00:01:11.000Literally celebrating Mexican heritage on the 4th of July.
00:01:16.000Now, I might admit some groups did have some red, white, and blue in there, but most of them were Mexican heritage dresses and celebrating Mexican heritage on the 4th of July, only in California.
00:01:48.000I know a lot of Europeans like to say America doesn't have culture because we haven't been around for as long as they have.
00:01:53.000But Fourth of July is one of those holidays where we all unite around those cultural things the barbecue, the fireworks, you know, all those traditions.
00:02:01.000And so to hear something like that, it's a bit of a black pill.
00:02:05.000You know, I'm sure many people can relate to that and seeing it pretty rough.
00:02:09.000But glad you enjoyed the holiday with the family.
00:02:33.000Right, because I know we came together and did a stream, I think, once to talk about Israel, and that was with somebody who's writing a book about the USS Liberty.
00:02:43.000And then we did, and then the most recent thing we did was that debate with Arthur Schopper.
00:03:01.000You know, I got to say, it was a little bit difficult in the moment, but in retrospect, I think it was a lot of fun.
00:03:07.000You know, Arthur Chopper, I can't even say he was a good sport because he wasn't, but it was a lot of fun.
00:03:12.000But the reason that we're having you on the show tonight, which I'm very excited about, because you have just been killing it with the content.
00:03:33.000I just got really upset with all the people tweeting, you know, the Joy Reads and the Kamala Harrises of the world tweeting about how it was immigrants who signed the Declaration of Independence and, you know, all sorts of bullshit.
00:04:04.000It's noticeably absent from the immigration debate that there is a real distinction between what's happening now, what happened at Ellis Island, and what happened at the beginning of the country.
00:04:15.000You know, this is a point that is so overlooked, nobody talks about it.
00:04:19.000But the idea that people who come here from Mexico, they don't speak the language, they come here for welfare, that they're comparable to people who came from Europe when they had nothing and they had to get a job and they learned English, or to the people who came here at Plymouth Rock and created a country out of nothing is just.
00:04:35.000Probably one of the biggest misconceptions about it.
00:04:38.000So that's really why I love the video and really to the point factual.
00:04:43.000And before we get into your article, because I really want to get into this article you posted this week about the future for the country, about how politics will look if we continue down this course of demographic change.
00:04:56.000Before we get into that, I just want to ask your opinion about this because I know we've been trying to get a lot of talent on America First, a lot of new faces.
00:05:04.000We've been getting a lot of guests lately.
00:05:07.000I feel like there is this coalition that's beginning to form.
00:05:10.000Of people like yourself, people like me, Faith Goldie, Lauren Rose, Jake Lloyd, people like this who we have the right idea.
00:05:19.000We're very principled on the issues of demographic change, of transnational influence, and things of this nature, but we have very persuasive rhetoric and we're right on the money in terms of we have the optics right.
00:05:31.000I mean, do you see that also coming together?
00:05:34.000Because I've been seeing this kind of new movement rise from the ashes of maybe the more confused messaging of the past year, and I'm very encouraged.
00:05:50.000And I've been thinking about, man, if we could all just get together somehow and start working together a little bit more instead of seeing ourselves as more of competitors for some reason, people see it that way.
00:06:01.000Instead of seeing ourselves more as competitors on the internet, competitors, we can come together and maybe create an actual organized media outlet.
00:06:13.000I mean, that for some audience members to come together on one website, one place, and actually find all of our content.
00:06:23.000Unfortunately, that's probably something that might not happen anytime soon, but I think that we should all be coming together.
00:06:28.000I mean, you see all these things that, I mean, you've seen it, people arguing online and bickering back and forth when we could all be coming together and doing more positive than good.
00:06:38.000Now, I granted some people do more harm than good, some of these pundits out there, but, you know, I think that we should be coming together.
00:06:48.000Yeah, no, it's great to hear that because I'm really encouraged by what I see because, you know, a lot of people say that the dissident right has kind of lost steam since the election.
00:06:58.000And I feel that that is to some extent true.
00:07:00.000I think there's been a lot of infighting, there's been a lot of disagreement as to what our goals are, what our method is.
00:07:07.000But I am very encouraged by seeing those talking points, those ideas that flourished in 2016, but maybe died with certain failed messaging campaigns.
00:07:17.000But you're starting to see them spread.
00:07:26.000It might be a little far down the road, but I certainly think that's a great idea to get everybody in on one page, on one outlet, or have some kind of an organization because I think we've really figured out what we need to do, the problems of the country, and also the problems that we need to address internally as a movement.
00:07:43.000So, I'm very encouraged by what I'm seeing and the kinds of content that people like yourself and Faith and others are putting out there.
00:08:41.000And it clearly shows that what you're going to have is 68 million more Democrats.
00:08:46.000And so, why don't you just tell us a little bit more about this article, about where you got your data, how you arrived at these conclusions, and just what do you think about all this?
00:08:55.000Yeah, I was just honestly, I mean, this article, which is actually, you have a lot of normies sharing it now on Facebook.
00:09:03.000I think it's where I've To somewhere around 80,000 shares on the article itself right now in the Facebook realm.
00:09:10.000So it's very normie friendly, very palatable for the average run of the mill Trump supporter.
00:09:17.000And a lot of these other people don't get it.
00:09:20.000I don't want to name any names, but we all know who they are the ones who think that we're going to have enough Candace Owens and enough Kanye Wests of the world to change the black vote to vote majority Republican in 10 years.
00:09:32.000The ones that just live in this false hope.
00:09:35.000But so I just decided to do some basic math and just, hey, this is how they vote.
00:09:40.000And which, by the way, hasn't deviated much from 1968.
00:09:46.000So you can pretty much assume and be correct that it's not going to deviate that much by 2050, regardless of what happens, regardless of how many Trump supporters get attacked in the restaurants.
