00:02:50.000Look, here's the thing with the theory of relativity, all right?
00:02:54.000Now, I'm not going to pretend that I'm totally sound on the science behind it.
00:02:58.000I'm not a big fan of science and generally that wing.
00:03:03.000But what Albert Einstein said was basically something to the effect that what time was not absolute, it was all basically based on where you are, it's relative to your position, right?
00:03:17.000Because what if you're towards something with more gravity, time is.
00:03:28.000So now, Albert Einstein, what he ushered in in the 20th century, what him and Heisenberg ushered in in the 20th century with their discoveries, Albert Einstein's theory of relativity and Heisenberg's uncertainty principle, which was that you couldn't know the position and what was it?
00:03:47.000The position and something else about an electron in an atom, basically, that it's a cloud as opposed to the other models they had for it, was.
00:03:56.000An intellectual tradition that was both relativist and nihilist.
00:04:02.000That's why I take issue with Albert Einstein.
00:04:06.000Whereas before you had absolutes, whereas before you had this idea that there was an objective and common reality, what we call philosophical realism, I think Albert Einstein's theory of relativity and the uncertainty principle ushered in a new tradition, a new paradigm that was relativist, that was philosophically materialist as opposed to realist.
00:05:08.000Yeah, and Spengler wrote a lot about this.
00:05:10.000If people think, it's funny to me because whenever I talk about these kinds of ideas, like when I talked with Destiny about Evolian spirituality for different races, people are like, he's coming up with this convoluted spiritual theory of race.
00:05:25.000And I talk about relativity like this, and he's coming up with this convoluted theory or whatever.
00:11:12.000Number one, which is, of course, the immigration.
00:11:15.000Number one, the people that are coming across our borders are not high IQ people, unfortunately.
00:11:20.000And given that IQ is the number one predictor of future success in basically every field, and we consider the kinds of people that are coming into our country people from Central and South America, people from Africa, countries and places that on average have sub 100 IQ, and we look at those people coming into the gene pool and diluting the formerly high IQ country that we had, I think that's the first thing to consider.
00:11:49.000The most preventable, that's the most actionable thing we can do, which is to cease immigration from low IQ places.
00:11:56.000If we want to have successful people, if we want to have a successful country, we have to bring in people that are going to contribute, people that have something to contribute.
00:12:06.000We have to raise the bar, not lower the bar.
00:12:11.000But then secondarily, you have something that's going on within even the high IQ populations of the country, which is something that is described by Charles Murray in the book Coming Apart, where he talks about how.
00:12:24.000Where formerly in smaller white communities you had high IQ and low IQ mixing between each other.
00:12:31.000You would have marriages happening within the small town, within the small community, and thus there was more social or IQ, biological mobility.
00:12:40.000Nowadays, all the high IQ people go to college, they meet other high IQ people, they marry other high IQ people, and you have this disparity that's growing between the high IQ people that go to college and marry other high IQ people.
00:12:55.000And all the ones that are left behind and will not be successful and will not be able to have that kind of mobility.
00:13:38.000And I know you're an urbanite from Chicago, and obviously that's not very popular with the people around here.
00:13:45.000And I just want to know do you think there's any virtue in urban life?
00:13:48.000Like, do you think, not just because of the demographics and all the crime and everything that makes it bad, do you think, honestly, that that's a place that people ought to move?
00:13:59.000Is there any good examples of a virtuous city?
00:14:02.000Yeah, well, I'm actually in the suburbs, not in the city, so not quite.
00:14:06.000But with the city, you've had this division between the city and the rural of the country for as long as civilization has been around.
00:14:16.000I mean, this is, we talk about conservative and liberal, and that division and the division between urban and rural, between cosmopolitan and tradition, dates back to the Roman Empire, dates back to Babylon, dates back to Israel, you know, the first time around, back to Egypt.
00:14:35.000A feature of, I believe, any human settlement since the agricultural singularity.
00:14:41.000So I do believe that being in the city does have its merits.
00:14:45.000I think it's a different lifestyle than in rural communities, but I think it's one that tends to lend itself towards degeneration, unfortunately.
00:14:54.000When you get the higher population density, you get more people, you get more temptation, you get more corruption.
00:15:01.000With lower social trust, it breeds more instability, more crime, some of the things that you described.
00:15:07.000I mean, there are a lot of benefits to the city, which is.
