00:00:38.000And that was on top of Conyers, and lots of that to get into, lots of that to dissect.
00:00:43.000That one's really an interesting one with Matt Lauer because of things that he specifically said about sexual assault on his show, which we'll get into.
00:01:20.000I was just sitting there bored, like, okay, what am I going to do between now and my show?
00:01:24.000I don't even know what to do with myself.
00:01:27.000Just pacing around, you know, because usually I do the old wake up at 1 or 2 or 3, or I stay up all night and then fall asleep in the morning.
00:02:00.000If it holds, if the schedule holds, I'll be uploading these in MP3 podcast format on Spreaker.
00:02:06.000If you don't want to watch the video, if you're going to listen to it, When you're on the bus or on the train or at work or, I don't know, some other form of travel, it'll be on speaker for you to download.
00:03:22.000Apparently, today it was revealed that he was fired over the weekend for a complaint that was filed by an employee at NBC accusing him of inappropriate sexual behavior in the workplace.
00:03:34.000Now, it came out later today that that was not an isolated incident.
00:03:38.000This is not news to anybody that works on NBC that Matt Lauer is this sicko pervert.
00:03:44.000And I'll read you some of the things from the report.
00:04:27.000One of the less wild accusations they said he played the game Mary, Screw, Kill, which is the fella's game when you're sitting around among the boys and you discuss.
00:04:37.000Among three women, or three traps, or you know, catboys, whatever it is, who you would marry, who would you things, and who you would kill.
00:04:47.000And so, I don't really see that one as so outrageous.
00:04:50.000I, you know, this sort of thing happens.
00:04:53.000The exposing yourself to women, the sex toys as birthday presents, or whatever, doesn't happen so much.
00:04:59.000And he also, get this, this is the weird thing.
00:05:01.000He had a button installed under his desk that if he pressed it, it would lock his office from the inside without anybody knowing it.
00:05:10.000Like getting that work order done, somebody had to go in there and install it.
00:05:15.000That's not something that is done like on the hush.
00:05:18.000You know, somebody had to go in, some like blue collar contractor type had to go in with a drill and screws and install a button that locked his door from the inside.
00:05:31.000Nobody thought that was a little bit weird.
00:05:33.000Nobody, that wasn't a red flag for anybody.
00:05:36.000Hey, Tony, could you install a button under my desk that locks the door from the inside?
00:06:10.000But on top of the fact that he's a pervert, I think this is.
00:06:14.000Really, an interesting story because of how Matt Lauer in particular has talked about the exact same behavior that he himself has committed.
00:06:25.000I mean, this is a perfect example, and I'm about to read you a perfect example of why you cannot trust anybody in media, why you cannot trust anybody in government, because these people just lie through their teeth.
00:06:39.000And I'll read you some of these quotes.
00:06:40.000This is from an interview on September 19th where he interviewed Bill O'Reilly.
00:06:46.000And if you remember, Very similar thing happened with Bill O'Reilly, with Bill Ayers.
00:08:33.000You carried the network on your shoulders for a lot of years.
00:08:36.000So, doesn't it seem safe to assume that the people at Fox News were given a piece of information or given some evidence that simply made it impossible for you to stay on at Fox News?
00:08:47.000This is meanwhile, Matt Lauer is abusing people.
00:08:51.000And I don't even believe his stuff against Bill O'Reilly, by the way.
00:09:23.000And this just comes down to, I think, absolutely destroying the benefit of the doubt that people have with media, which is the biggest reason why they don't entertain conspiracy theories or.
00:09:37.000Non conventional opinions or dissident political opinions.
00:09:42.000Most people, if you come to them with a theory about something that's happened, you come at them with revisionist history or an alternate philosophy, looking at politics in a different way, talking about trends that are happening that aren't reported on the news.
00:09:55.000Most people who don't believe you, who are not willing to be persuaded by you, it goes something like this Yeah, that just sounds a little out there.
00:10:23.000I mean, that's the number one response that I hear, generally speaking, about this stuff.
00:10:28.000People question it because it's not on television.
00:10:31.000They question it because it's not in the newspapers.
00:10:33.000Because the gatekeepers of information that have really been self appointed gatekeepers of information that have been elevated in society have not deemed it.
00:10:53.000And therefore, it's just, I don't know, it's just out there.
00:10:55.000I really don't want to put any stock in that.
