00:00:15.000We lost the necktie for tonight, and we'll be doing a lot of questions on the live chat.
00:00:21.000So if you ever wanted to just hang out with Nick, you ever just wanted to chill with Nick, I'll be in the live chat at about the half hour mark after I take your questions on Twitter, of course.
00:03:37.000Other things that were going on, I saw yesterday, I saw yesterday, if you guys were watching Lucian Wintrich's live stream, he did his live stream yesterday evening after I had done my show.
00:03:49.000And he was talking about how Milo's free speech week, which we talked about last night, is over.
00:03:55.000That everybody that's in the loop has basically said it's canceled, it's over.
00:04:00.000And certainly the Berkeley Patriot, that's the student organization that's organizing this event, they've reached out to press and said it's canceled.
00:04:08.000Hang on, I got an eyebrow here that's hanging right in my field of vision.
00:04:23.000Ann Coulter confirmed to the Associated Press that she's not going.
00:04:26.000Steve Bannon's confirmed that he's not going.
00:04:28.000All the other headliners are not going.
00:04:30.000It looks like there's only four confirmed speakers right now.
00:04:34.000And so Lucian was on the live stream with Ali Akbar last night talking about how this was basically just a meltdown, that Milo had been bluffing the whole time, basically using Steve Bannon's name, using Ann Coulter's name, in the hopes that they would never have to show up, in the hopes that the entire thing would be blocked or, you know, whatever by Berkeley, and so that they would never have to come out anyways.
00:04:59.000They just lent him their names in the hope that this bluff would pay off, and so that either.
00:05:05.000Either it would go through or either they would have to cancel it and it would look like horrible press or whatever.
00:05:12.000Obviously, Berkeley called their bluff and now they just look like a bunch of fools.
00:05:16.000Or not the speakers, but Milo Inc. does.
00:05:18.000So Lucian went on the live stream yesterday and basically said you have to really feel bad for all the young college kids who don't have any money, who had to eat plane tickets and hotel reservations, people that are in school, that are on a budget.
00:05:34.000Maybe they have a job, maybe they don't.
00:05:35.000They're strapped with college loan debt.
00:05:38.000And Milo promises them they're going to be able to see Steve Bannon and Ann Coulter and Milo and Cernovich.
00:05:43.000And they spend all this money on plane tickets, all this money on hotel reservations.
00:05:48.000They make all kinds of accommodations.
00:05:51.000And Milo had known from the beginning that that was going to happen.
00:05:55.000And they were just blowing their money.
00:05:56.000And so I really respect what Lucian did.
00:05:58.000And, you know, I don't always agree with Lucian.
00:06:00.000I know that he got into a fight with James Alsop.
00:06:03.000In my opinion, that was a silly, like, scuffle anyway.
00:06:07.000And, you know, Lucian's a part of a different movement.
00:06:09.000You know, he's part of this new right.
00:06:11.000And, you know, I don't agree with everything they say, but he's never said anything bad about me, so I don't have a problem with them.
00:06:17.000I think he's pretty smart, pretty cool guy generally.
00:06:20.000And I respect him a lot because I think he put a lot of his clout on the line last night when he did that live stream.
00:06:29.000Because I'm sure there are people in this movement, and Ali Akbar is one of them, who still want to defend Milo, who still want to blame Berkeley for this whole.
00:06:39.000And I think Lucian rightly, I think it took a little bit of courage, said that, and he was the first one to come out and say it, that it is unethical.
00:06:46.000It is downright unethical for Milo to continue this facade that is still going on when people have already made accommodations, when Berkeley is now going to invest a million dollars to protect an event that Milo has known from the start was never going to happen.
00:07:04.000You know, like I said, I know my audience is a little bit hostile to the new right, but.
00:07:10.000It's always been my policy with them that if they don't hit me, if they don't explicitly go after me, I don't think it's productive to go after them.
00:07:18.000You know, and like Mike Cernovich, me and him are mutuals, me and Lucian are mutuals, and some of the other ones, you know, we've DM'd or retweeted each other or whatever, and I think that's fine because while they don't agree with everything in this sort of space, and certainly we don't agree with everything going on in their space, I think we share common enemies, which is the Democrats, which is Leftists, which is progressives.
00:07:45.000And you guys know that I don't believe those people are the biggest problem, but certainly they are a problem.
00:08:24.000You know me, I'm not one to fight back or to punch back, but you know, it's just sort of funny that someone like Ali Akbar, who, by the way, half black, half Arab, he comes after me telling me like my podcast isn't any good, but he has like tens of thousands of followers and he can't get more than like 15 retweets on some of his tweets sometimes.
00:08:43.000So I don't know, did he buy his followers?
00:08:45.000Maybe the followers are a fraud, like how he committed credit card fraud and how he's a felon, how he stole a car.
00:08:51.000Look, you know, again, it would be wrong for me to hit him, it would be wrong for me to go after him.
00:10:06.000And some people are saying it's all together canceled.
00:10:10.000Some people are saying, and I think Mike Cernovich said that some of it will happen, but certainly it's not happening the way it was advertised.
00:10:18.000I think that's the takeaway Uncle Steve not showing up.
00:10:31.000A real disaster, and this is going to annihilate all of Milo's remaining credibility.
00:10:36.000I mean, he really, this was a major miscalculation on his part because you have to hand it to him.
00:10:42.000It was a pretty smart gamble, it was a pretty smart bluff because he basically bet that he would put together like the most insane right wing, like Woodstock thing.
00:10:53.000In a pretty fair prediction, he predicted that Berkeley would shut it down, which I think is a pretty wise thing to do.
00:11:03.000If you're going to put together this huge roster of all the mega celebrities of the right wing that have been shut out of Berkeley before, and they're all coming there in the same weekend for this massive event that's going to cost millions of dollars, I think it would be fair to say maybe two months ago that Berkeley would shut that down.
00:11:21.000It would have no chance of getting through, they would stonewall it.
00:11:25.000It was a pretty cunning, pretty smart bluff, completely unethical, completely unethical, duplicitous, and wrong, in my opinion, but smart.
00:11:35.000And, you know, an interesting gamble that he made.
00:11:38.000The problem is, Berkeley called his bluff.
00:11:40.000Ben Shapiro went to Congress and complained.
00:11:43.000He went and did his little yappy thing where he puts on the yarmulke, and him and the Munchkin Guild go down to Congress and they say, You know, nobody's giving all these Zionists free speech.
00:11:54.000Nobody's giving me free speech to talk about ethnic cleansing of Palestinians.
00:12:17.000Now, the problem is not only does he look like a con man in the eyes of probably half of his followers, half of his followers will say it's Berkeley, you know, it's safe space culture and all that nonsense.
