00:01:02.000Tonight, our featured story is about Afghanistan and the withdrawal drags on.
00:01:08.000Joe Biden is under mounting pressure to extend the deadline for a complete withdrawal of American troops.
00:01:15.000The deadline is supposed to be August 31st, which is coming up very quickly.
00:01:20.000But the other NATO forces, including Germany, UK, as well as even elements inside the Pentagon, they want America to have an open ended timeline for withdrawing all the troops.
00:01:33.000We're supposed to have them out by August 31st, and Joe Biden.
00:03:01.000I think I said this on Friday or Thursday.
00:03:04.000The last time we talked about Afghanistan, I think it was Friday.0.59
00:03:09.000I said maybe this was the plan all along Pentagon, national security apparatus, they mess up the withdrawal so that we have to stay there even longer.
00:03:19.000You know, maybe from the beginning, when people say this was a botched withdrawal, Biden totally mishandled it.
00:03:25.000They evacuated the troops and then the personnel?
00:03:40.000And now all these generals and, like I said, all these NATO leaders shrug their shoulders and say, oh, well, guess we're not getting out by August 31st.
00:03:48.000Guess we're going to be there for a long time.
00:03:54.000Coalition troops that have been redeployed to Kabul to secure the airport, which includes 6,000 American troops as well as troops from every other country that's involved.
00:04:45.000The other thing that they're talking about, in addition to that sort of related but also separate, they're talking about how ISIS, they call it ISIS K, which is the faction which is in Afghanistan.
00:05:00.000They say that ISIS K is gaining a foothold in Taliban occupied Afghanistan.
00:05:05.000Not only are they a threat to American civilians trying to get out of the country, but they're also gaining a foothold.
00:05:14.000Never forget that ISIS was an invention of the CIA, the US government, the state of Israel.
00:05:21.000And just like when Obama tried to pull us out of Iraq 10 years ago, ISIS came out of nowhere and took over a giant part of the territory.0.51
00:05:30.000Now, as American troops are set to leave the country on August 31st, they're all over Afghanistan.
00:05:37.000We haven't heard of them for five or six years.
00:05:44.000We'll also be talking tonight about the vaccine.
00:05:46.000In particular, I want to talk about Israel.
00:05:49.000There was a big news report today about Israel, which is the most vaccinated country in the world.
00:05:54.000More than 80% of their population, age 12 and up, is fully vaccinated, double dosed.
00:06:02.000In spite of this, however, They are having tens of thousands of new cases of COVID every day.
00:06:09.000And this is a big problem for the public health experts and the medical people and the doctors and the World Health Organization and Pfizer.
00:06:19.00080% of the Israeli population has been double dosed with Pfizer, which just got full FDA approval.
00:06:26.000And Pfizer is supposed to be the so called gold standard of immunization.
00:06:30.000It's an mRNA vaccine, and they say this is the most effective one.0.99
00:07:31.000They got to go get a third dose, and in six months, they'll have to get another dose because they can't keep the pandemic down with the vaccine.
00:07:42.000So, what do you do in a country like that?
00:07:43.000They were told if you get the vaccine, if you mask up, and if you diligently stay inside your house and social distance, this pandemic will be over.0.92
00:07:51.000Well, Israel did all of that, and the pandemic is still there.0.88
00:07:55.000So, how do you go out now in America or other countries and say, well, we just need to get those numbers up?0.99
00:08:01.000We just need to get a higher percentage.
00:08:03.000We just need to get more booster shots.
00:08:58.000It's not actually Trump's social media, but it's like a Twitter clone and it's run by a Trump ally and a Trump surrogate.
00:09:07.000Anyway, I tried to get on there this weekend and I went to go and register my account.
00:09:12.000I put in my desired username, which is Nick J. Fuentes.
00:09:16.000But because that username was verified on Twitter, because Nick J. Fuentes was my verified Twitter account on Twitter, it's reserved on Getter.
00:09:28.000So, I try to register as Nick J. Fuentes, and because it's reserved, you have to go through a special process, which is you have to tweet a verification link from that reserved handle on Twitter.
00:09:42.000So, I would have to go to Nick J. Fuentes on Twitter, the verified account, and tweet out a link so that Getter could verify that the me behind the verified Twitter app is applying for the Getter reserved app.
00:09:58.000But I can't do that because I'm banned on Twitter.
00:10:00.000So, I was calling up some of my friends in the Trump administration, like, hey, does anybody know anyone that works at Getter?
00:10:06.000Hey, could you put me in touch with customer service or something?
00:11:50.000Just an update on that because I know people have been asking me.
00:11:53.000They're like, hey, so when's that private test or when's the test?
00:11:57.000So I said last week we were going to begin testing the platform.
00:12:01.000So I'm on AmericaFirst.live right now, but we're going to onboard more streamers and we're going to have a homepage and we're going to build this out to be like DLive or Trovo or any of these other ones and have all our friends stream on there.
00:12:15.000So I said last week we'd begin testing it this week and we are testing it this week.
00:12:29.000And he's like, oh, well, I'm like, what exactly are we testing?
00:12:33.000He's like, well, we're really just testing to see.
00:12:35.000I don't want to go into specifics, but basically testing to see if other streamers can go online.
00:12:41.000We don't need people to watch the stream, we just need to test the capability.
00:12:44.000So I was like, well, let's just do it privately.
00:12:47.000So we're working through that and we should be ready for a beta launch.
00:12:52.000Sooner than you think, sooner than you think.
00:12:54.000I don't want to say, I mean, it's not going to be like next week or anything, but we're getting really, really close to a beta launch when you're going to be able to see a couple of our streamers on the platform.
00:13:05.000And then I think before the end of the year, we're going to be able to have everybody on the platform streaming with super chats, with everything, and we'll have our home base all set up.
00:15:32.000But I would sooner go with an illicit substance because, you know, at least with, I mean, all things being equal, at least you know what you're getting.
00:15:40.000Now, it could be laced with something or whatever, but you understand what I'm saying.
