Off the Beaten Path

Who Is the Second Amendment Really For? | Tony Simon

Cush Arrue and Rob Henson Season 4 Episode 6

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0:00 | 26:59

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What happens when you realize nobody is speaking for your community?

You build the room yourself.

In this episode of Off the Beaten Path, Tony Simon shares the story behind Diversity Shoot, a grassroots movement introducing thousands of new shooters to firearms safety, education, and Second Amendment rights.

From navigating New Jersey's restrictive gun laws to creating one of the most impactful outreach programs in the country, Tony explains why gun rights belong to everyone.

We discuss:

  • Second Amendment advocacy
  • Diversity Shoot and community outreach
  • Firearms education for new shooters
  • Gun ownership in restrictive states
  • Building inclusive firearms communities
  • Why representation matters

This conversation is about freedom, responsibility, and making sure everyone has a seat at the table.


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SPEAKER_00

Sink, sync, sync, sink, in sync, in sync, back, lips, back, all right. I know I don't know any in sync songs. Yeah.

SPEAKER_01

Ladies and gentlemen, we are back with another episode of Off the Beaten Path. We got our our brother, our big brother. Big homie, yes. Literally older and bigger than me. Yeah, fair. Yeah. Doing big things. Doing big things out of Jersey. He is a two-way powerhouse.

SPEAKER_03

Oh, yeah.

SPEAKER_01

We we met this brother, I want to say two years ago, right? Yeah, at shows, or was it shot? Yeah, goals.

SPEAKER_03

It was goals. Yeah, or in the media room. Yep. Yep. And uh that's where the food was.

SPEAKER_01

We've been following your journey. Uh T. I'm gonna call you T. That's right. If you don't like it, get over it. That's right. Oh man, I'm hurt. Yeah, I'm hurt. Uh I'm gonna so we known T for about that long, and I've been following you now, just watching your journey. And obviously, we connected again down at Two-Way Freedom Fest. And I got to hear more of your story in person. And that was like for me, that did it. That was the nail in the coffin. Because Rob and I, Breeze, my bad, Rob. My bad, Breeze. Nobody sounds Breezy and I like to make sure that when we interview folks, we're interviewing an authentic person. You're as authentic as they come. That's it. So uh out of the great liberal state of Jersey, tell us how you're fighting the good fight. Introduce yourself first.

SPEAKER_00

I'm Tony Simon. I run the diversity shoot, diversity shoot.com. Yep. 2015 I came up with diversity shoot because I was pissed off. Um why were you pissed? Let's go back. Jump in the way back machine. Got out the corps. I'm from Virginia, born and raised. Yeah, thank you. All right, all right, thank you. I don't know what to say. That always confuses me. Yeah. You're welcome.

SPEAKER_01

Because you volunteered to go in.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah. Yeah. It was my thing. I wanted to join the corps since I was 12. Anyway, joined the Marine Corps, got out, decided to move to Jersey. I had family up there. So I go, but I had firearms. I picked up some guns, you know, after I got out of the corps. And I still remember the phone calls because I wanted them to be legal. So I called just to transport them. I called every state between Virginia and Jersey to find out how to transport my firearms. And every state was like, yeah, just put them in the car and drive the frig up there, you know, maybe even have them in the trunk or something. But that would that was it. I mean, you can travel with your firearm. Jersey was like, oh, guns separated from the ammo, both of them locked in separate boxes in a different compartment of the car. And that was should have been my warning.

SPEAKER_02

Yeah.

SPEAKER_00

Because I laughed at the lady, because I called state police. That's who I called in each state, so I wouldn't violate the law because you know you're young and you're dumb. Yeah. Yeah. So uh I laughed. And she was like, What's funny, sir? I'm like, Y'all serious? And they're like, Yeah. I was like, okay, that should have been my warning. Jersey's very difficult to have firearms in, especially years ago. You need a something called a firearms ID card. You have to have one to go to the range. So firearms ID card, whole background check, everything, fingerprints. Uh, you give them permission to uh medical uh mental history check. Yep. They do all that, and then you can get a firearms ID card. Firearms ID card only means you can go in the store and handle a firearm, i.e., could I see that pistol? Could I see that rifle? And you can buy a long gun with it. So you can buy a rifle or shotgun, but you can't buy a pistol. You want to buy a pistol, you have to put in for a pistol purchase permit, which is all the exact same paperwork to get the uh firearms ID card, but now you're asking permission to buy one handgun. Oh, this is this is a different language to two Florida dudes. Exactly. So it was a different language to me from Virginia. So I pretty much didn't, I was like, well, F that. I don't want to have anything to do with this. Boom. Fast forward from that time to 2012, friend of mine became an NRA certified instructor. I went and bought my first 1022 in Jersey. I got you know everything I needed and uh couldn't shoot for shit. I was in the Marine Corps, means absolutely nothing if you don't practice pulling triggers. Yeah. I took his class and ended up shooting a group about the size of my thumbnail at 25 yards, like after I came out of the class. I wanted other people to feel like I felt, like you know, that accomplishment and empowerment. So I became a firearms instructor in uh 2012. And then right about then, after I went through rifle, pistol, shotgun, got certified NRA, NRA uh certified safety officer, Sandy Hook happened. And New Jersey started passing all kinds of anti-gun laws, and that, you know, I was like, well, if they knew what they were doing, you know, like if they understood what they're doing, it's not keeping people safer. And I went and testified and sent it. I testified in the assembly.

