00:00:51.000And for people who are not, I should probably explain for people that are not familiar with what's going on.
00:00:56.000So on Saturday, I went off on this big rant at like 4 a.m., as usual.
00:01:01.000I'm on this weird sleeping schedule called The Modern World.
00:01:06.000Where I stay up all night and then sleep in the afternoon.
00:01:08.000But I'm up at 4 a.m., I'm tweeting about the term racism.
00:01:12.000And I said, you know, all white people should just remove the words racism, white supremacy from their vocabulary.
00:01:19.000They serve no other function other than to bludgeon white people into submission.
00:01:23.000Because so often I see my fellow whites, I see my fellow white conservative pundits like Will Nardi tweeting about racism, or they direct message me about racism.
00:01:35.000If only we would disavow, if only we would disavow the real racist, the real white supremist.
00:02:48.000I know my fan base isn't wild about him.
00:02:50.000But, you know, when we want to influence a movement and we have things in common with certain people, I don't think it's tactically smart to burn bridges, to seek out monsters to destroy.
00:03:03.000You know, he's never hit me in the way that others have so blatantly done.
00:03:06.000So I generally try to avoid confrontation with certain people, certain people where there's no real reason to go after them.
00:03:15.000So Cernovich retweets Chamberlain, and for the longest time I had to restrain myself because you watch his periscope and he affects this very pretentious, bug man sort of arrogance, this pretentiousness where he has this laugh.
00:03:29.000I don't know if you've ever heard it, but he'll be talking about the alt right.
00:03:34.000And he does this phony laugh, and I think here's the most egregious, insufferable part.
00:03:39.000He does it because he knows it annoys people, he knows what a pestilence his approach is.
00:03:47.000So, I think he likes to take it up to the nth degree.
00:03:50.000This is like his schoolboy way of, I don't know, getting back at us.
00:03:55.000Like, I'm the most insufferable person in the world, and now I'm laughing at you.
00:04:03.000And so for the longest time, I had to restrain myself because I watched this and I, oh, I just want to tweet it and chop him in half with rhetoric.
00:04:13.000Never, never physical, never physical, but with rhetoric.
00:04:17.000And so for the longest time, I had to restrain myself, but then he comes after me.
00:04:20.000So I just gave him, I put him on full blast.
00:04:23.000I just sliced him and diced him like I did with Ali, with some of these other people.
00:04:51.000Somehow we got on to the subject of Israel.
00:04:54.000You know, he was saying something about how the founders were not white nationalists.
00:04:58.000And I said, well, you know, if you look at the 1790 Immigration Act, the 1795 Immigration Act, 1798 Immigration Act, the 1802 Immigration Law, if you look at.
00:05:09.000If you look at the preamble of the Constitution, if you look at the letter sent from Thomas Jefferson to George Washington in July 11, 1786, if you look at the 14th Amendment, which it's disputed if that was even ratified by three quarters of the states in 1868.
00:05:24.000I mean, there's so many things that just obviously goes against this.
00:05:28.000And I'm listing all these, you know, I think maybe if Will's watching, he gets an idea what a big brain nibble he's up against.
00:05:33.000I'm listing all this evidence, and he goes, I don't give a shit.
00:06:33.000He's kind of like this new male kind of bug man character.
00:06:37.000It'll be fun for him to get on the program and for me to, you know, give him the business, show him some of the things that we know that isn't talked about.
00:06:46.000And then I see Ali Akbar is doing a periscope about it.
00:06:50.000And then I see Jack Posobick retweets about it.
00:06:52.000And then I see Mike Cernovich retweets about it.
00:06:55.000And then I see Cassandra Fairbanks tweeting about it.
00:06:57.000And then I see Jeff Giza tweeting about it, or he DMs me about it.
00:07:52.000I don't drink wine or anything at all, but you know what I'm saying.
00:07:55.000You know, you can pick up on these subtleties, these nuances.
00:07:59.000And right away, when he was periscoping on Saturday, he hits me with this phrase.
00:08:04.000These very cool, calculated, like Scott Adams phrases.
00:08:07.000He says that when you say we shouldn't use the word racism, what you're doing, very, this is very good.