00:09:57.000It's likely not going to deviate that much.
00:10:00.000As a matter of fact, in one of my videos, I made a promise that I would delete my channel if blacks voted.
00:10:05.000Over 50% Republican in the 2020 election.
00:10:10.000So I just broke it down by race and I said, hey, this is how they voted in the past.
00:10:14.000We have multiple decades of data here to go off of.
00:10:18.000And this is how they're going to vote in the future.
00:10:19.000And the census data shows with the amount of immigration that is pouring into the country right now, we're going to be likely at about a 400 million population come the year 2050.
00:10:29.000And then you can go off of that and then you can break it down all the way to actual people who would vote or people who are actually of voting age.
00:10:38.000So In all actuality, they will have somewhere around 30 million or 35 million people who are of voting age more than Republicans will, and probably 25 of which will vote based on the 40% voter turnout that we had in the 2016 election.
00:11:00.000Right now, we're looking at only about a, I would say, maybe 6 million or so, 5 or 6 million, 5 million or so, 5 million or so, I think more.
00:11:12.000Actual voters of voting age than Republicans do.
00:11:41.000But I mean, it is just simple arithmetic, as you said.
00:11:44.000Well, yeah, and this is a problem that nobody's talking about for fear of being called racist or whatever.
00:11:49.000But I mean, this was really something that I woke up to in the 2016 election.
00:11:54.000I think a lot of maybe more normal Republicans, more mainstream perhaps Republicans, can relate to this.
00:12:01.000Where if you looked at the 2016 electoral map and you looked at what states Donald Trump needed to win, what states do Republicans need to win a national election for the White House or for the Senate?
00:12:13.000And you looked at increasingly this blue wall of states that are impossible to win.
00:12:18.000Every year, there's more states added to that list.
00:12:21.000Whereas maybe 10 years ago, it was the East Coast, or maybe 20 years ago, 25 years ago, it was maybe the East Coast and the West Coast, and a few states in between.
00:12:31.000Now you see that states like Arizona might be unwinnable in five years.
00:12:36.000States like New Mexico are now unwinnable.
00:12:38.000Colorado, Virginia, Florida is a razor margin.
00:12:42.000And so I think for a lot of people during the election, this was a big wake up call for us because we were sitting there putting together the numbers, trying to cobble together 270 votes, looking at Oh, well, you know, if he wins one in New Hampshire, or rather, if he wins one in Maine, he wins New Hampshire, he wins Nevada, and all the red states, he might be able to pull it off.
00:13:00.000And then we broke down, well, what's happening in these states?
00:13:05.000And the math, like you say, it speaks for itself.
00:13:08.000When you've got Hispanics, they're not going 50 50 as it should work out in a country where people are making their minds for who to vote for based on policies.
00:13:18.000You look at the black vote, it's obscene.
00:13:22.000In terms of Democrats, that are higher than Saddam Hussein wins, than Joseph Stalin wins, 97, 98%.
00:13:29.000And this is a wake up call to Republicans who maybe immigration isn't their top priority, maybe it's the Constitution, maybe it's low taxes, whatever it is.
00:13:38.000But you're not going to be able to govern your country in a way that is traditional, in a way that is effective, in a way that is how it's been for the past 50 years, if you can't get people into office, if you're relying on an increasingly smaller amount of the electorate, i.e., white people.
00:13:55.000To be bipartisan, to be looking at both parties.
00:13:57.000And so you just look at this, and this is not something that I don't think is too offensive.
00:14:03.000It's not really that ideologically charged.
00:14:10.000This is not some kind of like alchemy of, you know, this is the way it's going to go down.
00:14:15.000And so I would ask you, what do you think our prospects are then in the future to change this trend?
00:14:23.000Because, I mean, admittedly, this is something that's very.
00:14:26.000Pessimistic, where, you know, we barely got by by the skin of our teeth with 78,000 votes in three counties in the 2016 election to win the presidency.
00:15:10.000And this is something that I think we have a big problem with on our side we don't prop up any really respectable candidates that can actually win elections.
00:15:21.000I think that we need to start doing that.
00:15:22.000I think that we need to start getting people who are maybe.
00:15:26.000Be nihilist a little bit, maybe don't want to vote.
00:15:31.000A lot of people have messaged me and said, Hey, you know, I don't vote because there's no use or something like that.
00:15:37.000I think that we need to get more people out there to be registered to vote.
00:15:41.000Like, kind of, I don't know how you feel about that, but I think that that's something that we should be pushing for.
00:15:46.000Like I said, they did 34 videos on this, the socialist in New York.
00:15:51.000I think that maybe we should be picking candidates, candidates that I think are closer aligned to our beliefs and kind of raising them up during elections.
00:16:02.000And then the other thing is just the information and actually getting this out there.
00:16:05.000A lot of people ask, what is the solution in some of my videos?
00:16:08.000Because I don't particularly provide an actual clear cut solution sometimes when I talk about some of these issues.
00:16:15.000And really, just the solution in most of the videos that I create is just.
00:16:19.000Getting people informed because there's a lot of people out there, particularly young people, who believe that this multicultural society of America always was this way, who believe that we were always supposed to be this just multicultural utopia.
00:16:33.000And this is what America was founded on.
00:16:35.000They were founded on a bunch of, you know, a million Honduran immigrants coming over the border wall.
00:16:52.000And a lot of people didn't know that the poem on the Statue of Liberty that a lot of these politicians quote was added 17 years later in 1903 after the Statue of Liberty was erected.
00:17:04.000The Statue of Liberty was given to America to honor the centennial of America, 100 years of freedom.
00:17:13.000It has nothing to do about immigration, it has nothing to do with immigration.
00:17:19.000Emma Lazarus, the one who wrote the poem.
00:17:22.000She wrote the poem and she was inspired by the pogroms that were happening in Russia.
