00:00:40.000There's also rumors that Chief of Staff John Kelly, White House Chief of Staff, not just any Chief of Staff, the White House Chief of Staff John Kelly, General John Kelly, may be departing the White House by the end of July.
00:00:54.000They're discussing a number of alternatives.
00:00:57.000Nick Ayers, who is Vice President Pence's Chief of Staff, they're talking about Mick Mulvaney from the Office of Management and Budget.
00:01:06.000And Hope Hicks is a dark horse that people are trying to get in there.
00:01:10.000I'd like to get in there because she's the only one who's loyal to the Trumps and not to the Republicans.
00:01:15.000But I also thought, let's just do a call in show.
00:02:10.000It was always so unfortunate when I was doing the premium membership on Maker Support because I would have all these older people emailing me, How do I get on the voice?
00:02:19.000Hey, Sonny, how do I get on the voice chat?
00:02:22.000And I say this affectionately, and it's like, Well, do you have the Discord app?
00:02:27.000You know, some 70, 80 year old person.
00:02:31.000Well, have you started by downloading Discord?
00:02:50.000The other thing I will say before we get going about it, such, so unfortunate that last night the whole show, the whole rant was about the media, about this shooting.
00:03:04.000Because at the time when I was doing the show, the implication was by all these journalists that the shooting in Maryland and Annapolis was political, that the guy went and shot up the.
00:03:16.000Newspaper because Donald Trump told him to because he called the press the enemy of the people.
00:03:22.000And so I spent the whole show tackling it from that angle.
00:03:26.000By the end of the show, it comes out at some Mexican.
00:03:52.000And we don't hear about it ever again.
00:03:54.000Within an hour of us finding out who the shooter actually was, Twitter moments go from Donald Trump and Milo are causing mass shootings against the media to Ariana Grande said this, and you're not going to believe it.
00:05:53.000But if that's true, then I would say that he's really got to bring the hammer down.
00:05:57.000You know, you look at Because I've seen those reports and I've seen what's been going on in North Korea.
00:06:02.000The bodies have not been transferred out yet.
00:06:05.000And I hear Mike Pompeo is actually going to North Korea in about a week to see what's the deal.
00:06:10.000But the biggest trick with the North Korean negotiation is to make sure that it's not just like every other negotiation where North Korea launched or made some kind of overture to the United States just for the sake of buying time so that while the United States is decreasing tensions, they can just continue to develop their nuclear arsenal.
00:06:31.000We'll have to see what happens after Mike Pompeo's visit and what happens in the future.
00:06:36.000But we haven't really heard so much about it since the big summit.
00:06:39.000So, as long as the president doesn't give on the sanctions, as long as he, and he really has to go after China on this because both China and Russia have been softening the sanctions regime, as long as we maintain maximum pressure, there's really no way we can lose.
00:06:53.000So, I would just say, as long as that happens, we're okay.
00:06:56.000And to add, the media cited that it was a report from a U.S. official from inside the White House.
00:07:04.000So, how accurate that is, it's always that anonymous U.S. official we see that's the source.
00:07:08.000So, we don't really know how accurate that is.
00:07:12.000We need to be skeptical with these reports and really be aware of how they're trying to shift this narrative.
00:07:19.000But if it's true, it's a big problem and it's something that Trump really has to combat fast because we know really that North Korea and their nukes, their nukes are their main leverage.
00:07:31.000That's the only reason they have nukes, is so they can have leverage against us in negotiations.
00:07:37.000And to ask them to get rid of that leverage is hard.
00:07:40.000It's not something that they're going to be willing to give up easy.
00:07:44.000And, you know, while we may cast doubt on that anonymous source, which we see so much, it is true that we need to button up that sanctions regime.
00:08:39.000I've actually never called in here, but I wanted to ask you what are the major cases, Supreme Court cases, that you would look forward to having overturned with a new Supreme Court justice?
00:09:22.000His family had been working on Kennedy and his family, his son in particular, reassuring Justice Kennedy that his legacy would be protected, that Trump can nominate effective justices, conservative justices.
00:09:35.000And the whole point of lobbying Kennedy and doing this was to deliver on anti abortion.
00:09:56.000That's why in the National Review, the Cato Institute, all these libertarian think tanks where they're basically agnostic about God, they let all these issues basically go by the goalie.
