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Father loses two year old son one month ago continues building off-grid community empire

Stay Free with Russell Brand · What the Globalists Hate More Than Anything… - SF739 · July 10, 2026
Father loses two year old son one month ago continues building off-grid community empire
Stay Free with Russell Brand
Stay Free with Russell Brand
What the Globalists Hate More Than Anything… - SF739
"My own son passes away less than 10 minutes after I hugged him in my own driveway by his own babysitter, just bumped in the head. That's it. And I found him and I could sit there and I could say, Lord, what the— you know what? You know what? I could sit there and and and the demons inside of me, the the negative voices—they want to be—they want to be."
TJ Vizio Day revealed that his two-year-old son Colty died suddenly one month ago from a head injury in their driveway, an incident that occurred while TJ was running a company focused on helping families protect themselves through off-grid homesteads. Despite the profound loss, he continues operating Axe, which has monthly overhead exceeding $500,000. He frames his ability to continue as an act of faith, choosing to focus on the mission rather than succumb to grief and anger.

About this episode

Russell Brand interviews TJ Vizio Day, the 32-year-old founder of Axe Decentralized Real Estate, in an extraordinary conversation that blends faith, grief, entrepreneurship, and alternative living. Vizio Day, who lost his two-year-old son Colty just one month before this recording, reveals how he continues building an off-grid community empire despite profound personal tragedy. He discloses that his company operates with monthly payroll costs between $200,000 and $250,000, with total overhead exceeding $500,000, and explains how missing a single deal can create massive cash flow crises. The entrepreneur shares a striking claim that three separate landowners who attempted to renege on property deals were immediately hospitalized, experienced changes of heart, and then proceeded with transactions—events he interprets as divine intervention. Brand and Vizio Day explore biblical principles underlying the off-grid movement, discussing how centralized food systems, toxic products, and dependence on government infrastructure keep populations controlled. Vizio Day details his vision for helping families achieve self-sufficiency through land ownership, regenerative farming, and local food production, contrasting his ethical approach with standard developer practices of exploiting distressed sellers. The conversation takes deeply personal turns as Vizio Day describes his grief journey, explaining how he uses physical training with weighted backpacks to process loss and how he's learned to recognize demonic versus divine voices in his thoughts. Brand, who faces his own legal challenges, opens up about his struggle to surrender control and trust God fully, acknowledging his tendency to claim credit for blessings while fearing future outcomes. Both men discuss the concept of peace that surpasses understanding, exploring how crisis strips away illusions and forces dependence on God. The episode examines arousal theory and maintaining emotional equilibrium during extreme stress, with Vizio Day explaining how staying within his window of tolerance allows him to lead effectively despite impossible circumstances. Throughout, they return to the central thesis that local, self-sufficient communities offer the only viable alternative to increasingly centralized control systems, and that the current cultural moment demands radical solutions built on ancient wisdom.

Key takeaways

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