00:15:10.000Economic abundance, which is culture, which is economy.
00:15:14.000I mean, there are many great things about a city.
00:17:31.000I just want to touch on the 2008 midterms coming up and how it relates kind of to the Alabama election that we recently lost.
00:17:42.000I feel like you haven't learned any real lessons from that election.
00:17:46.000I feel like your kind of rhetoric and the things that you talk about every day in your streams didn't really relate to Roy Moore and how he didn't know anything about DACA.
00:19:05.000Compared to the 2016 election, Democrats turning out at 95% the turnout that they had in the 2016 presidential election versus less than 50% for the Republicans.
00:20:09.000You had this particular special Senate seat where Roy Moore was not a particularly good candidate.
00:20:17.000Roy Moore had lost statewide office twice before trying to win the nomination for governor.
00:20:22.000He ran, in my opinion, in my estimation, a below average campaign.
00:20:28.000I don't think he had very strong communications.
00:20:30.000I don't think he had very strong messaging.
00:20:33.000He wasn't even campaigning the weekend before the election.
00:20:36.000So to say that the 2018 special Senate election, given just the outright Insulting, I think, election results, insulting to the intelligence of anybody that, you know, they would try and fake it and make it that obvious.
00:20:50.000Number two, that he was running a terrible campaign.
00:20:52.000Number three, that it was a terrible scandal.
00:20:55.000I don't think there's anything to learn from it.
00:22:00.000You're making excuses for Roy Moore, the candidate, but there's the Virginia elections, there's future elections coming up, polling showing up.
00:22:09.000That no, I'm just talking about the polling in general is horribly wrong.
00:23:06.000If you're trying to say that the Virginia election or the Alabama special Senate election were either in any way constituted a referendum on President Trump or the Republican Party, and that would have any bearing on 2018, I just think it's fundamentally misreading.
00:23:23.000I think it's a fundamental misunderstanding.
00:23:25.000Of what was happening in either of those elections.
00:23:27.000In Virginia, you did not have a candidate that was strong on immigration.
00:23:31.000You did not have a candidate that was.
00:23:34.000He was running ads talking about MS 13.
00:23:37.000He was running ads talking about Confederate statues.
00:23:40.000In the last week of his campaign, it was months.
00:23:44.000It was months he was running those ads, running those flyers.
00:23:47.000If it had been Corey Stewart, I might concede that that would have been a referendum.
00:24:06.000And even then, finally, the The results of the election were dubious.
00:24:09.000You look at the turnout numbers, you look at compared to 2016, compared to 2012, it was just an anomaly.
00:24:17.000And I don't understand what the point is you're trying to make.
00:24:21.000If we're looking at special elections throughout 2016, I think the more informative ones are the special election in Georgia, the special election in Montana.
00:24:30.000I think those are far better examples.
00:24:32.000And so for you to come on and say that we were ignorant and we didn't understand, we did heavy coverage in Alabama.
00:24:40.000No, the point I'm making is those kind of hard right, those kinds of candidates like Roy Moore, like a Corey Stewart, they're going to get smacked down hard.
00:24:51.000They're going to get smacked down hard, just like Paul Nealon did in Wisconsin in his primary.
00:24:57.000You want to talk about Paul Nealon's primary in 2018?
00:25:19.000That's a very nice idea, but it doesn't work.
00:25:22.000People thought the same thing about Marco Rubio.
00:25:24.000They thought the same thing about Ted Cruz.
00:25:26.000And Donald Trump ended up not only winning the primary, but then winning a landslide election.
00:25:30.000If you want to talk about Paul Nealon, he was campaigning in the 1st District of Wisconsin, which Paul Ryan has been winning for 20 years, which Paul Nealon has the largest war chest in all of Congress, millions of dollars to spend on campaigning.
00:25:44.000Every single example you're giving me.
00:25:47.000I can tell you why it is not a suitable example.
00:25:49.000The idea that we need to cuck, the idea that we need to not run on Trump's platform, which is the most successful Republican platform in eight years, is just, it flies in the face of all the evidence that we've seen in the past.
00:26:05.000But who are the people that delivered that agenda in Congress?
00:26:09.000It's the same Paul Ryan and Mitch McConnell that you're lambasting.
00:27:09.000The Republicans, the right side, they're not enthused.