00:10:05.000I was watching Charlie Kirk on Rubin Report, and he's like, the problem with Christianity is word like, oh, thou shalt not do this, and it's fire and brimstone.
00:10:12.000It's like, the problem is there's not enough of that.
00:10:14.000So it actually, this whole process has revealed the fact that Trump knows where the base is.
00:10:19.000So if we go after Roe v. Wade and overturn that, that's a huge political win, but it's also a great moral victory.
00:10:25.000If we go after it's, what is it, Oberfeller, Ober something.
00:10:42.000But, you know, like the union ruling that came down today, you'll have a lot of surprises.
00:10:47.000The way that the courts work is it's like it's very sudden and then very sweeping.
00:10:52.000You know, one day a ruling comes down on maybe an issue you haven't been thinking about, and then it changes things for a very long time in a big way.
00:10:59.000So, Those are the three I'm really looking at, but there's a lot of damage they could do.
00:11:05.000I would expect you to have been particularly excited about overturning Roe v. Wade, considering the Catholic beliefs you and I would share there.
00:11:13.000So, yeah, thanks for taking my call, Nick.
00:11:20.000So, a good call, another great question.
00:11:22.000And that's actually a point which should be really, really hammered home for the Republicans, for the conservatives.
00:11:30.000If you, and this is something I've actually, I'm actually kind of stealing this from somebody I know who was talking about this earlier today.
00:11:36.000We were in a discussion about this, something I had never really realized before.
00:11:40.000But if you look at the conservative establishment, Jews and atheists and Christians, but they're fake, you know?
00:11:47.000And so that's why you see that the base is really, or rather the elites are really out of touch with their base because the base is Christian.
00:11:55.000Since George W. Bush brought about this evangelical revival in politics, it started with Reagan, but it really came to a head under Bush when he ran as like an explicitly evangelical candidate.
00:12:07.000And so, one of the reasons why the base has been so upset and there's been such a dissonance between the two is because the leadership does not care about Christian issues.
00:13:42.000Well, they have to follow a specific curriculum that the.
00:13:48.000Federal government enforce that the government enforces.
00:13:51.000But issue is sometimes you need to deviate a bit to teach more important skills and parts of the course, like Common Core math.
00:14:03.000It forces students to do math a specific way, even if that's not the way they that they're best at doing it.
00:14:11.000So it kind of limits and weeds out students who are not able to really do it the Way that the standard says they should.
00:14:23.000Yeah, well, no, I mean, that's obviously a big issue and probably unconstitutional, or at least the new majority would rule it unconstitutional because the Department of Education was created in the 70s.
00:14:35.000You know, I mean, you got to realize so many of these elements of the federal bureaucracy weren't created until very, very recently.
00:14:42.000And I would be, I find it very difficult to find a constitutional justification for Common Core, for The federal government mandating education standards in all 50 states.
00:14:52.000It doesn't seem like that was one of the enumerated powers.
00:14:54.000So appreciate the call and hopefully they get to it.
00:15:25.000This is another one of those things where people might say, oh, well, the economy is the most important or this is the most important.
00:15:31.000But just like the family, when you start to think about education, you realize why that is paramount in terms of how we're going to get the country back on track.
00:15:40.000Because once you understand that every professional, as a doctor, every teacher now in high school, elementary school, every college professor, every business person, every lawyer, every engineer, anybody who goes to school, which is just about everybody these days, has to go through this indoctrination machine.
00:15:58.000So it's no wonder, for example, why so many elementary school students are being taught by liberal teachers.
00:16:05.000Because now liberal teachers have to go through, or rather, teachers in general have to go through a five year, four year master's degree program.
00:16:14.000So it might not be apparent at first to think that college education would be one of the biggest issues.
00:16:21.000But once you start to understand who's in control of the universities and how far reaching the consequences are, then you realize what an important issue that is.
00:16:28.000When you think that the people teaching our children, treating us as doctors, people, everybody in the political system, everybody in the think tanks, everybody who's Drafting the legislation, everybody that's lobbying, they all go through.
00:16:42.000So, that same indoctrination machine we complain about, gender studies people, yeah, a lot of them end up in retail and food service.
00:16:48.000The other half end up in very influential positions.