00:17:26.000So, you know, these are things that I think a lot of Americans don't know.
00:17:29.000And it's because of the parasitic media and, you know, Hollywood and, you know, their school books, who are also controlled by, you know, who are also written and published by the same people, kind of indoctrinate them to believe.
00:17:45.000Well, yeah, I think you're very right about this idea that the first step to solving the problem is getting people to acknowledge that there is a problem.
00:17:54.000You know, we're never going to fix this demographic situation if you're not allowed to talk about it or if people have no idea what's going on.
00:18:00.000And I think that's basically where we're at right now, where you go to these Trump rallies, and I've been to a few, and I love the president.
00:18:08.000And I love the people that vote for him.
00:18:12.000But we have to recognize that this is that's a first step.
00:18:15.000We still talk to people at these rallies or we look at the people at the rallies or what's said, and we're fixated on maybe lower taxes or we're fixated on keeping illegal immigrants.
00:18:25.000Output transcript Out, making a merit based system.
00:18:27.000And these are steps in the right direction, but we have to get people to understand and acknowledge, as you say, that America was not intended to be this way.
00:18:36.000America was never intended to be this way.
00:18:38.000And actually, America cannot be this way.
00:18:42.000You know, because you're starting to see some movement in maybe more alt light, so it's described circles where they say that the problem is multiculturalism.
00:18:51.000The problem is that people come over here and they bring bad cultures.
00:18:54.000If it weren't for the bad cultures, it would be okay.
00:18:57.000If the America was multiracial, multiethnic, multireligious, all the rest.
00:19:04.000Because we find that even the legal ones that come over here, even the ones that are voting, even ones that are proud and they love the country and they love the flag, guess what?
00:19:56.000And so I think what you're doing in terms of the rhetoric, the messaging is very effective, presenting it in a way that is not ideological, it's not supercharged rhetoric.
00:20:07.000It's simply saying, This is the way it is.
00:20:10.000And is that going to be a good thing for our country?
00:20:13.000But so the big question then is this nihilist thing, which is the, and you address this a little bit, people commenting on your videos saying, well, you know, if this is the situation where the trends are not looking so good, really what can we do to stop this?
00:20:29.000And that's, I think, the next biggest obstacle to surmount.
00:20:32.000I think we've got to put out this effective rhetoric, effective messaging on these issues, but at the same time, we've also got to reassure people.
00:20:51.000And so, one of the things we've been talking about on this show is instead of going out and, you know, people like to do the rallies, which it's like, okay.
00:20:59.000But as you said, the solution now is to move forward and get people who understand these things into a position where they can make a difference.
00:21:07.000It makes no sense the idea that all the people who know about this should be outside government, should be outside.
00:21:13.000Places where they're making decisions.
00:21:15.000We have to get people who know about this into positions where they're writing laws, into positions where they're choosing candidates in their conventions for their party, into positions where they can give resources to people who are promoting the message and all the rest, backing candidates, but putting forward resources and manpower in ways that are productive, in ways that are, you know, we don't need to know exactly how we're going to get there to understand that we need, it's better to have people in power.
00:21:44.000Than to not have people in power, right?
00:21:45.000I mean, do you basically agree with that premise?
00:22:04.000I mean, I showed the graph in the video that we discussed just recently.
00:22:09.000And, you know, up until 1965, the source of immigration into most of the states was a healthy mix.
00:22:17.000Of immigrants coming over here from first world nations who were going to have an easier time of assimilation here.
00:22:23.000And that's just, you know, strictly based on the types of countries that these people were coming from.
00:22:29.000You have, back where I'm from, you have whole neighborhoods of Polish, whole neighborhoods of German, whole neighborhoods of, you know, you have the Polish meat markets, the Bobeks and the whatnots.
00:22:42.000And these are all immigrants who came over through that sort of a system.
00:22:46.000And they've been assimilated into society, they're productive in society.
00:22:51.000And they're the only ones really that are mixed, half and half, sometimes swing this way, sometimes swing this way.
00:22:57.000I mean, look at Wisconsin and Michigan, for instance.
00:23:00.000I mean, that's a perfect example of assimilation, is that those two states, even Minnesota almost went for Trump in 2016, those are all states that are majority white, and they swung one way, they swing one way sometimes, and swing another way the other times.
00:23:17.000You know, they're not just this monolithic 88%, 90%.
00:23:22.000Democrat the entire time, you know, refused to, you know, are on 70% overwealth on welfare, you know, these just these leeches on our society.
00:23:33.000And this is something that we need to really tell people, like I said, especially the young people, that it didn't used to be this way.
00:24:41.000And we've got to get away from this idea that we're ashamed of being white.
00:24:47.000And look, I don't think anybody is thrilled with racial politics.
00:24:51.000I think if you talk to most white people, or most Americans, because Americans are good people and they're benevolent and they like to think of ourselves as above race, we like to think of race as something that's kind of petty, something that's biological, something that's maybe unfortunate because you can't choose.
00:25:44.000Celebrating the more people are coming here.
00:25:45.000So we've got to get, once it's immigration, but it's also, we've got to get away from this fear, this shame about who we are.
00:25:52.000Why are we so ashamed of being a white country?
00:25:55.000Why should we be ashamed for wanting it to remain that way?
00:25:57.000Does anybody think it's not a good idea, right?
00:26:00.000I mean, what do you think about the racial component?
00:26:02.000Do you think that can be incorporated, or do you think that's, in terms of messaging, how effective do you think that can be?
00:26:09.000I think that people, listen, I like a lot of the people that people have been, I like a lot of the candidates that some people were propping up.
00:26:18.000You know, recently and as of recent, but you have to be very calculated in the way that you say things.
00:26:24.000You have to be very careful in the way that you say things.
00:26:27.000You have to kind of, and I know that the people, a lot of people are going to call me a cuck, optics, whatever.
