The boomer generation and its consequences have been a disaster for the human race. Americanism, not globalism, will be our credo. The Boomer Generation will be a disaster in the long run. I'm sorry, Brittany and Betsy, but I just can't do it. You're an e-girl, you know the rule. No e-girls. Who's got the clip? Who s got the clips? Who has the clip?? Hashtag Never E Girls! I've never heard of Bigfoot. What is that? What's that? Who's that Bigfoot? I never even heard of him. And it's not interesting. Have you ever heard of Big Fudge? The boomer Generation and its consequences have been a disaster for the human race? And its consequences have been a disaster in the short term, and the long term, and for the long term. It's not interested. Not even once, not even once. Not even once. I don't... I don t... know what Bigfoot is? and it's not interesting and I just don't want to know what it is. or what it s like to be a boomer. and what it's like to grow up in the generation. . And I just can t do it and can t do it or not it s not interested not interested in it s but I can't in just can t t do it, no can't I just not even don t , etc & n so can t I not y NOT interested, nt c a ? N (not even once ! B ENJOYING CHEERING IT AND NOT INTERESTED ... NO EEEEE YEAHAPPY BABY HAPPY THANK YOU GUYS AND BOBERING ME AND BRADY AND BRIAN XOXO, BRYAN & BOBBIE AND BYAN AND BEDIE
Transcript
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00:36:03.000Very excited to be back with you here tonight on Thursday.
00:36:06.000We've got some big news, some breaking news tonight.
00:36:10.000Another episode where we have to talk about something that I don't really care too much about.
00:36:16.000You know yesterday and I think the day before, maybe it was on Monday, we had to talk about impeachment.
00:36:22.000And for the past like four or five weeks it's been like impeachment and the United Kingdom elections and these have been like the two things have been going on for the past like month and I'm just like dreading.
00:36:33.000I'm not very interested in them but of course now that we have some major developments like of course
00:36:39.000The articles of impeachment which were revealed yesterday and now we have the British elections actually taking place tonight.
00:36:47.000It's a little bit more eventful and tonight our featured story, our main story tonight is about the British elections which I believe are taking place right now.
00:36:56.000I think the polls are closed over in the United Kingdom but the tabulation is occurring.
00:37:01.000We don't have the official results in just yet but we do have exit polling
00:37:06.000And I guess in the United Kingdom the exit polling is very spot-on.
00:37:10.000So you have a general idea of what it's going to look like in the new government after today's elections.
00:37:16.000It's a huge win for the Conservative Tory party in the UK, huge historic defeat for the left-wing Labour Party.
00:37:23.000We're gonna go over the results, we'll go over the exit polling, some of the background, what we can expect in the future, and I also have a very good whiteboard for you tonight.
00:37:33.000There was one quote that I saw on Twitter
00:37:36.000Which I actually didn't even put in my notes here.
00:37:38.000But there's a great quote from one of these British journalists that's been covering the election tonight and he said something to the effect that, and it's a very key thing, this was the inspiration for the whiteboard, he said that what we can learn from this election happening right now in the UK and what we can learn from Boris Johnson specifically is that it is much easier
00:37:58.000For conservatives to move left on the economy than it is for left-wing people, for liberals, to move rightward on culture and identity.
00:38:07.000And that's sort of, I think, the main takeaway from this election.
00:38:11.000I think that's basically been the theme of American politics, or rather, I think globally, what you can see in politics since Donald Trump got elected, or maybe since Brexit, because that was a few months before that.
00:38:23.000The rise of national populism I think is the main story, the main realignment happening across Europe and the United States.
00:38:31.000And I think that quote basically describes exactly what is happening, which is that I think the conservatives, the right-wing people in the world, in America, in the United Kingdom,
00:40:46.000It's gonna be high energy, gonna be exciting.
00:40:48.000You know, I don't love to talk about things that happen outside the United States, but I do think it has a lot of relevance for what's happening in the world and also, in some sense, what's happening in America.
00:40:59.000Of course, we can trace what's happening in the United Kingdom.
00:41:03.000You can see a lot of parallels with what's happening in the United States.
00:41:06.000The most obvious example would be Brexit in 2016 and Donald Trump in 2016.
00:41:12.000Maybe the stagnation of Brexit since then.
00:41:16.000Donald Trump has been stagnant since then as well.
00:41:18.000So I think there are definitely parallels and we can kind of see, based on this election, maybe some foreshadowing for 2020.
00:41:25.000So that's why I think it's relevant to talk about on America First, but normally don't really care so much about the Anglo world.
00:41:32.000But before we dive into all of that, do just want to talk very briefly.
00:41:37.000I just have to bring this up because I know we talked about it on Tuesday.
00:41:42.000The anti-semitism executive order, we talked about this, like I said on Tuesday, I think that was our main story, which is that, and I believe it was signed yesterday, the president signed an executive order that expands the definition of Judaism in America.
00:41:56.000They're now reinterpreting Judaism, not merely as a religion, but also as a nationality, and the Trump administration is doing that with an executive order.
00:42:05.000So that they could use certain legal provisions to go after colleges for not sufficiently protecting Israel's interests, basically.
00:42:14.000They couldn't go after college campuses for discriminating against Jews if they were religious, but if they reinterpret Judaism as a nationality, and they interpret Judaism as inherently Israeli,
00:42:25.000Well then they can go after college campuses for not shutting down BDS and Palestinian rights and stuff like that.
00:42:32.000So we talked about that a lot on Tuesday but you know I just have to talk about what's gone on since then.
00:42:37.000I don't know if you guys saw there was a big signing ceremony.
00:42:41.000For this executive order yesterday and again I read an article from the New York Times about this executive order on Tuesday and I said at some point you know I'm not reading from the Daily Stormer for what it's worth when we talk about the lengths that this administration goes to to target anti-semitism and to elevate and promote Zionists and Jews
00:43:07.000It seems so absurd and almost surreal that it's hard to believe sometimes that you're actually reading the news.
00:43:15.000And you're not reading anti-semitic tropes from neo-nazis or whatever, right?
00:43:21.000Because I saw the signing ceremony yesterday, and it had everything.
00:43:25.000There was a young kid there with a Make America Great Again yarmulke on, and Donald Trump at one point says, Oh, you got a Make America Great Again yarmulke?
00:44:08.000I think my threshold for that being excessive was probably crossed a long time ago, but I feel like probably for even normal people, at a certain point, don't you have to raise an eyebrow and say, okay, what's going on here?
00:44:22.000Because I feel like, and I know I've said this before, but it's so true.
00:44:26.000Every time I talk to like mainstream people, specifically about the Groyper Wars or just generally about
00:44:32.000You know, my view is to kind of clash with mainstream conservatism.
00:44:36.000The question is always, why are you obsessed?
00:45:46.000In fact, you could say it's possibly the opposite.
00:45:49.000Some might say that, well, Judaism and Christianity are actually very close.
00:45:54.000Or they might use a phrase, Judeo-Christianity.
00:45:56.000And in some sense, there's some truth in this.
00:45:59.000You know, obviously, in some capacity, Jewish people, I think, I think maybe some of them are left, they believe that the Torah is a holy book.