00:08:13.000He says, when you say don't use the word racism, what you're doing is you're turning off, get this, you're turning off your morality modulator.
00:08:25.000When you say we can't say the word racism anymore because it bludgeons whites politically, neuters them, castrates them socially, rhetorically, to even engage, concede that paradigm, he says, what you're actually doing is you're turning off, very, very visual symbol there.
00:08:44.000I mean, we all kind of understand what this means.
00:08:46.000You're turning off your morality modulator.
00:09:08.000It's hilarious to me because people watch this show, people who watch America First every night, like you're supposed to, five days a week.
00:09:18.000For my 250 IQ, six foot eight killers, you know, my right wing thought patrolling squads, you know, we don't need this alliteration.
00:09:26.000We don't need these nice, cute little Manhattan phrases and these little, oh, you know, little morality modulator.
00:09:32.000We don't need the muscle memory stuff.
00:09:34.000We stick to the facts here on this show, right?
00:09:42.000We look at the data, we look at the facts, and we deliver it.
00:09:45.000You know, there's no calculation, there's no like coy, sly, like rhetoric.
00:09:50.000You know, Scott Adams, we're not trying to like hypnotize you with morality modulator.
00:09:54.000And then, you know, I sort of let that one pass because I was like, you know, that's a little kind of a douchey way to say what you mean, which is I hate white people too.
00:10:03.000But then on, and if you notice, I moved my paw.
00:11:18.000I can get my head around it because it starts with the same letter of the alphabet, you know, and not for nothing.
00:11:24.000But you hear things like this the radicalization rabbit hole, and they tend to, without arguing the points, without answering or attempting to even refute the central claims, the central questions, core of our arguments, of our arguments.
00:11:41.000Criticisms of the modern world, they attempt to delegitimize it.
00:11:45.000And people warn me that Will Chamberlain would try to do this.
00:11:47.000Before the debate even starts, he delegitimizes.
00:11:50.000That's, you know, for he says he's a debate society champ.
00:11:54.000You know, he thinks because I wasn't a debate champ in high school, you know, I don't read books on this stuff.
00:11:59.000You have your ethos, your pathos, and your logos.
00:12:24.000That's what they do from the left, from the right, from the middle.
00:12:27.000They hear our questions, which are real, our concerns, which we feel in our bones, in our flesh, about what's going on to our country.
00:12:36.000And instead of refuting that, instead of looking at the bell curves, instead of looking at the disproportionate representations, instead of looking at the trends, the culture, this anomalous 20th century, the myth of it that we had, instead of even approaching a criticism or a refutation of any of those valid criticisms, it's he's 19, he's 18.
00:12:56.000If he's 19, he must be foolish as I was when I was 19.
00:13:27.000In a very sober way, I'm questioning things that are established.
00:13:31.000There's nothing like silly, there's nothing reckless about what I'm doing.
00:13:35.000Maybe the tactics are reckless, but the reasoning, the logic, as far as I'm concerned, so far as I've even heard, has not been refuted so far.
00:13:45.000If Will can come on the show and tell me why we should keep paying Israel $3.8 billion a year, why we should make good on this 10 year contract that we have, the memorandum of understanding, they call it.
00:13:57.000Wow, you know, that's a really nice way to say.
00:14:00.000Two thirds of the Congress goes to the APAC conference every year to hear people say why we should give ever increasing amounts of money to Israel because, you know, what, Muslims or something?
00:14:52.000I think, you know, certain people have certain things to answer for, certain people have certain opinions, ideas that they don't want to talk about, that maybe they don't even consciously know about them, but they can't.
00:15:04.000Can't let the cat out of the bag, but cat's already out of the bag.
00:15:11.000And, you know, the best they can do at this point is like literally kill people.
00:15:14.000The best they can do, I'm talking about the deep state.
00:15:17.000I'm talking about, you know, whatever shadow government is in control here.
00:15:22.000The best that they can do now is resort to either people infiltrating our organization, taking up a false banner and leading people astray, or it's literally putting bullets in people's heads.
00:15:33.000You know, not for nothing, but we're getting a lot of opposition.
00:15:38.000We're getting a lot of opposition, or at least I am, for Christianity, for things that are pretty sensible.
00:15:44.000And so I don't think it's going to work anymore.
