Protect & Serve: From Counterterrorism to Anti-Trafficking with Jeff Tiegs
51 min
•Mar 16, 2026about 1 month agoSummary
Jeff Tiegs, a retired Delta Force Lieutenant Colonel, discusses his transition from counterterrorism operations to leading Skull Games, an organization combating sex trafficking in the United States. He shares his personal journey of discovering his identity as a 'protector' and explains how military intelligence tactics apply to identifying and disrupting human trafficking networks through open-source intelligence and technology.
Insights
- Protector identity transcends military service—it's a calling that can be redirected to domestic threats like sex trafficking with equal effectiveness
- Traffickers exploit innate human vulnerabilities (need for love, self-esteem, belonging) during critical adolescent years (12-23), requiring proactive parental awareness and emotional security-building
- Commercial sex trafficking operates as a sophisticated economy with identifiable patterns, phone numbers, payment trails, and social media footprints that can be systematically mapped using OSINT
- Heroes aren't defined by extraordinary feats but by daily commitment to integrity, selfless service, and protection—a potential that exists in every person
- Biblical narratives contain operational lessons for modern challenges when examined through a soldier's analytical lens, bridging faith and practical leadership
Trends
Repurposing military intelligence expertise for domestic law enforcement and social good initiativesOpen-source intelligence (OSINT) becoming a critical tool for identifying trafficking networks without classified resourcesShift from counterterrorism to counter-trafficking as a continuation of protector mission among special operations veteransTechnology-enabled triage approach to identify highest-risk trafficking cases from massive volumes of escort advertisementsFaith-based leadership narratives gaining traction in secular business and military contextsVulnerability-based targeting of adolescents (12-23) as primary trafficking window requiring preventive educationRelational exploitation (family-like structures, children as leverage) as primary control mechanism in trafficking networksCross-sector collaboration between military veterans, law enforcement, and tech platforms to combat traffickingMemoir-style leadership books blending battlefield stories with biblical interpretation for millennial/Gen Z audiencesEmphasis on internal hero identity development as alternative to external achievement-based leadership models
Topics
Sex Trafficking Identification and DisruptionOpen-Source Intelligence (OSINT) MethodologyCounterterrorism Skills Applied to Domestic CrimeAdolescent Vulnerability and Grooming TacticsCommercial Sex Trafficking EconomicsProtector Identity and Purpose-Driven LeadershipFaith-Based Leadership DevelopmentParental Awareness and Child SafetyPimp and Trafficker Behavioral PatternsEscort Advertisement Analysis and IndicatorsRelational Exploitation and Control MechanismsTechnology and Data Tools for Trafficking InvestigationMilitary Veteran Transition to Civilian Social ImpactBiblical Narrative and Modern LeadershipHero Identity and Selfless Service
Companies
Skull Games
Organization founded by Tiegs to combat sex trafficking using OSINT and technology to identify traffickers and victim...
Shopify
E-commerce platform mentioned in pre-roll advertisement for entrepreneurs starting and scaling businesses
People
Jeff Tiegs
Retired Delta Force Lieutenant Colonel (25+ years service) who transitioned to founding Skull Games to combat sex tra...
Maria Coffey
Author cited by Tiegs for her book about losing her fiancé (high-altitude alpinist) and exploring identity, purpose, ...
Sun Tzu
Ancient strategist quoted by Tiegs on understanding yourself and your enemy as foundation for strategic success
Charlie Rose
Journalist whose interview with a ballerina influenced Tiegs' understanding of identity, potential, and continued com...
Paul Harvey
Broadcaster whose 'Now You Know the Rest of the Story' format inspired Tiegs' first book's narrative structure
Quotes
"I am a protector. That's what I do. That's who I am. That's what I do, and I will die trying."
Jeff Tiegs
"If you understand yourself and you understand your enemy, you need not fear the result of a hundred battles."
Jeff Tiegs (citing Sun Tzu)
"They're rape victims. They're being forced to have sex with men against their will."
Jeff Tiegs
"There's a hero there wanting to come out. Everybody has the potentiality to be a hero, but it doesn't have to be running into a burning building."
Jeff Tiegs
"Men, who are you protecting? Who are you living for? We all have a duty."
