00:00:06.000My name is Nicholas J. Fuentes, and we have a great show for you tonight.
00:00:11.000I don't know what's going on with the technology tonight, but it's not there, and it is so not the right day for the technology to not be working.
00:00:24.000I pull up the application to broadcast, and first of all, it's telling me it's clearing.
00:00:32.000It's telling me video and audio are clearing.
00:02:18.000I don't know, though, if anybody's got any questions about it, I'd love to bring it right back up.
00:02:23.000But, you know, we're not leading off with that tonight.
00:02:26.000I think we all know what we're talking about the number one thing that everybody's talking about today, which is terrorism in New York City.
00:02:38.000What a wonderful time we live in, right?
00:02:41.000I mean, I think we made the deal, or our politicians made the deal for us.
00:02:47.000Sometime 20 years ago, that in exchange for food courts, we were going to get bus bombings, people getting run over by cars, concert explosions.
00:02:59.000Somewhere along the line, somebody that we elected, somebody that you gave campaign money to, decided for us that in exchange for that falafel food truck in lower Manhattan, you know, a few people would have to die every couple of weeks.
00:04:50.000In a city as big as New York City, when you look at bus terminals, train stations, airports, crosswalks, different Christmas markets, New Year's Eve celebration, you will never, you will never stop every terrorist attack.
00:05:10.000The population density, the concentration of people in small areas on a day to day basis, and not just in New York City, but in Boston or Atlanta or Los Angeles, Los Angeles in particular, or Chicago or San Francisco, there's too many cities, too many people, too many days in the year.
00:05:33.000If somebody wants to go outside and they want to ram their truck or their car through a crowd of people, there's nothing you can do to stop that.
00:05:41.000If somebody wants to hop on a train and they have an improvised explosive device, there's nothing you can do to stop that.
00:05:48.000I mean, sure, you can implement some measures.
00:05:50.000You can have the dogs, you can have scanners, you can have security cameras, you can hire more police to watch, you can have people calling in and reporting suspicious activity, but you will never catch them all.
00:06:03.000And the reason why it's so simple is because the police have to stop every single attack.
00:06:10.000The attacker only needs to succeed one day.
00:06:13.000The police have to make sure that 365 days a year, no terror attack happens.
00:06:18.000Nobody gets by, not for five minutes can you let your guard down.
00:06:24.000A terrorist only needs to succeed one day, and there's many of them.
00:06:38.000And that's why you have to decide do you want to be in a position where you mitigate the risk of terrorism, but It will still be present, probably weekly, you know, at best monthly, but at worst, it's shaping up to be, as is the case in London and in other places, a weekly occurrence.
00:06:56.000Certainly, the frequency has increased in America.
00:07:00.000Are we going to accept that this will just be a weekly occurrence, that, you know, we're just not going to catch them all?
00:07:06.000Or are we going to decide that the solution is not to live in a country where terrorists are among us and we just have to catch them, but that we have no terrorists in the country?
00:07:22.000It's not politically incorrect, but we know who the terrorists are.
00:07:26.000Every time we know the MO of these people, it's a fighting age Muslim male, either second or first generation, from a very short list of countries in one region Middle East, North Africa.
00:07:40.000Well, I guess three regions Middle East, North Africa, and Southeast Asia.
00:08:29.000I mean, they fudge the data in a way that makes it look like that.
00:08:32.000But number two, if that's the case, hypothetically, let's entertain their statistic that since 2001, since the worst terror attack in American history, maybe world history, which was perpetrated by Muslims, excluding that one, if white people commit maybe marginally more terrorism than Muslims, think of it white people are 67% of the population, Muslims, less than 1%.
00:08:58.000So, if 67% of the population commits as much or marginally more terrorism than less than 1% of the population, who's the problem there?
00:09:34.000I know people in Central Europe and people in the United Kingdom and people in Australia are having a really hard time about this.
00:09:42.000They're trying to figure out if you have thousands of people gathered in a train station on a daily basis, or in an airport, or in a Christmas market, or just spontaneous order where people are going to be in these high volume areas, a high volume of people, high density of people on a daily basis.
00:10:01.000And they're trying to come up with all kinds of different.
00:10:04.000You know, well, we could put barricades here, and there's a certain type of road that we can use, and we can change the way the streets are.
00:10:11.000And, you know, we can, if we put cameras everywhere, and if we spy on everybody all the time, and if we register guns, and if we, you know, maybe we implement different things on automobile manufacturers so that it's not so easy.
00:11:00.000But here's the thing the United States government or the governments in Europe, their task.
