00:40:34.000Tonight, we're going to be talking about the immigration executive order, which turns out is actually going to be expanded.
00:40:44.000And we talked about this last night, which is the original executive order from the White House.
00:40:51.000I think this was two weeks ago, where the president shut down green cards.
00:40:57.000For about 26,000 people a month for two months.
00:41:01.000Yesterday, we covered a letter which was written to the White House by a number of GOP senators, a number of GOP congressmen, asking for the president to expand that immigration ban, the executive order, to more people, meaning more green cards, and particularly more temporary work visas.
00:41:21.000Actually, begin to ban them at all because the original executive order didn't even touch the temporary work visas.
00:42:14.000It is pretty rough out there, and I think people are only beginning to understand the economic fallout from the virus.
00:42:22.000You've got the coronavirus, which, in my opinion, is basically going to blow over in the sense that we're looking at the death rate, and all the figures and all the signs point to an extremely low death rate, at least compared to what we thought it was.
00:42:39.000So maybe I shouldn't say it's going to blow over, but the coronavirus is not going to be the catastrophe that people imagined it to be, at least in itself, in terms of the death count and maybe more indirectly, the ways in which it would overwhelm our healthcare resources.
00:42:55.000That appears to be, for the most part, underwhelming.
00:43:00.000The big crisis that is yet to come and the big crisis that is slow moving and gradually approaching every day is this.
00:43:07.000Recession, which is going to be by every single metric the worst recession since the Great Depression, and in some cases, worse.
00:43:16.000According to some metrics, even worse, potentially.
00:44:06.000My hair is sitting a little bit lower than normal, reflecting the sort of mellow mood of this moment, as opposed to the high energy, high placement.
00:44:16.000Now it's just kind of relaxing, it's just kind of hanging out there.
00:44:21.000And it's much more fitting, I think, to have the Corona beard and the Corona hair with the Hawaiian shirt than with the suit.
00:44:27.000It's a much more fitting, it's more consistent.
00:44:34.000But before we get into all of that, I just want to tell you that our new merch is going live tonight.
00:44:42.000And as promised, as I promised yesterday, I think towards the end of the show, we are dropping four new designs for t shirts and for hoodies.
00:44:50.000So, you can get them as a hoodie, you can get them as a t shirt.
00:44:55.000Launching, I think you can already see them.
00:44:58.000I literally just talked to my merch guy a moment ago.
00:45:01.000The communication is broken down slightly.
00:45:04.000So, that should be available to people that are subscribed tonight.
00:45:08.000So, if you're going to NicholasJFuentes.com, you're paying $5 a month for access to the whole archive.
00:45:15.000You will get first access to the new designs and you're going to get a 10% discount on your whole order.
00:45:24.000And I know people have been asking me about new designs forever.
00:45:28.000So, we finally delivered the new designs, and I'm going to give you a deal.
00:45:31.000I got to tell you, though, the hoodies are a little pricey.
00:45:34.000I'm not wild about that, but I think I told you the other day that we had to shift suppliers on very short notice.
00:45:42.000And I don't know at what point I said this.
00:45:44.000I think I said this yesterday or the day before, but just to apprise you of the situation, we were using one supplier last month, and they shut down all their operations, all their manufacturing, all their distribution because of the coronavirus.
00:46:00.000So, we had a whole month of back orders.
00:46:03.000And a whole month of merch that wasn't being produced or shipped out.
00:46:06.000So we rapidly switched over our whole storefront to another supplier, and they're a little bit more pricey.
00:46:14.000So I'm not thrilled about that, but this is just the reality of things.
00:46:17.000They increase the price, and you know, but it's free shipping.
00:46:20.000It's free shipping, and with this discount, hopefully that'll help you a little bit 10% off everything.
00:46:35.000And basically, every stream I've ever done, too commentary, interview, speeches, debates, gaming streams, everything, it's all there.
00:46:44.000And now, in order, and this is like basically to reward the early adopters, we've got like hundreds and hundreds and hundreds of new subscribers.
00:46:52.000In order to reward our first week people, we're giving them first access to the merch.
00:46:57.000So you've got to sign up to buy it, and you also get a 10% off discount.
00:47:01.000I think I'll release it for everybody next week.
00:47:04.000So that's just a little added incentive.
00:48:16.000The Samad Arbery case is really turning into one of these major media circuses like some of our other fallen brothers, some of our other fallen brothers like Trayvon, Michael Brown, etc.
00:48:31.000And, you know, so I don't have too much to say about it tonight because there's not any major news.
00:48:36.000Nothing new to report, no big developments, but it just continues to not even surprise me, but it is just amazing that now all the conservatives, virtually all the conservatives, have now joined the left.
00:48:50.000In calling this white supremacist, racist, targeted killing.
00:48:57.000And I, you know, on a certain level, we know what that's about.
00:49:01.000We know why conservatives are the way they are.
00:49:04.000We know that this is part of their worldview.
00:49:06.000But I just don't know how, like, on an individual basis, you see people and just so easily repeating the talking points about this case on TikTok or on Twitter or on YouTube or whatever, talking about how.
00:49:21.000This was a case of a black man being hunted because he was black.
00:49:25.000And what I'm trying to say is to me, this idea is so far from reality, it's absurd.