Jeff Tiegs
Full Transcript
Ready to launch your business? Get started with the commerce platform made for entrepreneurs. Shopify is specially designed to help you start, run, and grow your business with easy customizable themes that let you build your brand, marketing tools that get your products out there, integrated shipping solutions that actually save you time, from startups to scale-ups, online, in-person, and on-the-go. Shopify is made for entrepreneurs like you. Sign up for your $1 a month trial at Shopify.com. Ladies and gentlemen, welcome back to another exciting episode of Mic Unplugged. And today, we have an unparalleled force of leadership, a true Titan, whose career spans over 25 years of relentless service, encounter terrorism, and elite special operations. He is a guy who is going to blow your mind with some of the most amazing stories, but most importantly, talking about faith and purpose. Please join me in welcoming the outrageous, the courageous, the truly unstoppable, my guy, Mr. Jeff Teese. You're listening to Mic Unplugged, hosted by the one and only Mic Hunt. This is where purpose meets power and stories spark transformation. Mic takes you beyond the motivation and into meaning, helping you discover your because and becoming unstoppable. I'm Rudy Rush, and trust me, you're in the right place. Let's get unplugged. Jeff, how you doing today, brother? Thanks, Mic. I don't think I've ever been called a Titan, which I'll take it. I'm kind of short. People are always, when they meet me in person, I think they're slightly disappointed, but I will say I'll use this. No, no, no, Mic said I'm a Titan, so take that. Hey, it's on film and it's on record, so it has to be true, right? Let the record show. Thanks for having me. I'm really excited for this discussion. There's never a bad time to talk about leadership and purpose and passion, but I think today and what's happening in America is probably as good as ever. I couldn't agree with you more, man. And Jeff, I like to start my show by asking my guest one simple question, and that question is, what is your because? What is your purpose? What is that thing in Jeff today that's deeper than your why that really fuels your passion? So, Jeff Teague, man, what is your because? Great question, and I'm glad to be able to answer it. I sum up my because is simply I am a protector. I came to terms with that years ago, and really where I really started to come to terms with it was questioning why I was sacrificing so much of my time with my family, even my health with these wars that became obvious to us that we weren't going to win those wars. We weren't going to win Iraq. We weren't going to win Afghanistan. There just wasn't that national will. Was it something I wanted to continue to pursue? And was it something I was willing to put my life on the line for? And make I in that soul searching and even going back into my time in my childhood, and I write about some of these things and it's things that I'm I like this age where your things have calmed down. I'm not as ambitious. There are certain there's plenty of stuff in the rear view mirror. There's plenty of water under the bridge, and I'm able to look back and I realized a few years back. I'm going to say maybe 2010 ish. I'm a protector. That's what I do. That's who I am. That's what I do, and I will die trying. There's a bunch of different words came into that, a guardian, a fighter, a commando. Those are all kind of aspects that sit under that protector. But that's that's who I am. That's what God put me on this planet to do. And I see my roles in that continuing until the day I move on to the next next phase of things. I wholeheartedly believe that and I see that and you know, being a huge fan of yours and studying your works. I mean, that truly is what you're about, man. Like your journey from an 18 year old first Ranger Battalion, right to Lieutenant Colonel in Delta Force is extraordinary. Was there a moment that you realized that that was your purpose? Like being that protector? Was there a pivotal moment that stands out to you? It does. And again, I don't want the listeners to misunderstand that I always recognize this or there was nobility in any of this. I was a young man who was hungry for adventure and hungry for challenge and wanted to be part of the best, you know, fighting forces that I could find. This wasn't pure. You know what I mean? Like I look back on it and God's guidance, there was a purity in there that I didn't understand, you know. And so what I would say is as we around 2005 to 2007, we lost a lot of guys. Those are some tough years for special operations in Iraq. Lost some friends, lost some guys. My boys are old enough now to recognize that I'm going into harm's way. I could just feel the strain of it everywhere, you know. And I very distinctly remember looking for people who had discussed this either in story, in documentary, in film, but really probably in books. And I saw these books out, these people that had gone through this and how they navigated it. And I couldn't really find anybody that did it well. So I did come across this book and the author, her name is Maria Coffey. And I'm sorry, I think it's in the shadow of the mountain or where the mountain casts its shadow. It's one of those two titles. I can't remember specifically. But she was the fiance of a high altitude alpinist. And her fiance died in the high mountains, which you have a much more likelihood of dying as a high altitude alpinist than even you do as a commando in the military. You know, like it is a very, very dangerous job. So when she lost her fiance, she wrote this book through her grieving process. And she was questioning, who was he? And how did he love the mountains more than he loved his family? And then introspectively, who was she that she loved this man who she knew was putting this pursuit of things in front of her and in front of her family. And she came to the realization that that was his identity. He was a high altitude mountaineer. That's who he was. And that part of that is what attracted her to him. That was exciting. And it was unique. And it certainly, you know, there was never a boring moment. And even in those times of a volatility of a relationship like that, it was something that she sought. And she willingly, she didn't know at a time, but as she retrospectively looked at it, she was willing to lose him. She was willing to tie herself and bind herself to this man