SPEAKER_02

Let's go.

SPEAKER_00

And what I learned is they want to stay ignorant, they don't give a shit. Um, when we testified, there were 200 pro-gun people, a significant number were instructors. And they were all, look, I'll give you my number. If you really want to learn firearms, contact us. And I'm talking a bunch of them. No one ever called. They don't care. Pissed me off. And also noticed no one looked like me there that was pro-gun testifying. And about then I've been an instructor for years. And I'm like, what where are the black people at? Where are the Hispanic people at? Why is the only voice in here speaking for the Second Amendment, white males for the most part, who don't know anything about well, they can dismiss the white men. No, pro-gun, pro-gun white males that were testifying for our Second Amendment rights. That's all right, we've done that a couple times, yeah. Um, I'm like, well, where are we? Because you can dismiss the pro-gun white male as, oh, they're all racist and scared of brown people. Yeah. I'm like, well, where the brown people that's saying, y'all full of shit.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah.

SPEAKER_00

They're not there. So I talked to the groups that were there, the Second Amendment organization. I said, You have any kind of program to bring blacks and minorities in to teach them, hey, bro, you have we have advocacy. Same right story. Yeah, yeah. This is your right. And they were like, no. So I started it. So in 2015. Let's go. We need some horns and rounds of applause for that. Yeah.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah. And I know you were in the clubs back in the day, so you know that horn.

SPEAKER_03

Yeah, and real quick, if it's not a shirt already, practice pulling triggers. Needs to be a shirt. Go ahead, that was a bar. Yeah, yeah. Thank you, sir. Yeah.

SPEAKER_00

So uh I told them, I was like, I'll I'll start it up. I talked to Anthony Kalandro, who's a board member now. Yeah, but back, I think he was still on the uh committee for training, but uh, that's where I went to get my NRA certifications, gun for higher range in Woodland Park. I said, Anthony, could I use the classroom to host an event to get minorities in here to teach them advocacy and gun safety? He was like, do it Thursday. I'm like, yo, bro, slow down. Slow down, give me a week. So I did the first event. It was cool. It uh was three brothers and uh a Cuban kid showed up two hours late because three brothers in Cuban. They showed up, like that's not a stereotype, it's the truth. Yeah, that's not a stereotype, it's just what happened in my life. Uh, and if you think that's not a big deal, try getting somebody to try something new, your first idea. Oh man, and no one shows up for two hours, bro. I'm still sitting in the room. And props to you for for riding it out. Yeah, you were like, I know my people, they'll be here. They'll be here, they'll be here two hours later. So they come in, it turned out well. Uh I talked to Anthony, I was like, hey man, I'm sorry. I use your entire classroom for four people. They showed up late. I understand if y'all want to do it again. I love this part. Anthony said, You're gonna do it again, and you're gonna do it again until you fill the room. We fill the room. Yes, we fill the room first or maybe second year. Yeah. Yeah. Shout out to Anthony. We got he's a he's a good dude. I've got yeah. So we fill that room up, and Anthony went, You gotta start selling tickets, dude. We roll the fire clue. He had 80 people in the 30-person room. Yeah, so uh we started selling tickets only to limit the number of people coming. So we limit it to 20 people, so everyone's comfortable. We have volunteers from C and JFO, Coalition of New Jersey firearms owners, they bring their guns to my events. Uh, I bring in pizza, sodas. Uh, we get uh raffle prizes from companies throughout the industry. We raffle them off. That helps pay for the pizza. And I also provide the ammo that my guys don't provide because if I provide nine and uh five five six. Okay. You come in with you know six five cream or young yon. Yeah, yeah, yeah. But my guys are awesome. We host events every two weeks throughout the state. I've hosted events in uh Nebraska with the Nebraska Firearms Owners Association. Uh, we ran three events in one day up there. We had uh Pennsylvania. I was there for two years running events there. So yeah, we're ready to just keep blowing up, man. It's really great. Uh we get moms, dads, grandmothers, grandkids, all along the spectrums, co-workers. It's a wonderful thing. It's growing, and we're educating a bunch of people, not only blacks, Hispanics, whites, uh, gays, LGBT, we got Muslims, we got Jews, we got everybody that comes through because it's a human right. And one person, one people can't speak. Inalienable right. Yeah. Yeah, even aliens can do it. So one person can't speak for everybody because someone's gonna try to shut them down.