00:27:15.000They're not jumping to get to the polls the same way the Democrats are, is what I'm saying.
00:27:19.000If you think running candidates like Corey Stewart in Virginia, or like, you know, for example, in Missouri, the one that's trying to run against Josh Hawley is going to end up as a disaster.
00:27:33.000And I just want to avoid that so I can keep getting conservative judges in the court so I can hold Anthony Kennedy's seat in the Supreme Court.
00:28:27.000About international relations in China.
00:28:33.000And I think you see how that's relevant since proximity wise, Australia is so close to China and it's going to be a big problem for us when it comes to deciding who our allies are.
00:28:52.000Because at the moment, we're relying on China to get rich.
00:28:57.000Well, in theory, and America to keep us safe.
00:29:01.000So we're walking this tightrope, as it were, you know, like we're helping China as long as it doesn't anger America.
00:29:09.000And so when it comes to America first, I think maybe a bit of conflict might arise.
00:29:18.000So coming from that perspective, I just, you know, and I feel like Australians, we have a big connection to America in terms of, Liberal democracy, and you know, arguably racial wise.
00:29:32.000So, wondering, like, maybe if you put your head into the uh, the digger mind, you know, the do your spirit, uh, how do you see that playing out?
00:29:43.000The more Anglo countries, the New Zealand friends, and Australian friends, you know, what are we gonna do?
00:29:51.000Yeah, well, the Australian question is an interesting one because obviously Australia is in the Pacific, and there has been.
00:30:00.000This question in the public in Australia as to whether they are an Asian country because of their geography or are they a Western country because of their heritage and their history.
00:30:12.000And this is a question I think which will define Australia's role in the Pacific probably in the coming decades.
00:30:17.000Will they align then with Asian countries?
00:30:20.000Will they align then regionally or will they go again with the heritage and the history?
00:30:25.000And I think one interesting proposition, which somebody sent me an article about this the other week.
00:30:30.000Was about an Anglo alliance, was an alliance between the former countries of the British Crown, which would be Canada, the United States, Australia, India, the United Kingdom, and Ireland, and a few of the smaller islands in South Africa.
00:30:46.000And I think that's certainly the best option that we have to go for.
00:30:51.000And many international relations scholars have written about this, which is how will nations define themselves?
00:30:57.000How will they align themselves in the wake of the ideological? World order in the Cold War.
00:31:03.000And Sam Huntington and Robert Kaplan speculated that they would realign more along ethnic, cultural, racial lines.
00:31:12.000Sam Huntington said it would go back to the largest unit of peoples, which is the civilization of which Australia would be a part of the West.
00:31:21.000Kaplan said it would be a more ethnic, racial, in some ways non state allegiances that the new fault lines would be decided.
00:31:30.000I think Australia would be best suited towards going towards that Anglo alliance.
00:31:35.000I think if that could be created, if the United Kingdom could turn away from the European Union and towards.
00:31:43.000Our old colonial holdings turned towards the countries under the British crown, Canada, the United States, South Africa, India, and Australia.
00:31:52.000I think that would certainly make the most sense.
00:31:54.000I think that would certainly be the most solid alliance that we could get to in the 21st century when everything of the old order seems to be coming down.
00:32:04.000So I think the Anglo alliance is the future for the English speaking people.
00:32:08.000It's a common culture, it's a common heritage, a common history, and people like Destiny.
00:32:14.000I debated on this channel before, say things like Americans have no culture.
00:32:18.000Being an American doesn't mean anything.
00:32:22.000I mean, the English culture was the one that prevailed on the continent from the 17th century through to the mid 20th century.
00:32:29.000It was a culture that was English, Protestant, and liberal in character.
00:32:35.000And to have that cultural bond, I think it can't be overstated how valuable that would be to form kind of an international posse amongst those English speaking countries.
00:34:19.000Here's what I've been thinking about today in contrast.
00:34:23.000If you look at the America First movement or even the alt right, the fringe right, whatever you want to call it, in contrast with Conservative Inc.
00:34:32.000You look at Conservative Inc. right now and just look at all the infrastructure that they have in place.
00:34:37.000Just look at everything that they have in place.
00:34:39.000Their Turning Point USA conference that was this week, where they had thousands of kids from all over the country come and a lineup of 25 very impressive speakers.