00:15:47.000I think this is supposed to be some kind of ritualistic, you know, I think this is my sneaking suspicion.
00:15:52.000I think people are boosting this debate, so it'll be like a ritualistic shutdown of the alt right, which I'm not alt right, but some sort of ritualistic killing to say this is what happens.
00:16:05.000We had this intellectual debate, but I don't think they know what they're in for.
00:16:08.000And already you can hear Will was starting to back out a little bit.
00:16:11.000I don't know if he's going to back out of the debate.
00:16:13.000I don't know if he's even going to show up on Wednesday.
00:16:15.000I think that's a little presumptuous in and of itself.
00:16:18.000But on the Periscope today, he was saying, oh, I don't know.
00:16:21.000I might only do audio, I might not even come on video because.
00:16:26.000His trolls might make me look stupid, you know, by cutting.
00:16:29.000Whoa, you know, what happened to world class?
00:16:31.000What happened to world champion debater?
00:16:33.000Suddenly, you know, I don't want to go on video because they're going to make me look stupid.
00:16:37.000Well, you know, Will, it's kind of hard to make you look stupid if, you know, you're such a big brain nibble if you don't deserve the rock, right?
00:16:44.000So I don't know if he'll even show up.
00:16:59.000Why are we wasting so much time talking about Will Chamberlain when we have the biggest day, one of the biggest days of the year, in my opinion, for implicit white identity, for the strong European heritage to rise up and we can finally celebrate it?
00:17:14.000We actually have, I think, a real watershed here, a real touchstone issue, if you will, to declare our support, our celebration for our ancestors.
00:17:23.000Today is the day of our buddy, our hero, our ancestor, Christopher Columbus.
00:17:29.000And, you know, there was a real chimp out.
00:17:32.000Today, as there is every year, you know, they say, call it Indigenous Peoples Day.
00:18:06.000This is a touchstone issue for cultural.
00:18:08.000I mean, it goes by other names cultural Marxism, Bolshevism, you know, I don't know.
00:18:14.000There are other things we could call it, but cultural Marxism, where what they seek to do is to critique.
00:18:20.000It's a culture of critique where they seek to critique and admonish and take the wind out of everything that is good, everything that is heroic, everything that is powerful and resonant about Western and European, more importantly, people.
00:18:34.000You know, here we have an example of a man, Christopher Columbus, who was Genoan.
00:18:40.000We take him, us Italians take credit for him, but he was Genoan, sponsored by the Crown of Castile to sail to find new routes to Asia to sell spices.
00:18:50.000Because, of course, you know, it's a long trip to go to Asia when you're going around Africa or whatever.
00:18:55.000So they tried to seek a direct route to Asia.
00:18:58.000And, you know, people have said before that Leif Eriksson discovered the Americas first.
00:19:03.000Yeah, well, you know, he got chased out.
00:20:56.000They didn't have Nietzsche at the time, but sealing across the ocean, landing, conquering a foreign people, and then setting foot in foreign territory, making peace, making war.
00:21:08.000And over the course of the next 300 to 400 years, we conquered the North and South American plains.
00:21:13.000And, you know, not for nothing, but that was the law of the jungle at the time, the law of the land.
00:21:21.000You have to imagine in 1492, this is how they try and.
00:21:25.000Take the wind out of it, where we had a great holiday that celebrates glory and all these great things, heroism, you know, real men, real powerful people, real icons.
00:21:37.000They try and say, Oh, well, yeah, nice hero you got there.
00:21:41.000It'd be a shame if somebody said, What about this?
00:21:43.000It'd be a shame if somebody said, Oh, but what about the fact that he killed people?
00:21:48.000What about the fact that he oppressed and enslaved people?
00:22:30.000That is how it has always been in every other part of the world and remains the case to this day.
00:22:35.000I mean, you look at North America when we came here and you had certainly some empires and some were more consolidated and formal and structured hierarchical than others, but you had people that controlled geographic areas.
00:22:49.000And that's called property when you own something.
00:22:52.000And well, we were more powerful, so we took it from them, just like they took it from the people that came before them.
00:22:58.000And the same law has prevailed in Africa, by the way, in Arabia, in Asia.
