When they say, trust no man, I believe in a religion that makes sense. But as soon as people start playing games, I stop playing games. I stop them. And at any moment, I can hit that yay button. Not my words, not my rules, I just enforce them. This is from your biggest Protestant fan, may you one day see the light. May you see the Light! This episode is about how God is in charge of everything. He is the only true God and he is in control of everything else. He's the only one who can make sense of it all. And he's the one who has the power to make it all make sense or not make sense. He s the one in charge and he s the only God that can do all things. And he is the one that can make all things make sense and all things that don t make sense, he s in charge. Let me get the Yay button and enforce them! This is not my words or my rules. I'm just enforcing them. I don't have them, I'm not the one with the words, I am just the YAY button. I'm the only person with the rules and I enforce them I don t have the words or the rules, so why not just hit the yAY button? this is just a simple, simple, easy, easy and simple, right? I can do it. and I'm good to do it! I am good to go! We're good. I hope you like it. I love you. XOXO xoxo Love ya. Love you guys. -P.S. :D -JUICY XOXOXO -J.A. (J.M. (A.D. (P.I.C. ) -A.J. (M.E. (C.E.) J. (S. (R.M.) -S.R. (K) ) -PJ (A) (PJ) -M.S (A). & P. (L.A.) (AJ) -A (C) (K. (D) .A. (B.J.) -A) (A.) (J.) (P) (J) (P).
Transcript
Transcripts from "America First - Nicholas J. Fuentes" are sourced from the Knowledge Fight Interactive Search Tool. You can also explore and interact with the transcripts here.
00:00:04.000But as soon as people start playing games, I stop.
00:33:58.000The full news about the coronavirus situation and I have to say at this stage in the game I really don't know what to believe and I haven't known what to believe for a few months actually on coronavirus but I am my skepticism is starting to go in a different direction because at first my presumption was that the government wasn't telling us how bad it was they would not tell us the full extent of how bad the virus is because it was so bad
00:34:28.000It was so horrendous that if they told us how bad it was it would cause mass panic, but now I'm starting to think maybe it's in the other direction.
00:34:37.000Maybe it's actually not bad at all, but they are trying to cause panic.
00:34:44.000Maybe they leaked the virus themselves.
00:34:54.000The big source of my skepticism because the number, if you've been paying attention, has plateaued in China.
00:35:00.000It's been hovering around 79,000-80,000 confirmed cases in China for like a week now.
00:35:07.000And that's because largely they're redefining the disease and they're not testing people and there's a lot of artificial things they've been doing to keep the number stable.
00:35:17.000And in the United States, there aren't very many confirmed cases because they're not testing anybody who has the symptoms for the coronavirus.
00:35:25.000I saw a number which is pretty startling.
00:35:30.000This was in the New York Times today, and we'll get into this later on in more detail, but the number just right off the bat that I saw is that less than 100 people in New York State have been tested for coronavirus in the past two or three months.
00:35:44.000Less than 100 in New York State and New York City.
00:35:48.000Now if you're looking at the rate of transmission in Italy and South Korea, if you're looking at how quickly it's spread even in Washington state in the United States, and you've already got 41 cases I think of coronavirus in New York City, and they've tested less than a hundred people.
00:36:04.000So they're telling us there's 300 confirmed cases, but in America's largest city they've tested less than a hundred people.
00:36:12.000That maybe gives you an idea as to why the numbers are where they are.
00:36:16.000You know, whether they're too big or too little, that tells you why I don't trust the numbers.
00:38:31.000You know, hands and arms flying, all kinds of motion and all kinds of tasks being completed, phone calls, writing notes down, texts, DMs, emails, driving around the city, streaming.
00:41:01.000The importance of holidays, statues, advertisements, things that are seemingly innocuous, that a lot of people think are just sort of formalities or they're perfunctory, these are just, you know.
00:41:15.000This is just the background that is behind the scenes where we conduct our lives.
00:41:21.000You know, you're going to work, you're going to school, you're going about your daily life, and this is just sort of the background, this is the ornamentation, the setting of your life.
00:41:34.000is totally underestimated I think by most people and nobody really acknowledges the role that these kinds of things play.
00:41:42.000When it comes to the holiday, the statue, the advertisement, things that are seemingly innocuous or trivial but actually have a really strong influence on people.
00:41:51.000I think they are really big propaganda.
00:41:53.000These things are ubiquitous in our lives and in a lot of ways we literally look up to these things.
00:41:58.000You know, we talk about a celebration, a statue is a veneration.
00:42:03.000These things are in our sights, they're in our ears, they're in our minds.
00:42:08.000And they occupy a pretty important space.
00:42:10.000And because they're holidays or whatever, there's some regularity to them.
00:42:14.000I think it really does occupy a lot of brain space.
00:42:16.000So, the importance of this stuff, I'm not, you know, exaggerating this.
00:42:21.000A lot of people might say, oh, you know, who cares?
00:43:59.000You know, what does it mean to celebrate men?
00:44:02.000When you get too general about this stuff, this is when you start to get these interpretations where when it's International Men's Day, you'll have some Jewish woman in Vox writing about how, well, what it means to be a man is to cry and be a pussy and, you know, what it means to be a man is to show your emotions and wear a dress and that's real manliness.
00:44:21.000Without actually understanding what it means to be a man and what it means to be a woman, understanding these things on a deep and sophisticated and serious level, it gives way to all kinds of nonsense, all kinds of really bad ideological stuff.
00:44:38.000And the same is true with International Women's Day.
00:44:40.000Of course, they get by by saying it's International Women's Day, and if you're against the day, then you're against women.