00:34:51.000They saw they had Sebastian Gorka, they had Ben Shapiro, they had Brian Kilmead.
00:34:56.000And, you know, those are obviously not totally our guys, but I mean, these are pretty popular, pretty big names that are recognizable, and it's a pretty solid roster that they've put together and have these brands that people are invested in.
00:35:10.000Not only that, but they have magazines, they have columns, they have books, they have media.
00:35:16.000And I think that you look at all of that and you understand why they're winning.
00:35:22.000You look at Ben Shapiro and you understand why he's winning.
00:35:25.000Number one conservative commentator in America.
00:35:35.000If we had that kind of machinery, if we had books being published, if we had columns being published daily, if we had Some kind of consistent content where the messaging was consistent, the output was consistent, the quality was consistent, and there was cooperation, I think we would win.
00:35:54.000We don't have the same resources, but we have the better ideas.
00:36:39.000I mean, like, I kind of wanted to know what you think about European nationalist movements like Generation Identitaire and whether America should go in that direction.
00:36:52.000I have maintained that generation identity and groups like it are for Europe.
00:36:58.000I think European has more of a history with identitarianism.
00:37:02.000They have more of a history with that flavor of right wing politics and that style of politics.
00:37:09.000I don't think you have that tradition in this country that would resonate with the people.
00:37:15.000Where in Europe, you have all kinds of organizations in years past that might resonate with people, particularly in places like Germany or.
00:37:26.000You just don't have that in the United States, where it has been the two party system, the domination of Republican and Democrat political machines for 150 years.
00:37:38.000So I don't think that kind of political insurgency would work here.
00:37:41.000And especially given the electoral system.
00:37:43.000You know, in the United Kingdom, you have UKIP.
00:37:48.000In the United Kingdom, you have, I forget the name of that other very right wing party, but you have, because of their proportional parliamentary system or their first past the post.
00:38:31.000Is that like the Lauren Southern take, or was she a bit different?
00:38:36.000Well, no, Lauren Southern was more about ideology.
00:38:39.000That take of mine is like in terms of tactics.
00:38:43.000Hers was that she's an ethno nationalist for Europe, but for North America, she said it's different because we don't have a racial identity.
00:38:53.000We did, but she says it's not relevant anymore.
00:38:57.000So, are you technically not an ethno nationalist for either?
00:41:50.000And this will be particularly useful in the coming two decades when we look at the Southwest possibly breaking away from the Republican Party, when we look at the Southeast even breaking away from the Republican Party.
00:42:03.000This is something we have to consider in order to buy time.
00:42:07.000It would not be a permanent fix to have white people or conservative minded people move into swing states, particularly in the Rust Belt or the Midwest, but it is something that would buy time.
00:42:18.000Because if you consider that Texas will go blue in 20 years and Arizona will go blue.
00:42:24.000Probably sooner than that, and Florida will, and Georgia, and so on and so forth.
00:42:29.000It is a very smart strategy to start playing for Minnesota, to start playing for Wisconsin, and Michigan, and Pennsylvania, and New Hampshire.
00:42:37.000If we could make those states solidly red, if we could contest those, which Donald Trump did, and consolidate our gains there, and even in places like Washington or Oregon, I think with a concerted effort, it might be possible.
00:42:51.000We could buy ourselves another decade or two if it were ambitious, if it were.
00:42:57.000You know, if we tried really hard, it would be very difficult.
00:43:01.000But I think that might be a solution for buying us a little bit more time because you understand that the current Republican map, the electoral map that we count on, the math that we use to win elections, it's not going to be there for us in 20 years when Texas isn't a part of that.
00:43:18.000It's not going to be there when we can't contest states like Florida or even Colorado or even Virginia or even North Carolina.
00:43:26.000If you look at the Hispanic migration that's coming into the Mid Atlantic and the Southeast, so we're going to have to really rethink.
00:43:34.000The electoral map, and then as a result, rethink what our party platform is.
00:43:39.000So, yeah, I mean, we should have people moving up into the Midwest and into some of these states in the Rust Belt, like Ohio, Pennsylvania, and others.
00:43:47.000But also, we should be rethinking our platform in the sense that if we changed our economic policies to a more labor friendly, more union friendly platform, it wouldn't even require, I don't think, mass exodus from places like, you know, in the South to the Midwest.