who had this other calling and this other passion. And I recommend this to people who are looking for passion and purpose. It really solidified what I was seeking in my own life. And it was that identity. And then, you know, I kind of started with commando, right? Because a high altitude alpinist is exciting. A commando is exciting. An assaulter, I don't know what kind of term. And I lived for those. But that felt a little banal, right? Like, it really wasn't a fight that I was living for, even though it was a lot of what my drive was. I just loved the fight. It really was working with my mates. It really was defending these people that needed to be defended. And so I arrived at this idea of a protector. And quite honestly, there was inflection points in my career where I was thinking about getting out. And I thought, nope, one more time. Let me share one other story with you. To this day, it's still a weird one. I was going through this reflection. And I think it's probably based on my faith. I was born and raised as a Christian who references the Bible. If you want to know about who you are and where you come from, that's the book, right? Those are the stories. So that was always the bedrock of what I looked at. But I was always looking for other people's stories. And I remember one year, and this story doesn't make any sense because you're old enough to, or this doesn't make any sense memory-wise. Like, I remember being in Colorado when this happened. And I remember all these pieces. And I don't, I can't, if I was in the court of law, I would be, none of this would make sense. They picked me apart. But how I remember it, okay, is I woke up one night and I was still pondering this of like, hey, is this time my wife has had some health issues? Again, I felt like I wasn't giving my boys enough of what they deserved as a father. And I went downstairs and I flipped on the channel and Charlie Rose was on, who I used to love. I used to love Charlie Rose and that Oakwood table and just the diversity of the different people that he would have and what the questions that he would take them through. And there was this beautiful ballerina. And she was sitting across from Charlie and she was, I think she was maybe close to 40 or something like that. And she was just talking about dance. And Charlie was talking to her about, you know, how this, as she evolved and she moved through dance, why, why is she still in it? Why, why hasn't she moved on? You know, a 40 year old, there's no such thing as a 40 year old ballerina, right? You know, at least at the levels that she had attained. And she said, Charlie, I realized that I lived this very unique life. I was given all of this opportunity. I was trained by the best. I worked with the best. And I, and I'm in a small audience of people that just understands the potential of dance and make that landed with me. Where again, you take out high level, high level developmentists, you take out ballerina and you put in special operations soldier. I had been selected and trained with the best in the world. I had seen angles of warfare that other people only touch upon or barely understand the things that you see in movies, the spy game, the assault game, the, the, the conventional war, you know, airborne insertions, every, everything that you imagine of warfare and then everything around it. And I realized I've been given much and much is expected. I understand the potential of war. And I, and I think that's going to strike a lot of people as an odd statement, but war is such a valid option to make huge changes in the world and to make life better for people. We just haven't been using it that way of late. So the potential of warfare, kept me in for a while because of this ballerina. Again, I've, I've gone back and I've tried to find that episode with, with Charlie Rose. And I think I found it. I think I recognized the, the ballerina, but she never says what I'm telling you. She says, you know, so I don't know if it was cut out or whatever it was, but those two points in time are getting, this is a long answer to one single question. Those two points in time are stand out in my mind where I began to understand myself and who I was and who my passion purpose was and what it would take for the people that chose to love me or even sons who didn't choose to be around me. We, we brought my wife and I brought them into this world. They were forced to be with me, what it was that they would have to endure. And then obviously when it was time to retire, I was, I couldn't get this idea out of my mind that I'm a protector. I was also fearful that I would lose my identity, which brought me into the counter sex trafficking space. I wanted to be around the men and women that I had spent most of my life with, the talent, the drive, the passion, offer them something new, something that's relatively safe. We don't need to go to the furthest corners of danger in the world to, to affect change and protect people. People need our help right here in the United States. And, and when I started to look internal, again, I felt, I felt a little bit guilty that I had been working so hard to fix things in areas of the world that really didn't want our help. And so much had fallen away with exploitation and abuse and all these other things that we confront on a daily basis now with the counter sex trafficking. That is actually where I wanted to go next. So it says if we rehearsed this and you gave me the perfect segue slash layup to ask you a question. So you know, you've, you've gone from, or you transitioned from counter terrorism operations to leading skull games, which is the organization that you were just referencing. Talk to us about not the mission of why you started skull games, because I get that. And I think we, we understand that. But talk to us more about what the average everyday person doesn't recognize with human trafficking in the United States and what skulls, skull games is doing to, to, to disrupt and create war there. So let me, let me first answer a question you didn't ask and then get to the one that you did ask. So this is, this is a logical extension of this idea that I'm a protector and be much has been given, right? Like I just, I understand the enemy. You know, there's one of the, one of my favorite quotes of all time is from Sun Tzu where he says, if you understand yourself and you understand your enemy, you need not fear the result of a hundred battles of a thousand