00:44:47.000If I say I hate International Women's Day, it's like, oh, what?
00:44:53.000But what are we celebrating on International Women's Day?
00:44:55.000We're not celebrating the archetypal woman which is Mary, the mother of God.
00:45:00.000We're not celebrating the formal, the archetypal idea of a woman which is a life giver, a partner to a husband, the rib, you know, from the rib she is spawned, right?
00:45:12.000We're not talking about what it means to be a real woman in a much higher sense.
00:45:17.000We are talking about this debased, vulgar woman, an imitation of a man.
00:45:23.000We're talking about the working woman.
00:45:25.000We're talking about the agitator, the yeller, the nagger.
00:45:30.000And, you know, this is my intuitive, this is my implicit conception of the holiday, but the reason we're talking about it in a little bit of greater detail is because
00:45:39.000That's actually what it's been from the start.
00:45:40.000This might be... You may have some inkling that this is the case in your head.
00:45:44.000You hear International Women's Day and, of course, what comes to mind?
00:45:48.000The United Nations, feminism, the suffragettes, you know, all these loudmouth agitators.
00:45:54.000And, lo and behold, that's exactly what it is.
00:45:57.000So I found this article about the origins of International Women's Day.
00:46:00.000I'll read a little bit of this article to you.
00:46:04.000I'm sure none of this will come as a surprise, but it's very telling.
00:46:08.000It says, celebrated on March 8th every year, International Women's Day is a day dedicated to honoring the achievements of women throughout history and all across the globe.
00:46:16.000And it's typically a day for women from all different backgrounds and cultures to band together to fight for gender parity and women's rights.
00:46:26.000International Women's Day, or IWD, is dedicated to celebrating women's achievements in the social, economic, cultural, and political spheres.
00:46:34.000The day, collectively founded by women,
00:46:38.000Also brings attention to gender parity and women's rights.
00:46:41.000What does it mean, by the way, collectively founded by women?
00:46:56.000Do you know any women that participated in the founding of this ridiculous holiday?
00:47:00.000Do you know anything about this holiday?
00:47:03.000Your sister, your mom, your aunt, your daughter.
00:47:05.000Do you know anybody that was involved in that?
00:47:07.000Was it collectively founded by women, or was it this group of, like, internationalist far-left agitators who founded it?
00:47:14.000And, you know, I guess all women are a part of that.
00:47:18.000Anyway, it says, "...gender parity is a statistical measure that compares women and men through their income, education, and work hours, among other points."
00:47:28.000That's how they measure gender parity.
00:47:31.000This sociological metric helps researchers understand how society is progressing or regressing in specific areas.
00:47:38.000It's also an important tool for policymakers striving towards gender equality.
00:47:43.000Of course, the global celebration of International Women's Day is a time for reflection of how far women have come, advocacy for what is still needed, and action to continue breaking down barriers.
00:47:54.000With over a century of history, IWD is a growing movement centered around unity and strength.
00:48:00.000And I really want to convey to people, a lot of people take so much of this stuff for granted.
00:48:05.000And a big part of the show is breaking down all of the language that is loaded, that we see on a daily basis.
00:48:13.000I think a normal person can read something like this and on a subconscious level, on an instinctual level, they know there's something wrong with this.
00:48:21.000Feminist, liberal, you get a certain idea.
00:48:24.000You get the Lisa Simpson sort of archetype in your head.
00:48:28.000But when you really break down the language, it really helps you to see what the agenda is.
00:49:18.000Well, they lay it out, fortunately for us, they lay it out pretty clearly what they mean by this.
00:49:23.000They mean it in a strict and specific sense.
00:49:25.000Gender parity is measured, this is a statistical measure, I'm sure by the UN or some supranational NGO, and it's defined by equality in income, education, and work hours.
00:49:39.000Now all of these things are this is all from the perspective of a capitalist paradigm.
00:49:45.000Only in a society where everything is commodified and everything is determined in dollars and cents would you evaluate parity based on this.
00:49:55.000In a normal and healthy society you might look at parity based on more fundamental things like rights or again dignity, value, worth, things like that.
00:50:09.000Only in a society that is completely materialistic.
00:50:11.000And by materialistic I don't mean consumerist.
00:50:14.000I don't mean like overly concerned with material things.
00:50:18.000I mean materialist in the sense that it only concerns itself with matter.
00:50:22.000It only concerns itself with the physical and the temporal.
00:50:26.000As opposed to the spiritual and the eternal.
00:50:29.000Only in that kind of completely secular, godless, capitalistic, materialist society would you define things and it would be presumptuous that you would define things in terms of income, education, work hours.
00:50:43.000I mean, these things are absurd for how we would evaluate a society.
00:50:47.000It says, this is a metric that helps researchers understand how society is progressing or regressing in specific areas.
00:50:53.000Here again, you have this loaded term of progress.
00:52:24.000And all of that, again, all of that is loaded in these terms of progress and regression.
00:52:28.000When they say this kind of stuff of, it's progressive and we want progress and progress in certain areas, this is what they're talking about.
00:52:39.000Now, if somebody comes up to you and says, I hate progress, I want to regress, well, I mean, that sounds stupid.
00:52:45.000In any other context, that would sound ridiculous.
00:52:48.000If you're a company or if you're a person, to progress as a person means to move forward, to learn new things, to accumulate wealth, whatever, right?
00:52:59.000So to stand against progress in that context would sound stupid.
00:53:03.000For me to say I'm against society progressing,
00:53:07.000It's a no-brainer that we should be in favor of progress.