00:49:58.000It is white people being discriminated against.
00:50:01.000It is black people that we cannot ever do enough for or cannot ever be more sensitive towards or anything like that, right?
00:50:10.000You have, how many instances do you see?
00:50:13.000I think it was earlier this year, last year, a black girl walks into a part of a university library and says, There's too many white people in here.
00:50:28.000How many instances of this kind of entitlement, and by entitlement mentality, I don't mean like welfare.
00:50:34.000I mean, this entitlement mentality of, I mean, they really believe that we as white people should just die or get up and leave this country or just pass over all of our stuff to them.
00:50:45.000So it is just incredible to me that that has been the reaction.
00:50:49.000I mean, it's again, like, not surprising, but it is beyond belief that people can live in the world that we live in.
00:50:56.000And we know the racial dynamic and the cultural dynamic that exists between blacks and whites.
00:51:01.000And the double standards and everything that comes with that, and they could seriously peddle this.
00:51:06.000It was a white supremacist hunting a black man.
00:51:09.000He was jogging well, black in his Timberlands.
00:51:12.000He was jogging, unarmed black man jogging in his Timberlands.
00:51:23.000And it's funny, even too, the other day, when I first started talking about this, I said that I've never seen a black jogger before, which is true, by the way.
00:54:10.000And like I said, this is really the beginning.
00:54:13.000So, everything I'm about to tell you about the economy, keep in mind, and we're going to explore this, but keep in mind, this is for starters.
00:54:57.000It says, With much of the American economy in self imposed shutdown to prevent the spread of coronavirus, April's colossal surge in unemployment delivered a historic blow to workers.
00:55:08.000That should say an historic blow to workers, but not important.
00:55:14.000The U.S. economy lost 20.5 million jobs in April, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, by far the most sudden and largest decline since the government began tracking the data in 1939.
00:55:27.000Those losses follow steep cutbacks in March as well, when employers slashed 870,000 jobs.
00:55:34.000Those two months amount to layoffs so severe.
00:55:37.000They more than double the 8.7 million jobs lost during the financial crisis.
00:55:43.000For many Americans who lost their jobs and their homes in the 2008 crisis, this moment reopens old wounds.
00:55:49.000It took years to rebound from those setbacks.
00:55:52.000When the economy eventually did crawl back, U.S. employers added 22.8 million jobs over 10 years, a victory for all those who had weathered the Great Recession.
00:56:03.000Now the coronavirus pandemic stings not only because of the public health crisis, But also because it wiped out nearly that whole decade of job gains in just two months.
00:56:13.000The unemployment rate soared to 14.7% in April, its highest level since the BLS started recording the monthly rate in 1948.
00:56:22.000The last time American joblessness was that severe was the Great Depression.
00:56:26.000The unemployment rate peaked at 25% in 1933, according to historical annual estimates from the BLS.
00:56:34.000So it's 15% unemployment, 20 million jobs lost.
00:56:41.000And the reason I think more people are not freaking out about this is because the assumption and the perception on the part of investors and economists, and I think even subconsciously among most people, is that once these shelter in place orders expire, everything's going to go back to the way it was.
00:57:02.000Because people see, and this is true to a large degree, that the fundamental reason why the economy is so bad right now in terms of Unemployment in terms of the GDP contracting and shortages and all these other problems, this oil glut that's happening is because this artificial depression on demand, artificial, I don't know what the technical word for that would be, but demand has obviously shrunk dramatically because people are not buying things.
00:57:30.000They're not buying things because they're at home.
00:57:32.000They're not buying fuel, for example, because they don't have to drive to work.
00:57:36.000They're not buying school supplies because school is canceled.
00:57:39.000And most stores, with the exception of the essential industries, are closed anyway.
00:57:45.000You've got on both sides, on the supply side and on the demand side, the economic activity has evaporated because of the shelter in place orders and the coronavirus and social distancing.
00:57:56.000And so people assume that if that is driving the recession, that once these restrictions are lifted, all that economic activity will rush back.
00:58:07.000People are looking at 15% unemployment and they're not really taking it seriously because they assume that, well, once all of this ends, Those jobs will immediately come back.
00:58:19.000That's really like temporary unemployment to a lot of people.
00:58:22.000Now, maybe some of it is, maybe most of it is, but I think people are in for a rude awakening when they realize that consumption is not going to go back to where it was right before this pandemic.
00:58:36.000And that is underlying this entire theory that we're going to have this so called V shaped recovery where it goes down and then immediately goes back up.
00:58:45.000But that's predicated on the idea that.
00:58:48.000All of that's just going to come right back.
00:58:50.000And what is required for all of that demand and supply to come back?
00:58:53.000It requires that everybody is just going to pick up where they left off with their routines, with their purchases, their consumption habits, and everything like that.
00:59:03.000Where's the evidence that this is the case?
00:59:05.000There's no evidence that this is the case.
00:59:07.000And actually, the evidence is to the contrary.
00:59:09.000We see that in China, where they've largely reopened since the coronavirus pandemic has mostly subsided, according to their official data, which it's pretty opaque what the situation is like there in terms of public health, but they have largely resumed working and shopping and all the rest.
00:59:27.000And consumption has not come all the way back, it only came back about 75%.