00:46:07.000A lot of them it's more the Talmud, or it's like Holocaust remembrance are the main religious convictions, but I think for some of them it still is the Torah, right?
00:46:15.000Which is, you know, some of the Old Testament, and obviously the Christians have the Old Testament, and we also have the New Testament.
00:46:21.000But of course, as I said, I think I said this last week, so I know we're kind of going over the same thing, but it's worth repeating.
00:46:27.000Remember what distinguishes Jews from Christians.
00:46:34.000And they don't just not believe in Jesus Christ.
00:46:37.000They think he was real, but he was a rebel.
00:46:40.000Like Ben Shapiro said, a rebel got killed for his trouble.
00:46:43.000All of this is to say, when I see Mark Levin get up there smirking, and he's got a Make America Great Again yarmulke, and he says, yeah, Donald Trump's the first Jewish president, I'm thinking, no, he's not the first Jewish president.
00:47:32.000Somebody has to say something because conservatives who say they're America first, or say they're pro-Christianity, or say they're nationalists or whatever, they seem to be very, very quiet about this.
00:47:46.000Or, in some cases, they're very loud and vocal in support of Israel.
00:47:55.000And you want to put America first, and America is a Christian nation, and you're Christian?
00:47:59.000Or you don't, or none of that is true.
00:48:01.000And you want to put Israel first, and you want a Jewish president, and so on, but you have to understand these things clash.
00:48:08.000That's a point I want to drive home, because a lot of people think we could just have it always, and we could have this Judeo-Christian alliance, and we could have American nationalism, and hardcore, full-throated Zionism.
00:49:00.000And this is this is proof this is proof why it cannot be done because it's not a good look to be at the Zionist fundraiser saying we need to love Israel more and then to be at this thing saying I'm a Jewish president I want to wear a yarmulke sorry I want to put America first we need to love America and we need a Christian president and that's the way it has to be but
00:49:19.000I would be remiss if I didn't address that because I've been putting it out on Twitter, and I obviously addressed it a little bit on Tu- a little bit.
00:49:26.000I addressed it as the main story on Tuesday, but we saw the signing ceremony yesterday, and there were some egregious things there that had to be called out.
00:49:35.000The other thing I want to say before we fully dive in is just have to briefly talk about this time people of the year thing that's been going on.
00:49:46.000Honestly my plans for what to talk about on the show keep getting roiled or upset because things keep happening You know, I was planning tonight to talk about that shooting on that Air Force Base by that Saudi But then we have the British elections.
00:49:59.000We've got a trade deal, you know So we're gonna have to push that back maybe tomorrow again and maybe we'll do a bigger thing on time person of the year tomorrow but
00:50:08.000I don't know if you've seen this, but Time's Person of the Year for 2019 is, what is it, Greta?
00:50:13.000I've been told it's pronounced Toonberg, but spelled Thunberg we all know.
00:50:33.000I'd probably be hard-pressed to think of a third example, but you know the sort of archetype that the United Nations types like bow and worship over.
00:50:41.000A little girl who's sticking it to the man.
00:50:43.000You know, a little girl like Malala standing up to the Taliban.
00:50:46.000A little girl like Greta Thunberg standing up to big oil.
00:50:50.000It's like, little girls can't stand up to anything.
00:51:20.000You know, it was like one day you had never heard of her, and the next day choose the biggest thing in the world.
00:51:25.000One day I had never heard of her, never seen her face, and the next day it was an international, the biggest protest in the history of the world, climate protest on five continents.
00:51:35.000And she's at the whatever, you know, she's meeting Barack Obama, she's at the UN, right?
00:51:40.000I mean, does anybody feel the same way?
00:51:42.000So anyway, I saw that one, and I was like, it's not surprising.
00:51:47.000This system worships the femoid, it worships the little girl that stands up.
00:51:53.000We know this at this point, we live in a very matriarchal system.
00:51:56.000But what was much more odious to me was the entertainer of the year.
00:52:03.000They picked as their entertainer of the year this artist known as Lizzo, who is, again, the terms of service!
00:52:11.000Community guidelines are so restrictive!
00:52:13.000I might have to do a stream about it on DLive for Christ's sake, because I can't even talk about it on this show.
00:52:19.000I don't know if you saw it, but the community guidelines, they say you can't make fun of somebody based on physical characteristics, or race, or religion, or whatever.
00:52:27.000So anyway, look up a picture of Lizzo.
00:52:30.000Needless to say, maybe you could draw your own conclusions.
00:52:33.000And I see that and it's just like she wasn't even like a good entertainer this year.
00:52:38.000She had one big single, she performed at the VMAs, you know, I guess she had a couple of like big performances.
00:52:44.000So all this is to say I don't think she got picked as Entertainer of the Year obviously because she's a great entertainer or a great artist, but it's because she's a big fat black woman.
00:52:57.000And it seems to me, correct me if I'm wrong, that the people now that are being elevated more than anybody else
00:53:03.000Because leftism has gone so far and even past like white feminism and affluent white liberals and so on, affluent white liberal females, is not just black women, not just women of color, but women of color that also have like another thing going on.
00:53:23.000You had a black female transsexual who got up on the microphone and made a big scene and said, Oh, you don't care about black trans women of color.
00:53:32.000That's like, that's the most, you know, that's the most you could be.
00:53:35.000That's the most extreme, like diverse person you could be.
00:53:39.000Or Lizzo, you know, not just a woman of color, but she's got to be huge.
00:53:43.000She's got to be morbidly obese, you know?
00:53:45.000So I saw that it's obviously political and you just got to think,
00:53:50.000What conclusions can we draw from the people they're elevating?
00:53:53.000What conclusion can we draw about their values?
00:53:57.000When this is their person of the year, and it's obviously not about them being an entertainer, but they've selected Lizzo because of what she looks like and so on.
00:54:06.000What they're trying to promote is something that we can say objectively is not pretty.
00:54:12.000We could say, and I don't mean like Lizzo's not pretty, which I don't believe she is, but I'm saying what they are promoting, broadly speaking, is things that are ugly.
00:54:21.000They are promoting things that are offensive to look at.
00:54:25.000I mean, they're promoting things that are against the natural order.
00:54:29.000We know, as conservatives, something that is so fundamental, or I should say as right-wing people, that beauty is objective.
00:54:36.000We talk about art, we talk about performances, you think about classical performances, classical music, it is things that are beautiful, it is things that are objectively ordered, right?
00:54:47.000You know, and you could look at Mozart and there's mathematics, there's maybe something transcendent about them, but we know that there is something
00:57:26.000reportedly offered to have tariff rates on about $350 billion worth of Chinese goods, some of which had climbed as high as 25%.
00:57:33.000I'm sorry, offered to have tariff rates on about $350 billion worth of Chinese goods.
00:57:41.000However, the deal is not expected to address many of the more difficult issues that triggered the fight, like China's subsidies for certain industries.
00:57:48.000As described, the potential agreement falls short of what the US initially said were its goals, said Jennifer Hillman, a senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations and a former trade official.
00:57:59.000She wrote on Twitter, quote, This should not be described as a trade agreement.
