America First - Nicholas J. Fuentes - August 24, 2021


FOREVER WAR - Biden Pressured to RETURN to Afghanistan | America First Ep. 866


Episode Stats


Length

2 hours and 14 minutes

Words per minute

170.33

Word count

22,881

Sentence count

1,990

Harmful content

Misogyny

40

sentences flagged

Hate speech

231

sentences flagged


Summary

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

Transcript

Transcripts from "America First - Nicholas J. Fuentes" are sourced from the Knowledge Fight Interactive Search Tool. Explore them interactively here.
Misogyny classifications generated with MilaNLProc/bert-base-uncased-ear-misogyny .
Hate speech classifications generated with facebook/roberta-hate-speech-dynabench-r4-target .
00:00:01.000 Good evening, everybody.
00:00:03.000 You are watching America First.
00:00:04.000 My name is Nicholas J. Fuentes.
00:00:06.000 We have a great show for you tonight.
00:00:08.000 Very excited to be back with you here tonight on Tuesday.
00:00:12.000 We have a lot to talk about, a lot to get into tonight.
00:00:16.000 Pretty slow news day.
00:00:18.000 Not going to lie.
00:00:19.000 Pretty slow news week.
00:00:21.000 Summer.
00:00:22.000 Congress is in recess.
00:00:24.000 The war is over.
00:00:26.000 There's no new wars.
00:00:28.000 There's no new riots.
00:00:29.000 Everyone's locked down again.
00:00:31.000 So it's like.
00:00:32.000 Nothing's even going on.
00:00:33.000 Nothing's even happening in the country.
00:00:37.000 But it's Tuesday, so we have to talk about something.
00:00:43.000 Our featured story is about Afghanistan.
00:00:46.000 I'm getting sick of it.
00:00:47.000 I'm sick of the war, and now I'm sick of the end of the war. 0.96
00:00:51.000 I want a new war. 1.00
00:00:52.000 I'm ready for a new war against Iran or China. 0.98
00:00:55.000 When's China going to take Taiwan? 1.00
00:00:57.000 Now, that would be a good news day. 1.00
00:00:58.000 Now, that would be fun.
00:01:01.000 Joking, of course.
00:01:02.000 Tonight, our featured story is about Afghanistan and the withdrawal drags on.
00:01:08.000 Joe Biden is under mounting pressure to extend the deadline for a complete withdrawal of American troops.
00:01:15.000 The deadline is supposed to be August 31st, which is coming up very quickly.
00:01:20.000 But 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.
00:01:33.000 We're supposed to have them out by August 31st, and Joe Biden.
00:01:37.000 Says, and this is what he says.
00:01:39.000 I'm not saying this is him.
00:01:41.000 I'm not saying he's coherent, you know, that he's all the way there.
00:01:44.000 Because I got to be careful.
00:01:46.000 Some people don't understand this.
00:01:48.000 I'm merely reporting, you know, what is being told, what is being told to us from the government, right?
00:01:57.000 We're being told that Joe Biden wants to get all the troops out by August 31st.
00:02:01.000 He wants to keep the deadline.
00:02:03.000 But all these other interventionist forces, they want us to have an open ended commitment to keep troops there until. 0.99
00:02:11.000 All of these Afghans are evacuated. 0.84
00:02:14.000 But as we discussed recently, they want to evacuate like hundreds of thousands of people.
00:02:20.000 They want to evacuate personnel. 0.99
00:02:22.000 They want to evacuate refugees. 1.00
00:02:23.000 They want to evacuate collaborators, translators. 1.00
00:02:27.000 They want to evacuate a massive part of the population in Kabul off of one tiny airport. 0.97
00:02:34.000 And I don't think they're close to being finished with this.
00:02:37.000 And so as a result, people are saying this gives us a reason to stay in there well past the deadline.
00:02:43.000 The Taliban, though, is saying.
00:02:46.000 Whether or not you want to leave, you're going to leave on August 31st.
00:02:49.000 The Taliban says you're out of here by August 31st because we're in charge now.
00:02:54.000 So it's very interesting how all these different people disagree on the timeline.
00:02:59.000 It's what I said last week.
00:03:01.000 I think I said this on Friday or Thursday.
00:03:04.000 The last time we talked about Afghanistan, I think it was Friday. 0.59
00:03:09.000 I 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.
00:03:19.000 You know, maybe from the beginning, when people say this was a botched withdrawal, Biden totally mishandled it.
00:03:25.000 They evacuated the troops and then the personnel?
00:03:29.000 I mean, that makes no sense.
00:03:31.000 In other words, the soldiers and then the translators?
00:03:33.000 Why would you do it in that order?
00:03:35.000 Well, maybe that was all part of the plan.
00:03:37.000 Maybe that was designed.
00:03:40.000 And 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.
00:03:48.000 Guess we're going to be there for a long time.
00:03:51.000 And now you've got over 7,000.
00:03:54.000 Coalition 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.
00:04:04.000 So we'll talk about all of that.
00:04:05.000 It's kind of interesting how this is unfolding and developing.
00:04:08.000 I said from the beginning, I said I would not be surprised if the war did not end anytime soon because that's how this goes every time.
00:04:17.000 And this is the last thing I'll say before we jump on to our next story.
00:04:22.000 What's curious, and I said this before, pay very close attention to what they say in the news because I'm hearing.
00:04:28.000 Some very specific things.
00:04:30.000 Number one, they're talking about a threat to American personnel.
00:04:35.000 They're saying that American personnel can no longer get safely to the airport because of threat from ISIS and from the Taliban.
00:04:43.000 So pay very close attention to that.
00:04:45.000 The 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.
00:05:00.000 They say that ISIS K is gaining a foothold in Taliban occupied Afghanistan.
00:05:05.000 Not only are they a threat to American civilians trying to get out of the country, but they're also gaining a foothold.
00:05:11.000 And their presence is growing. 0.76
00:05:14.000 Never forget that ISIS was an invention of the CIA, the US government, the state of Israel.
00:05:21.000 And 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
00:05:30.000 Now, as American troops are set to leave the country on August 31st, they're all over Afghanistan.
00:05:37.000 We haven't heard of them for five or six years.
00:05:39.000 So we'll get into all that.
00:05:42.000 Quite the coincidence.
00:05:44.000 We'll also be talking tonight about the vaccine.
00:05:46.000 In particular, I want to talk about Israel.
00:05:49.000 There was a big news report today about Israel, which is the most vaccinated country in the world.
00:05:54.000 More than 80% of their population, age 12 and up, is fully vaccinated, double dosed.
00:06:02.000 In spite of this, however, They are having tens of thousands of new cases of COVID every day.
00:06:09.000 And this is a big problem for the public health experts and the medical people and the doctors and the World Health Organization and Pfizer.
00:06:19.000 80% of the Israeli population has been double dosed with Pfizer, which just got full FDA approval.
00:06:26.000 And Pfizer is supposed to be the so called gold standard of immunization.
00:06:30.000 It's an mRNA vaccine, and they say this is the most effective one. 0.99
00:06:35.000 Well, Israel has the most.
00:06:37.000 The highest percentage of their population vaccinated, double dosed, with the best vaccine out of anybody else in the world.
00:06:45.000 And yet they're experiencing another massive surge of the coronavirus.
00:06:49.000 And this has prompted them now to lock the country down again for a fourth time.
00:06:55.000 They're changing the mandatory vaccine pass to now require everybody to have three shots in order to get it.
00:07:03.000 They call it the green pass.
00:07:05.000 And their green pass is a vaccine passport.
00:07:08.000 They now say you can't get the green pass unless you're triple dosed, unless you get the booster shot.
00:07:13.000 And they say now the green pass expires after six months.
00:07:17.000 So in Israel, all the populations got the mRNA, Pfizer vaccine double dosed.
00:07:25.000 The pandemic came back, locked the country down again.
00:07:29.000 Vaccine passports are now expired.
00:07:31.000 They 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.
00:07:42.000 So, what do you do in a country like that?
00:07:43.000 They 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
00:07:51.000 Well, Israel did all of that, and the pandemic is still there. 0.88
00:07:55.000 So, how do you go out now in America or other countries and say, well, we just need to get those numbers up? 0.99
00:08:01.000 We just need to get a higher percentage.
00:08:03.000 We just need to get more booster shots.
00:08:05.000 It's not working. 1.00
00:08:06.000 And Israel's, ironically, the prime example. 0.98
00:08:10.000 So, we'll talk about that, too.
00:08:12.000 It should be a pretty good show.
00:08:14.000 Lots of news, lots of exciting things.
00:08:16.000 Before we get into that, a reminder to follow me on Telegram and Gab.
00:08:21.000 And the links are down below.
00:08:22.000 Telegram is t.meslash nickjfuentes.
00:08:26.000 Excuse me, I almost burped there.
00:08:28.000 Gab is gab.com slash real Nick J. Fuentes.
00:08:32.000 I'm trying to get on Getter, but I can't get my username.
00:08:36.000 My username is reserved.
00:08:37.000 I tried to get on Getter, which is, what's his name?
00:08:40.000 Jason.
00:08:43.000 What's his name?
00:08:44.000 It's not Jason Alexander.
00:08:45.000 That's the Seinfeld actor.
00:08:47.000 What the hell's his name?
00:08:49.000 Jason.
00:08:51.000 Anyway, I don't know.
00:08:52.000 It's one of Trump's, I think it's Trump's social media guy.
00:08:56.000 The name escapes me right now.
00:08:58.000 It'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.
00:09:07.000 Anyway, I tried to get on there this weekend and I went to go and register my account.
00:09:12.000 I put in my desired username, which is Nick J. Fuentes.
00:09:16.000 But because that username was verified on Twitter, because Nick J. Fuentes was my verified Twitter account on Twitter, it's reserved on Getter.
00:09:25.000 So you can't just take it.
00:09:28.000 So, 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.
00:09:42.000 So, 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.
00:09:58.000 But I can't do that because I'm banned on Twitter.
00:10:00.000 So, I was calling up some of my friends in the Trump administration, like, hey, does anybody know anyone that works at Getter?
00:10:06.000 Hey, could you put me in touch with customer service or something?
00:10:09.000 Like, what am I supposed to do?
00:10:12.000 I tried Groyper.
00:10:13.000 That's taken.
00:10:14.000 That's taken.
00:10:14.000 Nick Fuentes.
00:10:17.000 So, anyway, so I'm trying to get on Getter, too.
00:10:20.000 Okay.
00:10:21.000 With that out of the way, we'll dive into the show.
00:10:23.000 There's really not much else to talk about, not any pressing news.
00:10:28.000 We started a Minecraft server.
00:10:30.000 Well, I'll say UX Groyper.
00:10:32.000 Who's a friend of the show?
00:10:34.000 He started a Minecraft server, which we've all been playing on.
00:10:37.000 So I'm a little late today.
00:10:38.000 I was playing Minecraft all day, building my base, and I think I might stream it after the show.
00:10:46.000 I don't know.
00:10:48.000 I have a lot of work to do, which I should be doing that, but I really want to stream on the new Minecraft server.
00:10:53.000 So I'm going to have to make a decision.
00:10:55.000 But anyway, we have a Minecraft server.
00:11:00.000 I don't know where you can find out more information.
00:11:02.000 Sorry.
00:11:03.000 Maybe someone will say something in the live chat, but we have a.
00:11:06.000 Regular server where friends of the show can join, and then we have a server for streamers, and it's all the streamers playing on there.
00:11:14.000 So I'm on there, Jaden is out there.
00:11:16.000 Jake Lloyd's been playing, which is nice because he never plays with us.
00:11:16.000 Excuse me.
00:11:20.000 Beardson, Dalton, Trey, and some other people are joining.
00:11:25.000 Joe the Boomer.
00:11:26.000 I'm trying to think who else was on there the other day, but we have a lot of people on there.
00:11:31.000 It's a lot of fun.
00:11:32.000 So, like I said, I might be streaming that later tonight or later this week, but.
00:11:37.000 Kind of like a fun community event, so maybe you'll get a glimpse at that later this week.
00:11:42.000 Also, one other big development.
00:11:44.000 So, I said last week that we were testing the platform this week.
00:11:48.000 We are, but it's a private test.
00:11:50.000 Just an update on that because I know people have been asking me.
00:11:53.000 They're like, hey, so when's that private test or when's the test?
00:11:57.000 So I said last week we were going to begin testing the platform.
00:12:01.000 So 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.
00:12:15.000 So I said last week we'd begin testing it this week and we are testing it this week.
00:12:20.000 But it's private tests.
00:12:21.000 Because I called up our main developer this weekend and I was like, hey, so what's the plan for this test?
00:12:27.000 You know, how's this going to work?
00:12:29.000 And he's like, oh, well, I'm like, what exactly are we testing?
00:12:33.000 He's like, well, we're really just testing to see.
00:12:35.000 I don't want to go into specifics, but basically testing to see if other streamers can go online.