00:59:33.000And so, if it's only coming back at a fraction of where it was before, Then the same can be said about the rest of the economy, right?
00:59:41.000That probably not all those jobs are coming back, and probably not all that demand is coming back, and people are not going to pick up shopping and working and doing all the same that they were right before.
00:59:51.000And that means that all of this damage to the economy is profound and it is lasting.
00:59:57.000So to me, this is really just the beginning, and people should get comfortable with this.
01:00:01.000A lot of people think that, well, we'll deal with 15% unemployment and going up rapidly, and we'll probably go up maybe even past 20%.
01:00:11.000And really, those even aren't the best statistics.
01:00:14.000The better statistics are U6 unemployment.
01:00:17.000U6 unemployment statistics take into account people that are underemployed, meaning people that want a job, or rather, people that are working part time but want to work full time, and a number of other people that are in a similar situation.
01:00:30.000Or looking at the employment rate, in other words, not the rate at which people are unemployed, but looking at the rate of the overall population that is eligible to work, is working.
01:00:41.000Because the reason why the unemployment rate isn't much higher is because a lot of people are no longer seeking work.
01:00:46.000So they've dropped out of the labor force altogether.
01:00:49.000But nevertheless, people are saying, well, 15% and higher, or higher numbers in underemployment, or higher numbers in other areas, that's acceptable to us because we know that this is all just on a temporary basis.
01:01:02.000Even the spending, even these huge fiscal and monetary measures from the government, we've spent something like $3 trillion so far in stimulus.
01:01:12.000I don't know how much money has been injected from the Federal Reserve.
01:01:21.000All of these emergency measures and all of these red flags, people are stomaching that because they assume that in short order, all of that will be remedied.
01:01:30.000But there is no reason to believe this.
01:01:32.000This economic pain will last at least for the rest of this year, at least for next year.
01:03:00.000So, everybody that said that this coronavirus pandemic was going to be the worst of it, I've always been saying that the economic recession, the economic pain will be as bad or maybe even worse than the virus itself.
01:03:14.000Granted, how much of this was really under our control, I don't know that we could have really done it differently.
01:03:22.000You know, when you look at how rapidly the virus was spreading in Europe and how rapidly it was spreading in the United States, and we acted quickly and dramatically to shut down the spread of the virus.
01:03:31.000And over time, we've learned more about the virus.
01:03:34.000We've learned more about the asymptomatic cases.
01:03:37.000We've learned more about antibodies and about the real death rate and all that.
01:03:43.000And so, after we've learned a lot through the shutdown and put together guidance and policies, now we're beginning to reopen.
01:03:50.000I'm not sure that it could have or should have played out much differently.
01:03:54.000Nevertheless, the economic pain is here, whether we could have done something differently or not.
01:04:47.000This is like we're in a warehouse full of grenades or something.
01:04:52.000And all we just need, all we need is a little bit of a spark, and the whole thing's going to go up, right?
01:04:59.000So it's really interesting times that we're living in.
01:05:03.000I'm not looking forward to that, but I will say, And I've said this for years what is going to be required for us to win in the future is a dramatic change in circumstances, nationally and maybe even in some cases globally.
01:05:18.000Because right now, the deck is so stacked against us, we are so overwhelmingly outnumbered and outgunned in every way money, people, infrastructure, institutions, and so on.
01:05:30.000The only way, in my estimation, that we are going to rapidly turn the tables is if there is some kind of radical change in circumstances.
01:05:40.000I'm not telling anybody to go out and do anything.
01:05:43.000I'm simply saying that when you look at the forces of history, you really only see these kinds of changes happen in society when they're going with the momentum of a nation rather than against them, right?
01:05:57.000In other words, when you look at like the Russian Revolution, not arguing for a revolution, but when you look at major reforms and major changes in government or in regime or policies or things like that, it tends to coincide.
01:06:11.000With other big upheavals and shakeups in the economy or with war, things like that, right?
01:06:17.000I think you understand what I'm saying.
01:06:18.000In other words, to destroy this fortified edifice of New World Order control, there has to be a little bit of instability.
01:06:27.000There has to be a little bit of a shakeup because, in the absence of a shakeup, it is just this giant cathedral we're going up against and we're outnumbered, like I said.
01:06:38.000So, we need this fog of war, we need a little bit of a mix up, we need confusion, we need there to be.
01:06:45.000No pun intended that we're using entropy, but that's what's required.
01:06:49.000So I don't know that we as nationalists should seek a rapid end to the crisis, either the economic crisis or this virus.
01:06:58.000This is something that we stand to gain from in every way, shape, and form.
01:07:02.000Shutting down immigration, broad xenophobia against foreign nations and foreign lobbies and things like that, using the state to solve our problems and to help the people, making libertarianism look like a joke.
01:07:17.000Every way that you look at this crisis, it is something that vindicates nationalism as an ideology.
01:07:22.000And I think it fills people with anxieties and concerns that we have answers for, right?
01:07:30.000Which I don't think that's cynical to say.
01:07:40.000It is real, authentic conservatism, a real right wing ideology that favors order, that favors stability, cohesion, harmony over all of this noise that is liberalism.
01:07:54.000So that's the crisis, but that's the upside.