00:58:03.000It is a purchase and sale agreement that does virtually nothing to address substantive concerns of the U.S.
00:58:11.000Mr. Trump has repeatedly declared progress toward a deal that would end the trade war, which has seen tariffs imposed on more than $450 billion worth of U.S.-China trade and weighed on the global economy.
00:58:23.000In October he announced that the two sides had agreed to terms for a phase one deal, but negotiations dragged on.
00:58:30.000had threatened to impose tariffs on more than $150 billion worth of Chinese exports on December 15th.
00:58:37.000So that's why they're coming up with an intermediary deal.
00:58:41.000is basically the clock runs out on Sunday where we would put tariffs on an additional $150 billion worth of Chinese goods.
00:58:49.000And I have to tell you, you know, my position on the trade war all along has been there's really no need for an agreement.
00:58:55.000Honestly, everybody when they talk about trade is fixated on this idea of this grand bargain, grand deal between the United States and China that's going to address all these so-called substantive concerns.
00:59:08.000And the Council on Foreign Relations and the Chamber of Commerce have said that this deal does not constitute, properly described, a trade deal.
00:59:20.000It is a sale agreement, a purchase and sale agreement, where in this temporary deal we reduce tariffs and China buys more farm products.
00:59:30.000But you know, to me, it's like China's never going to address these substantive, so-called substantive concerns that we have with their system.
00:59:40.000I mean, there's no deal, I don't think, where they're going to agree to stop subsidizing industries like artificial intelligence and quantum computing and, you know, other technological sectors, things like that, computer chips.
00:59:56.000Why would they willingly and voluntarily give up making their industries more competitive against the United States?
01:00:03.000Industries that are the industries of the future that will determine supremacy and primacy and military.
01:00:10.000In other applications and space in the economy, there's simply no reason for them to do that.
01:00:16.000You look at other kinds of non-tariff trade barriers or simply tariff trade barriers.
01:00:21.000You know, look what China does to our manufacturing.
01:00:24.000We'll send people over there to build plants or to build factories.
01:00:28.000They'll have their people work at the factories, learn the know-how, and then they build their own factories and they produce the same goods.
01:00:36.000That kind of human capital, that kind of intellectual stuff that is so important that isn't accounted for in tariffs, why would they stop doing things like that?
01:00:44.000Why would they stop stealing our intellectual property?
01:01:24.000You know, so to me, I see the trade relationship with China and the United States and everybody's fixated on a big deal where China's going to come to the table and they're going to stop being naughty.
01:01:34.000They're going to stop with the currency manipulation and the IP theft and they're going to stop with everything else.
01:01:39.000And what are we going to do in return?
01:01:40.000We're going to eliminate all our tariffs?
01:01:42.000We're going to go back to the way things were?
01:01:44.000If we go back to the way things were, we will continue to bleed capital, we'll continue to bleed wealth, we'll continue to lose in the currency exchange market.
01:02:11.000If they're making American industry more competitive, or if it's hurting China's economy and it's forcing manufacturers, even if they don't come back to the United States, if they go to Vietnam or if they go to Cambodia or
01:02:47.000And I think Trump probably knows this, I think his negotiators know this, but I see the constant pressure, or at least the buzz from the media talking about the big deal, and I'm just thinking, what's the rush?
01:02:59.000The right approach is to keep the tariffs in place, or even if there is some kind of a deal, don't eliminate the tariffs altogether, maybe bring them down to a level that is
01:03:08.000Manageable, but certainly I think they should remain.
01:03:11.000Certainly I think we should use fire to fight fire.
01:03:14.000If China's going to use these illicit practices, excuse me, illicit or unethical practices, why should we not adopt the exact same thing?
01:03:22.000Doesn't make any sense to me why we wouldn't.
01:03:24.000You know, we can't have a fair fight, so let's have a dirty fight and just participate in it.
01:03:30.000Like I said, not a huge deal, not like huge groundbreaking news, but it's worth reminding on the trade war because it's been a long time since we talked about it.
01:03:39.000I think probably the last show I did about it was over the summer.
01:03:42.000The good news is we're still at war with China in terms of trade.
01:03:46.000The bad news is why do we seem to be capitulating?
01:03:49.000Why every time do we threaten tariffs do we have to undercut our own position?
01:03:55.000If you remember back, I think it was late May, early June, the president threatened huge tariffs on Mexico if they didn't stop immigration into the United States.
01:04:04.000He said we're gonna put, I think it was like a 10% tariff on everything coming across the border from Mexico, and it'll increase to 25% potentially by October.
01:04:15.000Back in May or June I don't remember exactly the date and it was like the weekend before the tariffs are supposed to go into place he made a handshake deal with the Mexican government to avert the tariff to avert the tariffs from going into effect and have Mexico have some kind of half-assed measures
01:04:32.000Why not remind these other countries that we're the most powerful country in the world and they couldn't exist without us?
01:05:05.000If we actually stood up to them and, you know, even before they gave concessions, even if they gave concessions and just made them feel the pain for a little while, it would totally change the dynamic.
01:05:16.000You know, for example, with the European Union, if we stopped funding NATO for like a year or for like six months,
01:05:22.000And that would probably be catastrophic geopolitically if it was a year, but you know what I'm saying.
01:05:27.000If we let the budget lapse for a little while, just long enough to let people start to panic, just long enough for people to start to feel the pain or feel threatened by Russia or something like that, the attitude would change overnight.
01:05:39.000You know, we go to these NATO summits and they laugh at us.
01:05:41.000Well, let's stop funding NATO for a month.
01:06:11.000Broadly speaking, that's what has to happen, but we keep trying to... we want to just revert back to the status quo.
01:06:17.000Everybody, I think, the attitude is always, we have to make a deal, we have to sort things out, we have to smooth things over, bring people together.
01:06:24.000Let's keep people apart for a little while.
01:06:26.000Let's make it hurt for everybody for a little while, and then maybe we'll get, you know, a better status quo.
01:07:07.000You know, so over three prime ministers, years, elections, and politicking, and so on.
01:07:14.000And it seems to me that up until Boris Johnson got into office, they were no closer to a Brexit deal than they had been when we started, or when they started over there.
01:07:22.000It seems to me that the conversation has orbited around that topic in the same amount of time.
01:07:28.000So, to me, it's just very mundane and boring.
01:07:30.000I check in almost every day on BBC and it's, you know, Brexit is ground to a halt!
01:07:48.000We don't have the official tally just yet.
01:07:52.000But this is what BBC says about the outcome.
01:07:55.000It says, quote, The Conservatives are set to win an overall majority of 86 in the general election, according to an exit poll for BBC, ITV and Sky News.
01:08:05.000The survey taken at UK polling stations suggests the Tories will get 368 members of Parliament, 50 more than at the 2017 election.
01:08:15.000Would all the results have been counted?
01:08:17.000Labor would get 191 seats, the Liberal Democrats 13, the Brexit Party none, and the SNP 55 seats.
01:08:26.000And one of the first seats to declare, the Conservatives took Blythe Valley.
01:08:30.000In Northeast England from Labor, this is the first time the former mining area which voted leave in the EU referendum will have a conservative Member of Parliament who is an NHS worker named Ian Levy.