battles, however it is. Then it's pithy and you'll see this above, you know, executives, you know, offices and their desks, you know what I mean? But it's loaded. Knowing yourself is very, very difficult. And then even, even knowing yourself as you change and adapt, I am, I am the same guy was when I was 15 years old, but I'm also not. So knowing yourself is a constant pursuit. Knowing your enemy is something that I think I excelled on in the military. I knew Al Qaeda. I knew ISIS. I knew, I knew my enemy. I knew what, how they thought. I knew how they fought. I knew what they were going to do. And, and it allows you to, to insert yourself into their game and win. So my hypothesis as I was beginning to transition out of the military was, hey, are these things that I've learned? Studying just bad people, particularly terrorist insurgents. But again, when you talk about a terrorist and an insurgent, it's all wrapped up into everything. They're kidnappers, they're exploiters, they're human traffickers, they're drug traffickers, they're weapons traffickers, you know, there's, there's all sorts of it. There's, there's media amirs that run all these things. So there's, there's aspects of crime that I think has a, has a constant to it. So I thought, I've spent the better part of my life understanding my enemy and finding ways to interject ourselves into their game and beating them at their own game. How much of that is transferable into a trafficker or a pimp? The first thing was a pimp. There's a lot out there about pimp. What, what is pimping? There's books out there. How to, how to, how to be a pimp? You know, how to, how to be a successful pimp. So the first question was, are pimping and trafficking the same? Are pimps and traffickers the same? Answer is yes. Evil people do evil things and there's patterns and processes that they use. So as I thought, maybe 40, 50, 60% of what I learned in the military would be applicable towards this crime category. It's a, it's 100%. So that was again, just an extension of this recognition of what you poured into me as an American citizen, what you expected me to, to excel at. You spend a lot of time and energy developing me as a, as a special operations soldier, and it's still my requirement and duty to give back. So that's that kind of bookend on that one. Going back to what you're saying, I don't think people fully appreciate how vast and deep this level of evil is in the United States. And the, the thing that's fascinating to me about trafficking or this sexual exploitation is it's based upon innate qualities. So, you know, when we go through life, I like to, I like to point out to the Maslow's hierarchy of needs, you know, where first you have, you have to have security, you have to feel safe, you have to have a place to eat, you have to have a place to sleep. But then we're all very rapidly, once those are, are provided, and there are people that are still in that space, but we look for love and we're looking for self-esteem. And even as you progress into your teen years, that's where we're at. There's a vulnerability there because you are beginning to separate yourself from your parents. Otherwise, we'd all still live in the basement, right? There's a, there's a built-in tension with, with parents. There's a built-in identity in independence that comes with maturation, you know, in adolescence. And there's that pursuit to find somebody else who, who provides you that self-worth and provides you that self-esteem and starts to show you love. That's design. That's God's design. That's, that's, that's our, our bio, our bio-mechanical design, you know what I mean? That's the way humans are built. And it's a beautiful thing. But in all of that is space for exploitation. And the way that these guys wait to manipulate, it's, it's fascinating to watch. They're incredibly good at it. There's a million ways I can liken it, you know, and one of the ways I like it, because it's very, very simplified, is I, I live here in Mont, in Oregon and I run the trails and there are mong lions out there all the time. I don't see them. They're out there and they don't let themselves be seen. And when they are seen, it's because they have identified something that was vulnerable, something that they think they could attack, you know, a lion on the savannah. When the lion attacks a herd of picket animal, antelope, he doesn't go for the leader. He doesn't even go for the mid-pack. He identifies the weakness. He can smell it. He can sense it. And we all have weaknesses. We all have vulnerabilities. And sometimes it's passing. Sometimes it's a season, you know, it's a season of depression. It's a season of alcohol abuse. It's a season of confusion. Sometimes those windows open and close, but these predators are remarkable at identifying when that season is ripe and what levers they need to pull. So I think folks, they don't need to be afraid. And there is no magic panacea on how to keep them out of your house. They're in your house. If your children are on social media, they're there. They're on all the kids' games. You know, they're already there talking with your children. It's very hard to stop. The more difficult thing is building a level of self-confidence and helping your children feel and understand and recognize that they're seen and heard and valued, and they don't have to look at that from an external point of view. I'd like to say that a believer who trusts God and believes in Jesus has that built in. But we know it isn't that simple. It's not a magic pill. We still go through these seasons of doubt and vulnerability. So again, a very long answer to a very simple question. Parents, caregivers, teachers, they need to understand and recognize what these vulnerabilities are in these children. We have them as adults, and they need to find ways to build hedges around these kids when they're vulnerable, where they get to that point, where they're beyond. And the prime hunting areas are 13, 14, 15 years old. That's when these kids are almost at their most vulnerable or their most malleable. Once a young person is 19, 20, 21, 22, it becomes less and less likely that these predators are going to be able to worm their way in and be successful. So again, there really is only a 10-year period, 13 to 23, 12 to 22, whatever it is, where I think parents and caregivers need to be hyper-aware that the risks are high. And Jeff, that's making me think a little bit because you said, you know, if your