00:11:06.000The money that they receive from taxpayers, the blessing they receive in the form of they are given out of anybody else in the country the monopoly on the legitimate use of force, a monopoly on force in the country.
00:11:20.000The reason they are the government, the reason they wield the power of the government, the purse of the government, is so they can protect their people.
00:11:30.000And so it might be a very sad thing that, you know, Abu Allah, Bakr, whatever, in Yemen is not going to be able to come here and they're going to die in the Yemeni civil war.
00:11:39.000It's going to be really sad that Mohammed Yusuri is going to die in Baghdad, or not in Baghdad, in Damascus, that's in Syria.
00:11:49.000But for him to come over here, and ten of his family members, and for his comrades, his brothers to come over here, and one of them decides they want to wage holy war, and one American dies, what in effect happens is that the United States government, which gets their money, which gets their blessing, their jurisdiction, their power from the people, will have sacrificed one of their own citizens so that other people, people from another country,
00:12:17.000can be comfortable, so that people from another country can do well.
00:12:21.000I'm sorry, but that's the job of their government to protect them.
00:12:25.000If they're going to die in those countries, that's not our problem, unfortunately.
00:12:29.000That's their government's problem, and that's their people's problem, not ours.
00:12:34.000And it would be one thing, and you know, it would be a completely different conversation.
00:12:39.000It would be a completely different conversation if, when they came here, they respected the country they came to.
00:12:47.000They're going to have to do a lot better if they want their people to come here, you know.
00:12:51.000It would be one thing if, like, Chinese people, they came here, or Japanese people is a better example.
00:12:58.000If, like Japanese people, they came here and they integrated and they dropped their language and they integrated into the community, they didn't consolidate into enclaves and they didn't disrespect the law and they didn't kill our people, that would be a different conversation.
00:13:12.000Nobody is fast tracking and urgently warning us about Japanese immigration.
00:13:17.000We need to shut it down because when they come here, and it's not in crazy numbers, when they come here, they have respect for the country, they don't kill our people.
00:14:01.000How quickly did it take to forget about that one?
00:14:03.000The shooting in Texas, the guy was a militant atheist.
00:14:06.000How quickly did we forget about that one?
00:14:09.000And we'll forget about this one too, and nothing will be done.
00:14:13.000And it's funny to me because whenever there's a, well, I don't know if it's funny, but it's ironic that whenever there's a shooting, whenever it's, you know, a loco white guy, and you're always going to have that, but whenever there is one of these, it's always, we need to seize the Second Amendment.
00:14:30.000How are we going to prevent this from happening again?
00:14:33.000If you don't want to confiscate bump stocks, who the hell had ever heard of a bump stock before Las Vegas?
00:14:39.000If you don't want to move to seize AR 15s, if you don't want to move to seize high capacity magazines, you know, the people talk like they've never seen a gun before, you know, you don't care enough about the people that died.
00:14:49.000You don't care sufficiently about the victims that were slaughtered.
00:14:53.000But when it's a Muslim terrorist attack, New York is going to, you know, keep doing what we're going to do.
00:15:17.000But when it's a Muslim terror attack for the upteenth time in a given year, we don't even consider any kind of action appropriate or proportional to the problem, which is this population, this foreign hostile population within our borders.
00:16:35.000Just sip your coffee, read in the paper.
00:16:38.000Another seven year old, another kid that could have been my kid, another person, could have been my sister, my brother, my dad, or my mom.
00:16:46.000Executed, gunned down in the streets by a foreign hostile population that tells us they're going to do this, by the way, when they're in their home countries.
00:16:54.000Yeah, well, what's going on with Bitcoin?
00:16:57.000What's going on with Game of Thrones tonight?
00:17:00.000You know, do people just not care about this stuff?
00:17:04.000I mean, really, you have to gauge the apathy.
00:17:06.000People watch the show, it's the same reaction.
00:17:08.000People that watch this show, you know, maybe they get mad, but I mean, does anybody do anything about it?
00:17:14.000I'm not saying, you know, take anything into your own hands.
00:17:19.000There has to be organization on this front, and we have to stop being afraid.
00:17:23.000I think it starts with realizing that we're in the right here.
00:17:26.000And it starts with recognizing that we are 100% in the right.
00:17:31.000It is 100% justice that we remove these people.
00:17:34.000I think it's a matter of a moral argument.
00:17:37.000If we win the moral argument, everything else, all the complications about calling for a Muslim ban go away.
00:17:45.000In the sense that if we put it forth as not.
00:17:49.000You know, how it's been kind of put forth, like a bigotry kind of a thing.
