00:00:08.000We've got a great show for you tonight, and hopefully, we will have a show without debilitating technical difficulties, which we had an abundance of last night.
00:00:36.000And I promised on Twitter if there are any technical difficulties, there will be dire consequences for the machines, for the tech.
00:00:46.000You know, look, I've gotten to the point where there's nothing much less left that I can do besides just a brutal threat, a very real physical threat that if the technology ceases to cooperate, the technology will not be around much longer.
00:01:04.000And I think force is the only language that.
00:01:07.000Some hostile actors understand, and certainly that's what we're dealing with on the show.
00:01:15.000It's not, and it's not even anything that I do.
00:01:17.000You know, people are like, boomer tech, boomer tech.
00:01:20.000Like, what, your internet never went out?
00:01:22.000Like, let me guess, if you're good with Microsoft, your internet never just, you know, or just generally speaking, nothing ever crashes, whatever.
00:02:50.000And I tweeted that out this morning, but I really strongly feel this is a great symbol for what we see in the world today, just generally speaking, because what you have in this commercial, which if you haven't seen it, it's a Democrat, a progressive who's running for governor in Maryland.
00:03:07.000And the premise of the ad, which played on Fox and Friends, I think this morning, was that this guy says, Well, I supported Planned Parenthood.
00:03:51.000They talk about love, but underneath it, it's nothing but spite, it's nothing but rage and revolt against God and a mockery of the natural order.
00:04:04.000And then finally, if we have time, we're going to talk about Samantha B and what she had to say.
00:04:09.000I just have to show you these things because so often people ask me, you know, is it really as bad as you say it is?
00:04:17.000Because you'll have normal people who watch this show, and I come on the show and tell you between your grocery shopping and tucking your kids in at night and all the rest that the country's controlled by demons, you know, that the government, the media, the things you watch on television, the things in the music industry, It's satanic.
00:04:37.000And people ask me a lot, you know, normal people who I interact with on a normal basis, and I say normal almost in a pejorative way, almost as an epithet, is it really that bad?
00:05:33.000I guess she came back after she took a break or something.
00:05:36.000I don't watch her show, so I don't know.
00:05:37.000But, She came back after the incident where she called Ivanka Trump a C U N T, and she did an apology, but there was a really great comment in the middle of it, which we'll get to, which is just very great.
00:06:09.000You know, I was actually, it's funny, I was reading a chapter, I was rereading a chapter from Sam Huntington's Who Are We? because I'm doing a little something with that book.
00:06:18.000You're going to find out about it pretty soon.
00:06:20.000Very excited to show you all that, but I don't want to give too much away.
00:06:24.000I was rereading some of that source material for some new content, and he actually referenced a movie, that movie, Falling Down in the book in a discussion about white nativism.
00:06:35.000And he discusses white nativism, and I actually think that's pretty good rhetoric.
00:06:38.000It's surprising to me that nobody's ever used that before.
00:06:40.000As opposed to white nationalism or, you know, national socialism, white nativism, a pretty good turn of phrase.
00:06:47.000But in the closing chapters of the book, he's discussing some of the reactions to demographic change in America.
00:06:54.000And one of the, like, icons of white nativism that he uses as an example of one of the reactions to demographic change is that movie.
00:07:03.000And the premise of it is, you know, this guy, he's in traffic.
00:07:06.000And this is so relatable to me because I'm a psychopath.
00:08:02.000But to get into the news, I know people, you know, like some of the commenters, they don't come here for funny, cool anecdotes.
00:08:09.000They come here for the hard-hitting news.
00:08:11.000And so, our first topic of the day, we're going to talk about North Korea.
00:08:16.000And there were some new developments today in particular that we are looking at.
00:08:20.000Shinzo Abe came back to the United States to meet with Donald Trump before the summit on June 12th, which will be, I believe, that's next Tuesday, correct?
00:08:29.000Let me take a look at my calendar, actually.
00:08:32.000So he sat down with the Prime Minister of Japan, Shinzo Abe.
00:08:35.000There was a press conference by the Secretary of State, Mike Pompeo, on the subject, and some new developments have come out.