00:12:41.000 We don't need people to watch the stream, we just need to test the capability.
00:12:44.000 So I was like, well, let's just do it privately.
00:12:47.000 So we're working through that and we should be ready for a beta launch.
00:12:52.000 Sooner than you think, sooner than you think.
00:12:54.000 I 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.
00:13:05.000 And 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.
00:13:14.000 It's been a long year.
00:13:15.000 It's been a long year trying to get all that set up.
00:13:18.000 We've come a long way.
00:13:19.000 Something that's been in development for, it'll be two years in December.
00:13:25.000 But we're finally getting close.
00:13:27.000 So we're really excited about that.
00:13:29.000 So sit tight, hang tight.
00:13:31.000 I know it's been a long year.
00:13:32.000 DLive, I mean, it was a nice place to be.
00:13:35.000 It wasn't the best platform.
00:13:37.000 The people there sucked, but it was a place where we were all there together.
00:13:40.000 And now we're all scattered.
00:13:41.000 You know, now Jaden streams on YouTube and Vincent Beardson stream on Trovo.
00:13:47.000 And some people just stopped streaming because of all the turmoil.
00:13:52.000 So.
00:13:54.000 Getting everybody on the same platform is going to be a huge deal, and we're getting very, very close.
00:13:59.000 Like I said, we're going to be testing for a little while.
00:14:02.000 We're going to do a beta launch.
00:14:03.000 And then, like I said, before the end of the year, we should have before, not like, okay, New Year's Eve, everyone's on.
00:14:09.000 We should, before the end of the year, I think, be able to have everybody on there.
00:14:13.000 So, last quarter of this year should be there.
00:14:17.000 Anyway, so very exciting stuff, but we're going to dive into the news here, and we'll talk about the latest.
00:14:26.000 Our first story is about the vaccine because that's the only thing that's happening, you know?
00:14:31.000 It's the end of the world.
00:14:33.000 Everyone's getting vaxxed up.
00:14:36.000 Everyone's dying from this vaccine.
00:14:38.000 People are dropping like flies.
00:14:40.000 They get the vaccine, then they die.
00:14:43.000 And it's not even a joke.
00:14:45.000 And I would feel safer taking drugs than I would feel taking the vaccine, honestly.
00:14:49.000 I mean, it's just so, I can't even fathom how people are considering.
00:14:55.000 Taking the vaccine.
00:14:56.000 I was talking to my parents the other day and they were saying how all our family friends got vaccinated.
00:15:01.000 All our neighborhood friends are vaccinated.
00:15:05.000 And I would literally do cocaine before I would do a vaccine.
00:15:10.000 I would do meth.
00:15:11.000 I would do heroin, whatever.
00:15:13.000 And you know me, I've never touched an illicit substance.
00:15:16.000 I've never had a sip of alcohol.
00:15:18.000 I've never smoked a cigarette, a cigar, vape, anything.
00:15:22.000 And I hate that stuff.
00:15:24.000 I mean, I'm totally averse to medical procedures, injections.
00:15:27.000 Anything that causes like a physiological change.
00:15:31.000 I hate that stuff.
00:15:32.000 But 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.
00:15:40.000 Now, it could be laced with something or whatever, but you understand what I'm saying.
00:15:44.000 At least we know what heroin is.
00:15:46.000 At least we know what meth is.
00:15:48.000 It's not good for you, but we know what it is.
00:15:50.000 This vaccine, I don't know what the hell this is.
00:15:53.000 It's Frankenstein.
00:15:55.000 They're injecting genetic material into your blood, goes into your cells, and creates poison in your body.
00:16:00.000 I mean, it literally creates poison throughout your blood, goes into your brain, in your heart, through your liver.
00:16:10.000 What a nightmare.
00:16:11.000 And it's lots of poison.
00:16:12.000 I mean, I told you the other week, I think I read something about how it's a big dose.
00:16:18.000 It's a lot of mRNA being injected, and it's creating a lot of.
00:16:21.000 Spike proteins.
00:16:24.000 They're even talking about creating a vaccine to inoculate you from the vaccine. 0.68
00:16:28.000 Real quick, I want to read this story before we move on.
00:16:30.000 Our story is about Israel.
00:16:32.000 But first, just to impress this upon you, I saw this.
00:16:35.000 This was on Revolver.
00:16:38.000 And it's a study about a therapeutic or a vaccine that they're trying to develop to help people who got the vaccine.
00:16:49.000 In other words, they want to make a vaccine.
00:16:52.000 For the vaccine.
00:16:53.000 There's a pandemic, so they give you a vax to make you healthy.
00:16:57.000 Well, the vax is making people sick worse than the disease.
00:17:01.000 So 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.
00:17:11.000 So 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.
00:17:24.000 That's supposed to treat sickness from the vaccine.
00:17:27.000 This is what it says.
00:17:29.000 It 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.
00:17:50.000 We term this new pathogenic mechanism antibody dependent auto attack.
00:17:56.000 This study explores a drug candidate for prevention and treatment of such ADAA diseases.
00:18:05.000 It says the formulation has the potential to prevent and treat the serious conditions caused by pathogenic antibodies during a COVID infection.
00:18:13.000 In 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.
00:18:27.000 The formulation will be helpful in increasing the safety of the vaccines without reducing the vaccine's efficacy.
00:18:34.000 Okay?
00:18:35.000 So, how insane is this?
00:18:37.000 How insane is everything?
00:18:39.000 COVID 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.
00:18:50.000 And 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.
00:19:01.000 But we have to do that out of an abundance of caution.
00:19:03.000 You can't leave your house.
00:19:04.000 You can't go to school.
00:19:05.000 We're going to put up plexiglass barriers in front of every counter so you can't hear anybody.
00:19:10.000 Also proven not to work.
00:19:11.000 But we have to do that out of an abundance of caution.
00:19:14.000 Everybody has to wear a mask, which makes you sick.
00:19:17.000 Your mouth has more bacteria than anywhere else in your body.
00:19:20.000 And you're breathing that out into fabric and breathing it in, rebreathing that all day.
00:19:26.000 It's a petri dish of filth.
00:19:29.000 Doesn't work.
00:19:30.000 As many studies have shown, it doesn't work.
00:19:33.000 But we have to do it out of due diligence.
00:19:36.000 We have to get two doses of mRNA gene editing vaccine.
00:19:40.000 Vaccine doesn't work because you could still get sick, still transmit, still go to the hospital, still die.
00:19:46.000 But arguably, it lessens the symptoms in some populations, but it does wear off after six months.
00:19:53.000 But we have to do it out of an abundance of caution.
00:19:56.000 The vaccine makes people sick.
00:19:58.000 Now, 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.
00:20:09.000 And it's like, at what point do you say, Just give me the virus already.
00:20:13.000 Just let me fucking get sick.
00:20:15.000 Can you just let me get sick?
00:20:17.000 Let's just let everybody get sick.
00:20:19.000 Wouldn't that be so much easier?
00:20:21.000 What are we even doing here?
00:20:23.000 None of what we're doing is working.
00:20:25.000 And not only is none of what we're doing working, but everything that we're doing is making people worse.
00:20:30.000 They're getting sick and they're experiencing other worse things depression, drug abuse, suicide, and other mental illness from the lockdown.
00:20:43.000 People are getting sick from the masks.
00:20:45.000 People are getting sick because they don't go to checkups at the doctor.
00:20:48.000 People are getting myocarditis and blood clotting from the vaccine.
00:20:54.000 And there's an economic recession and inflation.
00:20:57.000 And then people get COVID all day long, regardless.
00:21:02.000 I mean, what are we doing?
00:21:03.000 I'd prefer to just get the COVID.
00:21:05.000 I'd prefer to just get the COVID and not the lockdown, not the mask, not the vaccine, not the drug to help people with the vaccine.
00:21:12.000 Just give me the virus at that point.
00:21:14.000 You know what?
00:21:14.000 Give me the virus and the heroin.
00:21:18.000 And I think we're in good shape, right?
00:21:20.000 Anyway, so that's that.
00:21:23.000 But I want to move on.
00:21:24.000 I just thought that was just mind blowing, right?
00:21:27.000 It's mind blowing how the goalposts shift every day, and every day it's something else.
00:21:31.000 And the refrain that comes from these people all day long is trust the experts.
00:21:36.000 Do what you're told.
00:21:37.000 People are dying, so put the society ahead of the individual and trust the experts.
00:21:44.000 And there was an episode of the Bill Amar show the other day. 0.58
00:21:49.000 Where Bill Maher was arguing with this Jewish congressman, and Bill Maher said, I don't want to get a booster shot.
00:21:54.000 I don't need one.
00:21:55.000 I'm not a vulnerable population.
00:21:58.000 And the Jewish congressman said, You know, you're trying to be cute, but it's so dangerous what you're saying.
00:22:03.000 You don't have medical autonomy.
00:22:05.000 We have to trust our experts.
00:22:07.000 It is so important that we don't undermine their credibility.
00:22:11.000 And it's like, Okay, but they're full of shit.
00:22:13.000 I mean, you see it every day.
00:22:14.000 But this is the refrain do what you're told, don't question it, even if it doesn't make sense.
00:22:20.000 Even if it doesn't feel right, even though none of this adds up, the evidence is against it.
00:22:26.000 And this is just some summary of a report I think that was done in China or something about, or maybe it's just Chinese doctors.
00:22:34.000 I just look at all these Chinese names.
00:22:34.000 I don't know.
00:22:36.000 I said, oh, it's from China.
00:22:38.000 But there are doctors talking about prescribing a drug to help with the vaccine.
00:22:42.000 But this is just a supplemental story.
00:22:43.000 The big story is about Israel.
00:22:46.000 And 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.
00:22:53.000 We 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.
00:23:03.000 If we're supposed to hypothesize, you know, does the vaccine work?
00:23:07.000 Does this epidemiological response from the government, is this an effective way to respond to the virus?
00:23:13.000 Well, let's do a controlled experiment.
00:23:15.000 Let'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.
00:23:25.000 So let's look at this scientifically.
00:23:27.000 Israel is a country.
00:23:29.000 It's the highest country, or it's the country with the highest percentage of vaccinated people over the age of 12 in the world.
00:23:35.000 More than 80% of the population over that age is double dosed with Pfizer.
00:23:42.000 And according to the medical experts, Pfizer, which is an mRNA vaccine, is the gold standard.
00:23:48.000 That's what they say.
00:23:49.000 It's a gold standard of COVID vaccines, it's the most effective.
00:23:53.000 So you've got a country where almost the whole population, higher than herd immunity, has the best vaccine double dosed.
00:24:01.000 The problem, though, and this is the big story today, and this is what people that have been monitoring COVID have been looking at.
00:24:08.000 Is that in spite of this fact, compared to other countries, Israel is still having big outbreaks of the coronavirus.
00:24:15.000 And you might think, how is that possible?
00:24:17.000 If 80% of the population is vaccinated, who is giving them the disease?
00:24:25.000 If 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?
00:24:37.000 It's a question that doctors can't answer.
00:24:40.000 But their response is the same as it always is.
00:24:43.000 They're going to enter another lockdown.
00:24:45.000 Everyone's going to get a third shot.
00:24:47.000 And in order to have an exemption for the lockdown, which is your vaccine passport, you now have to have a third booster shot.
00:24:54.000 And your renewed vaccine passport will expire after six months, after which you get another vaccine.
00:25:02.000 And this is supposed to go on indefinitely, apparently.
00:25:05.000 So 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.
00:25:17.000 Ooh, it's so complicated.
00:25:18.000 This is really tricky stuff.
00:25:21.000 In June, there were several days with zero new COVID infections in Israel.
00:25:25.000 The 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.
00:25:38.000 COVID, most Israelis thought, had been defeated. 0.95
00:25:41.000 All restrictions were lifted, and Israelis went back to crowded partying. 0.90
00:25:46.000 And praying in mask free venues. 0.90
00:25:49.000 Fast 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.
00:26:08.000 More than 350 people have died of the disease in the first three weeks of August.
00:26:14.000 In a Sunday press conference, the directors of seven public hospitals.
00:26:18.000 Announced that they could no longer admit any more coronavirus patients.
00:26:23.000 With 670 COVID patients requiring critical care, their wards are overflowing and staff are at a breaking point.
00:26:32.000 So, 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.
00:26:49.000 Ever, ever in the country before they even had a vaccine, before one person had been vaccinated, before they even locked the country down.