00:17:52.000But if we put it forth, framing it in the way that I do, which is to say that we are sacrificing American lives for the comfort of foreign people, and that's not right, that's not our government's job.
00:18:03.000You know, when we win that argument, when we put that argument in front of people, I believe there can be legitimate organization.
00:18:10.000I think that's a convincing way to put it across.
00:18:13.000But the way that people put it across now, it's like we need extreme vetting, we need better security, we need better this or better that.
00:18:20.000You know, you'll never win with that one.
00:18:22.000That's not really because people know that will never work, I think, fundamentally.
00:18:25.000You know, when they're talking about the laptop bans and the TSA and surveillance and things like that, I mean, people fundamentally know that they're always going to get one through.
00:20:09.000You know, whatever it is, they're making tons of money.
00:20:11.000They're walking around like who the hell they are.
00:20:15.000Wielding this power, wielding this authority, commanding respect, and we're the ones, we're the sorry people that are getting run over on our morning commutes.
00:20:25.000It's not like, and it's not even like we're doing well otherwise.
00:20:29.000It's not even like economically we're doing well, like we were living in the lap of luxury, swimming in the Olympic sized swimming pool, and working five hours a day or four days a week or anything like they do in Scandinavia.
00:20:43.000It's not even like we were driving a luxury car across a bridge that works or anything like that.
00:20:48.000It's like, People were on the bus to go to their wage slave job so they could continue to afford out of control housing prices, out of control fuel prices, rent prices, food prices, electricity, utility.
00:21:03.000They were on their way essentially to work for the government for 40% of the year and then the rest to pay the landlord, the rest to pay the banks.
00:21:11.000And while they were on public transportation, shitty public transportation, they got blown up by somebody who shouldn't have even been here.
00:22:35.000You know, you saw in Arizona there, you have SWAT teams that come around that if you're smoking the wrong stuff, they're going to come in and kill your dog with a flashbang and I don't know, maybe break your collarbone.
00:22:48.000What is the trade off where this is benefiting us?
00:22:50.000I just don't follow how for 25 years the government has pursued policies that hurt us and they hurt us.
00:23:11.000So, so much to be angry about, so much to be up in arms about, so much to be mad as hell when you see these things on television.
00:23:19.000And I get all kinds of people that are tweeting and DMing me about that.
00:23:25.000And I guess everybody happened to be late for work today, pretty conveniently, but everybody's DMing me saying, you know, if I wasn't five minutes late today to take the bus, I wouldn't be here.
00:23:57.000It's just to say every day you are playing Russian roulette.
00:24:00.000You know, there are a lot of chambers, it's a pretty big revolver, so to speak.
00:24:06.000But every day you're taking that risk.
00:24:07.000Every day, if you're in a big city and you go down.
00:24:11.000And you take the bus or the train or an airplane, or if you go on vacation anywhere, you go to a concert at any point in your life, you're taking a chance.
00:25:22.000The reason that these things exist is to keep us down, is to keep us compliant, is to keep us controlled.
00:25:30.000I mean, because you see very quickly, at certain times, when the government wants something to stop, when the government wants something to go away, I mean, it stops, it goes away.
00:25:40.000It's pretty much within their control.
00:25:42.000You know, in the sense that you look at Antifa in Charlottesville, out of control, civil war in the streets, everybody's fighting each other, in Auburn, Alabama, Nothing, nothing.
00:25:53.000When the police decide they don't want something to happen, it doesn't happen for the most part.
00:25:59.000And if the government was putting all these trillions of dollars in national security and homeland security, et cetera, towards preventing these things, I'm pretty certain we would probably prevent most of it, you know, for the most part.
00:26:13.000You would still have those, you know, you would still have the risk, but I don't think it would be as big as it is.
00:26:17.000It just leads you to believe why are they, you know, why do we have the NSA?
00:26:20.000If it doesn't prevent anything, if you still have these attacks, and some of them very well coordinated, I don't know.
00:27:01.000The other big thing that happened today, a big thing, this didn't get so much coverage because of the terrorist attack, but you had Vladimir Putin making an unannounced visit to Syria today to announce the withdrawal of troops.
00:27:13.000And this is something that's been kind of going on for a little while, or at least it's been in the news kind of secondarily for a little while.
00:27:40.000And this kind of contributes to the previous conversation in the sense that we really have to start asking tough questions about our government.
00:27:48.000In the sense that with ISIS, they have been completely defeated.
00:27:52.000As of this weekend, they have been completely defeated in less than a year.