00:44:05.000To flip these formerly blue states, you know, to flip a state like Pennsylvania permanently.
00:44:09.000If we could win the white union vote, we could really shore ourselves up and buy ourselves a little bit more time.
00:44:27.000And it has to do with your promotion of Christianity and Catholicism.
00:44:37.000And to do also with like the negging of drama or whatever.
00:44:42.000But, and I don't know what the content is specifically of like the negs that you, that people post, like anti Christian, whatever.
00:44:51.000I don't know if it's like that's part of the alt right or et cetera.
00:44:55.000But the brushes, when you brush it aside, it comes off as like a don't criticize me kind of attitude, comparable to like the people that you criticize.
00:45:13.000I've explained this a few times before, but there's a big difference between Tara McCarthy, between the ridiculous vegan Tara McCarthy, who says that if you want people like me, people like me, women, in the movement, you can't criticize me.
00:46:15.000Like, if you want to say, I don't know, if you want to tell me that Catholicism is old or it doesn't work or whatever, like, you know, we can have an argument about that.
00:46:26.000But if you're trying to tell me that Jesus is a Jew on a stick and that's why, I mean, then I have to say you're not a serious person and that's not a serious criticism.
00:46:36.000You know, and I've been a vocal critic of many people in the movement and I've been treated like I'm an infiltrator for that, for saying that.
00:46:44.000You know, we should have better optics.
00:46:47.000There should be better organization, which is a very different thing from a lot of the counterproductive and I think criticisms with bad intentions in mind.
00:46:58.000When I criticize, it is with the intention that the movement gets better, that the messaging gets better, that we get stronger.
00:47:06.000And I think anybody who watches my show understands that it comes from that place.
00:47:09.000And that can't be said for, obviously, a lot of the shit posters who might be astroturfing for some people or ideas.
00:48:02.000If the media thing takes off, obviously, hopefully in five years, we'll be doing a pretty solid media company, a pretty solid media effort.
00:48:23.000What would I like to see in five years?
00:48:25.000Well, I'd like to see, obviously, the wall.
00:48:27.000I'd like to see Donald Trump being president.
00:48:29.000I would like to see the Republican Party solidly.
00:48:32.000Consolidating around the America First, Make America Great Again platform.
00:48:36.000I'd like to see Steve Bannon at the helm of Breitbart and at the helm of this political movement, bringing candidates into the congressional leadership who share our values.
00:48:46.000I guess in the next five years, what really needs to happen is consolidation of our gains within the Republican Party.
00:48:54.000That is the only thing that can happen, in my opinion, the most important thing that can happen in that timeframe for us to succeed.
00:49:03.000Because what happened with Ronald Reagan was.
00:49:05.000There was not that consolidation in the party of that kind of conservatism.
00:49:35.000I think he is setting himself up for a very strong position in 2020.
00:49:39.000And not only is he going to be in a strong position, but the Democrats will be in a weak position, which is a very, I mean, that was the dynamic that allowed Donald Trump to get elected.
00:49:50.000So I think we'll see a repeat of that in 2020.
00:49:52.000It's premature, but I think it is most definitely within the realm of possibility.
00:50:20.000This goes back to a little bit what the other previous call was about forecasting and what this is going to look like in a couple of years.
00:50:28.000Given the events of 2017, do you feel that in 2018 we're either going to grow, die, or we're just going to stay on the plateau as terms of people involved in this new nationalist white movement?
00:50:44.000What the leadership of the movement, what the people who constitute the movement decide to do with it.
00:50:50.000I think right now, many people in this movement are making a terrible mistake.
00:50:54.000They are shutting themselves off from the mainstream right.
00:50:58.000They are trapped in this, and I know it's a buzzword, but there is this purity spiraling that is preventing us from growing and from reaching out.
00:51:06.000You look at, for example, at Milo Yiannopoulos, who I have many problems with, who understandably many people have many problems with.
00:51:14.000Milo Yiannopoulos was one of the best things to happen to the alt right.
00:51:18.000He created a funnel from which these Ben Shapiro, Steven Crowder, Bill Crystal fags.
00:51:25.000Came into the nationalist movement, led them down the rabbit hole into this movement where I never would have gotten without people like Gav McInnes, without people like Milo, without people even like Alex Jones or Paul Joseph Watson.