00:26:57.000 Worst daily total ever after two months after 80% of the population had been vaccinated.
00:27:06.000 After they were reporting zero new cases every day.
00:27:10.000 Does that not put it in perspective?
00:27:13.000 Like I said, it's not just that they didn't defeat the virus, it's not just that it isn't zero new cases per day.
00:27:21.000 It's not just an outbreak.
00:27:23.000 It's their worst daily total.
00:27:25.000 More people are getting sick.
00:27:27.000 It's a higher rate than ever in a year and a half of the pandemic.
00:27:32.000 Irrespective of lockdown or not lockdown, vaccine is finished or not, what percentage of people are vaccinated?
00:27:39.000 Worst numbers ever.
00:27:43.000 So the vaccine works, right?
00:27:45.000 But we're told the vaccine works.
00:27:48.000 Coronavirus czar, Dr. Salman Zarka, told the Israeli parliament this week I don't want to frighten you, but this is the data.
00:27:56.000 Unfortunately, the numbers don't lie.
00:27:58.000 The complex.
00:27:59.000 It's complex.
00:28:01.000 And sobering truth is that no single policy or event brought Israel to this crisis, says the article.
00:28:08.000 Says Haggai Levine, a Hebrew University of Jerusalem professor of epidemiology.
00:28:15.000 A 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.
00:28:27.000 Go figure.
00:28:28.000 He said all the vectors have influenced the rise in morbidity.
00:28:32.000 But 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
00:28:54.000 That's why. 0.51
00:28:55.000 It'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
00:29:01.000 It's so complicated.
00:29:02.000 This is complex.
00:29:05.000 You 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.
00:29:16.000 Really?
00:29:18.000 And there's no one silver bullet, there's no one cause for any of this.
00:29:24.000 Really? 0.92
00:29:25.000 But the principal causes of Israel I just read that.
00:29:28.000 It says Israel vaccinated its population almost exclusively with the Pfizer vaccine, which received full FDA approval on Monday.
00:29:36.000 And remains the gold standard for the prevention of severe illness due to the coronavirus.
00:29:41.000 But 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.
00:29:56.000 Fully vaccinated people with weakened immune systems appeared particularly vulnerable to the aggressive Delta variant.
00:30:03.000 In 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.
00:30:15.000 As of this week, all Israelis over 30 will be eligible to receive booster shots.
00:30:20.000 By 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.
00:30:29.000 Israel will then reconfigure its green passports, granting them only to the triple vaccinated and limiting their validity to six months.
00:30:38.000 In anticipation of this change, the number of unvaccinated Israelis getting their first shots has tripled since the beginning of August. 0.81
00:30:47.000 Nice. 1.00
00:30:48.000 Nice.
00:30:50.000 So, I mean, what more is there really to say?
00:30:53.000 I feel like I'm going crazy because it's been like this for a year and a half.
00:30:59.000 Everything that they say is a lie.
00:31:02.000 Everything that they tell you one day gets proven wrong, completely wrong, the next day.
00:31:09.000 But they keep telling you as though that's not the case.
00:31:12.000 Like, at once, think of this.
00:31:14.000 Everything I've just told you, and this is from Yahoo News, this is from the Daily Beast.
00:31:20.000 Daily Beast, which is a hardcore liberal regime publication.
00:31:24.000 At 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.
00:31:34.000 And the numbers show that.
00:31:36.000 If 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.
00:31:51.000 It's not preventing people from getting sick.
00:31:54.000 And it's not preventing people from transmitting the disease.
00:31:56.000 It's not preventing people from being hospitalized or having severe symptoms because their hospitals are overrun.
00:32:01.000 So, 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.
00:32:11.000 At the same time, they tell you, sometimes in the same article, the vaccine is highly effective.
00:32:17.000 Everyone has to get their vaccine.
00:32:19.000 It's time.
00:32:19.000 We need carrots and sticks and vaccine passports and mandates, and people can't go back to school or work until they're vaccinated.
00:32:26.000 And if it's been six months since they've been vaccinated, they need to get vaccinated again.
00:32:30.000 And they need to get vaccinated again six months from now.
00:32:33.000 And if they get sick, well, we need to give them drugs to treat the vaccine sickness.
00:32:38.000 So, which is it?
00:32:40.000 On the one hand, there's no silver bullet, it doesn't work.
00:32:43.000 Nothing works.
00:32:45.000 Lockdowns, masks, vaccines, none of it has shown to have any impact on the rate of infection.
00:32:52.000 But at the same time, you can't question any of it.
00:32:54.000 At the same time, you will be fined if you violate the lockdown order, you will be fined if you violate the mask order.
00:33:01.000 Not permitted entry into places of business.
00:33:04.000 You will be expelled, fired, banned from society if you don't get the vaccine, none of which works.
00:33:13.000 And honestly, what are we supposed to do at this point other than massive civil disobedience, massive disobedience and protests against all of it?
00:33:23.000 Here's your certainty.
00:33:24.000 Because the biggest problem I think with issues like this is because it's medical.
00:33:32.000 People think that maybe they're a little apprehensive to say that they know better than the experts.
00:33:37.000 This isn't Jake Tapper's opinion.
00:33:39.000 It's not Chris Cuomo's opinion that the vaccine works.
00:33:44.000 They're merely citing the doctors who have a specialized knowledge and a long education in college studying this stuff.
00:33:52.000 So most people are apprehensive to say, well, maybe I don't trust the media, but I trust the doctors.
00:33:58.000 But 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
00:34:04.000 It's not working in Israel. 0.53
00:34:06.000 And it's not going to work here.
00:34:08.000 If 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.
00:34:20.000 And 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.
00:34:28.000 And 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.
00:34:35.000 So, what point do we as the people say no?
00:34:39.000 We'll take our chances.
00:34:41.000 We're not going to do that.
00:34:42.000 I'm not going to get myself sick with a mask.
00:34:46.000 I'm not going to poison myself with a vaccine.
00:34:48.000 I'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.
00:35:00.000 So I don't know how there's anybody left.
00:35:02.000 Well, I mean, you can obviously.
00:35:05.000 It's really not that difficult to understand why people just watch TV.
00:35:09.000 But 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.
00:35:28.000 We 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.
00:35:51.000 So it was proven definitively earlier this year, factual.
00:35:56.000 If the lockdown was designed to prevent the transmission of the virus, it didn't do that.
00:36:01.000 And 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.
00:36:08.000 And the state that locked down had a comparable rate of infection and death as the state that didn't.
00:36:13.000 So what do we conclude?
00:36:14.000 Lockdowns don't work at anything other than destroying the economy.
00:36:19.000 And then the same thing goes for the mask mandates.
00:36:23.000 We find that, and this has been proven in study after study, masks don't prevent people from getting sick.
00:36:29.000 The mask isn't dense enough to prevent virus particles from getting inside.
00:36:33.000 The masks aren't airtight.
00:36:35.000 The virus hangs in the air.
00:36:37.000 People breathe it in.
00:36:38.000 It's aerosolized, it's airborne.
00:36:41.000 And so the masks aren't doing anything.
00:36:43.000 But yet the mask mandate and the lockdown are coming back.
00:36:45.000 The vaccine.
00:36:46.000 And by the way, we knew this months ago.
00:36:48.000 They said that in Israel, the efficacy of the vaccine was down to 42%.
00:36:53.000 We read that study, I think, maybe a month or a month and a half ago.
00:36:57.000 That the efficacy, we were told at the beginning of the year for the Pfizer mRNA vaccine, was 92%.
00:37:02.000 Now it's down to about 40% in Israel.
00:37:05.000 We knew that a month ago.
00:37:07.000 And 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.
00:37:16.000 And 80% of the people that were hospitalized were also.
00:37:20.000 Doubly vaccinated.
00:37:22.000 Here we are now.
00:37:23.000 I mean, what more does it take in August?
00:37:25.000 And 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.
00:37:39.000 The vaccines don't work.
00:37:42.000 But 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.
00:37:55.000 They'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.
00:38:04.000 And 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.
00:38:11.000 So, is this supposed to just be our lives now?
00:38:13.000 If people just lay down and take this, this will be the rest of our lives.
00:38:17.000 Booster shots, shots for kids, experimental, cocktail of drugs to deal with the side effects, permanent lockdowns, permanent social isolation.
00:38:27.000 Permanent 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.
00:38:41.000 Is this supposed to be our lives now?
00:38:43.000 And 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.
00:39:06.000 We're giving up everything.
00:39:08.000 And I said this yesterday, but if we go along with this, you're giving up everything.
00:39:11.000 It's not like, well, I just got it over with.
00:39:14.000 That's the thing.
00:39:15.000 We don't get it over with.
00:39:17.000 It's never over.
00:39:18.000 It's not a one and done.
00:39:19.000 It's not like something that is just completed and then we get to move on the way things were.
00:39:24.000 We're talking about crossing the threshold into a time where things never go back to normal.
00:39:30.000 It's never over.
00:39:30.000 Get it over with.
00:39:32.000 You got your first round.
00:39:33.000 You got your first round over with.
00:39:35.000 But guess what?
00:39:36.000 If you want to keep that job that you.
00:39:38.000 Sacrificed 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.
00:39:48.000 And then six months then after that.
00:39:50.000 And, you know, at that point, are you going to get sick from the vaccine?
00:39:53.000 Your body is full of spike proteins and mRNA.
00:39:57.000 And then what's the next step?
00:39:58.000 When that doesn't work and there's increasingly more deadly strains of the coronavirus, the vaccinated individuals are a cauldron for this. 0.69
00:40:06.000 They're creating all these variants to the extent that that's even real.
00:40:11.000 So, are you going to be getting three vaccines every six months?
00:40:14.000 I mean, how many therapeutics, drugs, vaccines, arbitrary lockdown orders?
00:40:18.000 How many of these things are people going to comply with before they say, just get sick?
00:40:24.000 Let's just have our freedom back.
00:40:26.000 And if we die or get sick, so be it.
00:40:29.000 We're going to die and get sick anyway.
00:40:31.000 We might as well die and get sick with our freedom and our autonomy.
00:40:34.000 But are we going to have to fight for that five years in when everybody's been vaccinated a thousand times?
00:40:41.000 Are we going to figure that out in 10 years?
00:40:44.000 When they ban all Trump supporters from entering restaurants?
00:40:47.000 I mean, like, how bad does it have to get?
00:40:50.000 How much of a sunken cost has to go in before we say enough is enough?
00:40:55.000 It's already been a year and a half.
00:40:57.000 They said five weeks.
00:40:58.000 It's been a year and a half.
00:40:59.000 And at first they said, hey, just stay inside.
00:41:02.000 Now they're saying, we'll fine you, we'll kick you out of your job, we'll expel you, you're going to get vaccinated, you'll wear a mask.
00:41:08.000 When all this started, they said, hey, you know, we're just going to close the businesses.
00:41:13.000 It wasn't even a mask mandate in the first weeks, they said, don't wear a mask.
00:41:17.000 And look at how far we came in 18 months.
00:41:21.000 And people think if we just comply now, it'll get better or they'll leave you alone.
00:41:25.000 We have to resist this right now.
00:41:27.000 People have to say no.
00:41:29.000 Not hide, not get a medical exemption, not find some loophole.
00:41:32.000 People have to just say no.
00:41:34.000 No, I won't get a vaccine.
00:41:35.000 And we have to call their bluff.
00:41:37.000 We need like 5 million people to say no, we won't get vaccinated.
00:41:42.000 And if you want to fire me or kick me out of school, then so be it.
00:41:45.000 You can do that.
00:41:46.000 We need people to go and inform their colleagues.
00:41:49.000 And 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?
00:42:04.000 Fine, we'll all leave.
00:42:06.000 But it's time now for massive resistance to this stuff.
00:42:09.000 This 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.
00:42:20.000 If we didn't pass it in the past 10 years, I don't think.
00:42:24.000 It gets any more obvious, explicit, tangible, point of no return going down on the other side than this, right?
00:42:34.000 Then everybody gets vaccinated or you're banned from society.
00:42:37.000 And there's booster shots in six months.
00:42:40.000 It doesn't get worse than that. 0.95