00:27:08.000So, you know, those types of things, you know, you could push for a policy to ban dual citizenship from government, you know, government appointees or something like that, congressmen, senators, whatever.
00:27:20.000You know, there's lots of things that we have to do to just be a little bit more calculated in the way that we say things.
00:27:26.000We have to be palatable for the broader block of people who are going to vote, the block of voters, and make them think like it's their idea that they're changing the way that they used to think.
00:27:43.000That's how I go about things when I create videos I think, how am I going to make it to where they think it's their idea that they're changing their mind and they don't think that I'm trying to change their mind?
00:27:54.000And I think that that's the way that I go about doing things.
00:27:56.000And in terms of the The whole culture versus racial aspect of it.
00:28:01.000You know, we saw the far left, leftists in Mexico win the election recently.
00:28:07.000And I tweeted out to Arthur Schopper, I said, Man, although you were right, all those Catholics completely voted for the conservative out there, didn't they?
00:28:18.000And so, you know, there's this misconception, I think, amongst people is that it's ideological and it's really not.
00:28:40.000You look at, here's a great example of this.
00:28:43.000Robert Putnam, who wrote the book Bowling Alone, he did research on how racial diversity affected civil order and basically said, we look at countries in terms of how ethnically diverse they are, and then we see how they are doing.
00:29:16.000He collected this data by himself and he sat on it for years because he thought to himself, and he revealed this in later writings, that there is no solution so far to this problem that is maybe benevolent, that is humanitarian.
00:30:20.000That's why I'm no longer friends with the Daily Wire crowd because I went to a pizza party with Cassie Dillon and said, hey, you know, 109 countries.
00:30:28.000Or is that, you know, maybe is there a pattern there?
00:30:30.000You know, so believe it, I've been there.
00:30:32.000But if what we're trying to do ostensibly is to persuade, if we need power, And to get power, we need to get elected or get mass support.
00:30:42.000To get mass support, we need to convince people that our ideas are right.
00:30:45.000If our goal, if we accept, is to persuade people, we have to think what is the best way to persuade people to get them from point A to point B.
00:30:53.000And often that requires a tremendous amount of precision and calculus and care and thought.
00:30:59.000It's not so simple as you're not going to believe what I just heard.
00:31:03.000You know, there has to be some care, and people call this optics cucking.
00:31:28.000White people suck, and your kids are not going to be boys or girls.
00:31:32.000They're just going to lop whatever they have off down there, and they're going to write articles about cocktails made out of semen for a living.
00:32:54.000So they've taken this doctrine and then they've changed it for modern times.
00:32:57.000And it's completely changed our society as we know it.
00:33:01.000As you probably already know, modern postmodernism, cultural Marxism, these sorts of things came through the English department in Yale from the Frankfurt School.
00:33:12.000And it just spread like cancer throughout our society.
00:33:15.000And I think in most universities that you go into, you will see these things being taught.
00:33:19.000I've read a lot of these different texts.
00:33:22.000You know, the whole no borders, no nations chant that came from a text from a university professor back in 2003, made popular and mainstream by the anti flag band.
00:33:34.000You know, these are things that go back decades and 50, 60, 70 years.
00:33:38.000And so these are the ways that they have been changing the minds through manipulation of our society for forever, for 100 years now.
00:33:50.000And so if you think that you're just going to go up to someone and say, hey, you know, this is.
00:34:03.000It never has worked because if it did work, that's what they would be doing instead of doing it sort of a backdoor strategic way and making people think that they're changing their minds on their own when really they're not.
00:34:17.000I mean, if we're going to succeed, we have to look at the people that succeeded themselves.
00:34:22.000And you look at like a major corporation, for example, like if McDonald's is trying to get you to buy their hamburgers.
00:34:29.000And they invest all this money in RD, you know, they don't send out employees to like harass you in a parking lot at a mall and say, hey, did you know that McDonald's is the best hamburger?
00:34:39.000Here's the studies to show it, you know, or like shake you down.
00:34:43.000You're just trying to like buy a box of cereal for your kids.
00:34:49.000It's got to be subtle, it's got to be persuasive.
00:34:52.000And I think that we're always better for more persuasive rather than less persuasive.
00:34:57.000You know, that's, I don't think you lose anything by thinking about it.
00:35:01.000By being more strategic than less strategic, than uncontrolled.
00:35:05.000I think you always have to opt in favor of the latter.
00:35:07.000But I think we've covered this topic pretty thoroughly the messaging and the content, which is among the most important things.
00:35:14.000I also want to talk to you about this latest story about what happened to that Whataburger in San Antonio, Texas, which was, I mean, this kind of stuff just makes my skin crawl.
00:35:40.000And so this 30 year old guy, who later is revealed to be Kino Jimenez, so of course a very Anglo person who should be in the country, comes up, grabs the kid's hat off, throws a drink in his face, steals the hat, walks out of the restaurant.
00:35:54.000And, you know, I see this kind of stuff.
00:35:57.000This, to me, should be a national incident, but it should be everybody should be up in arms about this.
00:36:03.000You see something like this this is a grown man preying on children and assaulting them like this.
00:36:09.000Everybody, I don't care, Democrat, Republican, everybody, but it seems like a lot of Mexicans, a lot of black people, a lot of other people are cheering this kind of thing on.
00:36:19.000You look at the comments, and then a lot of white liberals, too.
00:36:22.000What is your reaction to this kind of stuff?
00:36:24.000Does this make you as mad as me, or how do you feel about this?
00:37:18.000And you can see CNN commentator Mark Lamont Hill condoning the attack.
00:37:23.000He also is a professor at Temple University, right?
00:37:27.000So we have university professors and CNN commentators condoning the act, condoning, you know, attacking someone in a restaurant for wearing a hat.