00:28:44.000I think the takeaway from this that ISIS is being defeated is on the one hand, there is the superficial, the pretty entry level stuff that Donald Trump is very effective at what he does.
00:28:55.000When he puts his mind to defeating ISIS and he lets the generals defeat ISIS and he orders them to defeat ISIS, ISIS is defeated, right?
00:29:05.000And another thing that the media is not covering it.
00:29:07.000Obviously, Trump basically finished that campaign promise and we're not even midway through his term and nobody's covering that.
00:29:15.000You know, okay, this is entry level stuff.
00:29:17.000But the broader question is why was it so easy all of a sudden?
00:29:26.000If ISIS existed for three years before this and they were growing for a long time and then they were barely being defeated, I mean, such a slow rate that they were shrinking, why was it so quick all of a sudden?
00:29:39.000Why was it that from Obama to Trump, All of a sudden, they started doing well.
00:29:44.000And by the way, all Trump did was say, defeat ISIS.
00:29:49.000That's all he did was say, we're going to change the rules of engagement and we're going to let the Defense Department conduct the war we want them to conduct it.
00:29:57.000And the only objective, it's not, you know, defeating Assad, it's not balance of power stuff, it's not shoring up greater Israel, it's defeat ISIS.
00:30:06.000And when he said, this is the objective and do what you got to do, they finished it.
00:30:20.000If Trump gets into office and he tells them to defeat ISIS and they do it in less than a year, that tells you that before he got into office, they weren't trying.
00:30:43.000Why was the government not trying to defeat ISIS?
00:30:45.000I mean, we really have to start peeling back the layers and examining.
00:30:49.000If we look at the cause and effect of policy, the stated objectives, and the actual consequences, I mean, we come to the point where nothing is as it seems.
00:30:59.000None of the practices or policies in place are really for the reasons they say they are.
00:31:18.000How many people, you know, I don't know if people are really connected to ISIS or sometimes they just pledge allegiance, but how many terrorist attacks across the country in the past four years?
00:31:28.000How many dead bodies, and we weren't even trying to defeat them.
00:31:32.000We weren't even trying to destroy this caliphate.
00:31:36.000I mean, what does that tell you about the people that are running the government?
00:31:39.000I mean, are these people, these are not our people.
00:31:42.000These are not people that care about us.
00:31:44.000These are not people, I think, that even are like us.
00:31:50.000I think, you know, whatever you want to call it, but these people in Washington, D.C., who pull the levers, and this isn't just the politicians, this isn't just the face of it, but we're talking about the deep state.
00:32:01.000The bureaucrats, the people behind the scenes that ensure the continuity of the same destructive policy for 50 years, they are not us.
00:32:12.000They are a part of some rootless, cosmopolitan, internationalist culture that is not American.
00:32:19.000They are part of some kind of occult that is not Christian, whether that is satanic, whether that is something else, godless, atheist, pagan.
00:32:28.000I mean, who knows what goes on at Bohemian Grove and anything like that.
00:32:34.000Go down a conspiracy theory path, but I mean, you have these expectations, you have these like presuppositions about the government, and it just doesn't fit with what we see.
00:32:44.000You know, for example, if they were Christian, they would not let this happen.
00:32:49.000They would not, the dereliction of duty would not be a moral Christian thing to do, right?
00:32:54.000I mean, if you're a Christian politician, if you're Barack Obama and you're a Christian, and you see that ISIS is genociding Christians and genociding Yazidis, and they're sending people over here to kill us.
00:33:06.000If you're a Christian, you would say, I don't care if we blow up their oil reserves and there's a negative environmental impact.
00:33:17.000If he were American, if he cared about the American people or Hillary Clinton, do you think they'd be talking about, I can't wait to put coal miners out of business.
00:33:25.000I can't wait to put coal workers out of business?
00:33:28.000You wouldn't have these Freudian slips when they say you didn't build that and things like that.
00:33:32.000I mean, that's the takeaway fundamentally.
00:33:35.000Every time we see terrorism, every time we see Some of these things that are going on in the Middle East, we have to really compare what we subconsciously believe about our politicians with what we actually see.
00:33:48.000Because there's a real dissonance where we say, you know, wait a minute, why is this happening?
00:33:54.000These terrorist attacks really mess with us because we go to work every day and we kind of have it implicit in our heads that this is like an advanced country and our politicians are who they say they are and everything.
00:34:05.000And then we see this stuff happen and we think, well, couldn't this not happen?
00:34:09.000You know, we have all these incredible technologies.
00:34:33.000The last thing we got to talk about here.