00:42:42.000 So, anyway, that's Israel.
00:42:44.000 We thank them for, you know, once again, they really kind of are helping us.
00:42:47.000 They're a great entry point for normies to kind of see the truth on a variety of things.
00:42:54.000 And in this case, too. 0.99
00:42:56.000 So, Israel sucks to suck, bitch. 1.00
00:42:59.000 How does that taste?
00:43:01.000 You got vaccinated, you got a heart attack, and now you have COVID.
00:43:04.000 And now you got to get more.
00:43:06.000 I just threw up in my mouth.
00:43:07.000 And you have to get more poison.
00:43:10.000 And you have to get locked down again.
00:43:11.000 Sucks to suck.
00:43:12.000 Fuck you. 0.95
00:43:13.000 You killed Jesus.
00:43:14.000 You took the vaccine.
00:43:16.000 Now you pay the price.
00:43:18.000 So sorry for the language, but I'm a little bit heated.
00:43:21.000 A little bit heated about it if you can't already tell.
00:43:27.000 But yeah, you know, damn, that sucks.
00:43:32.000 Man, you hate to see that.
00:43:34.000 Hate to see that.
00:43:35.000 I know I hate to see that.
00:43:39.000 Hate to see a biblical plague go down in Israel. 0.79
00:43:43.000 Anyway, we got to move on.
00:43:45.000 We got to talk about Afghanistan.
00:43:48.000 Just kidding, of course.
00:43:49.000 It's very tragic.
00:43:50.000 But really, I mean, they used to say, well, the vaccine is perfectly safe and effective.
00:43:56.000 Now they're like, well, it's not effective and it's definitely not safe.
00:44:00.000 But if you don't get it, we're going to kill you.
00:44:04.000 How long did that take?
00:44:05.000 At the beginning of the year, they said, oh, don't worry about it.
00:44:07.000 It's perfectly safe and it's perfectly effective.
00:44:10.000 You have nothing to worry about and you won't get sick.
00:44:12.000 And all these assholes lining up around Walgreens.
00:44:15.000 I made my appointment to get the jab.
00:44:18.000 And they're singing songs and they're on TikTok.
00:44:21.000 Oh, we get to go back outside.
00:44:23.000 And it's on all the late night shows.
00:44:26.000 And all these months later, they're like, yeah, well, the vaccine doesn't work.
00:44:31.000 It's not effective.
00:44:32.000 You can still go to the hospital.
00:44:33.000 You will be symptomatic.
00:44:35.000 You are going to give it to your loved ones and your friends.
00:44:37.000 You're going to have bad symptoms.
00:44:40.000 Also, it's not really that safe either.
00:44:42.000 The FDA is investigating reports that it'll give you a heart attack and kill you.
00:44:47.000 And it's happening more than anybody thought possible.
00:44:50.000 In the middle, at some point in the middle, they said, well, the pros outweigh the cons.
00:44:55.000 And it's like, well, who's making that decision?
00:44:57.000 What are the pros exactly?
00:44:59.000 Literally, what are the pros?
00:45:00.000 You get vaccinated, you still get sick, you still give it, you still could go to the hospital.
00:45:05.000 So what's the pro?
00:45:06.000 The pros outweigh the cons.
00:45:08.000 Well, there's no pros.
00:45:10.000 The con is that there's a small chance you could develop heart disease, brain disease, lose the skin on your legs.
00:45:17.000 Have a horrible blood clot, seizure, you know, neurological degenerative disease in five years.
00:45:26.000 Pros outweigh the cons.
00:45:28.000 But the pros outweigh the cons.
00:45:29.000 Just trust them.
00:45:30.000 Just trust them, you fucking dummy. 0.99
00:45:33.000 You hillbilly. 1.00
00:45:34.000 You didn't go to school. 0.99
00:45:35.000 You didn't go to Harvard.
00:45:36.000 You don't wear a lab coat.
00:45:38.000 What do you know?
00:45:39.000 These are scientists, man.
00:45:42.000 These are scientists.
00:45:42.000 They're in the laboratory, okay?
00:45:44.000 They look under microscopes, or at, I guess, through microscopes.
00:45:49.000 And they know.
00:45:51.000 I mean, that's what they're telling us.
00:45:54.000 I hate the vaccinated.
00:45:56.000 Except for Kai.
00:45:57.000 Kai's okay.
00:45:58.000 But if you're vaccinated, honestly, just shut up. 0.54
00:46:01.000 Get out of my face.
00:46:02.000 Don't breathe your spike proteins on me, you stupid, dumb animal.
00:46:05.000 You're a traitor to humanity.
00:46:07.000 If you're vaccinated, you have betrayed the human race.
00:46:11.000 And I don't want you breathing your poison, your poison breath all over me.
00:46:14.000 You're fucking contagious.
00:46:15.000 Talk about a pandemic.
00:46:17.000 You're the pandemic. 0.85
00:46:19.000 We should quarantine those people at the bottom of the ocean around the moon.
00:46:23.000 Or inside of a mountain in jail or something.
00:46:26.000 I'm sick of it, man.
00:46:28.000 They were ruining humanity for the rest of us.
00:46:31.000 Kanye was right.
00:46:32.000 Slavery is a choice.
00:46:33.000 And if you're vaccinated, fuck you.
00:46:36.000 Seriously.
00:46:37.000 You're stupid, and I hate you.
00:46:40.000 Okay.
00:46:41.000 Anyway, anyway.
00:46:42.000 And that includes Trump, by the way.
00:46:44.000 That includes Trump.
00:46:47.000 Okay.
00:46:49.000 Maybe that was a little heavy handed, but seriously.
00:46:53.000 All right.
00:46:53.000 We're going to move on.
00:46:54.000 We're going to move on. 1.00
00:46:55.000 We've got to talk about Afghanistan.
00:46:57.000 Apologies for the language, but I feel very strongly about this. 1.00
00:47:01.000 They're enslaving humanity, and people are just like, you know, la la la.
00:47:05.000 Let's just go along with it because, you know, TV told me to.
00:47:09.000 Olivia Rodrigo told me to.
00:47:12.000 Remember when, what a traitor. 1.00
00:47:15.000 Remember when Olivia Rodrigo went to the White House and she was like, I'm Olivia Rodrigo here to tell everyone to get vaccinated. 1.00
00:47:24.000 You stupid bitch. 1.00
00:47:26.000 Do you know how many people probably got vaccinated because of her? 1.00
00:47:30.000 Good for you.
00:47:31.000 You look happy and healthy, right?
00:47:33.000 It's kind of ironic, right?
00:47:35.000 That's how the song goes.
00:47:36.000 But she's singing that to me.
00:47:38.000 She's like, Good for you.
00:47:39.000 You look happy and healthy.
00:47:40.000 I am, bitch.
00:47:42.000 I didn't get vaccinated.
00:47:44.000 You don't look so hot. 1.00
00:47:45.000 You don't look so hot, you stupid fucking bitch, because you got vaccinated. 0.98
00:47:49.000 Hey, you don't look so hot. 1.00
00:47:51.000 You look like you're having a heart attack.
00:47:54.000 I would help you, but I'm not a doctor.
00:48:00.000 All right, no.
00:48:01.000 This show is off the rails.
00:48:02.000 I'm sorry for the language.
00:48:04.000 These are jokes, of course.
00:48:07.000 I do apologize for the language.
00:48:10.000 It's not very Christ like.
00:48:11.000 It's not very.
00:48:12.000 But it's infuriating.
00:48:13.000 They go out there and they're telling people to get sick and they're telling people to become slaves to the government.
00:48:18.000 This is like, if it isn't the biblical mark of the beast, it's about as close to that as you can get.
00:48:24.000 I mean, it's basically, we're there, you know?
00:48:28.000 And people go out and they're like, well, here I am doing what I'm told.
00:48:32.000 Here I am getting my mandatory, literal mandatory government vaccine.
00:48:39.000 Okay.
00:48:41.000 Yeah, well, if we all die from this, we definitely didn't have it coming.
00:48:46.000 Yeah, we definitely will be like, why did that happen?
00:48:50.000 What?
00:48:50.000 We're so unlucky.
00:48:54.000 Olivia Rodrigo.
00:48:56.000 Jacob Sartorius.
00:48:57.000 I can't believe him.
00:48:59.000 I cannot believe he would do that.
00:49:02.000 Jacob Sartorius doing an interview with Anthony Fauci.
00:49:05.000 Why don't you go smoke some pot, dude?
00:49:07.000 Why don't you go smoke some pot and cry in your bedroom, dude?
00:49:11.000 You'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.
00:49:20.000 And Jacob's like, okay, I'll do that.
00:49:23.000 What do you know about vaccines, man?
00:49:25.000 Why don't you go and cry and smoke some more pot?
00:49:30.000 You release like one single every two years, but you're going to tell me about mRNA? 1.00
00:49:35.000 Why don't you get another butterfly tattoo, faggot? 1.00
00:49:35.000 Really? 1.00
00:49:42.000 I didn't mean that.
00:49:44.000 I didn't mean that.
00:49:45.000 I take that back.
00:49:47.000 I take that back.
00:49:48.000 I'm just, you know, I'm just mad.
00:49:51.000 I feel betrayed.
00:49:52.000 I feel like all my favorites are betraying me.
00:49:57.000 First Olivia Rodrigo, then Jacob Sartorius.
00:49:59.000 I didn't mean that, but it's just, you think you know somebody?
00:50:04.000 You think you know somebody.
00:50:09.000 Anyway, all right, okay.
00:50:12.000 So we're going to move on.
00:50:12.000 We're going to talk about Afghanistan finally.
00:50:15.000 Okay.
00:50:16.000 So our featured story is about Afghanistan and similarly frustrating.
00:50:21.000 So, I mean, we thought we were getting out of Afghanistan two weeks ago.
00:50:25.000 Now, we have 7,000 troops back in Kabul, which is just about the same amount that we had five years ago when Trump got into office.
00:50:37.000 And the latest development is that Biden is sticking to the deadline to withdraw American troops.
00:50:42.000 We're still there.
00:50:44.000 And 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
00:50:56.000 And 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.
00:51:06.000 But he's facing immense pressure from America's allies and from the American national security apparatus.
00:51:13.000 They say that they want American troops to remain in Afghanistan indefinitely until the airlift is completed.
00:51:21.000 And this is a big problem.
00:51:23.000 This is what I said about the airlift from the beginning.
00:51:26.000 All these people that said, well, no, you needed to evacuate everybody first.
00:51:30.000 Well, you should have done this first.
00:51:32.000 We should have evacuated later.
00:51:33.000 We should have withdrawn our troops later.
00:51:36.000 And 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.
00:51:44.000 Because that's what the government wants.
00:51:47.000 The deep state wants us to be there forever.
00:51:49.000 And so they can always come up with an excuse strategic, diplomatic, whatever.
00:51:55.000 They can always come up with some reason why today is not a good day to leave.
00:52:00.000 We'll withdraw in a few months after.
00:52:03.000 Whatever.
00:52:04.000 The Taliban stops doing suicide bombings.
00:52:06.000 Oh, they stopped?
00:52:07.000 Well, we'll wait a few months because we still have to build up our strength so that we're not overrun when we leave and we lose face.
00:52:13.000 Okay?
00:52:14.000 Three months pass after that.
00:52:15.000 Well, we can't withdraw because the Taliban just killed an American soldier.
00:52:19.000 We actually have to escalate.
00:52:21.000 And by the time all these preconditions have been met, oh, whoops, looks like you just lost the election.
00:52:27.000 You're out of office.
00:52:28.000 Somebody else gets in.
00:52:30.000 And it's the same thing.
00:52:31.000 How does a war that nobody wants go on for 20 years?
00:52:36.000 This is how.
00:52:37.000 Is because nobody ever just pulls the plug and says, we're out by today.
00:52:41.000 And now you're seeing that.
00:52:42.000 Joe Biden pulled out the troops.
00:52:44.000 And like I said, I think this is maybe a setup from the start by the national security apparatus.
00:52:51.000 They 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.
00:52:58.000 And once they stay past the deadline, it's like, well, what's another three months?
00:53:01.000 What's another 10 years?
00:53:03.000 So this is the latest.
00:53:04.000 This is from BBC.
00:53:06.000 It says, quote, U.S. President Joe Biden says the U.S. is on.
00:53:10.000 Pace to meet an August 31st deadline for evacuations, despite previous calls from allies for an extension.
00:53:18.000 He said, The sooner we finish, the better.
00:53:20.000 Some American troops have already been withdrawn, although evacuations have not been affected.
00:53:25.000 At least 70,700 people have been airlifted from Kabul, which fell to the Taliban nine days ago.
00:53:32.000 The militants have opposed any extension of the evacuation deadline.
00:53:36.000 President 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.
00:53:45.000 He said, none of us are just going to take their word for it.
00:53:48.000 Mr. Biden said the airlift had to come to end soon because of an increasing threat from the Islamic State group in Afghanistan.
00:53:57.000 The longer the U.S. stays in the country, he said, there was an acute and growing risk of an attack by the group.
00:54:03.000 He 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.
00:54:14.000 The U.K. and other allies had urged the U.S. to stay beyond August 31st.
00:54:19.000 To allow more relief flights.
00:54:21.000 UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson, who chaired the talk, said Britain would continue to evacuate people until the last moment.
00:54:28.000 European 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.
00:54:40.000 Almost 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.
00:54:49.000 Smaller contingents from other NATO members, including France, Germany, and Turkey, are also present.
00:54:54.000 The airlift is being stepped up, with more than 21,000 people evacuated since Sunday.
00:55:00.000 The departure of some U.S. troops ahead of the deadline does not affect the mission, according to a U.S. defense official.