00:53:10.000But if you actually break down and sort out what they mean by progress, which means the erosion of distinction, of difference, of hierarchy, that that is progress, well, I want no part of that.
00:53:21.000Because that's not moving forward, that's moving backward.
00:53:24.000That is ignoring, that is papering over the impulses, the nature of men and women, the nature of people, of mankind, which is tribal, and there is distinction between peoples.
00:54:08.000The article goes on and says, why March 8th?
00:54:11.000Why do we celebrate International Women's Day on March 8th?
00:54:14.000It says International Women's Day has a rich history dating back 108 years.
00:54:18.000The first glimpse of it was in 1909 when the Socialist Party of America celebrated 15,000 women who protested long work hours, low pay, and the lack of voting rights in New York City.
00:54:31.000Originally called National Women's Day,
00:54:34.000The monumental annual celebration spread across the world, but it was Russia who unknowingly set the March 8th trend.
00:54:42.000Although International Women's Day became an official holiday in Russia in 1913, women still experienced difficulties caused by World War I. While men were off at war, women dealt with food shortages and a government who wouldn't listen to them.
00:54:55.000On March 8, 1917, tens of thousands of Russian women took to the streets demanding change.
00:55:01.000The unified cry for help paved the way for Russian women to be granted voting rights soon after.
00:55:07.000The theme, and I should add, it's the socialists who caused this.
00:55:12.000And I know on this show we are against this idea of socialism.
00:55:16.000Socialism sucks and socialism is the end-all be-all, but it is worth considering that in 1909 socialism was a fringe ideology.
00:55:27.000Socialism in the 20th century, and we don't live in the 20th century anymore so it's a different context,
00:55:33.000Socialism throughout the 20th century, and particularly in the first half of the 20th century, represented a completely foreign, international, left-wing ideology in America.
00:55:44.000And that's something that's really important to consider.
00:55:46.000When you look at McCarthyism, when you look at the Communists,
00:55:49.000This was almost completely, almost totally a fifth column in the United States that was supported by foreign governments or other international elements to try to destroy national unity in the United States in a lot of ways.
00:56:03.000You know, there are some other elements of socialism, but...
00:56:06.000Generally speaking, socialism was a completely left-wing and foreign subversive movement that was trying to destroy the traditional American nation.
00:56:14.000So, in the 21st century, it has a different context.
00:56:18.000Charlie Kirk and a lot of these hyper-capitalists will call any threat to the free market system, they will call anybody that's in favor of putting some breaks and some restraints on international finance, they'll call anything socialist.
00:56:32.000But a hundred years ago, it was very different.
00:56:35.000So, excuse me, it's important to consider that where did all this stuff originate?
00:56:38.000Where did all of this, um, and all of it, the women's days, the civil rights, homosexual liberation, all this stuff originated with, like, far-left socialist Jewish groups, largely, in the first half of the 20th century.
00:56:56.000These are not people that have our best interests in mind.
00:56:59.000In a word, and to sum it up kind of nicely, the reason why it matters that they're socialists is because the people that brought women's liberation and all the subsequent social revolutions and civil rights movements, the people that brought them do not have our best interests in mind.
00:57:16.000And so, as always, when you look at any product, anytime somebody's trying to sell something to you, you have to look at the intention of the person.
00:57:24.000When somebody tries to give you advice, when somebody tries to persuade you to do something, it matters what their motive is.
00:57:30.000If it's somebody that you know, they don't have your best interest at heart, you know they have it out for you, they want to bring harm to you, well probably the things that they're trying to sell you, the advice that they're trying to give you, is probably, you know, with that in mind, it's probably designed to hurt you.
00:58:55.000The theme for International Women's Day this year, according to this article.
00:58:59.000It says, in 1975, the UN officially recognized International Women's Day, and in 1996 began to adopt an annual theme for every year.
00:59:08.000The first theme was celebrating the past, planning for the future.
00:59:11.000This year's theme, hashtag each for equal, each for equal,
00:59:16.000is meant to be a shared goal throughout 2020.
00:59:18.000This is according to the organization site for International Women's Day.
00:59:25.000It says, quote, we can actively choose to challenge stereotypes, fight bias, broaden perceptions, improve situations, and celebrate women's achievements.
00:59:34.000Collectively, each one of us can help create a gender equal world.
00:59:40.000The IWD 2020 campaign theme draws on the notion of collective individualism.
00:59:45.000Which refers to the idea that every individual is a part of a whole and that an individual's actions, behaviors, and mindsets can all have an impact on larger society.
00:59:55.000Well, that much is actually kind of true about collective individualism.
00:59:59.000That's something that we're kind of trying to bring back, but not for, like, womankind or humankind, for, like, our people.
01:00:07.000When I, you know, at first I'm like, eh, that sounds like, you know, doublespeak.
01:00:10.000That sounds like United Nations doublespeak, but it refers to the idea that every individual is a part of a whole and that an individual's actions, behaviors, and mindsets can all have an impact on larger society.
01:00:23.000Well, I mean, directed towards a positive force like nationalism.
01:00:27.000I think that's definitely true, but this other stuff about, like, humankind and the species, that's when it becomes problematic, but
01:00:36.000I find it very interesting how it says that the theme is everybody's going to stand up to stereotypes, fight bias, broadened perceptions, and so on.
01:00:44.000We should not be fighting these things.
01:02:07.000That man has fallen, we have a fixed and imperfect nature, and we have to accommodate our nature.
01:02:13.000We have to restrain our nature using law, using
01:02:17.000The government, in some cases, you know, we have to sort of civilize ourselves, civilize our race as people.