00:12:30.000And the other half will say, like, you lied.
00:12:33.000It's obvious what you tried to do, and now we're out money and everything else.
00:12:38.000And so this will torpedo any of the credibility that he sought to maintain, which is kind of a shame because, you know, I didn't like what Reagan Battalion did to him initially when they launched that video of him.
00:12:50.000Where he said that pedophilia was sometimes okay for homosexuals.
00:12:55.000And I didn't agree with the way that whole thing transpired, where CPAC dropped him, he got fired from Breitbart, they pulled his book because of this video that had been on the internet for a long time.
00:13:24.000But then we saw what he started to do with all the money that he got.
00:13:27.000He got like $15 million from the Mercer family, and he was supposed to have that privilege grant, which was $250,000.
00:13:34.000He was supposed to have this college tour, this free speech week, and just one after the other, it's all sort of fallen through.
00:13:42.000And there was an article in Playboy that came out today that said that he's got like a drug problem, he's got a partying problem.
00:13:49.000They had to have an intervention with him in Alaska because he was missing media appearances because of all the partying and everything else.
00:13:57.000They said that when he went down to InfoWars in Texas, this is from Playboy.
00:14:01.000They went down to InfoWars in Texas, and Milo had to bankroll the whole trip because they were out of money.
00:14:06.000They spent it all on, you know, God knows what clothes and cars and everything else.
00:14:12.000And you have to look at the situation where this is a person, and Lee Stranahan did a live stream about this, and I sort of agreed with him.
00:14:20.000He said that Milo is a person who is damaged.
00:14:22.000And, you know, that's sort of a meme, but he's damaged goods, he's got some unresolved issues.
00:14:27.000And I think that became pretty clear with that whole episode with Reagan Battalion that he saw himself as some kind of proud villain because he was sexually abused.
00:15:11.000They're using him essentially as a vehicle for their movement or whatever you want to call it.
00:15:17.000And as a result, they've fed into his worst extremes, his most self destructive tendencies, which are the partying, the ego, the glamorous lifestyle, the flashiness, and all of that.
00:15:48.000You'd expect this sort of thing in Hollywood, not in news media.
00:15:53.000But I guess now that news media has sort of become a lot like Hollywood, you do see that where someone who is so clearly, desperately in need of assistance, of like real support and help, is instead being used and abused and pushed to a breaking point with this sort of degenerate.
00:16:12.000An extreme behavior, this manic behavior, it can't go on much longer.
00:16:17.000And Lee Strana had said, Milo will die if this isn't resolved soon.
00:16:23.000And so, in that regard, I look differently on my encounter with Milo because now I understand that it wasn't like he blew me off because, and I'm still pissed about that, you know, and I still think I deserve an apology for that.
00:16:38.000Whether or not you have issues, you're still responsible if you're going to bring other people into your madness, but.
00:16:45.000You know, I can sort of wrap my head around that.
00:16:48.000It would be one thing if I said something that was controversial and he blew me off, which would be hypocritical because he made his whole career off of being offensive and he would blow me off for that.
00:16:58.000I would say that's different than him not having his life together, that it's in shambles because people are messing up his head.
00:17:08.000You know, I think that would be different.
00:17:09.000Again, there would still be responsibility.
00:17:11.000I still would not be over that, but at least you can wrap your head around that.
00:17:46.000This is, and Lucian said this, this is the boy who cried wolf.
00:17:50.000If Milo says we're going to have this big thing, and Lord knows he's got the credibility that he's traveled to all the campuses, he's done all the events at no cost to these student groups.
00:18:01.000He's sort of the figurehead of this event style.
00:18:05.000And he was supposed to show up with everybody, and it was supposed to be this big thing.
00:18:09.000They were ready to put out a million dollars.
00:18:11.000They still might, just as a precaution.
00:18:13.000Do you think colleges are going to be so willing to host events like this in the future?
00:18:50.000You have all this money, $15 million, being dashed away on someone with issues who wants designer shoes and a gold Tesla for his black boyfriend.
00:19:03.000I mean, it just makes you hang your head a little bit.
00:19:06.000I'm over here scrimping and saving what I can to buy books.
00:19:26.000If I got the $50 million, you know, God knows what could happen, but I'm over here scrimping and saving my $500 from UPS, economizing on which books to buy.
00:19:38.000I got to buy the abridged version of Decline of the West by Spengler and not the full two part series.
00:19:44.000I got to buy the abridged Summa Theologica and not the whole thing by Aquinas and on and on and on.
00:19:57.000I got to go to Taco Bell and not order the premium tacos or the supreme tacos.
00:20:02.000And then you see someone like Milo with no ideology, no conviction, doesn't know what he's talking about, doesn't care what he's talking about.
00:20:11.000Throwing every opportunity and all this money away.
00:20:39.000Because then he can go home and he has a private fortune of, Of almost a million dollars from his life in tech, and he can retreat to his mansion in Miami with his boyfriends and his parties and everything else.
00:20:53.000But for all of us, for all the little people, for all the sorry people, if it doesn't change, if that money doesn't go to political ends that make things better, everything we care about goes away.
00:21:06.000Our children will be discriminated against or beaten up or killed, or their children will.
00:21:33.000And they'll never know what it's like to have a beautiful life that you love, that's your life partner, and to have beautiful kids, have a big family in a big house on a hill in nature.
00:21:43.000They just won't have that if we don't get our stuff together.
00:21:47.000And you see all these resources being poured into like a frat boy who's just blowing it all because he has mommy and daddy issues.
00:22:30.000We are making heavy sacrifices to make this happen.
00:22:33.000We are making a huge gamble, financial, personal, and everything else.
00:22:38.000And I think we're doing a lot with a little.
00:22:40.000But, I mean, when you see all this money that's just being flushed down the toilet, just being set on fire, it's just a little bit disheartening because.
00:22:51.000You know, you see how much we're struggling.
00:22:52.000And, you know, I don't, I'm not like complaining about that.
00:22:55.000I think there's an element to that that's almost preferable, that's almost desirable.
00:22:59.000Whereas I think if you're putting that together yourself, laying every brick yourself, it's making you stronger, it's making you smarter, it's making you appreciate what you're building.
00:23:38.000I think, though, this will ultimately be a triumph for us.
00:23:42.000And it's been sort of a Faustian bargain with him, where he sold his soul, he sold his convictions and everything else for money and fame, and that will consume him in a very poetic way.
00:23:56.000And ultimately, I think that that is a warning signal to us, but also it gives us a great opportunity because if they lose their credibility, it is sort of a zero sum game where.
00:24:06.000The alt light goes down and the alt right, paleocons, nationalists go up.