00:55:08.000 So, this is what they're saying now.
00:55:10.000 They're saying that we got to get these people out soon, or else ISIS will start killing them.
00:55:17.000 And, like I said on Friday, man, I just don't trust it.
00:55:22.000 And I really do believe that something is coming soon.
00:55:27.000 Because, of course, what happens if between now and next week, ISIS kills an American soldier? 0.59
00:55:33.000 What happens if an American civilian dies for any reason, gets killed by the Taliban, dies in relation to the airlift, gets killed by ISIS?
00:55:44.000 What happens right after that?
00:55:47.000 The media blows it up and says, American killed in Afghanistan.
00:55:51.000 Is Biden really going to take that?
00:55:53.000 Biden is weak if he doesn't respond.
00:55:56.000 It's going to demand an escalation.
00:55:59.000 If 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.
00:56:10.000 And I'm alarmed in particular at this line about ISIS.
00:56:13.000 They keep saying ISIS.
00:56:15.000 ISIS is in Afghanistan.
00:56:16.000 ISIS is compromising the route to the airport from wherever the American personnel is staying.
00:56:23.000 ISIS is on the rise.
00:56:24.000 Al Qaeda, terror threat, greater than ever.
00:56:29.000 Now, keep in mind the Taliban is against ISIS.
00:56:31.000 The Taliban is against Al Qaeda.
00:56:34.000 ISIS and Al Qaeda are Sunni Muslim. 0.80
00:56:37.000 They were, I mean, basically created by Saudi Arabia, arguably.
00:56:41.000 The ideology behind ISIS and Al Qaeda comes from Salafist, Wahhabist mosques in Saudi Arabia.
00:56:49.000 They get funded and supported by Israel, the United States, and the Gulf states.
00:56:54.000 But they're against the Taliban.
00:56:57.000 The Taliban's on the other side of the Middle East.
00:56:59.000 And the Taliban said, we kill terrorists, we kill ISIS, we kill Al Qaeda.
00:57:03.000 It's the same thing like they had in Syria.
00:57:06.000 When we were supporting the so called moderate opposition in Syria, guess who we were supporting? 0.90
00:57:11.000 ISIS and Al Qaeda.
00:57:15.000 It was the Assad regime with the help of Russia that was bombing ISIS.
00:57:18.000 It 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.
00:57:31.000 And really, the same goes in Yemen, too.
00:57:32.000 You have Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula, same deal.
00:57:36.000 Houthis, sponsored by Iran, are Shiite, you know, so it's similar over there, too.
00:57:40.000 This is a story across the Middle East.
00:57:42.000 But now they say, well, these ISIS militants are getting into Afghanistan, establishing a foothold.
00:57:47.000 What do you think that means?
00:57:49.000 ISIS isn't establishing a foothold in Afghanistan.
00:57:52.000 The media is establishing a foothold in the minds of Americans with this ISIS narrative.
00:57:57.000 When 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.
00:58:11.000 The reason why it has to be ISIS is because ISIS inspires lone wolves in America.
00:58:17.000 ISIS can do an attack in America, and that makes it our business.
00:58:21.000 The Taliban doesn't.
00:58:22.000 The Taliban doesn't kill Americans in America.
00:58:24.000 The Taliban, these are mountaineers, these are people that live in caves, these are people that govern a country that doesn't have roads.
00:58:32.000 ISIS, not so much.
00:58:33.000 So the media has to hype this up and say ISIS is gaining a foothold.
00:58:37.000 They're establishing a territory so that they can create bases.
00:58:41.000 They create bases so that they can send people over here.
00:58:45.000 They can sell oil.
00:58:46.000 They can organize.
00:58:47.000 They can traffic in weapons and other things.
00:58:50.000 And they can mount attacks against Europeans and America, mount attacks against NATO allies in the United States.
00:58:57.000 So that what?
00:58:59.000 We have to go back.
00:59:00.000 We have to bomb them.
00:59:01.000 We have to send in special forces, both of which are far more popular.
00:59:05.000 If 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
00:59:17.000 Occupation like we had in Iraq and Afghanistan, but that is what that's there for.
00:59:23.000 And 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
00:59:33.000 Even 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.
00:59:42.000 Even if that doesn't happen, you're going to see within the next couple of years, ISIS is back. 0.83
00:59:47.000 ISIS is back in Iraq.
00:59:49.000 ISIS is back in Afghanistan.
00:59:50.000 ISIS is taking over the region.
00:59:52.000 We have to redeploy.
00:59:56.000 Because it's the same playbook they used 10 years ago.
00:59:58.000 Is it so quickly that people forget?
01:00:00.000 And you know what's funny is that under the Trump administration, people did forget because Trump eradicated ISIS.
01:00:06.000 Under Obama, ISIS flourished.
01:00:08.000 Obama leaves Iraq.
01:00:10.000 ISIS comes out of nowhere, take over Iraq, take over Syria.
01:00:14.000 What does that do?
01:00:15.000 It forces Obama to bring America back to Iraq, and it forces America to intervene in Syria.
01:00:22.000 But Obama didn't deploy in Syria, so they did chemical attacks and then they wanted to get him to do airstrikes and so on.
01:00:28.000 Under Trump, we got rid of ISIS.
01:00:30.000 ISIS was wiped off the map.
01:00:31.000 Why did that happen?
01:00:32.000 It's because the U.S. stopped pursuing regime change in Syria.
01:00:38.000 That's a very important thing.
01:00:41.000 ISIS was eradicated after the U.S. stopped pursuing regime change in Syria.
01:00:47.000 When the official policy of America was to remove Bashar al Assad in Syria, ISIS had control over a third of the country.
01:00:56.000 When ISIS was being backed up by American Air Force, they were in control of a third of the country.
01:01:02.000 In 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.
01:01:13.000 Bombed 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.
01:01:24.000 Now 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.
01:01:42.000 And you start to realize that these kinds of groups, they are just a front.
01:01:47.000 These groups are an extension of the U.S. government.
01:01:52.000 These groups come in so that America has an excuse to follow them.
01:01:56.000 That's why they exist.
01:01:57.000 And maybe you begin to unravel why terrorist attacks happen then.
01:02:01.000 There weren't a whole lot of terrorist attacks under Trump either, were there?
01:02:05.000 How 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?
01:02:15.000 Off the top of my head, in the Obama administration, I think about Nice, France.
01:02:20.000 I think about the Bataclan massacre.
01:02:23.000 I think about San Bernardino.
01:02:25.000 I think about the Pulse nightclub.
01:02:27.000 I think about a beheading in Oklahoma, or maybe it was Kansas.
01:02:34.000 All over the place.
01:02:36.000 And under Trump, not so much.
01:02:38.000 Well, think about the relation of all these things.
01:02:41.000 ISIS chops off ahead.
01:02:43.000 ISIS is in Iraq and they have a base of operations.
01:02:47.000 The base of operations, therefore, has to be destroyed.
01:02:50.000 Well, how do we destroy it?
01:02:51.000 We have to go over there.
01:02:52.000 We have to send our planes there.
01:02:53.000 We have to give guns to other people in the region to kill them. 0.76
01:02:57.000 We have to send our troops there.
01:02:58.000 And what do our troops do while they are there?
01:03:01.000 They prevent a rival government from having sovereignty over the region.
01:03:05.000 So that we control the country, we control the resources, we have boots on the ground there as a check against other rival powers.
01:03:13.000 And it's like, listen.
01:03:15.000 We'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.
01:03:23.000 There's an argument. 0.84
01:03:24.000 Okay.
01:03:25.000 Should America have a base in Afghanistan bordered against China, against Pakistan and Iran, and not far from Russia?
01:03:33.000 I don't think it's a bad idea.
01:03:34.000 Honestly, I don't think it's a bad idea to have an American base there.
01:03:38.000 But that's very different than saying there's all these terrorists there that we have to go and kill.
01:03:43.000 And people are like, well, who cares?
01:03:45.000 And then they're like, well, we'll make you care because they'll start chopping off your head.
01:03:49.000 What if they just said we need a base there?
01:03:51.000 Well, it wouldn't be as convincing because then people would say, well, is it really worth it?
01:03:54.000 Do we want to have an empire? 0.78
01:03:56.000 Do we need to check Russia and China? 0.77
01:03:57.000 Why do we need to do that? 0.91
01:03:59.000 What is the threat that is posed by Russia and China?
01:04:01.000 Aren't they nuclear armed? 0.59
01:04:03.000 Will we ever go to war with another great power in a conventional way ever again?
01:04:07.000 Why do we need to have war?
01:04:08.000 Why do we need to have American hegemony over the total globe?
01:04:12.000 You know, then people might question it.
01:04:14.000 So instead, we have to have fear, we have to have terror.
01:04:19.000 Our own government has to create terrorists, which is what's happening here. 0.97
01:04:23.000 So I don't know if we'll get out of Afghanistan. 1.00
01:04:25.000 I would say it's like 50 50. 1.00
01:04:26.000 We might.
01:04:27.000 Biden administration might end the war in Afghanistan.
01:04:31.000 They very well might sacrifice some American civilian. 0.97
01:04:35.000 Now we're in the future.
01:04:37.000 Now or ISIS gains a foothold later on and we have to go back.
01:04:42.000 But this stuff never really ends.
01:04:44.000 We never really win.
01:04:45.000 There's never really a white pill.
01:04:46.000 Enjoy the means while they last.
01:04:48.000 The Taliban's in control. 0.93
01:04:49.000 Enjoy it while it lasts. 1.00
01:04:50.000 They're eating ice cream. 1.00
01:04:52.000 They're telling women they can't work. 1.00
01:04:53.000 They're killing the gay people. 0.99
01:04:55.000 So let's just say, okay, that was funny because it's not going to last. 0.99
01:05:01.000 But anyway, that's our story on Afghanistan.
01:05:04.000 We're running out of time.
01:05:05.000 So we're going to move on.
01:05:06.000 I got to get to Minecraft.
01:05:08.000 I got to get to the nether.
01:05:12.000 So we're going to take a look at our super chats and we'll see what you guys have to say about all this.
01:05:16.000 What's your take?
01:05:16.000 Do we stay?
01:05:17.000 Do we go?
01:05:19.000 Are you vaccinated?
01:05:23.000 Let's take a look and we'll see.
01:05:25.000 But what does the audience have to say?
01:05:26.000 Now it's time for the audience questions.
01:05:39.000 Hmm.
01:05:42.000 Yummy.
01:05:43.000 We are enjoying that.
01:05:45.000 We are enjoying cold water.
01:05:49.000 All right.
01:05:50.000 Advancing Australia has been watching black and white movies to escape the misery here.
01:05:57.000 Saw a good one about a tragic liaison between an ideological prison guard and his housekeeper.
01:06:03.000 If you like a good rom com with a twist, you should check it out.
01:06:05.000 It's called Schindler's List.
01:06:07.000 Ha ha ha.
01:06:11.000 I hate you.
01:06:12.000 That wasn't funny at all.
01:06:17.000 Did he just say that?
01:06:18.000 Oh my gosh.
01:06:19.000 Wow.
01:06:21.000 Now that was edgy.
01:06:25.000 You can't say that.
01:06:28.000 Just shut up.
01:06:29.000 Why don't you just shut up?
01:06:30.000 Leave the funny to me.
01:06:32.000 Leave the funny to me.
01:06:37.000 That's like a.
01:06:37.000 I hate these jokes.
01:06:39.000 It's like a setup.
01:06:40.000 It's like a setup.
01:06:41.000 It's like Rodney Dangerfield.
01:06:42.000 You know what it reminds me of?
01:06:43.000 And you know what it is?
01:06:44.000 It's these Australians and British people. 1.00
01:06:47.000 Gradually, I began to hate them. 1.00
01:06:49.000 Gradually, I began to hate Australians and British. 1.00
01:06:52.000 The 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
01:07:07.000 Have you ever seen this? 1.00
01:07:08.000 Have you ever seen this genre of content on TikTok or Instagram?
01:07:12.000 Where 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.
01:07:27.000 I 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.
01:07:36.000 You know what it makes you want to do.
01:07:39.000 And that's the kind of energy that I'm getting from this.
01:07:41.000 It's advancing Australia.
01:07:43.000 You're probably Australian. 1.00
01:07:45.000 It's a joke like this. 1.00
01:07:46.000 Are we all supposed to laugh now?
01:07:48.000 Anyway.
01:07:52.000 So I hate that shit.
01:07:54.000 Freaking John says I really wish we could have been given the opportunity to see the destiny of all people debate well on meth.
01:08:00.000 Is that wrong?
01:08:03.000 That's great. 0.55
01:08:04.000 Prodigy says thoughts on IRL rallies against the vax mandate or promoting trucker strikes?
01:08:09.000 Oddly enough, seems like it's happening everywhere except the Midwest.
01:08:12.000 If not now, what time would be optimal?
01:08:15.000 Yeah, I'm in favor of trucker strikes and protests. 1.00
01:08:18.000 Vita 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
01:08:28.000 Hey, only I can be rude to my friend. 0.96
01:08:31.000 True.
01:08:34.000 I said this on my show. 1.00
01:08:36.000 You know, women are not capable of real friendship. 1.00
01:08:39.000 I 100% sincerely believe that. 1.00
01:08:44.000 And I've said this before men and women are just different and.
01:08:49.000 I don't have to explain myself.
01:08:51.000 And I don't have to explain myself any further than that. 0.97