00:16:53.000There's a pandemic, so they give you a vax to make you healthy.
00:16:57.000Well, the vax is making people sick worse than the disease.
00:17:01.000So now there's a study about how they're making a vaccine to help people that are sick from the vaccine to help people that are sick from the virus.
00:17:11.000So I just briefly, because this isn't a huge development or anything, I don't even know what the source is because I'm not a scientist, so I don't read this kind of academic stuff, but this is a summary of a study that's being done in China about a drug.
00:17:24.000That's supposed to treat sickness from the vaccine.
00:17:29.000It says In a recent study, we reported that certain anti spike antibodies of COVID 19 and SARS CoV 2 viruses can have pathogenic effect through binding to sick lung epithelium cells and misleading immune responses to attack self cells.
00:17:50.000We term this new pathogenic mechanism antibody dependent auto attack.
00:17:56.000This study explores a drug candidate for prevention and treatment of such ADAA diseases.
00:18:05.000It says the formulation has the potential to prevent and treat the serious conditions caused by pathogenic antibodies during a COVID infection.
00:18:13.000In addition, the formulation has potential to prevent and treat the adverse reactions of COVID 19 vaccines because the vaccine can induce similar antibodies, including pathogenic antibodies.
00:18:27.000The formulation will be helpful in increasing the safety of the vaccines without reducing the vaccine's efficacy.
00:18:39.000COVID is a respiratory virus that is killing people that are either already sick or already at risk of dying from the flu or pneumonia, elderly, obese, and pre existing conditions.
00:18:50.000And in order to combat this, everyone has to lock down, which doesn't work because the states that lock down don't have better rates of infection or death than the states that didn't.
00:19:01.000But we have to do that out of an abundance of caution.
00:19:58.000Now, you have to get a vaccine and a drug with your vaccine, with your booster shot, to help combat the side effects from the vaccine that doesn't work.
00:20:09.000And it's like, at what point do you say, Just give me the virus already.
00:20:25.000And not only is none of what we're doing working, but everything that we're doing is making people worse.
00:20:30.000They're getting sick and they're experiencing other worse things depression, drug abuse, suicide, and other mental illness from the lockdown.
00:20:43.000People are getting sick from the masks.
00:20:45.000People are getting sick because they don't go to checkups at the doctor.
00:20:48.000People are getting myocarditis and blood clotting from the vaccine.
00:20:54.000And there's an economic recession and inflation.
00:20:57.000And then people get COVID all day long, regardless.
00:22:46.000And Israel is a, you know, if we want to be scientific here, if we want to put on our medical hats, I don't know what doctors wear.
00:22:53.000We want to put on our hairnet and our scrubs and our mask, and we want to play doctor and we want to think like scientists and we want to think scientifically.
00:23:03.000If we're supposed to hypothesize, you know, does the vaccine work?
00:23:07.000Does this epidemiological response from the government, is this an effective way to respond to the virus?
00:23:13.000Well, let's do a controlled experiment.
00:23:15.000Let's look at a country that is vaccinated, and let's look at a country that isn't vaccinated or has fewer vaccines or a smaller proportion of vaccines.
00:23:49.000It's a gold standard of COVID vaccines, it's the most effective.
00:23:53.000So you've got a country where almost the whole population, higher than herd immunity, has the best vaccine double dosed.
00:24:01.000The problem, though, and this is the big story today, and this is what people that have been monitoring COVID have been looking at.
00:24:08.000Is that in spite of this fact, compared to other countries, Israel is still having big outbreaks of the coronavirus.
00:24:15.000And you might think, how is that possible?
00:24:17.000If 80% of the population is vaccinated, who is giving them the disease?
00:24:25.000If they are vaccinated and therefore inoculated against and have immunity against the virus, who then is contracting and transmitting the virus such that tens of thousands of people are being infected every day?
00:24:37.000It's a question that doctors can't answer.
00:24:40.000But their response is the same as it always is.
00:24:43.000They're going to enter another lockdown.
00:24:47.000And in order to have an exemption for the lockdown, which is your vaccine passport, you now have to have a third booster shot.
00:24:54.000And your renewed vaccine passport will expire after six months, after which you get another vaccine.
00:25:02.000And this is supposed to go on indefinitely, apparently.
00:25:05.000So this is the story it says The massive surge of COVID infections in Israel, one of the most vaccinated countries on earth, Is pointing to a complicated path ahead for America.
00:25:21.000In June, there were several days with zero new COVID infections in Israel.
00:25:25.000The country launched its national vaccination campaign in December last year and has one of the highest vaccination rates in the world, with 80% of citizens above the age of 12 fully inoculated.
00:25:38.000COVID, most Israelis thought, had been defeated.0.95
00:25:41.000All restrictions were lifted, and Israelis went back to crowded partying.0.90
00:25:49.000Fast forward two months later, Israel reported 9,831 new diagnosed cases on Tuesday, a hairbreadth away from the worst daily figure ever recorded in the country, which is 10,000, at the peak of the third wave.
00:26:08.000More than 350 people have died of the disease in the first three weeks of August.
00:26:14.000In a Sunday press conference, the directors of seven public hospitals.
00:26:18.000Announced that they could no longer admit any more coronavirus patients.
00:26:23.000With 670 COVID patients requiring critical care, their wards are overflowing and staff are at a breaking point.
00:26:32.000So, not only, get this, the most vaccinated country in the world not only has another outbreak, not only did they not eradicate the disease, but it's the worst daily total of new infections.
00:26:49.000Ever, ever in the country before they even had a vaccine, before one person had been vaccinated, before they even locked the country down.
00:26:57.000Worst daily total ever after two months after 80% of the population had been vaccinated.
00:27:06.000After they were reporting zero new cases every day.
00:28:01.000And sobering truth is that no single policy or event brought Israel to this crisis, says the article.
00:28:08.000Says Haggai Levine, a Hebrew University of Jerusalem professor of epidemiology.
00:28:15.000A deadly set of circumstances came together to put Israel on the precipice, most of which can be summed up as we are still in the midst of a pandemic and there is no silver bullet.
