Episodes
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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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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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Missing episodes?
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Life ain't fair. There’s winners, and there’s losers—no participation trophies, no stickers for showing up. In this episode, Tristan breaks down the truth about the game we’re all playing—money, power, survival. Everyone’s in it, but only a few make it. I talk about grinding through dead-end jobs, eating dirt, losing everything, and still pushing forward. No excuses, no safety nets—just pure will. Most people will fold when life gets hard. A few will make it through. Which one are you? Watch, listen, learn.
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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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You can’t resist when you’re weak.
Become strong.
www.thewarroom.ag
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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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You need to chase challenges and join others who are doing the same. https://apply.thewarroom.ag
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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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Candace Owens discusses the alarming trend of blind reliance on “data” and the elites’ potential agenda to undermine critical thinking. Featuring Andrew Tate’s unfiltered critique of data manipulation, this episode explores why trusting intuition, logic, and experience often trumps overanalyzing skewed statistics. A must-watch for anyone questioning modern narratives.
If a fight is inevitable, swing first. Www.cobratate.com/wisdom
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Most people listen to opinions. Winners follow discipline. You either spend your time proving yourself right or letting others tell you why you’re wrong. Which one sounds like success?
Hard work beats entitlement. No one cares about your excuses. Show up, do the work, and stay consistent—because the ones who win aren’t the ones who feel like it, they’re the ones who do it anyway.
Stop waiting for motivation. Stop asking for permission. Lock in, execute, and let results do the talking.
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Merry Christmas! 🎅 🎄
🎁 TATE'S 10 BTC CHRISTMAS GIVEAWAY 🎁 In conjunction with $Daddy coin and http://university.com 🌲🎄 To qualify: 1) Join the newsletter http://cobratate.com/newsletter 2) Join the telegram https://t.me/tatespeech 3) Sign up to http://university.com 4) Join the telegram http://t.me/daddytatecto 5) Retweet this tweet Imagine getting transferred 10 entire Bitcoin. THIS CHRISTMAS MIRACLE WILL CHANGE YOUR LIFE 🎅🏼 Make this a Christmas to remember for the rest of your life. Love, Top G ❤️
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“The Frozen Wasteland” is a story layered with meaning, its lesson fluid enough to apply to countless aspects of life. On one level, it explores survival and the unlikely alliances formed in adversity. On another, it speaks to trust, coexistence, and the wisdom of setting aside conflict for a greater purpose. Whether viewed as a tale about human relationships, leadership, or even the balance between nature and humanity, its core message resonates universally. The story invites readers to interpret its meaning through their own experiences, finding parallels in challenges that require collaboration, courage, and trust.
Conclusion:
This tale is a mirror, reflecting the struggles and choices we face in our personal lives, communities, and the world at large. It reminds us that conflict and fear often mask opportunities for connection and mutual benefit. Whether it represents resolving interpersonal disputes, navigating the challenges of teamwork, or balancing ambition with humility, “The Frozen Wasteland” speaks to the timeless truth that harmony often emerges from unlikely places. Its message is as adaptable as it is profound: to seek understanding, embrace trust, and know that wisdom lies in recognizing what truly matters in any given moment.
Thinkers always lose to doers. Most often all that pondering is an excuse for inaction, a disguise for cowardice. Meditate through action. Raw action solves everything. www.cobratate.com/wisdom
One Of Many Interpretations:
Master Po and the Tiger are one, Light and Dark. Master Po symbolizes the hope and positivity we aim for, while the Tiger represents the inner darkness and doubts we run from. The cold nights are our hardships, where the Man and the Tiger usually meet. This lesson can only be learned through hardship, where survival is guaranteed by accepting your fears and doubts. The average person would try to slaughter the Tiger (Fear and Doubt) because it’s a threat to be eaten by the Tiger, and it’s big and supposedly scary. But Master Po chooses to embrace the Tiger, for that acceptance brought them both survival. The "rest at night to fight each other the next day" signifies our expectation to always clash with our own darkness. From Master Po, the teaching is to embrace fear; it makes you sharper and aids you in the harshest of circumstances. But always be full of hope, the Light. Together, you will be formidable. When others asked how the Tiger was kept as a pet and whether it wouldn’t attack Master Po at night, Master Po responded, "Why would Fear and Doubt try to kill me? If I died, it would as well." The lesson is that your Fear and Doubt are not trying to kill you. If you accept, embrace, and master them, you will prevail and have them as your pet.
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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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If a fight is inevitable, swing first. www.cobratate.com/wisdom
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The world is a competition. Every second of every day, someone’s taking what could have been yours. Every dollar, every girl, every opportunity—someone like me is out here taking it while you sit around whining about life being unfair. I came from nothing, built everything myself, and I look at people who had more than I did and still failed. You had food, you had support, and you still lost? What does that say about you? If I, with all the struggle, still made it, then what’s your excuse?
The elites don’t care about you. You think they sit around feeling bad for the poor? No. They see you as weak. Because weakness is a choice. You’re in a war, and most don’t even realize it. Walking around eating croissants, scrolling your phone, wasting time while people like me are out here grinding, outworking you in every way. And then you wonder why life feels unfair. You’re not in the game. You don’t even know the game exists.
And that’s the truth—this isn’t about fairness, feelings, or some fake idea of happiness. It’s about winning. You either win, or you lose. That’s it. And the losers? They talk about being humble, they talk about fairness, they talk about excuses. Winners don’t talk. Winners take. And if you’re not willing to take, if you’re not willing to outwork every man around you, then you deserve exactly what you have—nothing
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Andrew Tate breaks down the philosophy that led him from the bottom to the top—through relentless work, discipline, and never missing a day. He discusses the power of consistency, taking action, and why true fulfillment comes from overcoming struggle.
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Bravery is a pre-requisite to honesty. I tell the truth because I am unafraid. www.cobratate.com/truth
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Andrew Tate explains why doing your absolute best—whether working, relaxing, or improving yourself—matters. He discusses the stress of not working, finding balance through hobbies like card games, and how effort in one area can radiate positivity across your entire life. This philosophy, he believes, also aligns with being rewarded for gratitude and effort.
You're most likely to end up where you're expected to end up. You're held accountable to the standards OTHER people have for you. Look at who you spend your time around. Because that matters. Surround yourself with people who EXPECT the best from you, and watch yourself naturally meet the expectation: www.thewarroom.ag
Surround yourself with people who EXPECT the best from you, and watch yourself naturally meet the expectation: www.thewarroom.ag
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