01:08:42.000The handful of results so far were broadly in line with the exit poll which was conducted by Ipsos MORI at 144 polling stations with 22,790 interviews according to polling expert John Curtis.
01:08:56.000Labor's vote is predicted to be nearly 12% down on the 2017 general election with the Conservatives up by 2.5% and smaller parties having a good night as well and the British pound also surged against a dollar as a result of the outcome.
01:09:11.000So basically it's a lot of a lot of Anglo-European
01:09:46.000Not only a historic victory for the conservatives, but also a historic defeat for labor.
01:09:51.000According to the exit polls, if everything is correct, if everything is sorted out at the end of this, this will have been the worst performance by labor since 1935.
01:10:02.000historic victory for the right historic defeat for the left and that again is if the exit polling is basically accurate which it looks like it is and to me the story of this election is a story about the realignment in 2016 and it's also about I think what's happening in America so a little bit of background about what's been happening in the United Kingdom
01:10:23.000Like I said, the Brexit referendum passed over the summer in 2016 and it hasn't been delivered.
01:10:29.000Conservatives suffered electorally for years because they didn't deliver a Brexit.
01:11:33.000The vote of no confidence, she got ousted from the party, was wildly unpopular because of gridlock, and because gridlock would not allow her government to fulfill the mandate that the voters gave to the government in 2016.
01:11:45.000In other words, the voters said in 2016, we want out of the European Union.
01:11:50.000They have not been able to fulfill that.
01:11:52.000That has made conservatives unpopular up until Boris Johnson.
01:12:18.000Because he's going to follow through on the mandate.
01:12:21.000To me, the obvious striking parallel with that is with Donald Trump.
01:12:24.000Now, I don't know if it'll be exactly one-to-one, because the demographics are different in the United Kingdom and the United States.
01:12:31.000The electoral system is very different.
01:12:32.000They've got a first... Well, I think, what do we have?
01:12:35.000We have a first-past-the-post... I forget exactly all the political science language.
01:12:39.000I have been in college in a long time.
01:12:41.000But, you know, they've got a parliamentary system over there.
01:12:44.000We've got an electoral federal system over here where, you know, we have battleground states and they've got, you know, members of
01:12:50.000It's not a perfect one-to-one analogy, but I think the principle is the same, which is to say that in the same way that the voters in the United Kingdom voted for Brexit in 2016, which was a radical change,
01:13:10.000A radical challenge to the status quo, which was in place and was in motion for probably like 60 or 50 years, depending on how far you go back in Europe.
01:13:21.000The trend towards a European super state or some kind of super national organization in Europe had been in the works since the European Coal and Steel Community or some of these, you know, European Economic Zones, depending on how far you want to go back.
01:13:36.000So they buck something like a 60-year trend towards
01:13:58.000They bucked the trend of neoliberalism, neoconservatism, the sort of left-right gridlock and mainstream status quo that had been dominant for 30 years.
01:14:07.000They also gave a mandate to the president to do very tangible things like build the wall, stop illegal immigration.
01:14:29.000And so if we could see that in the United Kingdom, a leader who says they're going to fulfill the mandate of 2016, and maybe voters are frustrated with the Labour Party, the opposition party, shutting down that mandate,
01:14:41.000And causing partisan political gridlock?
01:14:44.000Could we say that if the same forces are at work in both countries that the analogy in America in 2020 is that voters will rise up against the Democratic Party, the opposition party in America, that has caused gridlock, that has shut down the government, prevented the mandate from 2016 from being fulfilled?
01:15:02.000The difference to me is that in the United Kingdom you had a change in leadership.
01:15:07.000You know, in the sense that you had Theresa May that tried to get the Brexit done and failed, and then you had Boris Johnson who seemed to be more competent, and somebody who voters had confidence could carry out the Brexit.
01:15:18.000In the United States, we just had Donald Trump.
01:15:21.000And Donald Trump has clearly, in a lot of ways, failed at executing the mandate of 2016.
01:15:26.000So that's where it gets a little dicey.
01:15:28.000Will Donald Trump have the outcome of Theresa May?
01:15:48.000So he's had something like seven months.
01:15:50.000You know, if Boris Johnson could take a stalled, stagnant, gridlocked government and move forward with Brexit in seven months, could we see something similar from Donald Trump that he goes from, you know, what could be an analogous, the first half of this term is his Theresa May segment,
01:16:06.000And then maybe in the next year he works really hard, he gets a lot of stuff done.
01:16:09.000It's like Boris Johnson getting Brexit together.
01:16:11.000Do you understand how the two leaders in the Conservative Party in the United Kingdom could be analogous to two parts of Donald Trump's reign in his first term?
01:16:23.000That, of course, would be contingent on Trump getting his act together, building the wall, deporting illegals, pulling us out of the war, and so on.
01:16:30.000But to me, that's basically how you could sort of compare and contrast on a very surface level what's happening in the UK with what's happening in the United States.
01:16:38.000If Donald Trump cleans it up, builds a wall, and so on, he could win in a landslide in 2020.
01:16:44.000You know, some have been saying that not only is the Midwest back in play in 2020, and a lot of the states that Donald Trump flipped in 2016, they'll be back in play in the next election, but possibly more states could be in play.
01:16:56.000States like Minnesota, possibly Maine, you know, some of the other states.
01:17:01.000So the question is, if Donald Trump gets it together, he could win a big landslide like Boris Johnson.
01:17:06.000If he doesn't get it together, he could end up like Theresa May and lose ground after 2016 in 2020.
01:17:13.000So to me, that's where the comparison between them starts and stops on a partisan level.
01:17:19.000But beyond that, I think it's very important to talk about what's happening, looking at the bigger picture.
01:17:25.000If you look at which voters delivered this result for Boris Johnson, it was largely white voters who had voted labor their entire life, middle class and working class labor voters, who went over to the conservative Tory party because of Brexit and predominantly because of cultural issues.
01:18:27.000It tells you that a political realignment is happening.
01:18:30.000This happens many times in democracies when voters who go one way for a long time and you might talk about like the black vote or certain constituencies that go a certain way for a long time because of changing circumstances in the country or changing parties they will then evolve and move over reliably to the other side.
01:18:49.000So if we see that the working class British people, and I mean British like ethnically English or Scottish or whatever, if they are moving from labor...
01:18:58.000To the conservative side, well this is largely representative of what's happening across the world, which is to say that older, more socially conservative people that might have been left-wing on economics are finding that they don't have a home in left-wing parties anymore.
01:19:13.000You see the same thing happening in this election that you saw in the election in 2016 in America.
01:19:19.000In the same way that a lot of blue-dog Democrats, right, or older, working-class, white, socially conservative Democrats
01:19:29.000We're gonna vote for Donald Trump for the first time ever.
01:19:31.000We're gonna vote for the GOP because Donald Trump is gonna protect working-class people and going to protect American identity on some level.
01:19:41.000Donald Trump is going to oppose foreign wars and so on.
01:19:44.000In the same way, you could see this happening in the United Kingdom where working-class people are saying, you know, this party of Jeremy Corbyn, this hardcore left-wing
01:19:52.000Labor Party from London does not represent our interests.