kids are on social media, the predators are there or the enemy is there. If they're on apps and games, the enemy is there. And I know one of the things that Skoll Games is leading the mark on is innovation and technology. Can you talk to us about how Skoll Games are using technology to help do the job and the roles that you all do to impact that space? Yes. Thank you. So one thing I'd like to just bind when we talk about this, because this crime is huge, right? And what we just talked about is 100% across the board. Every single human has vulnerability. You have it, I have it. Every adult has it. Every child has it. So we just need to be a little bit more safe where people can talk about those. Most of the time, when I talk about sex trafficking, that's what I spend most of my time on, is we need to be able to have a safe space where we can talk about what's troubling us. We can talk about what our vulnerabilities are, you know? So that aside, that's the giant iceberg, right? So what Skoll Games does very, very specifically is we hunt escort ads to identify who the girls are that are being sold and who the traffickers are that are selling those girls. So it's, I mean, I can't even tell you how big the iceberg is under the water. It's just a tiny piece, but it will keep us busy until we all retire again, you know? So what I mean by that is a lot of things have to happen under the surface that we don't see. Initially, what we see is a woman or a girl. And again, there are boys and men that are being sold. It isn't a huge market, right? There's a bell curve, and we are hunting the center of the bell curve. What is the product that is most likely being sold? Who is the most likely profile of the buyer? That's where we hunt a majority of our time. So there's a human being, usually a woman or a young girl, for sale online. It's an escort site. They're accessible all over the world. I say this very often. It's as easy as ordering a pizza. You go to that escort site, you type in your city that you're at, the town that you're at, where you want this girl delivered. It's basically a drop-down menu of what it is you're looking for. Do I want a blonde? Do I want a brunette? Do I want this? Do I want that? And now you reach out and you communicate to this victim. Now, this victim is not who you're communicating with. That's the fantasy. You see a picture of a girl. You communicate to her. You start negotiating a price. You start negotiating a sex act. You think that's, you're already getting excited, right? This is, this is, you know, these is two Americans. This is a woman selling her body. I'm a man who wants to rent her body. God bless America. You know, they don't realize there's the in between. There's the pimp. There's the trafficker. He's who you're speaking with. So that's where we start. And on these escort sites, there are millions and millions of ads. So if we were going to work in any city, the first thing we do is we look at the current ads that are happening in that city, and then we look for indicators of trafficking, not just prostitution. So again, I say we're a counter sex trafficking organization. We're not counter prostitution. I'm against prostitution, but it's such a vast problem. We are looking for the worst of the worst, right? So if a girl is for sale online, there are certain indicators, emojis, the way the photos are taken, different indicators in the ad, very, very simple things where you start running the phone number, you start running the email address, because there this has to be a contact, right? This isn't anonymous. This is it. This is an exchange. So there's always a start point. Now, sometimes that start point is a phone number that's a that's a voice over IP, and it's very hard to get around. But as we're looking at these indicators, so the first thing we'll do is look at an escort site, and we will bin up looks like indicators of trafficking indicators of trafficking. So let's say we look at 300 cases in the city, 300 ads in the city, maybe only 50 of them will have indicators of trafficking, right? So those are the 50 that we focus on. It's kind of like triage, even as I tell you this, it's sad to me because it's kind of like triage on the battlefield. Those other 250 women, we're just leaving that we were leaving them laying on the battlefield bleeding. But those 50 that we have, we have evidence that can lead to probable cause that a cop can now take action. So we don't, you know, that so that's how we immediately do it. Are there are there are there are there evidence of trafficking? And then the real magic to what we do is open source intelligence. So start with that ad, which is public. It's it's an ad for a girl. And once you start dipping behind that ad, you start running technology and tools on recognition of the photo, maybe the room, the phone number, anything that you can syntax of the way the ad is written. There's all sorts of complexity in in building a case to figure out who's running this girl, who's the person of interest that's controlling this victim. And we have various levels of confirmation. You know, one of the easiest ones for us, Mick is here's a girl, she's at a price advertised for sale. Here's her phone number. She says she gives you the cash out number to, you know, how you how you can pay her, you run that cash out number, and it comes up to some dude. Well, that's an easy one. Right. You're paying this woman to have sex, but the money is going to a third party. You know, so that's that's that's an easy thread to start to unravel, right? So that's what we're trying to look for. If it's a voice over IP, or there's a level of complexity, that's where it comes to the talent of our OSINT pool, our task force, who are some of the best in the world at continuing through this analytical process, both instinctively and intuitively, and then the and then the tech and the data that we that we have access to, to just find mistakes. And as you build out that case, what we're trying to figure out is the profile of that person of interest. And again, you look that guy up and he's, he's been arrested three times for pimping, or there's a warrant out for his arrest, or he's got domestic and use charges that are already against them. Some of those are really easy cases. And those are the ones that get prioritized with the cops. They're able to go in, they're able to arrest that guy, they're able to offer this woman a path to freedom. So there are times