00:24:11.000Because as people move away from this sort of spectacle driven insanity from the election, convictionless, substanceless, chameleon like movement, they will find refuge.
00:24:24.000They will find a real movement, what the alt light was supposed to be in our movement, which is talking about the issues, talking about policy, and we're real people with real ideas and real beliefs.
00:24:47.000It's just strategic that that's what's going to happen.
00:24:49.000So it is going to be sort of a boon for us that as people lose interest in this flash in the pan yelling nonsense, they will come over to our side, which will be a good thing.
00:24:59.000Because the Milo crowd, I mean, even if you watched Milo's speeches towards the end of his tour, nobody cared.
00:25:07.000If there wasn't a big riot, if there wasn't a big sensation, if there wasn't press coverage of him being stonewalled.
00:25:15.000He would go in there just like anyone else.
00:25:18.000He would get up to a podium and he would give a pretty milquetoast speech before a half filled auditorium about the same tired talking points from 2015.
00:26:00.000You get the slider, it's a little oniony taste, and it's cheap, and it's quick, and it's always open, and there it is.
00:26:06.000And that's sort of like what Milo was hawking was this, you know, sometimes it's sensational, but if you go in, you're going to be on your phone the whole time.
00:26:14.000Because he'll be looking down, acting all, you know, small, like he's such a galaxy brain, he can't.
00:26:19.000His head is wobbling from the weight of his brain and these intense thoughts like, Safe Space culture isn't good for college kids.
00:26:26.000Whoa, whoa, my socks are coming off because you rocked them.
00:26:31.000I mean, people know what they're getting.
00:26:32.000They'll show up and they'll go on their phones, they'll go on Twitter and be like, you know, okay, I'm sort of over it.
00:26:37.000I'm just going to wait for the signature or the picture afterwards.
00:27:02.000I don't know if that was ghostwritten or not, but it was pretty good.
00:27:05.000And at that time, you didn't know who this guy was.
00:27:08.000He was just, I thought his name was like Milo.
00:27:11.000I thought he was like some super ethnic Greek guy.
00:27:13.000And then I'm reading the article, and it's like, you know, men and women, blah, blah, blah, but as a gay man.
00:27:19.000And then I was imagining like some fat, like, cuck, some fat, like, disgusting 30 year old frumpy homo.
00:27:26.000And it turns out to be like this, this like sexy, trendy, cool sort of, you know, British European person, exotic.
00:27:34.000And then he was on Rubin Report, and then he had that beef with Ben Shapiro, and we saw those clips of him like pwning feminists.
00:27:41.000Whoa, Kekistan, rookles, and all that dumb stuff.
00:27:46.000And at the time, it was mildly interesting because he was saying things, which at the time, if you were a normie, if you were just like a regular conservative, was fresh.
00:30:29.000I was watching one video, I was just showing it to my mom, actually.
00:30:32.000And they always, unfortunately, they always, in this type of video, you know what type of video I'm talking about, in this type of video where you have Oswald Mosley and it's so dramatic and they do the clips of the migrants, they always use the same song.
00:30:44.000It's from Inception, I think, the same soundtrack.
00:31:29.000And the reason we haven't had that, I believe, is because the globalists know that if the people get attached to any one leader, they can lead them astray.
00:31:40.000And I was thinking about this, even with authoritarian regimes, even with big government, the reason they're terrified of a strong, charismatic, nationalist president or nationalism at all is because they are terrified of unity.
00:31:54.000They are terrified if the people ever see it as us versus them.
00:32:07.000And they know that if we ever get someone that knows about them and it was charismatic and the people trust them and they love them and they rise to prominence, they're gone.
00:38:13.000It's called Unthinkable by Kenneth Pollack, and it's about the Iranian nuclear program.
00:38:19.000It's like 600 pages, and it goes over every problem presented by a nuclear Iran.
00:38:25.000It goes over every type of solution, it evaluates all of them.
00:38:29.000I really like just the process of the book because it's very well documented, and the analysis is sound, and it really entertains everything, every contingency.
00:39:35.000So we've been talking about this for 15, 20 years, and that's 20 years of legal infrastructure built up to get European, Asian, and other sanctions on Iran, and then just to make them all go away immediately.
00:39:48.000You've undone decades of work, decades of tightening the screws to get Iran to cooperate.
00:39:58.000And the biggest problem with any other alternative that Kenneth Pollack makes the case is that it would be virtually impossible for us to make it so that Iran could never reconstitute.
00:40:09.000He makes the case that even if we completely destroyed it, without a prolonged occupation, Iran could reconstitute their program in a matter of a couple of years, which would be unacceptable, obviously.
00:40:23.000So containment would be the best approach just so long as it had the snapback sanctions.
00:40:53.000People don't like saber rattling, but that's how you achieve a deal.
00:40:56.000I think a lot of alt right people are.
00:40:59.000Have a knee jerk response to any sort of aggression or hostilities with these rogue regimes, but they don't understand that in order to make a deal, you have to create leverage for yourself.
00:41:10.000And the only way to create leverage is to demonstrate that you're willing and able to impose costs.
00:41:17.000And that means a missile strike in Syria, that means a Minuteman ICBM test in the Pacific, that means doing things that appear interventionist, that will get the neocons in the West Wing riled up.
00:41:39.000So that's a bit of a word on strategy that if we were going to renegotiate this deal, there would have to be, they would naturally be sparring in the Persian Gulf, in the Strait of Hormuz.
00:41:49.000They would naturally be sparring in these proxy conflicts in Yemen, in Bahrain, in Qatar, and some of these other countries, and certainly with Saudi Arabia, unfortunately, even with Israel.
00:42:01.000You know, I would say negotiation, but understand what that means.
00:42:04.000It means you'd have to create leverage, you'd have to put yourself in a position to walk away with a good deal.
00:42:09.000People, I think, wrongly assume that the Iranians and the North Koreans and the Russians want this world order.
00:42:16.000They want hegemony, they want what the United States has, which is influence and power, and they're willing to do what it takes to get it.
00:42:23.000It's not in our interest to allow that to happen.
00:42:26.000I don't care that it's not a direct threat to American lives, but it is bad for American interests domestically.
00:42:34.000If rogue regimes are able to achieve hegemony or influence where American influence was, that doesn't mean we're an empire.
00:42:41.000That doesn't mean that we have foreign wars.
00:42:43.000But it means that when possible, we use our leverage, we throw our weight around to achieve favorable outcomes in different regions in the world.
00:42:53.000So, Iran is a good example where Iran and Israel are destabilizing the Middle East.
00:42:58.000That is not in America's interest because you have that and that makes oil prices skyrocket.
00:43:06.000That has possible implications with Europe, where you're creating refugee crises, where you have people that are displaced and they're dying and everything else.
