America First - Nicholas J. Fuentes - April 25, 2018


Dragon Energy is Real | America First Ep. 152


Episode Stats


Length

1 hour and 25 minutes

Words per minute

185.58086

Word count

15,895

Sentence count

1,319


Summary

Summaries generated with gmurro/bart-large-finetuned-filtered-spotify-podcast-summ .

Transcript

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00:00:01.000 Good evening, everybody.
00:00:02.000 You are watching America First.
00:00:03.000 My name is Nicholas J. Fuentes.
00:00:05.000 We have a great show for you tonight.
00:00:08.000 You already know what it's about.
00:00:09.000 You already know what we're talking about tonight.
00:00:13.000 Probably the most important show of my career, maybe the most important show forever, maybe the most important show that anyone has ever done at any time in the world.
00:00:25.000 And you know what we're talking about.
00:00:27.000 You know what it is.
00:00:28.000 We're talking about Kanye West and.
00:00:31.000 We're going to get into it.
00:00:32.000 We're going to talk about it in a way, and just a second.
00:00:36.000 My microphone here is out of control.
00:00:38.000 My gain's all the way up.
00:00:41.000 The yelling is probably not going to go so well on the gain like that.
00:00:44.000 Okay, we're good now, but you know what it is.
00:00:47.000 It's Kanye West.
00:00:48.000 We're going to get into it, and we're going to talk about it in ways, levels of analysis that shouldn't even be possible.
00:00:55.000 You're not going to hear anything close to it.
00:00:57.000 I was watching Fox News today, and Shep Smith was talking about it, this dandy, and it was so clear.
00:01:05.000 He doesn't get it.
00:01:06.000 These boomers, these old people, Ramsey Paul was giving me a hard time about it.
00:01:11.000 Old people, they don't understand.
00:01:13.000 They don't get it.
00:01:14.000 They don't understand what's going on here.
00:01:16.000 But I'm going to break it down for you and show you why this is unironically one of the most important things to happen this year.
00:01:24.000 And we're going to get into it.
00:01:25.000 I don't mean that in an ironic way, I don't even mean that in a joking way.
00:01:29.000 It's a little bit hyperbolic when I say it's the most important show forever.
00:01:32.000 But really, I mean, this is big stuff.
00:01:35.000 Of course, we're talking about Kanye West again.
00:01:38.000 He's back on Twitter, and he's been tweeting out some very explicit things.
00:01:43.000 We talked about it, I think, on Monday when he had been tweeting about Candace Owens and Scott Adams.
00:01:49.000 Or, no, I'm sorry.
00:01:50.000 Maybe it was yesterday.
00:01:52.000 What's today?
00:01:53.000 I don't even know what day it is anymore.
00:01:53.000 Wednesday?
00:01:55.000 I think it was either yesterday or Monday that he tweeted out Scott Adams, and a few days prior, he tweeted out Candace Owens.
00:02:02.000 And we got into it a little bit.
00:02:03.000 You know, this is a big deal.
00:02:04.000 He's right wing.
00:02:05.000 But we didn't really, you know, now it's a big deal.
00:02:08.000 Today, he tweeted out.
00:02:09.000 Several explicit endorsements of the president, and we'll just get right into it what he tweeted.
00:02:17.000 And so he started out tweeting this morning.
00:02:19.000 This was kind of the foreshadowing tweet.
00:02:22.000 He tweeted, Free thinkers don't fear retaliation for your thoughts.
00:02:27.000 The traditional thinkers are only using thoughts and words, but they're in a mental prison.
00:02:31.000 You are free.
00:02:32.000 You've already won.
00:02:33.000 Feel energized.
00:02:34.000 Move in love, not fear.
00:02:35.000 Be afraid of nothing.
00:02:36.000 So he tweets that out.
00:02:38.000 Everybody's like, okay, you know, this is the usual kind of.
00:02:41.000 New age stuff that Kanye has been tweeting.
00:02:45.000 He deactivated his account about a year and a half ago and then he came back about a week ago.
00:02:50.000 He's been building his following back up.
00:02:52.000 He was at about 16 million followers when we last talked about him.
00:02:55.000 Now he's up to more than 18 and a half million.
00:02:59.000 And so he's back on Twitter and he's been tweeting some controversial stuff, some new age kind of faux philosophical type stuff.
00:03:07.000 And then there was the Candace Owens, the Scott Adams tweets.
00:03:10.000 And then Kanye tweets this.
00:03:12.000 And then we see the biggest tweet.
00:03:15.000 The tweet that breaks the internet basically after that one.
00:03:18.000 He tweets out today You don't have to agree with Trump, but the mob can't make me not love him.
00:03:24.000 We are both dragon energy.
00:03:27.000 He is my brother.
00:03:29.000 I love everyone.
00:03:30.000 I don't agree with everything anyone does.
00:03:32.000 That's what makes us individuals, and we have the right to independent thought.
00:03:36.000 And so this is pretty big.
00:03:39.000 I mean, we had seen that Kanye, we talked about this the last time we talked about his Twitter.
00:03:44.000 Before he went away from Twitter, before he basically vanished from the public eye completely.
00:03:50.000 Canceled his tour, shut down his Twitter, shut down all the rest of his social media, basically went into the mountains, literally went into the mountains, I think in Wyoming, to record his new album.
00:04:00.000 Before he vanished about a year ago, he was very vocal after the 2016 election in his concerts, saying that if he voted, he would have voted for Trump, saying they should build a wall, saying some things about how conspicuous it is that radio only plays certain songs, that The establishment's controlling things.
00:04:21.000 I mean, really started to get into some red pill territory.
00:04:25.000 And it looks like we have a note.
00:04:28.000 I don't know.
00:04:28.000 I guess there's an issue with the audio there.
00:04:32.000 And on Facebook Live, we're not on Facebook.
00:04:35.000 I forgot to tell my producer, but we're not on Facebook Live because Kanye West is copyrighted and Facebook takes it down.
00:04:42.000 So that's why I don't like the interruptions.
00:04:44.000 But where even was I?
00:04:46.000 So he vanishes for about a year.
00:04:48.000 He was in the concert saying some very outlandish stuff, and then he disappears.
00:04:54.000 And this didn't get a lot of coverage because it was the press reporting about Kanye from what he had said during a concert.
00:05:02.000 So there were very few unedited video or audio from the actual concerts where he went on these long speeches.
00:05:11.000 Some of them were like 13, 15 minutes.
00:05:14.000 And so my opinion is it was groundbreaking at the time, but you just had the big election, so it was a little bit muted compared to what was happening in politics.
00:05:23.000 And also, I don't think many people heard exactly what was said because.
00:05:28.000 In my opinion, it was covered up.
00:05:30.000 I think that there was a big, long rant he went on.
00:05:33.000 If everybody listened to it, it really would have changed what they thought about Trump and maybe what they thought about Kanye.
00:05:38.000 But they kind of kept that on the down low.
00:05:40.000 Well, he comes back now, and this is an explicit endorsement of the right wing, of Scott Adams, of Candace Owens, or Red Pill Black.
00:05:48.000 And now he says, I love Trump.
00:05:50.000 We're both dragon energy.
00:05:52.000 He's my brother.
00:05:53.000 I love everyone.
00:05:55.000 And Donald Trump later quote tweets that.
00:05:57.000 He retweets it with a quote on top saying, Thank you, Kanye.
00:06:02.000 Very cool.
00:06:03.000 And I love, you know, it's almost patronizing.
00:06:07.000 Thank you, Kanye.
00:06:08.000 Very cool, you know, because I'm sure as wacky as Donald Trump is, as much of a shit poster as Trump is, he sees Kanye tweeting all this wacky, goofy stuff about we're a dragon energy.
00:06:20.000 And I'm sure even Donald Trump is like, what is this guy on?
00:06:25.000 What does that even mean?
00:06:27.000 So he says, thank you, Kanye.
00:06:28.000 Very cool.
00:06:30.000 Kanye comes back and he tweets, quote, If your friend jumps off the bridge, you don't have to do the same.
00:06:36.000 Yay being yay, which is short for Kanye, is a fight for you to be you.
00:06:43.000 For people in my life, the idea of Trump is pretty much a 50 50 split, but I don't tell a Hillary supporter not to support Hillary.
00:06:49.000 I love Hillary, too.
00:06:52.000 And then he goes on to say, My wife just called me, and she wanted me to make this clear to everyone.
00:06:56.000 I don't agree with everything Trump does.
00:06:58.000 I don't agree 100% with anyone but myself.
00:07:02.000 And then after that, he tweets a picture of himself.
00:07:04.000 In a MAGA hat, and then he tweets a picture of another MAGA hat, which is signed by Trump.
00:07:09.000 Trump replies with a quote tweet saying, MAGA.
00:07:13.000 And then here was the best one.
00:07:14.000 So we're in, you know, it's just outright, it's all out there.
00:07:18.000 He loves Trump.
00:07:19.000 He's his brother.
00:07:20.000 I don't agree with everything he says, but then he's wearing the hat, then he's bragging about the signed hat.
00:07:25.000 And then this was the best one.
00:07:28.000 This is the most recent one that I don't think a lot of people have seen yet.
00:07:31.000 But then he tweeted out, Obama was in office for eight years and nothing in Chicago changed.
00:07:38.000 And so then now he's really making people crazy.
00:07:41.000 And you could see all day on Twitter the blue check marks, the liberals.
00:07:45.000 Everybody says blue check mark like it's this derogatory epithet.
00:07:45.000 I shouldn't say it.
00:07:49.000 I'm a blue check mark.
00:07:50.000 Be careful who you say that around.
00:07:53.000 I'm a blue check too.
00:07:53.000 All right?
00:07:55.000 I worked very hard to get my blue check mark, and I don't appreciate everybody being so nasty about it, right?
00:08:01.000 But anyway, you saw all the reporters, the liberals, the press got very mad at him.
00:08:07.000 And then you saw after the Scott Adams incident, TMZ and People magazine came out with these reports saying that Kanye was going crazy, that he was erratic, he was fighting with Kris Jenner.
00:08:20.000 Who is Kim Kardashian's mom?
00:08:22.000 He's married to Kim Kardashian, saying that his marriage is strained.
00:08:25.000 He's having all these problems.
00:08:27.000 And so Kanye's been tweeting this political stuff, which is revolutionary, groundbreaking for a number of reasons.
00:08:33.000 But if that wasn't enough, this is already a huge deal that we were talking about earlier this week.
00:08:39.000 That Kanye, on top of what he's already tweeted about Scott and about Candace, now he's saying, I love Trump.
00:08:45.000 He's wearing the Trump hat.
00:08:46.000 He says, Look, I don't agree with him, but you have to respect that I have an opinion.
00:08:50.000 I'm an independent thinker.
00:08:51.000 That's all fine and well.
00:08:52.000 That was already a crazy day.
00:08:54.000 It was already an insane day that Connie was tweeting this kind of stuff, and the president was responding.
00:09:00.000 But if that wasn't enough, then Kim Kardashian jumps in the mix, and she tweets out.
00:09:07.000 And think of this I'm not a fan of Kim Kardashian, okay, admittedly.
00:09:10.000 I don't watch her show.
00:09:12.000 I don't think her show is very generative.
00:09:14.000 It's reality television, so does that have a high entertainment value?
00:09:18.000 I don't know.
00:09:19.000 I think I'm a little cynical about people who say, oh, we don't like Kim Kardashian.
00:09:23.000 It's garbage, blah, blah, blah.
00:09:25.000 You know, it's like.
00:09:26.000 They're creating jobs.
00:09:27.000 At the end of the day, people have jobs because Kim Kardashian has the show, and people enjoy it.
00:09:33.000 It's stupid, it's silly, it's entertainment, whatever.
00:09:36.000 But, anyways, she tweets out to her 60 million followers To the media trying to demonize my husband, let me just say this Your commentary on Kanye being erratic and his tweets being disturbing is actually scary.
00:09:53.000 So quick to label him as having mental health issues for just being himself when he has always been expressive is not fair.
00:10:01.000 She goes on to say, he's a free thinker.
00:10:03.000 Is that not allowed in America?
00:10:06.000 Because some of his ideas differ from yours.
00:10:09.000 You have to throw in the mental health card?
00:10:12.000 That's just not fair.
00:10:13.000 He's actually out of the sunken place, which is a reference to the movie Get Out, when he's being himself, which is very expressive.
00:10:21.000 And so now all bets are off because Kanye is a big celebrity in his own right.
00:10:27.000 You know, he's one of Time's 100 most influential people.
00:10:31.000 He's one of the.