00:28:28.000He said all the vectors have influenced the rise in morbidity.
00:28:32.000But the principal causes of Israel's current predicament are the dominance of the extremely infectious Delta variant, which was carried into the country by Israelis returning from foreign vacations during the weeks in which Israel dropped all restrictive measures, along with the worrisome decrease in vaccine efficacy after about six months.0.74
00:28:55.000It's because the vaccine stops being effective after six months, the Delta variant, and people come back to Israel, and it's a perfect storm.0.94
00:29:05.000You got to bring in Albert Einstein to figure this one out because there are so many vectors and components, and it's a set of circumstances that there's no one single thing.
00:29:25.000But the principal causes of Israel I just read that.
00:29:28.000It says Israel vaccinated its population almost exclusively with the Pfizer vaccine, which received full FDA approval on Monday.
00:29:36.000And remains the gold standard for the prevention of severe illness due to the coronavirus.
00:29:41.000But in early July, with citizens over the age of 60 almost completely vaccinated, Israeli scientists began observing a worrisome rise in infections, if not in severe illness and death among the double vaccinated.
00:29:56.000Fully vaccinated people with weakened immune systems appeared particularly vulnerable to the aggressive Delta variant.
00:30:03.000In order to keep severe illness and the number of COVID deaths down, And avoiding a fourth national lockdown, Israel has embarked on an aggressive effort to provide all adults with boosters in a matter of weeks.
00:30:15.000As of this week, all Israelis over 30 will be eligible to receive booster shots.
00:30:20.000By the end of the month, they are expected to be universally available to anyone over the age of 12 who received their second vaccine five months or more ago.
00:30:29.000Israel will then reconfigure its green passports, granting them only to the triple vaccinated and limiting their validity to six months.
00:30:38.000In anticipation of this change, the number of unvaccinated Israelis getting their first shots has tripled since the beginning of August.0.81
00:31:14.000Everything I've just told you, and this is from Yahoo News, this is from the Daily Beast.
00:31:20.000Daily Beast, which is a hardcore liberal regime publication.
00:31:24.000At once, they say that a doctor in Israel from the University of Jerusalem says there's no silver bullet, which in other words means the vaccine doesn't work.
00:31:36.000If your rate of infections is worse than at any other point when almost all the population is fully vaccinated, I think it's safe to say you don't need to be a doctor to know at that point that the vaccine doesn't work at all.
00:31:51.000It's not preventing people from getting sick.
00:31:54.000And it's not preventing people from transmitting the disease.
00:31:56.000It's not preventing people from being hospitalized or having severe symptoms because their hospitals are overrun.
00:32:01.000So, once they say, well, there's no silver bullet, the vaccine doesn't work because the most vaccinated country is now sicker than it's ever been before.
00:32:11.000At the same time, they tell you, sometimes in the same article, the vaccine is highly effective.
00:32:45.000Lockdowns, masks, vaccines, none of it has shown to have any impact on the rate of infection.
00:32:52.000But at the same time, you can't question any of it.
00:32:54.000At the same time, you will be fined if you violate the lockdown order, you will be fined if you violate the mask order.
00:33:01.000Not permitted entry into places of business.
00:33:04.000You will be expelled, fired, banned from society if you don't get the vaccine, none of which works.
00:33:13.000And honestly, what are we supposed to do at this point other than massive civil disobedience, massive disobedience and protests against all of it?
00:33:39.000It's not Chris Cuomo's opinion that the vaccine works.
00:33:44.000They're merely citing the doctors who have a specialized knowledge and a long education in college studying this stuff.
00:33:52.000So most people are apprehensive to say, well, maybe I don't trust the media, but I trust the doctors.
00:33:58.000But at what point do you look at what's going around in the country and trust what you see with your own eyes and say, this isn't working?0.89
00:34:08.000If America has a vaccination rate of just under 50% and Israel's is at 80%, it just goes to show that getting 30% more of the population vaccinated is not going to stop the pandemic.
00:34:20.000And if the vaccines haven't worked so far, getting another one and getting another one six months later, that's not going to work either.
00:34:28.000And if the lockdowns didn't stop the virus or stop the spread for the past year with the masks, they're not going to do that for another year.
00:34:35.000So, what point do we as the people say no?
00:34:42.000I'm not going to get myself sick with a mask.
00:34:46.000I'm not going to poison myself with a vaccine.
00:34:48.000I'm not about to lose my job and get kicked out of school because of sickness that I'm going to get anyway, even if I go through with all these mandates.
00:35:00.000So I don't know how there's anybody left.
00:35:05.000It's really not that difficult to understand why people just watch TV.
00:35:09.000But I don't know how somebody who knows all these facts can look at the breadth of the situation and say that these people still know what they're talking about, or that anything that comes out of the government or the media is still true or shouldn't be treated with skepticism almost immediately after they say it, because everything has changed.
00:35:28.000We found out at the beginning of this year, I don't know if people even remember this because this was a memory hold, but after a year of lockdowns across the country, when that was still going on, the first wave of lockdowns, Numbers were coming out which showed that there was no difference in rate of infection or death between states that had lockdown, like California, and states that didn't, like Florida.
00:35:51.000So it was proven definitively earlier this year, factual.
00:35:56.000If the lockdown was designed to prevent the transmission of the virus, it didn't do that.
00:36:01.000And we could prove that scientifically because we have one state that didn't lock down at all, and we have one state that locked down for the whole year.
00:36:08.000And the state that locked down had a comparable rate of infection and death as the state that didn't.
00:37:07.000And we knew a month ago that the outbreak of the Delta variant in Massachusetts had 75% of the people that got sick, they were doubly vaccinated.
00:37:16.000And 80% of the people that were hospitalized were also.
00:37:23.000I mean, what more does it take in August?
00:37:25.000And they tell us the country, the country with the highest proportion of vaccines, more than 80% double dosed, the most diligent about the lockdowns, masks, they got it together and they're having the worst outbreak ever in the history of the country.