SPEAKER_01

That's it.

SPEAKER_00

But if we have a black female talking about Second Amendment from her perspective, we have a uh someone in the LGBT community speaking it from their perspective. You can't shut them all down or say they're all wrong or they're racist, yeah, or they suffer from an ism, racism, sexism. No, yeah. This is just a woman living her lived life, and she had a stalker. Now she has the ability to defend herself. This is a 90-year-old black woman, one of the coolest things I had. 90-year-old black woman or Afrocentric hat Erica Badu thing. Yeah. Well, my boy Nick is there. Nick is Asian American, he had a Foo Man shoe, great for photos. Yeah, so Nick is there with a Foo Man shoe, training a 90-year-old black woman dressed up like Erica Badu with an AK-47. Let's go. I was like, yo, this is America as hell. It is 100%. It's America as hell. But that was our event. And it's like advocacy is every one of us. Every firearms owner can be an advocate if they choose to be. Open-minded, bring your friends from work. I have a lot of white people approach me and they go, hey man, I'd love to do what you do, but I don't know any black people, you know, to bring them to the range. I'm like, you don't have to just bring your friends, whoever they are, and eventually somebody has someone in their circle that's a minority, and they go, Hey, Tim's a good guy, man. He taught my mom to shoot, my wife to shoot. Uh you want to go check it out? I don't know. Tim's a white dude, Tim's cool dude. You want to come? Now all of a sudden you got somebody who's black that you introduced to firearms. Not because you went out of your way looking for it, just you were doing the work and it happened organically. Don't go looking for minority. Hey, black guy. Give away that's your pitch line. Yeah. Hey, Darkie. You know freedom?

SPEAKER_01

Yeah. Well, man, you said so much, Pat. First first, we need some, yeah. Yeah, let's get some more. I want to get uh yeah, yeah, you do deserve your flowers, definitely. Thank you, gentlemen. And one of the things I said earlier was that you are authentic. Yeah. And what we love about that is that you are who you are, who you are all the time.

SPEAKER_03

And we see him walking the walk. Yeah, we see this man everywhere. Everywhere. Like in the small, and I don't want to say a small gathering in a bad way, but the Freedom Fest, right? Intimate. We'll say intimate, right?

SPEAKER_02

Yeah.

SPEAKER_03

My from Jersey came down. This is in Central Florida. We drove there. Yep. My man Tony was there speaking, empowering, knowledge, education. So we just want to say he's not just out here on a podcast saying these things. We see this man putting in work.

SPEAKER_01

You know what my issue is? Like, not with you, just as a whole, with the space, is that you're either gonna be a two-way absolutist, like it is for everybody, yeah, or you're gonna tie it to your party line. Yeah. And no, no, I think everybody we had that conversation an hour ago. Yeah, deserves the right to bear arms. So I don't care if you're a Democrat, liberal, what's the if you wanna say, hey, I need a firearm because I want to protect myself. Man, shout out our boy Chan. What did he say? Owning a firearm is the first sign of responsibility because Yeah, the first step to personal responsibility.

SPEAKER_03

100%.

SPEAKER_00

It's a hundred percent true. So I caught some flack last year. Uh there was an illegal immigrant, I don't even care where he was from, in Chicago. They got busted with a firearm protecting his family. He got it. He wasn't, I mean, outside of being here illegally, just a hard-working dude, lived in an effed up neighborhood, got a pew pew to protect his loved ones. Yep. I'm like, nothing's wrong with that. I don't know. A lot of people have a problem because it's an American right, it's this. I'm like, hold up, bro. You can say what you want to about the Constitution, but understand I'm a Second Amendment absolutist. It's a human right.