00:10:32.000 Biggest rappers of the 2000s, if not the biggest rapper, the most innovative, the highest selling, all the rest.
00:10:39.000 I mean, he's really up there in terms of influence.
00:10:41.000 And people are going to say, oh, he's a celebrity.
00:10:44.000 He's a rapper.
00:10:45.000 I don't like Kanye.
00:10:46.000 I think he's dumb.
00:10:47.000 Regardless of your personal opinion about Kanye, or whether you think it's deserved, or whether you think there's value in what he does, or, you know, if people are intelligent for supporting him, you know, whatever boomer comments you have about him, he's tweeting out this pro Trump message to 18 million people who otherwise wouldn't have heard it.
00:11:07.000 And he's also doing it from a position of cultural power and cultural influence.
00:11:12.000 And then not only is he tweeting about it, then Kim comes out, guns a blazing, defending her husband.
00:11:19.000 And I think Kim, in many ways, is more impactful.
00:11:24.000 At least this message might be more important and more impactful than Kanye's message.
00:11:30.000 In the sense that what Kim is telling her 60 million followers, really think about what she said, and think of the words she's using.
00:11:37.000 For the media to demonize my husband.
00:11:40.000 Quick to label him as having mental health issues because he's expressive.
00:11:44.000 She says he's a free thinker.
00:11:46.000 Is that not allowed in America?
00:11:48.000 Think of the themes.
00:11:49.000 Think of the tone here that she's conveying here.
00:11:53.000 It's a message that is against the media, that's against the fake press, the mainstream media, whatever it is.
00:11:59.000 It's against the media.
00:12:01.000 It's pro free speech.
00:12:03.000 It's saying, you know, look, you don't have to like it, but he's an independent thinker.
00:12:06.000 If this is America, that should be allowed.
00:12:09.000 It uses the left wing's mental health card against themselves.
00:12:13.000 You know, they're always the first ones to say, It's mental health awareness day.
00:12:17.000 You know, be nice to each other.
00:12:19.000 Everybody's on their period.
00:12:20.000 Be nice to each other.
00:12:21.000 You can't say mean things or, you know, people get depressed, whatever.
00:12:25.000 So she flips the script on them.
00:12:26.000 She says the left is being hypocritical.
00:12:28.000 They're going to trivialize mental illness by comparing my husband to a mentally ill person because he has a different opinion.
00:12:36.000 And so you have, and then you have the demonization part where people are demonizing somebody for supporting Trump, for having an independent thought and using the mental health card.
00:12:45.000 This message.
00:12:47.000 Is that would be powerful if Tucker Carlson was saying that.
00:12:51.000 I mean, that's the kind of thing that Tucker Carlson says.
00:12:53.000 That's the kind of thing that Sean Hannity says on Fox News going against the media, defending Trump supporters, talking about free speech in this way.
00:13:01.000 And you have Kim Kardashian.
00:13:04.000 Kim Kardashian, like, who would have thought tweeting that out to 60 million followers on Twitter?
00:13:10.000 I don't know how many.
00:13:11.000 She's got tens and tens and tens of million followers on Instagram.
00:13:16.000 She's got her television show.
00:13:17.000 I mean, Kanye West is huge in music.
00:13:20.000 Kim Kardashian is huge in television.
00:13:22.000 She's huge in terms of being a social media influencer.
00:13:26.000 So then she goes out there just when you think that's enough.
00:13:31.000 We already have Kanye.
00:13:33.000 It's a crazy week already.
00:13:34.000 He goes on this Trump thing.
00:13:36.000 Trump's tweeting at him.
00:13:37.000 Then you have Kim Kardashian.
00:13:38.000 She jumps on with this very articulate and very on point message about Trump supporters.
00:13:45.000 Probably the best, I hesitate to say bipartisan, but maybe the best.
00:13:50.000 A political thing you can say about Trump, which is to say that she's not commenting on the content of Trump's policies or his platform or his politics.
00:13:59.000 She's not saying, you know, build the wall or even, she's not even tweeting in support of Trump or in support of Trump supporters.
00:14:06.000 And in some ways, that is even a better thing.
00:14:09.000 In some ways, that's a more persuasive thing.
00:14:12.000 What she's saying is that Trump supporters should be normalized.
00:14:16.000 Or maybe if she's not saying that, that's the effect that her tweet has.
00:14:20.000 If she's putting out this tweet and she's giving a cultural, she's coming at it from a place of cultural relevance and legitimacy, and she's telling her 60 million followers, who many of them are millennials, Generation Z, young girls, young boys in high school and college, she's telling them, look, you don't have to like them.
00:14:39.000 I certainly don't.
00:14:40.000 I don't agree with them, but this is America, and you have to respect them.
00:14:44.000 And they're not mentally ill, they just have a different opinion.
00:14:46.000 They're independent.
00:14:48.000 That is such a persuasive thing.
00:14:50.000 That's something that a Manhattanite, A liberal Manhattanite, you know, one of your most far left people who's on their way to work with their coffee rushing, could say, wait a minute.
00:15:00.000 I agree with that.
00:15:01.000 This is America.
00:15:02.000 Maybe you are allowed to have a different opinion.
00:15:04.000 That makes people stop and think.
00:15:05.000 Or even if it doesn't, it contributes that to the conversation on a massive scale.
00:15:10.000 And if that's not enough, so you have all this big stuff.
00:15:13.000 And then you have Chance the Rapper who weighs in.
00:15:16.000 And Chance the Rapper is not as well known as Kanye.
00:15:18.000 He's not as big as Kanye quite yet.
00:15:21.000 He was a relative newcomer a couple of years ago.
00:15:24.000 I think it was my sophomore year of high school, like 2014, he came out with Acid Rap, and that put him on the map.
00:15:30.000 And then he had Coloring Book in 2016, I think in like May or June, and that was huge.
00:15:36.000 And so now he's kind of on par with Kanye.
00:15:38.000 He's got about 7 million followers on Twitter for context.
00:15:41.000 So, Chance the Rapper's not even, you know, he's big now, but compared to Kanye or like Drake, he's not that big yet.
00:15:48.000 But for context, he's got 7 million.
00:15:50.000 The biggest conservatives have 1, 2 million, 2.5 million.
00:15:54.000 So, it just goes to show it's a different order of magnitude when we're talking about entertainers.
00:15:59.000 If it wasn't enough that we had Kanye and then Kim, then Chance jumps in, and he's from Chicago, consider that.
00:16:05.000 And he says, quote, black people don't have to vote for Democrats.
00:16:11.000 And that's just, I mean, now think of the message that we have here.
00:16:15.000 Think of this comprehensive message that we have from three very culturally legitimate and relevant people.
00:16:22.000 If it was just Kanye, you could say that's a big deal.
00:16:26.000 You know, he's got a huge following, he's got a lot of cultural capital and relevance, but it's one guy.
00:16:32.000 And not only is it one guy, but Kanye, I mean, let's look back at his record.
00:16:36.000 He is a leader in terms of he says outrageous things and he's stood alone.
00:16:41.000 He's very independent in that regard.
00:16:43.000 But I think because of the nature of Who Kanye is, many people could maybe write that off and say, well, Kanye tweeting about Trump and Trump supporters, it's Kanye being Kanye.
00:16:55.000 He's always been out there.
00:16:57.000 He's always been kind of crazy.
00:16:59.000 He says himself that he's crazy.
00:17:01.000 And maybe he's just stirring the pot.
00:17:03.000 Maybe he's just being controversial.
00:17:04.000 He always has been.
00:17:05.000 You know, even when he was humble, even when his mom was still alive and a lot more people liked him before the Taylor Swift thing, even then he was arrogant.
00:17:14.000 He was cocky.
00:17:15.000 He was causing all kinds of trouble in the rap world because he was wearing the pink polo and the backpack.
00:17:20.000 And he was very pro gay, too, in like 2005, which was different for the rap industry, for the rap people.
00:17:27.000 And then there was a Taylor Swift thing, and then there was Jesus, which was totally out of bounds.
00:17:31.000 So he's been a controversial guy.
00:17:33.000 And so maybe people could say, okay, Kanye's tweeting in support of Trump.
00:17:37.000 I think it would be much easier if it was just Kanye for people to say, that's just Kanye.
00:17:43.000 It's Kanye tweeting words.
00:17:44.000 And I said this on Monday.
00:17:45.000 Low IQ, small brain people in our movement will say, you know, Kanye made a tweet big whip.
00:17:51.000 And many people would be able to say, Kanye tweeted something.
00:17:54.000 He's already crazy.
00:17:55.000 I don't care.
00:17:56.000 I still like his music, whatever.
00:17:58.000 But when Kanye tweets, and then Kim Kardashian tweets, now it's a different ballgame.
00:18:03.000 Now you have two people.
00:18:04.000 And not only do you have two people, but you have Kim K, who's huge in her own right in a totally different industry.
00:18:09.000 Kanye's huge in music.
00:18:11.000 Kim Kardashian's huge in television.
00:18:13.000 She's huge in social media.
00:18:16.000 She's a woman, which is also different.
00:18:18.000 You know, Kanye's a black male, so not obviously Trump's core demographic.
00:18:23.000 Kim Kardashian's a woman.
00:18:25.000 The media said that women are not supposed to be in support of Trump, so she tweets out in support of that and with a message that is different.
00:18:32.000 Whereas Kanye goes off the reservation, Kim's message is almost complimentary to Kanye's in a way that is, it almost looks deliberate.
00:18:41.000 I have to say, it almost looks astroturfed.
00:18:44.000 I don't think it was simply because I don't know what the motivation would be.
00:18:47.000 I think Kanye is the kind of guy to go off the rails, and Kim's the kind of woman who supports her husband.
00:18:52.000 You saw this when Taylor Swift lied about Kanye West.
00:18:56.000 Kanye, for context, Back when Life of Pablo came out, Kanye came out with a record called Famous, where he does a line in the song about Taylor Swift, and he says some interesting things about Taylor Swift.
00:19:11.000 And Kanye, after that came out, there was all kinds of controversy.
00:19:14.000 And Kanye said, I called Taylor Swift in advance of the album coming out to make sure she was okay with this line because it was controversial, it was inappropriate.
00:19:22.000 And then Taylor Swift was like, No, I didn't say that.
00:19:24.000 That's not true.
00:19:25.000 And Kim Kardashian came back, and she called Taylor Swift a liar, basically, and defended her husband.
00:19:32.000 And so she defends her husband.
00:19:33.000 So, in long story short, I don't mean to get into celebrity drama.
00:19:37.000 That's not obviously the point of the show.
00:19:39.000 But it's just to demonstrate that this was organic.
00:19:43.000 Although it appears AstroTurfed, this was organic.
00:19:46.000 Connie's the kind of guy who goes off the rails.
00:19:49.000 Kim's the kind of wife who defends her husband.
00:19:51.000 And Chance the Rapper is probably the kind of guy who defends a friend.
00:19:55.000 And he tweeted before the thing about black people, he tweeted out that Kanye's fine, he's doing well.
00:20:01.000 And then he tweets, black people don't have to vote for Democrats.
00:20:03.000 And in these three messages, you get like two jabs and then just a total.
00:20:10.000 A total hook there in terms of the messaging because first you have Kanye, and like I said, he could go off the reservations.
00:20:16.000 He says, I'm wearing my Trump hat and I love Trump.
00:20:19.000 And then people might say, I don't like that.
00:20:21.000 But then Kim Kardashian comes in.
00:20:23.000 Here's where you get the complementarity of the message.
00:20:25.000 She comes in and she says, You know what?
00:20:28.000 I'm going to defend my husband.
00:20:30.000 You may not like it.
00:20:32.000 I certainly don't like it, but he has the right to express himself.
00:20:34.000 And so people who initially said, You know what?
00:20:37.000 I'm done with Kanye.
00:20:38.000 I hate him.
00:20:39.000 He's against me, whatever.
00:20:41.000 Then you have Kim Kardashian coming in and saying this, and that person could say, Well, you know, hey, I respect Kim for defending her husband, and I sort of get where she's coming from.
00:20:51.000 I agree with Kim Kardashian's politics, probably.
00:20:53.000 I think Kim Kardashian supported Hillary Clinton, so, you know, I support her politics, but I respect her for defending her husband, and I also respect what she said about her husband that, you know, maybe we don't have to like it, but it is independent.
00:21:06.000 And certainly a lot of far left people, they're not going to concede.
00:21:10.000 They'll say, No, he's evil, now he's with white supremacists and all that.
00:21:14.000 But, Reasonable people will say, okay, maybe there's a point there.
00:21:17.000 And then the knockout punch there from Chance the Rapper is at the heart of the issue.