00:08:44.000President Trump said, for starters, during a press conference after his meeting with the Prime Minister of Japan, that he may be open to having North Korea's leader, Kim Jong un, for a summit in the United States after their planned summit in Singapore, which would be incredible.
00:09:00.000Moreover, the implication is that it'll take more than one summit, which is what he said.
00:09:04.000They'll do multiple summits, may have one in the United States.
00:09:08.000And then additionally, this is really a big white pill.
00:09:12.000This was from Mike Pompeo at the press conference.
00:09:15.000If you recall earlier in this week, we didn't actually report on it on this show, but Rudy Giuliani, who we like him, I guess, for what he's doing, but he was in Israel, which is already regrettable enough, but he was in Israel, and he made the offhand comments during some kind of a dinner that Kim Jong un got down on his hands and knees and bagged Trump for the summit, which of course.
00:09:39.000It's like the worst possible thing anybody in the Trump administration could have said after the summit got called off and then put back on, right?
00:09:49.000I mean, we had the summit, which was started in March.
00:09:52.000It fell off the rails in May because John Bolton said the wrong thing about Libya.
00:09:56.000And that really wasn't why, as we discussed in great detail, but it was used by the North Koreans as leverage to kind of try and mess things up, to try and get an upper hand.
00:10:15.000But the white pill, of course, is that Pompeo got on the press conference today and said, well, you know, Giuliani doesn't speak for the administration on that negotiation.
00:10:30.000You know, I was skeptical of him at first, but I think it's interesting.
00:10:34.000Before we really get into kind of where we are and the state of things, just on Pompeo, I think it's very interesting because he was basically a neocon.
00:10:43.000You know, I mean, you look at some of his earlier statements before he came on as Secretary of State.
00:10:51.000And the least you could say is that it was interventionist.
00:10:54.000The most you could say is that it was neoconservative.
00:10:57.000But saying things like, we should do regime change in Iran, we should take out North Korea.
00:11:01.000And it's actually, I think, refreshing and surprising that the neocon that was moved from the head of the CIA to the Secretary of State, which everybody was so worried about, by the way, you know, I never heard the end of it when he got nominated.
00:11:16.000What's Nick Fuentes going to say about this?
00:11:21.000He comes in as a neocon, and it actually turns out that he put together the whole summit.
00:11:26.000He flew and met Kim Jong un on two occasions.
00:11:29.000He's making the arrangements at the State Department to meet in Singapore on June 12th, even after Trump canceled that.
00:11:35.000He's the one who's keeping this very delicate thing all together.
00:11:39.000The allies, whether it's Japan and South Korea, some of our adversarial partners in this process, like China and even the North Korean regime.
00:11:48.000So, it really is refreshing and a good thing to see that Mike Pompeo is committed to the peace.
00:11:54.000And additionally, I think it's worth mentioning overall, you've got John Bolton, who's the national security chief.
00:12:29.000We have our own feelings on that on the show.
00:12:32.000But nevertheless, I think it is a testament to the fact that Trump is still committed to the goal of non intervention, of dual containment, as opposed to regime change.
00:12:43.000You know, that's a very important thing.
00:12:45.000And to get into just where we are before the summit so the summit will be held June 12th in Singapore, and it's Donald Trump and Kim Jong un.
00:12:55.000Japan, South Korea, China, and they're actually all very upset, but they won't be there.
00:13:01.000It's not like a big multilateral summit.
00:13:05.000And that's a very important thing to remember.
00:13:08.000And Trump even said this in his letter to Kim Jong un, canceling the summit.
00:13:12.000He said, The only thing that matters is a dialogue between me and you.
00:13:17.000And that's, I think, a great save because that prevents maybe any interference from allies, interference from elements within the administration, from outside.
00:13:28.000And You know, I did a whole podcast about this on World Report for my premium members, and there was an announcement that came out about that for our email subscribers.
00:13:37.000You'll hear some more about that later, but I did do a whole episode about how we arrived here because it wasn't such an easy road, you know.
00:13:46.000Initially, it started out very antagonistic.
00:13:50.000Kim Jong Un, who was actually the one who made the overture for the summit in the first place, started out by provoking the president.
00:13:57.000You look back as far back as January 2017, and Kim Jong Un was firing missiles, conducting a nuclear test less than a few weeks after Trump was inaugurated in January 2017.