00:37:38.000And with no repercussions, by the way, it's highly doubtful that he would get fired from Temple University.
00:37:44.000It's highly doubtful that he would get, you know, Not invited back to be a commentator for CNN, it's more likely that he would actually receive a promotion at Temple University.
00:37:56.000So, this is obviously the double standard that I think a lot of people cover and talk about.
00:38:00.000And yes, it did make me extremely angry when I saw it for sure.
00:38:06.000Because, as you said, you know that if it was somebody like yourself, you know that if it was somebody who was a grown man, similar in size and stature, wearing that hat, you know this coward wouldn't have done that.
00:38:22.000And you also can't miss the clear racial element here.
00:38:26.000Of course, could you imagine in a bizarro world where a Trump supporter, a big white Trump supporter, goes up to a bunch of Muslim kids or goes up to a bunch of black kids or, God help us, went up to a bunch of Jewish Democrats and said, hey, you know, and took something, assaulted them like that?
00:39:05.000You know, don't get me wrong, it's not everybody, but you see a lot of this in the black community.
00:39:09.000You see a lot of this among Hispanics.
00:39:12.000You see a lot of it among Jewish people as well.
00:39:14.000You have a visceral hatred for white people.
00:39:17.000It's not everybody, but it's a real problem because they have no problem saying, well, every white person's a racist.
00:39:23.000Every white person, even if they're not racist, well, they are racist.
00:39:27.000But there's the, and nobody wants to talk about it, but there's this massive problem of the fact that, you know, you talk to a lot of people, you see this a lot online, there is a real hatred of white people in the country, this anti white system.
00:39:42.000If we're going to get along together in this country, if we're going to come together under one flag and we all bleed the same color, we all pray to the same God, if that's going to be the case, there has to be some accountability here.
00:39:53.000We're going to handle the KKK, the five of them left that aren't federal agents or whatever.
00:40:01.000Well, if that's the case, you've got to handle all these people that seem to have a big bone to pick with white people.
00:40:18.000And, you know, I think the thing is that a lot of people, because of the movies in Hollywood, and most sickening, by the way, this latest Purge movie, which is completely anti white, and we all know who, you can go through the producers' names and see what their last names are.
00:40:37.000This is what I was talking about, though, because the white people have become the bourgeoisie of communism.
00:40:43.000They have become the race that votes against their.
00:40:49.000Their beliefs that votes against their tactics that votes against them.
00:40:54.000And if they can take us down, then communism can thrive and they can have the revolution that they're seeking.
00:41:01.000But if you really want to dive into it, I actually did a video on this, and I think it's called Black People Are More Racist Than White People or something on YouTube.
00:41:11.000And I went through the FBI statistics of hate crimes because I think since George H.W. Bush, he made it federal law to actually track.
00:41:22.000And blacks commit a hate crime at a 4.09 per capita rate, and whites commit hate crimes at a 1.49 per capita rate.
00:41:30.000So we are less racist than any other race in this country as far as hate crimes go.
00:41:37.000And then, if I also covered a few stories in, I think it's in the Bronx, or I can't remember which part of New York, where they're having this big problem with blacks attacking Orthodox Jews.
00:41:47.000There was recently an attack on an Orthodox Jew.
00:41:50.000He had a Cute, this huge black guy in the video when he did an interview with some news, some local news station out there.
00:41:56.000And essentially, this black guy came up to him and said, You took my house and my mortgage and just punched him in the face.
00:42:02.000And could you imagine if it was a white guy who did that?
00:42:05.000I mean, it would be blasted on CNN for 24 hours a day for seven days, calling him a neo Nazi and whatnot.
00:42:11.000And then I also talked about, you know, you mentioned the KKK, but black nationalist groups, Nation of Islam, things like that.
00:42:19.000They call them, they also call them hate groups, according to the Southern Poverty Law Center and CNN.
00:42:24.000They Posted this graph and they outnumber the KKK.
00:42:29.000The amount of groups, I think there are 139 black nationalist groups in America, and it's more than the number of KKK groups, it's more than the number of neo Nazi groups, it's more than the number of every other white group in the country.
00:42:46.000And if you look at the amount of members that are in the black nationalist groups versus the amount of members in the KKK and the rest and the like, and you can clearly see that per capita, the amount of members in black so called hate groups way, way surpass the amount of white.
00:43:04.000So, but we've been sold this lie that the white man is racist, that you're inherently racist upon birth.
00:43:11.000And, you know, according to the FBI statistics and the per capita, the Per capita hate crime rates, that tells a completely different story.
00:43:19.000And imagine all the other crimes that go unreported when a white person accidentally wanders into a black neighborhood and you hear the white boy, and then all of a sudden you're punched in the side of the head and robbed or trampled over, and people pickpocket you.
00:43:34.000So these are things that, again, it's just information.
00:43:37.000And a lot of people have been indoctrinated, sold a lie through the same academia complex, which I've noted the major publishers, McGraw Hill.
00:43:48.000Who are run by a CEO by the name of Cohen.
00:43:52.000And one of the biggest publishers of school books in the country publishes most of the books for most of the schools.
00:43:59.000These are things that we're being told in schools and taught in schools.
00:44:02.000And I just think that alternative media should be doing a good job to break that cycle.
00:44:06.000I mean, it's the only hope that we have.
00:44:09.000Well, and you combine these two trends here of the textbooks, which are anti white.
00:44:15.000I mean, you take a history class, I got out of high school two years ago.
00:44:18.000And let me tell you, the curriculum was first the white people came and killed the Native Americans, then they enslaved the blacks, then they hated the blacks, then they committed the Holocaust, and then they, you know, and all the rest.
00:44:30.000Yeah, they don't teach you about the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo.
00:44:34.000They don't teach you about the Gadsden Purchase.
00:44:36.000They don't teach you about all these different purchases that occurred.