00:37:42.000But that's not going to stop them from telling everybody to get a third shot and implicitly saying you'll get a fourth shot too and making everybody's participation in society contingent on their compliance with that new rule.
00:37:55.000They're going to update their vaccine passport, which is already in place, and say that you can't get an exemption of the lockdown unless you've been vaccinated a third time.
00:38:04.000And then that expires after six months, upon which you'll have to get vaccinated a fourth time with the vaccine that doesn't even work.
00:38:11.000So, is this supposed to just be our lives now?
00:38:13.000If people just lay down and take this, this will be the rest of our lives.
00:38:17.000Booster shots, shots for kids, experimental, cocktail of drugs to deal with the side effects, permanent lockdowns, permanent social isolation.
00:38:27.000Permanent filthy mask muzzles over your face every day, all the time, on and off lockdowns, increasingly complex passport system, which can be manipulated for really anything the government wants it to be used for.
00:38:43.000And I want people to think long and hard when it comes to the vaccine mandate, which is coming, which is a, I mean, it's coming in a de facto way because they're going to require a vaccine passport to go to work and to go, To a store or restaurant or anything like that, you got to think to yourself if you're keeping your job and getting the vaccine, it's not like it's a one time sacrifice.
00:39:36.000If you want to keep that job that you.
00:39:38.000Sacrificed your bodily integrity, your bodily autonomy to, you're going to get vaccinated again in six months or else say goodbye to your job again.
00:39:58.000When that doesn't work and there's increasingly more deadly strains of the coronavirus, the vaccinated individuals are a cauldron for this.0.69
00:40:06.000They're creating all these variants to the extent that that's even real.
00:40:11.000So, are you going to be getting three vaccines every six months?
00:40:14.000I mean, how many therapeutics, drugs, vaccines, arbitrary lockdown orders?
00:40:18.000How many of these things are people going to comply with before they say, just get sick?
00:41:46.000We need people to go and inform their colleagues.
00:41:49.000And their classmates and other people about the dangers of the vaccine have this conversation, tell them what's going on, and have groups of people in every company and every school in every place saying, You want to kick us out because of the vaccine?
00:42:06.000But it's time now for massive resistance to this stuff.
00:42:09.000This is one of those times when it's like people say, 'Have we passed the point of no return?' I don't think there's a clear example of a discernible point of no return than this.
00:42:20.000If we didn't pass it in the past 10 years, I don't think.
00:42:24.000It gets any more obvious, explicit, tangible, point of no return going down on the other side than this, right?
00:42:34.000Then everybody gets vaccinated or you're banned from society.
00:42:37.000And there's booster shots in six months.
00:49:02.000Jacob Sartorius doing an interview with Anthony Fauci.
00:49:05.000Why don't you go smoke some pot, dude?
00:49:07.000Why don't you go smoke some pot and cry in your bedroom, dude?
00:49:11.000You're going to tell me to, you know, Anthony Fauci was like, listen, Jacob, you got to tell your audience that this conspiracy stuff isn't true.
00:50:44.000And we redeployed thousands of troops to facilitate an airlift of American personnel and Afghans out of the capital, Kabul, into the United States or other countries.0.70
00:50:56.000And Biden is sticking to the timeline, saying, even though we redeployed, even though they are there to finish this airlift, we still want them all out by August 31st, which is a week from today.
00:51:06.000But he's facing immense pressure from America's allies and from the American national security apparatus.
00:51:13.000They say that they want American troops to remain in Afghanistan indefinitely until the airlift is completed.
00:51:33.000We should have withdrawn our troops later.
00:51:36.000And the problem is if you don't pull the plug and if you don't set a day and you don't say, I'm leaving by today, we will be there forever.
00:51:44.000Because that's what the government wants.
00:51:47.000The deep state wants us to be there forever.
00:51:49.000And so they can always come up with an excuse strategic, diplomatic, whatever.
00:51:55.000They can always come up with some reason why today is not a good day to leave.
00:52:44.000And like I said, I think this is maybe a setup from the start by the national security apparatus.
00:52:51.000They probably pulled out the troops first, and they messed it up deliberately so that they would cause this crisis, which would demand the troops come back and then stay.
00:52:58.000And once they stay past the deadline, it's like, well, what's another three months?
00:53:06.000It says, quote, U.S. President Joe Biden says the U.S. is on.
00:53:10.000Pace to meet an August 31st deadline for evacuations, despite previous calls from allies for an extension.
00:53:18.000He said, The sooner we finish, the better.
00:53:20.000Some American troops have already been withdrawn, although evacuations have not been affected.
00:53:25.000At least 70,700 people have been airlifted from Kabul, which fell to the Taliban nine days ago.
00:53:32.000The militants have opposed any extension of the evacuation deadline.
00:53:36.000President Biden said the Taliban have been taking steps to help get our people out, adding that the international community would judge the Taliban by their actions.
00:53:45.000He said, none of us are just going to take their word for it.
00:53:48.000Mr. Biden said the airlift had to come to end soon because of an increasing threat from the Islamic State group in Afghanistan.
00:53:57.000The longer the U.S. stays in the country, he said, there was an acute and growing risk of an attack by the group.
00:54:03.000He was speaking after leaders of the G7, which consists of Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, the U.K., the U.S., and the EU, discussed the Afghan crisis during a virtual meeting.
00:54:14.000The U.K. and other allies had urged the U.S. to stay beyond August 31st.
00:54:21.000UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson, who chaired the talk, said Britain would continue to evacuate people until the last moment.
00:54:28.000European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said the G7 leaders had agreed it is our moral duty to help the Afghan people and to provide as much support as conditions allow.
00:54:40.000Almost 6,000 U.S. soldiers and more than 1,000 from the U.K. were at Kabul airport to secure it and organize the evacuation of foreigners and eligible Afghans.
00:54:49.000Smaller contingents from other NATO members, including France, Germany, and Turkey, are also present.
00:54:54.000The airlift is being stepped up, with more than 21,000 people evacuated since Sunday.
00:55:00.000The departure of some U.S. troops ahead of the deadline does not affect the mission, according to a U.S. defense official.