01:02:27.000And then there's the liberal perception, which has no grounding in religion, which does not believe in God, and therefore there's no humility.
01:02:42.000They believe that we are merely matter, that we came from amoebas, we are now people, and we are part of a broad continuum.
01:02:50.000We are sort of this intermediate, this developing situation on a broad continuum.
01:02:57.000Between not being developed and being fully developed.
01:03:01.000You know, and that's on a biological and now on a sociological continuum.
01:03:05.000That once we were a single cell organism or a primordial stew and we climbed our way out of the ocean and climbed onto land and had scales and then feathers and then hair and then we were monkeys and now we're people.
01:03:19.000And they see that we have this momentum directed towards total, total absolution
01:04:01.000We know that all these high-minded liberal ideals
01:04:04.000That stand against our nature and stand against the Bible and stand against natural law, that we can rewrite natural law according to what we think is good.
01:04:12.000And we should rewrite society and try to mold mankind into the idea of what we should be like, according to our own laws, according to what we think the laws should be.
01:06:51.000Who are we to say that we know better than nature?
01:07:07.000Your purpose which is your uterus and your eggs and all these other things no We will thwart your design and we'll put you on a battlefield And put you on steroids and all this you could get jacked and so on it's totally absurd I mean this kind of this International Women's Day stuff is satanic it is opposed to the natural law and
01:07:43.000Why does all this feminism, and you can look across the world, the more that women are educated, the more that women work, the more money women have, the less they have children.
01:07:53.000What does that say about the human race?
01:07:56.000All these people that purport to be in favor of the human race, they're advancing policies, they're advancing societal patterns that lead to outcomes where the human race is not perpetuating itself, where human beings are not being born.
01:08:11.000Human beings are not loving each other in monogamous, natural unions and having children.
01:08:17.000What does that say about its role in the human race and its designs for the human race?
01:08:25.000The human force, the real banner of humanity is Christendom, is Christianity, which understands the human law, the natural law given to us by the people, rather, by God, the being that created mankind.
01:08:40.000Not all these planners and schemers and, you know, haters of mankind.
01:10:42.000Have you ever tried, you know, it's the old argument, I could never win an argument with my wife!
01:10:47.000And it's true, you'll never win an argument against a woman.
01:10:50.000That's why we need these social pressures to return, and they have to return forcefully and aggressively.
01:10:56.000And I'm not gonna sit there and go back and forth with some pantsuit, you know, head full of ideology.
01:11:02.000I, you know, we just simply don't have time.
01:11:04.000We don't have an eternity to convince one of these creatures that it's in their and everybody else's best interest to drop the act and return to tradition.
01:11:12.000We simply have to just yell and scream and, you know, until it comes back.
01:11:56.000Saturn plot emanating from the black cube.
01:11:58.000You know, the black cube of Saturn radiates its radio signals across outer space, penetrating our atmosphere, and it goes to the United Nations headquarters and the Pentagon,
01:12:50.000If I see, if I see one more Zionist, if one more Zionist comes up to me in Washington DC with, and they, you know, they've got in their hands a tesseract, they come up to me, hey I need to show you something.
01:13:03.000We go in the back room at Harry's and they conjure, they conjure a tesseract, they conjure up in their hands some kind of
01:13:16.000A shadow of a fourth dimensional tesseract?
01:13:41.000some sorcerer comes up to me and you know and suddenly there are there are three heads you know suddenly there are three heads of of a man in time and conjuring a cube a ghastly trans-dimensional display get that away from me do not do not speak your in your evil tongue kabbalistic naming get that away from me i repel that i'm repelling i'm repelling
01:14:09.000If I see one more sorceress conjuring a tesseract, I'm gonna go off.
01:16:51.000So we've got 80,651 in mainland China.
01:16:57.000We've got 6,767 cases in South Korea, 4,747 in Iran, 4,636 in Italy, 670 in Germany, 613 in France, 350 in Japan, 321 in the United States, 374 in Spain.
01:18:04.000In the world's second biggest economy, number one manufacturer, factory floors where you're talking about raw materials, you're talking about first stage processes, supply chains totally disrupted for weeks.
01:18:18.000Across the board, shipping container volume down 25% at the port in Los Angeles.
01:18:39.000Yeah, the second biggest economy in the world shut down and all the transportation and commerce is being shut down, but the rate is being cut.
01:18:47.000And so that means, hey, everything's OK now.
01:18:51.000All of a sudden, the economy is good again.
01:20:29.000They are saying that the coronavirus will cause a correction.
01:20:34.000Some are saying that the coronavirus is catalyzing a correction which we were due for, which makes sense because the economy hasn't had a correction in a long time and we are due for one.
01:20:45.000So some are saying that the coronavirus catalyzed the correction.
01:20:49.000Others are saying the coronavirus is the correction.
01:20:52.000That obviously you take a lot of these big players out of the economy and this is going to cause two and a half trillion dollars in damage to the global GDP and that's the that's the least bad scenario they say that the damage could be anywhere between 2.5 and 9 trillion dollars could be the cost of the global GDP so I'm not an economist I'm not an expert but it's looking pretty bad for the economy and then and then there was something interesting about the United States a new development today which gives you an idea of where we're at with this
01:21:23.000The thing to look at is the testing kits.
01:21:26.000This is what people just don't understand, and I see this on social media.
01:21:29.000You know, people are panicking, and they're buying, and people are wondering, is this going to be so bad, or is it not going to be so bad, or something like that.
01:21:37.000Look at these numbers, and based on the numbers, it's either really good or really bad.