00:34:35.000That was just pretty brief, kind of an add on to the terrorism thing, but, you know, pretty relevant in the sense that, you know, if we're trying to build up this case that, Government is not with us.
00:34:45.000You see it everywhere, and it's not hard.
00:34:47.000I mean, just watch the news and watch what happens, and then try and recall and think back like what the policy on that is.
00:34:53.000Think about your experiences with the government, and there's a real disconnect there.
00:34:57.000But the last thing we got going on here Roy Moore, the election is tomorrow, and we have big coverage of it coming to you tomorrow.
00:35:05.000We'll have live coverage of the Roy Moore election, the special Senate election in Alabama, starting at 6 p.m. Eastern Time, 7 p.m.
00:35:19.000We'll have live coverage of the Roy Moore special election in Alabama.
00:35:24.000It'll be me, James Alsop, a panel of people, I think, our buddies, Alex Wytoslawski and Shane Trejo, is coming on, as well as Jay McFields, I believe, Jazz Hands McFields.
00:35:49.000Depending on how you want to take it, either it's bad news or good news.
00:35:52.000But there was a big Fox News poll that came out today that had a lot of people worrying.
00:35:56.000If you were on Predicted today, If you're on Maxim Lott's election betting odds website today, Roy Moore's chances went way down today.
00:36:05.000Went down like 7% on predicted because of a poll that came out from Fox News that had Doug Jones, a Democrat, winning by 10 points.
00:36:13.000And, you know, I understand why people would freak out because they think to themselves, Fox News equals conservative.
00:36:19.000If they're forecasting that Roy Moore is going to lose, that's probably more credible than, say, the Washington Post or the New York Times or, you know, any of these other polling places that.
00:36:29.000That had Trump losing or, you know, that fudged the numbers before.
00:36:32.000But if you look at the actual numbers for the Fox News poll, they only had, in terms of who they sampled for this poll, and I know a lot of people are freaking out, but for the Fox News poll where they have Doug Jones winning by 10 points, they sampled, I think it was something like only a 2% difference between Republicans and Democrats.
00:36:51.000I believe they had Republicans at 48 and Democrats at 46.
00:36:54.000I don't think those numbers are right, but they sampled the Republican and Democrat populations only at a 2% difference, which.
00:37:01.000Is wrong, which is inaccurate, which is incorrect.
00:37:05.000If it were the case that you had only a 2% disparity in Alabama between Democrats and Republicans, I would say, you know, that's cause for concern.
00:37:13.00010 point lead by Doug Jones the day before the election, not something you want to see.
00:39:01.000If Roy Moore succeeds tomorrow, and I think there's a strong case that he will, I think a lot of the meta political stuff that's been going on, or maybe more just national political stuff that's been going on, suggests that he will win.
00:39:14.000In the sense that Mitch McConnell, Donald Trump, they wouldn't walk back what they had said about Roy Moore if they weren't certain to some extent that he was going to win, either with regards to internal polling or maybe just regular polling.
00:39:28.000Chuck Schumer, Nancy Pelosi wouldn't have forced Al Franken to resign if this wasn't the case.
00:39:38.000I mean, we've talked about it all week, this week and last week and the week before, and, you know, there's slow news weeks at times.
00:39:44.000But, I mean, the reason why this will be so big is because this will demonstrate that you can have the whole media against you.
00:39:52.000You can have your own party against you.
00:39:54.000You can have, like, all you need is you in this day and age to win.
00:39:59.000And particularly, I don't know if that's necessarily a takeaway, but with regards to this ascendant America First coalition in the country, I guess for them, you don't need any of these institutions.
00:40:11.000That just goes to show that Donald Trump, that guy in Montana, some of these other special elections, one in Georgia, you don't need the media.
00:43:31.000And what it came down to was that they wanted to protect their hypocrisy in the sense that everybody that was defending what Tara McCarthy did were hypocritical.
00:43:42.000And if one person, such as myself, was saying, yeah, this doesn't align with our values at all, anybody who believes what they're saying wouldn't defend this at all.
00:43:51.000Well, of course they had to delegitimize.
00:43:53.000Of course the only thing they could say was, you're a Nazbol, you're, you know, maybe you're right.
00:45:24.000All I was saying was you have Tara McCarthy.
00:45:28.000She's going around telling people that if you don't defend her for saying she's a feminist, if you don't defend her for like wigging out and freaking out, Because people are criticizing her because this is a traditionalist movement and she is by no means a traditionalist and isn't shy about it, then she's not going to work with you.
00:45:47.000And if you have a problem with that, guess what?