01:19:55.000You can see where there's parallels happening, not just in the UK and the United States, but all across the world.
01:20:00.000And I'll show you what I mean by that, what's happening sort of ideologically in the country.
01:20:05.000We've got a whiteboard for you, and this is something which... I just dropped my pointer, but I have another one over here.
01:20:15.000This is a graph which I've seen a lot on social media since Donald Trump got elected, and this is not perfect.
01:20:24.000People have talked about this little graph a lot, like I said, for the past few years.
01:20:29.000I would say maybe since Donald Trump got elected, maybe a little bit after to sort of describe what's happening in American politics.
01:20:36.000Like I said, it's not exactly what you might have seen, but it's pretty close to it.
01:20:39.000We've got two axes here to describe political ideology, political movements.
01:20:45.000We've got an economic axis, and we've got a cultural and identity axis.
01:20:49.000This is different, by the way, from a political compass.
01:20:52.000A political compass, I believe the x-axis is economic, and the vertical axis is like... I don't actually know what it is on the political compass.
01:21:03.000It's like size of government, I think?
01:21:07.000But anyway, this is different than that.
01:21:09.000So we've got the cultural identity axis.
01:21:11.000This is things like, you know, you talk about social issues like abortion, or you talk about gun rights, or immigration, you know, pretty self-explanatory.
01:21:23.000We've got the cultural right, the cultural left, the economic, sort of counterintuitive because it's vertical, but the economic right, the economic left, obviously economic right is
01:21:33.000Free market, liberalization, laissez-faire, that kind of thing.
01:21:37.000Economic left is socialism, government control, and so on.
01:21:41.000And so I've charted out basically some of the ideologies that define these quadrants and also where different parties and people would land on this chart.
01:21:50.000So I would say that in the top left axis, we'll go clockwise I guess,
01:21:57.000So an ideology that is left-wing culturally and in terms of identity, but right-wing in economics describes neoliberalism.
01:22:04.000I would say the Turning Point USA is pretty representative of that.
01:22:07.000This is an ideology that says, for example, that we can globalize the population.
01:22:12.000In other words, we could have mass demographic change, mass cultural changes to our country, and that's okay.
01:22:18.000You know, this is where we hear Ben Shapiro say, I don't give a damn about the browning of America.
01:22:22.000You know, this is where people say that, well, as long as people come here and assimilate, or maybe in some cases, even if they don't, diversity is enriching our nation, it's making us strong, so long as we maintain a free market.
01:22:34.000So long as these changes are good for the economy, they're good for us.
01:23:14.000Obviously, we know that the Conservative Party hasn't really been very right-wing in terms of culture and identity.
01:23:20.000They're very much nominally right-wing in terms of culture and identity.
01:23:24.000In other words, they say they are in name only.
01:23:27.000So traditionally Republicans will talk about defending Christian values and defending the American way of life and that kind of thing.
01:23:35.000On a very nominal level, you could have the GOP in this quadrant as the conservatives, the mainstream conservatives.
01:23:42.000I think Trump is probably the best fit though.
01:23:45.000Here's a politician who is obviously hardcore right-wing on economics, and I'm using these terms sort of in their vernacular.
01:23:53.000I think a real right-wing economics isn't necessarily hyper-capitalist, but that's the vernacular.
01:23:59.000I think that's sort of the connotation it has today that right-wing is towards free market, left-wing is towards big government.
01:24:04.000So these terms are all a little bit subjective.
01:24:08.000Trump is obviously very much a free market guy, the tax cuts, the deregulation, you know, greenlighting the oil projects and so on.
01:24:16.000He's a little bit more economically left than his predecessors like Reagan and Bush and others because he has tariffs and wants an infrastructure project and so on, but in practice almost all of it's been very much indistinguishable from Turning Point USA.
01:24:29.000But unlike Turning Point USA, at least in the rhetoric, Trump has been, in terms of culture and identity, right-wing.
01:24:35.000You know, Make America Great Again, America First, Muslim Ban, People Are Drinking Drugs, Crime and Rapists, Shithole Countries.
01:24:43.000All this kind of stuff is, at the very least, implicitly, if not explicitly, culturally right-wing.
01:24:50.000And it's worth reminding people, or it's worth acknowledging, that Trump is in a different quadrant from Turning Point USA.
01:25:07.000Mitt Romney ran as a neoliberal and he lost.
01:25:10.000Marco Rubio ran as a neoliberal and he lost.
01:25:13.000Jeb Bush ran as a neoliberal and he lost.
01:25:16.000Charlie Kirk and Turning Point USA initially didn't support Trump because they are left-wing on culture and ostensibly right-wing, nominally right-wing on economics.
01:25:24.000Trump, in practice, is both of these things, right-wing on economics and right-wing on culture, and this is how he won the election.
01:25:31.000He went from Marco Rubio, Turning Point USA, mainstream conservative, neoliberal identity, or ideology, and he shifted us rightward on culture, I think, and that was the defining thing that made Trump different that distinguished him, by saying we're going to ban Muslims, we're going to make America great again, and so on, and he said we're going to be a party that's right-wing in both ways.
01:25:52.000Well, I'll save this quadrant for last.
01:26:43.000Maybe it's not outright communist or big government.
01:26:45.000But certainly, it is trending leftward on economics compared to full-on neoliberalism or traditional Republican free market Reaganite bullshit.
01:26:55.000You've got somebody like Tucker Carlson on this side.
01:26:58.000Somebody that says it is important that we maintain the character of the nation, and maybe they're not even left-wing economically, but they're just right along the x-axis.
01:27:06.000Maybe they're a little bit right-wing or a little bit left-wing, but fundamentally this sort of economic axis that is up and down doesn't really even matter, so long as we are all the way on this side on culture and identity.
01:27:18.000So somebody that says, well, you know, maybe we support private property, which is a economically right-wing belief.
01:27:23.000Maybe we support deregulation and something like that, localism.
01:27:28.000But, you know, we also support people getting taken care of.
01:27:30.000We also support, maybe there's a baseline level of catastrophic health insurance.
01:27:35.000Maybe there's a big infrastructure project.
01:27:43.000This is where we have the most room to grow is by moving from, you know, maybe up here.
01:27:48.000I think the movement that needs to happen is from neoliberal, left-wing on identity and right-wing on economics, maybe in the last five years we move this way.
01:27:59.000I still think we're probably over here on identity.
01:28:00.000But the big move was rightward on the x-axis over the last five years, going from left-wing on culture, right-wing on economics, to right-wing on economics and right-wing on culture.
01:28:12.000The next move, where we have the most to gain, is a move downward on the vertical axis towards economic populism, left-wing economics in some sense.
01:28:22.000Even if it's not outright left-wing economics, it's trending in that direction.
01:28:26.000And to me, we can control this entire half of the graph here.
01:28:32.000We can control the entire half of this, what would you call this?
01:28:48.000It means that we can probably expand the electorate by appealing to liberal, white, working class, in some cases older people or college graduates, in states like Minnesota.
01:28:58.000Or in New Hampshire or in Wisconsin or Michigan by saying that, you know, we're not in favor of a health care plan that leaves people uninsured or slapped with huge bills and hospitals and with ambulances and so on.