01:21:41.000This is the death rate, or this pales in comparison to influenza.
01:21:46.000You know, there's a lot of different takes, but to me, how many people are taking into consideration the fact that they're not testing anybody for the coronavirus?
01:21:54.000That, to me, is the biggest scandal of this whole thing.
01:21:57.000In New York, and I said this at the top of the show, there are 41 confirmed cases of coronavirus in New York.
01:22:05.000That's New York City and obviously New York State.
01:23:03.000In order to get tested, you have to meet a very stringent series of qualifications.
01:23:08.000That you can't have pre-existing conditions and you have to have this many symptoms and all kinds of preconditions and they're really not giving the tests out to very many people at all.
01:23:17.000Even in places where the disease is known to have been transmitted, where people are dying from it, where you have high rates of infection.
01:23:35.000Well, that would be a really great number if we were testing everybody who seemed to have gotten it.
01:23:40.000We're only testing, like, we're not testing many people at all.
01:23:44.000So if you limit the amount of people that you test, you limit the amount of people that you confirm.
01:23:49.000And if the number is limited overall, you're not getting all the cases.
01:23:52.000So you have no idea the extent to which it's spreading, and therefore the extent to which we should be reacting to the virus.
01:23:58.000And then there's problems beyond that.
01:24:00.000You have the problem of the incubation period.
01:24:03.000You have the problem of false negatives.
01:24:06.000And you have the problem of people that are being released early.
01:24:08.000These are the other big problems of the testing kits.
01:24:11.000They found in at least two states that the testing kits don't work.
01:24:15.000They find that the testing kits, when they're administered, they will deliver a false negative, people will be released from the quarantine, or they'll stop monitoring them, and then those same people will be brought back to the hospital, and then they'll test positive for coronavirus.
01:24:28.000So the test kits don't work, they deliver false negatives, and you have this long incubation period of 24 days, where people are quarantined, and then they can leave the quarantine, they can arrive here, they can last the full duration of the quarantine, which is 14 days, and then be released, and then still have 10 more days,
01:24:45.000Part of the 24-day incubation period before they might exhibit symptoms.
01:24:50.000In short, there are so many problems with this confirmation process.
01:24:54.000The number almost doesn't mean anything.
01:24:59.000Well, that doesn't mean anything because the confirmation process is so convoluted and riddled with problems that this number, I mean, it's like you're just pulling a number out of a hat.
01:25:09.000It really doesn't mean anything at all.
01:25:11.000So the number could be maybe what they're saying.
01:25:14.000I mean, I think that'd be very unlikely.
01:25:16.000There would just be 321 cases and they just happen to be catching everything.
01:25:21.000But it's probably much likely, it's much more likely, the number's probably much higher than what they're letting on.
01:25:27.000In which case, we should be shutting things down.
01:25:34.000Public events, we should be shutting down, maybe even interstate borders, things like that.
01:25:40.000What they're doing in Italy, what they're doing in South Korea.
01:25:42.000Because this is what happens when it's spreading in all these other countries, is they let it spread, they let it be transmitted.
01:25:48.000The health care infrastructure is not in place, that's not prepared for something like this.
01:25:53.000And so it transmits silently for weeks, and only when you start getting your hospitals overrun and thousands of cases, then do you start to get real with the numbers.
01:26:03.000In Iran, I remember last week or two weeks ago, it started to really pop off in Iran, and the number was like 60.
01:26:11.000And it was like, everyone in parliament has this, and hospitals are being shut down, and the number they were reporting was like 60 confirmed cases.
01:27:08.000We're not seeing it play out in China because they're suppressing the numbers.
01:27:12.000We're seeing it play out in South Korea and Italy, and it keeps getting worse.
01:27:15.000The number doubled in Europe in three days, to give you an idea.
01:27:18.000So we don't know what the ceiling is, we don't know how this is going to burn through a country, how long it's going to take, how many people will catch the virus.
01:27:29.000But the Trump administration, I think, is trying to downplay it and is not responding because they do not want this kind of panic.
01:27:36.000They don't want to trigger some kind of bad economic effect because if the economy goes down, then Trump goes down.
01:28:46.000It's either gonna happen now or it's gonna happen later.
01:28:49.000The real black pill about coronaviruses... It doesn't matter if this is the big one.
01:28:54.000This could be the big pandemic that kills millions of people.
01:28:57.000But even if it isn't, it will happen in our lifetimes.
01:29:02.000It will happen in our lifetimes, and we will not be prepared for it, and they will not be able to stop it, and it will claim lots of people.
01:29:10.000That's the real... So if you think like, oh, coronavirus, well, maybe it won't be so bad, and maybe it won't be, and maybe it'll be okay.
01:29:19.000You know, you look at the past 100 years, and you look at the Spanish flu, you look at the Hong Kong flu, you look at SARS, MERS, H1N1, Ebola,
01:29:28.000There have been a lot of different bad things going on just in the last 100 years.
01:29:33.000In our lifetimes, we're due for another bad situation.
01:29:37.000And especially when you're looking at antibiotics and the super bugs that are evolving as a result of antibiotics and antibiotic resistance.
01:29:46.000I really do think, and especially with the global commerce and travel and tourism, you see how terrible the infrastructure is to prevent things like this.
01:29:57.000You know you ought to prepare if not for this one then for the next one, but we're gonna move on We'll take a look at our super chats.
01:30:02.000We'll see what you guys are saying about all this Yeah, yeah, yeah coronavirus be safe the usual stuff.
01:30:09.000We'll see what people are saying Polish Americans has no necktie nationalism check wahmen yeah Big Nimbus is Kirk versus Benny Johnson boxing match who wins definitely Charlie Kirk.