00:21:23.000 That's the core of what is being discussed here.
00:21:26.000 Well, you know, it's kind of metapolitical.
00:21:28.000 It's kind of about Trump and free speech, and it's up in the media, whatever.
00:21:33.000 Chance the Rapper really gets to the heart of it, which is the straight line black people don't have to vote for Democrats.
00:21:40.000 And those are the magical words that we've all been waiting to hear, that it's been so difficult for everybody to say for so long, that Dinesh D'Souza has paid.
00:21:49.000 Like, what, a billion dollars in films and books and everything to get people to hear?
00:21:53.000 We've been trying to get that message out forever.
00:21:57.000 Because Democrats control the black vote.
00:22:00.000 They won 90% of the blacks in 2016.
00:22:03.000 They won 97% in 2012, 98% in 2008.
00:22:06.000 And so Chance the Rapper says, you know, let's clean all this up.
00:22:11.000 Forget Trump for a moment.
00:22:13.000 Forget free speech and the media and all this.
00:22:15.000 Black people don't have to vote for Democrats.
00:22:18.000 People are mad at Kanye because their expectation is.
00:22:22.000 Was that he's black, he must be a Democrat.
00:22:24.000 He's black, he has to be a Democrat.
00:22:26.000 And that's what it comes down to.
00:22:28.000 And that's a very basic talking point.
00:22:30.000 This is nothing you haven't heard before about blacks and about the Democrat voter plantation.
00:22:36.000 And people might say, oh, well, Kanye probably doesn't believe in the things Trump believes in, or this isn't totally a message that we like.
00:22:44.000 It goes back to what I talked about the other day about the contextual versus the particular, the real versus the ideal.
00:22:53.000 Politics is about the art of the possible.
00:22:55.000 Otto von Bismarck talked about this at length in his diaries.
00:22:59.000 He says that politics is just making decisions, making choices, making trade offs, taking whatever is useful and using it to your advantage.
00:23:07.000 And that's the way that we have to look at this.
00:23:09.000 Kanye, Kim, Chance the Rapper, these are certainly not people who I would say have great political insight, who have great historical insight.
00:23:17.000 I wouldn't follow Kim Kardashian for her takes about politics.
00:23:21.000 I wouldn't follow Kanye.
00:23:23.000 Typically, for anything other than a novelty.
00:23:25.000 I think a lot of what he tweets is profound, but there's also an ironic component to it.
00:23:29.000 Chance the Rapper, I followed him a long time ago because he's a raging leftist.
00:23:33.000 He's a raging liberal.
00:23:34.000 And so, certainly, this is not an endorsement to say suddenly we love celebrities.
00:23:39.000 Suddenly, we're all on board with degenerate celebrities who, you know, Connie's very controversial and Kim Kardashian, she had a sex tape.
00:23:46.000 And, you know, it's not an endorsement of their behavior or who they are, but it's to say this is an important message being delivered by very important people.
00:23:57.000 Or maybe you don't think they're important, but highly relevant people who have a big reach, who have big engagement.
00:24:02.000 And so, you add up the followers just on Twitter alone, not counting.
00:24:07.000 They have a different kind of power.
00:24:09.000 Twitter, for celebrities like Kanye and Kim Kardashian, Twitter is kind of like a side thing.
00:24:15.000 For people like me and for online personalities, Twitter is the benchmark.
00:24:19.000 It's the benchmark because we're known for Twitter, we're known for YouTube.
00:24:22.000 Kanye, obviously, is known for his music.
00:24:24.000 Kim Kardashian is known for her television show.
00:24:27.000 Chance is known for his music.
00:24:28.000 And Twitter is just people who like that follow their Twitter.
00:24:31.000 So if we're adding up to Twitter, this is like a sliver, this is like one benchmark to judge.
00:24:37.000 Their influence, which is probably much greater because they are connected.
00:24:42.000 They have that kind of old world, that old infrastructure, old guard media influence that is just changing for a lot of people.
00:24:52.000 But we just look at Twitter, and Connie's got 18 million followers.
00:24:56.000 Kim Kardashian's got 60.
00:24:58.000 Chance the Rapper has seven.
00:24:59.000 So what is that?
00:25:00.000 85 million people.
00:25:02.000 You add all that up, and let's say just the people that follow them see this three part message, which is.
00:25:10.000 You don't have to agree with Trump to understand what he's doing.
00:25:13.000 Secondly, you don't have to like Trump supporters to respect their right to speak their mind and to have their own opinion.
00:25:19.000 And lastly, black people don't have to vote for Democrats.
00:25:22.000 Let's say 85 million people hear that message from people they like, from people they have a personal connection to.
00:25:31.000 It's different when you hear it from a politician.
00:25:34.000 When you hear something from Hillary Clinton or Mitt Romney or Barack Obama, it's like, okay.
00:25:41.000 When you hear it from a celebrity, it's different.
00:25:43.000 Politics and celebrity is different.
00:25:44.000 I don't have to tell you that, but it's a different kind of relationship.
00:25:47.000 It's a different kind of credibility.
00:25:49.000 This is why people will pay hundreds of millions of dollars to celebrities to get them to wear Nike, to get them to wear whatever product they want, to use their product.
00:25:58.000 These people watch celebrities and they say, I want to be like that person.
00:26:02.000 These are the pretty people.
00:26:03.000 These are the people on television.
00:26:04.000 I want to be like them.
00:26:06.000 I want to use the products they do.
00:26:08.000 We're going to talk like them.
00:26:09.000 We're going to imitate them.
00:26:10.000 We imitate their lifestyle.
00:26:12.000 We use their slogans.
00:26:13.000 And ultimately, we're influenced by their politics much more than you are with a politician.
00:26:19.000 A politician, it's kind of a different, it's more bottom up as opposed to top down.
00:26:23.000 With a celebrity, a celebrity is a tastemaker.
00:26:26.000 A Kanye West, a Kim Kardashian, whether it's politics or fashion or whatever, they are a tastemaker.
00:26:31.000 And so it's top down.
00:26:32.000 They tell you what the latest trends are, the fashion, whatever, and you get it and you say, okay, I like that.
00:26:38.000 With politics, it's bottom up.
00:26:39.000 You say, I have certain opinions about politics and I will support then this candidate who aligns with me.
00:26:45.000 And that's why.
00:26:46.000 It's a different kind of power that we're talking about, too.
00:26:48.000 We can compare it to, you know, let's say Tucker Carlson gets a tweet and it's retweeted by every conservative pundit on Fox News.
00:26:56.000 You're talking about 15 million people, and it's a different kind of influence.
00:27:00.000 You get 15 million, hypothetically, maybe you get Sean Hannity, Bill O'Reilly, Tucker, Greta.
00:27:06.000 You get like five or six or seven of them, and you've reached 15 million people if all their followers see it.
00:27:12.000 And it's bottom up kind of thing where people can say, maybe I like it, maybe I don't.
00:27:17.000 With the celebrity, you have 85 million people who say, wait a minute, I have a personal connection to these celebrities.
00:27:25.000 I've personally invested in this brand.
00:27:28.000 Maybe I've bought Kanye West's shoes.
00:27:31.000 Maybe I know his lyrics by heart.
00:27:33.000 Maybe his music helped me get through something in my life.
00:27:37.000 Maybe his music was the soundtrack to my summer, you know, whatever, the summer of 2007, and it was so great.
00:27:45.000 And maybe that was the song that I went on that ice cream date after prom, whatever.
00:27:49.000 I mean, you understand.
00:27:51.000 Kim Kardashian, this is somebody I follow on Instagram, and I buy her clothes, I buy her makeup line, whatever.
00:27:56.000 I play her app.
00:27:58.000 And now those kinds of people, these celebrities, are tweeting out to 85 million, and the engagement, I guarantee you, is somebody who has a Twitter.
00:28:06.000 The engagement is exponentially larger than the follow count.
00:28:10.000 I have 23.9 thousand followers and I get 10 million engagements a month.
00:28:17.000 So think of it.
00:28:18.000 If I have 23,000 followers and I get 10 million engagement, 10 million impressions over the course of a month, think of what somebody with 85 million followers collectively, what are the impressions for that?
00:28:33.000 10 billion?
00:28:34.000 Who knows, right?
00:28:35.000 I don't think there's not 10 billion people on Twitter, but.
00:28:38.000 You understand it's a much larger number, people who are getting that message and by people that are relatable to them.
00:28:44.000 So that's huge in its own right.
00:28:46.000 But what this tells us about politics more broadly, Kanye West is talking about he's going to run for election in 2024.
00:28:53.000 He's going to run for the presidential election in 2024.
00:28:56.000 This is the rumor.
00:28:58.000 And we don't know if that's going to happen.
00:29:00.000 2024, that's a long ways away.
00:29:02.000 Who knows, who, God only knows what could happen.
00:29:05.000 You know, last week, can anybody have predicted this?
00:29:08.000 Go back to 2013.
00:29:10.000 And try explaining to somebody, you know, go to Time Machine to like one day in 2011 or 2013 and say, hey, buddy, hey, colleague, I came from the future.
00:29:23.000 And in this timeline, Kanye West and Kim Kardashian are talking about how supporters of President Donald Trump actually have a right to express.
00:29:32.000 I mean, like, this is in the span of a few years that we've gone light speed.
00:29:38.000 Consider what's going to happen in the next five or six years.
00:29:41.000 But it doesn't matter.
00:29:43.000 Regardless of whether he runs, whether he doesn't run, whether he considers running, if he seriously runs, if he runs for a party, whatever it is, what this tells us is something that has nothing to do with Kanye West.
00:29:56.000 It shows us how fragile the Democratic coalition is.
00:29:59.000 This is the takeaway from the Kanye West presidency.
00:30:02.000 The Democrats would fear a Kanye West candidacy for one reason.
00:30:07.000 Kanye West runs, he's got his own money, he's got his own backing.
00:30:11.000 Because he's a celebrity, maybe there's some degree of viability.
00:30:15.000 How many blacks does he take with him?
00:30:17.000 Probably a lot.
00:30:19.000 Is it totally out of the realm of possibility that maybe it's not Kanye West, but maybe it's somebody else?
00:30:25.000 Maybe a white progressive runs third party.
00:30:28.000 Maybe someone like, not Bernie Sanders, but maybe somebody like Bernie Sanders gets some kind of money, some kind of backing.
00:30:34.000 They get a backing from a big celebrity and they run third party.
00:30:39.000 And then Democrats are in real trouble if they're split right down the middle between the progressives and between the establishment people.
00:30:45.000 What happens if a well funded Hispanic runs?
00:30:49.000 What happens if Jose Gonzalez from Texas runs in 2024 for president and he's got money and he's articulate and he looks nice?
00:30:58.000 What happens to the Hispanic vote in Texas, in California, in Arizona, in Georgia?
00:31:03.000 What happens to the entire Democrat vote?
00:31:05.000 What happens if you get a progressive and an Hispanic in the same election?
00:31:08.000 What if you get a black person to run?
00:31:10.000 Democrats are in real trouble.
00:31:12.000 And the difference between the Democrats and the Republicans is the Republican Party has been preaching unity.
00:31:18.000 They haven't been stressing so much explicit identity politics.
00:31:22.000 And even if they do, They've got one group, and that's white people.
00:31:25.000 It's white people, or it's Christians, or it's the working class.
00:31:28.000 It's all groups that basically fall under the same umbrella.
00:31:31.000 They basically have the same shared values.
00:31:34.000 And so the Republican Party, could this happen?
00:31:36.000 It's happened before.
00:31:38.000 It happened with Ronald Reagan in 1980, or yeah, I think it was 1980.
00:31:42.000 It happened with Ross Perot.
00:31:44.000 It's debatable if he pulled more from Republicans or Democrats.
00:31:47.000 It happened in 2016 with that bald guy in Utah, Big Muffin, or Ed McMullen.
00:31:53.000 But there's a much smaller risk that this happens with the Republicans because they have a lot of the same shared values.
00:31:58.000 The group that they're appealing to is a lot larger it's white people or it's Christians.
00:32:03.000 Versus the Democrats, where they've cobbled together this hodgepodge of, well, we'll slap on progressives over here and blacks.
00:32:10.000 You know, they're just going to vote for us no matter what.
00:32:12.000 So, you know, they're at the bottom of the totem pole.
00:32:14.000 Like, I guess we'll give them lip service, but they're basically not here.
00:32:18.000 And then we'll stick on Hispanics who think that the Mexican session was illegal.
00:32:23.000 We'll put them on top.
00:32:25.000 Homosexuals are over here.
00:32:26.000 Muslims, we're going to have to jam in over here in the middle.