00:16:50.000So, that's common core doesn't really pertain to that, but education in general is a big one.
00:17:22.000Well, I'd first like to say thanks, I guess, because over the last couple of months, I've been moving away from degenerate libertarianism and becoming more of a traditionalist in recognizing that all this degenerate behavior, you know, we can't just let it.
00:17:43.000I mean, that's really the kind of market we're trying to tap into these conservatarians who think they got it all figured out with their low taxes.
00:17:50.000We're trying to get them back to God, back to basics.
00:21:52.000Somebody like Donald Trump can come in and change it from the top down.
00:21:55.000But with culture making institutions, it's insular, it's not democratic.
00:21:59.000There's a tremendous barrier to entry.
00:22:01.000You know, you can't just start making movies, start making music that can compete with Hollywood and with the, you know, you know who music industry.
00:22:09.000So it's difficult, but I think it starts.
00:22:12.000I think it starts very gradually and incrementally.
00:22:15.000We have to look at it not as how can we suddenly change the culture, but just start taking baby steps.
00:22:42.000Star Wars 9 will probably be a total flop because they're injecting this.
00:22:46.000Political and very charged social narrative.
00:22:49.000Look at all the female movies, Oceans, whatever, Ghostbusters, are all big flops.
00:22:55.000And so I think, you know, you look at the Roseanne thing, that was a big phenomenon because it showed that there was a big appetite for conservative culture.
00:23:02.000So I think as consumers, we're creating an incentive for new conservative culture to be made, but we also have to kind of take advantage of the tools at our disposal, which is social media and the internet, which makes it so that culture is being decentralized, which is actually a big benefit.
00:23:17.000You know, you look at Legacy culture institutions, and they're still very prominent, but they're on the way out.
00:23:25.000You'll find that if you talk to people more and more nowadays, they have their own niche interests in music.
00:23:31.000They have their own niche interests in television or, you know, very, very particular tastes in terms of culture.
00:23:37.000Very different than 10 years ago when everybody was listening to the same artists.
00:23:41.000Everyone was listening to Taylor Swift and Kanye and I don't know who was big 10 years ago, Flo Rida, that kind of thing.
00:24:44.000That's what it's going to be like in 20 years if people follow the program.
00:24:48.000In 20 years, you'll have some congressman who, I don't know, like his janitor will beat the hell out of him, and then he goes to the hospital and all the nurses are on our side, and so they take him out to the alley, and I don't know what happens next.
00:26:44.000If Roe v. Wade were to be overturned, would you be concerned about an increase in the black population?
00:26:55.000Yeah, see, this is, I think, where Catholic social teaching is a very good answer to the satanic and just downright immoral elements of the alt right, which drove me away from it, which is this idea that abortion is somehow acceptable because it's silently ethnically cleansing black people.
00:27:53.000You know, look, when we have a multiracial country, it creates ethnic tension, it creates strife, and all the rest.
00:28:00.000But, you know, look, I'd rather live in a moral country than I would in a country where things like that are happening, no matter what the demographic situation looks like.
00:28:09.000And as though that would be a long term solution to what's happening in the country, number one, it's immoral.
00:28:14.000Number two, it wouldn't even be practical if it was.
00:28:16.000So that kind of thinking is just not Catholic.
00:32:30.000So I wanted to bring up a lot of like socialists like that, Ocasio Cortez, who won in New York, and Bernie Sanders.
00:32:40.000They talk about a federal jobs guarantee.
00:32:43.000But I was wondering do you support a federal coochie guarantee?
00:32:49.000Well, I mean, yeah, I think, you know, people joke about that kind of thing, but one of the big tasks of the society is restoring monogamy.
00:32:58.000What we have right now, and this is the complaint of the incels.
00:33:01.000I'm a Volcel, well known, but because I'm Catholic and unmarried.
00:33:06.000But the big problem that young men are having is this idea that as sex has become liberalized, you have the top, and this is shown in the statistics with Tinder, for example, where the top 20% of men, of which I think I am included, are getting 100% of.
00:33:22.000The women and the bottom 80% in looks and other components are not, and that leads to societal collapse.
00:33:29.000I mean, every society that does not have monogamy, that does not get that in order to an extent, doesn't function so well.