00:10:57.000Well, what does it tell you when these very people who everybody trusts to different degrees?
00:11:03.000I mean, we're talking about the average person, we're talking about your neighbors or extended family.
00:11:08.000What does it tell you that these gatekeepers that you trust, that you either consciously or unconsciously say that what they say is mainstream and therefore true?
00:11:32.000This is why he cannot be allowed to succeed or become viable or become normalized.
00:11:38.000That's something here a lot is about normalcy.
00:11:41.000Because they know that if Donald Trump ever becomes legitimate, ever becomes just the president, as Barack Obama was, as George W. Bush does, they know it's over for them.
00:11:53.000Because Donald Trump is the living refutation of the mainstream media who says it must be this way and the establishment who says it must be going in this direction.
00:12:03.000Donald Trump, who says, you know what, I'm going to say whatever I want and everyone's just going to have to live with it and wins and says, you know what, we're going to say Merry Christmas again.
00:12:13.000And you know what, these guys are scumbags.
00:12:14.000Hey, Joe Scarborough, how about what happened with that tape 28 years ago or whatever?
00:12:20.000You know what he tweeted this morning.
00:12:22.000And that's why they hate him because he's not in the club.
00:13:18.000And why, just why is it do you think that they elevate these people to the highest stratums of these sectors or the highest strata of these industries?
00:13:28.000Why is it do you think, coincidentally, that these people find themselves in the highest positions?
00:13:33.000It's all these perverts and Sexual weirdos.
00:13:36.000You know, could it be that if you're predisposed to these types of behaviors, you're more easily to manipulate, or it's easier for you to manipulate these people?
00:13:46.000Could it be that if you have these Harvey Weinsteins and these mega huge people in these positions in Hollywood and finance and government and media, could it be that if you have somebody who has a dirty little secret, it's much easier to move them around, to tell them what they should be doing?
00:14:07.000Or maybe they're all eccentric, right?
00:14:10.000Maybe everybody in government and media and Hollywood, maybe they're all just eccentric.
00:14:15.000You know, when they go to the Bohemian Grove parties and we find all these sick, disturbing things about them, they're all either pedophiles or rapists.
00:14:22.000Maybe they're all just eccentric, right?
00:15:06.000Other kinds of words you could use to describe it.
00:15:08.000But you have this organization of people that is.
00:15:11.000Like, really abusing people, like raping people, pedophiles.
00:15:14.000And then at the same time, they're reporting, in the same breath that they're reporting, that Matt Lauer, top of the industry, is abusing people and Kevin Spacey, famous actor, is raping kids.
00:15:24.000They report that this NPR radio host, Garrison Keillor, I don't know the guy, but Garrison Keillor, I don't know if I'm saying that right, he was terminated for misconduct.
00:15:37.000And you know what the misconduct was for this guy?
00:15:41.000By placing his hand on her lower back.
00:15:44.000So I love on BBC, you have Matt Lauer sexually abusing people.
00:15:48.000He has a button under his desk to lock his door so he can intimidate women.
00:15:53.000And at the same time, NPR radio host puts his hand on her lower back.
00:16:02.000You know, that's something I think that we should be a little bit worried about.
00:16:06.000And we saw the same thing with Roy Moore.
00:16:09.000You know, it's all the difference in the world when you have these little guys, these innocent people that have a target on their back, or maybe not in the case so much of NPR, but with Roy Moore, where.
00:16:20.000Just anybody with a story gets to ruin their career.
00:16:23.000Like, that's a little bit different than you're Harvey Weinstein, and there's a paper trail, and there's documents, there's evidence.
00:16:32.000I mean, that's all the difference in the world.
00:16:34.000I mean, that had been going on for a long time.
00:16:37.000And people are comparing it to Roy Moore and this NPR guy and Bill O'Reilly, where it's like a couple of people had some stories, and then there's no evidence.
00:17:08.000And it's just funny to me that Matt Lauer, what's his face, Jake Tapper, CNN, all these people that are accused of sexual assault, those were the biggest, those were the people crying wolf when Donald Trump.
00:17:30.000You know, in all fairness to Donald Trump, if you do listen to the tape, and I have been unapologetic about defending the tape in the past, but he said, when you're a star, they let you do it.
00:17:42.000And we all know what he was talking about.
00:17:43.000He was talking about gold diggers, right?