SPEAKER_02

Yes.

SPEAKER_00

Dude didn't have to be. I'm like, he's got a gun to protect his family in Chicago, like you would have a gun to protect your family. But you're telling me because he's here illegally, he should just be a victim. Right. Right, come on now. All right, it makes sense. Yeah, exactly. And people wanted to argue with that, and I'm like, oh, you with your fat mama?

SPEAKER_01

Yeah. I don't care. It's true though. It's true though, because yo, man, like like yo, I am a two-way absolutist. Yeah, I believe I don't care what color you are, I don't care what your religion is, I don't care what what party you align yourself with, everybody deserves the right to bear arms.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah, yeah, but what if they're a terrorist? Well, I didn't say people can arm themselves at a murderers. And by the way, well, how do you know? Bitch, why you carry a gun? Yeah, if somebody's a terrorist and they pop off, pop them in the face.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, we literally just had uh Mike Sodini a couple a couple moments ago talking about like a lot of times when people snap, there is no sign. It could be as simple as a man walking in on his wife cheating, and he fucking spazzes and kills both of them. Yeah, it's that you don't know. You don't get a firearm with the intention of snapping and losing your shit. Sometimes you there are individuals who are just unstable, but for the most part, like it's usually for self-defense, home defense.

SPEAKER_00

My whole thing is how you're gonna adjust how you're gonna use someone committing a crime of passion to try to remove the rights of all people.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah.

SPEAKER_00

Because you come in that door, you catch your spouse cheating. Yeah, you grab a baseball bat and whip their ass and both of them pass away, is in baseball bat legislation we're talking about next. That's such a rarity. Let's stop acting like that's the freaking norm. Yeah, it's not. Man, say that again.

SPEAKER_03

Hit hit some horns for that. It is not. We're talking about a super duper small percentage.

SPEAKER_01

Shout out to the dad here in Texas, walked in on his son being violated. But remember, we saw this uh the news. He walked in on like one of his farm workers raping his son, beat the man to death, and they they they let him walk. I agree with that. Yeah, yeah. Like, yeah, I don't think there's anything. But are you gonna say now he's not allowed to fight anybody if it's defending his son? No, exactly. The logic there is is always flawed for me because 100%. Like, like you said, it's if I if I beat somebody with a bet, now it's an axe, anything, you stab somebody, yeah, whatever it is. I mean, look at the UK, yeah, they're illegal, they stab the hell out of everybody.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah, the crazy thing about the UK is I love the fact that they say this thing is illegal because it's deadly, but then when there was deadly attacks, remember there was a London bridge attack? Oh, yeah, and the guy used a Norwal whale horn to beat a dude in the head. And I'm like, wait a minute, you took you understand what a fighter you gotta be to go, I'm gonna take that horn and whip him up for the nothing's gonna stop me from fighting this terrorist off.

SPEAKER_01

Give me a horn. Yeah, it and that's man, I don't remember what season I said this, but it's usually the it's a reflection of the man's heart.

SPEAKER_03

Man, that's a great line. Yeah, it's a reflection of the man's head.

SPEAKER_01

Anything can be a weapon. I mean, I know that's a down right here, it ain't gonna shoot nobody.

SPEAKER_00

No, not not nail person, but and if you're a person that has never gone there mentally, how are you gonna use your handgun or firearm to protect yourself? And you've never gone there, you've never had the thought, yeah, what if this happens and this happens? Like you've never gone there mentally, something happens, you might not go there because you don't have it in your heart to fight with that thing, you don't have faith in yourself and that thing. Yeah, so you having a gun is not doing you any good if you don't have the uh mental capacity. I'm gonna use this. Yeah, I'm gonna use this, I have to. Right. These are the circumstances, I'm gonna have to use this. That way you don't get caught up in the passion. I was scared, so I pulled the gun and shot. No, no, dude. You shooting, you pulling a gun has to meet certain criteria. Yeah, come on, because it's either gonna be what? Fight, flight, or freeze. Yeah, and you gotta go, okay. If this happens, this happens. However the heck it does. I don't need to watch any of those shows. It's not about watching the shows for entertainment, it's about watching those shows and putting markers on. If I see this, yeah, I'm already even subconsciously pre-programmed to go, yeah. If a dude starts looking around a lot when I'm at a place and he's got a shysti on in the summertime, yeah, all right. Look, be on point. He might not see anything, he might have allergies. Yeah, yeah, but he might have other thoughts. Yeah, exactly. And you don't have to be paranoid. I think a friend of mine he says you don't have to be paranoid, just be aware of your surroundings, situational awareness. We say that all the time. That's it. That buys you time, all right. I'm paying attention. Whoa, that's kind of weird. What's happening over there? Yeah, okay. All right, man, that's good. It's the microcosm.