00:51:38.000And there is this concerted effort in the leadership of this movement this year to cut the flow off, to cut that off, to board ourselves off from the rest of the world.
00:52:00.000Recently, since I started criticizing about the optics and some other people have, but we've got to get serious about what our goals are because I don't think in its present form there is much more room for growth, if that makes sense.
00:52:15.000So in 2018, it is really going to be up to the leadership if they're going to be smart, if they're going to be pragmatic, and what really do they want for the movement, and that will decide it.
00:52:27.000Our present trajectory, I think it will plateau or go down.
00:52:32.000If we change, if we adopt the America First, the American nationalist brand, I think the sky is the limit.
00:52:54.000How many of these people who are actually in this dissident white movement are actually going to take the opportunity to maybe even go to CPAC and maybe even just Not necessarily to LARP or whatever, but actually just be there in legitimate suit with legitimate purpose there and actually discuss and network people that were down there.
00:54:23.000Too many times when we discuss any sort of opinions with maybe other dissonant white folks, they constantly bring up the fact that they don't understand the fact that we can't just simply just meme and keep ship posting our way to the goals.
00:54:36.000We actually have to get boots on the ground.
00:54:38.000And too many times when I've discussed this, they say, well, those who are not as based as I or a cuck, I say, well, you don't understand.
00:56:55.000I want to hear your insight on that kind of stuff.
00:56:58.000Well, you know, this is a difficult thing for a lot of people because to believe in God, you know, it requires at once a faith, which is very difficult in the modern world, and at the same time, a humility.
00:57:11.000I think these are the two biggest problems that people have with it.
00:57:16.000You know, I talk to people in this movement, and a lot of it is the humility.
00:57:21.000And then I talk to other people, and a lot of it is the faith, in the sense that in the modern world, when everything is.
00:57:27.000Scientific and everything is empirical and everything is rationalist and everything is material.
00:57:33.000It's hard to conceive of something that is none of those things.
00:57:37.000It's hard to conceive of something that is outside of the realm of our experience, outside this paradigm of rationalism, outside of this hard empiricism which we've developed in the past 200 years.
00:57:50.000And then at the same time, there's this question of humility where, particularly in this movement, it's difficult for people to say, That there is something above us, greater than all of us, greater than the individual, greater than the collective.
00:58:03.000And, you know, what I think really fosters and nurtures faith is hardship.
00:58:11.000But I know that I came around to understanding God and understanding spirituality at the times when you're having a very difficult time, you know.
00:58:24.000And we all think that we're very mighty and very strong and kings of the universe when things are going very well.
00:58:30.000But, you know, You know, then when we come close to death or something terrible happens, and you consider the suffering of life, it's almost a necessary construct in your mind, or it actually exists.
00:58:45.000But either way, I think that's the best way to come around to it.
00:58:50.000So I really found it in November of 2016 when I thought there was going to be a nuclear war.
00:58:55.000When I thought there was going to be a nuclear war with Russia, because I thought, you know, if you heard some of the rhetoric going around at the time, Joe Biden talking about retaliation against Russia for a perceived cyber attack, I thought, I'm going to get nuked.
00:59:08.000I'm going to get nuked before I see my family again.
00:59:12.000And that really brought it home for me.
00:59:15.000Well, thank you for answering my question.
00:59:46.000So, my question is how important do you think it is to, maybe with a more forceful kind of effort, Popularize sort of the intellectuals of our own kind of Catholic Christian tradition, such as, you know, Augustine, Anselm, Aquinas, the medieval scholastics, and even to an extent, Plato and Aristotle, who are really kind of, I think, the intellectual prefigurements of the Christian kind of worldview.
01:00:09.000Because it kind of seems like these thinkers, especially Aristotle and St. Thomas, are not only important to making Christianity intellectually attractive to more people, but to me, from my own studies, seem quite.
01:00:23.000You know, right wing friendly, and that you can really use them to intellectually promote things like traditional morality or philosophy on gender, the necessity of God's existence, the metaphysics of the state, natural law, the importance of hierarchy and order, and that kind of thing.
01:00:39.000And, you know, in that regard, I think have an even broader appeal to the whole movement, which I think would not only help the movement intellectually, but as well as would kind of make it easier to baptize, as I think you and I would want to do.
01:00:56.000What we need in this movement is, I think, a renewed evangelism for these Catholic ideas in the sense that, you know, take, for example, Milton Friedman, who did his free to choose lecture series in the 1980s.