00:14:12.000It started out with a period where Kim Jong Un was testing Trump.
00:14:17.000You had the inauguration in January 2017, and you had this period between February and about June.
00:14:23.000I would say roughly June when it was Kim Jong Un really provoking Trump.
00:14:28.000It was many, many missile tests, more so.
00:14:32.000Than in any other year in Kim Jong un's reign, which started in 2011.
00:14:36.000But nevertheless, even though he wasn't in power very long, more missile tests in 2017 than I think all the other years combined, all 28 years since they had a missile program combined, they did more missile tests in 2017.
00:14:50.000And they were doing all kinds of missile tests, they did nuclear tests, despite Trump's admonitions.
00:14:56.000And it started out, and what characterized this phase of the negotiation, and I describe it very loosely at this point as a negotiation, really.
00:15:05.000Kind of up in the air, kind of a thing.
00:15:07.000But in this early stage, it was a very muted response from Trump.
00:15:11.000It started out in a way that was actually very similar to the Obama administration.
00:15:16.000The Obama administration was, the policy was strategic patience.
00:15:20.000And so whenever there was a missile test, it was kind of this like amusement.
00:15:26.000You know, we disavow, but like, who really cares?
00:15:30.000You're under the boot of the United States.
00:15:32.000It's not really going to change our calculus.
00:15:34.000And it started out in a very similar way with the Trump administration from about January until June, where Trump said, you know, actually, there was a very brief message that came out from the State Department in those early months, if you remember, when Tillerson was still in charge, where it was like a one sentence response.
00:15:52.000It was like, you know, they better stop it.
00:15:54.000And it was supposed to be very intimidating, but he kept going.
00:15:58.000Trump came on 2020 for an interview, and he said that he would be open to having a sit down with Kim Jong un.
00:16:06.000He'd be open to a negotiation or a meeting.
00:16:08.000And you could kind of start to see the early phases of a deal making process.
00:16:14.000It was a very harsh rebuke on the one hand, but on the other, in the same interview, he said he'd be honored to meet Kim Jong Un.
00:16:21.000He would definitely sit down with him at the appropriate time.
00:16:24.000And then things really got wacky from a period of about June to December.
00:17:49.000And what is instructive, I think, in looking at the long road from threats and strike group drills and ICBM tests is the premise that threats basically work.
00:18:01.000Is the premise that at the end of the day, this is a negotiation between two individuals.
00:18:08.000And it is a negotiation that is based on leverage, that is based on power, interest.
00:18:14.000And the biggest mistake that I think could be made in this negotiation, which I have no fear of it happening.
00:18:20.000Would be for Trump to compromise, would be for Trump to give in.
00:18:24.000You know, if the North Koreans try something, if they threaten to walk out, if they don't give everything, if they were misleading about denuclearization, the biggest mistake that could be made is that we give in to any kind of unreasonable compromise.
00:18:38.000And so I don't think we're in any danger of that happening.
00:18:41.000But as the summit approaches, what we have to remember and what we really have to look for is denuclearization, irreversible, verifiable, and complete, you know, and that cannot be budged on.
00:18:53.000This is something we've really harped on as negotiation talks have picked up.
00:18:58.000You know, people have said, will Kim Jong un denuclearize?
00:19:16.000You know, we don't really know what kind of carrots would be used, but we do know exactly the threshold for any carrots to be introduced, which is that type of denuclearization, which is those three things.
00:20:38.000I think he's got great instinct, and he knows these things.
00:20:41.000I'm telling you this, not for anybody in the administration.
00:20:45.000I think he knows this, and he's acutely aware of it.
00:20:47.000If not consciously, at a subconscious and instinctual level, he knows this.
00:20:53.000And so I imagine he sits down at the summit, and barring some crazy, outlandish power play or stunt or mishap, I think they will sit down and agree to some kind of a framework.
00:21:05.000Maybe it's a schedule for hashing out the details, but I really do believe progress could be made because, of course, Trump has laid out the preconditions that this is what denuclearization looks like for us.
00:21:17.000It is, you know, exactly what it says it is.
