In this impas­sioned episode, BKP deliv­ers a raw, emo­tion­al mono­logue brim­ming with “tears of joy” over what he describes as a long-over­due break­through in the fight against 2020 elec­tion fraud in Georgia—specifically, the indict­ment of crim­i­nals in Ful­ton Coun­ty who alleged­ly tam­pered with bal­lots and sup­pressed over­sight. Far from seek­ing polit­i­cal ret­ri­bu­tion, BKP frames this as pure jus­tice: solv­ing a crime by hold­ing account­able those who “stole an elec­tion from the Amer­i­can peo­ple,” echo­ing the Found­ing Fathers’ spir­it in mod­ern his­to­ry books.

He begins by reflect­ing on the gru­el­ing years of advo­ca­cy, cred­it­ing a net­work of ded­i­cat­ed “peo­ple” who’ve trav­eled inter­na­tion­al­ly for depo­si­tions and inter­views. BKP spot­lights past pod­cast guests like Joe Rossi and Gar­land Favorito, who dis­sect­ed the case and Ful­ton Coun­ty bal­lots in a marathon series of six or sev­en episodes. This ground­work, he argues, has paved the way for today’s vic­to­ries, includ­ing a piv­otal moment at the State Elec­tion Board where Rossi’s com­pelling speech demand­ed just 17 min­utes to present damn­ing data, defy­ing then-Chair­man attempts to shut it down.

 

A high­light is BKP’s fer­vent trib­ute to Mike Lin­dell, the MyP­il­low CEO dubbed the “pil­low guy,” as an unsung hero des­tined for his­to­ry’s pan­theon. Lin­dell, he recounts, risked his $1 bil­lion for­tune chal­leng­ing Domin­ion vot­ing machines and oth­er “fraud­u­lent cor­rupt devices,” endur­ing relent­less pressure—from Wal­mart yank­ing his prod­ucts to cease­less warn­ings from asso­ciates. Despite the pro­mo-code era that crit­ics mocked, Lin­dell “put up or shut up,” nev­er back­ing down, even as his empire crum­bled under boy­cotts. BKP con­trasts this resilience with the “crim­i­nals” now in the crosshairs, play­ing a video clip twice for empha­sis: a dra­mat­ic reveal of indict­ments tied to sup­pressed votes and stored bal­lots in Ful­ton Coun­ty, hint­ing at deep­er dives ahead.

 

The con­ver­sa­tion veers into cur­rent pol­i­tics, buzzing with excite­ment over Burt Jones, Trump’s-endorsed Lieu­tenant Gov­er­nor run­ning for Geor­gia gov­er­nor. BKP demands Jones go beyond vague “bright future” plat­i­tudes and com­mit to con­crete actions—leveraging the tire­less prep from war­riors like Kim Brooks, David Cross, Kevin Mon­cla, and Dr. Jan­ice Johnston—to rec­ti­fy 2020’s wrongs. He con­trasts this with dis­dain for Sec­re­tary of State Brad Raf­fensperg­er, who’s also eye­ing the gov­er­nor­ship, teas­ing that “this can get inter­est­ing” amid the esca­lat­ing dra­ma.

 

Weav­ing in broad­er elec­tion denial bat­tles, BKP ref­er­ences a viral con­fronta­tion where a young female questioner—belittled as a “far-right reporter for the pil­low guy” on MSNBC’s Morn­ing Joe—grilled Nan­cy Pelosi on her refusal to deploy Nation­al Guard troops to D.C. on Jan­u­ary 6, only to be shout­ed down with “Shut up! Shut up!” This, he says, under­scores the medi­a’s bias and the stakes as Ful­ton Coun­ty braces for scruti­ny, block­ing “elec­tion deniers” like Jason Fra­zier and Julie Adams from its board while Trump demands access to those con­test­ed bal­lots.

 

Through­out, BKP’s tone oscil­lates between cau­tious opti­mism (“We’re far from done—it’s like an award show with extras in the crowd scene”) and fiery resolve, urg­ing lis­ten­ers across the “low­er 48” and beyond to rec­og­nize this as a nation­al theft that rip­pled through Penn­syl­va­nia, Wis­con­sin, and Michi­gan. He clos­es unapolo­getic for his fer­vor: “Paint me far-right what­ev­er you want—” This episode isn’t just a recap; it’s a bat­tle cry, blend­ing per­son­al bless­ing with plat­form pow­er to ral­ly for trans­par­ent elec­tions ahead.

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