where we stop at the POI, depending on what what it is we're looking at. But most often, we continue to scour social media and find this story of this girl. And it's absolutely heartbreaking, because you will see a young woman, and she's on the cheerleading team, or she's in the band, or she she rides horses or whatever it is she does. And you see her happy. And then she gets troubled. And then she starts to devolve. And you see her body change, you see her language change, you see her become sexualized. And those things are really hard to recognize and understand what's happening. Because because many of us are on that journey. We experiment with our sexuality, we experiment with our identity, and we come out of it on the other side. But there are as oftentimes, or this goes back to where we first discussed, that's where that lion in the savannah sees an opening. And it's it's heartbreaking to see these healthy young girls now end up where they are being sold and abused and raped. And I wish people would recognize it. We call them prostitutes. We call them escorts. They're rape victims. They're being forced to have sex with men against their will. And I think another piece that people don't recognize and understand is what that lever is that the traffickers use is something of high value relational value to that other girl. So a pimp will have a stable of five to six girls, that's that's by design. It diversifies his product. So we can have different different girls, size, shapes, colors, whatever, do different things. He can control it. You know, it's enough of his locus of control five or six girls. But most importantly, he builds a family with these girls, he builds a relationship, they call each other sister wise. They call him daddy. So he builds this relationship where they're in their they're codependent on each other. You're the sister I never had, you're the daddy I never had, however it works. So now when one of these girls is compelled to go out and conduct a sex act with a buyer, if she doesn't do what the trafficker wants her to do, he can beat one of those other girls. So yes, there's a physical exploitation against the women, which most most people get hardened to right if you hit me enough, again, there's plenty of people that are listening who have undergone child abuse and at some point, you just become in your to it. But now they start hitting something you love, a brother, a sister. So that is really the control that they have that stable is very, very important to the control that the trafficker has. More often than not, also, they have children with the victim, because that's another lever that they can hold. I always ask the mothers, what would you do to protect your daughter? What would you do to protect your baby son? And the answer is pretty much anything. And that is what the trafficker is counting on. So there's an insidious level of this crime that I think would surprise people if they wanted to really understand it. But it's also an economy. It's we, we describe ourselves as countering commercial sex trafficking. I'm not in your home, I don't see what's happening with abuse. If there are closed systems, where girls and children are getting passed around, it's very hard for us to see. Once it hits that commercial level, we're off and running. Amazing. You know, Jeff, we need, I'm going to call them heroes like you and your team to make an impact here. We really do. And that leads me to, you know, part of the reason we were going to talk today. And I wanted to give you the floor before we got to the book, just so that the audience knows who Jeff Teague is, right? And the things that you've done, you have an amazing book. And when we talk about heroes, you get me with the title of the book. Like the minute I saw the title, I was like, Oh, gotta, gotta read this one. So where have all the heroes gone? So I see the book. And then I get into the book and I was like, wow, this is why when I opened, I called Jeff one of the best storytellers you've ever come to know, because you blend battlefield stories with biblical narrative and narration better than anything I've ever seen. This is like true kudos to you, which made this book like something that you can read from beginning to end. And then also go back and take, take chapters, take, take moments of chapters and apply them to your leadership, to your purpose. So, you know, Jeff, with this book, where have all the heroes gone? Like walk us through the purpose of you saying, I'm going to write a book about this. And this is how I'm going to tell these stories. So I had the opportunity to be assigned to Jerusalem, Israel back in 2013, 2014. And that brought my faith life to another level. And man, I wreck, I want to encourage anyone out there, if they haven't been to Israel, they need to experience it. So there's an old monk out there named was Bazalpixner, who used to say, walking Israel is like having access to a fifth gospel, you know, it ties things together. So once again, I had to, I lived there on and off for close to two years. And I was able to walk these places, this terrain that I've read about, you know, and, and it's there, it's all right there. Some of it is a little bit inaccurate. Some of it is incredibly accurate. So once again, as I walked this terrain, I felt a responsibility to share what it is that I had experienced or witnessed or studied. So it really started out as this book about, I think I started the name of, there's always more to the story. So it was a, it was an homage to Paul Harvey, remember Paul Harvey? Now, you know, the rest of the story, I used to love that as a kid, you know, I used to love it. I mean, just what a brilliant storyteller. So it was an homage to Paul Harvey of, you know, there's always more to the story. So you've got the Bible story, but then with the soldier's perspective on it, there was, there was more that would, that would come to life. So it really started as this, you know, exposition about the things that I had studied, the things that I had learned, looking at them through a soldier's eyes. And then interestingly, I went to a workshop, a writing workshop, and one of the guys in my, in my, on my table, his name was Tim, and he was an atheist. He was a devout, a devout atheist, you know, but he was very, he was very kind and he was very open. And we were all talking about our ideas on books. And Tim said, he said, Hey man, I'm going to discount your book right out