01:29:10.000Maybe we're going to take care of people more.
01:29:11.000Maybe we're going to have a more liberal approach to economics.
01:29:18.000Okay, we've got all the people that are free market, all the Reagan coalition people here, we've got them on lock.
01:29:24.000We can bring this whole quadrant into fold, of which there are many people in here, by simply losing some of the hardcore Reagan dogma, by just drifting a little bit down on this axis, by drifting a little bit left.
01:29:38.000I know it's counterintuitive because I'm showing down but saying left.
01:29:41.000If we drift a little bit in this direction and maybe get in a happy medium somewhere in this area, that would yield huge electoral victories, huge electoral prospects and potential, and also this is an ideology which would save the country.
01:29:57.000You know, this kind of stuff, everything up here, not really sufficient.
01:30:01.000Neoliberalism is going to make the problem worse.
01:30:03.000Everything on this side, this is our enemy.
01:30:06.000These are the people we have a problem with.
01:30:08.000People that want to destroy America is what's on the left.
01:30:10.000People that are left-wing on culture and identity say that basically white people shouldn't exist, and white people's time is over in America, and Christianity is over, and so on.
01:30:22.000And truth be told, I don't really care about the vertical axis.
01:30:27.000And we can afford not to care, because you know what's going to happen is regardless of what we feel about economics, this is going to be the defining axis of our time, culture and identity.
01:30:37.000In other words, we can have a free market system, a socialist system, we kind of already have a socialist system in some capacity, right?
01:30:45.000What is it, like 50% of all health care spending is by the government,
01:30:49.000You look at all the onerous regulations and all the spending the government does.
01:30:53.000$4 trillion in government spending a year.
01:30:58.000That's a fifth of our spending is from the government.
01:31:00.000So I'm saying in some capacity this axis is irrelevant.
01:31:05.000This is what will define the future and, consequentially, the outcome on this axis.
01:31:11.000And I've said this before in different terms, but if we go left on culture and identity, if we have mass immigration, whether you're justifying it because you're a progressive and you hate white people, you're a neoliberal and you're Jewish and you hate white people and you want the economy to grow, no matter what side of this axis you're on, if you're on the left,
01:31:28.000You are going to see America become a multiracial country.
01:31:32.000Whites are going to become a minority.
01:31:35.000The Democrats become a party that are never going to leave the White House, never going to leave the Senate ever again.
01:31:41.000And so consequently, you're going to get the country in this zone.
01:31:45.000If you're on this side, you will end up in this zone eventually.
01:31:49.000You know, neoliberals are advocating for a policy that will put these people in power forever.
01:31:53.000You know, I think that's the best way to say it.
01:31:55.000And so that is why we have to be predominantly fixated on winning everything on this side, everything that is culturally right-wing.
01:32:02.000And we can be in favor of property rights, like I said, we can be in favor of low taxes and localism and things like that, maybe a relatively free market, but also we should not be afraid of going left on economics.
01:32:14.000We should not be afraid of restraining the free market, of shutting down big banks, going after the rich, going after... even if you don't think it's a good idea, because
01:32:24.000Truth be told, I'm pretty right-wing on economics, but some things are so out of control, and not only are some things out of control in terms of the economy, but moreover, even if we do things that don't make sense economically now, it's much more preferable to get in power and have left-wing economic policies as nationalists than it is for left-wing people to get in power, no matter what their view is on the economy.
01:32:48.000So in other words, even if you don't like this idea, even if you're a, I'm a rootin' tootin' Ronald Reagan, rugged individuals, free market conservative, you might have to bite the bullet.
01:32:58.000You know, you might have to suck it up and say, well, I'll vote for somebody left-wing on economics, because if these people get in power, it's game over for everybody.
01:33:07.000If these people get in power, anybody on this side, even if they're up here, this is where you all end up, and this is hell.
01:33:13.000This is a thousand years of darkness over here.
01:33:21.000And this is what happens if somebody from this side of the axis or some party or some coalition controls the government at some time in the next four or five decades.
01:33:31.000So to me, and to tie it into the British elections,
01:33:37.000The lesson that we learned from Boris Johnson winning this historic victory is that it's much easier for conservatives to go left on economics than it is for liberals to go right on identity.
01:34:09.000Are benevolent, you know, shadow hand, invisible hand, they're amazing, titans of ministry, whatever, they're the people that are destroying the country.
01:34:17.000So if we can mobilize the people against the elites based on cultural identity and economic resentment, whoever gets populism controls the next century.
01:34:59.000Boris Johnson, because he supported the Brexit, because he's right-wing on culture and identity, and at the very least he was ambivalent about economics, maybe you could say he's fluid between these two, he was able to capture this area, this quadrant.
01:35:13.000That unleashed a lot of votes, a lot of potential, and that's going to be the realignment.
01:35:17.000This is, in some sense, in a little way, what Trump did.
01:35:20.000You know, I put Trump up here based on how he governed, but how he campaigned, he'd probably be closer to here.
01:35:25.000Because on healthcare, he didn't say, we need a free market healthcare system, he said we need to take care of everybody.
01:35:53.000So Trump, I think, definitely campaigned here.
01:35:55.000We just need to realign the whole party this way.
01:35:58.000We need to get the rhetoric, the policy, consolidate some of the ideas, and have a very coherent sort of nationalist populist perspective on the world.
01:36:13.000And maybe he'd even take it a little bit further, but that's to me the whiteboard.
01:36:16.000That's the big takeaway from the British elections.
01:36:18.000That's really kind of why I wanted to talk about it because we see that it works.
01:36:22.000Boris Johnson in many ways proved that it worked when he went over this...
01:36:27.000Whatever, this city, what is it, Blythe Valley in Northeast England, it's a mining district, it's working class white people that have been voting Labor forever, and he made them Tory and they voted overwhelmingly for the right-wing party.
01:36:54.000We're gonna move on and take a look at our Super Chats.
01:36:58.000We'll see what you guys are saying about all this, about the... I'm sure I'll get a number of corrections, maybe on pronunciations and other things.
01:37:05.000Some Angloids are probably losing their minds.
01:37:14.000I'm interested to see what some of the British people might have to say about this, because of course I am not British, so I only know about this election from what I've read about it, but...
01:37:51.000Honestly, though, the whole reason I never started a subreddit of my own is because I knew this would happen, you know.
01:37:58.000People have started two Nick Fuentes subreddits and they both, you know, they both got banned in a relatively short amount of time, so it's like, what were you trying to do?
01:38:08.000Jaji says, Femmoids on Nick's timeline be like, MTV reached out to me too, but I turned them down because I'm smart.
01:39:20.000Daniel says boneheads here still keep spouting sensationalized talking points like privatizing the NHS.
01:39:27.000Try having an original thought for once in your lives FFS.
01:39:30.000I don't know dude I mean look I'm not like a free market you know hyper free market guy but NHS kind of sucks doesn't it?
01:39:39.000I mean the idea of a national health care system or service to me seems like a really bad idea so I don't know if I'd be in favor of privatizing it but
01:39:49.000I would not trust the government to take care of my health care, honestly.