00:32:30.000 Asians, they aren't going to have to be, we're going to have to get them for California in the future.
00:32:35.000 And so they've got this hodgepodge.
00:32:36.000 They call this the Coalition of the Ascendant.
00:32:40.000 They've got this hodgepodge of ethnicities, of sexual degenerates, and religious minorities, and all these different groups where they have nothing in common.
00:32:49.000 The only thing they have in common is they want free stuff, and they want things that benefit them.
00:32:53.000 And that's it.
00:32:53.000 I mean, it's like, let's just take away stuff from Whitey, and that's what we have in common.
00:32:57.000 But there's no positive vision.
00:33:00.000 They all agree we don't want white supremacy, we don't want Christianity, we don't want the West, but there's no positive.
00:33:06.000 There's no.
00:33:07.000 There's no active message there of what society do you want?
00:33:11.000 We know what you don't want.
00:33:12.000 What do you want?
00:33:13.000 Well, blacks want it this way, and Hispanics want it this way, and Muslims want it this way.
00:33:18.000 Gays want it that way.
00:33:19.000 Asians want it this way.
00:33:20.000 And so this just goes to show the vulnerability of the Democratic Party, not only electorally.
00:33:26.000 Maybe you say, ah, well, it's still not a great thing.
00:33:30.000 It's not ideal that we would be reliant on spoiler candidates like that.
00:33:34.000 But it just goes to show all it would take is one viable spoiler candidate, and the Democrats lose their demographic advantage.
00:33:40.000 That's number one.
00:33:42.000 The other big thing about this is the shift in consciousness about media.
00:33:47.000 What happened with Donald Trump was not political.
00:33:50.000 It was metapolitical.
00:33:51.000 It wasn't about immigration.
00:33:53.000 Not at the end of the day.
00:33:54.000 It really wasn't about immigration.
00:33:56.000 It really wasn't about trade.
00:33:57.000 It really wasn't about foreign policy.
00:33:58.000 It was about something bigger.
00:34:00.000 It was about the elite.
00:34:01.000 It's about the fact that we're dominated in our country by a small ruling elite in media, in government, in finance, in Hollywood, in entertainment, all over the place.
00:34:13.000 And this very small class of people, they control everything.
00:34:17.000 And so, electing Donald Trump wasn't so much, you know, in some ways it was political.
00:34:21.000 We had Republicans, it was conservative, all the rest.
00:34:23.000 But really, the ethos of the Trump campaign was a middle finger to the establishment.
00:34:29.000 This is what Michael Moore talked about.
00:34:30.000 Many people, myself included, who predicted Trump winning understood it really wasn't so much about politics.
00:34:36.000 It was more about a much more primal, a much more primordial impulse that there is something wrong in the country.
00:34:46.000 I don't think people could quite put their finger on it, but it was the globalists.
00:34:50.000 It was the rootless transnational.
00:34:51.000 It was the media.
00:34:52.000 It was political correctness.
00:34:53.000 But it was this domination, this stifling, this suffocation of the country, strangling by this elite.
00:35:00.000 And that manifested in political ways and cultural ways all over the place.
00:35:04.000 And what Donald Trump did was he broke their power.
00:35:07.000 He showed that you could tear a hole open, essentially, in this monopoly that they had this monopoly on government control, this monopoly on truth.
00:35:16.000 They were the gatekeepers for the media, this monopoly on money, that you could get your own money and run your own campaign and all the rest.
00:35:24.000 And it was exactly one guy.
00:35:26.000 But all it took was one guy because he showed that it was possible.
00:35:29.000 And now that he's opened the door, you get somebody like Kanye West, and then Kanye West leads the way for people behind him and all the rest.
00:35:36.000 And what, at the end of the day, the message is for Kanye is not so much Trump or Wall or immigration or any of that.
00:35:43.000 It's much bigger than that.
00:35:44.000 It's a message that the spell is broken.
00:35:47.000 The media does not have power.
00:35:49.000 They're corrupt, and it's okay now to say that they're corrupt.
00:35:53.000 It's okay now to say that they lie.
00:35:55.000 They don't control our lives anymore.
00:35:57.000 People Magazine and TMZ can say, oh, Kanye went against the narrative and he will be punished.
00:36:03.000 He's erratic and we're going to spread rumors about him.
00:36:05.000 And Kanye West said, No, That's wrong.
00:36:08.000 That's not, you're lying.
00:36:10.000 And you don't have any power over my life anymore.
00:36:12.000 I'll say what I want.
00:36:14.000 And it takes a crazy, you know, a borderline, people who say he's crazy, somebody they say he's whatever, erratic, or he's eccentric, whatever the word is.
00:36:23.000 It takes somebody like that who's got the balls to lead.
00:36:26.000 At the end of the day, that's leadership.
00:36:28.000 And then for Kim Kardashian to say, You know what?
00:36:30.000 I support him.
00:36:31.000 The media, I'm not going to be a slave to the media either.
00:36:33.000 Whereas in the past, you might have seen something like this and it causes a divorce.
00:36:38.000 You know, the media spreads rumors, they slander, and it leads to a very ugly, well, you know, he just went in a terrible direction.
00:36:44.000 It's hurting my career and it's embarrassing me.
00:36:46.000 And so we have to separate and we have to reel him in.
00:36:49.000 But Kim said, no, no, no, I'm right alongside him.
00:36:52.000 The media lies and I'll defend him.
00:36:54.000 This is nonsense.
00:36:55.000 And so you have a lot of angry people in the country.
00:36:58.000 And it's not just conservatives.
00:36:59.000 It's not even just political.
00:37:01.000 Even left wing people are saying this.
00:37:03.000 Even progressives are saying this.
00:37:05.000 Even people who are completely apolitical, who don't know anything about politics, who don't care about politics at all.
00:37:11.000 Are saying, you know what, something's not right in the country.
00:37:13.000 The media lies.
00:37:14.000 We're sick of the entertainment industry and all the rest.
00:37:16.000 We're sick of this, whatever it is.
00:37:19.000 And so there's a real change in consciousness going on.
00:37:22.000 People say that's, you know, like a new age thing.
00:37:25.000 That's kind of hokey.
00:37:26.000 And it's hard to articulate in a Kantian, rational, systematic way.
00:37:32.000 But it is happening in the sense that people in the past were limited, before this election, before Donald Trump, were limited very much in terms of what they would even allow themselves to think.
00:37:45.000 By what the media enforced on them in terms of expectations, in terms of conformity to the group.
00:37:53.000 People would hesitate to say the things or even think the things that Donald Trump talked about because you understand the consequences.
00:38:00.000 Well, that's racist.
00:38:02.000 And I'm not a racist.
00:38:03.000 Why are you not a racist?
00:38:04.000 Because if you are, you're fired, you're ostracized, you're expelled, all the rest.
00:38:09.000 And so that's what's really changing here is that the media and this cartel, this ruling elite, they are no longer the gatekeepers of what is acceptable.
00:38:18.000 What is permissible, what you're allowed to say, what you're allowed to do.
00:38:22.000 And so that's the real consequence of this.
00:38:24.000 So now that you have not just Donald Trump, who is a celebrity, we should remind everybody, but you have people like Kanye and Kim and Chance the Rapper, now you're going to see more people like this.
00:38:34.000 More people are going to say, oh, it looks like it's okay now.
00:38:37.000 The coast is clear.
00:38:39.000 They said it and they seem to be doing okay.
00:38:41.000 And if they have the courage, maybe I should have the courage.
00:38:43.000 It's almost like Me Too.
00:38:44.000 It's like that domino effect.
00:38:46.000 And Me Too is another one of those things.
00:38:48.000 We see these old power structures collapsing, whereas people before.
00:38:51.000 We were afraid to speak out.
00:38:52.000 They were afraid to say what was obvious, and there was so much evidence for it.
00:38:57.000 Now they're speaking out against it.
00:38:58.000 And I don't doubt that something is happening on another level, whether that's spiritual, whether that's another dimension.
00:39:05.000 I don't know what it is, but something is going on.
00:39:07.000 You see, very evil forces in the country are being beaten back, are being exposed, are being fought.
00:39:16.000 I mean, you look, for example, at this Nexium scandal, which we'll have to cover either tomorrow or another time.
00:39:22.000 But there's this Nexium scandal where there's a cult.
00:39:26.000 In New York City.
00:39:27.000 It turned into like this weird sex cult.
00:39:29.000 It was just uncovered this week.
00:39:31.000 And it turns out there's all kinds of actors involved.
00:39:34.000 It turns out the daughter, or rather the head of the World Jewish Congress, or his daughter, was involved in this.
00:39:41.000 And it's just really freaky stuff.
00:39:43.000 They gave money to Hillary Clinton.
00:39:44.000 They had access to major multinational corporation email servers.
00:39:48.000 I mean, really sick stuff.
00:39:49.000 And these were like Satanists in terms of the rituals they were practicing.
00:39:54.000 I mean, evil stuff.
00:39:55.000 And so you see that it's not so much about high taxes and.
00:40:00.000 The left wants to raise your taxes.
00:40:02.000 The left wants that.
00:40:04.000 It's so much bigger than that.
00:40:05.000 It's spiritual.
00:40:06.000 It's on another level.
00:40:07.000 The people behind Hillary Clinton, they're not just liberals.
00:40:10.000 They're evil.
00:40:11.000 They're Satanists.
00:40:12.000 And the people behind Donald Trump are not Republicans.
00:40:15.000 They're not conservatives.
00:40:16.000 They're honest.
00:40:17.000 They're virtuous.
00:40:18.000 They're striving.
00:40:19.000 And so we got to get to this is the analysis that you're not going to hear anywhere else.
00:40:24.000 What did Kanye mean by dragon energy?
00:40:28.000 We have to get into the tweet.
00:40:30.000 He said about Donald Trump, we are both dragon energy.
00:40:34.000 What does that mean, folks?
00:40:36.000 At first, I didn't think anything of it.
00:40:37.000 I thought this is like tiger blood, like Charlie Sheen talked about.
00:40:40.000 This is tiger blood.
00:40:42.000 But I said, wait a minute.
00:40:43.000 No, no, no.
00:40:44.000 Because Elon Musk tweeted something very similar.
00:40:48.000 Kanye West was tweeting out a couple of days ago about the Tesla.
00:40:51.000 He said, Elon Musk is a genius and he makes a great car.
00:40:54.000 I love driving my Tesla.
00:40:56.000 Elon Musk was retweeting it.
00:40:57.000 And then Elon Musk tweeted, I'm going to build a cyborg dragon, which is a weird thing to tweet, right?
00:41:05.000 And then Kanye West tweets, We are both dragon energy.
00:41:08.000 He had just interacted with Elon Musk, who had talked about dragons.
00:41:11.000 Now he's talking about dragons.
00:41:13.000 Donald Trump's retweeting it.
00:41:16.000 What's dragon energy?
00:41:17.000 So we got to get into it.
00:41:18.000 I consulted my expert, my esoteric, mystic, occultist person.
00:41:28.000 Sticks and Hammer might actually, Sticks, Hex and Hammer might be offended by this because I'm saying this.
00:41:32.000 But I have a very good friend named Western Identity or Owen Cyclops on Twitter, who's my go to guy.
00:41:39.000 For the esoteric, for that kind of thing.
00:41:41.000 And he told me about what tiger, or rather, excuse me, what dragon energy is.
00:41:46.000 And so I have, we're going to bring out the whiteboard too.
00:41:48.000 It's a very special episode.
00:41:50.000 And we have our whiteboard, and we're going to get to the bottom of this because I really don't believe in coincidences.
00:41:57.000 And things are too weird.
00:41:58.000 It's too fishy to ignore something like that, especially a dragon, which if you're familiar with Jung, if you're familiar with psychology or of symbology, the dragon is a very, Old symbol for human beings.
00:42:12.000 So, to be talking about dragons, it's not just an arbitrary thing.
00:42:16.000 It's not something I'm willing to let go.
00:42:17.000 So, we look at dragon, dragon energy.
00:42:21.000 And there's two ways to look at this there is a Western interpretation of the dragon, and there is an Eastern interpretation of the dragon.
00:42:29.000 I tend to side with the Eastern version for this example.
00:42:33.000 We know that the Western version of the dragon comes from the Greek word dracon, D R A K O N, meaning serpent.
00:42:42.000 And we know that in the Western tradition, the dragon or the serpent is antagonistic to the Trinity, which is Christ, the Holy Spirit, and God.
00:42:50.000 We know this from the Bible.
00:42:52.000 We know this from the Garden of Eden.
00:42:53.000 We know the devil is compared to a snake.