01:08:53.000 Men and women are different.
01:08:54.000 Men are capable of friendship. 1.00
01:08:55.000 Women are not. 1.00
01:08:57.000 Simple as that. 1.00
01:08:58.000 Real friendship. 1.00
01:08:59.000 Not 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
01:09:11.000 You know, you think about like men going to war together, you think about like partners in crime, you think about. 1.00
01:09:19.000 The mafia, stuff like that, political dissidents, a king, and like people in the court. 1.00
01:09:29.000 That'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
01:09:36.000 You know what I mean? 1.00
01:09:38.000 I 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
01:09:47.000 A woman, as a physical weakling and a weakling in other ways, is sort of taken care of. 0.99
01:09:56.000 And so, in that way, it's not really the same sort of reciprocal relationship. 0.97
01:10:01.000 Like responsibility for the other.
01:10:04.000 You know what I'm saying?
01:10:05.000 Like, there's this sense of because, in a way, they are powerless, there's not really the power to be, you know.
01:10:16.000 You don't have that stake, that buy in.
01:10:19.000 It's not equivalent, it's not reciprocal.
01:10:22.000 I 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
01:10:31.000 Because a woman is a caretaker of the children.
01:10:33.000 You know, women have that connection with the child, but I feel like friendship is really more of a male thing. 1.00
01:10:38.000 I don't think anybody writes like ballads or odes to the friendship between women or between men and women.
01:10:45.000 I 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?
01:10:55.000 Not really.
01:10:57.000 They might talk about a couple, like a husband and a wife or something, but that's not really quite the same thing.
01:11:03.000 So it's just categorically different.
01:11:06.000 And I saw somebody posted a clip of that on Twitter, and people got all upset about it. 1.00
01:11:16.000 But it's true. 0.50
01:11:17.000 It's just true.
01:11:18.000 Anyway, German American Groyper says, Hello, hi.
01:11:22.000 MacMan says, Jake Lloyd, Lloyd Floyd, George Floyd coincidence.
01:11:28.000 It's a George Floyd joke in 2021.
01:11:31.000 Far right Groyper says, What is your argument against exterminationism?
01:11:34.000 Don't use religion as justification.
01:11:37.000 Since religious morality is relative, I'm an amoral atheist and I have no problem with ideologies like that.
01:11:45.000 Well, the thing about that kind of argument, extermination, you could call it anything.
01:11:49.000 You could call it murder, you could call it abortion, you could call it stealing.
01:11:54.000 You're saying, well, don't use a moral argument in a moral universe on a moral issue.
01:11:59.000 It is a moral argument.
01:12:01.000 You know?
01:12:02.000 And religious morality is not relative, it's a definition of objective.
01:12:08.000 I mean, the definition of religious morality is that we have religious, or rather, moral authority.
01:12:14.000 Those are the only people that have moral authority.
01:12:16.000 Those are the only people that have morality are people that are religious.
01:12:19.000 Where does your morality come from if you're a materialist?
01:12:23.000 If you're an atheist, if you don't believe in God, if you don't believe in the supernatural, all you believe in is the natural.
01:12:30.000 And all that is natural is material.
01:12:33.000 Different combinations of, you know, what, molecules or atoms or whatever.
01:12:39.000 And what difference does it make if you blow somebody's head off?
01:12:42.000 You're just, you know, rearranging matter.
01:12:45.000 Everything 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.
01:12:59.000 So, I reject the premise.
01:13:02.000 I mean, you just don't even understand what you're talking about.
01:13:05.000 But, I mean, in essence, what you're talking about is murder.
01:13:07.000 You're saying, what's your argument against murder?
01:13:09.000 And don't use morality as an argument because morality is subjective.
01:13:12.000 Well, The answer is that morality is objective and it is morally wrong, and you either live in a moral universe or you don't.
01:13:19.000 If you don't live in a moral universe, then you could do anything.
01:13:22.000 You can murder one person, you can murder a million people, you can murder every kind of one person or every other kind of a person.
01:13:29.000 Or you can murder yourself.
01:13:30.000 I mean, none of it matters.
01:13:31.000 It's totally meaningless.
01:13:33.000 And 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
01:13:46.000 So, I mean, yeah, I would understand why an atheist would believe that.
01:13:49.000 You don't believe in morality, you don't think that we have a moral universe. 0.72
01:13:53.000 So.
01:13:55.000 I don't think, I mean, the argument at that point is, is there morality?
01:13:58.000 And then at that point, the argument is, is there a God?
01:14:02.000 You know, but I don't think a person who's religious would say, well, you know, morally it's wrong.
01:14:07.000 And somebody who doesn't believe morality is like, well, I don't believe in morality.
01:14:10.000 Okay, well, we're at an impasse.
01:14:13.000 You know?
01:14:16.000 Let's see.
01:14:17.000 Frankie McDonald says, Hi, Nick.
01:14:18.000 You do a good job on your show all the time.
01:14:22.000 Ignore the negative comments, only read the positive comments.
01:14:25.000 That's my order.
01:14:26.000 Oh, that's your order?
01:14:31.000 Well, thanks for the compliment.
01:14:33.000 But I got to read all the super chats.
01:14:36.000 Otherwise, you know, maybe people are like, well, I'm not going to send one.
01:14:39.000 I don't think that's the real Frankie McDonald, though.
01:14:42.000 Mac Manson saw Jake Lloyd going off on the timeline recently.
01:14:46.000 The man is based as hell, but he looks like the teddy bear from Five Nights at Freddy's.
01:14:52.000 I will not comment on Jake Lloyd's appearance other than that I don't see the resemblance.
01:14:57.000 That's all I'm going to say.
01:15:00.000 And 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.
01:15:07.000 So, 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.
01:15:24.000 Why do you think this huge difference exists?
01:15:25.000 Thanks and God bless.
01:15:27.000 White evangelicals are more conservative than white Catholics.
01:15:31.000 That's that simple.
01:15:33.000 You know.
01:15:35.000 A lot of Catholics are ethnics that live in cities and they are liberal.
01:15:41.000 I mean, there's no, that's not a secret.
01:15:44.000 Catholics are not as religious as other Christians, don't go to church as much. 0.97
01:15:49.000 They don't even believe in like the core main tenets of Catholicism. 0.75
01:15:52.000 There are a lot of pro choice Catholics, there are pro gay marriage Catholics, there are Catholics that don't believe in transubstantiation.
01:15:59.000 So, a lot of Catholics have become liberal and are not, I mean, Really, you could even say practicing or believing Catholics.
01:16:10.000 Whereas evangelicals tend to be more conservative and more religious, and they come from a more conservative part of the country.
01:16:16.000 So that's why that is.
01:16:19.000 Because the vaccine, like other things, is becoming a partisan issue.
01:16:21.000 It's not like saying, you know, why do you think more Catholics vote Democrat or Republican?
01:16:25.000 You know, the vaccines become partisan, more or less.
01:16:29.000 Big Globes is pretty keck that the ice on the camera did the trick last night.
01:16:33.000 I don't know if that's what made it work.
01:16:37.000 We'll say that it did.
01:16:39.000 Diligence says, Happy Leaf Ericsson Day.
01:16:42.000 Hanga dinga doinga.
01:16:43.000 Yeah.
01:16:44.000 Happy Leaf Ericsson Day.
01:16:45.000 Diligence says, Gotcha.
01:16:46.000 Based Cali says, Nick, my car has been overheating, so I want to know if you think ice cubes in the gas tank will help.
01:16:53.000 Very funny.
01:16:54.000 That's hilarious, dude.
01:16:59.000 Cold, hot.
01:17:00.000 I mean, I don't think you have to be a rocket scientist to figure that one out. 0.92
01:17:05.000 Fred Groibson says, Apparently, there's an ISIS K now. 0.97
01:17:08.000 There's new variants of spook terrorists and a very convenient. 0.99
01:17:11.000 Time.
01:17:11.000 Yeah, exactly.
01:17:13.000 Peru says, I heard that based homeschool mom doesn't like you anymore because of her husband. 0.95
01:17:17.000 I always found it odd that a woman would call herself based.
01:17:20.000 Yeah, 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.
01:17:31.000 You know, and it's unfortunate because she was nice.
01:17:35.000 You know, she was nice, and I think I met her at one of the Stop the Steals and everything.
01:17:41.000 But, you know, you always knew where that was going.
01:17:44.000 And it all went downhill when a few weeks ago, what did she say?
01:17:48.000 She said, I'm self publishing a book.
01:17:52.000 Could you read my book?
01:17:54.000 I'm on Patreon now.
01:17:55.000 Could you support my Patreon?
01:17:57.000 And 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.
01:18:07.000 Started out nice.
01:18:08.000 Started out with, hey, love your show.
01:18:10.000 We support you.
01:18:11.000 That's great.
01:18:12.000 Thanks so much.
01:18:13.000 Wow.
01:18:14.000 God bless you.
01:18:14.000 Said really, you know, a lot of nice things.
01:18:17.000 And gradually it became, hey, watch my content.
01:18:20.000 Hey, watch my show.
01:18:22.000 Hey, you should be on a debate with me.
01:18:24.000 Hey, watch my husband's debate.
01:18:25.000 We're eCelebs now.
01:18:26.000 Now we have Twitter.
01:18:27.000 Follow me on Twitter.
01:18:28.000 Now we're on Patreon.
01:18:29.000 Now I've got a book.
01:18:30.000 Buy my Patreon.
01:18:30.000 Buy my book.
01:18:32.000 And, 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.
01:18:42.000 Even if it wasn't conscious, even if it wasn't cognizantly like a charm offensive, it was. 0.99
01:18:49.000 And 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
01:18:59.000 There's something so toxic about the wanting. 0.98
01:19:02.000 Big difference.
01:19:04.000 I am an e celebrity, but you know what?
01:19:06.000 I never cared about the fame.
01:19:08.000 I've been doing the show for four and a half years, and it's been very successful at times, and it's been very not successful.
01:19:15.000 But I do it every day.
01:19:17.000 And I would do it every day if it was a lot smaller.
01:19:19.000 I would do it every day if it was a fraction of the size.
01:19:22.000 I started doing the show because I like to do it.
01:19:24.000 I love what I do.
01:19:25.000 I love to talk about politics.
01:19:27.000 I love to.
01:19:29.000 To stream, I love to make content.
01:19:31.000 I make content on Twitter all day for free, or at least when I had a Twitter.
01:19:36.000 I make content on social media, I should say, all day and on this show all day for free.
01:19:42.000 And I do that because I like to make myself laugh.
01:19:45.000 If I cared about money and fame, I'd be in Turning Point USA.
01:19:47.000 I'd hold my tongue and I'd say what I'm supposed to say.
01:19:50.000 I'd be working at Daily Wire or whatever.
01:19:53.000 But I always treated this like I want to do something that is like the content is good.
01:20:00.000 I started this out because I put the content first.
01:20:03.000 I said, I want to make something that I would watch.
01:20:05.000 I want to make something like no one else is making, but that I would want to watch.
01:20:09.000 I want to talk about the stories and give the takes that other people aren't giving.
01:20:13.000 I didn't say, I want to be famous like this person.
01:20:16.000 I want to be like this one.
01:20:18.000 I want to have privileges like this famous person.
01:20:21.000 I want to have people worshiping me like this person.
01:20:24.000 I want to make money like this person, live in a house like this person.
01:20:28.000 I live at home.
01:20:30.000 I live at home.
01:20:30.000 I drive the same car that I drove in high school.
01:20:33.000 I don't have any.
01:20:34.000 I have this suit since I was 18, and it cost $400 at Macy's, and I'm a millionaire.
01:20:41.000 You know what I mean?
01:20:42.000 Like, I have had the same PC for four years.
01:20:46.000 I do the show in gym shorts because it gets too hot down here.
01:20:51.000 And, you know, when I got banned on Twitter, it sucked, but you know what?
01:20:55.000 I just went on Telegram and Gab and a few other platforms and just started making more content.
01:20:59.000 I didn't blow my brains out because I was like, no more dopamine.
01:21:02.000 It sucked for like a couple weeks.
01:21:04.000 You know what I mean?
01:21:06.000 But what I'm trying to illustrate is from the start, and I'm not trying to, I'm not saying this to say I'm such a good person.
01:21:13.000 I'm so much better than everybody.
01:21:15.000 I'm just saying that people would say, well, what about you?
01:21:18.000 What about you?
01:21:19.000 You're an e celebrity.
01:21:20.000 Yeah, I am somebody that loves content and became an e celebrity.
01:21:25.000 I'm somebody that because I love what I do and I work really hard at it and I'm the best at it, I'm well known, you know?
01:21:32.000 But I've never, it's never been about the fame and the money and all that first.
01:21:36.000 It's been about the content first.
01:21:37.000 It's been about, you know, the actual stuff.
01:21:42.000 And for some people, and again, it's the toxic people are the people that it's in the wanting.