01:39:52.000Or to have, like, no private insurance available.
01:39:55.000That, to me, is just, like, a disaster.
01:41:27.000Wes Nat says, studying for my management final.
01:41:31.000And the textbook talks about how men are more task-oriented, autocratic, and directive with their leadership style.
01:41:38.000While women are more socially oriented, participative, and democratic.
01:41:43.000Though thought this was a good summary of the left versus the right, dichotomy reinforces the idea that this divide is ultimately a difference between the male and female worldview.
01:42:17.000The male, the conservative's obviously right.
01:42:19.000It's obviously ordered and Apollonian.
01:42:21.000So yeah, I definitely think there's a female energy to the left, male energy to the right.
01:42:26.000It's pretty obvious by who dominates the two sides.
01:42:28.000On the left, you've got these sort of doting school headmaster types like Elizabeth Warren and Hillary Clinton.
01:42:36.000These finger-wagging like, you know, C-words.
01:42:40.000For lack of a better word, but you know the type I'm talking about.
01:42:42.000These bitches wagging their finger, and you can't do that, and that's not nice, and you know, we need to love everybody, we need to be tolerant.
01:42:49.000You've got that on the left, and sort of bitchy, snarky deception, and on the right, you know, you've got balls-to-the-wall, belligerent, obnoxious, epic, Trump wants to build walls, build a big wall to keep us safe.
01:43:05.000I can't give you a guarantee but yeah I mean generally I don't think I've heard of anybody having to wait for like more than two weeks but I don't know it kind of depends on a number of factors.
01:43:30.000I think you should be fine, but I don't know.
01:44:59.000Oh boy, Nick's gonna say not much is happening and tomorrow we're gonna have, we're going to have literal space aliens attacking the planet.
01:45:10.000But yeah, hopefully Project Bluebeam comes soon.
01:45:12.000We need something to talk about on the show.
01:45:15.000mentality says sargon went off on his election stream he said quote migrants have yet to show any respect for british customs you would still be enslaving each other if it wasn't for the british empire based was on jesse lee peterson too sargon is based i know a lot of like he's become sort of a meme in our circles you know people make fun of him and everything i was never that familiar with this content like when sargon like came out of the scene
01:45:44.000I was watching like Gavin McInnes and Jared Taylor and you know things like that So I never really got into the Sargon like that that extended universe So I'm not really familiar with all the drama all the like deep lore all the deep background there But from what I've seen from him, he's becoming increasingly based.
01:46:03.000I think he is just very based So he kind of gets I mean, he's obviously an individualist and a liberal and so on but it seems like he's getting there and
01:46:12.000Cool Kid says, is a conservative win showcasing that Britain is still a WASPy neocon country or giving the Brexit delay a sign that nationalism is growing?
01:46:28.000I don't know if this is evidence that nationalism is growing.
01:46:31.000I don't think it's evidence that Britain is still a WASP-y country.
01:46:35.000I think this is very particular to this election, in this time, on this issue of Brexit.
01:46:41.000You know, I think we have to be careful about falling victim to reading into our... reading into elections and things, our own narratives, our own agenda.
01:46:51.000You know, for example, like the 2016 election.
01:46:55.0002016 election was decided by a few thousand votes.
01:46:59.000In Florida, in Pennsylvania, in Michigan, you know, those are the states that won the election and all of them were determined by a very very tiny sliver of the electorate.
01:47:09.000All of this is to say it could have very easily gone in the other direction if like a couple of things have been different.
01:47:14.000And what would have been the narrative if Hillary Clinton had won?
01:47:17.000If a couple of variables have been different,
01:47:19.000Things that might not even have anything to do with ideology or anything might be the Hillary campaign in Michigan.
01:47:24.000If people spend ad money in a different way.
01:48:02.000So, I'd be careful to reading too much into it.
01:48:04.000I'm trying to prescribe what we should do based on some of this stuff and some of the broader trends, but I wouldn't say that these voters went out and they're like, I'm nationalist.
01:48:13.000I mean, maybe on a certain level it was about that, but I'd be cautious about saying, you know, Boris Johnson is in, that means Britain's based.
01:48:20.000I mean, obviously Britain is not based.
01:48:22.000Masad says, is the situation with Virginia... we've got somebody saying boogaloo.
01:48:56.000I don't know exactly what red pill you mean by that.
01:48:58.000RA says, I wonder what the likelihood is of Nick getting bored by covering Anglo elections and switching over to covering the paused Game Awards happening right now instead.
01:49:08.000I didn't even know there were Game Awards happening.
01:49:45.000I've got the blah blah blah blah blah Just just you know, I think if you just get in a semi-automatic rifle, you know, whatever I think like you're good, you know, that's that's enough for me.
01:49:56.000Whatever go to the gun store Yeah, give me a shotgun.
01:50:13.000Okay, okay, I'll get an AR-15 or I'll get a whatever.
01:50:16.000I mean, to me, that's the long and short of it.
01:50:19.000But some of these people, it's like, oh, they're so obsessed with... And to me, that's just another, like you said, you hit the nail on the head, it's like another form of like consumer culture.
01:50:27.000It's these people that are, you know, endlessly fascinated with trinkets and widgets and things like that, like Legos, Funko Pops, you know, computer parts, things like that.
01:51:03.000Yeah, that's a pretty accurate analogy.
01:51:05.000Thanks for the, uh, thanks for the water bottle.
01:51:07.000Thanks for the, uh, thanks for the boost.
01:51:10.000Big John Town says, seems like YouTube has given up trying to rehabilitate me with these fake conservatives and now exclusively recommends CNN shut it down.
01:51:19.000Yeah, their algorithm, I think, is getting more aggressive.
01:51:23.000Scooter says, whose adult teeth will grow in first, Baby Yoda or Charlie Kirk?
01:52:44.000Wherefore rebuke them sharply that they may be sound in faith not giving heed to Jewish fables and commandments of men that turn from the truth says Titus 1 13 to 14.
01:55:37.000But as an example, as an example, even if you were like socially conservative, but you worshipped like the devil, I mean, you probably, you probably would say that's degenerate.
01:55:48.000But, you know, I should have said it as an example.
01:55:52.000Hypothetically, if one were to be worshipping Baphomet or Baal,
01:55:58.000I'm talking about an ancient Canaanite god.
01:56:00.000I mean, probably you would say that's degenerate, even if they were conservative.
01:56:04.000You know, like if you're doing animal sacrifices and things like that, drinking, you know, I don't know.
01:56:10.000So I would say that sure, Orthodox Jews are socially conservative, but... Anyway, Theodore McCarthy says, the difference between Jews and Christians goes beyond belief in Christ.
01:56:23.000They are the heirs of the Pharisees, whose legalistic pseudo-religion Christ denounced in his ministry.
01:56:28.000Okay, so it's about Christ, obviously.
01:56:31.000Lance Pickle says, Christianity without the church leads to liberalism.
01:58:07.000Because well, I mean there were some There were some good progressives trust busting was good, you know Theodore Roosevelt was a good I think he identified as a progressive but the ultimate progressive was Woodrow Wilson and Woodrow Wilson gave us World War one and the Federal Reserve and the income tax all of which are terrible, so I
01:58:30.000I would say that if the crowning achievement of progressivism was not actually to reign in, in any meaningful way, big business or protect the environment or anything like that, but instead to empower the federal bank, the national bank, I would say was a failure.