00:42:56.000 We know in all the great fables and myths and histories, whether it's St. George or it's King Arthur, the dragon represents a predator.
00:43:06.000 The dragon represents an amalgamation of all the different kinds of predators.
00:43:10.000 He's reptilian, he's got reptile skin.
00:43:14.000 Like a lizard.
00:43:15.000 He's got wings like a bird of prey, like a bat, like something like that.
00:43:19.000 He's got sharp teeth like a tiger or a shark.
00:43:24.000 He breeds fire, which is one of the most dangerous forces that's known to man, an elementally dangerous force.
00:43:30.000 The dragon represents the unknown, it represents evil.
00:43:33.000 And so I say that this doesn't really fit with what Kanye West was saying.
00:43:37.000 When he said, me and Donald Trump are dragon energy, I don't think he meant this.
00:43:41.000 So there's two ways to look at the dragon.
00:43:43.000 One of them is the Western.
00:43:44.000 I don't think the Western interpretation is correct.
00:43:46.000 So many people are going to think of the dragon in terms of medieval times, in terms of like Game of Thrones.
00:43:53.000 I don't think that's the kind of dragon he was getting at.
00:43:56.000 And I'll tell you why.
00:43:57.000 We look at the Hindic tradition, we look at India, or rather the Dharmic tradition, with energy, particularly serpentine energy, and it makes much more sense in context.
00:44:08.000 Dragon energy really doesn't make sense in the context of the Western tradition, where it's just like a reptilian manifestation of the unknown or of danger.
00:44:19.000 There is much more that the Eastern tradition has to say about energy and serpentine energy as opposed to the Western.
00:44:26.000 So that's why I tend to side with the Eastern tradition.
00:44:29.000 In the Eastern tradition, there's a few ways to look at it.
00:44:31.000 There's the East Asian, the Sinic tradition of the dragon, which you may know from China, or there's the Dharmic tradition, which is known to the Hindu people, to Indian people.
00:44:42.000 And so we'll start with the Chinese perspective.
00:44:44.000 As you may know, in China, the dragon is a revered symbol.
00:44:48.000 Whereas in the West, it's evil, it's dark, it's Satan.
00:44:52.000 In the East, it couldn't be further.
00:44:54.000 It's noble, it's solemn, it represents good fortune, it represents holiness.
00:44:58.000 The dragon in many sculptures and many religious traditions for Buddhists represents enlightenment.
00:45:04.000 Many people are seen as, in Buddhists, they ascend to enlightenment on the back of a dragon in sculpture and the symbology of it.
00:45:13.000 They see the dragon as a deity, as a very wise figure that watches over people and enlightens them, brings them to a higher consciousness.
00:45:21.000 In the Eastern tradition, there is the yin-yang dichotomy between the dragon and between the tiger.
00:45:29.000 The dragon is the yang.
00:45:31.000 The dragon is celestial.
00:45:33.000 It's male and it is light and also active, compared to the tiger, which is terrestrial, female, dark, and passive.
00:45:41.000 And so you have this kind of dichotomy where they kind of go together, as opposed to in the Western tradition where it's just, you know, dragon.
00:45:48.000 In the East, it goes along and it complements another figure.
00:45:52.000 And so it brings on all these other attributes, which are, I think, very informative about this kind of analogy.
00:45:58.000 I believe in this kind of stuff, where the dragon is celestial, which means it's.
00:46:03.000 From outer space.
00:46:04.000 It's from the heavens as opposed to from the earth.
00:46:06.000 So it's from without.
00:46:07.000 It's a higher, it comes from a higher place.
00:46:10.000 It's male.
00:46:11.000 And I think, was there any better way to characterize somebody like Trump against Clinton in the way that Trump represented masculine virtues, whereas Clinton represented feminine virtues?
00:46:22.000 You know, there was a cartoon that went around during the election where it said, This is the new Republican Party.
00:46:26.000 And it was a big, beefy guy, and it said testosterone.
00:46:29.000 And Trump was male, representing male values, which were strength, honesty, Courage, these kinds of things.
00:46:36.000 Whereas Clinton was compassion and being nice and all the rest.
00:46:41.000 Lying, I guess that's a feminine attribute, right?
00:46:43.000 It was celestial, it was male, it was light and active.
00:46:48.000 Light meaning as in light versus dark, and active meaning there's action, meaning it's taking charge, it's creating action as opposed to, I don't know, I don't really much more to say, active versus passive.
00:47:01.000 Those are the other two dichotomies.
00:47:03.000 It's light versus dark, active versus passive.
00:47:05.000 And light and dark are a little bit more complicated than.
00:47:08.000 One is good and one is bad.
00:47:10.000 Dark can be seen in a good way as well, at least in the Eastern tradition.
00:47:13.000 In the Western tradition, it's very black and white.
00:47:15.000 It's very dark is bad, light is good.
00:47:18.000 In the Eastern tradition, it's more complicated.
00:47:19.000 Dark forces can be harnessed.
00:47:21.000 We recognize the balance between the two, the duality of nature, the duality of man.
00:47:26.000 We have a dark and a light side.
00:47:28.000 There's positives and negatives to both.
00:47:30.000 But, you know, you look at Trump, and the hair is light.
00:47:33.000 He's light.
00:47:34.000 He represents, I think, in many ways, goodness, a more moralized light.
00:47:40.000 And he's, is Trump anything but action?
00:47:42.000 He's a man of action.
00:47:44.000 This even goes back to people compare him to a fascist.
00:47:48.000 And you look back at the earliest rhetoric from fascists, whether it was Oswald Mosley or, you know, regrettably, Mr. Trump.
00:47:54.000 Adolphus or Mussolini.
00:47:56.000 And that ideology, or even conservatism in general, revolves around pragmatism, revolves around the active as opposed to the passive.
00:48:04.000 You know, the action versus the spoken word, versus the speech, the law, John Locke versus Thomas Hobbes, which is action.
00:48:13.000 And so, in many ways, I think Trump is this kind of a dragon the yang, the male, the celestial, the light, the active.
00:48:19.000 But then we get into this is really where we get to the bottom of it.
00:48:23.000 And this is something which was written about before I go into it because.
00:48:27.000 People are going to say, this is all hokey.
00:48:29.000 Nick, you're going crazy.
00:48:30.000 This is goofy.
00:48:31.000 I think this is very good stuff.
00:48:33.000 Evola wrote extensively about this.
00:48:35.000 Evola was a mystic.
00:48:36.000 He believed in the esoteric.
00:48:37.000 He believed in alchemy and this kind of thing.
00:48:40.000 Evola wrote extensively about the Dharmic, which is what I'm about to talk about.
00:48:45.000 There's another way to look at it, which is the Kundalini.
00:48:48.000 I don't know if I'm pronouncing that right, but in the Dharmic tradition, the Kundalini yoga is the idea that there is a serpentine primordial force located at the base of the spine.
00:48:59.000 It's the lowest chakra.
00:49:01.000 And the process of yoga, of doing these stretches and these positions, I think yoga is a little goofy.
00:49:07.000 But the Dharmic tradition says that in the process of doing Kundalini yoga, you bring this primordial serpentine energy that is located at the base of the spine, the lowest chakra.
00:49:17.000 You're able to gradually bring it up through the other chakras, through all the way through your body into your higher consciousness.
00:49:25.000 And that makes you an enlightened person.
00:49:27.000 And they believe in that through the Kundalini.
00:49:30.000 And so they call this the serpentine fire.
00:49:33.000 They call this an igneous force, but it's a serpentine, a dragon like primordial energy, a dragon energy, dragon energy located at the lowest chakra that through certain forms is brought through and you achieve a higher consciousness.
00:49:50.000 I think that's what they're getting at.
00:49:53.000 Now, I don't know.
00:49:55.000 Did Kanye mean this deliberately?
00:49:55.000 I don't know.
00:49:57.000 Did he intend all this?
00:49:59.000 Probably not.
00:50:00.000 But I do believe there are these trends that are at work, there are bigger powers at work.
00:50:05.000 And it's not a coincidence that that happened.
00:50:07.000 And even to get to Elon Musk, it turns out, I looked into it, the cyborg dragon he was talking about was a space vessel that he launched into outer space and that recently came back down.
00:50:19.000 So I don't know what cyborg dragon would mean.
00:50:22.000 I don't know if that means it's artificial intelligence or what.
00:50:26.000 But he's getting at something that is celestial, something that is light and active.
00:50:32.000 And so I think that's what we get at it.
00:50:36.000 Mythic esoteric tradition here that we're seeing, there are forces far greater than political at work here.
00:50:43.000 It's not just that he doesn't just tweet out about dragon energy for no reason, it had to have a purpose.
00:50:50.000 And you see, things are rapidly changing around the world in very conspicuously religious places.
00:50:58.000 I will say, I normally wouldn't be into this kind of thing.
00:51:02.000 Usually, I look at the Dharmic and the Eastern tradition as new age, hippie dippy kind of stuff.
00:51:07.000 But you see that there are forces far greater than the material at work in these transformations we're seeing.
00:51:15.000 You see it all around the world, whether it's airplane crashes happening out of nowhere in Moscow, Tehran, in Philadelphia.
00:51:24.000 You see earthquakes all over the globe.
00:51:25.000 You see these destabilizing events in the Holy Land, in Israel, in Syria, in Saudi Arabia.
00:51:33.000 You see things happening that could have never happened before.
00:51:35.000 Donald Trump becoming the president, Kanye West giving him his support.
00:51:39.000 They're sitting down to meet with Kim Jong un.
00:51:41.000 It's also worth mentioning, and we talked about North Korea the other day, and how China, or excuse me, Trump, Is pivoting towards China, towards Asia, towards the dragon.
00:51:51.000 So there's another interpretation.
00:51:53.000 I don't think it's completely outside of bounds to say that we can't chalk it up totally to coincidence, to it's just pure luck.
00:52:03.000 It's just a weird, it's just a really weird time.
00:52:05.000 I think there's something bigger going on.
00:52:06.000 I think there's a lot to this.
00:52:08.000 And we'll see.
00:52:09.000 We'll see what happens.
00:52:10.000 If it fizzles out and it's nothing and people just turn out to be, you know, just disappointing and there's no shift in consciousness, I don't know.
00:52:17.000 But there's no reason for me to believe that.
00:52:20.000 This is not what's going on.
00:52:23.000 If anything, it should be getting probably more ordered as opposed to less ordered.
00:52:27.000 You would think after Trump gets elected, if it was a normal timeline, you know, he would just be in office and he'd goof it up and wouldn't be very successful.
00:52:35.000 Maybe he gets impeached and we go back to the way things are.
00:52:38.000 But something on a higher level is happening here.
00:52:40.000 It's really transformative.
00:52:42.000 It's on a global scale, and we'll keep an eye on it.
00:52:45.000 But that's a dragon energy.
00:52:47.000 That's my esoteric analysis of the Kanye tweets.
00:52:49.000 You all thought I was going to come on here and be like, oh, Base black guy in a maga hat is really a big deal.
00:52:55.000 No, no, no.
00:52:56.000 No.
00:52:57.000 It's about dharmic energy.
00:52:58.000 It's about the chakras.
00:52:59.000 It's about the shanti.
00:53:01.000 It's about the serpentine fire in the base of the spine.
00:53:07.000 It's also worth mentioning.
00:53:09.000 And this is not really, you know, I also looked at this.
00:53:11.000 I don't know if this is totally the same thing, but Kim Kardashian's Armenian.
00:53:16.000 You had the Armenian shooter the other day in Canada, or not the shooter, the car attack in Toronto the other day by an Armenian guy.
00:53:24.000 This Armenian guy was an incel, an involuntary celibate.
00:53:28.000 He did this attack after he said he was going to war against the Stasis and the Chads.
00:53:33.000 He's an Armenian incel going to war against the Stasis.
00:53:36.000 Kim Kardashian's an Armenian.
00:53:38.000 She's like the queen of the Stasis.
00:53:40.000 She goes out on this explicitly political rant a day after Armenian Holocaust Remembrance Day.
00:53:46.000 And then why can't Trump throw her a bone and recognize the Armenian Holocaust?
00:53:51.000 Because it would upset Turkey, who's intervening in Syria.
00:53:54.000 There's just too many connections here.
00:53:56.000 And disturbingly, it all goes back to the Holy Land.
00:53:59.000 That's what's really upsetting about that.
00:54:02.000 This may sound like crazy talk, I think, to a lot of people.
00:54:04.000 And trust me, I'm all there.
00:54:05.000 I'm all the way there.
00:54:06.000 I'm good.
00:54:07.000 But it all goes back to the Holy Land.
