Serve with mango. joey: this is fantastic. rachel: we don t have a lot of here we go. you want to try that out. rachel: this is one of the best key lime pies i ve ever had. amazing. thank you for joining us. thank you. more of this key lime pie. another one bites the dust. another one bites the dust. and another one s gone, and another one s gone. another one bites the dust
Was so terrible too. that same day that the fires happened we announced my next fight, for the bell and it was a big announcement. it was such a bitter sweet announcement. i was like i can t focus on this fight until i do something to try and help our ohan a a and our friends back in maui. with their blessings, i m fortunate to have a contact, boots on the ground in maui, a lahaina resident whose family lost everything but with her blessing i was able to start a fundraiser on instagram and never in my wildest dreams did i imagine that it was going to reach the audience that it has and i think that s just a testament to how much love and aloha people have for maui and the people. rachel: 1.8 million, i know you say that far surpasses what you thought. our good friend will who is on
Essential supplies. they are very, very good. they are now requesting more long-term help, more long-term items and supplies, like water filtration systems, solar powered charging stations, fire extinguishers, we need generators, just items of that nature, come postable toilet to help the next rebuilding phase and we re directing or encouraging people because we are good on supplies at the moment, we re encouraging people to please if you can donate monetarily. that s actually going to be the easiest way to help those families that were impacted is by monetary donations and especially in this next rebuilding phase and rehoming phase. we are trying everything possible to make sure that those families are able to return to their land and that they don t have to sell to some big land grab corporation. rachel: amen to that.
The basics of individual liberty, of, you know, human rights and everything, right. so that s my advice, take care of your rights, protect your freedom, you can easily lose it if you don t do things right. it happened in venezuela. we were a democratic nation. not anymore. so, yeah. rachel: a lot of people feeling like they are being persecuted right now so they want to keep quiet. he is saying keep up while you can, essentially. is that your advice as well? yes, obviously. i speak to high school students. i want to tell them about being a woman, growing up in iran. 40 years ago iran was a liberal country. now we live under one of the most tie tyrannical regimes in e world. wi.rachel: you give us hope tht maybe we can turn things around. thank you for what you do, and the dissident project that is
That simply gave plea gal add gave legal add a vice to their r clients threatened to have licenses revoked. i believe there is hope. we have a justice system that has levers of transparency. however, we need to remain vigilant. rachel: that s a great point you bring up, we could see charges against people giving legal advice to somebody is a new next level thing for america and something we should be concerned about. what kind of advice would you give to americans? you seem to be a little more hopeful, maybe because the system is so bad in venezuela. but what are the things that you would advise americans in this situation? well, i think my main advice would be to remain vigilant, to care about your rights, to go out there and probe when you see something is that not right. we re part of the dissident project. we visit high schools to basically teach students about our own experiences in countries we left behind so they can learn