01:21:46.000 They want, they see somebody like me and they don't say he's inspiring.
01:21:52.000 I love content too, and I want to make my content like his content.
01:21:56.000 They see me and they say, Look at all those viewers he has.
01:21:59.000 Look at all the money he makes.
01:22:00.000 Look at all the stuff that's going on for him.
01:22:02.000 I want people to look at me like that.
01:22:04.000 I want to be famous like that.
01:22:05.000 I want to be on debates and have go off moments and clips.
01:22:09.000 There's a big difference.
01:22:10.000 And it's sort of like people even trying to get rich.
01:22:14.000 You 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.
01:22:21.000 He just loved computers.
01:22:22.000 And he just did what he was good at and got really good at computers and was really good at business.
01:22:26.000 I'm oversimplifying here.
01:22:28.000 And he became the richest, one of the richest guys in the world.
01:22:31.000 Some people look at Bill Gates and say, look at the things he buys.
01:22:34.000 I want to buy those things.
01:22:35.000 Well, Bill Gates didn't get to be so rich because he said, I want to buy a car, so I'll work on computers.
01:22:42.000 He worked on computers and did it so well that he was able to buy nice things.
01:22:46.000 So it's sort of similar there.
01:22:47.000 And it's this wanting which necessarily makes people very toxic. 1.00
01:22:52.000 That's why I say specifically no e girls, because girls in particular are like. 1.00
01:22:57.000 Very lethal, you know, because guys fall in love with them. 1.00
01:23:02.000 And 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
01:23:23.000 People 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
01:23:31.000 Do all kinds of things. 1.00
01:23:34.000 And along the way, the girl steps on people and is going to, not in a good way, not in a cool way, is destroying things. 1.00
01:23:41.000 That's a joke. 1.00
01:23:44.000 On the way, she's causing lots of damage. 1.00
01:23:47.000 She's, you know, conducting espionage, sharing people's secrets, causing conflict between people. 0.88
01:23:54.000 She's getting sort of like undue opportunities and things like that.
01:23:58.000 Lots of problems.
01:23:59.000 With a guy, don't get me wrong, guys are the same way.
01:24:02.000 There are guys that want to be famous and it's just as bad.
01:24:05.000 But, you know, if you're a guy trying to be successful, people go like, oh, fuck you.
01:24:11.000 Who are you?
01:24:12.000 Oh, okay, okay, J.O., go away.
01:24:15.000 You know, but when a girl shows up, it's like, hi.
01:24:17.000 Guys are like, hi.
01:24:20.000 Yeah, you could come on my show.
01:24:22.000 I think you're just really smart.
01:24:23.000 It's not because, not for any other reason.
01:24:26.000 Come on, collaborate with me and I'll introduce you to my friend and all this kind of stuff.
01:24:30.000 So it's like, anyway.
01:24:33.000 So you could see that from the beginning with this based homeschool mom.
01:24:37.000 It was not about, I want to support your show.
01:24:40.000 It was, I want to buy an advertisement.
01:24:42.000 Maybe there was some goodwill in there, but there was definitely the other stuff too.
01:24:46.000 And it became, I want to build a brand.
01:24:48.000 Me and my husband are going to take over.
01:24:50.000 We're going to do a debate.
01:24:51.000 We're going to be e celebrities, blah, blah, blah.
01:24:53.000 And don't get me wrong.
01:24:55.000 It's not bad if you want to be successful.
01:24:57.000 There's nothing wrong with wanting to be successful.
01:25:00.000 But, 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.
01:25:12.000 And, 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.
01:25:23.000 Even then, it's called finesse, you know?
01:25:27.000 It's called, I don't know what you would even call that.
01:25:30.000 It's called finesse, it's called tact.
01:25:34.000 And, you know, basically, even if you're out for the wrong reasons, you still got to play it smart.
01:25:42.000 And 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.
01:25:52.000 So, 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.
01:25:59.000 Couldn't control themselves. 1.00
01:26:01.000 Got a little bit of an ego.
01:26:02.000 And you saw her douchebag husband was saying stuff on Discord about, I can debate Nick.
01:26:07.000 I'm one of the few people who can.
01:26:09.000 They need to see their idol fall.
01:26:11.000 And the guy got a little too big for his britches.
01:26:14.000 And now, you know, then, well, at one point they became a laughing stock, and I hope they enjoyed their.
01:26:18.000 15 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.
01:26:29.000 But 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.
01:26:37.000 I always hated Patrick for the same reason, to tell you the truth.
01:26:41.000 I 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.
01:26:48.000 He really did.
01:26:49.000 He had such an ego.
01:26:51.000 And, you know, Because I'm very smart, because I'm even smarter than him.
01:26:56.000 And I have an ego, but I also have a little bit of humility.
01:26:59.000 I respect the game, I respect what I'm doing.
01:27:02.000 And so I approach it with great humility, even though I think I'm good at it.
01:27:08.000 When I talk to people and I build relationships and things, I understand it's about reciprocity, it's about cooperation.
01:27:16.000 You have to show deference, you have to show humility to people.
01:27:19.000 And so Patrick, I know, thought that he was this great Machiavellian.
01:27:23.000 Sort of snake like character.
01:27:24.000 And 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.
01:27:36.000 He was just calculating, cool customer.
01:27:40.000 And it was so transparent.
01:27:41.000 And for that reason, it was so incompetent.
01:27:46.000 It was such a bad effort.
01:27:47.000 And he failed miserably for it.
01:27:49.000 And I just, I have complete disdain for people that are in it for the wrong reasons and are bad at it.
01:27:54.000 If you're in it for the wrong reasons and you're good at it, at least I could be like, okay, well, you know what?
01:27:58.000 I respect it.
01:27:59.000 I respect it.
01:28:02.000 And people that are failing but are in it for the right reasons, I'm rooting for them.
01:28:06.000 People that are succeeding and they're in it for the right reasons, I'm happy for them.
01:28:10.000 But people that are in it for the wrong reasons and failing, it's like, what are you even doing?
01:28:15.000 You should go, I don't even know.
01:28:17.000 You should go wait tables.
01:28:18.000 You should go, you know, clean tables, honestly.
01:28:23.000 Ah.
01:28:26.000 Very funny.
01:28:28.000 But the key, really the key, the key to being successful is humility.
01:28:34.000 I 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.
01:28:48.000 You know, I thought that the way that you really win is willing to do dirty things that people aren't willing to do.
01:28:53.000 Not like dirty, like, bedroom things.
01:28:55.000 I mean, dirty, like, Like playing, like cheating, you know?
01:28:59.000 And 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.
01:29:07.000 But, 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.
01:29:16.000 I've helped people without keeping score.
01:29:19.000 I'm a good listener.
01:29:21.000 I talk to people.
01:29:22.000 I make people feel good.
01:29:24.000 I help them with things.
01:29:25.000 And, you know, that's honestly just a good practice, whether you're doing it for the right reasons or for the wrong reasons.
01:29:31.000 That's just a good practice.
01:29:32.000 It's like game theory.
01:29:35.000 If you're cooperative with people, if you build good relationships, it's not to say you don't have to watch your back.
01:29:40.000 It's not to say that you don't have to verify and everything.
01:29:43.000 But 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.
01:29:52.000 And keep your word, have honor, be loyal, especially in this, especially in politics, especially in this kind of politics, in an enterprise like this.
01:30:03.000 But really, in anything, it's a good policy.
01:30:05.000 That's the way you get ahead.
01:30:06.000 It's to be respectful, to be deferential, humble, and honestly avoid confrontation.
01:30:12.000 I have this reputation of being this big fighter, but I really go out of my way not to provoke or instigate conflicts.
01:30:20.000 And if I have to have a conflict, I wait for the game to come to me.
01:30:24.000 If I don't like somebody, if I want to have a fight with somebody, I wait for the game to come to me.
01:30:30.000 This is just basic diplomacy.
01:30:31.000 You know, like with Owen Benjamin, I never liked Owen Benjamin.
01:30:34.000 And 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.
01:30:41.000 Now I can go after him.
01:30:43.000 If I went after him before, I'd look like an asshole.
01:30:45.000 But if I go after him now, you know, now it makes sense.
01:30:48.000 So, anyway, that's just a little bit of my personal philosophy.
01:30:57.000 And that's why I hate people that aren't good at it because it's like you're so dumb.
01:31:01.000 You think you're so smart, but you're so dumb.
01:31:04.000 And I don't think I'm the smartest guy ever.
01:31:07.000 I think I have a good sense.
01:31:11.000 But I look at people like that and I'm like, you moron.
01:31:13.000 Like, you had so many opportunities and it wasn't even that hard.
01:31:17.000 There's so many people I know and I give them many opportunities to take advantage, to help, you know, to accept opportunities, whatever.
01:31:26.000 And people don't take them.
01:31:27.000 And I'm like, what are you doing, man?
01:31:29.000 Like, you're the worst snake ever.
01:31:31.000 You're the worst Machiavelli ever.
01:31:34.000 Man, I'm like Gordon Ramsay.
01:31:36.000 You bloody idiot.
01:31:38.000 You're an idiot sandwich, you know, that kind of thing.
01:31:42.000 Oh, so it's very funny.
01:31:43.000 It's very funny to me. 0.99
01:31:47.000 Yeah, it pays to homeschool mom.
01:31:49.000 And you saw it coming. 1.00
01:31:50.000 What's the rule?
01:31:51.000 What's the rule? 1.00
01:31:52.000 No e girls, not even once. 1.00
01:31:54.000 Not even once, man. 0.99
01:31:57.000 Even when you think, she's a homeschooled mom. 1.00
01:32:00.000 She's married. 1.00
01:32:02.000 If she's online and she's a woman, she's an e girl, and you can never have them involved. 1.00
01:32:07.000 I mean, you just can never get close to them. 1.00
01:32:09.000 God forbid, what if I got all up in their business?
01:32:13.000 You know.
01:32:16.000 But everybody thinks, no.
01:32:19.000 But there's an exception, but not me, not this.
01:32:22.000 Surely he didn't mean this.
01:32:24.000 This is okay.
01:32:25.000 It's happened to like everyone I know at some point in time, with some exceptions, and it never works.
01:32:37.000 Never works out. 0.65
01:32:39.000 No e girls, no e girls, not even the based homeschool mom.
01:32:43.000 You know what?
01:32:44.000 You want to support the show?
01:32:45.000 Drop a super chat, say, hey, thanks for the show, and just let that be the end of it.
01:32:49.000 You don't have to start a YouTube channel.
01:32:50.000 Take care of your kids.
01:32:52.000 You don't have to write a book and start a YouTube channel and all this.
01:32:56.000 I mean, there are some people that are working on projects, but, you know, they just do them quietly.
01:33:01.000 They're not like on my show trying to build up a brand in the super chats and with their husband and their tag team debating and whatever.
01:33:11.000 Gosh.
01:33:13.000 Yeah, very funny, though.
01:33:14.000 The fall.
01:33:15.000 The fall. 0.80
01:33:17.000 The decline and fall of Big Papa Fascist and the Bayes Homeschool Mom. 0.93
01:33:22.000 Oh, it's so amusing. 0.88
01:33:24.000 So amusing.
01:33:24.000 So amusing.
01:33:28.000 Because they don't think race is real.
01:33:30.000 Really?
01:33:30.000 Well, then why do you watch this show?
01:33:31.000 I mean, that just goes to show how duplicitous they are.
01:33:34.000 They're going to come into my show and, you know, prop me up and say, You're the best.
01:33:38.000 We love you.
01:33:39.000 Oh, but we think you're evil, basically.
01:33:41.000 We 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.
01:33:51.000 Okay.
01:33:52.000 Nice people, by the way.
01:33:53.000 Nice people.
01:33:54.000 That's based. 1.00
01:33:55.000 That's your based woman for you.
01:33:59.000 You see, and people wonder. 0.96
01:34:00.000 They're like, well, who made you this way?
01:34:02.000 How did you get this way?
01:34:05.000 I'm very observant.
01:34:07.000 That's all.
01:34:08.000 Heart of gold, but I'm very observant.
01:34:13.000 Angry Inch says, long time since I super chatted.
01:34:16.000 Thanks for being an inspiration to us all.
01:34:18.000 You've changed my life for the better, as well as countless others.
01:34:20.000 Hey, thank you, man.
01:34:21.000 I love you, bro.
01:34:22.000 Good to hear from you.
01:34:24.000 Angry Inch, what a guy.
01:34:27.000 Good to see you.
01:34:28.000 We saw Angry Inch recently.
01:34:31.000 And he's a good dude.
01:34:32.000 St. Ambrose says, Who cares if not drinking makes people uncomfortable?
01:34:36.000 They're uncomfortable because they feel they are inferior.
01:34:39.000 Now, that is true, but I don't want to make people feel that way because I don't think that's the case.
01:34:45.000 People want to have a good time.
01:34:47.000 You know, I'm not like them.
01:34:48.000 That's okay.
01:34:49.000 But I just wish I could do my thing without people feeling like they're being judged, you know?