00:43:16.000You have all sorts of other concerns here.
00:43:19.000Beyond that, you have American investments overboard.
00:43:21.000You have American military bases overseas.
00:43:24.000You have treaties with other countries.
00:43:26.000You have economic deals with other countries, trade deals.
00:43:30.000Unless you're willing to become an autarky, unless you're willing to become an island, unless you're willing - this damn dog keeps barking.
00:43:39.000Unless you're willing to draw up the bridges to foreign America and become completely isolationist, this knee-jerk reaction to every action with foreign affairs is silly.
00:43:50.000And you even look at the great statesmen of Europe, whether it's Bismarck or - Metternich, or some of these others, Lloyd George comes to mind, they were not isolationists.
00:44:03.000They were active in diplomacy, active in foreign affairs.
00:44:08.000I know that's not going to go over well with a lot of the alt right, but I mean, it's true.
00:44:11.000And by the way, Iraq is not like an argument for every foreign affairs action ever.
00:44:17.000I'll say, like, you know, the Syrian missile strike back in April was smart because it leveraged China into combating North Korea's nuclear program.
00:44:29.000And they think like that's, oh, you totally got me.
00:44:33.000I said that a small missile strike that really went unpunished by Russia and Iran and Syria in any major way benefited American strategic interests, and you tell me Iraq.
00:45:00.000You know, so people are going to immediately question my allegiances when I say something that is unorthodox for this movement.
00:45:08.000I really don't appreciate it because if you could respond to my analysis, I will agree with you if it is accurate.
00:45:15.000If you can tell me, if you can make the case for me why it's acceptable that North Korea has a hydrogen bomb that's miniaturized and can fit on an ICBM and it's basically up to their whim to nuke an American town, maybe they will, maybe they won't.
00:45:30.000If you can make the case why that's an acceptable contingency, I I will hear it and maybe I will agree with you.
00:45:36.000But when I present an argument, I say, you know, this is unacceptable because either there's proliferation or there's instability or, you know, the regime collapses and they use it or, you know, whatever else.
00:45:48.000And people answer with, well, unless you're willing to serve as a Marine, you know, that doesn't make any sense.
00:45:53.000Or unless you're an Israeli shill, like, come on, guys, really.
00:45:58.000So don't tear up the deal, renegotiate it, understand what that means.
00:46:01.000And then what if we do if they try to get nukes?
00:46:06.000They have a nuclear capability, which is different than a nuclear arsenal, which is to say that they have the capability to manufacture enriched uranium to produce a nuclear warhead.
00:46:17.000They have the missile technology, I believe, to put that on an ICBM or at least a medium-range ballistic missile, and I'm pretty sure they could work out miniaturization because they're farther along, I think, than some of the other countries, or at least they have relations with Pakistan, who does have that information.
00:46:36.000And so I don't think they're trying to get a nuclear weapon.
00:46:39.000I think they would have gotten a nuclear weapon if they were trying to get one already.
00:46:43.000I think once this Iran deal runs out by the end of the decade, we'll see.
00:46:47.000But truly, I believe they have the capacity to build an arsenal.
00:46:52.000And I think they understand that that's where their strength comes from, that it could happen if certain things aren't changed.
00:46:58.000If, you know, that's sort of their version of a deterrent.
00:47:02.000And I think they're playing it much smarter than North Korea.
00:47:05.000Because if Iran developed a nuclear arsenal, Iran knows Iran would be invaded because Israel's AIPAC lobby would be pressuring our congressmen for a declaration of war.
00:47:16.000Israel's agents in the media would be advocating for war.
00:47:19.000Israel themselves might strike Iran, and America would have to make good on our defense guarantee to Israel or our security guarantee.
00:47:27.000So Iran knows that if they ever constructed the arsenal, which is to say, if they actually built the missiles and put the warheads on the missiles and they had some form of a triad, I think they would only build missiles, which is far more unstable and bad.
00:47:41.000But if they did that, they would rouse the ire of the United States, like North Korea is now.
00:47:46.000So they're sort of walking the line in this perfect strategy where it's sort of this tug of war where America either.
00:47:54.000Pushes too far and they develop a nuclear arsenal, and it's a horrible complication, or they don't, and America basically stays away and isn't as aggressive, isn't as eager to engage in the Persian Gulf or anywhere else.
00:48:09.000So I think it's actually a far more prudent strategy.
00:48:13.000They don't have the same luxury that North Korea does, or the opposite.
00:48:18.000North Korea doesn't have that luxury in the sense that American military presence, a huge one, is on the DMZ at their border.
00:48:26.000Iran has that to an extent with Afghanistan and with Iraq, but it just isn't the same.
00:48:32.000Like in South Korea, they're ready to mobilize for war imminently.
00:48:37.000And in Iran, I think they have a little bit more of a luxury where it's just a different geography.
00:52:00.000That says everything that you need to know.
00:52:03.000If you really cared about the environment, you'd care about these Africans or these Indo-Chinese people who are burning dung, which is far worse than CO2 for energy.
00:53:43.000I think Germany, more than anybody, maybe Sweden is the exception, has borne the brunt of this globalism, the migration, the free trade, and everything else.
00:54:18.000I'm amazed at how many people just don't look at the history.
00:54:21.000The Balfour Declaration was written, I think it was the foreign minister of the British Empire at the time, Balfour, who he.
00:54:28.000He basically wrote in a letter that a homeland for the Jewish people should be established in Palestine, which is strange, because the Balfour Declaration was issued by the foreign minister of Great Britain for Palestine at a time when Palestine was not controlled by Great Britain, at a time when Palestine was 95% Muslims and Christians and only 5% Jewish, at a time when that territory was in firm control of the Ottoman Empire.
00:54:58.000So that would be like if Rex Tillerson said that there should be a homeland for Christians in, I don't know, in Constantinople, in, what do they call it today?
00:55:14.000That'd be like if Rex Tillerson sent a letter to a foreign head of state and said there should be a homeland for Catholics, or for Orthodox, rather, in Istanbul.
00:55:28.000I was reading a book that contained documents that draws a pretty succinct paper trail between the Balfour Declaration and the involvement of the United States in World War I. Because you understand that Louis Brandeis was a member of the Zionist movement, and he was actually.
00:55:47.000I think he was the president of the World Zionist Organization when he ascended to the Supreme Court during Woodrow Wilson's term.
00:55:56.000And Woodrow Wilson and Louis Brandeis had gone back a long time.
00:55:59.000They were in school together, they were close personal friends, and that's why Brandeis was able to get on the court.
00:56:04.000And when he got on the court, he formally broke off ties with the World Zionist Organization.