00:21:20.000It isn't like, you know, well, you'll still have a capability or you'll still have something else.
00:21:25.000He's laid out what a deal would look like, what it would have to require, and he's done so in very persuasive ways.
00:21:32.000I think one of the ways he laid that out in a very subtle and indirect way is in rescinding the Iran deal.
00:21:39.000We had a nuclear deal with Iran, and he rescinded that.
00:22:04.000Any kind of limited denuclearization will not bring you a deal.
00:22:09.000And so I think with that understanding in mind, that Trump has laid out very clearly these are the preconditions for any kind of Deal for any kind of sanctions relief, any kind of economic support, are these three things.
00:22:22.000And Kim Jong un, you know, came away and then came back.
00:22:25.000I think that's an affirmative that he is ready to make a deal.
00:22:30.000I'll try in during the summit, I'll try to send off some kind of transmission from the woods.
00:22:37.000I don't think I'll be able to help myself.
00:22:38.000I'll have to do it, you know, and I'll make sure, even though I'll be indoors a lot, I'll make sure to like go out into a remote area so it gets the aesthetic of, and I'll grow out my facial hair a little bit.
00:22:50.000And you'll say, wow, you know, that was really something.
00:22:53.000You know, for my woods transmission, I'll be like in New Vegas radio sending it out from the wasteland.
00:23:01.000This is something that is like a year and a half in the making.
00:23:04.000And especially for this show, we launched almost exactly when the first missile strike occurred.
00:23:11.000And we've been covering it just about every other week for a year and a half, as long as the show's been on.
00:23:17.000So to see this finally happen, it'll feel so fulfilling.
00:23:21.000It'll feel so, you know, like at long last, we've.
00:23:24.000Heard it all before, we've seen it all before, but now it's going to happen.
00:23:27.000And I think he'll really break the cycle.
00:23:31.000This will be revolutionary if we pull it off.
00:23:33.000Just to say this if we pull this off, this will set a precedent which is unbelievably important.
00:23:41.000The precedent is that the number one security challenge of the United States in the post Cold War era is the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction in the hands of rogue actors Saddam Hussein, Muammar Gaddafi, Bashar al Assad, Kim Jong il, and Kim Jong un.
00:24:00.000This was the chief security challenge of a country that was a hyperpower.
00:24:04.000Right after 1991, after the Cold War, there was no country, there was no great power that was there to contest American hegemony in any region.
00:24:14.000And so the only threat that stood was this asymmetrical equalizer, which was nuclear weapons.
00:24:20.000A country like Iraq can't challenge America conventionally, nobody can.
00:24:25.000But a rogue country can challenge America, or at least deter America, if they have some kind of arsenal of weapons of mass destruction, which equalized the potential.
00:24:35.000Because if it escalates to nuclear, Both sides lose.
00:24:39.000And so that's been the number one challenge.
00:25:16.000Under Obama, it was this strategic patience or this like weird smart diplomacy, which was predicated on the assumption that America won't be powerful anymore.
00:25:26.000And if Trump can pull this off, it's revolutionary.
00:25:28.000He set a precedent that we can handle these kinds of countries with containment.
00:25:34.000And this is a theory that was put forward in the book Unthinkable by Kenneth Pollack, which is about the Iran nuclear program.
00:25:41.000Highly recommend that book if you want to write that down.
00:25:45.000It's a really comprehensive overview of the subject.
00:25:49.000But he laid out in that book the only sensible policy for America in the 2010s and in coming decades is containment, which is maximum pressure, as Trump is doing economically, diplomatically, until either change is brought about from within or a deal is made.
00:28:07.000And let's just take a little look at the description here.
00:28:11.000Rich Madalino is the only candidate for governor who has stood up to Donald Trump and the Republicans to deliver on progressive priorities for all of Maryland.
00:32:44.000This is just my first, this is our once over, and we're gonna go through, we'll just take a look at how this reflects the left and the world we're living in today.
00:34:15.000Why do Republicans oppose Planned Parenthood?
00:34:18.000Is it because they provide services for women, which some of the services are good?
00:34:23.000I don't know enough about Planned Parenthood, but I know that they do provide some things that are not abortion.