00:45:49.000Other people are not going to work with you.
00:45:51.000I will criticize that until the day that I die.
00:46:26.000Caesarism is about people that are legitimate, people that have integrity, people that have virtues, real titans rising up, that care about the country.
00:46:49.000All these people talk, you know, they talk all day long about these really nice ideas, and then, huh, it's really hard to actually live them in real life.
00:48:54.000You can call me MGTOW, you can call me Lefty Pole, you can call me Najble, you can call me whatever you want, but you can't tell me I'm wrong.
00:50:56.000He says, you know, I was briefly a homosexual in the 1990s, you know, because it was the 90s.
00:51:02.000And, you know, he's going on, he was almost like a gay prostitute, but he ended up being a scam.
00:51:07.000I don't know the whole story with that.
00:51:09.000And he's got the audacity to lecture me about dividing the movement.
00:51:12.000Listen, listen, bucko, if you are a feminist, if you are a, if you preach degeneracy, I don't care, you know, maybe you're a degenerate, you know, we're all not living the trad life 100%.
00:51:23.000But if you're rationalizing your degeneracy, saying there's nothing wrong with it, We are not in the same movement.
00:51:31.000I'm not, you know, whatever the hell conspiracy theory it is today for saying that if you do not believe in traditionalism, we're not in the same movement.
00:51:54.000And if you're a feminist, if you're preaching a degenerate lifestyle or you're rationalizing it or whatever, I'm sorry, we're not in the same movement.
00:52:02.000You know, so he goes on the stream and he's talking about how I'm a homosexual.
00:52:06.000He's talking about bestiality at other times.
00:52:09.000And I'm thinking to myself, you know, who is this guy?
00:52:12.000I'm the guy who's the problem for the movement.
00:52:14.000You get on the stream and you're saying, you know, oh, women are scrutinized for their appearance.
00:52:18.000Oh, yeah, I've never gotten told to go to the gym before, right?
00:54:26.000But I've also been looking at IOTA, and I've been looking at Request, and I've been looking at some of these other cryptos.
00:54:31.000And with IOTA in particular, I was reading about this.
00:54:35.000I know other people have had issues with IOTA.
00:54:37.000I've heard kind of these rumblings that IOTA is not entirely secure.
00:54:42.000But I've been reading a little bit about IOTA.
00:54:44.000And if you know anything about cryptocurrency, IOTA is a third generation cryptocurrency.
00:54:50.000And some of the things I was reading was that it's quantum resistant, which Bitcoin in 10 or 20 years will not be able to survive a 51% attack.
00:55:00.000See, I know the lingo because with quantum computing, it'll be able to have more computing power than all the different nodes in the blockchain.
00:55:08.000And so it'll take a long time for them to upgrade their security to account for quantum.
00:55:15.000They would be able to weather an attack from quantum computers.
00:55:18.000They talk about how IOTA uses the Tangle instead of the blockchain, which apparently is much more efficient.
00:55:25.000It's much more scalable because with Bitcoin, when they use the blockchain to verify transactions, it takes 10 minutes.
00:55:31.000And there are some problems with the blockchain.
00:55:33.000You have transaction fees, you're going to need higher and higher transaction fees.
00:55:39.000As more transactions are made, so they can be verified in a timely fashion.
00:55:45.000You can't have microtransactions because the transaction fee will be greater than the money exchanged.
00:55:51.000If it takes 10 minutes, you're not going to be able to handle the same amount of volume as PayPal or Visa or the competitor, so it will never be viable on a large scale.
00:55:59.000Whereas with the Tangle, with IOTA, because the way it works is that every person that makes a transaction has to verify two preceding transactions, everybody that's making transactions is a part of the verification.
00:56:14.000And as a result, they have more computing power, more transactions are able to be made.
00:56:19.000And I believe IOTA actually passes the same amount of transactions, the rate, as PayPal.
00:56:25.000In addition to that, you have the economy of things element of it, which I don't know very much about that.
00:56:31.000That's much more like AI and things like that.
00:56:34.000But I've been looking at IOTA and I don't know is there a reason why I shouldn't buy IOTA?
00:56:38.000I haven't bought any yet because I haven't completed my research.
00:56:41.000I'm still figuring out a lot of the tech stuff.
00:56:43.000But I mean, if you leave a comment below, if you're.
00:56:46.000If you know something about IOTA that I don't, but I'm reading about it, third generation, all these different bells and whistles, and I'm thinking, why is anybody using the blockchain if you have the tangle?