SPEAKER_03

Yeah, for those that are listening, yeah. He's just trying to no, that's all right. We do that too. Just reposition yourself. Yeah, he can see a little more of the crowd, right? Your back's not to everyone.

SPEAKER_01

I am a two-way absolutist, but I don't carry every day. That sucks. Well, here's my here's my line of thinking. At the end of the day, I still got Smith and Wesley. Yeah, yeah. I'll I'll go to town with Eve. You can write hands on, yeah. I'm usually with him or my brother, and I know they're always carrying, but like, you know, it's it's not not that I'm scared to or anything like that.

SPEAKER_03

It's just, yeah, I just I just point in the conversation because I have a uh seven-year-old and a four-year-old, and I'm and I'm starting to plant those seeds. Yeah, we'll be at a restaurant, you know. I said, Hey, listen, something might never happen, right? I said, but if it did, what would you do right now? And I love to see them process everything. You know, why probably there's an exit right there. Maybe I get and I'm like, that's good, baby girl. Yeah, yeah. Just so you're not, you have some kind, like you said, to tell you got some kind of plan. Nope. It's just you walk in, all right.

SPEAKER_00

Those exits are there and there.

SPEAKER_03

We always do that.

SPEAKER_00

We're always facing the door. Where's the exit? Yeah, at least we know. My whole thing is I can't, I'm big as hell, right? I'm a big dude. I'll probably get got, but it won't, I won't get got because I lack the plan. Yeah, yeah, yeah. I'll get got because I'm just big as hell. All right, y'all boys. You got me. You got me. You got me. It's like I don't carry it, I carry every day. Why? Because I ain't running, bro. Yeah, yeah. I ain't dying tired.

SPEAKER_03

I ain't dying. That's another that's the quote. I think that's the quote.

SPEAKER_01

I ain't dying tired.

SPEAKER_03

No, sir. Nope.

SPEAKER_01

So, all right, we're gonna switch, we're gonna switch paces here.

SPEAKER_03

Yeah, we're 20 minutes in, man. That's a great combo. No, it doesn't happen. I feel like we just got started.

SPEAKER_01

So, you know, we're all about exploring the outdoors, the second amendment, the comedy, culture, all that other fun stuff on our tagline. We love music. We own a recording studio. We're gonna go with what is Big Tony's top five artists of all time. Oh my goodness, great wow, of all times, huh? Yeah, and it could be any genre. Oh, and any particular order.

SPEAKER_00

We don't have to go five to one or one to five. Yeah, right. No, I'm just thinking, because it's crazy. Most people put their top five as people that they listened to while they were alive. It's it's always it. Oh, the best artist ever. And it's like you you you were born in 1990, bro. It's like best artists ever were in the middle of their careers when you were hatched, yeah. Like uh Prince.

SPEAKER_01

Hold on. I'm surprised. Okay, now hold on, hold on, because you know how I feel about Prince.

SPEAKER_03

Of course.

SPEAKER_01

Who's better, Prince or Michael Jackson? Whose catalog? Oh, let me rephrase that. Whose catalog are you choosing? Prince or MJ?

SPEAKER_00

Um no, I'm no, fuck that. Okay, so I go by this. My first albums I ever purchased, going way back, because I I didn't grow up with money, but my dad had an old record album, uh record machine that he had like in storage. Well, when you turn like 15, you want to get music, right? So I went and dragged it out, and uh, first albums I bought Michael Jackson, uh Thriller album, Prince 1999, and Lionel Richie Dancing on the ceiling. Those are my first three albums. Hello, yeah. I mean, that thriller album all came out at the same time. Think about how crazy that all came out at the same time. What a what an era of music. Yeah, so we had great music. So yeah, Prince, Alutha Vandros. Come on now. Because it's like getting laid music. I was just about to say Tony's Tony's about love. And if you really want to get laid. Throwing some print slow jams. I don't know. You having a baby. Yeah. I don't even care if you two dudes. Somebody get burning. Damn. So that's that. I like uh Metallica. Okay.

SPEAKER_03

Metallica mentioned today. Shout out to Metallica.