01:08:18.000And I've often used the quote by Otto von Bismarck, and forgive me if I'm butchering it right now, I don't have it right in front of me, but Otto von Bismarck, who was the chancellor of Germany back in the late 19th century, he said that the task of the statesman is to hear the footsteps of God.
01:08:37.000Thundering through the halls of history and to try to grab onto his coat.
01:08:41.000That is, in essence, what I'm describing.
01:08:44.000We have to grab onto the coat of God as he thunders through the halls of history.
01:08:48.000In other words, try to capitalize on events, try to ride the momentum of historical events and of nations and civilizations because I don't believe that history is made exclusively or singularly by individuals with a plan.
01:09:02.000You know, there has to be that coincidence.
01:09:05.000But we're going to move on and we're going to talk about the immigration ban.
01:09:08.000You know, I think that's a perfect segue because we're now going to talk about the president and what he is doing to do exactly that, to take advantage, to capitalize on the crisis, to use this momentum to our advantage, which comes in the form of the immigration ban.
01:09:24.000And we talked about this a couple of weeks ago.
01:09:26.000The initial immigration ban was toothless, right?
01:09:30.000And actually, I think I can remember the exact date.
01:09:32.000It must have been April 22nd because I know that it was on April 20th that he tweeted about it.
01:09:38.000And then I think it was on Wednesday that.
01:09:41.000He talked about it in the press conference, right?
01:09:43.000So it was Monday, April 20th, that he announced it because that's when we got excited about it on Twitter.
01:10:05.000And the initial immigration ban was, I mean, it was better than what we had before.
01:10:12.000But in some ways, it almost didn't change anything at all.
01:10:14.000Because if you look at and track President Trump's response to the coronavirus, we actually shut down all immigration before that executive order.
01:10:24.000We actually had already, not in a policy manner, but just logistically speaking, I believe we stopped issuing new visas.
01:10:31.000And I believe we stopped issuing new green cards and processing immigration while the coronavirus happened.
01:10:37.000We did the travel ban against China and the travel ban in Europe, and then we shut down our borders.
01:10:45.000And we also said that any aliens would be turned away and moved out.
01:10:49.000So, in a de facto way, we'd already almost totally shut down the elements of immigration that were then banned with the executive order.
01:10:58.000But, nevertheless, the executive order only covered the 30,000, close to 30,000 green cards per month for 60 days, so for two months.
01:11:07.000And yesterday we talked about a letter that was written to the president by a number of senators, a number of congressmen on the Republican side saying that we need to expand this immigration ban, not just to the Diversity visa lottery and the family based green card recipients, which accounts for about 30% of legal immigration.
01:11:28.000But also, we need to take into account the temporary work visas, which aren't even counted in that.
01:11:32.000I mean, they're not even classified as permanent immigration, even though they often lead to permanent immigration, right?
01:11:38.000They often end up being permanent residents of the country, even though initially they're given a temporary work visa.
01:11:44.000So the letter said you need to expand the ban.
01:11:48.00027,000 green cards a month isn't enough.
01:11:50.000It needs to be longer and it needs to be broader.
01:11:55.000Immigration visas and it needs to include temporary visas as well.
01:11:59.000And so this is from the Wall Street Journal talking about the White House.
01:12:04.000It seems that the president is going to do exactly what this letter says.
01:12:09.000He's going to implement an expanded immigration ban soon.
01:12:13.000So this is from the Wall Street Journal.
01:12:14.000It says, The Trump administration, having temporarily closed borders and curtailed immigration in response to the coronavirus pandemic, is moving to expand those restrictions while the president's advisors Push to leave them in place for months or even years to come, according to several people familiar with the matter.
01:12:34.000Senior administration officials are operating on the assumption that the public during the pandemic will be willing to accept new limits on immigration, right?
01:12:44.000That in turn presents the administration with an opportunity to pursue long held goals to overhaul the immigration system in the name of public health and job protection for Americans.
01:12:54.000The president's immigration advisors are drawing up plans for a coming executive order expected this month that would.
01:13:01.000That would ban, excuse me, the issuance of some new temporary work based visas.
01:13:05.000The order is expected to focus on visa categories including H 1B and H 2B, as well as student visas and the work authorization that accompanies them.
01:13:17.000Though the scope of the order hasn't yet been decided, administration officials said it could range from suspensions of entire visa categories to the creation of incentives to hire Americans in industries hardest hit by layoffs.
01:13:30.000The discussions would follow a series of moves by President Trump to curtail the The flow of migrants at the nation's borders and entry points.
01:13:37.000In January, facing reports of the spreading epidemic, the White House announced travel restrictions on China.
01:13:44.000In March, the government shut down the Mexican and Canadian borders to non essential travel and enacted a policy of expelling any migrant crossing the border illegally or asking for asylum.
01:13:55.000In April, the president signed an executive order temporarily barring new immigrants for 60 days, including family members of U.S. citizens.
01:14:03.000The moves so far are billed as temporary.
01:14:06.000But some administration officials argue the restraints on immigration may need to be in place at least until a vaccine is widely deployed in the U.S. and Latin America, which could take more than a year.
01:14:17.000Stephen Miller, the architect of the president's immigration agenda, recently told representatives from conservative groups on an April conference call that the president's action to curtail family immigration could pave the way for more permanent limits on immigrants entering the United States.