00:55:10.000They're saying that we got to get these people out soon, or else ISIS will start killing them.
00:55:17.000And, like I said on Friday, man, I just don't trust it.
00:55:22.000And I really do believe that something is coming soon.
00:55:27.000Because, of course, what happens if between now and next week, ISIS kills an American soldier?0.59
00:55:33.000What happens if an American civilian dies for any reason, gets killed by the Taliban, dies in relation to the airlift, gets killed by ISIS?
00:55:59.000If an American civilian gets killed over there for any reason, they can blame it on ISIS, they can blame it on the Taliban, they can blame it on whoever they need to, and that will be the pretext for America to come back.
00:56:10.000And I'm alarmed in particular at this line about ISIS.
00:57:15.000It was the Assad regime with the help of Russia that was bombing ISIS.
00:57:18.000It was the Assad regime with Russia that was fighting back the Sunni terrorists, the Al Nusra Front, these kinds of groups, which are by no stretch allies of the United States or any better than anybody else for that matter.
00:57:31.000And really, the same goes in Yemen, too.
00:57:32.000You have Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula, same deal.
00:57:36.000Houthis, sponsored by Iran, are Shiite, you know, so it's similar over there, too.
00:57:40.000This is a story across the Middle East.
00:57:42.000But now they say, well, these ISIS militants are getting into Afghanistan, establishing a foothold.
00:57:49.000ISIS isn't establishing a foothold in Afghanistan.
00:57:52.000The media is establishing a foothold in the minds of Americans with this ISIS narrative.
00:57:57.000When they say ISIS is establishing a base, All they're doing is seeding the idea to the American public that Afghanistan could be used in the future as a base of operations for terrorists that attack Americans on American soil.
00:58:11.000The reason why it has to be ISIS is because ISIS inspires lone wolves in America.
00:58:17.000ISIS can do an attack in America, and that makes it our business.
00:59:01.000We have to send in special forces, both of which are far more popular.
00:59:05.000If you look at opinion polling on this, airstrikes and special forces are a far more popular menu option for the government than boots on the ground, than a full.0.93
00:59:17.000Occupation like we had in Iraq and Afghanistan, but that is what that's there for.
00:59:23.000And like I said, just based on what the media is saying, you could probably predict that there will be further U.S. involvement in the region, just on the basis of what they're saying.0.68
00:59:33.000Even if they don't get some kind of dead civilian in the next week that they can blame and they can say, well, these 7,000 troops just got to stay indefinitely.
00:59:42.000Even if that doesn't happen, you're going to see within the next couple of years, ISIS is back.0.83
01:00:41.000ISIS was eradicated after the U.S. stopped pursuing regime change in Syria.
01:00:47.000When the official policy of America was to remove Bashar al Assad in Syria, ISIS had control over a third of the country.
01:00:56.000When ISIS was being backed up by American Air Force, they were in control of a third of the country.
01:01:02.000In April 2017, when Nikki Haley and Rex Tillerson said it is no longer the policy of the United States to pursue regime change against Bashar al Assad, all of a sudden, ISIS was destroyed.
01:01:13.000Bombed to smithereens by the Russians, destroyed by the Assad regime, defeated in Iraq when America changed the rules of engagement, and people haven't heard of them for the past five years.
01:01:24.000Now that Biden is in charge, or whoever's behind him, now that the deep state is back in charge, Now that America's leaving Afghanistan and the rival Taliban takes over the government and they begin doing diplomacy with China, perhaps, or other countries, now all of a sudden ISIS comes back.
01:01:42.000And you start to realize that these kinds of groups, they are just a front.
01:01:47.000These groups are an extension of the U.S. government.
01:01:52.000These groups come in so that America has an excuse to follow them.
01:01:57.000And maybe you begin to unravel why terrorist attacks happen then.
01:02:01.000There weren't a whole lot of terrorist attacks under Trump either, were there?
01:02:05.000How many Muslim terror attacks have happened in the past three or four years, with few exceptions, compared to under the last four years of the Obama administration?
01:02:15.000Off the top of my head, in the Obama administration, I think about Nice, France.
01:03:15.000We'd be in a very different situation if the US government said, well, we need to invade so that we have troops there as a forward base against China.
01:06:49.000Gradually, I began to hate Australians and British.1.00
01:06:52.000The more that I see them on TikTok and these compilations where it's a video of gameplay and they're in like a voice party and they're talking to each other, telling jokes, the more that I hate Australians.1.00
01:07:08.000Have you ever seen this genre of content on TikTok or Instagram?
01:07:12.000Where it's like the video is somebody playing Grand Theft Auto or Minecraft or whatever, and it's like a bunch of dudes in a party on the game telling each other like edgy jokes and then laughing way too hard at them.
01:07:27.000I don't know if you know what I'm talking about, but every time I see that kind of stuff, it's like it makes you want to.
01:07:36.000You know what it makes you want to do.
01:07:39.000And that's the kind of energy that I'm getting from this.
01:08:04.000Prodigy says thoughts on IRL rallies against the vax mandate or promoting trucker strikes?
01:08:09.000Oddly enough, seems like it's happening everywhere except the Midwest.
01:08:12.000If not now, what time would be optimal?
01:08:15.000Yeah, I'm in favor of trucker strikes and protests.1.00
01:08:18.000Vita says women will never understand having a friendship where you can go in the span of minutes from banter and personal insults to defending that same person when someone else says similar things about them.0.97
01:08:28.000Hey, only I can be rude to my friend.0.96
01:08:59.000Not that I haven't had friends that are women, but that kind of like deep, abiding friendship, I just think that on some level, women just can't have it.1.00
01:09:11.000You know, you think about like men going to war together, you think about like partners in crime, you think about.1.00
01:09:19.000The mafia, stuff like that, political dissidents, a king, and like people in the court.1.00
01:09:29.000That's not to say that there's not treachery or backstabbing, but I just don't think women can understand that level of friendship because they don't really have that level of buy in.1.00
01:09:38.000I think that what is sort of necessary in the friendship is that you've sort of got something on the line and you're capable and responsible.0.96
01:09:47.000A woman, as a physical weakling and a weakling in other ways, is sort of taken care of.0.99
01:09:56.000And so, in that way, it's not really the same sort of reciprocal relationship.0.97
01:10:05.000Like, there's this sense of because, in a way, they are powerless, there's not really the power to be, you know.