00:23:04.000Notice you hear nobody complaining every time there is a Muslim holiday about Muhammad's conquest of the Arabian Peninsula.
00:23:11.000I mean, remember in what was it, 632 when he died?
00:23:16.000Yeah, 632 when he died, he had conquered the entire Arabian Peninsula, beheaded people, slaughtered people by the thousands, conquered an entire peninsula, paved the way for an empire which would span from Spain in the west to Indonesia in the east.
00:23:34.000You know, how do you think that happened?
00:23:39.000What was the, you know, you had many caliphs in North Africa who demographically replaced the native Bedouin North Africans.
00:23:46.000I mean, there was the Arabization, an explicit policy, interesting precedent, of Arabization of all these different lands.
00:23:53.000And then you had, in the 10th century, you had the Turks coming down from Central Asia.
00:23:58.000And then in the 12th century, you had the Mongolians come through, the Golden Hordes.
00:24:02.000I mean, nobody thinks to condemn, nobody thinks to condemn the conquest, the genocides, the slaveries of third world empires, of which that has been the rule forever and remains to be the rule today.
00:24:17.000But when Christopher Columbus comes around, we have to say, we have to bow our heads in shame, a ritualistic shame, and say we're sorry for being stronger, for being greater, for being excellent, for being exceptional.
00:24:33.000And if any of these people cared about what they say they care about, this critique, this cultural Marxism, this what about this, what about that, they would not be celebrating the prophet Muhammad.
00:24:44.000They would not be celebrating any other people at any time in history.
00:25:08.000Today is a day to celebrate a great people with great heritage, great ancestors, who through their sophistication, their knowledge, through reason, through culture, We were able to dominate, to truly excel in a world of barbarism.
00:25:26.000And I don't think that's anything to apologize for.
00:25:28.000I mean, if anybody thinks it was preferable to be indigenous, if anybody thinks what the indigenous people had to offer was better or worth preserving or even valuable, they should move to, I don't know, Afghanistan.
00:26:56.000Of cultural Marxism, it comes from a very particular class of people globalists, cosmopolitans, internationalists, the Frankfurt School, the Soviet Union, the Bolsheviks, the butchers of Budapest, the butchers in Moscow.
00:27:17.000It's called critical theory, where in order to subvert and destroy the West, in order to subvert and destroy Christendom, Europeans, capitalism, the Bolsheviks, you know, whatever their ideological or other.
00:27:33.000There are other things to describe these people.
00:27:36.000In order to subvert and destroy, they have taken this line called critical theory.
00:27:41.000And this is kind of a boomer talking point, but it's true.
00:27:45.000Where they take from all different angles, from all different perceptions, this is what intersectionality is, by the way, from the women lens, from the queer lens, from the black lens, from the indigenous lens, from the Hispanic, you know, the mestizo lens.
00:28:01.000And they take great Western achievements and they hold them to standards that didn't exist at the time.
00:28:32.000They spread diseases and they genocided, and that's not okay.
00:28:35.000And so you should feel sorry for being that.
00:28:37.000And they look at America, and they say, yeah, America is liberal, and you have voting rights and civil rights and the Constitution, but slavery.
00:28:46.000Okay, they had slaves, so you should feel bad about it.
00:29:16.000Who are guilty of the same crimes in spades.
00:29:21.000And it comes down to you can criticize everything that is white, everything that is Western, everything that is European, everything that is Christian, and nothing else.
00:29:31.000And that's why, you know, if we can come full circle, that's why I come at Will Chamberlain, or rather, he came at me when I said that we shouldn't be using the word racism.
00:29:39.000Racism is the catch all to corrupt white European Christian achievement.
00:29:57.000That's why we have to destroy all these institutions.
00:30:01.000And I'm reading, you know, you don't believe me that this doesn't exist, but I'm reading CNN today.
00:30:06.000CNN's headline is Trump's praise of Christopher Columbus omits dark history.
00:30:13.000The article begins Never mind the disease and slavery wrought by Christopher Columbus's voyage.
00:30:19.000Or the fact that he didn't actually discover the new world.
00:30:22.000You notice that only one people, only one faith, only one continent, only one culture is put under the microscope in such a way that we drag up the ugly omissions, right?