01:14:34.000Senator Tom Cotton, an immigrant hardliner, said in an interview he is pushing Mr. Trump to leave his order banning some immigrants in place for 12 to 36 months.
01:14:47.000So, this is the executive order that we were promised.
01:14:50.000This is much more in line with the tweet from April 20th that said we're going to ban all immigrants from coming into the United States.
01:15:00.000Could you imagine if we put in place an immigration ban for three years for this country?
01:15:07.000You know what a game changer that would be?
01:15:10.000And what's amazing about this is well, you know why it's amazing no more immigrants.
01:15:16.000But what is truly remarkable about this opportunity is that it is perfectly legitimate.
01:15:23.000This is the perfect time and the perfect excuse.
01:15:27.000Three years, the economy is going to be reeling for at least three years, like I just described.
01:15:33.000Public health will not recover for at least three years.
01:15:58.000And this is exactly what we've been saying now since January, I think, even.
01:16:03.000Take the coronavirus pandemic, use it to your advantage.
01:16:07.000Things that were otherwise not possible in normal times when the status quo reigned.
01:16:13.000And when people were complacent and when people weren't hungry or scared or anxious, these things suddenly become possible in a time of crisis.
01:16:23.000These things suddenly become tangible and real.
01:16:27.000We just need a president who will act.
01:16:29.000And honestly, once you overcome, I think, that preference towards inaction or the preference towards the status quo, the dominoes will begin to fall in our direction.
01:16:40.000In other words, if the president came out tomorrow and announced this executive order, Shutting down all immigration for three years, it would be celebrated.
01:16:52.000This would make him a great president.
01:16:54.000This is something which, according to all the polling, is wildly popular.
01:16:59.000A supermajority of Americans at least supports this measure.
01:17:03.000So all that it requires is for the president and for his advisors to overcome this idea that we have to go with the status quo, we have to return to normalcy.
01:17:15.000Once they realize that we are in this Pivotal world historical moment that we can use to shape world events and to sculpt and mold a new country.
01:17:25.000Only then can we really, and I hate to use this word, become who we are, create the country that we want to create, make this administration what was always intended to be, which is radical, revolutionary, dramatic, right wing change to this country.
01:17:42.000Fulfill the mandate that you were given in 2016.
01:17:47.000Ever since this president got elected, He has been mired in ridiculous scandals, obstacles that shouldn't exist, being tied down by injunctions from federal courts, investigations from the House of Representatives, investigations from the intelligence community, the media obstructing him.
01:18:06.000Paul Ryan and uncooperative congressional Republicans.
01:18:10.000It's only fair that we get redeemed in the last quarter here, right?
01:18:16.000In the last year of this administration, or the last year of this term, I should say.
01:18:21.000That we should get this great crisis to redeem all the nonsense we had to put up with for the past three years and finally make good on those promises and fulfill the mandate that was given out by the American people to shut down our borders and shut down immigration and make America great again, right?
01:19:43.000Jared Kushner's immigration proposal, which he unveiled this year, said that we would restructure immigration but not cut it even a little bit.
01:19:51.000So if we achieved a 30% reduction over three years, that in itself would be.
01:19:58.000But add to that that we're going to get another executive order that expands this maybe to more green card holders like EB5 and maybe other people.
01:20:06.000And in addition to that, the so called temporary work visas H1B, H2B, and I think they talked about OPT as well.
01:20:17.000If we expanded it out to all these other temporary work visas and added in incentives to hire American workers, you have changed the immigration landscape.
01:20:26.000Permanently, and you didn't need Congress, and maybe this doesn't even need to go through a federal court.
01:20:33.000We can maybe just defy the courts on this, even if they tried to put up some resistance.
01:20:37.000So, I think this is really huge, really exciting, and surprising, honestly.
01:20:46.000The letter was written, I think Tom Cotton was one of the authors of the letter, along with Matt Gaetz, Ted Cruz, and Gosar, and Grassley, and some others who I forget.
01:20:58.000But they all sent the letter and said exactly this.
01:21:01.000And yesterday, excuse me, yesterday, I said, I don't think the White House is going to do this.
01:21:06.000I don't think the president is going to do this.
01:21:13.000I'll believe it when I see it, frankly, because we literally did this exact same thing two weeks ago where we said, oh, it's all, he did it.
01:21:23.000So, you know, I'll believe it when I see the new executive order.
01:21:26.000But I am honestly surprised that we have heard this today.
01:21:31.000Because my expectation was they were going to write this letter yesterday, and the reaction would have been basically that it would have been ignored, right?
01:21:40.000And that there would be no executive order.
01:21:42.000Maybe there'd be an expansion, or rather an extension, of the existing order, but this would go nowhere.
01:21:49.000All the calls, all the agitation would be in vain.
01:21:55.000They're still designing it, they haven't written out any specifics or particulars, they haven't hammered out the scope of.
01:22:01.000This new executive order, but I think we're going to get another executive order.
01:22:05.000It's going to prolong the existing shutdown.
01:22:09.000And if we could just expand it to more categories and make this temporary immigration ban as untemporary as possible, we will have changed the paradigm on immigration.
01:22:20.000And this is so huge because there's no party.