00:34:31.000But the reason they're saying they stand with Planned Parenthood, the reason Republicans oppose Planned Parenthood is because they do fund abortions, they do perform abortions, right?
00:34:40.000And so when these people are saying, I stand with Planned Parenthood, and they got all these women.
00:34:44.000What they're really saying is, I stand with abortion because that's what it's about.
00:34:49.000You don't stand for, you know, Planned Parenthood is a euphemism.
00:34:52.000When they're talking about Planned Parenthood, they mean, well, if we can't really plan it out that well, we'll just abort the kid.
00:34:59.000We'll just murder the kid instead, you know, that's the plan.
00:35:02.000So they're saying, I stand with abortion.
00:38:15.000I'm not, you know, education is not like my forte.
00:38:17.000I don't know that much about education policy.
00:38:20.000The voucher system is that instead of the public school, for people that don't know, you get a voucher from the government that's equal to the cost of educating a child in the public school system.
00:38:30.000So, you know, for example, you might give a kid a $3,000 voucher and instead of Educating them in a state run public school, you take them to a charter school or a parochial school, and essentially it's public education without public schooling.
00:39:34.000The point of us going through this video is to show that this is all part of the same system.
00:39:40.000It's all part of the same belief system, it's all part of the same worldview.
00:39:44.000And the kind of people who preach it are literally corrupted and so corrupted that it.
00:39:50.000Manifests itself physically because of how toxic these ideas are.
00:39:55.000It is not a coincidence that this person believes in gun control, believes in public schooling, believes in abortion, and looks like this and kisses someone like this and has kids like this.
00:40:27.000We just want to love who we want, blah, blah.
00:40:29.000And this is all we hear from liberals all day long, not just on this issue, but on all the issues.
00:40:33.000It's about love, it's about tolerance, it's about acceptance.
00:40:37.000And in this case, and I'm sorry I had to watch that twice, but in this case, what you have, and it's so naked, is a gesture that is empty, that it doesn't mean anything.
00:40:48.000A kiss is supposed to be about love, a kiss is supposed to be an expression of affection.
00:42:17.000Now, 20 years ago, Democrats like Hillary Clinton and Bill Clinton, the only thing that differentiated them from us, Republicans, was that, well, they believed in higher taxes.
00:42:29.000And they believed in, Idealism in foreign policy, but you know, that was about it.
00:42:34.000Or you could go back a hundred years ago, and they said, Oh, well, the difference between us is that, well, we believe that public works is the best way to solve an economic depression.
00:42:44.000Even Franklin Roosevelt ran on a platform of balancing the budget, so they all shared the same values.
00:42:51.000This represents how far the Democrat Party has gone.
00:42:56.000Are there any Democrats in like Michigan, Wisconsin, Pennsylvania, you know, people who work with their hands, they have families they're trying to support?
00:43:03.000Who says, yeah, like this is what I want.
00:43:20.000What they represent is a worldview that is so far removed from anything that is normal, anything that is normative, anything that is perennial.
00:43:29.000You know, we talked just yesterday about Normandy.
00:43:32.000Yesterday was the 74th anniversary of Normandy.
00:43:35.000And let me turn off the volume so we could have this kind of going in the background here.
00:43:40.000What we were talking about yesterday was Normandy and the sacrifice that people made and why they made the sacrifice.
00:43:48.000You know, you watch any of the World War II movies and they went out to war.
00:43:52.000And any of the testimonies too by the veterans, it was for their country or it was for freedom, it was for their family, it was for their wives.
00:44:05.000This is the country that your great grandfather went into basically a situation where it was nearly certain that he would die to defend this, to defend this future.
00:46:08.000It's like a mother holding a baby, but it's off because the baby is like demonic and the mother is demonic.
00:46:15.000And the point that Mel Gibson was getting at, even though that wasn't like biblical, was that evil presents itself in like a very perverted form of what is good.
00:46:24.000In the sense that a mother and child is supposed to be a divine image, supposed to be something that's good, but it's like that, but it's.
00:46:31.000It's just off in such a disturbing and perverted way.
00:46:37.000You know, we see the devil as, you know, evil and angry and full of wrath, and he's got horns and a tail and all that.