01:30:23.000He's he's just bigger He's just got a bigger reach
01:30:27.000And Benny Johnson's a pussy, so... I mean, they're both probably weak, but Benny Johnson just seems like he couldn't take a punch.
01:30:34.000Delco... probably Charlie Kirk couldn't either, but at least Charlie Kirk's... if they're both weak like that, then I think Charlie Kirk, because he has the reach, would be him.
01:30:44.000Delco says, your music today was a vibe.
01:33:03.000I don't know where you've been but they've been grabbing land.
01:33:05.000I think the the era of like big land wars over terrain, I think that's... I don't see that coming back in the foreseeable future.
01:33:15.000I don't see Russia doing a land grab anytime soon.
01:33:18.000That seems to me to be like an outdated way of thinking of things and maybe I'm naive about that but it seems to me that offensive and defensive military capabilities and also international dynamics have changed such that things like that are no longer worth it.
01:33:34.000You know, back in the 18th century, you could get away with that because, you know, there wasn't nuclear weapons, there wasn't this idea of a tripwire and these international coalitions drawn and people ready to go at each other.
01:33:49.000You know, we're living in an era after world wars.
01:33:53.000And in the era of, you know, these modern conventional military means and also nuclear weapons.
01:33:58.000So, the idea that in these developed, advanced countries that you would have Russia just, you know, grabbing countries, I don't think that's the case.
01:34:07.000I mean, they're bound to be at least a threat of a nuclear strike or a big conventional military response.
01:34:19.000That's why when you do see a land grab, it's not an old-fashioned, you know, your guys in uniforms march in carrying your flag with muskets and, you know, they march through your villages.
01:34:30.000It's like what you see in Eastern Ukraine.
01:34:35.000It's that Russia will send paramilitary forces, these kind of, the little green men as they were called back in like 2014.
01:34:43.000They'll send these guys in, they'll do like a diplomatic coup.
01:34:51.000They'll do a referendum, you know, they'll send in these people that will do this warfare, this urban warfare in the streets, and they'll gradually take land where it strategically makes sense, where there's a high Russian population, they're sympathetic to the aims of Russia, things like that.
01:35:08.000But I don't think Russia's gonna, like, invade France anytime soon, if that's what you mean.
01:35:26.000I think we mean that I guess you're referring to terrorism like Al Qaeda versus like the Jacobins in France in other words terrorism sanctioned by the state like the Soviets or like the French revolutionaries versus like modern terrorism I guess is what you mean 300 Spartan says made some money on gold options here's your slice oh thanks for the dollar James says keep up the big Macs and you'll be based Chungus yeah
01:35:56.000Cameron King's thoughts on the Eternal Atake.
01:37:48.000These are real, well-thought-out projects.
01:37:51.000There's a deeper meaning behind them, right?
01:37:54.000When you listen to Eternal Atake, this is just something that some guy on drugs shitted out, and he's gonna make millions of dollars off of it, you know?
01:38:02.000He's just messing around with his buddies.
01:38:04.000And they're freestyling on garbage beats.
01:40:56.000You know, if you're blackmailed eating oatmeal because it's Friday, imagine how Jesus Christ felt when they came to him and they said, hey, today's the day, today's the day that you're gonna die.
01:41:06.000Today's the day that we're gonna nail you to a cross and you're gonna die.
01:41:10.000I mean, so, everything in its proper perspective, right?
01:41:37.000But then it's like, hey, imagine... Hey, it's much better than somebody, than the police coming to your house and saying, okay, today's the day.
01:47:46.000We'll have one bed that we'll have sex in, and then we'll have two beds in for sleeping, okay?
01:47:52.000Because, I don't know about you, but I like to sleep alone.
01:47:57.000I like the idea of having somebody in bed, having to struggle and fight with the blanket, and all the heat that is being generated under this cloth, okay?
01:48:13.000Uh, and, you know, the idea that if I have to get up, I'm gonna disturb my partner and all this.
01:48:18.000Like, this is just, this is unconscionable to me.
01:50:58.000You know, this cuddling, I'm supposed to be sleeping draped all over you, do you know how hot that would be?
01:51:04.000It's hot enough as it is with one person under the sheets.
01:51:07.000I can't tell you how many nights I wake up and I'm kicking and, you know, throwing off the covers, exasperated, frustrated, it's too fucking hot in here, you know, throw off the covers, I can't get comfortable, I'm sweating, and now I'm gonna have another person under the cover in bodily contact and exposure?
01:52:43.000We're you know doing drugs Men are getting in car crashes Anvils being grand pianos falling on us being chased by you know wolves and crocodiles and you know women are nagging us and
01:53:07.000I practically have Mossad trying to stick me with an AIDS needle all week.
01:53:12.000And as soon as I get in the car, when I get picked up from the airport, my mom's going to nag me about, you texted me the wrong time when you're getting in.
01:56:43.000The good news is, because I'm a smart person, I've amassed a lot of resources and connections and contacts.
01:56:50.000And a movement that was once just me with a green screen is now a movement with a lot of people behind it, a lot of support, a lot of connections have been made.
01:57:00.000You know, these conferences are so important.
01:57:02.000A lot of people have been scoffing, like Bronze Age perverts scoffed at these conferences that we're holding.
01:57:08.000The connections that are happening, like, you can't even begin to understand how critical this is to the infrastructure that's being built.
01:57:16.000The people that are getting in touch, the resources that are being compiled, the vehicles and institutions that are being created.