01:22:24.000I mean, to tell you how little support there is from government officials for being against immigration or for immigration restriction would be impossible.
01:22:48.000He said at the State of the Union maybe last year or two years ago, he said, I want more immigrants than ever, more legal immigrants than ever.
01:23:00.000And if you step outside our Twitter circles, if you step outside our internet community, Donald Trump is perceived as an immigration hardliner.
01:23:08.000He's perceived as the Republican, the president that doesn't like immigrants.
01:23:13.000And he said last year at the State of the Union, we want more illegal immigrants than ever.
01:23:18.000I don't have to remind you, I'll never forget.
01:23:24.000So there is nothing, as far as I'm concerned, in D.C. In terms of elected officials, there are some people that are working their way up.
01:23:33.000I'm not going to expose them, but trust me, America First has friends all over the place.
01:23:37.000But as far as legislators, as far as the president goes, as far as his.
01:23:43.000Close to staff, I am really not optimistic as far as this goes.
01:23:47.000But if we are able to achieve an executive order that says that immigration is bad for the economy, essentially, I mean, that is effectively the message that we don't need immigrants.
01:24:17.000Congresses, presidents, it doesn't matter.
01:24:20.000Reagan, Bush, Reagan and Bush were huge sponsors of immigration.
01:24:25.000George W. Bush brought in 8 million immigrants in five years, in the first five years of his presidency.
01:24:32.000And even President Trump said, you know, we want more immigrants than ever.
01:24:35.000So to take the Republican Party, put it in the hands of a president and a congressional coalition of people that are saying, you know what, no more immigration.
01:25:22.000You know, would you say that, well, and granted, Obamacare is different in a lot of ways, but the principle is the same.
01:25:30.000Obamacare goes into law, and even though it's not socialized medicine, even though it's not single payer, anything like that, look at what is produced.
01:25:39.000Look at what this has produced in the Democratic Party.
01:25:42.000That Bernie Sanders was the runner up in this election, saying, we want Medicare for all, we want single payer.
01:25:48.000I think there is almost something comparable that is possible with this.
01:25:52.000Where just as long as that gets set as policy and as long as this coalition is built and that idea percolates in the minds of conservatives and Republicans everywhere and inside government, I think that it will be much harder to get rid of than people think in terms of policy and more importantly, in terms of the expectations and the ideas in the minds of the voters and of the American people.
01:26:20.000There's nothing so permanent as a temporary government program.
01:26:24.000Finally, The onus will be on these people to turn over immigration restriction as opposed to the opposite.
01:26:32.000And they will have to come to us and make the case in one year or two years or three years and tell us why we need to accept more immigrants.
01:26:40.000And they'll find themselves trying to make the argument, economic and otherwise, to bring in yet another one million immigrants into this country after all this havoc, all this chaos.
01:26:51.000And I doubt people will be as receptive after all this as they were 60 years ago.
01:26:57.000So, So, I really want to drive home that thing because some will say Nick is saying that Trump is white pilled again and the country is saved because of this immigration executive order because there are rumors about it.
01:27:12.000I'm saying that if this is followed through on and carried out, there is a lot of potential in this.
01:27:19.000There's a lot of potential, there are a lot of possibilities that this will unlock if this becomes policy.
01:27:32.000If Trump wins another term and there is some kind of return to normalcy in term number two, then they will talk about immigration reform and reform to the legal immigration system.
01:27:44.000And I doubt that if we're in the midst of a recession and a pandemic, they are going to write the comprehensive immigration reform in a way that doesn't cut legal immigration if they're doing this ban and if all this is going on right.
01:27:59.000And so that to me is like the light at the end of the tunnel is what if we could shape legislation, immigration legislation, and for the first time since 1965, draft legislation that starts pushing us in the other direction and changing the trajectory from complete and total open borders back towards the way it was before.
01:28:19.000You know, that might be the light at the end of the tunnel there.
01:29:18.000So we've heard this a million times on every issue.
01:29:23.000And I'm hard pressed to find one example of a time when we haven't been totally disappointed, right?
01:29:30.000So I still don't know that I have high hopes that this is going to happen.
01:29:34.000I'm surprised that it's come this far.
01:29:37.000That you have congressional GOP calling for it, and the White House is drafting a more expansive executive order.
01:29:44.000But I don't want to get really excited until I see the actual executive order, until it gets signed and it is everything that we thought it was.
01:29:52.000But at least for now, I'm pretty skeptical.
01:30:00.000You know, I didn't think we could come this far along and still be capable of turning this around.
01:30:06.000In other words, without the coronavirus pandemic, if we were where we are right now in terms of progress and in terms of time, I would say it's too late.
01:30:55.000How could you get a fresher start than that in this 21st century industrial, technological, globalized society?
01:31:02.000How do you get a fresher start than telling everybody you can't leave your houses for three months, you know, or for two and a half months?
01:31:09.000We have the ability to mold a new nation.
01:32:00.000I don't want to look back two years from now at this moment and say that, well, it was just a mundane and perfunctory return to normalcy.
01:32:10.000Well, you know, Trump fixed the economy and then he got everybody healthy and then it was back to global homo.
01:32:15.000It was back to total domination, rape, and pillage by, you know, global slavery incorporated.