00:33:36.000So, yet to some degree, I think the government should be promoting coochie, should be pro, but married, of course, married and for reproductive purposes.
00:33:46.000But we should have government sponsorship of you know, every man a coochie.
00:33:50.000I think that would be under a Catholic theocracy, I think we could do it.
00:33:56.000Every man a GF, but if the GFs are running low, Cowboys will do.
00:36:27.000Okay, so my brother, he plays a lot of video games on him a lot, and she did it that night, and I got kicked off, and then she came in and yelled at me for being up late.
00:37:59.000I was going to compare him to somebody people often compare him to in one of his speeches, but no, he operates definitely better behind the scenes, and I know Trump likes that better.
00:39:22.000That's a pretty smart career move, actually.
00:39:24.000You know, Irony Bro, the most gamer, the most depressed, the most sought after versus journalists, the most protected, the most arguably Jewish of the occupations, by which I mean high IQ, and there's never enough of them.
00:41:14.000It's like, you have to have some standards about who you associate with.
00:41:17.000I mean, you know, I'm not saying you have to be like super, super picky, but I think.
00:41:21.000You know, homosexual pagans is a safe line to draw in the sand of like people that, you know, you don't want to hang out with and you don't really care about because, I mean, they're losers.
00:41:32.000By and large, you know, compared to people who inherit the kingdom of God, I have to say they're taking the L.
00:41:38.000But, I mean, that's the big thing is standards.
00:41:40.000I think that's what, just to get serious for a moment, that's really what I think people resent about you and Sean and me and others is when we start to impose accountability or standards on the movement, people who live by no standards, Standards and therefore can do whatever they want, get away with everything, or, you know, would be kicked out because of those standards.
00:45:16.000All right, so only came on here for a Quick observation about the latest shooting, and then a follow up question as to your interpretation of a particular part of Christianity.
00:45:31.000As for the interpretation, I'd like to, I'm not sure if you've said this already, but it's kind of strange how this shooting, you know, shootings usually play well with the whole Democrat, you know, gun control narrative.
00:45:47.000How, as soon as the libtards got owned, despacito style, with the, you know, Supreme Court dealings, all of that stuff.
00:45:59.000And they completely tired out the full week or two weeks of crying babies on Time magazine.
00:46:08.000And along with the fact that the Mueller investigation is pretty tired with quite a large amount of people.
00:46:15.000As soon as most of their narratives have been tired out and they're getting owned really hard, some unstable guy shoots up some journalists.
00:46:40.000But, anyways, and then for the question that I had was something I was talking about with Bread earlier, which is how do you, what's the word, reconcile both God's plan and free will of humans?
00:46:56.000Yeah, well, we have free will, of course, but.
00:47:01.000You know, I mean, it's one of the most often questions I get asked by friends and family.
00:47:08.000A lot of people actually, you'd be surprised to ask me this question.
00:47:10.000It's one of their biggest qualms about Christianity is that people will say, well, if God has a plan, if there is an existing omnipotent, omniscient being, well, then how can we be truly said to have free will?
00:47:21.000And this is actually much better explained by C.S. Lewis in Mere Christianity.
00:47:27.000And basically, you have to understand God as fourth dimensional in the sense that God is present.
00:47:34.000Just as he is in this present moment, he is also present in the future and in the past.
00:47:39.000You know, in the same way that you could say that I am in this room or, you know, whatever, or I am over there and I go other places, God is always in all places at all times.
00:47:51.000And so that he is aware of what happens in the future and the past and is also present in them doesn't mean that he's deciding what's happening, you know, in the sense that, like, I can watch a movie and just because.
00:48:04.000Just because I know what the ending is doesn't mean that the characters in this hypothetical place didn't know what happened.
00:48:10.000I can read a history book, and just because I knew what was going to happen, what inevitably might have happened, doesn't mean that choice led up to it.
00:48:17.000So I think that if you look at God, God acts in the world a lot.
00:48:25.000I think that the reason that you have evil is because people have free will, but I don't think that denies that inevitably people are directed towards an ultimate end.
00:48:44.000I didn't really expect you to fully answer it because these are definitely a lot of hard questions that I've been thinking about for myself with a while.
00:48:51.000And you recommended Mere Christianity.