00:56:58.000If you have the tangle, no transaction fees, you don't have to wait 10 minutes.
00:57:18.000And what I found out about Request Network today, that's something I just started looking into, is the quantity is always going down.
00:57:25.000Whereas the reverse is true with some of these currencies, they have no market cap or, you know, there's no limit to how much currency can be in existence at any time.
00:59:08.000And what he says is that Bitcoin will keep going up until the demand dries up.
00:59:15.000That essentially, Bitcoin will go up and up and up until demand is met, and then it'll probably plateau or decrease a little bit and then plateau.
00:59:23.000But he says, other than that, there'll be dips, there'll be drops from time to time because of the news, but none of that will really be sustained because as long as the demand is there, as long as people keep adopting this, it'll keep going up.
00:59:36.000And so that's why I'm long on Bitcoin.
01:00:20.000They'll buy contracts to sell Bitcoin for something like $9,000 in January, as an example.
01:00:27.000And then they'll go on the circuit and they'll try and depress the price of Bitcoin and go on and say, you know, there's all kinds of problems with it.
01:00:50.000We didn't see that bear out, though, because when the futures went on sale at 5 o'clock last night, when they went live, Bitcoin went up like a grand.
01:02:27.000You're going to hold on to it for a little while.
01:02:28.000If you believe in the technology, I think you'll hold.
01:02:31.000For some people, it's going to be one of these things where you buy in cheap and you sell a little bit higher a little bit later.
01:02:36.000But for people that believe in the technology, and I think that's what people who are holding it for a while believe, then, I mean, this should take off and become much bigger than it is now.
01:02:47.000Some people forecasting $100,000, a million by 2020 or 2025.
01:02:53.000I don't know if that's totally true, but who knows?
01:04:12.000They're putting things on an anonymous message board.
01:04:15.000Oh my God, they're trying to push Lawrence Southern out of the movement.
01:04:18.000They're trying to get Vox to write articles about how people were preaching traditionalism and now they're not traditional and they're taking heat for it.
01:04:26.000Ah, they're trying to crush the movement.
01:05:05.000People are criticizing her for being a feminist, and she's going around demanding that people defend her for being a feminist and getting criticized for it.
01:07:01.000Some of these other people who I don't want to say, but some people who get like a cult following, like Jordan Peterson, like they have to have this weird thing where I don't know.
01:07:13.000I think there's like a very cult like persona that's very arrogant, that's very pretentious.
01:07:52.000Build bridges means make friends with people.
01:07:55.000Look, I make friends with people, but if you are going to come to me with an ultimatum, that is not a person that you can do business with.
01:08:03.000You have to build bridges, yes, but you have to build bridges with people that you want to be associated with.
01:08:11.000And, you know, look, I was friends with Tara McCarthy.
01:08:14.000And I told her, I de-entered, and I said, look, I like you a lot.
01:08:34.000I mean, the same people would tell me to build bridges with these people would be telling me to build bridges with Leadership Institute or build bridges with Identity Europa.
01:08:42.000You know, I tried, and then all these people want to kick me out.
01:08:46.000You know, people, there was this post on poll where they were saying, Nick gets kicked out of this, Nick gets kicked out of that, Nick gets kicked out of everything.
01:09:08.000You know, I'm in Leadership Institute.
01:09:10.000Yeah, if we really want to save our people, if we really care about anything, you know, this is not, lowering taxes is not going to help us.
01:09:18.000What it comes down to is that people who are in leadership generally get comfortable.
01:09:23.000They generally get comfortable with the way things work and they get into a sort of rhythm and then they get lazy and then they get complacent and the money's rolling in and they're comfortable and, you know, they lose sight of the objectives.
01:09:34.000And then you get somebody like me who comes into the organization and I say, okay, why are we doing this every day if it could be done better?
01:09:45.000This doesn't seem to be working very well.
01:09:47.000And the people who are comfortable, the people who are, you know, the money's rolling in and they get to, you know, basically take it easy and do what's always been done, they say, I don't like this guy.
01:10:36.000And that's what happened this week you have people that are in this movement who have gotten complacent, who have gotten lazy, and they think that they don't have to play by their own rules, and they think that, you know, they just get to show up and collect a check or whatever.
01:10:50.000And I say, you know, that's really not this Tara McCarthy character.
01:11:37.000You know, so if it takes somebody on the inside to point out a weakness so that we don't get criticized by people that don't like us, that's a good thing.
01:12:06.000If that's not going to make me a lot of money, if that's not going to get me to a very high place by making these salacious arrangements and going back on whatever, then so be it.