01:57:23.000I'm telling you that the work that we're doing now, you're not going to believe where we'll be at in about a year, if everything goes according to plan.
01:57:33.000A lot of it's very ambitious, a lot of it is stuff I don't have experience with, and we're going to try.
01:57:37.000You know, we're going to try our best to build a political apparatus, but I think we've got the best people.
01:57:44.000So on the site and on everything else, like the conversations I've been happening at AFPAC and since AFPAC, totally white-pilling.
01:57:55.000Yeah, yeah, we've got, you know, it's a good thing.
01:57:57.000If I was just some jerk-off, out of taking all the super chats that I've made over the years and I would have bought a new car and I'd be, I'd buy, you know, I'd be spending it on booze and drugs and whores and trips and
01:58:20.000I, you know, I do autistic spreadsheet, you know, stuff.
01:58:27.00095% of all the super chats, you know are in the bank and are being invested and they're being reinvested in the movement It's not I've taken very little, you know I've you know, maybe over the years taken a very small amount in books and McDonald's and things like that But almost all of it is being reinvested into a political machine So it's so funny people are like, oh, I'll you need to sell out.
01:58:49.000I'm gonna offer you a contract I don't need your contract.
01:59:19.000Everything that has been done over the years, it's not been completely optimal because I'm a neophyte to this stuff, but very, very wise decisions have been made about managing the movement and everything.
01:59:30.000Such that we'll be able to do big things this year, now that we're in a good position.
02:00:20.000It's kind of like a cringe catchphrase at this point.
02:00:23.000Baseless is do you still need developers for the platform?
02:00:26.000Hey, I need all the help I could get so shoot me an email NJ Fuentes blog at gmail.com if you're interested in helping Base dollar says would have been nice to see pack in India trade nukes.
02:01:17.000Every month I do probably an excessive amount of financial accounting information, and I probably do it in a way that is totally inefficient and arduous.
02:02:35.000But I'm really, you know, some people are like, oh, I like football, I like skateboarding, I like to ski, I like to drink, party, I like to talk to, I like to meet new people, I like to try new bars.
02:02:47.000You know, my favorite thing is like, just driving in circles, just driving in circles listening to the same album.
02:02:53.000I don't know, I'm like The Accountant.
02:02:55.000You ever see that movie The Accountant with Ben Affleck and he goes into his house?
02:02:59.000And he turns on really loud music and he, like, smashes out.
02:05:08.000I think the purpose of suppressing the number is to quell panic internally you know to keep people from freaking out and also probably externally because if people think that it's a higher number than it is well then they'll take drastic action to shut down transportation travel from China things like that
02:05:29.000so I think there's a there's a big economic incentive and a big political incentive to pretend that there's not a big crisis because you know this is gonna hurt China and like the trade war it's gonna hurt their economy it's gonna hurt Xi Jinping and what people think about him so base dollar says so they are grabbing land yeah but it's not happening in the way that it was before you know what I mean somebody's saying who asked the initial question about like taking land
02:08:10.000Big Johntown says, let's talk about the Chinese people with their Kung Flu.
02:08:15.000funny I rolled Detroit says don't be annoyed big guy just shit my hoodie yeah yeah I'll get right on I'm not annoyed I'm just you know telling you I'm getting right on top of that you seem like the one who's annoyed what a dumb takes is watching you since 12,000 subs so hype for the future yeah you should be big things ahead liquid says thanks for the great content yeah you're welcome Quani says do you think games as a medium can help in rebasing our culture mmm I don't think so
02:08:45.000I've been doing this for a long time and the most common way that people get doxxed is it's their own fault.
02:09:10.000Like, I hardly ever, I don't think I've ever seen somebody get hacked.
02:09:14.000I don't think I've ever seen a case where somebody got doxxed.
02:09:19.000Their anonymity was compromised because they weren't using a VPN or they clicked on a phishing link or something like that.
02:09:25.000I believe, and I would have to think long and hard, but almost every case of somebody getting doxxed that I've ever seen online
02:09:53.000And they make it like a Groyper account and they forget to delete the old stuff.
02:09:57.000They'll be in a Discord server and they'll say too much personal information about where they live, what they do, you know, things that if you collect it over time, and this is how it is, you have to be smart about it, if you look at a chat log,
02:10:11.000You may not think a lot of it over time, giving out little kernels, because it's just a little bit here and there.
02:10:16.000If you say your age, oh well you can't deduce who I am from my age, but then you forget you said how old you were.
02:10:22.000And then another time you'll say what town you live in.
02:10:24.000You think, well they can't figure out who I am just by my town, and you forget that you said what town you're in.
02:10:28.000And then you say, you hint at what you do.
02:10:31.000Identify me just based on what I do and then you forget you that you said that and over time If somebody finds the chat logs in a DM in a discord channel something like that Over time if you're not if you're negligent about these things Somebody can search you by name and they'll find your age your town your profession all this and it's like well now you've got a profile of somebody and now it's actionable and
02:10:55.000And that is the most often, that is what I've seen most often is people getting doxxed because they are just stupid with their information.
02:11:02.000They give it to somebody who's untrustworthy.
02:11:04.000They, oh hi e-girl, here's my name and address.
02:11:07.000They give it out over time, things like that.
02:11:09.000It's almost always somebody just gives it out.
02:11:13.000and rarely is it that they get hacked something like that but you know just general good habits you know VPN is good I've never found it necessary I mean I have one but it's not like you know I don't know for normal people it's like a totally big deal you're gonna want to change your passwords if you're really concerned about this stuff you want to get a password that's at least 16 characters and you're gonna want to change it about every four to five weeks I mean some people say like six to eight weeks but if you want to be safe you got to change it pretty frequently
02:11:43.00016 characters, special characters, no words, no common phrases, special characters capital under, you know, lowercase, things like that.