00:54:09.000 And that's what's so puzzling.
00:54:11.000 You look at this Armenian connection where Kim Kardashian had her kids baptized in an Armenian church in Israel.
00:54:18.000 Armenia was one of the first Christian churches.
00:54:21.000 The Armenian church is one of the first Christian churches in the world.
00:54:24.000 Armenia was the first kingdom to become Christian.
00:54:27.000 You look at why.
00:54:29.000 Donald Trump can't interact with Kim.
00:54:31.000 I think it would be a good idea at this point for him to recognize the Armenian genocide.
00:54:36.000 He can't do that.
00:54:37.000 Because Turkey would get upset.
00:54:37.000 Why?
00:54:39.000 Turkey is intervening in Syria.
00:54:41.000 Syria is where they say the apocalypse happens.
00:54:44.000 So that, it all, it's very troubling.
00:54:47.000 And what are the odds?
00:54:48.000 What are the odds that you have all of this coming together on this day with the shooter, with that kind of a motive, with Trump, and it all goes back to Syria?
00:54:56.000 I don't know.
00:54:57.000 That last part is a little bit dubious, granted.
00:54:59.000 I'm not positing a theory there.
00:55:01.000 I'm just saying it's a weird connection towards the end.
00:55:03.000 These.
00:55:03.000 These conspicuous connections towards biblical places and names and times is worrying me.
00:55:10.000 It's really weirding me out.
00:55:12.000 The dragon stuff is legitimate.
00:55:14.000 The other stuff, it's like, it's just concerning at this point.
00:55:16.000 But that's Kanye.
00:55:18.000 I bet you didn't think it would be that big of a deep dive.
00:55:21.000 So we'll get into your super chats and stream labs.
00:55:25.000 Remember, jump in on the stream labs.
00:55:27.000 The link is back up and working again.
00:55:28.000 So I'll take your questions there first.
00:55:31.000 Somebody commented on the last video.
00:55:32.000 They said, if you want people to do stream labs, read the stream labs first.
00:55:36.000 So I'll do that.
00:55:38.000 And we'll see.
00:55:38.000 What do we have in our stream labs?
00:55:42.000 Let's see.
00:55:43.000 Begbie says, or no, I'm sorry, that was from yesterday.
00:55:47.000 We've got Trashboat who says, I don't know where you are getting the yin and yang stuff, but I know for a fact studied Mandarin Chinese for six years.
00:55:54.000 Then in Chinese tradition, you need a phoenix to balance out the dragon, not a tiger.
00:55:59.000 Well, I don't know if you totally understand it from learning the language, but my buddy Owen Cyclops told me otherwise, so I'm going to trust him.
00:56:07.000 Joe the Croat says, Nick, what are you doing with this dragon stuff?
00:56:10.000 What world are we in?
00:56:11.000 What's going on?
00:56:13.000 Also, it's no surprise the boomers can't comprehend the esoteric.
00:56:17.000 It says, also, surprise after Nick's show, go to my gaming stream.
00:56:20.000 We're playing stuff in Discord, and maybe I'll do a face reveal.
00:56:23.000 Can I get a Nick Fuentes endorsement?
00:56:25.000 I don't know.
00:56:25.000 I don't usually support the breakaway, the separatist movements.
00:56:30.000 This happened in the Nationalist Review Discord, where literally people who were supporting our show went on and did their own podcast.
00:56:37.000 But I guess, by all means, go for it.
00:56:40.000 Ru Fu says, I'm sorry, Run Fu says, it's not crazy talk.
00:56:44.000 But I was expecting a tray of charm stones for Seal to be presented at any moment during that takeout, right?
00:56:51.000 I don't know.
00:56:51.000 I think it's the coincidences are there, and they're not coincidences.
00:56:56.000 I've never believed in that.
00:56:57.000 I've always believed in something a little bit more esoteric, a little bit more mythological.
00:57:03.000 You guys know that about me.
00:57:05.000 I'm not this rational empiricist kind of a guy.
00:57:09.000 I think science is mostly nonsense.
00:57:11.000 I really do subscribe to that kind of magical thinking.
00:57:15.000 Some people would say that's irrational, some would say that's.
00:57:18.000 You know, plain stupid, but I place a lot of stock in intuition and the, what do they call that?
00:57:25.000 What is Jung called?
00:57:26.000 The collective unconscious.
00:57:28.000 I put a lot of stock in that.
00:57:31.000 Kanye 2024 says, MAGA.
00:57:33.000 Mochi says, Have you heard of the concept of synchronicity by psychologist Carl Jung?
00:57:38.000 Yeah, vaguely.
00:57:39.000 I've read Modern Man in Search of a Soul, and admittedly, a lot of this is motivated by Carl Jung.
00:57:44.000 A lot of the research for that came from Man and His Symbols by Carl Jung.
00:57:50.000 And certainly there's a lot to it.
00:57:51.000 There's a lot to synchronicity.
00:57:52.000 There's a lot to the collective unconscious.
00:57:55.000 And Jung, I think what was peculiar about Jung is he took religious and he put it through the filter of scientific and made it understandable, made it rational, in the sense that he looked at prayer or he looked at incantations or prayers and he interpreted them through the lens of psychology in such a way that we could understand.
00:58:20.000 If there were no God, if there were no spirituality, it wouldn't really make sense why people do these things.
00:58:27.000 It really wouldn't make sense how people would evolve these kinds of social devices, like an incantation, if there wasn't some utility to it.
00:58:37.000 And why should we expect that there would be utility to it?
00:58:39.000 You know, for example, he talks about how in some of these African tribes, every morning they would, I think they would like pick up a piece of soil, spit on it, and hold it up to the sun.
00:58:50.000 And it was just a basic, a very primitive, Kind of a religious ritual.
00:58:55.000 But he said that this kind of a thing is present in all cultures at all times.
00:58:58.000 And if there's utility in it, if it makes them feel better, it gives them an existential meaning or whatever, then maybe there's something to that even in the West.
00:59:06.000 Maybe there's something to it in Christianity.
00:59:08.000 Maybe there's something to it in these Eastern faiths.
00:59:10.000 Maybe there is something immaterial.
00:59:12.000 And so by interpreting it through like a behavioral analysis, you can kind of get away from the Christopher Hitchens who says, they're picking up dirt and holding it up.
00:59:22.000 That's not doing anything.
00:59:24.000 Or, you know, you say a prayer.
00:59:25.000 I'm sorry, that's not doing anything.
00:59:27.000 But there is something to be said about projecting intentionality, about saying something, and many people say it, and they're projecting some kind of an intentionality onto the world.
00:59:38.000 They're manifesting something in the world.
00:59:40.000 Maybe it's not happening like they say something and therefore something changes, but something changes in the mind and things change in other people's minds and then people subconsciously do other things.
00:59:50.000 I think maybe it's in the embrace of the subconscious, but it's definitely there.
00:59:54.000 So I agree.
00:59:55.000 Jung is a big part of it.
00:59:57.000 And we'll look at our super chats now.
01:00:00.000 What do we have here?
01:00:02.000 Let's see.
01:00:03.000 I don't know if I'm missing them right now.
01:00:05.000 It looks like my stream's lagging, so I'll have to jump into this other tab here.
01:00:12.000 But isn't that a pretty fun show?
01:00:13.000 Usually we do.
01:00:14.000 This is good.
01:00:15.000 I know a lot of people, it's going to be a polarizing episode.
01:00:17.000 A lot of people are going to say, Nick is crazy.
01:00:21.000 We don't want to talk about, you know, Kanye West.
01:00:24.000 I don't like celebrities, whatever.
01:00:26.000 But it's a nice change of pace from the usual stuff, which is Syria, North Korea, whatever.
01:00:33.000 So let's take a look at our super chats here.
01:00:36.000 Simon Skullis says, Nick will be wearing Kanye glasses.
01:00:39.000 Calling it now.
01:00:40.000 I should have caught those.
01:00:41.000 They're a little outdated now.
01:00:43.000 They were much more popular in the 2000s, but I'm wearing my Jesus hoodie for the occasion.
01:00:49.000 Guerrilla Radio says, Jesus walks.
01:00:51.000 This is magic.
01:00:52.000 Dragon energy.
01:00:53.000 Appreciate it.
01:00:54.000 Simon Skola says, Kanye is great, but Kim is the epitome of a thought.
01:00:59.000 I really got to respect her for defending her husband, I have to say.
01:01:02.000 She went out there on a limb, and in my eyes, she earns a little bit of credit there because I don't think your average thought would step up and defend Kanye like that.
01:01:11.000 I don't think an average thought would have done that.
01:01:12.000 I don't think somebody with no character would have done that.
01:01:15.000 So I have to say, I don't agree with everything she's ever done.
01:01:18.000 I'm not wild about her show and all that.
01:01:22.000 But I do say that I've gained respect for her, that she defends her husband and she defends what's right.
01:01:28.000 It's wrong for them to say he's crazy and mentally ill for that.
01:01:31.000 It's wrong for them to demonize Trump supporters.
01:01:33.000 So I agree.
01:01:35.000 Samurai Spirit says dragon energy equals power to dominate global discourse.
01:01:39.000 Yeah, it could be.
01:01:40.000 I think it's that kind of disruptive, higher consciousness feel.
01:01:45.000 Matthew Wood says your Bitcoin wallet.
01:01:47.000 We'll be blessed if you truly get this right.
01:01:50.000 Matthew Wood, audio is L only.
01:01:52.000 Get it right, Nick.
01:01:53.000 This is too important for left ear only.
01:01:55.000 I don't even know what that means.
01:01:56.000 How does that?
01:01:57.000 I didn't change any settings on my microphone, so I don't know what that would.
01:02:02.000 Oh, maybe it's for the music?
01:02:05.000 I'm not sure.
01:02:06.000 Was it just for the music, or is it for the talking part as well?
01:02:11.000 Because I didn't change anything with the microphone.
01:02:14.000 None of the settings have changed since I started the show.
01:02:17.000 There's no filters on it, but I'll have to look into that after the show, I guess.
01:02:21.000 Ian Weber says, be nice to mom.
01:02:23.000 It's not mom, it's my producer.
01:02:26.000 Dominic Libertor says, I'm going to let you finish, but Nick Fuentes has one of the best web shows of all time.
01:02:31.000 Glad you didn't let the purity spiralers get to you.
01:02:36.000 Well, thank you, big guy.
01:02:37.000 Appreciate it.
01:02:38.000 D. Warbuck says, what timeline is this?
01:02:41.000 Yeah, God only knows where we are in the multiverse.
01:02:46.000 Alt-right General Eliphas says, please explain how this reverses white decline.
01:02:52.000 And this is the problem with.
01:02:55.000 Purity spiralers.
01:02:57.000 If you look at incremental steps, if you look at tools and say, you know, for example, you look at a hammer and you put a nail into a piece of wood.
01:03:07.000 And a purity spiral would say, How does that build a house?
01:03:10.000 You put that nail into a piece of wood.
01:03:12.000 How does that build my house?
01:03:14.000 You know, you saw a two by four.
01:03:17.000 How does that build the shed in my backyard?
01:03:19.000 Tell me how.
01:03:21.000 It's piece by piece, incrementally.
01:03:23.000 People focusing on the particular and they can't see the forest for the trees.
01:03:27.000 I'll tell you how.
01:03:28.000 Somebody like Kanye West doing this.
01:03:30.000 Doing this, it breaks the monopoly of the mainstream media, and so it allows us to get dissident messages out there.
01:03:36.000 If the media does not control the narrative, it's far easier to get a dissident message.
01:03:41.000 If we can communicate with people and they accept their ideas, it's easier to lead our way to a better country.
01:03:47.000 If Kanye shows and paves the road for other celebrities to break out, we get more cultural influence, more cultural clout.
01:03:54.000 That means more votes.
01:03:56.000 If other candidates follow in Kanye's footsteps, they could break away, become ethnic spoiler candidates.
01:04:02.000 In future elections.
01:04:03.000 I mean, there are many ways, some direct, some indirect, but it's about incremental steps.
01:04:07.000 Is this a better thing or is this a worse thing?
01:04:09.000 Does this hurt us?
01:04:10.000 No.
01:04:11.000 Does this help us?
01:04:12.000 That's politics.
01:04:12.000 Yes.
01:04:14.000 And few people understand this on the right because, and that's why the alt right has been losing.
01:04:19.000 I have to say, you know, the person who comments is alt right general, and they say, explain how this reverses white decline in kind of a nasty way.
01:04:27.000 And this is why the alt right, in my opinion, has been losing.
01:04:31.000 And I think Richard Spencer's a smart guy.
01:04:33.000 And I like him personally.