01:58:45.000Name says they are gaslighting us, King.
01:58:49.000Jokel says daily reminder that people who die in a state of mortal sin will spend infinity apart from God and suffering beyond our wildest imaginations.
01:59:06.000Should you repent for rap that promotes sin?
01:59:09.000I don't think there's anything in the catechism about listening to rap.
01:59:16.000I guess the church probably wouldn't encourage it, but I don't think it's a mortal sin.
01:59:20.000Allen's his thoughts on Colin Flaherty sort of based for a boomer even though he never names them But for what it's worth he does a lot of light on the 1350 thing.
02:03:07.000Have you heard of the Virginia County's creating Second Amendment sanctuary laws that just started this November when the state flipped blue?
02:03:16.000Over 50% of the states are already on board.
02:03:22.000All these, like, you know, boomers, they want to clutch the guns and do the low-tax thing, and they realize then that the states are gonna flip blue no matter what because of demographic change.
02:03:32.000No matter what you do, ultimately, if you don't get the demographics right, you get Democrats.
02:03:37.000And then they take your guns and, you know, I said this before, but if you get all the Democratic policies anyway, so...
02:04:23.000I think it goes against... I'm not positive on what the doctrine is on this, but I don't think you're supposed to go and attend other religious services like that.
02:05:07.000Danger errands says Trump's recent executive order on Jews even has the elites confused.
02:05:12.000Dave Rothschild on Twitter doesn't like it because he says he's now slumped in with the Zionists.
02:05:17.000I don't think the elites are ever confused, but yeah, I mean there is like a nominal difference between left-wing Jews and Zionists, but I think we all realize it's pretty much fictitious.
02:06:59.000uh nicolas gerber says been watching since you interviewed my friend yusuf glad to see his influence spreading beyond the lunch table trust the plan and trust god's plan so true yeah good old yusuf changing the game with his uh btf owing of steven crowder jude says if we can make an exception for traps i don't think anybody's talking about making an exception for traps but go off jude says we can make an exception for traps due to the degenerate state of woman can we make an exception for anime gfs
02:07:29.000I don't think anybody ever said anything about an exception, so I think you're a little misinformed on my position on that.
02:07:36.000Amagazox, does that all make sense now?
02:07:39.000Thanks for getting out the whiteboard today.
02:07:40.000It's been sort of a rough week trying to understand why I should vote for Trump.
02:08:47.000No, you don't know what Wignat... The derivative of the term Wignat is wigger, so it's not white, it's wigger.
02:08:55.000Asap says my GF says I'm too sensitive and called me a femme boy because I talked about my emotions any tips Yeah, stop being a pussy your girlfriend's probably right if your girlfriend Well, I don't know some women are kind of overkill with that They're like you're not manly enough, you know, so you have to sort of use your own discretion But generally speaking if you are like, oh, you know all about your emotions and everything.
02:09:18.000Well, she probably got a point King Just suck it up
02:09:22.000Joe says constituencies, not counties.
02:10:13.000Sunday, you know you go there every Sunday, and there's a there's a little ceremony people get there together You know maybe maybe that's a starter, so I would go to church You know if you're confirmed go to you know confession, whatever
02:11:01.000Just don't... And, you know, I understand people have, like, trouble because it's force of habit, and, you know, there's some component of addiction, but...
02:11:32.000something but uh but it's true you know nobody's gonna tell you there's this magic trick to uh whatever you just can't just can't do it just don't do it uh john says america first airs money through friday does that mean the marketplace of ideas is closed on saturday and sunday it does actually yeah
02:11:51.000M says, I think instead of trying to destroy something, we need to be focused on building up ourselves and our community back through culture, religion, etc.
02:11:58.000Oh, that's a really... No, we do have to destroy.
02:13:39.000John Pants says, you and Jake clink bamboo cups on the island sand as you watch the e-girls float out to sea, exiled from the island and subsequently consumed by sharks.
02:13:49.000Yeah, me and Jake on the beach, coconut beverage in hand, you know, sliced open coconut, some kind of tropical beverage, clink, and we watch the, we watch the indigenous
02:17:10.000That I think defined the country for probably the first like 200 years.
02:17:14.000So when I say that the normative American culture should be Anglo-Protestant, well, you know, obviously it is a more individualistic nation.
02:17:21.000It is a nation that is oriented around work and also around faith.
02:17:25.000You know, faith is a big important part for Protestants and obviously, you know, Catholics are faithful too.
02:17:31.000So I don't think there's a lot of, you know, I say give in your faith.
02:17:33.000I don't think there's a lot of areas where it clashes.
02:17:37.000Tim says Maine has the highest population of whites and the lowest crime rate in the US.
02:18:16.000Bob says the consume product get excited for next product meme is very white peeling it means people are deprogramming themselves from the corporate borg.
02:20:34.000Professor Eric says, bull moose mode, yeah.
02:20:38.000Pepe says, Nick, what I can't understand is how most people live their lives conservatively but don't vote accordingly.
02:20:44.000Well, most people aren't very, you know, introspective when it comes to these things.
02:20:49.000I think most people, for them voting identity is much more a cultural expression or environmental, as a result of environmental influences than it is of like people meditating on like their thoughts about politics and their priorities and so on, right?
02:21:04.000So in a lot of places like you look at the West and the Northwest in America like Montana or in the Midwest and like North Dakota and a lot of these states Democrat the Democratic Party is very different than like our conception of it today like the Democratic Party for them for decades fought for unions and certain industries like mining and certain parts of agriculture and so for them the Democratic Party is it's like a much bigger deal
02:21:32.000It's much more... it's a lot less to do with, like, a lot of where they are ideologically.
02:21:38.000It's not the party of Hillary Clinton for them.
02:21:40.000For them, it's the party that fought for their ancestors, you know, rights and all this as workers and so on.
02:21:46.000So, you know, party identity is sort of a complicated thing like that.
02:21:52.000White guy named Jamal says, lost out in a sales position to a less qualified black femboy today.
02:22:25.000Well, of course what we mean by demographics is destiny, is that if a white country votes in non-white people, non-white people create a destiny of a low standard of living.
02:22:35.000When the country was Christian and white, the country was doing good because the demographics were, you know, in accordance with certain outcomes.
02:22:44.000Now that we have new people, we will have different outcomes.
02:22:47.000I don't know how you think that's like a huge own or something.
02:22:52.000Well yeah, I mean sure, people can make mistakes, but the reason why mass immigration is problematic is because the people that are coming here will have a bad, they will create a bad standard of living.
02:23:02.000Whether or not, let's say in a vacuum,
02:23:05.000If white people voted for mass immigration from Europe, you would still have a good standard of living, right?
02:23:12.000And you could say that even if white people are liberal and they're voting for these things, you know, let's say that if people voted for mass immigration in a hundred years,
02:23:24.000If the people that lived in that next 100 years were people that favored mass immigration, but you just didn't have it yet, it would still have the same standard of living.