01:10:16.000You don't have that stake, that buy in.
01:10:19.000It's not equivalent, it's not reciprocal.
01:10:22.000I think a woman, you know, has a sort of bond with her children, maybe that a father doesn't, maybe that a father doesn't necessarily have, but can have.0.95
01:10:31.000Because a woman is a caretaker of the children.
01:10:33.000You know, women have that connection with the child, but I feel like friendship is really more of a male thing.1.00
01:10:38.000I don't think anybody writes like ballads or odes to the friendship between women or between men and women.
01:10:45.000I mean, romance is one thing, which is, I think, the kind of state between men and women, but do people talk about the kind of like legendary friendship of like two women or like a woman and a man?
01:12:33.000Different combinations of, you know, what, molecules or atoms or whatever.
01:12:39.000And what difference does it make if you blow somebody's head off?
01:12:42.000You're just, you know, rearranging matter.
01:12:45.000Everything in that, in the, all the morality, if you could call it that, or ethics or anything of an atheist is completely subjective, completely, you know, contingent.
01:13:33.000And there's really no such thing, even then, as me and you or a person or anything like that because it's all, it's really just about where do you draw a dividing line, you know?0.93
01:13:46.000So, I mean, yeah, I would understand why an atheist would believe that.
01:13:49.000You don't believe in morality, you don't think that we have a moral universe.0.72
01:15:00.000And for the record, if it wasn't made clear earlier, I'm obviously against extermination because I'm against murder because I am a Christian.
01:15:07.000So, House of Usher says 45% of white evangelicals refuse to get the vaccine, making them the most anti vax group in the U.S., but only 21% of white Catholics refuse to get it, making them one of the most pro vax groups behind Jews and atheists.
01:15:24.000Why do you think this huge difference exists?
01:15:35.000A lot of Catholics are ethnics that live in cities and they are liberal.
01:15:41.000I mean, there's no, that's not a secret.
01:15:44.000Catholics are not as religious as other Christians, don't go to church as much.0.97
01:15:49.000They don't even believe in like the core main tenets of Catholicism.0.75
01:15:52.000There are a lot of pro choice Catholics, there are pro gay marriage Catholics, there are Catholics that don't believe in transubstantiation.
01:15:59.000So, a lot of Catholics have become liberal and are not, I mean, Really, you could even say practicing or believing Catholics.
01:16:10.000Whereas evangelicals tend to be more conservative and more religious, and they come from a more conservative part of the country.
01:17:13.000Peru says, I heard that based homeschool mom doesn't like you anymore because of her husband.0.95
01:17:17.000I always found it odd that a woman would call herself based.
01:17:20.000Yeah, I mean, it's unfortunate because she was a fan of the show and she super chatted the show a lot, but anybody with a brain could see where that was going.
01:17:31.000You know, and it's unfortunate because she was nice.
01:17:35.000You know, she was nice, and I think I met her at one of the Stop the Steals and everything.
01:17:41.000But, you know, you always knew where that was going.
01:17:44.000And it all went downhill when a few weeks ago, what did she say?
01:17:57.000And it's one of those things that's sort of uncomfortable because you don't want to be mean to somebody that's nice to you, but sometimes people are not being nice to be nice.
01:18:32.000And, you know, it's just, it's sad when that kind of stuff happens because, you know, it's clear that there was an ulterior motive there.
01:18:42.000Even if it wasn't conscious, even if it wasn't cognizantly like a charm offensive, it was.0.99
01:18:49.000And I've always said the problem with e girls and with, honestly, with anybody, people that want to be an e celebrity, they're, They're always toxic.0.95
01:18:59.000There's something so toxic about the wanting.0.98
01:22:10.000And it's sort of like people even trying to get rich.
01:22:14.000You know, people that get really rich, Bill Gates, I mean, I'm sure he likes money and I'm sure he's ambitious and everything, but he started out loving computers.
01:22:47.000And it's this wanting which necessarily makes people very toxic.1.00
01:22:52.000That's why I say specifically no e girls, because girls in particular are like.1.00
01:22:57.000Very lethal, you know, because guys fall in love with them.1.00
01:23:02.000And so it's particularly pernicious when a girl who has that streak, wanting, wanting to be famous, wanting to be, you know, to have opportunities, wanting to level up and climb rung after rung and seek status and everything, when a girl gets in the mix, that's so bad because people let her.0.98
01:23:23.000People let a girl use them as a stepping stone to go from one level to the next and to open doors and gain access and.0.99
01:24:55.000It's not bad if you want to be successful.
01:24:57.000There's nothing wrong with wanting to be successful.
01:25:00.000But, you know, even if you're being like ruthlessly pragmatic, even if you don't care about this stuff, At the minimum, you gotta be cooperative and you gotta just like shut the fuck up.
01:25:12.000And, like, I honestly have disdain for people that are bad at this because it's like, okay, maybe you are power hungry or money hungry or whatever.
01:25:23.000Even then, it's called finesse, you know?
01:25:27.000It's called, I don't know what you would even call that.
01:25:30.000It's called finesse, it's called tact.
01:25:34.000And, you know, basically, even if you're out for the wrong reasons, you still got to play it smart.
01:25:42.000And what I see all too often is a lot of people, they get a Big head, you know, they think who the hell they are, you know, whatever, and they just get sloppy and they get bad, you know.
01:25:52.000So, like, this based homeschool mom, she probably could have roped me into helping her with a lot more stuff, but her and her husband just couldn't control themselves.
01:26:11.000And the guy got a little too big for his britches.
01:26:14.000And now, you know, then, well, at one point they became a laughing stock, and I hope they enjoyed their.