01:01:09.000And take, for example, the Leadership Institute or Turning Point USA.
01:01:12.000When you go into college, you're 18 years old, you go into college, and you consider yourself a right leaning person, you know, ambiguously, generally a right leaning person, conservative leaning person.
01:01:25.000You can take your pick at Turning Point USA, College Republicans, Young Americans for Liberty, and you go to any one of these organizations, and they will have literature for you.
01:01:37.000They will have Milton Friedman's free to choose book summarized in a two minute video with flashy graphics.
01:01:44.000They'll have books available for you through their publishing company.
01:01:47.000They'll be able to get you free books.
01:01:49.000They'll be able to get you a pamphlet.
01:01:51.000They'll be able to refer you to an hour long resource on YouTube, a half hour resource, classes on.
01:01:57.000Liberty, U University, or whatever, the Constitution class at Hillsdale.
01:02:01.000And there's just this abundance of material that's easy to consume.
01:02:08.000And if we did the same thing, if we took Aquinas and Augustine and Plato and Aristotle and we did the same thing, and even look at Ayn Rand, look at the Ayn Rand Institute, look at Young Americans for Liberty and all the resources that are available for anybody that likes Ayn Rand and book clubs and movies and everything, if we had that with Catholicism, You're exactly right.
01:03:50.000Yeah, so, uh, I don't know, like, uh, don't you, just like, I just want to, like, point out that person a couple of hours ago, very low-tee individual.
01:04:16.000Is it, why is it a realistic thing to just say that?
01:04:20.000Like, why can't you just, like, for all these people to come into the country, like all these Mexicans and such, third worlders, why can't you just, like, I don't know, castrate them so they can't have kids and, like, say this is the price to come in?
01:05:10.000And the people that are here, if we had a solid birth rate, if we brought up the white birth rate through the Christian faith or through other things, through an economy that worked for families in the middle class, the problem would solve itself.
01:05:25.000Like with the state of Christianity, like people, there's very few people are really involved in it and like identify with that.
01:05:34.000Like you see all these Mexicans, like they're supposedly like majority Catholic, but you don't see them voting for the pro, for the pro, like the anti abortion president being Trump.
01:05:55.000No, but we're talking about for, we're talking about for the People that are already here, we have to revive Christianity so that they can have kids.
01:06:03.000Like, when you look at the voting statistics, like, white people are the only ones who have independent thought, it looks like.
01:06:12.000The ones who vote based on the morals and the principles.
01:06:15.000Whereas all, like, all the others will majority vote Democrat every single time.
01:06:20.000Well, I don't know if it's about thought.
01:06:21.000I think it's just more about for white people, this is intuitive to them because they don't feel like they are.
01:06:31.000They are not conscious of their identity because historically and traditionally and culturally, this is a white country.
01:06:39.000And so for them, it can be about economics.
01:06:41.000But if you consider it from the perspective of a black person, where they're in a very small minority, 14% of the population, of course they're going to put their racial identity above it.
01:06:51.000Of course they would do that because they feel like an outsider.
01:06:56.000It's this feeling of alienation, which I think is intrinsic to being a minority in a multi ethnic or a multi racial country.
01:07:03.000And so I don't think it's really a signifier of a capability of thought or anything.
01:08:45.000Because I don't know, just taking it one step at a time, showing people like, You see things over the internet of the governments wasting money and they're just in all the inefficiency in it saying people see this and they still support socialism.
01:09:13.000The continent of Africa has not had a thriving, sub Saharan Africa, I'm talking about, has not had a thriving city for 3,000 years.
01:09:23.000Has not had a two story building since we arrived as colonists in the 19th century, did not have a written language since we arrived in the 19th century, except for Ethiopia.
01:09:35.000I mean, you just look at that, and how does anybody explain that?
01:10:26.000What are the serious questions, my friend?
01:10:30.000Okay, well, more people that are getting red pilled are going into the Milo Ben Shapiro crowd, the normie tier red pills.
01:10:39.000And, you know, people like Ben Shapiro and Milo are recognizing this and they've been punching right more.
01:10:44.000And I just want to know how do we drive more people into our movement?
01:10:49.000Well, I mean, here's how is just by producing content.