00:30:33.000When the Huffington Post, when the New York Times, when CNN talks about the lesbian cop that saved Steve King, or Steve Scalise rather, when he was shot on that baseball field in Alexandria, do they say that lesbian cops saved Steve Scalise?
00:30:48.000But it omits the dark history that the homosexual community.
00:30:51.000Is rife with sexually transmitted diseases, promiscuity, and domestic violence.
00:30:58.000When they say, oh, Muslims were the first ones on the scene to take care of people in Parsons Green and in the London terror attack, but it omits the dark history that Islam was an evil empire that enslaved Eastern Africans, and Islam cut off people's heads, and Islam perpetrates terror attacks, and the Prophet was a pedophile.
00:31:18.000When they talk about black excellence and they say, look at what the black community is doing.
00:31:22.000You know, Donald Trump disparages the black community, says it's awful, but it's actually great.
00:31:27.000Do they say it omits the dark history of Africa as a place where their own people sold each other into slavery and they hadn't discovered anything at all and they didn't even have two story buildings or written language or wheels?
00:32:46.000There is a real something going on here.
00:32:48.000There is a real reason that this goes on.
00:32:51.000And that is one of the biggest reasons why I was led away from this because I started seeing movie posters, started seeing movies, started reading these headlines, started seeing the patterns, the writing on the wall here, where, you know, there's one people under fire.
00:33:05.000It goes against all of the stated values of the left, of tolerance and everything else, where you start to say maybe they're not hypocrites.
00:33:13.000Maybe we don't understand what they're actually about.
00:33:16.000And we have to really analyze, we have to really look at.
00:33:56.000It just appears that the media, Hollywood, the government, finance, Wall Street, international finance in particular, has this pernicious grudge, hatred of the European people, of Christ, of Christianity, of the West, of logic, of reason, of tradition, hierarchy.
00:38:43.000So we can't put the pumpkin over here.
00:38:46.000The light, which is over there, used to be closer up.
00:38:49.000So, you get this weird glare issue when I put it over here.
00:38:52.000But now it's back there, so the pumpkin is good.
00:38:55.000And for the Halloween show, speaking of fall identity, speaking of implicit whiteness with our autumn spirit here, I'm thinking about doing a call in show on Halloween.
00:39:58.000I love the holidays, and how can you not?
00:39:59.000It's the most traditional thing you can do.
00:40:03.000In my opinion, and this is the perfect season, you got October, and the weather is so perfect in October, especially where I live, you know, in Chicago, in the burbs, in the great Midwest.
00:40:14.000You have all these beautiful seasons, and then a fall, it gets nice, it gets like cool.
00:40:19.000The leaves are falling, they're changing colors, it's very beautiful.
00:40:23.000It's kind of a melancholy time, I'm not gonna lie, but it is a time which speaks to our souls.
00:40:29.000The fall tells us something, the fall tells us about our mortality.
00:40:34.000The fall tells us about the transience of our time here, of our experience here.
00:40:40.000When you see the leaves that were once green, when you see that you've lived through the spring and the summer, and what was new and fresh and full of life and beautiful and warm has now turned cold, has now turned brittle and dead, and it's on the ground and it's crunchy, and all the trees are barren.
00:41:00.000And it tells you something about life.
00:41:01.000It's a beautiful thing, it's something that speaks to our souls.
00:41:23.000It's a great, and then you have Halloween, and it's nice.
00:41:27.000It's a fun holiday, and you get to be with the kids.
00:41:30.000You remember your childhood memories, if they're good, where you got to dress up in a fun costume, and you had, at our elementary school, we had the Halloween parade around.
00:41:38.000The school, and then of course you go trick or treating.
00:41:43.000You get the candy, you have all your friends, you have this little community.
00:41:47.000And in a high trust society, that's one of the most remarkable things about a high trust society.
00:41:52.000When Destiny gets on my show and he says, well, that really doesn't matter, material wealth can supplant high trust societies.
00:42:00.000What we're talking about, it sounds kind of gay, okay?
00:42:03.000But when we're talking about high trust societies, we're talking about trick or treating, we're talking about birthday parties, we're talking about your childhood, which is.
00:42:13.000The most meaningful thing that you have.