00:17:45.000I mean, the groupie type, where you see a powerful billionaire celebrity like Donald Trump, and they let you do what you want.
00:17:51.000I mean, that's what he was talking about.
00:17:54.000And all those people in Hollywood and media who are busy, Raping young girls and young boys, and actually raping women and like doing perverse things in front of them, depraved.
00:18:04.000They were crying bloody murder when that happened, right?
00:18:08.000Donald, we elected a rapist, we elected.
00:19:01.000And then the next major thing we got going on today.
00:19:04.000If you've been on Twitter, you saw this.
00:19:06.000Donald Trump is getting himself into some hot water again with the tweets, with the retweeting.
00:19:13.000So today he tweeted out three videos from the Britain First Deputy, Jada Franson, depicting a Muslim attacking a Dutch man on crutches, smashing a statue of the Virgin Mary, and then another one throwing a teenager off of a building.
00:19:29.000And everybody, of course, gets very upset by this.
00:19:41.000The UK Prime Minister, a spokesperson for her office, said, It was wrong for President Trump to have done this.
00:19:48.000And I really think this is a good sign that he tweeted out these videos because it shows us that he's seeing the same things we are.
00:19:56.000He's aware of the same problems that we are.
00:19:59.000You know, every time you think Donald Trump is cucked, every time you think Donald Trump is compromised, every time people are saying he's lost his way, I'm so edgy, I'm off the Trump train, he always gives us a little something, a little wink.
00:20:14.000And it's impossible ever to confirm it if it's really a wink or not.
00:20:19.000I mean, there are various statements he made about various events.
00:20:22.000There were various reporters he shut down about certain things.
00:21:04.000I think it's about time somebody acknowledged, frankly, and exposed what's going on in Europe because you don't really see that.
00:21:11.000Nobody really talks about this, even though daily life in Paris or in Stockholm or in these cities is literally like living in the third world.
00:21:21.000I mean, you see what happens in Sweden where there's grenade attacks, there's car bombings, like every day.
00:21:27.000Had anybody heard about car bombings or grenade attacks in Sweden before the past five years, before they started letting in millions of these people from the Middle East?
00:21:39.000Was Sweden known in 2005 for their grenade attacks and car bombs, or were they upheld as the gold standard of the highest happiness, the best education, a socialist system that works?
00:21:55.000And now it's like every day for people that are paying attention to the real news, people who see the videos of Paris where you have the worshipers, Muslim worshipers in the streets blocking traffic, the Islamic call to prayer heard throughout English neighborhoods.
00:22:11.000So it's very good that he's brought attention to this.
00:22:13.000And it's so funny, too, that he brings attention to something that's going on in Europe.
00:22:18.000And the Europeans are always more upset with him than they ever are upset about the very real things going on in their own countries.
00:22:27.000You know, Theresa May makes a statement about President Trump shouldn't have done this.
00:22:31.000I don't recall the same indignation about how many terrorist attacks we've seen just this year in that country.
00:22:38.000You know, that Westminster Bridge is basically paved in blood.
00:22:43.000You basically walk down the sidewalk and you have human remains on your shoes.
00:22:50.000We weren't really up in arms about that one.
00:22:51.000You know, when people are getting blown up, when your kids are getting splattered all over the concert seats at the Ariana Grande concert, nobody was really up in arms.
00:23:01.000Remember, it was keep calm and carry on.
00:23:05.000When there was a false alarm, there was like people thought there was a terrorist attack the other week in Britain, and it turned out it was some kind of a fight, but everybody thought it was a terrorist attack and they had to lock themselves in.
00:23:16.000And afterwards, everybody on Twitter said, Oh, it's so British.
00:23:20.000They thought there was a terrorist attack going on and they didn't even care.
00:24:41.000A little bit in his Poland speech earlier in the spring when he talked about Western civilization defending itself and not going extinct, and you're hearing it again.
00:24:50.000So he has his head in the right place.
00:24:53.000And every time you see this president like cuck on something, I know people are very quick.
00:24:59.000Paul Joseph Watson, you know, he's off the Trump train, he's on the Trump train.
00:25:12.000When the Syrian missile strike happened, everybody was saying, Mike Cernovich, my sources are telling me there's going to be 100,000 troops in Syria on June 1st.
00:25:21.000And everybody said, This is exactly what we heard with the buildup to Iraq.