01:04:34.000 But I think the alt-right has been losing because there's really not a great political instinct on their side.
01:04:39.000 I think people will turn their noses up.
01:04:41.000 They're too good.
01:04:42.000 They're too snobbish for the means and tools that other successful political movements have used to gain prominence.
01:04:50.000 For example, I saw somebody the other day take a picture of the upcoming young conservative feminine leader summit in Texas.
01:04:59.000 And it's like this youth conservative summit for women.
01:05:03.000 And the speakers were like Charlie Kirk and Ben Shapiro and Ali Stuckey and the usual cast of characters.
01:05:08.000 And somebody said, Hey, say what you will about the alt right, but at least we're better than these guys.
01:05:13.000 And I look at that, and that's the losing mentality.
01:05:16.000 Whatever you think of these guys, yeah, they're rubes.
01:05:18.000 Yeah, they're nerdy.
01:05:19.000 They're goofy.
01:05:20.000 Yeah, guess what?
01:05:21.000 Charlie Kirk runs one of the biggest college campus organizations in the country.
01:05:25.000 And he interviews the president, and he's on Fox News.
01:05:29.000 Ben Shapiro runs a Daily Wire, which is one of the biggest conservative publications in the country.
01:05:34.000 He's probably the number one conservative pundit in the country today.
01:05:37.000 He's on Fox.
01:05:38.000 He writes for National Review.
01:05:40.000 He's got a massive Twitter following.
01:05:41.000 You look at the others, they're bringing up this coalition.
01:05:45.000 Who has been more successful?
01:05:46.000 These rubes?
01:05:48.000 Oh, yeah, we're too good for that.
01:05:49.000 We're too good for campus organizing.
01:05:51.000 We're too good for having a consistent publication.
01:05:54.000 We're too good for having a million Twitter followers.
01:05:56.000 And what have you done?
01:05:58.000 And I think that's the problem.
01:05:59.000 That's why it's been losing.
01:06:01.000 It's people who turn their noses up at people who are 90% their allies.
01:06:05.000 And they say, no, we don't want them.
01:06:07.000 They turn their noses up at techniques that work for everybody and say, we're not going to do that.
01:06:11.000 That's too lame.
01:06:13.000 And that's the problem.
01:06:14.000 Kanye West saying this, does it fix mass migration?
01:06:18.000 No.
01:06:19.000 Does it get us a step closer to these higher objectives that we need to achieve to get there, which is to have an environment where we can say our message without reprisal?
01:06:29.000 We can say it independently and reach people.
01:06:31.000 We can break the conditioning.
01:06:33.000 Does it help us electorally in some way, or does it contribute eventually to that kind of a benefit?
01:06:38.000 No.
01:06:38.000 On both counts, yes.
01:06:40.000 And so it doesn't hurt us.
01:06:41.000 It benefits us.
01:06:42.000 That's the way to regard it.
01:06:43.000 But people will continue counter signaling things like this, waiting and waiting and waiting and waiting for a George Lincoln Rockwell figure to rise up and take the country like Hal Turner.
01:06:54.000 Yeah, don't hold your breath.
01:06:57.000 Oscar says, Keep up the great work, Nick.
01:06:58.000 I've been watching every day.
01:06:59.000 Appreciate you, big guy.
01:07:01.000 Thank you.
01:07:02.000 Nationalist Youth says, and I'll move my mic over here.
01:07:05.000 People complain he can't hear me when I read the questions.
01:07:08.000 Nationalist Youth says, Glad to be watching America First after converting back to Knife Gang after the IBS with you and James.
01:07:16.000 I am glad people came over after that.
01:07:19.000 Also, shout out to Isaiah for showing the facts about the split.
01:07:24.000 Who's Isaiah?
01:07:26.000 But either way, yeah, no, the facts needed to come out.
01:07:28.000 And more facts will come out once it's resolved, but I can't get into it right now.
01:07:32.000 Every time I talk about it, people get mad at me.
01:07:35.000 Ben Stada, three favorite Kanye songs.
01:07:38.000 Probably Last Call is definitely number one.
01:07:43.000 It's the last song in College Dropout, so that's probably number one.
01:07:48.000 Then I would probably say it's Runaway from Beautiful, Dark, and Twisted Fantasy.
01:07:54.000 And then I would have to say it would be.
01:07:59.000 Then I would have to say, I wonder.
01:08:01.000 That's one of my all time favorites.
01:08:03.000 But then there's also Paranoid Streetlights from 808 and Heartbreaks.
01:08:07.000 Maybe those would be tied for third place instead of I wonder.
01:08:11.000 Paranoid and Streetlights are very underrated tracks.
01:08:14.000 808 is an underrated album, and those are two very underrated tracks.
01:08:18.000 You listen to Streetlights and you say, wait a minute, Kanye is not an idiot.
01:08:22.000 Kanye is actually a very smart person, a very profound song, profound lyrics, and a totally different style, very innovative for its time.
01:08:30.000 So I'd probably say those are some of my favorites.
01:08:33.000 King Genseric Vandal.
01:08:35.000 How do you tell people the truth about IQ differences between certain populations without sounding like a total butt face?
01:08:42.000 I don't think, I don't know if it really even has to be all that difficult, so long as you just make it clear that, you know, it's not hateful, right?
01:08:50.000 I mean, how do you come across as a butt face by citing statistics?
01:08:53.000 If you say, look, the average IQ in Africa is estimated to be 65, and you say, how can we expect them to come over here and form an advanced, Educated liberal democracy, if that's the IQ.
01:09:09.000 And you can say, look, I don't know if that's totally legitimate.
01:09:12.000 I don't know how much IQ contributes, but think of that.
01:09:14.000 Think of what a 65 IQ person and expecting that's the average and they're going to come together and they're going to vote and they'll respect religious pluralism and have markets.
01:09:27.000 Tell me, how are we going to build a society like that with people who in America would be classified as mentally challenged?
01:09:34.000 I mean, that's a tough question.
01:09:36.000 And you can cast dispersions on the data.
01:09:38.000 I'm certainly not an expert.
01:09:39.000 I've seen the studies, and it's very troubling.
01:09:42.000 I don't know.
01:09:43.000 I haven't collected the data.
01:09:44.000 JF tells me it's true, and you can cop out like that because it's true.
01:09:48.000 I mean, I really don't know.
01:09:49.000 But those are questions that have to be asked.
01:09:52.000 It's not hateful to say there are these differences between people.
01:09:55.000 And I think one of the good questions you can ask is well, you recognize that black people are taller than white people, right?
01:10:01.000 Or you could talk about the NFL or the NBA.
01:10:04.000 The NBA is 60 some percent black.
01:10:06.000 Would you say it would be fair for me to say that blacks, on average, are better athletes than white people?
01:10:12.000 On average, they are better athletes because they have a different muscle growth, they have different height, they have different weight.
01:10:18.000 Would you agree with that?
01:10:19.000 I think many people could say yes.
01:10:21.000 Well, if those differences exist, why can other differences not exist?
01:10:25.000 Why is it out of the realm of possibility that some people develop certain characteristics, physical attributes, differently than others, but brain characteristics, that's totally out of bounds?
01:10:35.000 And not just intelligence, but all sorts of things in the brain chemistry.
01:10:38.000 I think it's just a scientific thing.
01:10:40.000 And I've explained this to many people, and they don't like the consequences.
01:10:43.000 They don't like.
01:10:45.000 The implications of it, but you have to stay on point in terms of what you're trying to say because people will always recoil and say, So you're saying, So you're saying this?
01:10:56.000 So you're saying we have to kill them all?
01:10:59.000 So you're saying what?
01:11:00.000 We're better than them?
01:11:01.000 I mean, you always have to understand exactly what you're saying and never entertain anything that you're not saying, which is there are these differences.
01:11:10.000 What is to be done?
01:11:11.000 Not one is better than the other, not, oh, well, we don't like them or they're dumb or whatever.
01:11:16.000 And you always have to maintain that very solidly because that's when it starts to fall apart.
01:11:20.000 Is when people say, So you're saying it should be this way, it should be that way, whatever wild liberal preconception they have, you have to, no, no.
01:11:29.000 We're saying how, if you think this is how society is supposed to function, multiracial, multicultural, tell me how we integrate people with this significant of a difference into the country.
01:11:39.000 How does that happen?
01:11:41.000 If you are, if the proposition is this you have one group of people who creates this kind of outcome, and you replace them with a different group of people.
01:11:50.000 And they're totally different.
01:11:52.000 How do you expect that you'll get the same outcome?
01:11:55.000 We made this analogy before on the show.
01:11:57.000 You're in a rubber ball plant.
01:11:58.000 You replace the rubber with wood.
01:12:00.000 You replace the molding with the shape of a cube.
01:12:03.000 How do you expect that you'll get the same rubber ball if you change the ingredients and you change the mold?
01:12:09.000 How can anybody expect that you would still get a rubber ball if instead of putting in rubber, you put in wood, and instead of a mold of a sphere, you put in the mold of a cube?
01:12:18.000 How could anybody say that those two things would be the same?
01:12:20.000 And that's not to say cubes are worse than balls and whatever.
01:12:24.000 It's simply to say these are different.
01:12:26.000 Things will change if you change the inputs and if you change the expectations.
01:12:30.000 And that's what's happened in the country.
01:12:31.000 We change the expectations, we change the inputs, and we'll get a very different outcome.
01:12:36.000 Who's to say if it'll be better or worse?
01:12:38.000 I don't know.
01:12:39.000 I couldn't tell you.
01:12:40.000 I certainly don't think we could look to any other country and imagine and foreshadow.
01:12:45.000 Frederick White says, I'm a based Catholic.
01:12:47.000 Retweet me, big guy.
01:12:49.000 Well, tweet good content.
01:12:51.000 Uger Stanfish says, Hey, Nick, what's your favorite Kanye album?
01:12:55.000 Late registration and MBDTF for the win.
01:12:59.000 I would say my favorite is College Dropout.
01:13:02.000 It's the first, it's the best.
01:13:04.000 It was, you know, I mean, that was, that inaugurated Kanye's career and the innovation that was present.
01:13:10.000 I mean, the way that he used those sped up old soul tracks, nobody was doing that at the time.
01:13:15.000 And that was just a totally different style.
01:13:17.000 They called him a producer rapper because he wasn't the most lyrical, the flow wasn't the best.
01:13:22.000 I prefer it.
01:13:23.000 I think he's very good on both of those counts, but he was known for very good production.
01:13:29.000 And late registration, or excuse me, not late registration, college dropout when he debuted, that's when everybody saw, wow, this guy's good.
01:13:35.000 But college dropouts there, that whole trinity, college dropout, late registration, graduation, I mean, those three are probably the triumvirate.
01:13:43.000 That's the holy trinity of Kanye albums.
01:13:47.000 I do really like Pablo.
01:13:48.000 I like them all.
01:13:49.000 You know, people have like one that they don't like a lot of times.
01:13:52.000 I like them all.
01:13:53.000 I really like 808s.
01:13:54.000 I really like Yeezus.
01:13:56.000 I really like Life of Pablo.
01:13:58.000 That's the most controversial opinion.
01:14:00.000 People thought Jesus was bad, and then Life of Pablo came out, but I like them both.
01:14:00.000 Next to Jesus.
01:14:06.000 But I would have to rank College Dropout number one because I relate to it.
01:14:10.000 Classical theist says there's a Western equivalent to the dualism.
01:14:14.000 St. Thomas's doctrine of actuality and potentiality seems to parallel.
01:14:19.000 God, after all, is pure act.
01:14:20.000 Sure, but we're talking about in terms of the symbology.
01:14:23.000 Sure, there are many dualities, I think, in the scholastic philosophical tradition, like you said, between actuality and potentiality, or between.
01:14:33.000 Form and what is it, essence and substance, or between form and material?
01:14:38.000 I forget the dichotomies.
01:14:40.000 And even in causation, you have efficient cause and final cause.
01:14:43.000 You have what are the other causes, the first two?
01:14:47.000 Formal cause, and what was the second one?
01:14:50.000 Or the first one?
01:14:52.000 Material cause?
01:14:53.000 I forget the first cause.
01:14:54.000 But I mean, you understand, there are these dualities in the scholastic philosophy, but I don't think they're the same in terms of the symbology.
01:15:01.000 There's a different physiognomy to the civilizations, right?
01:15:05.000 There's a totally different physiognomy to the West versus the East.
01:15:08.000 And I think in the East, the yin and the yang is much more.
01:15:11.000 Talk about that a lot more.
01:15:13.000 That's much more foundational, I think, than in the West.
