John McPhee spent 20 years as a Delta Force operator hunting America’s enemies. Now he’s teaching hardworking patriots about real leadership – the kind that wins wars, not participation trophies. His message to Megyn Kelly was clear: weak leaders get good men killed.
McPhee says true leadership means putting your team first, every time. While woke generals focus on pronouns and sensitivity training, warriors like him focus on survival. “Politics gets soldiers killed,” he growled, slamming politicians who send troops to die without letting them win. Real leaders lead from the front – not from a Washington desk.
Jiu Jitsu keeps McPhee battle-ready at 50 years old. He called it “combat chess” that sharpens the mind and body. While liberals push yoga and meditation, this warrior proves discipline beats “self-care” every time. His gym trains patriots to fight – not cry in safe spaces.
The decorated veteran blasted today’s military leaders for caring more about diversity quotas than combat readiness. “China’s not scared of our rainbow flags,” he warned. McPhee praised President Trump’s plan to purge woke nonsense and refocus on winning. Real warriors know strength deters enemies – not apology tours.
Growing up tough prepared McPhee for battle. He lived in a brothel, fought bullies, and learned that life doesn’t give handouts. These “American values” made him a legend in Special Forces. Meanwhile, spoiled kids get trigger warnings – and can’t handle basic training.
McPhee’s company SOB Tactical teaches the skills Washington wants to ban. While Democrats try to disarm citizens, he trains regular Americans to protect their families. His message? Don’t rely on bureaucrats – be your own first responder.
The warrior saved his harshest words for the Afghanistan withdrawal disaster. “Weak leaders betray allies,” he said, calling the Taliban takeover preventable. McPhee’s solution? Let warriors fight wars – not politicians.
This American hero proves strength comes from sacrifice, not government programs. As McPhee put it: “Comfort makes you soft. Adversity makes you dangerous.” In a world full of threats, we need more Sheriffs of Baghdad – not more crying rooms.