01:32:22.000Usury, something of Satan, you know, vampire incorporated.
01:32:28.000I don't want to look back and say, Well, good thing Trump cleared out this coronavirus so the you know what machine can steamroll the nations of the world.
01:32:37.000I want this to be, you know, the IED that blew up the giant, you know, the juggernaut that is the New World Order.
01:35:05.000Didn't we expressly and explicitly say exactly what it was about throughout the TikTok War, which was an abbreviated conflict?
01:35:16.000You know, it was sort of like the Spanish American War, right?
01:35:22.000So it was not a protracted, you know, major engagement, but it was, you know, it was like a small little battle, which is ongoing.
01:35:30.000But throughout the whole thing, we said exactly what we were doing on the TikTok stream, on the many D Live shows about it.
01:35:39.000Well, if the Optics Wars were about the wing, it's like the TikTok Wars was an extension of the Groyper Wars against the fake conservatives on TikTok.
01:35:47.000I thought we established that like a million times over.
01:36:30.000So, if a paper towel is to clean up messes in the kitchen and a napkin is to clean my mouth when I'm eating dinner, what is this paper for?
01:39:13.000Charlie, I don't really watch his content, but yeah, it seems like he's coming around a little bit.
01:39:17.000Charlie says if I was jogging through the south side of Chicago and two black guys with guns wanted to question me, not only would I not charge at them, I'd be lucky not to be shot even if I did comply.
01:39:29.000Yeah, have you ever heard of the knockout game, right?
01:41:12.000Eternal pragmatist says, someone called into the David. Pac Man show today, worried about whether or not you and white nationalism are taking over the right wing.
01:41:30.000I told, I don't know if I told this story on the show, but after the Groyper Leadership Summit, I was flying back home to Chicago from West Palm Beach, and I sat down on the plane, and this girl sat next to me.
01:41:44.000It was like assigned seating, because it was like American, I think, or United.
01:41:49.000And she's like, So I know exactly who you are.
01:41:53.000And like, my, And she, you know, rattled off her little story.
01:42:11.000I said, You're going to look back at this little exchange that we had on this plane and you're going to say, Wow, I cannot believe that it has come this far that I sat next to him on a plane.
01:42:25.000And I told her, There is nothing that you or anyone can do.
01:42:29.000To stop us or to stop me in particular, you cannot stop us.
01:43:44.000You know, I imagine Jared Holt in his tiny little apartment in D.C. with his roommates, you know, scheming about, we got to stop these guys, these guys are taking over, whatever.
01:43:56.000And I mean, pretty soon the long shadow cast by America First will cover the nation.
01:48:26.000So anyway, Livid City says, Nick, your great show persuaded me on something, but I got to ask, as a minority, do you think that this anti white education plays a part?
01:48:38.000In why young immigrants and minorities are anti white and liberals?
01:48:55.000That plays a factor in why a lot of white people are anti white.
01:48:58.000But, education does not create racial conflict.
01:49:03.000I think the fact that you have different races creates racial conflict within the same polity, fighting over limited resources.
01:49:12.000And in the manner in which they've been introduced.
01:49:13.000I think that by its nature is bound to end in conflict unless carefully managed or unless it's thoughtfully considered.
01:49:23.000So I agree that certainly these tendencies and trends have been exacerbated by media and education, but I don't think they've been created by media and education because you could say the same.
01:49:36.000I mean, why did the American Indians scalp and raid and attack the European settlers?
01:50:31.000We might have a desire for equality, but we know that our nature conflicts with this, and we have to thoughtfully consider our nature and accommodate it.
01:50:41.000And the same is true with this it might be nice to live in a multiracial country.
01:50:45.000We might strive for that, we might long for that for whatever reason.
01:51:09.000Are we supposed to pretend that we don't pee and poo and we don't get angry and we don't get sad and we don't get violent and all the ugly things that human beings do?
01:51:19.000Why are we bad people for acknowledging them?
01:53:17.000Yeah, the feeling when an innocent, unmanned jogger tries to wrest control of your firearm.
01:53:26.000You know that common occurrence when you're just jogging through the street and people are calling 911 on you?
01:53:31.000When you find yourself looking through people's windows in a home under construction, 911 calls are made about you, suddenly break into a sprint.
01:53:40.000And then you try to grab a shotgun away from somebody holding it.
01:53:43.000Yeah, that classic, innocent bystander story.
01:53:48.000Polish American Groyper says, Nick, that pink hoodie kind of ugly.
01:54:46.000They used to be really based, but they used to be more based than they are now, even 10 years ago, totally.
01:54:52.000Yeah, they used to go hardcore on Trayvon and even some of the talk radio stuff about pull up your pants, pull up your pants, and stop smoking reefer, get back in school, that kind of thing.
01:59:23.000I don't think a black person will ever do a jog for a white person.
01:59:27.000Correct me if I'm wrong, but I don't think, generally speaking, you're going to find a lot of black people that will rush to go on a three mile jog for a white life.
01:59:37.000Could you imagine you go to the south side of Chicago?
01:59:40.000We're running for a white child that got killed.
02:01:51.000Comedic Relativist says, Nick, you're coming across as divided, angry, controlled, blaming those who are different from you rather than those who are responsible.