00:44:39.000You know, I mean, sure, you have, you know, the Trail of Tears and some things like that, but they don't teach you about these tribes were slaughtering other tribes if they came into their town.
00:44:50.000You know, I mean, and so, and they also don't talk about, you know, the Smithsonian data, which states that a lot of these so called natives came over through the Bering Land Bridge.
00:45:00.000So, you know, I mean, again, it's just the whole information, it's the selective information that we're taught in schools and on our TVs.
00:45:09.000I mean, look how many movies there are about the Holocaust versus how many movies there are about the Commissars, you know.
00:45:17.000Well, and combine the two trends of, This is what people are being fed.
00:45:22.000And now it's not a problem because maybe white people internalize it and they hate themselves or, you know, they go through a weird thing in college.
00:45:33.000In 2050, when whites are in the minority and the high schools are filled with black and Hispanic and Asian students, and all day long the textbooks say, hey, you know those white kids in the class?
00:45:45.000Them and their ancestors are responsible for all these racially charged crimes against your people.
00:45:50.000What do you think it's going to look like, folks?
00:45:52.000How do you think that's going to turn out for our country in 30 years?
00:45:56.000How's that going to work out for you and your kids?
00:45:59.000Because I think people tend to compartmentalize these kinds of things.
00:46:03.000We see the textbook thing, and I think we all know that, right?
00:46:05.000I mean, we all see it happening, and then you look at who's behind it, and it's like, of course.
00:46:29.000And they're reading up, and their history book is full of hate Whitey, Whitey sucks, Whitey did this, and then Whitey killed these people, and then those people.
00:46:38.000How is that going to look like for our country in 100 years?
00:46:40.000You know, if they made a textbook, if they made Protocols of the Elders of Zion a textbook, I think it would be comparable.
00:46:48.000You know, it's almost akin to all these things they say, oh, Nazi Germany did this or that.
00:46:53.000I mean, is that not effectively the same thing?
00:46:55.000You know, what if the textbooks introduced in this day and age, because Jewish people are a minority, what if they said, well, you know, first the Jews made the Rothschilds Bank, and then they did the Russian Revolution, and then they did the Frankfurt School, and then they did this, and then they did that.
00:47:09.000And they committed the Holodormor and they did this and they enslaved the Middle Easterners and all the rest.
00:47:14.000They did the day of tragedy in Palestine.
00:47:18.000You know, what do you think it would look like for those people?
00:47:20.000And that's just to put it into perspective.
00:47:22.000That's just to make you think about what that's going to look like for white people.
00:48:04.000They forced them to release all the data and the documents, which clearly show, I mean, as far as this Asian group says, clear discrimination against Asians and other groups.
00:48:14.000I mean, look at the Indian guy who had to pretend.
00:48:16.000Pretend that he was black to get into medical school.
00:48:19.000These things are coming down on them hard.
00:48:22.000And I think that they, I think you're right.
00:48:24.000I think that, you know, this is, imagine what it'll be like in 2050.
00:48:30.000You know, you're seeing all this anti white propaganda now in schools.
00:48:33.000You're seeing a day without whiteness in some of these universities and all the stuff we see in the media, the new Purge movie showing all these white people killing all these black people.
00:49:46.000They tried to time it at a point to where it would start to break right at the time when whites were a minority.
00:49:50.000In the country, and they just broke way sooner.
00:49:53.000And I think that they, you know, they screwed up.
00:49:55.000And so this is, that's a little bit of a white pill to look forward to.
00:49:58.000It'll be interesting to see what happens in November.
00:50:00.000I'm really interested to see what happens in November.
00:50:04.000Yeah, no, you're right about that, about this idea that they have been intensifying this to the point where we're not vulnerable enough to be destroyed yet.
00:50:13.000I mean, that's, that's, I think, effectively what you're getting at is they kind of jumped the gun on this when we were still not out of the game yet.
00:50:30.000But, you know, you bring up the point about the Purge movie where it's white people killing blacks.
00:50:36.000It's this racially charged violence in a movie.
00:50:40.000And I'll never forget something very similar, which was the Django Unchained movie, which was Jamie Foxx and this, you know, this revenge porn.
00:51:03.000And I'm thinking to myself, could you imagine if there was a movie out there where it was maybe like a remake of Zulu and it's about British colonists going to South Africa and just massacring Africans.
00:51:19.000And we made it out like it was a fun action blockbuster.
00:51:23.000And you had a white actor who got on stage and was like, well, you know, I got to kill a bunch of Africans.
00:51:29.000Could you imagine like that kind of tongue in cheek?
00:51:32.000You know, they're doing the Gatlin gun on and they think they're magic, so they're just getting.
00:51:49.000Yeah, no, I obviously think, and that's another thing.
00:51:53.000I think a lot of the kind of normie conservatives, even like the boomer types, probably see that there's certainly a double standard as it comes to race.
00:52:03.000And I think it's very important that we show them, hey, You know, this is how they're going to vote, no matter how you think.
00:52:10.000I think, okay, so one of the people that I think does more harm than good is probably Charlie Kirk.
00:52:15.000I think that he does more harm than good giving people false hope in that, you know, causing all of these 50, 60 year olds to think that the black vote's going to shift massively come November 2020.
00:52:27.000I think that that is doing more harm than good because he's certainly not focusing on the real issue, which is we need to do something about this immigration right now.
00:52:35.000We need to make sure that we're propping up candidates so that we don't have to worry about the Senate.
00:52:39.000We need to make sure that we're propping up candidates so we don't have to worry about rhinos in Congress who won't even let the good lot bill out of Congress.
00:52:47.000So he's doing more harm than good, in my belief.
00:52:51.000And I think he's one of the very few people who are actually doing more harm than good.
00:52:57.000And I think these are things we need to be talking about for sure.