00:56:09.000He remained the leader of it as an honorarium, but he remained actively involved in their affairs.
00:56:16.000The chief executive counsel would meet.
00:56:19.000In his office at the Supreme Court to discuss the affairs of that organization while he was on the Supreme Court.
00:56:25.000And so I don't think it's any coincidence.
00:56:27.000And certainly there's more documentation to this.
00:56:31.000But there is documentation to suggest that in exchange for the Zionists in Britain advocating that Lord Balfour declare a Jewish homeland in Palestine, in exchange for that, Britain got the United States involved in the war via Zionists in the United States, particularly Louis Brandeis.
00:56:51.000So the Zionists said to Britain, hey, You're losing.
00:57:10.000Louis Brandeis calls up his friend, President Woodrow Wilson, and says, hey, it's time for the Lusitania to sail into harbors that are patrolled by German U boats.
00:57:21.000And that gets sunk, and then we enter World War I. There's documentation to suggest that that happened.
00:57:26.000And people are going to call me a crank, but read the book Against Our Better Judgment by Allison Weir.
00:57:32.000I talked about this book on my show, I think, yesterday or the day before.
00:57:36.000It's 97 pages of content, and then it's 100 pages of endnotes.
00:57:42.000So it's like she lays out the case in a pretty cursory way, and then in a book longer than the case, she lays out all of her notes, all of her sources, and everything else.
00:58:35.000You have all these people in these different movements, and it's like they have all this baggage, and you've got people like me and James and others, and it just doesn't exist.
00:58:43.000Mo, will you consider making a different channel and uploading other forms of content in the future?
00:58:48.000Yeah, I mean, why would it have to be a different channel?
00:58:50.000It would be on Nicholas J. Fuentes' channel.
00:58:52.000But yeah, I'll definitely be making more content as time goes on.
00:58:57.000I've just been getting used to this schedule.
00:58:59.000It's pretty, people, I don't think they understand it's a pretty rigorous schedule to.
00:59:04.000To be on for an hour plus every night, you know, just out of the blue.
00:59:08.000So, I'm sort of getting into the schedule, and I'll probably start doing some more content.
00:59:13.000I just got to get back on a good, like, routine where, you know, I'm together and everything.
00:59:18.000Got to get a little bit organized over here, as they say.
00:59:22.000Tom Cuckington, Nick, Bait Alaska's live chat claimed Laura Loomer looks like a bowl of shit.
01:00:12.000I mean, that's what I try to do I try to really bring substance and, you know, we joke about the high IQ stuff, but it's true.
01:00:19.000This is not a show for people that are dogmatic.
01:00:22.000This is not a show for people that want to hear me go and repeat slogans and repeat talking points and get people like fired up about the enemy.
01:00:32.000I mean, that's not what the show is about.
01:00:34.000The show is really an expository show to say, this is what's going on, this is the context of it and everything else, given my knowledge.
01:00:41.000Any fool, any dummy, Who is semi eloquent and has a little bit of money and time can do the former.
01:00:48.000But it takes someone, I think, with skill and with the know how to do the latter, which is what I attempt to do on the show.
01:00:56.000I think we do it pretty well, which is to say that more often than not, we err on the side of analysis and evaluating things with integrity as opposed to playing this four dimensional rhetoric battle.
01:01:15.000I saw a niche where there just wasn't a whole lot of stuff because I watched Vox Day's stuff, and, you know, he's kind of gone off the plantation a little bit this week.
01:01:23.000But prior to that, he was a really smart guy, had a really good thing to say.
01:01:29.000But the problem was the delivery just wasn't very stimulating.
01:01:32.000And, you know, I have a pretty high tolerance for that sort of thing, but just very slow and repetitive and all of that.
01:01:39.000And Jordan Peterson's certainly interesting.
01:01:41.000It's not so much political with him, it's different.
01:01:46.000Sort of similar stuff mostly from him.
01:01:48.000I love what he does, but it's just sort of a different genre than me.
01:01:52.000So I saw a niche where you have people that like Cernovich and Bait Alaska and some of these other ones, and I kind of want to occupy a different space entirely where theirs is more activism and political stuff, mine's more intellectual stuff.
01:02:08.000That's not to say they're dumb, but just to say it's a different style.
01:02:12.000King of Savion, could you button your shirt, sir?
01:02:18.000Nick, don't you think this is the age of social media, or in this age of social media, there's a strong need for spectacle to spread across social media?
01:02:28.000I just think the spectacle has to have a purpose.
01:02:31.000You have to have a final cause, the five causes.
01:02:34.000You have to have a final cause for the outrage, which is to say that there's all the difference in the world between creating a big spectacle so that you could insert your message into the public consciousness and creating a spectacle for the sake of spectacle, which is, I think, what Milo does.
01:03:06.000You just don't know the answers to these questions for the most part because he's far more concerned with the hot button issues because they're controversial.
01:03:14.000And I don't know, maybe there's a value in that.
01:03:50.000They don't know what content to produce.
01:03:52.000They're kind of in limbo because they captured lightning in a bottle for a very short amount of time, latched onto President Trump in a very unique period in history.
01:04:02.000And now that the effect is gone, now that that unique time, that energy is gone, They stagnated and flatlined, basically.
01:04:10.000And I think that's what's going on, and particularly with Milo.
01:04:35.000You know, the homosexual thing doesn't, you know, maybe work with these movements so much.
01:04:40.000The black boyfriend thing, that would have been a deal breaker with them.
01:04:43.000But that would have been a reinvention that people would have been interested in, I think.
01:04:47.000That would have been something that people would have, you know, maybe my 250 IQ audience wouldn't be phased, but a regular person might say, like, oh, you know, and that's all you need is someone to be like, and click.
01:04:59.000And that's what you need to get another charge.
01:05:02.000But he came back with, oh, is it safe space culture?
01:05:05.000Again, we're still talking about, you know, everyone's over that.
01:05:08.000Everyone, liberals make fun of that now.
01:06:29.000If it was something like a continuation of DACA in exchange for the RAISE Act and funding for the wall, and there was no chain migration for DACA, I would say that's an okay deal.
01:06:42.000People may call me a cuck for that, but you have to realize that you have to be pragmatic.
01:06:48.000Funding for the wall, an end to chain migration, and 800,000 people that get permanent resident status renewed every two years and no pathway to citizenship?
01:06:59.000Or would you rather have nothing at all?
01:07:01.000Would you rather have continued chain migration, continued DACA, continued illegals, no wall, no RAISE Act?
01:07:46.000On amnesty, of course I'm against amnesty.
01:07:49.000But under the right provisions, it could be a good concession given what we would get in return.