00:42:14.000It's those little things, you know, it's kind of trite, but when we talk about those little things, those moments that make life worth living, that's what we're talking about.
00:42:23.000High trust means you can send your kids out in a costume and they can be out until reasonably late in the evening and they could go door to door to strangers' houses and accept food from them and then go home and eat it.
00:42:44.000These are the things that enrich our lives.
00:42:46.000Hang on, let me take a swig of water here.
00:42:49.000That's Satan, it's the devil creeping in, trying to corrupt this beautiful monologue here.
00:43:01.000These are the things that enrich our lives.
00:43:03.000You know, when you go door to door and you have this fun and you know the neighbors, you know, up and down the block and you know your friends and you get to go home and you trade your candy, you decorate your house with cool decorations.
00:43:14.000When you see these days where people are putting like needles in candy, you know, or they're giving kids poison or drugs, or people are driving around on Halloween kidnapping people and raping people, or there's violence or shenanigans or pranks and things like that, that's low trust.
00:43:34.000Because when you have a high trust society, you know which, maybe you know which neighbors to avoid.
00:43:40.000Maybe you know which ones are not, you know, they're not even in the neighborhood because you didn't permit them to come in because they're not.
00:43:48.000When you're in this atomized sort of rebel without a cause postmodern suburb where nobody knows each other, nobody goes outside, nobody has dinner with each other, you just don't know who's up and down the block.
00:44:02.000That's how you open yourself up to that sort of thing.
00:44:04.000So, this Halloween, or Halloween, this holiday season is, I think, a strong case for a message.
00:50:25.000I get like, I wake up every day and my inbox is just like, and my notifications are, and I don't even say that in like a braggadocious way, but just like, I want to wake up, have my eggs, read my book, ease myself into Twitter.
00:50:40.000I don't, I don't, uh, it's very stressful for me.
00:50:43.000I got to answer everything and people get mad at me.
00:50:47.000It doesn't mean I don't like you, it doesn't mean I don't think you're cool, but just like, I have a lot of requests and everything, and I can't always get to it all.
00:50:57.000Dissident Right based Columbus Day segment, man.
00:51:34.000The police are protecting people, and like the police are too big and corrupt.
00:51:37.000The problem is the people that employ the police are too big and too corrupt, and the people that influence are too big and too corrupt.
00:51:44.000You know, when you had Andy Griffith patrolling the streets, Andy Griffith and Barney Fife, that wasn't because of the police structure that was inherently good.
00:51:56.000It was that you didn't need that sort of police structure was sufficient for the community they were serving, right?
00:52:03.000If we got the demographics like they were in the 1950s, if we got Our society to look like it was in the 1950s and to have a culture like that, you wouldn't have a big corrupt police department.
00:52:15.000It's because of the urbanization, the atomization, these covert sort of things that are going on with the deep state that you need a militarized corrupt police department.
00:52:25.000I mean, like, you have the police department in Chicago that's grappling with the drug cartels on one side and the CIA basically on the other.
00:52:33.000And it's no wonder that it's that way.
00:52:35.000You have the CIA, or if the CIA, Chicago Police Department operating in places where there's no community, where nobody wants to.
00:52:42.000Achieve justice and they're fighting against everybody.
00:52:45.000No wonder you're going to have this combative sort of autonomous organ in the police.
00:52:51.000So it's more about changing the culture.
00:52:54.000Tom O'Neill, Nick, the left has found the only immigrant that has no right to come to America, Christopher Columbus.
00:53:03.000They compare Columbus and the Europeans to immigrants.
00:53:06.000They say, you know, they post this meme of a Native American, where it's a picture of a Native American in a big headdress, and he says, Oh, you're against illegal immigration?
00:53:17.000And I like how it basically concedes that immigration is an existential threat to our people, right?
00:53:23.000Like, you're not exactly doing yourself any favors when you compare migrants and immigrants, who you say are engineers and they want to be Americans, to people that came and destroyed everything that existed here.
00:54:41.000Fascism originates, at least in its political experimentation, in Italy, right?
00:54:47.000Where we have Benito Mussolini, and then it was in Spain, it was in other countries in the Balkans and like Romania and other places.
00:54:55.000And fascism is basically the old principles of hierarchy, tradition, order, conservatism adapted to the modern state, to the modern world, modern technology.