02:12:06.000Don't click on any links from people that you don't trust.
02:12:09.000Don't input information based on links.
02:12:11.000You know, people send you an email with a link, and it'll say, hey, log into Twitter, and then, you know, you give up your password.
02:12:17.000So those are just like basic you know I guess social media hygiene practices but the biggest one is just don't give out personal information and generally you should be fine.
02:12:26.000Most people are not sophisticated enough to do hacking and usually you're not worth hacking so that's the way that they get you.
02:12:34.000Let's see what a dumb takes has got Mickey D's for the show.
02:13:56.000I would get a flat-top, a cheeseburger cooked on a flat-top grill.
02:14:00.000You know, like a smashed, you know when they smash it?
02:14:04.000They press it down on a flat-top grill.
02:14:06.000Cheeseburger, lettuce, tomato, onion, Merck's cheddar cheese, some kind of a special sauce, toasted bun.
02:14:15.000Hand-cut fries with ketchup, of course and a chocolate milkshake.
02:14:20.000That would be my last meal It's the best meal out.
02:14:22.000That's my favorite thing in the world I'm not gonna disclose my place because I don't want to see anybody there But I know there's one place in Chicago that I love
02:14:38.000I was on the Wikipedia page recently for documenting all the last meals in the United States, and you see what people eat.
02:14:45.000And some people, they have an extravagant meal.
02:14:47.000Some people, they have something simple.
02:14:48.000Some people, they don't eat anything at all.
02:14:51.000But it's kind of morbid that it's like, this is my last meal, and then I'm going to die.
02:14:55.000To be sentenced to death, there's something about that.
02:14:58.000As opposed to just dying, you know, somebody kills you, you blow up, you know, you die in a car accident.
02:15:04.000There's something about being sentenced to death, you know, you will be put to death, you make preparations for it, you know, and you're ready.
02:15:13.000Whether it's disease or, you know, death penalty, something like that.
02:15:16.000There's something very, you know, really makes it think.
02:15:19.000It's not something you should dwell on very much, especially if you're trying to sleep, you know?
02:15:23.000But I'd probably go in for a couple of cheeseburgers.
02:16:18.000This is the thing about black people, generally speaking.
02:16:20.000It's obviously not every person is the same of a race.
02:16:25.000But generally speaking, the more that you just treat black people in an honest way,
02:16:32.000Uh, the better you can get along with them.
02:16:34.000And I know this is not like a fresh take, but it's so true that back when we used to be able to make, like, so-called racist jokes, we got along better with each other.
02:16:42.000Now everybody's got all this political stuff and chip on their shoulder and so on.
02:16:47.000But the black people that I meet that are in the America First movement, they get it.
02:16:52.000It's all the white people that think I'm a racist.
02:16:54.000All the white people that are like, are you racist?
02:16:56.000Do you, you know, do you hate people based on the color of their skin?
02:17:00.000At AFPAC, and not to dwell on this because I know there's a cringe way to say it, but at AFPAC, there were so many black people that came up to me and were like, I love what you're doing, I love your show.
02:17:11.000None of them were phased by anything I say on the show.
02:17:49.000So yeah, but some of them are not cool, though.
02:17:51.000Some of them are, like, militant, and they're hardcore, and they have a racial grievance against white people, and they'll, like, use that as a pretext to hate you.
02:17:59.000So it's definitely not all of them, but, you know, I think generally speaking, black people are not, you know, they're not as political as you see on social media or Twitter or whatever.
02:18:09.000A lot of them are just, you know, they're just homies.
02:19:39.000fans says yeah i say boomer hard are yeah funny sammy says all i wanted was mcdonald's fries okay kwani says are there still nf clips highlights uploads yeah i think they're uploading them on bit shoot what a dumb takes is take the bed pill yeah for real dude separate beds
02:20:47.000so so yeah maybe not three maybe we just get the two and we just trade off uh big butter okay vulgar okay that's gross we don't need to talk about bedroom things on this show this is a family show no bedrooms nick please don't go back to this
02:22:29.000And you know her bedroom can have whatever really flowery type stuff, but my bedroom is gonna be kick-ass I'm gonna have I'm gonna have you know I'm gonna have a model train maybe a model train that will go into the bathroom and into the Into the bedroom, you know on the ceiling.
02:22:44.000They'll be like a shelf and it'll go through the different rooms I would have something kick-ass like that.
02:22:49.000I'm sure my wife would never go for something like that That's why she'll have her own room and she could have her bullshit she wants in her room so
02:23:37.000I mean, it seems like fun, you know, for like the obvious reason, but beyond that, what is fun about tossing and turning and trying to get comfortable with somebody else, you know, in that close of proximity?
02:25:27.000One of my, you may catch some lines here and there, you may catch some lines from 30 Rock and it's funny, if you watch this show, I've borrowed so many things, so many little allusions and references from over the years, TV shows, movies, just a way I might say a certain thing.
02:29:03.000You turn on a football game, and you've got the constant white noise of the screaming fans, and the commentary, and there's something about that sound which just pierces my mind.
02:29:15.000And when you turn it off, it's like a mind control signal breaks and it's like, well, where am I?
02:29:21.000You know, like you hear that constantly drilling into your brain.
02:29:24.000And when it stops, you feel this great relief.
02:29:27.000It's like when you forget that the air conditioning is on and then it goes off and then it seems like eerily quiet and you're like, oh, that's better.