00:46:45.000But of course, that we recognize that evil, we can say, oh, you know, those are the evil guys, those are the bad guys.
00:46:51.000But of course, if evil were like that, it wouldn't be tempting.
00:46:54.000This is how evil presents itself as a perversion, a mockery, something that approaches and dresses itself up as the good, as the divine, but it's all wrong, it's all messed up.
00:47:06.000And it doesn't take much for the thin veneer to be pulled off.
00:47:12.000You know, you talk to any of these people, and I've done this before, and you show them any statistics about, oh, I don't know, soil samples, like, you know, how long does it take to burn something, or you look at pictures of chimneys, you know, just random facts like that.
00:47:28.000And they will be foaming at the mouth, angry, furious.
00:47:33.000And that's when you see that it's not about love.
00:48:10.000Oh, I just thought I'd share some of those observations because, you know, people will watch that ad and they'll be repulsed, I think, naturally by what goes on in it.
00:48:18.000But we really have to peel back the layers and just show you this is who we are dealing with.
00:48:40.000But I hope that was entertaining, but also fills you with I don't want to say anger or rage, but it should fill you with a righteous hatred of what is evil and a righteous love of what is good.
00:48:54.000You know, that's a really tricky thing because we like to think that hate is a bad thing.
00:48:59.000We like to say that, think in terms of absolutes, just love, just hate, and all the rest.
00:49:04.000But of course, the world is more complicated than that.
00:49:07.000You start to think about these things for more than five seconds, and then you realize what we're really dealing with here.
00:49:13.000You know, the gun violence is a perfect example.
00:52:02.000You know, and I think, you know, somewhat wistfully about Halloween, my old house, walking down the block, trick or treating with all the friends.
00:52:11.000You know, it's one of those things where, and what's really, you know, what's really sad about growing up, which I'm not very old yet, but, you know, I am not a child anymore.
00:52:21.000What's really sad is when you realize that you are now the only way you'll ever experience that again is as a parent.
00:52:28.000The only way you'll participate in that again is as a parent.
00:52:32.000Even though, in terms of age, you're closer to when you were trick or treating.
00:52:36.000You know, everything was so new and fun, and you saw novelty, and you weren't cynical yet, and you didn't have to worry about world jewelry.
00:54:36.000So at the end of the day, I understand Kaczynski type people and prim instincts, but I could never bring myself to live like that because I love mankind.
00:54:48.000I guess that's the last element of me that's kind of boomerish is that I love man's dominion over mankind.
00:54:57.000That we were able to conquer the wilderness and we can have it any way we want.
00:55:03.000So, in that way, it's hard to reconcile that with the fact that to an extent you are rejecting man's nature and some of the restrictions, which is what we talk about so much.
00:55:14.000But, nevertheless, I do like that we have things that are impossible.
00:57:16.000Also, it's important to note look at the like to dislike ratio.
00:57:21.000And this is important just to acknowledge because people will often say when you see, for example, interracial couples in every commercial, when you see homosexuals in commercials, when you see this kind of stuff on television.
00:57:36.000People often say, oh, well, that's just a sign of the times.
00:57:40.000Maybe they're just appealing to a modern audience.
01:02:53.000I don't remember how I responded to that.
01:02:55.000I think I said something to the effect of, like, you know, what about Hillary Clintoners?
01:02:59.000I think I responded by saying, well, you know, Bill Clinton raped this many women and Hillary Clinton bullied them and nobody talks about that.
01:03:09.000And it was crazy because then everybody started yelling at me.
01:03:12.000I kid you not, when I did that debate, and for people that don't know my origin story, How I got discovered was I tweeted something out at Boston University.
01:03:21.000I tweeted out, like, multiculturalism is cancer, something very basic like that.
01:04:53.000I mean, there were people yelling at me like Muslims and women, and some woman got up and she was all like, you know, sassy, like, you know, and I shut her down and some people left crying.
01:05:07.000That was a wild, a wild night, a great night.
01:05:11.000Happy Day says, Oh, he's still on the screen?
01:09:29.000All these people, it really is a turnoff.
01:09:31.000All these people in our movement, or I guess not in my movement, but in other movements, who think America's finished or they don't like America or they have this antipathy towards America.
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