01:26:18.00015 minutes, you know, all those super chats and time building the brand, all the spend it on some stupid remark made on Discord and some stream of Beardson on the Ralph retort.
01:26:29.000But I openly disdain people like that because it's like not only are you not in it for the right reasons, but you're not even good at doing it for the wrong reasons.
01:26:37.000I always hated Patrick for the same reason, to tell you the truth.
01:26:41.000I always disdained Patrick for the same reason because he thought he was in it for the wrong reasons and he thought he was so damn smart.
01:27:24.000And I just, honestly, what I never, what I, what I always sort of had contempt for him or looked down on him for was the fact that he thought that he was just two steps ahead of everybody.
01:27:36.000He was just calculating, cool customer.
01:28:28.000But the key, really the key, the key to being successful is humility.
01:28:34.000I always thought that people that were humble and people that paid it forward and that were kind, when I was like a teenager and I watched like House of Cards and I was doing Model UN, I thought those people were suckers.
01:28:48.000You know, I thought that the way that you really win is willing to do dirty things that people aren't willing to do.
01:28:55.000I mean, dirty, like, Like playing, like cheating, you know?
01:28:59.000And I never operated that way, but I always thought in my mind, like, well, if you got to get ahead, if you want to get ahead, you got to be ruthless.
01:29:07.000But, you know, for as long as I've been in this, I've always approached people and been a friend, and I've done, I've helped people without expecting things in return.
01:29:16.000I've helped people without keeping score.
01:29:35.000If you're cooperative with people, if you build good relationships, it's not to say you don't have to watch your back.
01:29:40.000It's not to say that you don't have to verify and everything.
01:29:43.000But generally speaking, it's a good policy to do things for people, be useful, do things and favors for other people and forget about it.
01:29:52.000And keep your word, have honor, be loyal, especially in this, especially in politics, especially in this kind of politics, in an enterprise like this.
01:30:03.000But really, in anything, it's a good policy.
01:30:31.000You know, like with Owen Benjamin, I never liked Owen Benjamin.
01:30:34.000And then he went totally off the deep end and attacked me and kind of proved why I didn't like him, but it was like, Okay, now I can attack him.
01:33:39.000Oh, but we think you're evil, basically.
01:33:41.000We think you're evil and you're spreading poison and you're poisoning the minds and we disagree on a foundational belief of your show, but we're just going to super chat and pretend to be nice so we could build our brand.
01:35:20.000St. Ambrose, the same thing happens to me whenever I step into a room.
01:35:23.000I'm so hulked up and shredded that the size large Ralph Loren Polo t shirt I'm wearing cannot even contain my sculpted form, God's purest creation.
01:36:02.000And now when I read the super chats, I can't get out of my head how funny it is that somewhere out there, some like 45 year old woman, lib shit, Woman in graduate school is sitting at her laptop or whatever, folding laundry or making dinner with this in the background.0.59
01:36:20.000And she has to listen to me talk for like hours about, like, well, I don't drink because, well, why don't I drink?
01:36:26.000Is it because I'm autistic or is it because, and all the rest.
01:36:55.000They're watching Nick Fuentes in grad school.
01:37:01.000Ethel Red says Have you heard of the placebo theory, where for all the people not having adverse reactions to the vaccine are not getting the vaccine, but a placebo while everyone actually getting the vaccine are always getting seriously harmed?
01:37:28.000Whilst everyone actually getting the vaccine, what you said doesn't make sense.
01:37:34.000Have you heard of the placebo theory, where for all the people not having adverse reactions to the vaccine, they are not getting the vaccine?
01:37:43.000People that are not having adverse reactions to the vaccine that they didn't get are not getting the vaccine.
01:37:51.000But, conjunction, a placebo while everyone actually getting the vaccine are actually getting seriously harmed.
01:38:30.000Special provisions of U.S. foreign aid to Israel.
01:38:34.000Israel gets to spend 25% of U.S. military aid on their own defense industry, which is a provision no other country gets.
01:38:44.000Every other country has to spend all their aid money on American defense contractors.
01:38:49.000Israel gets their foreign aid as a lump sum at the beginning of the year, which we have to borrow money to give them that much at the beginning of the year.
01:38:57.000Every other country doesn't get it as a lump sum.
01:40:08.000He kept saying, You know, five countries get more aid than Israel.
01:40:13.000And he said that, like, throughout the debate.
01:40:15.000And then at one point, because it was never directly addressed, I said, Hey, and I'm just going to take some time, you know, because I just kept getting asked questions.
01:40:24.000I was like, And also, I just want to clarify, and I want to ask Robert, what countries are getting more foreign aid than Israel?
01:40:29.000Because as far as I know, since 1978, Israel's gotten more military aid than any other country in the world.
01:40:36.000They're number one, and they have been for 40 years.
01:40:38.000And the next two countries are countries that have been paid off since they made peace agreements with Israel.
01:40:44.000And those countries are Egypt since the Camp David Accords and Jordan since the early 90s.
01:40:50.000And after that, he never, he didn't address it and then never brought it up again.
01:40:54.000Kept saying it and then he never brought it up again.
01:47:00.000Silent generation, basin red pilled boomers, you know, each generation is successively more liberal.1.00
01:47:07.000So, you know, we want to be bringing in new people that are like new on planet Earth so that they go to college and they infiltrate and they're Groypers for life for 80 years, you know?1.00
01:47:27.000And they're afraid of that because they know that the youth is the future.
01:47:29.000And, you know, they can laugh at one young patriot or whoever, Latino Zumer and some of these other guys at CPAC, and they can say, oh, that was bad optics.
01:47:39.000Nick Fuentes and all these teenagers, that's good optics.0.94
01:47:46.000These are people that are going to go into college and go into politics, and they'll be fighting for the Groyper cause for 100 years, maybe longer.
01:47:54.000You know, I'll take young over old any day of the week.
01:47:57.000You know, in terms of political followers, I'll take the youth over the elderly any day of the week.
01:48:05.000And it's not to say that we don't like the elderly or they're worth less as people or anything like that, but we want energy.