01:07:54.000Because if it was just permanent resident status and you ended birthright citizenship maybe, and there was no chain migration and you had the RAISE Act and the wall was funded, if you had those.
01:08:05.000If you had those stipulations, I think we'd have to evaluate it.
01:08:08.000But I won't make a judgment on a hypothetical until we see a deal.
01:08:12.000I'm against amnesty, but, you know, again, we'll see.
01:08:43.000There's a reason why NBC has MSNBC as a property.
01:08:47.000Because if you had, like, your sitcoms and your nightly news and Rachel Maddow on NBC, people would conflate all those programs as liberal, even though they are.
01:08:57.000But they need MSNBC as a property so that they could have their charged, partisan programming.
01:09:04.000And I think RSBN was the same way, where it wasn't like they agreed with a lot of my positions.
01:09:10.000Not all of them, but they agreed with what I'm doing and my positions.
01:09:13.000But it just got to the point where they needed press credentials to get into the rallies, and I was sort of like an unnecessary risk at that point because I didn't bring in a whole lot.
01:09:22.000I mean, I brought in donations, but we didn't make any ad revenue.
01:09:27.000At that point, I had basically grown as much as I could on that network.
01:09:31.000It was time, I think, for me to do my own thing anyway, and I was already in talks with investors and people since the Reagan Battalion thing for that anyway.
01:10:15.000And if you think, you know, people might say, oh, well, I have a job.
01:10:18.000Yeah, okay, well, I need to make money to support myself and to support a campaign or a business or whatever it is, a movement to get results.
01:10:27.000You're not going to do it by having anonymous Twitter accounts and 4chan.
01:10:32.000You need that, but that's not sufficient.
01:10:35.000So the reason I didn't get Jared Taylor and Kevin McDonald is because you don't want to stillborn your career and pigeonhole yourself as.
01:10:45.000This guy in this very limited closed loop circuit, it just doesn't make any sense.
01:10:49.000And I have no apologies about shutting down people who are trying to drag me into a place that I know, based on my instinct, based on my intuition, based on what I've seen, will be a tragic mistake strategically.
01:11:06.000So, I mean, that's what, you know, Milo, a gay Jew.
01:11:09.000Yeah, okay, you're really edgy, you're really cool, George L. Rockwell on Twitter.
01:11:14.000Obviously, too cowardly to not lose your job using your real name, but you're trying to drag me into that space.
01:11:20.000I question the intentions of people who do that.
01:11:25.000And maybe if those are pure, I question the downright intelligence of people who do that.
01:11:29.000Because you're going to take people that are actually going to accomplish things in the world and drag them to hell because they weren't edgy enough for an anonymous Twitter user.
01:11:40.000It really grinds my gears when that sort of thing happens, really rustles me.
01:11:44.000Because there are people out here that are making real sacrifices, that are doing real work because we actually care.
01:11:51.000And then you have ingrates, incels, neats.
01:11:54.000Which we love our incels, we love our neats, but you have some of these people who sit on their Twitter all day long unsatisfied.
01:12:01.000You know, what's the real culture of critique there, right?
01:12:05.000Kevin Von Schwartz, what kind of Christian are you if you are one?
01:12:08.000I am a Roman Catholic, Roman Catholic.
01:12:12.000Leopold Weber, have you read Cod Renault's For My Legionaries?
01:14:05.000I didn't always win because my style wasn't for everybody, but I was very good at what I did at Model United Nations, and I made a name for myself there.
01:14:12.000And people would always gloat to me because they were better at MUN.
01:14:15.000And I always knew that I was stronger, I was smarter, I was better, but when you're being evaluated by other high schoolers and college kids, you're not going to be able to see that greatness.
01:14:25.000And so it's always sort of funny when I look at all the old kids from the MUN circuit, and they're still climbing the greasy ladder trying to stick on there.
01:14:33.000But someone from Model UN from back in the day said, Hey, you know, it's great to see what you're doing.
01:14:38.000You know, really glad to see a fellow Munner climbing up and doing something great, which I was appreciative of.
01:14:46.000He said, I would kill to have the platform you would.
01:14:49.000And I sort of like, I get why people say that.
01:14:52.000People don't really understand why I might be triggered by that.
01:14:56.000But like, this platform that I have, I've been working at this for years like, every day for years on Twitter, reading books, watching things, honing my craft.
01:15:07.000I mean, I did Speech Team for three years to practice my delivery, I did Radio for four years to practice my delivery, I did Model UN for four years, 20 conferences, countless hours.
01:15:22.000And then, you know, and I'm not saying that's you.
01:15:24.000I'm not saying like, you know, this is not a dig at you.
01:15:26.000I'm just saying, me in general, generally speaking, when people talk about the platform and they say like, oh, I'd love to have that and everything else, it's sort of a grind, you know, where I get what they're saying.
01:15:50.000Maybe that's being generous in the right wing.
01:15:54.000And it's countless hours, a huge investment, many sacrifices, and things that I've done that people just wouldn't do.
01:16:03.000I mean, where I've gotten my name dragged through the mud as an anti Semite, as a racist, a white supremacist, like a dangerous psychopath.
01:16:11.000I mean, how many times people have gone after me personally, gone after my family, gone after people I know, my employers, everything else.
01:16:20.000I mean, it's a big commitment to do this sort of thing.
01:16:24.000People like the idea of it, but then when they see everything that it entails and how you have to just keep fighting through it every day, even though you're not getting many more views or followers, you know, you gotta, it's tough.
01:16:36.000So I would say that for how do you get the platform?
01:16:39.000You're putting the cart before the horse.
01:17:20.000If you have a decent area over here, if you have a decent area over here, and you're maybe like 20% as good as the best person, You will do better than most.
01:17:30.000You know, Cassie Dillon's a good example.
01:17:38.000And, you know, we talked a lot about her on the show, or at least we've had a lot of run ins with her in the past, and she's done a lot of things that I think are unethical and immoral, and she's tried to destroy me.
01:17:49.000Say all of that, but she works very hard at what she does, and she's very put together, very organized.
01:17:56.000And, you know, most people will do that and not get very far, but.
01:18:39.000I think the television, like the telescreens, is a lot like 1984.
01:18:42.000The newspeak, the double think, all of that sort of stuff fits in with our time.
01:18:47.000But certainly the drugs and the keeping people in a constant state of pleasure, and that's certainly very much Alduas Huxley, very much Brave New World.
01:18:57.000So it's a combination of both, I would say.
01:19:23.000Lord knows it'll be funny because you'll have kids trick or treating upstairs and they'll hear someone yelling about brace mixing in the basement.
01:19:41.000For all my neats out there who are home on Halloween, alt right diction.
01:19:45.000The ethnostate talk is obviously ironic.