of hand, because it's just not my thing. I'm not a Bible guy. I don't care about any of this. He said, But you know what interests me is you. I'm sitting across this table and I'm talking to you. And I'd be interested to hear how what you're talking about, you've applied to your life. You know, so I, this pivot in my, in the book, I owe to an atheist who explained to me very clearly, I want to hear you, I want to hear where you're not just talking the talk, but where you've applied these things to your life. So the, the book that you, that we have now really became a new version of these biblical stories, the more to the story of that biblical story, which I think is fascinating in and of itself. And then almost a memoir or testimony of how, how I apply those things through different hardships in my life. And then it continued to evolve, make, and it became almost, it became almost cathartic to be able to share some of these things, you know, and it's a, it's a tough line because deservedly so much of what we do in special ops and, you know, especially in Delta Force, it's not meant to be shared, right? So it's, it's this fine line between sharing enough of the intent and the meaning behind the story with, with the detail that keeps it interesting. So it became this, what it is today. And that, and, and once I really recognized that I was writing this book to my two sons, you know, the, the avatar was my two sons, Aaron and Jonah. You know, they were both in their early 20s at the time, believers, lovers of God, lovers of Jesus, but a little bit bored, you know, they lived in Israel with us, you know, they walked the land and Western Christianity has its own style and its own flavor, you know, for good and bad. And I was just trying to encourage and inspire young men to just take, take another look, take, take another look that's a little bit adventurous on, on what God is, is trying to tell us. And again, to, to give away the story where of all the heroes gone, they're right here. They're everywhere. My, my sons are heroes to me. My wife, everyone, you know, I'm, I'm the hero by the standards that we talk about. I was a soldier and I did this and I have these awards. But my wife and my two sons are absolute heroes. And it's because they just get up every day and they do what they do with honesty and integrity. So we're often looking for heroes in the wrong place because you can run fast, or you can jump high, or you can punch someone really hard in the face, doesn't necessarily make you a hero. You can be heroic, but I wish we were telling more stories of these heroes among us. And lastly, that every person on this planet, and I speak, you know, very more intentionally to young men, but this includes women. When you look in that mirror, there, there's a hero there wanting to come out. Everybody has the potentiality to be a hero, but it doesn't have to be running into a burning building. It comes with commitment. It comes with integrity. It comes with selfless service. All these things that so many people are doing. And I'll, I'll finally roll that in with, you know, what we have at Skull Games with our task force. The men and women that work on our task force, they're all heroes to me. I mean, they just are selfless in their commitment to helping a young woman that they will likely never meet. You know, they will never encounter her. They will they, they most likely will never really see the justice that that trafficker deserves because it's such a long flash to bang. So the heroes are among us. I think we need to recognize them more. And then again, there's one inside of you trying to get out. Jeff, bro, that was a mic drop right there. I don't even need to summarize that or I too. I mean, you're exactly right. There's a hero waiting to come out of all of us. Jeff, where can people get this book? So it's on Amazon. Where the hero, where have all the heroes gone? A pilgrimage through the Bible, the battlefield and back home again. So again, that little piece after, after the main title sums up what it is. I really appreciate so it's on Amazon. I my website, website, Jeff Teague's book.com or Jeff Teague's books.com. You can find it there as well. I really appreciate what you what you had to say about about that book. And it was it was a huge experiment, right? Like I I know what I like. I know what keeps me reading. And I was really concerned that it would jump around too much and people will get lost. And I was like, I'm just going to go for it. So two things came out of that make that were that were unintended. Well, that was intentional. I was hoping it would grab people's attention. My boys read it. And I have to fight back tears to talk about this. And in both my boys, they just know me better. And they know why I was gone. You know, a three year old boy, a four year old boy, they don't, they don't know why again, this goes back to that question we were talking about. Why does dad choose to leave us over and over and over? Are we not important to him? Right, you know, does he not? I don't you know, again, these aren't these aren't things that are heavy on my son's minds. They're incredibly healthy young men. But but of course, it's just natural. And there was a level of closure there and recognition and understanding on on what I was doing, why I was doing it, why it was important, and why even though they hadn't volunteered to be part of it, they were. And I'm appreciative of it. So I'm working on a whole new series. I've got a book at the editor. So it's a very, very similar style of where have all the heroes gone? I don't have a title for it right now. It's I'm calling it Words, Create Worlds. Eden. So I'm going to talk about Eden and Sinai and Galilee and Jerusalem. And the premise is that there are 10 words that God has been has been using to inspire, create, guide us that is just a constant through time. And I guess I'll share the I guess I'll share the premise I'll share the premise with you because I think I loaded a lot into that first book, you know, so as I've been writing the second one, I came to this conclusion just a few months ago. Oh, hey, man, these are four different books, just say this in this book, say this in this book, you know, and my the hypothesis or the thought experiment that I have in this in the second book that hopefully is coming out in the next couple months is the 10 words that God used at creation and what were our roles and responsibilities. So one of the