01:10:52.000It's about creating that pathway from Ben Shapiro to us.
01:10:56.000And how you do that is number one, engaging with them, achieving cross pollination with them.
01:11:01.000But number two, making it so that people who are looking for us will find us.
01:11:06.000People who are looking for this ideology or this movement or something that's a little bit more out there, we need to give them the 10 minute video.
01:11:16.000We need to give them the five minute video of this is why we are right on immigration.
01:11:21.000This is why immigration cannot work in any way.
01:11:24.000We have to challenge those talking points.
01:11:26.000And it's about creating that pathway from Shapiro to us, paving it with content.
01:11:32.000And not only that, but cross pollinating so people get from one to the other.
01:11:36.000For example, a lot of our people don't like to affiliate with the alt light, as they call it, don't like to affiliate with Cernovich, don't like to affiliate with Alex Jones and the likes of them.
01:11:47.000But if we get on those shows, if we get on with those people, if we're in communication with those people and we appear with them, people who are watching those streams will think, oh, you know, this is, for example, this is Nick Fuentes.
01:12:24.000It's not an easy thing, but with persistence, with quality, with cross pollination, I think that's how we got there.
01:12:32.000And that's how we arrived at where we are today, I believe.
01:12:35.000You know, I didn't hear about the alt right until I started talking to people who.
01:12:39.000Went down the path from Stefan Molyneux, who bridged the gap really nicely, andor through Gavin McInnes into Jared Taylor and into Richard Spencer.
01:12:55.000In the future, do you think that it'd be good to see us transform into our own political party of some kind with more organization, or do you think that we could in some way morph ourselves into the current conservative movement?
01:13:07.000We just have to co opt the Republican Party.
01:13:09.000I mean, that's, I believe that that's the shape it has to take.
01:13:14.000And the reason being that the infrastructure is already there.
01:13:17.000It's so much more difficult to create a new system, to create something that is a threat to the existing system, than it is to just co opt the system.
01:13:27.000And I don't, as far as I've seen, the system is not beyond repair.
01:13:32.000The system is not beyond saving or infiltration.
01:13:40.000And when, if, or when the Republican Party stops being a useful, Instrument or channel through which we can achieve our goals, then we should look at being a third party.
01:13:50.000But I mean, until that point, we look at the most successful ideological slash party coups in the history of the country, and it's been within these two parties for a long time.
01:15:33.000What we usually do, and this is going to be, I'm going to get nagged so hard for this because this is a pretty degenerate cosmopolitan tradition.
01:15:40.000But on Christmas Day, we go, well, we have a big breakfast, of course.
01:15:49.000We usually have sushi because those are the only places that are open, and we see all the Jews at the sushi place because, you know, they don't celebrate Christmas.
01:17:03.000Thinking about restructuring how we do our QA.
01:17:07.000I'm thinking, and tell me what you think about this.
01:17:10.000In the live chat or in the comments, I'm thinking about doing it this way.
01:17:13.000Instead of doing super chats on Friday, if you are on the Patreon, I'm thinking about adding a perk that if you subscribe to the Patreon, you can get into a weekly call in show on Friday.
01:17:54.000But if you like that idea, let me know in the live chat or in the Discord or the comments, you know, however you want to communicate it to me.
01:18:00.000But I'm thinking about doing it weekly because people do enjoy the banter.
01:18:04.000It creates a nice connection between me and my audience.
01:18:58.000Give it a like if you liked what you saw, if you liked the call ins, the bants, the comments, the insights, the humor.
01:19:04.000And remember to follow me down below on Twitter at Nick J. Fuentes, Facebook.com slash Nick J. Fuentes, Periscope at Nick J. Fuentes, gab.ai slash Nick J. Fuentes, Nicholas J. Fuentes.com.
01:19:17.000It's Nick Fuentes' planet universe over here.
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01:19:27.00016 ounce, very sexy, very tall, big gulps.
01:20:01.000Of 2017, if you can believe it, many, many months ago, and we've made it through RSBN independently, America First Media, all the way through today.
01:20:11.000And we thank everybody that's donated, everybody that's watched, given us patronage, that's helped us along our way on this journey to defeat the eternal globalist and bring a balance back to the United States.
01:20:26.000So thanks for a great year, everybody.
01:20:28.000Hope everybody has a Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year.
01:20:32.000God bless you all, and we will see you.