01:15:16.000 Because, of course, in the West, you have the focus on the point.
01:15:19.000 You have the focus on one God.
01:15:22.000 And he's a Trinity, but he's pure act, and so he's individual as opposed to having a duality and anything like that.
01:15:31.000 Cloudstar says, Nick, I thought you were just another dumb white nationalist from IBS, but you've actually really surprised me.
01:15:36.000 I'm digging your show.
01:15:38.000 Also, Catholics Kill Joan of Arc.
01:15:39.000 Well, I appreciate it.
01:15:41.000 That I well, yeah, I try not to be one dimensional.
01:15:43.000 That's the biggest pet peeve I have.
01:15:46.000 That's one of the reasons why I like sticks.
01:15:48.000 That's one of the reasons why I like some of these unlikely people is because I like people who are multi dimensional.
01:15:53.000 I don't like people that are just save the talking points, tell you what you want to hear.
01:15:58.000 It's always predictable, it's always the same.
01:16:00.000 I hate that more than anything.
01:16:01.000 I hate mediocrity, I hate stagnation.
01:16:04.000 And so that's why I like, you know, I like that kind of feedback because I like to keep it fresh and throw different things at you, unexpected.
01:16:12.000 And that's why I like a lot of these different characters that I'll meet on IBS.
01:16:15.000 You know, for example, I really like Styx, even though we disagree, couldn't disagree more on the most fundamental issues, but I like him because he's a real guy.
01:16:24.000 He's authentic.
01:16:24.000 He's got, there's layers there.
01:16:26.000 As opposed to a guy like Atheism is Unstoppable, who maybe they agree about atheism, but this guy's just one, he's, have you even read Richard Dawkins?
01:16:35.000 I mean, he's just a one dimensional guy.
01:16:37.000 And I would categorize him in the same way as I'd categorize a lot of people.
01:16:42.000 In the alt right, put them in the same boat.
01:16:43.000 Maybe I agree with you on more things, but certainly don't like you, you know, so appreciate it.
01:16:48.000 But on Catholics killing Joan of Arc, look, you know, Protestants, they really tore the realm asunder.
01:16:57.000 They tore the church apart.
01:16:59.000 And I don't know if that's true.
01:17:01.000 I'm not, it's been a while since I've been in European history.
01:17:04.000 But look, Protestants, Joan of Arc may have had very noble virtues, but Protestants are, you know, it's unfortunate.
01:17:12.000 We're going to have to form an alliance with them.
01:17:14.000 Because I think we have bigger fish to fry than Protestants and Orthodox.
01:17:18.000 Not that we want to fry them, don't get me wrong.
01:17:20.000 We don't want to fry any of them, but you understand the real threat is not Protestants, it's the modernists, it's secularists.
01:17:28.000 And there's modernists and Protestants, there's modernist Catholics, and I think that's a real dichotomy.
01:17:34.000 Give me a conservative Baptist, a conservative Protestant over some of these heretics any day of the week, right?
01:17:42.000 But let's look and see.
01:17:43.000 Do we have any other Super Chats, any other Stream Labs?
01:17:46.000 Ian Weber says, Did you see the juice, juice, like orange juice, killed Jesus tweet by Chance the Rapper?
01:17:53.000 Big stuff here, folks.
01:17:54.000 I did see that.
01:17:56.000 And yeah, very interesting.
01:17:57.000 Because, of course, he has a song called Juice, and the refrain goes, I got the juice.
01:18:02.000 And I always thought, does he mean he got the Jews?
01:18:07.000 Because that would be completely anti Semitic, and we would disavow it.
01:18:10.000 But very interesting that he tweeted that.
01:18:13.000 Ian Weber says, It was an older tweet.
01:18:14.000 Yeah, it was from a couple of years ago, but nevertheless, important.
01:18:18.000 Tavit Andros has finally woke up to the purity spiral meme.
01:18:23.000 I've seen it firsthand today with people who are on our side talking about how they won't even watch content by non whites, and it blew my mind.
01:18:30.000 Why would you limit yourself like that?
01:18:31.000 Well, exactly.
01:18:32.000 We've gotten to the point where they're not serious people.
01:18:36.000 They've taken the meme and it's become their reality.
01:18:39.000 It started out where so many of these memes were just jokes.
01:18:43.000 It was lighthearted.
01:18:43.000 It was funny.
01:18:44.000 You know, we used to call ourselves haters, ironically.
01:18:47.000 You know, we would say, oh, like, you know, for example, people talk about the hate squad or the hate this or the hate that.
01:18:54.000 And originally that was ironic.
01:18:57.000 You know, we're saying, oh, the mainstream media says we hate people because we're talking about statistics.
01:19:02.000 You think this is a hate fact?
01:19:03.000 That's ridiculous.
01:19:05.000 And then people somewhere along the way forgot it was a joke and then started unironically hating people.
01:19:11.000 Because of the color of their skin, which we were never on board with.
01:19:15.000 I never signed up for that.
01:19:15.000 I don't know about you.
01:19:17.000 And that's not a message to the left.
01:19:19.000 That's not like, that's not to say, oh, maybe they won't call me a racist or anything like that.
01:19:23.000 Those are not my beliefs.
01:19:25.000 I say that because I distinguish myself from people who, who disturbingly are coming to believe that.
01:19:31.000 And I say, you know, look, we can understand what's happening in the country.
01:19:35.000 We can understand that mass migration is a big problem and that we probably have to embrace ethnic nationalism.
01:19:42.000 And there may have to be some kind of a divorce.
01:19:44.000 With black and white America, if we can't work it out.
01:19:47.000 And history shows it'll be very difficult to work it out.
01:19:50.000 Now, all of that said, we can recognize the reality of race in America or differences between tribes and all the rest without saying, I won't even listen to a song by a black person.
01:20:01.000 I won't even listen.
01:20:02.000 I mean, that just gets so beyond the pale for me.
01:20:04.000 It's alien to me.
01:20:06.000 I just don't understand it.
01:20:07.000 It's just not logical.
01:20:09.000 And so I appreciate that.
01:20:12.000 The purity spiralers will be the death of this movement because what we're saying is not extreme, it's not hateful.
01:20:19.000 It's none of those things.
01:20:20.000 Our message is a message of love.
01:20:22.000 It's a message of truth.
01:20:23.000 It's a message that is completely reasonable.
01:20:26.000 And you have people who embrace the false labels.
01:20:29.000 Oh, no, no, it's hateful.
01:20:31.000 Oh, oy vey, no, it's extreme.
01:20:34.000 Oh, no, we're the real extremists.
01:20:37.000 And we actually hate them.
01:20:39.000 Like, no, That's not how it started.
01:20:43.000 And that's not how it's going to go.
01:20:45.000 We're not hateful.
01:20:46.000 You know, we were not extremists.
01:20:48.000 And I don't know.
01:20:49.000 I just had a weird, there was a weird effect that just happened to my voice.
01:20:51.000 Totally unintentional.
01:20:53.000 But.
01:20:53.000 You have these period spiralers that are really dragging us to a place which is not productive.
01:20:59.000 And we'll see.
01:21:00.000 I'm going to update a few more times.
01:21:02.000 We'll see.
01:21:03.000 Beat Machinist said, Thoughts on Jordan Peterson?
01:21:05.000 I like him.
01:21:06.000 I think he's been doing a lot of harm in that he really hits hard against white identity.
01:21:13.000 But every time he does that, I say, Oh, to this guy again?
01:21:17.000 But then he really talks up IQ.
01:21:19.000 And then I say, Does he really?
01:21:21.000 Okay, what's the deal with this guy?
01:21:22.000 Because on the one hand, he actively.
01:21:26.000 And explicitly counter signals white identity and the alt right and that kind of thing.
01:21:32.000 And he's basically a liberal.
01:21:33.000 He's basically a liberal.
01:21:35.000 But on the other hand, he is so convincingly laying the foundation, the groundwork for a serious conversation about racial differences and IQ that it's almost impossible to ignore.
01:21:48.000 You know, here he is saying, oh, the alt right's BS and white identity is not real.
01:21:52.000 And all the while, he's building up the case IQ is the number one determinant, IQ is important.
01:21:58.000 IQ is the most important, and it's totally legitimate.
01:22:00.000 It's totally scientific.
01:22:02.000 And then he says something like, the reason Jewish people are overrepresented in the media is because they're so high IQ.
01:22:07.000 And something like that, a guy that intelligent, I don't think he could not understand what the rational consequence of those kinds of ideas will be.
01:22:16.000 And so it's tough.
01:22:17.000 I think he's doing a lot of good work.
01:22:19.000 He's preaching responsibility, individual responsibility.
01:22:22.000 He's preaching some Burkean conservatism, some degree of it.
01:22:27.000 I think he has to moderate a little bit, but I don't think that's totally.
01:22:30.000 You know, some might call that a tactical cuck.
01:22:32.000 I don't think that's totally the wrong way to go for him.
01:22:35.000 I think he's doing a lot better than many people that run in our circles because he's putting it forward in a way that's appealing, in a way that will bring people in.
01:22:44.000 And yeah, he disagrees with us and he hits us pretty hard from time to time, but it's nothing we can't take.
01:22:50.000 It's not really strong insults.
01:22:51.000 And I don't know.
01:22:52.000 Is that by design?
01:22:52.000 Is that not?
01:22:53.000 Either way, I think he's doing a good thing.
01:22:56.000 And we'll look at Streamlabs.
01:22:58.000 Joe the Croat.
01:22:59.000 Nick, that hurts.
01:23:00.000 Six months ago, you turned me around.
01:23:02.000 Kanye, I understand him now.
01:23:04.000 He's just remarking how insane things are right now.
01:23:06.000 Very exciting.
01:23:07.000 Oh, okay.
01:23:08.000 Well, it's true.
01:23:09.000 Also, stinging rebuke for my tiny gaming stream.
01:23:12.000 I still have your back, though.
01:23:14.000 Much love for your dragon.
01:23:15.000 Appreciate you.
01:23:16.000 Well, the knife cuts.
01:23:17.000 I can't help myself sometimes.
01:23:19.000 But I'll tune into the gaming stream.
01:23:21.000 Depends on what game you're playing, though.
01:23:23.000 I've got to check it out.
01:23:24.000 But we'll see.
01:23:25.000 Lots of love for Mr. Joe the Boomer.
01:23:27.000 But looks like those are all of our super chats and stream labs.
01:23:32.000 We're about a half hour over, so it's a pretty long, pretty big super show.
01:23:37.000 But I think that's going to do it for us tonight on America First.
01:23:41.000 Remember to sign up on Maker Support.
01:23:43.000 We did our episode of World Report last night about North Korea.
01:23:47.000 Very good content.
01:23:48.000 I have to say, I'm continually impressed with myself how I'm able to churn out original, fresh content, just like a machine.
01:23:54.000 I'm a content machine.
01:23:56.000 And it was a very good episode of World Report last night.
01:23:59.000 If you want to get those exclusive podcasts, the premium roll on our Discord server, access to our call in shows, and this show in podcast form, you've got to sign up on Maker Support.
01:24:09.000 Five bucks a month.
01:24:10.000 Link is in the description.
01:24:11.000 Remember to subscribe on YouTube, Facebook, Twitch, Twitter, Periscope, all the rest.
01:24:17.000 Remember to leave a comment.
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01:24:22.000 Give us a big thumbs up for a great analysis.
01:24:25.000 And we BTFO the LARPers and all the rest.
01:24:28.000 A fantastic show.
01:24:29.000 A job well done.
01:24:30.000 We're on the air Monday through Friday, 7 p.m. Central, 8 p.m. Eastern Standard Time.
01:24:35.000 I'm Nicholas J. Fuentes.
01:24:36.000 This was America First, as always.
01:24:38.000 Thank you for watching.
01:24:39.000 Thank you to our Streamlabs donors, our Super Chatters, our Premium members, the Twitch.
01:24:45.000 Prime people and the Periscope Rainbow people.
01:24:48.000 I don't even know what currency they use on Periscope.
01:24:51.000 On Periscope, they use pesos.
01:24:53.000 They use immigrant tokens, right?
01:24:54.000 We're built by immigrants.
01:24:56.000 That's why it doesn't work, right?
01:24:58.000 Anyway, but thanks to everybody who watches.
01:25:00.000 Thanks to everybody who helps out with the show.
01:25:02.000 We will see you tomorrow.
01:25:03.000 Until then, have a great rest of your evening.
01:25:09.000 Americanism, not globalism, will be our credo.
01:25:15.000 It's going to be only America first.
01:25:20.000 America first.
01:25:22.000 The American people will come first once again.
01:25:37.000 With respect, the respect