01:19:48.000In reality, isn't it about striving towards a transcendent ethnostate of white solidarity?
01:19:54.000Well, I think that is the ethnostate, I think, makes more sense in Europe than it does in America.
01:20:00.000But yeah, I mean, I think, again, you have to really think about strategy, which is that everybody in the alt right puts the cart before the horse and that they talk about things that should happen.
01:20:10.000They talk about things that need to happen.
01:20:12.000They talk about all of this without actually wondering how that's going to happen, without actually thinking, how do we draw a line from this to that?
01:20:21.000And that's my biggest problem with these people.
01:20:23.000Is they just want to meme that to happen.
01:20:32.000People like me had to campaign for him.
01:20:34.000People like me had to send Facebook messages and emails to every college Republican chapter in the Boston area and correspond with them and Facebook friend them and make a Facebook group and have meetings and deal with like really not so great people sometimes and drive two hours in a van at night and stay overnight and miss classes.
01:20:57.000And go in the rain and put flyers on doors and ruin your shoes because you walk so much all over the hills of Manchester.
01:21:05.000I mean, that's how that happened because someone had a plan.
01:21:10.000Don't mistake your posting online for real infrastructure, real thought infrastructure, human infrastructure, economic, fiscal infrastructure, and on and on and on.
01:21:22.000I mean, there's tremendous effort that goes into something like a campaign, much less trying to transform the nation.
01:21:43.000I could be a disgusting slob who doesn't shave.
01:21:46.000And I'm kind of, I haven't shaved, so I guess I'm being a little bit hypocritical there.
01:21:50.000But, you know, if all these people have their online alternative accounts, you know, LARPing as George Rockwell or Hitler, and they think it's just going to happen overnight if they keep clicking post.
01:22:03.000And they don't have to find a wife, and they don't have to lift weights, and they don't have to make a show five days a week.
01:22:08.000They just have to sit and complain about everything.
01:22:11.000It gets my goat so much, you have no idea.
01:22:15.000So, yeah, I mean, there is this element of transcendency of having that brotherhood.
01:22:19.000But at the same time, we want practical outcomes for our country.
01:22:22.000And to achieve them, this requires intense planning, testing, organization, fundraising.
01:22:30.000I mean, you don't get there by posting online.
01:22:34.000These people have trillions of dollars at their disposal.
01:22:39.000You're not going to get there by posting links.
01:22:42.000Most people can't red pill their own brothers and sisters, their own fathers, mothers, neighbors, if they have them, their own normie friends.
01:22:52.000And they think that if they keep posting the same stuff on the same websites, that we're going to defeat George Soros or the Rothschilds.
01:23:21.000And so that's the reality check that nobody's willing to say because everybody gets really upset and really spurgy about that when people complain that there's no plan, but there isn't one.
01:23:31.000And if you care, you've got to put down a plan.
01:23:45.000As much experience as someone that's older.
01:23:47.000I haven't read everything I need to, but it's, you know, we have something that is true.
01:23:52.000We're making the effort to make something happen, to sort of put this together where we're saying this can work and this won't work and this is why.
01:24:01.000And if everyone was doing that, if everyone was on that page, we would be light years ahead of where we are now.
01:24:06.000But I woke up a couple of weeks ago and I was like, you know what?
01:25:25.000Infographics or large text or double space so you don't actually have to say anything.
01:25:31.000And so, I mean, that's what I meant by that.
01:25:33.000Obviously, it sold some books, but I mean, look at Milo's infrastructure today where he's got, I mean, really his major asset is his Facebook account.
01:27:07.000It's not like they were uncovering some secret plot.
01:27:10.000Oh, they were actually like everything that's been said in private is said in public by the alt-right.
01:27:16.000So I don't know what the intent was there.
01:27:21.000Huang Zhen-en, do you think World War I could have been avoided, the greatest tragedy of the 20th century and the beginning of the fall of Western Civ?
01:27:28.000Absolutely, it could have been avoided.
01:28:32.000You look at how, for example, like Bismarck was ousted by Wilhelm II, I believe, right?
01:28:38.000That was the, what was the role for him?
01:28:42.000He was the king, but he was the Kaiser.
01:28:44.000Kaiser of Germany, Wilhelm II, kicked out Bismarck because he didn't like him.
01:28:48.000He was the successor to Wilhelm I, who Bismarck reluctantly understood that Bismarck was keeping the balance of power stable and safe as Germany rose.
01:28:58.000But once they kicked Bismarck out, and you had Wilhelm II, who was young and immature and not so smart, and he had a foreign minister who wasn't, that's when he saw it come apart.
01:29:29.000If you repeal the 19th Amendment, you probably stave off the demographic or the electoral winter that will happen very soon because men vote Republican more than women.
01:29:39.000And they vote for the right things like free speech, Second Amendment, everything else.
01:29:43.000So, on the one hand, if you have Repealing the 19th Amendment, you'll stave off the electoral winter maybe by 15 or 20 years.
01:29:51.000If you restore the 1915 decency laws, I don't know if there'll be a huge effect.
01:30:14.000Not good, not good because, you know, although it would decrease the debt, I mean, that's really just a stab in the back to people that have been paying into it.
01:30:22.000My parents have been paying into it all their lives, and then they don't see it.
01:30:25.000I understand the boomer argument of, you know, they mismanaged it, or the basic argument that boomers mismanaged the money and they voted for the wrong people and all of that.
01:30:39.000It seems like we're going back on the social contract there.
01:30:41.000Even though, I will say, though, all contributions to Social Security now go directly to beneficiaries.
01:30:47.000So I don't know if I'm wild about that, but I think certainly there are pros and cons to that one.
01:30:53.000For defund universities, I think that's the only one.
01:30:57.000It would have a widespread systemic effect because repealing the 19th, that would last for 20 years, and then you'd get blues controlling the White House and the Senate, and they'd restore it anyway.
01:31:09.000The 1950 indecency laws, you couldn't enforce them, generally speaking.
01:31:13.000I think people would revolt because indecency is the addiction of the West.
01:31:18.000Abolishing Social Security, there's pros and cons, there's a case to be made.
01:31:22.000And defunding universities, I think there's no negative to that because you'd see less people going to college, less people engaging in degeneracy.
01:31:30.000Less people being indoctrinated, more people taking up trades and everything else.
01:32:01.000I think people are being too hard on Torba.
01:32:04.000He's trying to make a good product that's like miles better than Twitter, and people are getting on his case because they can't say things that will get Gab taken off of Google forever or off of the internet.
01:32:16.000So I think you've got to give Torba a break.
01:32:17.000I haven't seen the tweet, but I think generally speaking, that's what's got to happen.
01:33:23.000I've gone over it before on the show multiple times.