big ones that I say that I that I ask people is what was the first sin? So when you know the when you know the the garden story, what was what actually was the first sin? What do you think? And there's no right or wrong answer. This is just a thought experiment. I mean, I would go to what everyone thinks right when when God said don't bite the apple. Yeah, yeah. So disobedience, right, you know, so people have a lot people the people people talk about pride, pride pride is definitely a sin. Doubt, I don't think doubt is a sin. You know, again, we could we could we could we can these are these are good for intellectual discussions. I believe Jesus had doubts, right? Jesus didn't have pride, Jesus had doubts. Disobedience, no question. So then but then I'm here's my here's my next question. Mick, where was Adam when Eve was talking to the serpent and took a bite out of that apple? Where was Adam? I don't know. He was standing right next door. So this is this is like my first book that you read. You've read that 100 times. But it just there's only so much we we process, right? No, it says you'll when we finish this discussion, you'll go back and you'll look at Genesis and you'll and you'll Adam was right next to her. So this thought experiment that I'm creating here for folks for young men to ponder is I believe the first sin was Adam's apathy. I believe the first sin was Adam not protecting his wife. She was the crown jewel of creation. When God created woman, he was like, nailed it, we're done. She creates life. She is the partner, the helper of Adam. And his one job is to protect her. And he failed. So we're pointing all the way back again, even if this even if someone believes this is myth, fine. There's a reason we have myth. There's a reason we have legend. And that story is telling us something that resonates almost stronger today than it ever has. Men, who are you protecting? Who are you living for? We all have a duty. And one last thing again, because you've you've read my book, I like this play on different concepts and ideas with the Hebrew. And the the snake, the serpent, and people are I'll murder it. Not na hish, I think it's is the Hebrew term is a serpent. And it means a slithery snake, but it also means this concept of deception. And lies. And you see that throughout the Bible. And through this Bible story. But we also see the serpent and the devil that has embodied the serpent changed to something else called time mean time mean, which is a dragon. So I don't know if this creature came to Eve looking like a snake. Or if this creature came to Eve looking like a dragon. But my gut tells me it looked like a dragon. And it was a dragon, a serpent like dragon. And the Hebrew Bible calls it a serpent, because that was the point of it was deception. The point of it was not fear and chaos, which which is what's embodied with this time mean dragon. So again, now we go back to this thought experiment of a man stood next to his wife, as she was approached by a dragon, a dragon, and he did nothing. And we have been trying to right that wrong ever since. So that's that's the next book, Sinai I'll share. Again, it's an extension of all of that. But but all of this is sits heavily upon just that journey and that work of that first book, which is which was just the first of first of many. I'm ready for the second book, Jeff. Like, dude, like I want the manuscript, I don't I can't wait for for full print. Like, that is going to be a amazing topic in my family. Yeah, like I'm when we are finished here, I'm immediately calling my mom. So my mom is a minister. So we're going to have some questions. I'm going to ask her some questions. Jeff, I'm like, I needed this one today. Well, thanks, Mick. And I tell you what what what I appreciate about it is I'm blissfully ignorant, right? Like I'm not a theologian. I'm not a pastor. I don't know. I don't know anybody other than the best I can do and as accurate as I can be, you know, and I don't mean to kind of have this disclaimer of it's just a thought experiment, because I've I've spent hours and days with God in this process. And he he guides me and he shows me things. And I might not have all the answers. But again, what I discussed to you just just discussed to discuss with you might not be 100% accurate, but you feel it. Yeah, you feel the truth. You feel like, Oh, how have we missed this? How have we missed that a man, the man, a dumb failed to safeguard the most important thing that God had ever created? No, you feel it in your gut. So that's what I'm getting. I got I'm happy that I'm just a dude, right? I'm just a dude. I'm just a soldier. I'm out there studying and praying and reading. But when I hit something that feels like a knife, a knife wound. I want to share that. And I hope it inspires young men to get off the couch and go find your dragon because there's one out there. Hmm. No matter what it looks like, many times it looks like a slithery snake. You know, it looks like a DM. Looks like a job, you know, looks like a, you know, you know, tax evasion. It looks like a lot of things rarely doesn't look like a roaring dragon. Yeah. But it's a dragon. And men were on are on this earth to slay dragons. Let's go, Jeff. Let's go. Ladies and gentlemen, this has been Jeff Teeks. This has been the Jeff Teeks. Jeff Teeks hour. Like I needed this. This was awesome. I feel like we've got a follow up conversation in here, Jeff. You know, as we get closer to book two, let's definitely come on again. But I'd love to man, like we could just, we'll talk offline, Jeff. I just had a vision. Like there's something we can do right here. Let's do it. Love it. Thanks. Thank you for having me. Thank you for being here to everybody that's watching or listening. I'm going to have links to all things Jeff Teeks. So you can definitely check out the things that he's doing. Definitely go get the book. Jeff has been an honor brother. It has been an honor. Me too. Great meeting you, Mick. More to do brother. Absolutely. Let's go slay them to all the viewers and listeners. Remember your because is your superpower. Go unleash it and go slay dragons. Let's go. That's another powerful conversation on Mick Unplugged. If this episode moved you, and I'm sure it did, follow the show wherever you listen, share it with someone who needs that spark and leave a review so more people can find there because I'm Rudy Rush. And until next time, stay driven, stay focused and stay unplugged.