00:53:00.000Well, you're right about that because, I mean, what he's telling people is that there is no problem.
00:53:04.000He's effectively telling people this demographic thing is not really that worrisome because, well, look, we could just convince them.
00:53:30.000He's telling people that this problem that we acknowledge is basically inevitable and grounded in history and biology is not really that big of a problem.
00:54:20.000People can find your content, your YouTube, your website.
00:54:23.000You know, give us a little plug and tell us what you're up to this month.
00:54:26.000Just type in the red elephants in your Google search or your goat, duck, duck, go or whatever, and you'll find all the different places the YouTube, the Facebook, everything's named the same.
00:55:32.000Well, we got in like kind of a fight one time.
00:55:36.000I think maybe that's just because we have very similar personalities, but you could tell he's a very smart guy.
00:55:41.000He can talk to you like a regular person.
00:55:44.000You know, I think a big problem a lot of people have is, you know, some of the content we have or some of the content other people have is it's way over everybody's head.
00:55:53.000He has a great way of taking issues that are complicated and communicating them in a way that is persuasive.
00:56:01.000In a way that is understandable for most people.
00:56:03.000And that is a talent that is so undervalued in the movement right now.
00:56:07.000Because you could look at somebody like, let's say, hypothetically, a Richard Spencer.
00:56:11.000We don't agree with him on everything.
00:56:13.000He's a really smart guy, a really well read guy.
00:56:15.000And I think one of the big problems, unfortunately, is in many cases he comes across as too inaccessible to people.
00:56:22.000And so it's a really great thing to see him, James, Vincent James, or is it?
00:56:37.000It's great that he's able to put out these videos that are five, 10 minutes, and they summarize the issue so well, so clearly, precisely, factually.
00:57:30.000I mean, I just don't know anything about the field, I don't know anything about the subject.
00:57:34.000And I'm not like a futurist or anything, but I'm a big believer that that's true.
00:57:40.000You know, we're about to, and this is the way that it works.
00:57:43.000Technology is about to jump off at an exponential rate.
00:57:47.000You know, it's like we've been going compared to where we're headed in a pretty linear direction for a long time.
00:57:53.000And then very soon it's just going to take off and increase in a way that is exponential as compared to just arithmetic or linear.
00:58:04.000And the trick with that kind of growth is that you can't see, you cannot see around the corner.
00:58:09.000You can't see when that point is going to be, at what point that's going to begin.
00:58:13.000And so, in that way, it is incredibly difficult to forecast, to predict, to stop, to restrain.
00:58:20.000And what terrifies me is I look at the people that are in charge, and they're very malicious people.
00:58:26.000I looked at the movie Eyes Wide Shut, for example, and this is a movie about how, you know, there's this rootless cabal at the top of the world that controls everything, and Tom Cruise gets into some trouble with them.
00:58:39.000And they've got eyes on him everywhere.
00:58:41.000Now, he's able to kind of figure out what's going on because he's got a little bit of money, and he's able to talk to people here and there.
00:58:50.000His doctors, his practitioners' licenses, able to flash and get access to people.
00:58:55.000And I think, well, what happens when all the power is concentrated into very, very few hands, where you're watched all the time, where everything's on your phone all the time, things are maybe in your mind or in your body in some capacity, and it's literally everywhere, it's ubiquitous.
00:59:14.000What happens when you have that technology that projects power over everything so absolutely, and it is in the hands of not a bureaucracy?
00:59:24.000Where there's a king and he has to tell his ministers to carry it out, and their ministers tell people to carry it out, and the functionaries tell their underlings to carry it out, and so on and so forth.
00:59:35.000Where there's, it's really not so much absolute, where you have a more traditional kind of distribution of power.
00:59:41.000What happens when it's technology everywhere and it's in the hands of one guy, one guy or two guys?
00:59:48.000Where Facebook, for example, what is that, a billion and a half people?
01:00:03.000And now think of what happens down the road when you've got artificial intelligence that's smarter than you.
01:00:09.000What happens when computers are not just here, but they're also in your light bulbs, they're your thermostat, it's your refrigerator, it's your car, it's everything else?
01:00:20.000What happens when very, very few people gain access to ubiquitous power?
01:01:34.000Long term wages would rise, increased consumption, et cetera.
01:01:39.000Well, I mean, here's the way I look at it.
01:01:42.000I don't even entertain the economic argument.
01:01:44.000Certainly, it's a persuasive argument for lower status or lower class people where you say, well, if immigrants come in, it'll lower your wages.
01:01:52.000If immigrants come in, there's more people competing for the same amount of resources.
01:01:58.000You know, if there's 330 million people and they're competing for a fixed amount of jobs and a fixed amount of resources, and then immigrants come in, Well, what do you think its basic division?
01:02:09.000The same amount of resources divided by more people.
01:02:32.000I think everybody would prefer to live in a community where they could still go trick or treating because it's safe out, where they could still have a 4th of July barbecue and not get shot, where they could have a school where everybody speaks the same language and it's an involved community than they would if they had slightly more money and all of that wasn't happening.
01:02:47.000I think most people would make that decision.
01:02:51.000And that only can occur when you have people that are similar to each other.
01:02:55.000Doesn't mean we think we're better than anybody, but by and large, people choose to be with people who are like them, and they're happier that way.
01:03:03.000And so to me, the economic argument is a red herring.
01:03:20.000Because You look at the life that, for example, my children might have if I have children in the future, which I'd like to.
01:03:26.000My children might have growing up here, and rapidly where I'm at, if it's anything like a little bit east in Chicago, it's going to look like Mexico.
01:03:34.000So I would vastly prefer to live in a much smaller house, paying a lot more for fuel and cars and all the rest, which I don't even think it would be that much more, and go to a school and live in a community that is like the one I grew up in than to have my kids go to school and the kids, you know, the Spanish kids are speaking Spanish.