01:33:26.000The plan is to set the framework, to set the foundation for a rebound in maybe 2050, which is that we get economic policies, social policies, monetary and trade policies to make it conducive.
01:33:43.000For the native birth rate to grow and the foreign born birth rate to decrease and the foreign born population to decrease.
01:33:49.000That means you have subsidies for housing, subsidies for secondary education, subsidies for having children or tax credits for getting married or having children, things like this.
01:33:59.000At the same time, you cut off welfare completely and all the illegals and even legal self deport.
01:35:16.000And the America First Movement, I'm not great on the details of that.
01:35:19.000I didn't really look into that so much, but I definitely respect the man.
01:35:22.000And I think if you disagree with Charles Lindbergh on anything, you need a pretty good case, because, you know, if I'm just thinking of like, Random names are coming to mind.
01:35:32.000Alexander Solzhenitsyn, Henry Ford, Charles Lindbergh, Richard Wagner, Martin Luther.
01:35:39.000You know, these are just random names that are coming into my head.
01:35:43.000These people are so smart that I think if you disagree with them on something that's pretty, like, pretty controversial or important, you'd have to have pretty good reasons.
01:35:52.000I think you'd have to read their arguments, evaluate them, and then have good counterpoints and not just dismiss them.
01:35:57.000Of course, I'm talking about cars and airplanes and Russia.
01:36:02.000Nothing else, but just these names popped into my head.
01:36:39.000I was saying that when Nicholas J. Fuentes, which is the name, pops up into the live chat, that is of someone I know, which is Matt McGuinn.
01:36:55.000Before and after it'll be me, but during it'll be him.
01:36:58.000What do you say about those that say Christianity is just cucking for Judaism?
01:37:03.000Well, you know, I would certainly say, I would recommend for all Christians to read the Talmud and get back to me on that one.
01:37:09.000I would recommend, because I think Christians, like, they have this weird thing with Israel and this weird thing where they don't understand that, like, Jewish people don't like Jesus.
01:37:17.000They have this, like, in Israel, this is not, I hope this is not anti-Semitic, as I'm just stating a fact.
01:37:23.000Hopefully, nobody calls this a hate fact.
01:37:26.000But in Israel, in elementary schools, they actually don't use a plus sign for addition.
01:37:32.000They use an inverted T, because the plus is too close to the cross.
01:37:39.000Now, look, you can read the Babylonian Talmud.
01:37:45.000But they don't have great things to say about us and our guy and our guy upstairs.
01:37:50.000So I don't know where this insane affection comes from.
01:37:53.000I had all these evangelical Christians come at me every time I attacked Israel.
01:37:57.000And I want to say, I mean, read where Jesus is in the Talmud, read what they have to say about him and about his mother, and get back to me on that.
01:46:21.000For people to cut themselves off from their connection to their ancestors and their children, I mean, what worse thing could you do than to say that you are nothing more?
01:47:53.000It's never like a woman gets caught cheating while living in someone's house that they pay for and they slave away all day at a job they don't like and then they find their woman cheating in their bed and then, you know, they push all the wrong buttons.
01:50:55.000Because, I mean, if I'm not wearing formal clothing, like in a professional setting, usually I'm just like running errands or whatever, in which case I'll just wear a hoodie.
01:51:03.000I'm young, so I could get away with it.
01:51:04.000It's one thing if I was like 26 or 30, but, you know, when you're 19, you don't have to.
01:51:09.000I don't think you have to have your whole wardrobe together.
01:51:11.000To buy clothes is so expensive, I never realized that.
01:51:14.000It's like $50 for like a halfway decent item?
01:51:51.000Look at what he's been saying since the inauguration.
01:51:53.000There have been some things that have been a little bit peculiar.
01:51:57.000That, although he's been overtly and explicitly in favor of Israel, there's some things that if you really pay attention, you see that maybe it's not all the way there.
01:52:08.000What do you do about rampant leftism in public schools?
01:53:57.000But it's also to say that we're so saturated with sex and everything, and people are so young and people make poor decisions, influenced by media and everything else, that.
01:54:06.000If you repent, and I'm not being ironic, if you go to confession and say, I'm truly sorry, I truly think this is wrong, I think it's not the worst thing in the world.
01:54:21.000It's one thing if you have a long term partner for three years, you're looking at a longer term relationship, and maybe you do some activities.
01:57:21.000If anybody wants to be happy, if anybody wants to be content or fulfilled, you just have to exercise discipline and restraint.
01:57:28.000That's how you find, that's how you, because you start to feed that hole in your heart and it just grows larger and larger.
01:57:36.000You just have to, you have to understand that to an extent it'll always be there and have to nourish it with children, music, culture, art, knowledge.
01:57:45.000I mean, these are productive pursuits, I think, fulfilling pursuits as opposed to something unproductive.
01:57:54.000Coffee is much more degenerate than pot.
01:57:56.000Yeah, well, I don't know if it's as degenerate.
01:59:31.000I take melatonin to sleep at night because I have a pretty wacky sleep schedule.
01:59:35.000That's always been an issue for me because I'm such a galaxy brain person that I just can't sleep at night.
01:59:41.000It's one of those things where, like, I'll be like so close to going to bed, and then I'll see an old picture, or I'll hear a song, or I'll think of something that makes me go, Oh, brother.
02:01:22.000I think because I'm a smart person, I'm sort of like Odysseus in the sense that I'm not, I obviously look at me, I'm not the strongest guy in the world.
02:02:53.000My motherland is the United States, not Europe.
02:02:56.000So, you know, I wish I could say that, but I'm really not authentically, like, I'm not from Europe.
02:03:03.000I wasn't born in Europe, I was born in this country.
02:03:05.000And this country has given me everything.
02:03:07.000So I don't know if it would be right to give my life for Europe when you have all these Europeans that have been giving it away for so long.
02:03:15.000I'm going to give my life for this country, for America.
02:03:19.000Do you feel like having a career in politics?
02:03:21.000Eventually, you know, but I think it'll have to be social first.
02:04:14.000If it's like inconsequential, I don't.
02:04:16.000I definitely checked it for like college admissions, which maybe that'll come across as a little hypocritical, but I feel like that's sort of the tactical advantage that everyone should take advantage of if they have it, right?
02:04:30.000People are going to say, oh, you know, well, whites, other whites didn't have that.
02:04:33.000Well, I mean, should I squander an opportunity because of like a principle?
02:04:38.000I think we all understand that we have to do what we have to do.
02:04:41.000You know, I didn't put on a mustache and pretend to speak Spanish.
02:05:31.000We'll save a little bit more time and we'll take all your questions on Monday that we have from tonight and from the weekend and from Monday.