02:02:37.000People have fought me on this forever, but I think it's retarded to think that, like, You know, oh, I made a phone call and now the White House is changing their policy.
02:06:30.000Harrison Alexander says, You rejuvenated my commitment to Christ.
02:06:34.000Your show is just as religiously important as it is politically and ideologically important.
02:06:38.000I know everyone hates lab coat shit, but I've always been curious about you being non committal when it comes to creationism versus evolution.
02:06:57.000The idea that we, all the species, have a common ancestor, I don't believe that.
02:07:04.000And I haven't done enough research to say, you know, Am I like officially denying it or you know, like I honestly don't know enough about the subject, but from what I do know, it just seems like implausible that we came from monkeys and monkeys came from whatever and from lizards and lizards came from fish and fish came from amoebas.
02:07:30.000Like, you know, no, well, actually, lizards came from like, do you know what I mean?
02:07:36.000The idea that you get all this differentiation and.
02:13:01.000Eternal Pragmatist says, As demographics continue to change, I see white Dems and Republicans consolidating into one party and minorities in the other.
02:15:10.000I hope it's nuking the whole world, maybe.
02:15:13.000Anand says Back in the 60s, you could join Belgian paramilitaries in the Congo and shoot at UN forces and get paid for it, and now you literally can't even call someone a faggot online.
02:15:26.000Yeah, yeah, you would be doing that, right?
02:15:31.000I see this kind of shit all the time on Twitter.
02:15:34.000I saw this tweet the other day on the timeline.
02:15:36.000Somebody was like, in ancient times, when you got your heart broken, I assume this was some simp.
02:15:41.000He was like, when you got your heart broken, you would conquer islands and, you know, slave villages to make yourself feel better.
02:15:49.000It's like, no, you would probably be a slave.
02:15:52.000No, you would probably be a slave, actually, or a farmer, you know?
02:15:58.000That was literally a tweet the other day.
02:16:00.000Somebody's like, back in the old days, when a girl broke your heart, you would slave villages and conquer islands to make yourself feel better.
02:17:19.000Imagine sending in, you know, $10, $2 super chats or sending in and they're all cringe and it's an essay or one $200 super chat and he just says, hey, he convinced me to give you this.
02:19:19.000Do you think when we're talking about dual citizens, we're talking about people with like extenuating exceptional family circumstances that for ease of travel, Are you trying to visit their family members?
02:19:30.000Or do you think we're talking about people that clearly have an allegiance to another country, were born in another country, and prioritize their citizenship in one country over another?
02:21:10.000Bilal says Hey, Nick, viewer from Canada here, when you talk about different races being a problem for the U.S., Never see you bring up Arabs.
02:23:24.000It's just like clearly, when we're talking about dual citizens, we're not talking about extenuating exceptional circumstances.
02:23:31.000We're not talking about functionally having dual citizenship in your case because it's easier to visit your family.
02:23:37.000Some people have family in another country.
02:23:40.000When we're talking about Yoram Hazoni, the dual citizen nationalist, this is somebody who purports to be a nationalist but has citizenship in two nations, one of which he is clearly more loyal to than the other.
02:24:08.000We're not talking about a layperson that's a layperson, an average person that's America first, but happens to, for a logistical reason, hold dual citizenship.
02:24:18.000Like, that's clearly not the problem we're talking about.
02:24:20.000We're talking about elites, intellectual, academic, or governmental that are shaping our society that have a dual citizenship, which is.
02:24:28.000You know, an expression of dual loyalty.
02:26:04.000I don't care what anybody says, but a white man going out and jogging for that is nothing short of self hatred and that bending over backwards, that cucking for another group.
02:26:16.000I can't imagine, I can never imagine anyone in my family doing anything like that.
02:28:37.000There was literally a blue check mark on Twitter the other day who he was responding to that Daily Dot video of me saying black people don't jog.
02:28:46.000And he was like, wait, he lives in New York City?
02:28:49.000Yeah, yeah, I live in a New York City penthouse.
02:31:06.000And it's not The Joker, it's Joker, okay?
02:31:11.000And what is so relatable, like I said, is this is the story of a guy.
02:31:19.000Who, you know, he's not even really like a totally exceptional guy, you know, and he's not somebody who even gets along so well.
02:31:28.000But one man with one speech is able to throw himself into this machine, you know, this soul sucking societal machine and blow it up and cause major problems.
02:31:43.000You know, there's something relatable about this idea of, you know, taking your resentment and wielding it.
02:36:05.000You've got to watch them all, and you've got to watch them in order.
02:36:08.000It's Phantom Menace, Attack of the Clones, Clone Wars movie, Revenge of the Sith, and then it's Rogue One and Solo.
02:36:17.000I don't think it matters in which order you watch those, but Rogue One, Solo, A New Hope, Empire Strikes Back, Return of the Jedi, Force Awakens.
02:38:12.000That's a little thank you to all of our subscribers because I know people have been asking for the merch.
02:38:17.000So I said, let's give them a little taste first and a discount as well as a thank you because I do appreciate everybody jumping on board this week and overwhelming success with this new program.
02:38:29.000So I appreciate everybody jumping aboard.
02:38:31.000So I wanted to do something that was nice and we were going to launch the new merch anyway, but I said, let's give a little benefit, a bonus, right?