00:26:11.000There's no reason why he would be against something for 30 years.
00:26:15.000He would ruin his reputation running for president on something, become president, and then decide six months in, actually, I don't care about that at all.
00:26:23.000And everybody said, no, no, you're too optimistic.
00:28:42.000You need to be doing those benches if you're going to even be able to lift it off the table, 16 ounces.
00:28:47.000So, anyway, enough shilling for big mugs for big water.
00:28:52.000But we have the tax plan coming along very nicely.
00:28:56.000And it cleared a very important procedural hurdle today.
00:28:59.000It passed and it got onto the floor of the Senate.
00:29:02.000They had to vote to bring the bill to the floor of the Senate to be debated and then ultimately passed.
00:29:08.000And it got onto the floor by a vote of 52 to 48 along party lines.
00:29:12.000So, That suggests, if we take that as a preliminary vote, that the tax plan will pass.
00:29:18.000He went to Missouri today, the president did, to push for his bill, and he took aim at Democratic Senator Claire McCaskill, who's up for re election in 2018.
00:29:27.000And here's really a golden quote from that rally.
00:29:30.000He said about the tax reform, he said, Now comes the moment of truth.
00:29:35.000In the coming days, the American people will learn which politicians are part of the swamp and which politicians want to drain the swamp.
00:30:25.000Why have we not started to construct the wall as vigorously as he's pursued other major legislative reforms?
00:30:31.000But around August, I started to see a very clear pattern of what was going on.
00:30:36.000If you looked at, in particular, if you look at where his rallies were being held in states like Pennsylvania, West Virginia, all over the country, in Arizona, this rally today in Missouri, if you look at some of the things that he's focused on, the things that he's gotten.
00:30:52.000Some of his major victories, a pattern started to emerge by the summer of him targeting these states where Democrats were up for re election in 2018 in the Senate and states where major legislative gains could have been made even in the House of Representatives.
00:31:07.000And so I started to think around August, and we started to talk about this on Nationalist Review and on the show about how really he wasn't playing.
00:31:14.000I don't think he's been playing the past nine months or 10 months for legislative wins in the conventional sense, in the sense of Barack Obama trying to get landmark major reforms.
00:31:25.000I think the past 10 months have been about angling and framing for 2018.
00:31:31.000And I think Steve Bannon was a big part of this because if you heard him on Handity a couple of weeks ago when he was talking about his insurgency that he was running against the GOP, he said, This was not finished in 2016.
00:31:43.000This is something we will have to fight for every day for the next 10 years.
00:31:47.000We got to be out there in 2018, 2020, 2022, and for a decade or more.
00:31:52.000And that he was so close to President Trump, you have to remember, he was the chief strategist.
00:31:57.000It really suggests to me that this was the play all along.
00:32:00.000I mean, you look at, for example, when he went to West Virginia, President Trump, and he did his rally there.
00:32:06.000And the governor of West Virginia converted to being a Republican at that rally.
00:32:10.000And he made it so that the only two offices held by Democrats in the entire state of West Virginia at the national level or at the state level was Joe Manchin, their senator, who was like a blue dog Democrat, and like their state treasurer.
00:32:26.000You look at in Arizona, where he pardoned Joe Arpeo, who's wildly popular.
00:32:31.000In Arizona, who, when President Trump pardoned him, that was a major blow to Jeff Lake, who was running at the time.
00:32:37.000Now it looks like Kelly Ward's going to win and take the seat for Arizona.
00:32:42.000You look at Obamacare that was sunk single handedly by John McCain from Arizona.
00:32:48.000I mean, you think that's going to hurt his chances against a Republican insurgent in 2018 in the Senate?
00:32:53.000I don't know if he's running actually in 2018, but I think that is the prevailing strategy that's starting to take shape here.
00:32:59.000And that he framed it this way in Missouri by saying, If you don't vote for tax reform, if we don't get tax reform, it's actually Republicans.
00:33:07.000It's actually them who are not loyal to you.
00:33:14.000I'm going to sign it if they put it on my desk.
00:33:17.000But this will show who is with us and who's against us.
00:33:19.000And that is a message to every Republican in Congress who sees what's going on with Judge Roy Moore in Alabama and panicking, who saw what happened to Luther Strange, who had the blessing of Mitch McConnell and Donald Trump himself.