01:16:14.000Governor Wallace, is it a smart thing to do to take on a $100,000 investment into an education that you don't know how you're going to pay for it?
01:16:47.000You know, people hit me about the mom's basement.
01:16:50.000Living with your parents is something that's a necessity in this day and age.
01:16:53.000If people didn't ruin the economy, if a certain generation didn't ruin the economy, I could graduate from high school, get a low skill, high paying job, and buy an affordable house.
01:17:04.000But when the average cost of a home in this country is $180,000 and you don't have.
01:17:09.000Jobs that'll pay for something like that, fresh out of high school without a college degree, that'll cost you a hundred grand.
01:17:17.000I mean, do people think that nobody knows this?
01:17:20.000Do people think when they neg me about living in my mom's basement, do people think that it's a big secret that it's not affordable to own a home?
01:17:30.000Yeah, and I think I'm very smart for doing that.
01:17:33.000I mean, would people prefer that I be burning a thousand or hundreds of dollars every month on rent, like not even working towards owning something so I could say otherwise?
01:19:41.000I can build a bridge with you, certainly.
01:19:44.000But again, people that don't have integrity, I can't build bridges with those people.
01:19:51.000If you're asking me to not tell the truth to my audience for the sake of being on a podcast every now and again, I would just say that that's probably not the best decision.
01:20:05.000Again, there are bridges that have been built with people.
01:20:08.000I build bridges with people where it's mutual, where it's a two way street, where it's conciliatory, where it's a good working relationship.
01:20:15.000I build bridges with Lucian Wintrich, with Ali Akbar.
01:20:18.000People, it would have never been thought that I was building bridges with them.
01:20:32.000They're not going around making ultimatums towards me.
01:20:36.000You know, I mean, Lucian, I was going to enter into a deal with Lucian, but he said, you know, I can't enter into a deal with you if you work with James because, you know, I'm not alt right.
01:20:45.000And I said, yeah, I'm sorry, I can't do that.
01:20:49.000You know, it wasn't, I didn't get burned.
01:20:51.000Nobody DM'd me and was like, you know, we can never work together again because of that.
01:20:55.000So people are focusing way too much on me and not too much on the people who instigated this.
01:21:04.000You know, I'm really fascinated by everybody has a problem with me.
01:21:07.000For telling the truth about something that's going on, and not the people that want to sweep everything under the rug, not the people that are going around.
01:21:14.000Has anybody asked Tara McCarthy if she wants to build bridges?
01:21:17.000Hey, Tara, do you think it's a good idea to go around DMing people and making ultimatums saying, if you don't abide by my speech code, I can't work with you?
01:21:26.000Has anybody asked Millennial Woes if it's building bridges?
01:21:29.000If because you disagree with somebody about an e celebrity controversy, you're going to disinvite them from your stream and unfollow them and similarly say you can't work with them and on and on and on?
01:22:18.000You know, even if she said, I don't agree with your thought patrol and I think it's harming the movement, I would say, like, we can talk about that.
01:22:24.000We could have a discussion about that.
01:22:26.000I would consider even stopping if she came to me and said politely, Nick, I think what you're doing is damaging the movement.
01:22:40.000She came to me and she said, if you don't stop doing this, if you don't restrict what you're saying and what you're doing, we can't work together.
01:22:50.000If somebody's going to make an ultimatum, on principle, I cannot say that you can hold me hostage and blackmail me, essentially, saying, unless and until you abide by my rules, I will not work with you.
01:23:04.000If she had told me something like, I don't know, even something I disagreed with, even something I was ready to stop doing, you know?
01:23:14.000If she said, like, Nick, you know, if you don't stop doing, if you don't stop waking up late for nationalist review, I can't work with you.
01:23:22.000Even though, even though, That's probably a bad example because that would be different.
01:23:27.000But if it was like behavior harmful to myself, if she was like, Nick, if you keep staying up all night, like I do, if you keep staying up all night, I can't work with you anymore.
01:23:39.000Even though it's harmful to my health to stay up all night, and I should probably change it, I would have to say, then you can't work with me because I don't respond to blackmails.
01:23:46.000I don't respond to ultimatums like that.
01:23:49.000That is not something that an ally does.
01:23:51.000That is not something that a friend does.
01:23:53.000You know, none of your friends come up to you and And make those ultimatums like that.
01:23:56.000Or at least if they do, it's well after there has been a discussion, a process, and that is what I have a problem with.
01:24:03.000And nobody seems to be too concerned about that.
01:24:07.000Daily Evans says, Jared Taylor on Nationalist Review.