SPEAKER_00

Who's that? Mike? No, that was uh Gabby. Gabby. Gabby, yeah. Oh shit. She was in here. Yeah, yeah. I love Gabby. Yeah. Um, so yeah, Metallica's huge. Uh actually I was a member of the Snake Pit. Yeah. Their fan club. Yeah. Yeah, that was that. So you said five, right? Yeah. I don't know, man, because everybody's so epic. Like, oh, MJ. What the hell am I doing? Yeah, yeah, yeah. Yeah, you got Michael Jackson, you got Prince, you got freaking Luther, uh, you got Metallica. Metallica. Yeah, I love Metallica. Where'd you get into them? Like, what album was it? Black album. Okay. Black album. My boy in Japan turned me on to him. He was like, yo, you gotta check these dudes out. Yeah. I was like, yo, this is fire, bro. Yeah. And then we went from black album and uh I went backwards, right? Okay. So I went and started listening to some of the old catalog, and I was like, that's fat. And then my favorite metallic album is when they did it with the Symphony Orchestra. Oh, that was crazy. That whole live. I bought the DVD set and everything.

SPEAKER_01

I'm grateful you haven't said you two.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah. I can't stand you. I I don't like uh truthfully, you're not my vibe. From Beatles on, I don't like any of the things. Yeah, and I never got into the Beatles either.

SPEAKER_01

Philly Collins, yeah.

SPEAKER_03

Well, I got into some Zone for a little bit. Yeah.

SPEAKER_01

I'm a little more than one song for Phil. Rock Stewart.

SPEAKER_00

I'm gonna listen to the side. Oh, you're doing Ron. No, no, no. But my thing is, do I listen to every album? Oh, yeah. Michael Jackson album I can throw up. Yeah, no album. No doubt. Everyone's thriller, yeah. Every Metallica album.

SPEAKER_03

Yeah.

SPEAKER_01

Like I said, speaking of which, all those artists laid on their were laying on the ground during their uh their album covers. I saw a post that said we need to get RB singers and pop stars back down on because the music ain't good. But yo, so Tony, um, let's just shift gears again. What's your everyday carry?

SPEAKER_00

Night Glock 19, Gen 2. Let's go. Any attachments? Uh it's got really cool sites called Triclop Sites. Cool. Go check out their website, triclopsites.com. Dude's an ophthalmologist, and he came up with a way to pretty much uh how do I say it? Make an analog red dot. What? Yeah, it's crazy. It's using uh the high viz uh you know, little uh fiber optics. Yep. Back one has one at two, one at twelve. Yeah, one at twelve, one at three, and one at nine. That's the back. It's squared off. He's got one, boom, boom, and then the front site has a high viz, it's in the metal. Pretty much you just punch out like you're using a red dot, centered up in a hole and shoot. It's fast as hell. I've competed with it. Um when I did my review on it. Oh, what? Uh what would you which which gun did you say was that?

SPEAKER_01

Oh, Block 19.

SPEAKER_00

Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah. Yeah, so I've I've competed with it. I carried it for over a year. Um, it's a cool site, and I 100% recommend it to anybody that wants to try it out, especially if you have stigmatism.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, okay.

SPEAKER_00

Oh, yeah, like homie G got a stigmatism. Yeah, just check it out. Don't overthink it. I might have awesome in the front side. That's totally different.

SPEAKER_03

A touch of the tism.

SPEAKER_00

Grip it, grip it, and rip it. Grip it and rip it. Yeah. So where can people find you? Yeah, diversity shoot.com. Go to diversyshoot.com, you'll see all of my links. You can help a brother out because uh we always need money. Again, I provide the ammo for the events, I provide the food for the events. Yeah, so if you can help fund it, great. Um, I'm also on Patreon. Again, links are on diversityhoot.com. Yeah, if you want to see my IG, Simon says train. I never really changed that up. I need to. Uh Simon says train, and I'm also on second is for everyone on Facebook and second for everyone on Twitter. I gotta combine those names. I just haven't done it yet.

SPEAKER_01

Bro, we want to say thank you for your time. We appreciate it. It's been an amazing episode, folks. If you're listening, please tap.

SPEAKER_03

You can hear this, tap in.

SPEAKER_01

You can hear you can see this. If you're watching us on YouTube, tap in, go follow, like, share, comment, subscribe, share this with somebody you love, you care for reach one, teach one, go get you a fire, empower someone, empower yourselves, empower someone, and more importantly, go shoot some stuff.

SPEAKER_03

And stay low and keep firing.

SPEAKER_01

Stay low and keep firing.

SPEAKER_03

That's it.

SPEAKER_01

Thank you, America.

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