Avsnitt
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Right now, there’s a man no smarter, no better than you—but he’s taking your future while you hesitate. He’s making money, getting stronger, building his empire. And you? You’re waiting, overthinking, making excuses. In five years, you’ll look back broke, invisible, and forgotten. And the worst part? It’ll be your fault. The world doesn’t care about you—it only rewards the bold.
You feel that fear creeping in? Good. Use it. Every second you delay, another man is stealing what should be yours. The house, the car, the life you dream of—he’s taking it because he had the balls to act. You think you have time? You don’t. The choice is simple: take what’s yours or be ruled by the men who do.
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In this speech, Andrew Tate discusses the value of difficulty in achieving success, particularly in getting rich. He compares the pursuit of wealth to a challenging video game where the difficulty level is what makes the experience rewarding. If success were easy, it wouldn’t be satisfying because there would be no challenge. Tate argues that the reason people desire wealth is not just to own things, but because it’s a hard achievement that sets them apart from others.
He encourages people to embrace challenges and be grateful for difficulties, viewing them as opportunities for growth rather than obstacles. According to him, most people’s lives are easy, with basic needs like food and shelter readily accessible, so the real challenge lies in pushing oneself to excel in tough areas. Changing your mindset to see difficulty as an exciting challenge, instead of a setback, is the key to success and fulfillment in any endeavor.
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Saknas det avsnitt?
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Love isn’t kindness. Love isn’t tolerance. Love isn’t letting people do whatever they want while you sit back and accept it. That’s weakness, and weakness destroys everything it touches. Real love is authority. Real love is discipline. A father doesn’t love his son by letting him be soft—he pushes him, tests him, makes him strong. Society has rejected this, replacing a father’s love with blind acceptance, stripping men of standards, and calling it progress. It’s not. It’s the reason the world is falling apart.
Men chase money, status, and power because they crave love—the respect of their peers, the loyalty of their women, the admiration of their children. But love without strength is worthless. A weak man’s love has no value because he has no value. If you want love to mean something, you must become something. That means suffering, struggle, and absolute capability. The most loved men in history weren’t soft—they were powerful. They built, they conquered, and they protected what was theirs. That’s what love is.
You don’t beat the Matrix by begging for freedom. You don’t defeat evil by tolerating it. Love isn’t surrender—it’s war. A man who truly loves stands firm, sets rules, and enforces them. That’s what the world has lost. That’s why men are lost. And until they understand that love comes with responsibility, pain, and power, they will remain weak, and the world will keep burning.
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Andrew Tate: Weakness Makes Men Useless in Love, Leadership, and Life
Andrew Tate delivers a powerful critique of weakness, framing it as the root of failure in leadership, love, and loyalty. He argues that men are valued based on their utility—their ability to protect, provide, and lead. Without strength, a man has no utility and, consequently, no love or respect.
“If you don’t have any strengths or you’re not strong, you don’t have any kind of utility,” Tate explains. “If you love anybody, you’re going to try and become strong.” Strength, he insists, is not just about physical power; it’s about the ability to stand firm under pressure, make tough decisions, and resist external threats. Weakness, on the other hand, is a liability that ruins relationships, betrays friends, and fails to uphold values.
“There’s no nobility in being weak and a loser,” he says bluntly. Tate draws a direct link between strength and love, explaining that only strong men can truly protect their loved ones, lead their communities, and defend their countries. Weak men, he adds, crumble under pressure, cave in during challenges, and betray those they care about when the stakes are high.
For Tate, strength is the cornerstone of being a good man. Without it, you can’t be a great leader, a loyal friend, or a dependable partner. His message is clear: if you truly care about someone, you’ll work on becoming strong—not just for yourself, but for them. In his words, “Weakness is the most disgusting quality a man could have.”
If you truly loved,
You'd never be tired.
You COULDN'T be weak.
Your strength is a direct reflection of your ability to love.
If you truly loved, you'd become as capable as humanly possible as a testament to that love.
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You’ve wasted the last year. NOTHING CHANGED.
You can change your life in 2025.
https://jointherealworld.com/heros-year
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If you aren't making money in crypto, you should be worried. Catch up TODAY: www.jointherealworld.com/btc
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Fun? I don’t even understand the concept. I don’t wake up thinking about fun. I wake up knowing I have things to do, and if I don’t, I’ll find things to do.
Work never ends. There’s always more money to make, more skills to sharpen, more ways to win. Every second wasted chasing fun is a second lost in the war for greatness.
You think Genghis Khan cared about fun? Alexander the Great? No. They woke up and took what was theirs. That’s what men are built for—conquest, not comfort.
The Matrix numbs you with distractions—mindless entertainment, cheap dopamine, garbage food, fake happiness. They want you weak. They want you satisfied. But deep inside every real man is the urge to conquer—whether it’s through business, power, or legacy. You don’t need fun. You need purpose. You need war. Every moment you waste laughing and playing, another man is outworking you, outthinking you, and preparing to take what’s yours.
I don’t chase fun. I provide it for others. My women, my people—they enjoy themselves because I handle the burden. I make the money. I fight the battles. I stay stressed so they can live carefree. That’s the cost of being on top. You either embrace the grind, or you get conquered. Simple
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Michael Franzese visits Andrew and Tristan Tate at their compound for a candid conversation. They discuss Michael’s passport issue, the Tate brothers' legal battles, media narratives, government influence, and free speech. With Andrew’s outspoken views and Michael’s experience in legal and political circles, this episode offers sharp insights on power, control, and personal freedom.
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BTW white guys. I'm trying to help you here.
Take the hint.