01:03:54.000And I don't know, they're doing whatever goofy stuff they do, and it's tribalism, and there's violence, and the nation is not cohesive.
01:04:02.000I would prefer the former, and I think most people would.
01:04:05.000So, to me, the economic argument is unsound for that reason.
01:04:10.000You know, like Destiny, for example, we were debating about this, and people said, oh, well, Destiny, you weren't prepared enough on crime statistics.
01:04:26.000My argument was based on the very simple reality that you bring in people that are different from each other, it disintegrates the nation, it erodes the culture.
01:04:57.000It was always about let's argue from the axiom of what I value, what people, for the most part, value, which is not economics, it's something more.
01:05:31.000In Parliament, you mean Parliament in England or Parliament in Australia?
01:05:34.000I don't know, but oh, flying to England and okay, yeah, that would be pretty nice.
01:05:40.000Yeah, I did you see the thing about the big baby balloon that they're going to fly in the UK when Trump goes there?
01:05:46.000These people are just so juvenile, but we really are lucky to have Trump when you look at all these other countries in the Anglosphere where they've got like a woman as head of state and a woman as head of government, or they've got Justin Trudeau, you know, but I'm being a little bit redundant there.
01:06:02.000We are so lucky to have Trump compared to the other alternatives, right?
01:07:16.000I mean, that's a big part of it, but also we have to get elected.
01:07:19.000A lot of it is shaped by who is in office, you know?
01:07:22.000And so I don't think it hurts to run campaigns either and get the people on our side.
01:07:26.000I think that's a great source of our strength.
01:07:28.000So I'm in agreement that you don't have to have electoral for all positions, but you definitely need people that are legislators.
01:07:37.000You definitely need people that are judges.
01:07:39.000You need people that are the president sometimes.
01:07:42.000So, but I am definitely in agreement with you that a lot of it is the behind the scenes people.
01:07:47.000Because you look at the White House, for example.
01:07:49.000The biggest problem they're having is staffing.
01:07:51.000They cannot find people to fill important roles in the White House that are loyal to Trump and loyal to the principles that got him into office.
01:08:00.000And so, as such, it is very difficult to have real reform take place because Trump may write out an executive order that says we're going to change these regulations and all the rest.
01:08:10.000But if the bureaucracy doesn't enforce it enthusiastically, it's not going to happen.
01:08:17.000And so, that's why, in many ways, you know, it's You have to have both.
01:08:20.000You have to have people that are elected, and at the same time, you have to have people that are going to be at that level carrying it out, making sure it's being followed through.
01:08:28.000So I'm in agreement with that, basically.
01:09:23.000And yeah, no, I'm really enthusiastic.
01:09:26.000About this because as I bring on more guests and people are seeing that I have really, you know, I have to be so smug and oh, you know how much I hate being smug, right?
01:09:38.000I have, you know, people don't like it.
01:09:40.000A lot of people don't like it, but we have to remind people when we were right and when we were vindicated.
01:09:50.000People say, oh, you know, you can't get along with anybody.
01:09:53.000You're impossible to work with, all this and the other.
01:09:56.000And it's like, what I've done over the past year at the ripe age of 19 is with strong convictions and sharp logic, have basically created the beginnings of a political movement that is viable, folks.
01:10:40.000That's the kind of movement I want to be a part of.
01:10:42.000That's a movement we want because a lot of my followers said, You know, we're tired of all this goofy stuff.
01:10:47.000We want a movement that's Christian, it's pragmatic, it's not autistic, it is just, it's all the good stuff, and it's principled beyond that.
01:10:55.000And what I see coming together is exactly that.
01:10:59.000Time has shown that people who are wrong, people who are silly, people who are not thinking about the things we are, they are not doing well.
01:12:11.000But we have a real chance to build a team that is strong, that is reliable, and is on the same page and viable more than anything.
01:12:20.000So I am more excited about this collab than I have been in a long time.
01:12:26.000Ben Anglin says the same pansexual socialist flesh units who want open borders and hate whites also cling to traditionally homogeneous white democratic socialist nations.
01:12:40.000What is the example that they point to?
01:12:42.000Norway, Sweden, Denmark, you know, all these countries that, and by the way, I don't believe in the Scandinavian socialist meme.
01:12:50.000Some, I think True Dill Tom kind of criticized me a little bit because he thinks that I was on board with Yusuf's democratic socialist platform.
01:13:02.000Even the places where it worked the most, and it didn't really work out in these countries, but where it worked the best, homogeneous, so homogeneous they say that the entire nation was like a family.
01:15:12.000It's funny because we didn't really used to get along.
01:15:15.000He said something nasty about me once, and then I said something really nasty back, and then we both followed each other and started retweeting each other's content.
01:16:05.000I bet he's regretting debating me because that's what really gave me a platform in the first place.
01:16:09.000We got to remind Cassie Dillon, at every step of the way, we got to remind Cassie Dillon and her employers that if it weren't for her, nobody would know who I am.
01:16:17.000We have to go out there and remind her she was my best good friend, and we took pictures together, and we went to breakfast together, and, you know, I slept over at her house one time, and, you know, all the rest.
01:16:31.000We have to remind everybody, we have to let the world know when Cassie Dillon tries to pass herself off as some kind of totally innocent, totally moderate, centrist, Zionist Republican.
01:16:44.000We got to remind everybody if it weren't for her, white nationalist, alt right villain Nick Fuentes would have never been in the cards.
01:16:52.000We got to remind everybody go out there and tweet, thank you, Cassie Dillon, for bringing Nick Fuentes, for discovering Nick Fuentes.
01:17:01.000You got to go and tweet that out at some point.
01:18:45.000You go to nicholasjfuentes.com slash membership.
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01:19:46.000I don't want to see any Europeans in there saying nasty things about America just because we have more bombs than you and because we landed on the moon.