01:48:34.000And the people that turned out were it was a lot of old people.0.70
01:48:39.000And when she went to AFPAC, it was all like college kids.0.95
01:48:43.000And it's not like one's better than the other necessarily, but when she was at AFPAC 1 and AFPAC 2, the place was electric.
01:48:50.000You know, the crowd went crazy when she got up there.
01:48:53.000And it was like when we were in AFPAC 1, it felt like the room was shaking because it was so loud.
01:48:57.000And, you know, you had people that had their whole life ahead of them and people that were doing exciting things in college and college Republicans, people working on the Hill, people working in politics, people in high school, whatever.
01:49:19.000If you think the botched withdrawal from Afghanistan was on purpose, will the Taliban now act as another proxy force like ISIS or Al Qaeda now that they have all the leftover U.S. arms?
01:49:39.000I don't know to what extent that we do.
01:49:40.000Maybe it's honestly the extent of our control there.
01:49:44.000It's possible, but I don't think it's true.
01:49:46.000Slappy says Even after hearing you say that the problem with super chats is that people try too hard, people still decide to do some clever joke.
01:55:41.000Contrary to popular belief about your girlfriend or your wife as your best friend, and you got to confide and cry and be vulnerable and all that, it's literally like the opposite.
01:55:53.000It's like having a pet dragon or a lion or something.
01:55:56.000It's like they're going to, not like physically, because you could obviously beat the shit out of them, but like with the way the system is set up, they could rip you in half at any time, literally with your assets or whatever else.
01:57:15.000Entropy User says L.S. Spurg in chat is butthurt that you lumped him or her with traitors for taking the facts, that his or her boomer parents forced him or two.0.68
01:57:25.000L. Spurg, I don't even know who that is, but I don't care.
01:57:29.000Brian says, Nick, when you do something you love, you never work a day in your life.
02:04:32.000I did like a Google search the day before.
02:04:34.000I wrote my white paper and black paper the day before it was due.
02:04:37.000And I would show up and just sort of like sprawl out and, you know, get an idea of what was going on, get on speakers list, propose a moderated caucus, whatever.
02:04:55.000I get in, I size up the crowd, I see, you know, what people are thinking, and then I get to work.
02:05:03.000But this guy comes in, and he's, you know, all prepared, and his suit is so clean and nice, and he's got the trendy brown shoes with the navy suit.
02:05:16.000And I beat his fucking ass because he.
02:05:20.000I mean, he did a lot of research, but he wasn't using his personal powers very well.0.57
02:05:26.000So, that was always my favorite, especially beating these Southerners, because, you know, these down south folksy tops, they have, like, nothing better to do, apparently, because they live in a town of, like, two people.0.53
02:05:40.000Like, roll around in the mud or whatever?
02:05:42.000So, all they had to do was speech team, model UN.
02:05:45.000In all the extracurriculars, they were way more prepared every time.
02:05:49.000You know, because that's all they have to do.
02:05:52.000Every contest I've ever been in, like a statewide contest or anything from like Illinois or where there's people from the South, they're always the most prepared.
02:06:00.000And their parents are, you know, their parents are involved and they've, you know, because that's all they got to do.
02:06:09.000So, I always took a special pleasure, a special pleasure in looking at these, you know, down south folksy types, you know, who really did everything they were supposed to do, but still couldn't win, you know, because they would.
02:06:25.000They would prepare, they would do it the conventional way, the way that you're supposed to, and they'd practice, they worked their little fingers to the bone, and then I'd go in there and I'd do some trick.
02:06:35.000I would just, like in Speech Team, I remember I made it to finals and extemporaneous.
02:06:41.000And there was this girl from Southern Illinois, and she gave her speech, and it was on a technical level a very good speech.
02:06:48.000But I came in, I had a very funny joke in my intro.
02:07:33.000This was the method in Model UN, and I brought that to the speech team, you know.
02:07:36.000There was a distinctive Chicago school in Model UN because the Chicago International Conference was run by this guy, Sue Hale, who was Indian, who we knew.
02:07:46.000And they designed the rules at that conference to be different than any other conference.
02:07:50.000If you go on the East or West Coast, you get a different set of rules.
02:07:53.000And what they incentivize is consensus building, and the rules are built around that.
02:07:58.000The rules are built around passing one resolution, taking everyone's ideas into account, and compromising.
02:08:05.000But Chicago is different because all the schools in Chicago, their big national conference was the Chicago International Mon Conference, run by.
02:08:45.000And they rewarded you based on how well you were able to.
02:08:48.000Be an effective representative of your country's interest.
02:08:52.000And so, because that was their rules and that was our conference, that shaped all the schools in our area.
02:09:00.000So, all the schools in our area, when they hosted their one day conferences, it was like that.
02:09:04.000And so, we came up with a very different kind of an outlook, which is really based on sort of like wheeling and dealing and that kind of thing, as opposed to, you know, pre writing speeches, pre writing resolutions, you know, being meticulous and technical.
02:09:38.000I don't hate Southerners, but there's something about this, like, you know, there's something about it which was just irritating to me that they would come and, you know, they were so polite and they were so prepared.
02:09:59.000But yeah, they would come in and they would, it was basically like a distilled version of everything that I didn't like about school and model UN, which is going through the motions, checking the boxes, process.
02:10:12.000I wanted results, you know, I wanted victory and I wanted to pass resolutions and I wanted to break the competition, you know, poison pill resolutions, embarrass people.
02:10:23.000We would get physical, we'd push people around.
02:10:27.000One of my, I was in a double delegation once, and I think I've told the story.
02:10:31.000A few times we were in the security council, me and my buddy, and he played rugby and he was like a huge guy.
02:10:38.000I went up and distracted the chair while he, like, he ran into some guy and like knocked him on the ground.
02:10:48.000I went up to the chair and I'm like, Hey, and I held up my paper.
02:10:50.000I'm like, Hey, so what do you think about this?
02:10:53.000And he came like barreling down the aisle and smashed into this guy.