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You don't have time for "fun" as a man. You have work. www.cobratate.com/mission
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If you’re not competing, you’re losing. Surround yourself with men who push you—financially, physically, intellectually. Who’s making the most money? Who’s training the hardest? Who’s finding new ways to win? Build an environment where success isn’t optional, it’s expected. Measure yourself against real metrics, not feelings. If your circle isn’t holding you accountable, you’re wasting time.
Struggle is the foundation of fulfillment. You don’t need fun; you need purpose. Training, building wealth, solving problems—these should be your daily battles. Happiness isn’t found in distractions; it’s earned through discipline. If you’re not pushing yourself, you’re falling behind. Men are built through hardship, not comfort. Find the fire inside you and use it.
Reject weakness. Reject mediocrity. Chase greatness in everything you do. Be the strongest, smartest, wealthiest version of yourself. The world is watching—will they remember you as a competitor or a spectator? The choice is yours.
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Episode Description:
In this explosive and unfiltered episode of the Jack Neel Podcast, Andrew Tate sits down to discuss his perspective on the forces trying to suppress influential voices. Tate delves into what he calls the “three stages of attack”—cancelation, imprisonment, and, ultimately, elimination—reflecting on his personal experiences navigating through stage two as he battles multiple criminal cases.
He opens up about the calculated financial incentives behind prolonged legal battles and the broader implications of power struggles between governments and high-profile individuals. As always, Tate brings his signature blend of sharp wit, bold opinions, and unwavering confidence, offering a fascinating glimpse into the mind of one of the most polarizing figures of our time.
From candid reflections on his own survival to a critique of modern systems, this episode is a must-watch for those seeking raw insight, controversy, and a deeper understanding of the mechanisms at play behind the headlines. Don’t miss it.
The only way to resist is through strength.
Weak men cannot help in the battle for humanity,
They only get in the way.
When they threaten to fire you from your job for speaking out,
will you have the finances to speak anyway?
Do you have the strength to resist?
if not, are you even trying to develop it?
www.cobratate.com/fight
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The sooner you begin to operate from a place of honor and duty. The sooner you will finally feel fulfilled. www.cobratate.com/truth
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I don't want everybody to like me. I want to save the Kingdom. www.votebruv.co.uk
If you want to be liked you're not fit for politics.
I don't need to lie.
I don't care if you call me racist, homophobic, misogynistic.
Been through that for years it has 0 effect.
I am the Borg and have adapted beyond your phasers.
I WILL FIX GREAT BRITAIN.
If that makes me racist?
TOUGH If that makes me homophobic?
TOUGH If that makes you cry?
TOUGH I don't care.
I'm a problem solver.
I don't want everybody to like me.
I want to save the Kingdom.
www.votebruv.co.uk
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Life isn't about chasing happiness—it's about being strong, respected, and valuable. If you're focused on "feeling good," you're setting yourself up for failure. Happiness is a byproduct of achievement, not the goal itself. You don’t wake up and ask, Am I happy? You wake up and ask, What must be done?
Men earn respect, not sympathy. No one cares if you're happy. You’re judged by what you build, what you conquer, and how you handle adversity. Struggle is the price of greatness. Weak men chase comfort. Strong men embrace hardship and come out the other side as winners.
So make a choice—suffer as an unknown nobody, or suffer to become someone worth remembering. The world owes you nothing. Earn your place.
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Your mind is either your greatest weapon or your biggest enemy. Every second, you have a choice—program yourself for strength, success, and domination, or let weakness and excuses rot you from the inside. Most people stay stuck because they take the easy route—complaining, procrastinating, and waiting for a miracle. But the truth is, no one is coming to save you. You are exactly where you deserve to be because of your mindset.
Discipline is everything. Motivation is a joke—it fades, but discipline stays. The strongest men in history weren’t waiting for inspiration; they conquered because they had an unbreakable will. If you want to win, you have to be relentless. Cut out distractions, stop feeding your mind garbage, and stop surrounding yourself with losers. Train your mind like a warrior, push through pain, and do what needs to be done, no matter how you feel. That’s the price of success.
Most people will never get this—they will live, die, and be forgotten, trapped by their own weakness. But you have a choice. Keep wasting time, or step up and take control. The world belongs to the strong, the disciplined, the unstoppable. So ask yourself—are you going to be another weak man stuck in the cycle of excuses? Or are you going to rise, take control, and dominate? The answer is yours.
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Trump's a tough guy. America is over if he loses. www.cobratate.com/truth
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My unmatched perspicacity coupled with sheer indefatigability makes me a feared opponent in any realm of human endeavor.
I've lived a varied life.
A long exciting adventure.
The only reason I have so much wisdom to share, Is because of the experiences I've had.
The life I lived.
www.cobratate.com/wisdom
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In this episode, Andrew Tate breaks down the raw truth about discipline and willpower. People always say, “Oh, but Tate, you’re just lucky because you’re talented.” But here’s the reality: Talent means nothing without discipline. Andrew didn’t even realize he was talented until he put in the work, day in and day out. He explains how without discipline, you’ll never discover who you truly are or what you’re capable of. There are people out there who could be the best in the world at something but never will be because they lack the discipline to even try.
Andrew dives deep into how doing the right things every single day, on time, without fail, is the key to success—whether it’s becoming a four-time world kickboxing champion, mastering chess, or making millions of dollars. It all comes down to willpower and staying laser-focused, no matter the distractions. And in today’s world, staying focused is harder than ever. With social media, ads, and constant entertainment fighting for our attention, most people have lost the ability to truly concentrate.
This episode is a wake-up call for anyone who wants to take control of their life. Andrew lays it out straight: If you can master your own discipline and willpower, you can achieve absolutely anything. Tune in to hear the brutal truth about why most people fail and how you can rise above it all.
- - Visa fler