00:55:07.000Fascism is sort of, in my opinion, the political successor to monarchism.
00:55:13.000You know, in the way that we had the outdated monarchy where the monarch would be sovereign, we would serve the monarch, and he would have this balance with.
00:55:23.000Fascism was sort of the modern age successor to that structure, where the fascist, the leader, the furher, whatever, would be the vanguard of a higher degree of organization.
00:55:38.000Whereas the monarch was the leader of a kingdom.
00:55:41.000He was on top of different people, of different manorial lords, different manors, different feudal lords, and everything.
00:55:51.000Pay tribute to the sovereign who would protect them in exchange for them giving their allegiance to him.
00:55:58.000In a similar way, in the advent of the modern nation state, the leader, the chief executive, the person who executes law, the sole actor, would be able to execute power and protect a large group of people.
00:56:12.000And this comes after the Atlantic Charter, which says that there's self determination, a people determines its own destiny.
00:56:18.000The leader is supposed to be like the executor of the will of the people in the modern state.
00:56:23.000And in the same way that he interacts.
00:56:25.000And he has to balance like a court that a monarch would.
00:56:28.000He has his inner circle, his Politburo.
00:56:30.000That's kind of communist terminology, but he has his inner circle.
00:56:35.000And in the same way that the monarch, like a Louis XVI, would have to compete with the second and third estate, he would have to compete with the clergy and the aristocrats.
00:56:45.000Well, the leader has to compete with the oligarchs, for example, or the private business holders, or whatever other institutions of power there are, or with the church, the clergy, if you have one.
00:56:58.000And then ultimately, the final check is the people.
00:57:00.000So, you know, fascism in itself, well, it's not something I would advocate for.
00:57:06.000I think you have to divorce it from the highly negative connotations of national socialism, which is different.
00:57:12.000You know, fascism is different from national socialism.
00:57:17.000And fascism, I think, is a pretty legitimate expression of a monarchical, conservative political theory or governing structure, but adapted, manifested in modern times.
00:57:29.000And I think if you read some of the neo reactionary stuff, you'll see that.
00:57:33.000You read some like Yarvin or Moldbug, you'll see this.
00:57:38.000But really, just generally, if you look at what it is, if you divorce yourself from your prejudices, if you get away from this, like Hitler was a fascist, Hitler was a national socialist, that's all.
00:58:00.000I would imagine Jean Jacques Rousseau would say that fascism made sense.
00:58:06.000And Jacques Rousseau was like the most liberal of the Enlightenment political theorists.
00:58:11.000I would imagine Thomas Hobbes would say something similar.
00:58:15.000I would imagine that Montesquieu, you know, he would maybe have his trepidation about like an all powerful totalitarian version of fascism.
00:58:23.000But I would say that if there was sufficient separation of clergy, ruler, of private organizations, I would say he would be for it as well.
00:58:31.000I think, you know, Putin's government is kind of a proto fascist type government where it's one autocrat.
00:58:39.000And there are certainly some checks on his power, but basically he's given free reign to execute the will of the people.
00:58:44.000You know, maybe Duterte is similar or Assad.
00:58:47.000And I think that makes it a little bit less scary, you know, when we see that it works to some degree.
01:00:58.000Details on your visit to Colorado University.
01:01:01.000Looking like it's not going to happen, folks, because we've been in talks with the University of Colorado Boulder and the Turning Point USA group doesn't want to have me because I'm too extreme.
01:01:12.000And I think the same is true with Young Americans for Liberty.
01:02:00.000They wanted to help out their buddies to get in college campuses and increase their exposure instead of actually bringing on smart conservatives.
01:02:11.000I just tagged you in a tweet by Will, the not so good thinker.
01:02:14.000I feel you will find it interesting, perhaps humorous in a sad way.
01:03:16.000Well, if you want to fund, you can drop a donation in the Super Chat or you can contribute to our Patreon, which is in the description below on this video, I think.
01:03:26.000For all the ways you can donate, it's in the description of this video right now.
01:03:31.000So if you scroll down, you click on the little blurb under the video screen, you can find PayPal, Hatreon, Patreon, and that's how you can hook us up there.