00:49:13.000I interpret it as basically like an introduction to Christianity for people who are maybe skeptical about it.
00:49:21.000So he starts out by explaining kind of a justification for the existence of God by explaining that we all have some degree of a conscience.
00:49:30.000We all have some degree of a moral code that is internal, that we weren't taught, that is kind of intuitive to us.
00:49:40.000His beginnings for an explanation for why God, why Christianity is sensible and explaining what it means.
00:49:46.000And so he explains it pretty well in layman's terms for people to understand.
00:49:51.000And obviously, from a Catholic perspective, why it's good, why it's sensible.
00:49:55.000And it's been like a year and a half since I've read it.
00:49:58.000But I remember it was one of those books that really took me from having a lot of questions about things and a lot of misconceptions about it to really getting kind of a foundational understanding of the religion and why it's not sky daddy stuff, why there is something.
00:50:14.000About this religion that's different, that's special, that makes sense, and all of that.
00:50:28.000You should check out, because I've got it on my bookshelf up there, you should also check out G.K. Chesterton, literally anything by Chesterton.
00:52:03.000Yeah, well, Canada and Australia are in a particular dire situation because you have this unfettered migration, but at the same time, it has all of the worst things going forward at the same time.
00:52:16.000The strengths that you could attribute to Europe are the fact that they have an ancient source of identity.
00:52:21.000They have a long tradition of revolutions and fringe politics.
00:52:26.000So you could see something happening in Italy happening in many other countries, and that plays on their strengths.
00:52:33.000In Canada and Australia, you don't have that strong heritage because obviously these are like transplanted societies.
00:52:41.000You also have these brutal hate speech laws, so that like fringe political parties could never thrive.
00:52:47.000You also have a situation that's much more dire than in Europe.
00:52:50.000I think the percentage of non whites is much higher in Australia and Canada than in most countries in Europe.
00:52:55.000And so you look at a picture like that, it's very bleak.
00:53:00.000Well, it's interesting here because like I'm in one of our capitals, and between Melbourne and Sydney, it's mostly.
00:53:08.000One particular ethnic group that's being brought in at the glee of our government.
00:53:14.000And I'm sure they're getting some kind of free trade deals out of it, but it's predominantly Chinese, ethnic Chinese.
00:53:19.000And we have our former prime minister now going ahead and, you know, when he was in office in the 90s and stuff like that, he was talking, he was ragging on a controversial political figure that came into the parliament and said, you know, Australia's going to be swamped by Asia.
00:53:35.000And now he's, you know, 2018, and he's going ahead and saying, we're being swamped by Asia.
00:54:18.000So it's, I don't really know the situation too well in Australia or in New Zealand or Canada, but I know you guys are much further behind than we are with Trump or much further behind than some of the European countries where they at least have dissident parties that are rising.
00:54:34.000Is there anything comparable in Australia where, you know, is there like a resistance growing?
00:54:43.000We've got a controversial figure that's been in and out of Parliament since around the 90s, this lady, a redhead lady, Pauline Hansen.
00:54:51.000Who has quite a controversial following from the media, of course.
00:54:57.000And, you know, we basically got the same thing as in the States, where the two major parties, we've either got the left or the pretend right.
00:55:37.000I don't really see a solution politically.
00:55:40.000I would imagine that this place is going to only see a solution when it gets bad, you know, and I'm sure it will because immigration is only concentrated in metropolitan CBD areas.
00:55:50.000It's not going out into the regional areas at all in Australia because the infrastructure is just not there to support it, nor is it in the cities.
00:55:57.000Yeah, and the problem with Chinese immigration as opposed to Muslim and Mexican migration is almost a gradient where.
00:56:03.000What's actually interesting is that Chinese immigration will probably go on a lot longer and a lot less contested because it's not violent.
00:56:11.000It's not as violent as immigration from Mexico or immigration from North Africa.
00:56:15.000And so I think what you see is that Muslim immigration is very visible.
00:56:20.000It affects you in very visceral ways because it's crime, it's rape, it's terrorism, it's murders.
00:56:26.000And so people are much more likely to say, okay, we've had enough of these people.
00:56:31.000In America, to a lesser extent, I mean, You've got MS-13, you've got gangs, you've got drug violence, but for the most part, if you're looking at the vast majority of people who will feel Mexican immigration, it's just like they speak a different language.
