as Christians aren't supposed to charge other Christians' interest on loans,
16:29
right? So if we had a system that was built on a moral foundation, this wouldn't be happening
16:34
because you would go to me and say, hey, Brian, I need a hundred bucks to go fill a tank. It's too much.
16:37
People do. And I would give you, it's, it's, it's incredibly prevalent in obviously the banking
16:42
system. I mean, you look at the foundation of the federal reserve and take Lincoln's greenbacks
16:47
during the civil war, right? They needed loans. The banks were like, we'll give you loans. We'll
16:50
charge you 60 percent interest. And that's why the greenbacks were created by Lincoln,
16:53
ones to create the currency so that they didn't have to take the loan because gold ran the system.
16:58
And so Lincoln went and he said, look, we're not going to take your loans and said, we'll create
17:01
our own currency. We'll back it by the federal government. We'll say that this is how it's going to
17:04
run. We're going to produce it. And they did. They set an amount. I think it was like $400,000.
17:08
They printed that and that became the currency that got them through the civil war. The banks didn't
17:12
like that. And so afterwards, the federal reserve was founded. This is, you know, 50 years after
17:17
at the Jekyll Island meeting with Senator Albright. Senator Albright, he got a bunch of JP Morgan
17:23
and you got all these very powerful bankers together. They created the federal reserve. And it was
17:28
because of the foundation of the federal reserve, they said, we need to centralize bank to harbor all
17:31
of the currency in America to make sure everything is good that it was passed and eventually led to us
17:36
being taken off of the gold standard by was it Nixon to make sure everything is good? Everything's
17:41
good. Wasn't it Nixon who took us off the gold standard in 1971? I believe it was. Yeah,
17:45
as well as Nixon's taking us off of the gold standard and really the federal reserve foundation,
17:50
the inception from the beginning that is the reason why we're here. The reason why inflation is
17:55
one rampant because you look at inflation back a hundred years ago when the federal reserve existed,
18:00
but we were still backed by gold. Right. And as long as gold stayed and remained as value,
18:04
you couldn't inflate the dollar. Once they were separated, you could do whatever you wanted with
18:08
this. That's the that's the idea behind Bitcoin. It's this unlimited supply. That supply will never
18:13
change. That's all there is. I love that your mom knows about Bitcoin. She does. Well, she knows
18:17
Robert Breedlove and he's a pretty knowledgeable guy. You got a Bitcoin. Well, he, I have
18:23
believed in decentralized. We both believe in decentralization and I believe in decentralized
18:28
education and school. All right. Don't believe in school, right? I believe he says,
18:32
utilizes and solidate things. It leads to because power corrupts and power corrupts absolutely
18:38
an absolute power corrupts, right? So it's once you centralize everything, you give way to somebody
18:43
taking advantage of that power and doing something nefarious with it. It's correct. So with schools,
18:48
do you want it the power to go back towards the principle of the school instead of the city,
18:52
the state, the federal should be the parents. It should really be the parents of the control of
18:56
the schools. And it's how it used to be, right? And the problem is that the schools have taught all
19:00
the parents. They're too stupid to do it. But I, but it's not true. Yeah, the parents are the,
19:06
the parents should be the number one indicate it. Sorry, the number one educators of their children,
19:11
the primary educators of their children. And then the schools can be secondary to that. But the
19:16
schools have taken the primary seat and they're driving the boat now. And the parents are hanging on
19:20
for dear life. And that's why for parents, the parents demanding justice alliance, we're seeking
19:26
restitution for some parents who have been targeted by their school boards. How dare the school
19:31
boards come after the parents? But they do dare because no one's doing anything for the parents now.
19:37
So we're demanding where we're actually go. We've gone to the DOE, the DOJ. We're talking with them.
19:43
We're getting great language, but no action yet. And we need some action. It's true. I mean,
19:51
you have people in the school board who don't even have kids, right? So why are, what message are we
19:55
sending when anybody can have an influence on another person's children? Well, the problem is,
19:59
you know, if you want, if you want money, where do you go? You rob a bank. If you want to have sex
20:04
with children, where do you go? You go where all the children are collected. And that's what we're
20:09
seeing today. We're seeing grooming of the children in the schools and the school boards seem to
20:14
not want to do anything to ameliorate that. In fact, they're, they're facilitating it,
20:20
which I'm sorry puts them in the spotlight. How did you feel about your schooling experience?
20:26
Did you go to private? I was, I was homeschooled. She was my teacher, so I can't say anything negative.
20:31
That's funny. No, it was, so I thoroughly enjoyed homeschooling, and I'll be homeschooling my
20:36
own kids when I have them, right? One day if the Lord gives me them. The freedom that comes from
20:41
homeschooling, obviously, you know, 60 years ago when there was like a couple homeschool kids
20:45
that were all the weirdos. Yeah, you have, you have all the jokes, but you look at how homeschoolers
20:49
test what's a 25% better better than their public school peers. No, there's something to be said
20:54
about giving a child the creative freedom to pursue his dreams, right? When you give them the room,
21:01
my sister, for example, when she was three or something, came to my mom and she said, I want to
21:05
draw. And so my mom said, five, she goes draw 15 minutes a day. My sister started drawing hours
21:11
a day. Now, at 20 years old, she is doing these amazing designs for people, all completely self-taught,
21:17
hasn't taken a single class, she taught class, right? So she at 20 years old is drawing better
21:22
than people who go to school for this because it was a passion that she pursued. It was something
21:28
that she took seriously, and she was given the freedom to do that without the restraints that
21:33
the school would have imposed on her. So this nation was founded on life liberty and the pursuit of
21:38
happiness. Happiness is not the term that we have today. The happiness of the founders was
21:44
fulfilling your purpose. And so if you allow a child to discover his or her purpose and then
21:50
pursue that purpose, that happiness, they will teach themselves anything that they want. Because
21:55
education is actually driven by curiosity. It's not driven by school. Yeah, for sure. Well,
22:00
guys, thanks for your time. It's been a pleasure. We'll link your socials below and your book
22:04
is out now, right? Yep, the book is out now. Everyone can go to sorbustudios.com for all the
22:08
information that'll have both her and my stuff. Awesome. Check them out, guys. Peace.
22:13
I hope you guys are enjoying the show. Please don't forget to like and subscribe. It
22:16
helps the show a lot with the algorithm. Thank you.