00:33:33.000And they're saying to themselves, you know, now is the time for choosing.
00:33:44.000Am I going to bet on Donald Trump, who is rapidly consolidating control of the GOP?
00:33:49.000Or do I bet on Mitch McConnell, who appears to be a bigger liability than a child sex scandal and beating the shit out of a reporter the night before the election?
00:33:57.000Who am I going to go for in this tax reform?
00:34:00.000And it has this dual effect where at once, They're having to be forced in this double bind.
00:34:06.000And then at the same time, if they don't vote on it, they're primaried, they're out.
00:34:11.0002018, Donald Trump has people that are loyal.
00:34:14.000If they vote on it, he's created people that are loyal already in Congress, and he has tax reform.
00:34:20.000And he can run on that in 2018, and he can run on that in 2020.
00:34:23.000So, tactically, strategically, and I was very white pilled about this on Nationals Review earlier today, we are in a very good position where you look at the 2018 electoral map for Senate, there are 25.
00:34:37.00024 Democrats up for re election in the Senate in 2018.
00:35:13.000I think his base is generally around him.
00:35:15.000And this is a major, I think this is really major because you look at other presidents like Barack Obama, George W. Bush, Ronald Reagan, even, who came in with strong electoral wins.
00:35:26.000Barack Obama came in on a landslide, enormous landslide, even bigger than Donald Trump, but he lost the House of Representatives in 2010, and it was all downhill from there.
00:35:37.000He won in a landslide in 1980, he lost the Congress in 1982, and he had to deal with the Democratic legislature.
00:35:44.000And it was lethal, I think, to his legacy.
00:35:47.000So, If President Trump can come away with a first term where he has both chambers of Congress and one stronger than the other, that is, he has a stronger hold on the Congress in the latter two years than the former two years, he will have an incredible potential to shape the government and the country and maybe even come out on top in 2020.
00:36:09.000You know, and another thing people don't consider is not even the legislative stuff, but the judicial stuff.
00:36:14.000Donald Trump is set to, I think he's set to a point, something like 130.
00:36:18.000Federal judges and something like 36 appellate court justices.
00:36:22.000I mean, he has the power to reshape the judiciary like nobody since FDR.
00:36:26.000He'll probably be able to fill a couple more Supreme Court seats.
00:36:30.000He'll be able to fill all these seats in the federal judiciary.
00:36:33.000He will be, I think, as consequential, maybe more so than Ronald Reagan by the time he's out.
00:36:40.000And that's not, I mean, that's not anything more than looking at the numbers.
00:36:44.000I'm not saying that because, like, I got a thrill running up my legs like Chris Matthews because I'm enamored with the image and the visage of the president, but.
00:36:53.000You look at the data of it, the sheer data of it, the seats that he's able to fill, the seats that are up for reelection, the numbers that he won by, and the way he's playing it, which I think is more strategic than anybody in a long time.
00:37:09.000I mean, really, he's playing it the right way.
00:37:11.000He will have immense potential to shape what's going on.
00:37:30.000You know, people who are concerned about demographics, for some reason, there's like this weird idea that you can't care about taxes and also demographics at the same time.
00:37:38.000But actually, taxes is very important.
00:37:41.000I mean, you think about it, and I really started to come around to this when I was in college just how important the fiscal stuff was for birth rates.
00:37:48.000Because I'm in college, and I look at the cost of living, and I look at the cost of going to school if you want to be a professional, and I look at the salary a professional makes compared to the cost of living.
00:38:05.000I don't even know what I'm majoring in.
00:38:06.000I don't even know what kind of a job I'm going to get.
00:38:09.000And I'm sinking myself thousands of dollars in debt, wasting the best years of my life that I could be getting experience or training or whatever.
00:38:16.000And you look at the tax situation that many families are in or the fiscal situation, the cost of a home, which on average is $188,000, the average student loan debt burden, which is something like $39,000, the average credit card debt, the average mortgage payment, the average car payment, and all the expenses combined with High prices for energy, high prices for utilities, high prices for food and taxes and everything else.
00:38:43.000And you realize that many people in the country are just not in a position.
00:38:48.000They're just not in a position to have a family.
00:38:51.000Many people are living paycheck to paycheck.
00:38:53.000They can barely afford instability in their own life, let alone bring someone else on as a dependent and two more or three more, you know, if you're going to have children.