00:56:44.000They're in the schools, and it's just difference.
00:56:46.000I mean, they do bring a lot of these problems, but to a lesser extent than Europe.
00:56:49.000And then Chinese immigration, you see a lot of Asian immigration in Canada and Australia, you don't see that same reaction.
00:56:56.000So acceleration is much more difficult there.
00:56:59.000So I don't have the answers for Australia.
00:57:21.000But we're looking around the Whitlam government and his senior Jewish advisor, from what I understand, and a guy that he put in charge of immigration who was married to a Jewish woman before he decided to leave her for a gay Asian man.
00:57:38.000Some weird stuff, man, and it all got changed.
00:57:41.000They threw out the White Australia policy, even though the majority of the population did not want that to go.
00:57:47.000What was historically a pan European immigration policy had flipped in the matter of one government without a referendum, without any kind of public input.
00:58:00.000Now we're seeing the fruits of that now, and it's quite scary.
00:58:04.000We've got all these African gangs in Melbourne that are killing people, and judges are giving them community sentences of 80 hours.
00:58:45.000Because, you know, the people who oversaw the Hart Seller Act, for example, they promised us when they got it passed that it would not change the demographic composition.
00:58:53.000It would not lead to an influx in immigrants.
00:58:55.000But you look at the people that enforced the laws over the years, the people that presided over the takeover, and these were people who did not have love for the people and people who benefited actually from immigration.
00:59:07.000Because, of course, if America is not a white country, if Australia is not a white country, if Britain is not an English, Welsh, Scot, and Irish country, And there's not that strong national identity.
00:59:19.000Well, then guess who else gets to stay?
00:59:27.000There's no, you know, possibility that any kind of strong national sentiment could rise against an outsider like white bodies or rather white blood cells attacking an infection, some invasion of the body.
00:59:40.000That could never happen if there was no national identity.
00:59:43.000That could never happen if the country's just as Chinese as it is Australian, you know?
00:59:51.000We're in for some tough times ahead, but I've got faith that we're all going to come out, you know, on the other, or at least our kids anyway.
01:02:05.000I mean, you have to have military parity with Russia for the sake of, you know, if you look at the security dilemma in international relations, it's just theoretically it has to be there.
01:02:15.000But there's no reason why the Germans shouldn't be able to field a military of their own that's competent at this point.
01:02:28.000I mean, we also have troops like all over Europe anyway, so it's like, you know, why do we need specifically troops in Germany?
01:02:34.000I think it's interesting because, you know, we have this upcoming meeting with Russia, but we also are going to have a NATO conference pretty soon.
01:02:42.000I could definitely see this being used as Trump trying to use this as a bargaining chip, say, hey, I mean, if you're not going to increase your spending, we're going to pull our troops out of Germany.
01:02:52.000And oh, by the way, we want to bring Russia back into the group of eight instead of the group of seven.
01:02:59.000It really is four dimensional chess when you look at he wants to resolve Syria and Iran with Russia.
01:03:04.000Could be also looked at as a bargaining chip in that regard as well, where these, and this is where Trump is really smart because he understands our assets and he knows how to make them work for us.
01:03:15.000Where at once he can go to Brussels for the NATO meeting before the meeting with Putin and say, if you don't start paying your fair share, if you don't start, or rather stop killing us on trade, then we're going to bring back our troops because we're getting ripped off, basically.
01:03:31.000And at the same time, then he could go to Russia and say, hey, if you can find a solution to what's going on in Syria or what's going on with the Iran nuclear deal, maybe we could pull our 1,600 troops out of eastern Syria.
01:03:42.000Maybe we could pull some troops out of Germany or Italy or what have you.
01:03:46.000So I think that I really trust the deal making.
01:12:34.000So, why is it that an historical event, just like the Armenian genocide or just like any other genocide, an historical event, if you say, not that it didn't happen, if you say, well, it didn't happen the way they say it did, it didn't happen.
01:12:47.000You know, like Ellie Wiesel said, where he said there were masturbation machines and roller coasters into the like crazy stuff.
01:12:57.000But if you say, oh, well, this iteration of the story is maybe not historically accurate, or maybe there's evidence that goes against it, you're suddenly Adolf Hitler himself.
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