00:39:03.000And so I think that's a big part of it is the fiscal situation.
00:39:05.000That's why we talk about the taxes a lot on this show because.
00:39:09.000For many young people in particular, what you're seeing is a new lower class.
00:39:14.000The middle class is being either separated out into the upper class, either the middle class is moving up and away into urban professionals and yuppie types, or it's being crushed into people with no assets, pushed into people with no wealth, people that have no savings.
00:39:31.000And you see this mainly with millennials and with Generation Z, where people can be in their 20s or 30s or 40s and they don't own a home.
00:39:44.000I mean, people who have $1,000 in their bank account.
00:39:48.000And you got to wonder that even if we got everything right, even if people were going to church and they wanted to have kids, they just couldn't do it.
00:40:16.000The average cost of raising a child in this country from the time they're born until the time they're 18 is a quarter of a million dollars.
00:40:27.000And then you got to put them through college.
00:40:29.000Does any 20 something have a quarter of a million dollars laying around?
00:40:33.000I have a buddy of mine who would probably get married at this point.
00:40:37.000He's been going out with this girl for a long time.
00:40:39.000And in two or three years, in a normal world, in an economy that worked, he would be getting married and having kids right about now.
00:40:47.000But that's not going to be happening for another 10 or maybe if ever, because they're going to end up paying something like $100,000 for both of their educations.
00:40:56.000They're going to spend how much money for a house, how much money for everything else.
00:41:11.000For couples, they raise the standard deduction to $24,000.
00:41:15.000And that's really big, because if you are.
00:41:18.000If you're raising both the standard and the deduction for couples, that creates an incentive to get married.
00:41:24.000And more than that, it creates an incentive for women to stay home.
00:41:27.000Because if you can take $24,000 off of your taxes, why would you not get married?
00:41:34.000If I was on one salary and I wanted a wife who doesn't work, I could just double my standard deduction by getting married and she didn't even have to work.
00:41:44.000They're reducing the corporate tax rate from 35 to 20%, which is very big.
00:41:48.000They're going to change the rules in terms of how they tax.
00:41:52.000Income for corporations, not just reducing the rate, but also moving to an international form of taxation, which many other countries use.
00:42:00.000So it's really a white pill that we're looking at a tax reform that is pro growth because you understand that when there is growth, when there are new jobs being created, when costs are going down, when the economy is more efficient.
00:42:14.000People say that because I'm skeptical about individualism and libertarianism, I don't believe in capitalism.
00:42:20.000Markets are very effective at what they do, but you have to understand the limitations.
00:42:24.000If we get the market to be efficient, people are going to be able to be in a position where they can have kids again.
00:42:29.000And that's a good thing because you look at the incentive structure, the people that would have kids by paying less taxes are the people who want to have kids.
00:42:39.000And the people that are not going to be affected by the tax cuts, that maybe they're on welfare or whatever, if they get their welfare taken away, they're either out of the country or they're not going to be having clown car amounts of kids.
00:44:27.000And I looked at the demographics in Colorado, Arizona, New Mexico, Florida, Georgia, and I said, you know what?
00:44:34.000We, given the way everything is headed, given the way the demographics, not just nationally, which people might not be so concerned about, Because people may be insulated in an all white community or an all white state.
00:44:47.000If you look at the state level politics, the state level electorate, the state level stuff, and what it will entail if Republicans start to lose, I said, you know what?
00:44:59.000And this is kind of why I got into a little bit of a beef with Richard Spencer in 2024, let's say 2024, Texas goes blue.
00:45:07.000Let's say, no, no, let's say 2032, Texas goes blue, okay?
00:45:11.000We'll be a little bit generous and we'll say 2032, Texas goes blue.
00:45:15.000And Florida is blue at that point, and Arizona is blue, and New Mexico is blue, and Colorado is blue, and all these states, which will be infiltrated and overrun by Hispanics, who first generation Hispanics go 73%, I think, on average, is Hispanics who support big government.
00:45:33.000It's something like 83% for first generation, 70 some for second generation, and 50 some for third generation support big government.
00:48:29.000This is the sovereign in our country the federal government.
00:48:32.000And when they bring in millions and millions of people, we're going to be in such a worse position to defend ourselves than when we have what we have right now.
00:48:41.000I mean, Democrats are also going to take away the guns.
00:50:05.000You know, Jewish people tend to have this double standard.
00:50:07.000I know that's kind of a weird thing, but they have this double standard about Zionists and white nationalists, if you've ever noticed this.
00:50:14.000Jewish people have it that if you criticize the state of Israel, if you criticize the fact that Jews have their own ethnic religious homeland in the Middle East that was established illegally, you hate Jewish people.
00:50:29.000Yet, white nationalists who want the same thing, want something no different, which is an ethnic or religious homeland for white European Christians, you're somehow a bad person.
00:50:39.000How do they maintain this double standard?
00:53:12.000They are on this morally righteous path, almost predestined, preordained.
00:53:16.000They are on the right side of history.
00:53:18.000And they believe that this country and people in general are liberal like them and they are good like them.
00:53:24.000And so that half of the country would reject them outright and vote for Donald Trump, who they see as the epitome of evil.
00:53:31.000I mean, that crushes their worldview that things are all going according to plan and we're on this up and up towards progress and, you know, why America?
00:54:24.000I mean, women, it's so funny because things that everybody knows, people will admit to you like off the cuff if you're in a private conversation, any one of them.
00:54:33.000But when it becomes political, they have to defend like their beliefs, they have to defend the belief.
00:55:19.000And when they're done having kids, maybe they can get into the workforce by all means.
00:55:22.000And of course, there are exceptions where they will get into the workforce.
00:55:25.000And there are many talented women in the world.
00:55:28.000But if we're talking about generalities, if we're talking about rules, if we're talking about The natural order of things, they don't mix, and that's okay, and we should be okay with that.
00:55:39.000You notice that men have no problem with our role.
00:55:42.000We're the ones that have to go and get exploded on the battlefield.
00:55:45.000No man has ever said, I don't like that.
00:55:51.000No man has ever complained about that.
00:55:52.000I mean, maybe they dodged the draft, but no men would disagree with the fact that men should be defending the country or defending their family.
00:56:00.000Men reluctantly and begrudgingly say, that's.
00:56:04.000We'll clean up all the shit in the streets, and we'll literally build the buildings and go up to the highest skyscrapers and clean the windows, and we'll go get killed with mustard gas and get blown up in Iraq.
00:58:20.000It wasn't because they were racist or sexist, it's because they wanted people of good and sound mindset who had a stake in posterity to be deciding the fate of the country.
00:58:32.000It wasn't universal suffrage of mankind.
00:58:35.000That was the French Revolution, not the American Revolution.
00:58:39.000And the reason for that is because if you have property, if you have a family, if you are an aristocratic type person, if you are a man and you're the head of the household, well, it kind of is consequential who gets elected.
00:58:50.000If you're some like Joe Bernstein wearing, you're like some Joe Bernstein type person in New York City and Manhattan with your beanie on and your glasses and your balding and you have no kids and you're homosexual and you live in a tenement apartment and you write about like, I don't know, dildos or something at BuzzFeed, sorry, we don't care what you have to say about the government.
00:59:12.000We don't care what you have to say about taxes, foreign affairs, morality, the courts.
00:59:38.000Why should people on welfare be voting?
00:59:41.000These people can't even have a job and they're voting for the most part.
00:59:45.000If you're talking about the chronically unemployed, you know, the eternally unemployed, people, some people who can't even get out of bed in the morning.
01:01:33.000I mean, that's the worst thing in the world.
01:01:35.000If your parents die, if something terrible happens, if you see a great natural wonder, if you're reading Dostoevsky, if you're reading Evola, you can cry.
01:01:44.000If you're watching an Oswald Mosley speech, you can cry.
01:01:47.000But when you're talking about individualism and you're on like a live stream, the individual, only the individual suffers.
01:02:21.000I mean, all these great intellectuals that we hold up as great people that are like total degenerates and they happen to write on the side.
01:02:29.000We forget that that is not how it used to be.
01:02:31.000People who wrote also had a pragmatic, they had a practical intelligence as well.
01:02:42.000I mean, he had a clinical study where he was a psychologist, but I mean, really, if you're not like a prominent mover and shaker in the society, the practical intelligence just isn't there.
01:02:53.000And if you're crying like that, if you can't be like a man's man and also be, and that's not even like alpha, nobody cries, but it's like, I mean, to an extent, we should just expect that there should be some kind of fortitude there.