01:34:56.000 People like to have a good time and dance and drink and everything, and I don't like to do that, but I like to be a part of the crowd.
01:35:04.000 But my presence there makes people feel like, oh, I feel ashamed.
01:35:10.000 And it sucks because I just want to do my thing.
01:35:14.000 It's been like that my whole life.
01:35:17.000 But I'm not budging.
01:35:20.000 St. Ambrose, the same thing happens to me whenever I step into a room.
01:35:23.000 I'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.
01:35:34.000 Very based.
01:35:35.000 We love to see that.
01:35:36.000 We love to hear.
01:35:38.000 About the no drinking.
01:35:39.000 The polo is, give or take, not really a polo guy per se, but the rest is solid.
01:35:48.000 What was I going to say?
01:35:49.000 I was just going to say, it's so funny to think about there.
01:35:52.000 There's this woman on Twitter who the other day she was like, I'm writing a graduate paper on Nick Fuentes.
01:35:58.000 I've had to watch 30 hours of his show.
01:36:00.000 All he does is talk about himself.
01:36:02.000 And 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
01:36:20.000 And she has to listen to me talk for like hours about, like, well, I don't drink because, well, why don't I drink?
01:36:26.000 Is it because I'm autistic or is it because, and all the rest.
01:36:32.000 That is so funny to me.
01:36:33.000 She's got to sit through and suffer my monologues about cake frosting and about ice pack on my camera and all this kind of stuff. 0.94
01:36:43.000 Bay's homeschool mom and.
01:36:46.000 That's very funny to me. 1.00
01:36:47.000 Yeah, you are going to watch it, bitch. 1.00
01:36:49.000 Yeah, watch my show, bitch. 1.00
01:36:51.000 Write it down and write it down. 1.00
01:36:54.000 And write your paper about me.
01:36:55.000 They're watching Nick Fuentes in grad school.
01:37:01.000 Ethel 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?
01:37:14.000 That didn't make any sense to me.
01:37:16.000 Would make sense because they could then control the death and harm statistics.
01:37:26.000 But a placebo.
01:37:28.000 Whilst everyone actually getting the vaccine, what you said doesn't make sense.
01:37:34.000 Have you heard of the placebo theory, where for all the people not having adverse reactions to the vaccine, they are not getting the vaccine?
01:37:43.000 People that are not having adverse reactions to the vaccine that they didn't get are not getting the vaccine.
01:37:51.000 But, conjunction, a placebo while everyone actually getting the vaccine are actually getting seriously harmed.
01:38:02.000 What is wrong with you?
01:38:03.000 Can you just string out a coherent sentence?
01:38:07.000 Geez, I mean, I think I know what you're saying, but it doesn't make any sense.
01:38:15.000 Noah Nooner says, went back to the Barnes debate.
01:38:17.000 Do you mind going a little more in depth on the special provisions Israel gets from U.S. foreign aid?
01:38:23.000 If not, where can I read up on it?
01:38:25.000 Love the show.
01:38:26.000 God bless.
01:38:26.000 Thanks, man.
01:38:28.000 Appreciate it.
01:38:30.000 Special provisions of U.S. foreign aid to Israel.
01:38:34.000 Israel gets to spend 25% of U.S. military aid on their own defense industry, which is a provision no other country gets.
01:38:44.000 Every other country has to spend all their aid money on American defense contractors.
01:38:49.000 Israel 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.
01:38:57.000 Every other country doesn't get it as a lump sum.
01:39:01.000 Let me think.
01:39:02.000 Israel gets the money as a loan. 0.61
01:39:06.000 Because if they got it as a grant, it would be supervised.
01:39:10.000 If we gave Israel a grant, we would have to oversee how the money is spent.
01:39:13.000 If we give it as a loan, we don't.
01:39:16.000 Then we forgive the loan.
01:39:17.000 So we give the loan.
01:39:19.000 So we don't get oversight like with a grant, but we also don't get the money and the interest paid back like with a loan.
01:39:26.000 So we give them the money with no oversight.
01:39:30.000 And we also give them a special interest rate to borrow money from American lenders.
01:39:38.000 And let me think, what else?
01:39:41.000 I have it in my notes somewhere, but just off the top of my head, those are some of the conditions.
01:39:48.000 And we give them more money than any other country in the world.
01:39:51.000 And Robert Barnes kept saying, well, these countries get more money combined.
01:39:55.000 Or what the hell did he say?
01:39:57.000 He kept saying the dumbest thing.
01:39:59.000 He kept saying, like, I don't know what you're talking about.
01:40:01.000 These countries get more money in aid.
01:40:03.000 And I corrected him, and he never said that again throughout the debate.
01:40:06.000 He said it like five times.
01:40:08.000 He kept saying, You know, five countries get more aid than Israel.
01:40:13.000 And he said that, like, throughout the debate.
01:40:15.000 And 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.
01:40:24.000 I was like, And also, I just want to clarify, and I want to ask Robert, what countries are getting more foreign aid than Israel?
01:40:29.000 Because as far as I know, since 1978, Israel's gotten more military aid than any other country in the world.
01:40:36.000 They're number one, and they have been for 40 years.
01:40:38.000 And the next two countries are countries that have been paid off since they made peace agreements with Israel.
01:40:44.000 And those countries are Egypt since the Camp David Accords and Jordan since the early 90s.
01:40:50.000 And after that, he never, he didn't address it and then never brought it up again.
01:40:54.000 Kept saying it and then he never brought it up again.
01:40:57.000 So, I'm a fucking liar.
01:41:00.000 I was like, yeah, what's your source on that?
01:41:04.000 I'm like, Israel gets like half of all foreign aid money or some crazy figure like that.
01:41:08.000 I don't have it in front of me, but.
01:41:11.000 Black Knight says government trustors are the real cancer.
01:41:14.000 They are the enemy number one of every self respecting free man.
01:41:18.000 True. 1.00
01:41:19.000 Based Femmoid, here we go. 0.53
01:41:20.000 So just found out I can get citizenship in Hungary because of my parents.
01:41:24.000 Seems like Viktor Orban is the kind of leader we wish we had.
01:41:28.000 It is cringe.
01:41:29.000 Is it cringe to leave and move to Hungary? 0.99
01:41:31.000 I think so.
01:41:33.000 I think it's cringe to leave.
01:41:36.000 But it's a personal choice.
01:41:37.000 Do you want to go down with the ship?
01:41:39.000 Does America mean something to you?
01:41:41.000 Or do you want to raise your family in a nice country?
01:41:45.000 I mean, it's really a personal decision.
01:41:49.000 Ethelred says, went to the gym and had to wear a mask again.
01:41:51.000 Immediately got in a fight with a mask.
01:41:53.000 Freak couple. 0.92
01:41:55.000 The guy was clearly shaken, and his wife had to get the manager.
01:41:58.000 Afterward, they apologized and agreed it was ridiculous, and they hate them too.
01:42:02.000 LOL.
01:42:03.000 I wouldn't have even forgiven the couple.
01:42:07.000 Right?
01:42:08.000 I mean, if they get all shaken up and they get the manager involved, and they're like, oh, never mind, so sorry.
01:42:13.000 It's like, oh, blow it out your ass.
01:42:16.000 I hate that.
01:42:17.000 You know, if you're going to disagree, disagree.
01:42:20.000 Stick to your guns.
01:42:22.000 That's funny, though.
01:42:23.000 That's a funny story.
01:42:25.000 I've never gotten in the fight with civilians.
01:42:28.000 I've never gotten in the fight with patrons.
01:42:31.000 Just with, you know, workers.
01:42:36.000 So that's never really happened to me.
01:42:38.000 People don't really give me a hard time.
01:42:40.000 I don't know why. 0.82
01:42:43.000 Advancing Australia says regarding Afghan refugees, cringe boomers and neocons tell us we owe them. 1.00
01:42:48.000 Owe them, really? 0.56
01:42:49.000 It was the blood and limbs of our youth and our treasure.
01:42:52.000 Surely they owe us.
01:42:55.000 So true.
01:42:56.000 Ha!
01:43:00.000 Yeah, yeah, you said it.
01:43:03.000 Now that's true.
01:43:05.000 The blood and the limbs of our youth and our treasure, surely they owe us.
01:43:11.000 And seen.
01:43:13.000 Now that's good writing.
01:43:15.000 Now that's good writing.
01:43:20.000 That's good.
01:43:20.000 No, you're right.
01:43:21.000 It's true.
01:43:23.000 It's a good point.
01:43:23.000 Wow.
01:43:25.000 So true, King.
01:43:26.000 That is so true.
01:43:28.000 California Groyper says, Hi, Nick.
01:43:29.000 I made my first super chat on the weekend and was looking forward to you reading it on Monday, but you didn't.
01:43:35.000 Did you skip some?
01:43:36.000 Thanks for all you do.
01:43:37.000 I'll take a look for you.
01:43:41.000 Robert Montgomery says, Dr. Robert Malone, inventor of mRNA vaccines, says the thing is deadly poison and to not get it.
01:43:48.000 True.
01:43:50.000 Advancing Australia says, I love you too, Nick.
01:43:52.000 Hey, I love you, King.
01:43:54.000 Spencer says, Have you read The Grand Chessboard and are you very into geopolitics?
01:43:58.000 No, I haven't read that one.
01:44:03.000 I'm not into it so much anymore.
01:44:04.000 I used to be.
01:44:05.000 I used to be when I was in high school and in college because I was studying IR in college, but not so much.
01:44:14.000 I don't even read as much as I used to.
01:44:16.000 I should read more, but I'm just busy, you know?
01:44:20.000 Life gets in the way.
01:44:21.000 When you're in high school, all you have to worry about is you have so much free time.
01:44:25.000 And I wasn't like doing a show or an e celebrity back then, so all I had was time to read.
01:44:32.000 You know?
01:44:33.000 Now I don't even really have time to read.
01:44:35.000 It's like I get worn out.
01:44:37.000 I prep for the show, do the show, wrap up the show.
01:44:40.000 That's like four hours.
01:44:42.000 I do at least four hours of other work during the day.
01:44:45.000 It's paperwork, it's emails, it's phone calls, it's logistical things, it's errands, it's whatever.
01:44:53.000 And, you know, just add on to that.
01:44:57.000 I mean, I could be more productive, I could do that, but it's just not as easy as it used to be.
01:45:02.000 I don't have as much time as I used to have.
01:45:04.000 Because in school, I would just read all throughout the school day, and then I'd read when I got home, you know.
01:45:08.000 I'd read in class, I'd read at lunch, I'd read at home, I'd read in study hall.
01:45:13.000 And it was like, well, I have to be in school anyway.
01:45:16.000 I can't be on my phone.
01:45:17.000 Might as well read.
01:45:17.000 Now it's like I have other things I have to do, you know, or could be doing.
01:45:22.000 But yeah, I used to be into it.
01:45:25.000 Spencer's, I just read that.
01:45:27.000 360 NoScope says, stop Anglo hate. 0.68
01:45:30.000 Great. 0.67
01:45:31.000 Pawn says, how do I get the Minecraft server IP?
01:45:33.000 I don't know if they want to open it up to everybody yet because we were having some trouble bringing lots of people on.
01:45:39.000 Mechasalt says, Pfizer, Moderna, JJ, how about I'm taking none of them?
01:45:43.000 Vaccinated?
01:45:44.000 Not me, not ever. 1.00
01:45:48.000 So true.
01:45:52.000 Max says, Nick, hope you're doing well tonight.
01:45:54.000 Much love from Kansas. 0.84
01:45:56.000 Anyway, it's so funny to see leftist soy boy tards like Hassan Piker cry about kids and teens in the AF movement, such as myself. 0.88
01:46:05.000 Keep it up, brother. 0.99
01:46:07.000 It is funny, those soy boy, you soy boy tard. 1.00
01:46:12.000 No, it's true. 1.00
01:46:13.000 Thank you, King.
01:46:15.000 They do hate it, and that's why it's good.
01:46:19.000 What would you prefer?
01:46:20.000 Because I see.
01:46:21.000 For better or for worse, I like Matt Gaetz, but I see Matt Gaetz and Marjorie Taylor Greene and they fly around the country.
01:46:28.000 And who goes to their rallies?
01:46:30.000 People that are 100 years old. 0.99
01:46:31.000 No offense.
01:46:32.000 Nothing wrong with being old. 0.99
01:46:35.000 But they go to these rallies and it's boomers. 0.99
01:46:38.000 It's boomers.
01:46:39.000 It's elderly people. 1.00
01:46:41.000 And that's fine.
01:46:42.000 We love elderly people too.
01:46:44.000 But there's something to be said about somebody like me that can bring out people that are high school and college. 0.94
01:46:51.000 Because the older people, I mean, They're a reliable voting demographic and everything, but they're not making any more of them. 0.97
01:46:57.000 You know what I mean? 1.00
01:46:58.000 They're not making any more. 0.97
01:47:00.000 Silent generation, basin red pilled boomers, you know, each generation is successively more liberal. 1.00
01:47:07.000 So, 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
01:47:19.000 That's what we want. 1.00
01:47:20.000 So, yeah, of course they hate that.
01:47:23.000 Of course they're worried about that.
01:47:24.000 They call it the Hitler Youth.
01:47:27.000 And they're afraid of that because they know that the youth is the future.
01:47:29.000 And, 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.
01:47:39.000 Nick Fuentes and all these teenagers, that's good optics. 0.94
01:47:42.000 That's good optics.
01:47:43.000 We have the youth on our side.
01:47:46.000 These 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.
01:47:54.000 You know, I'll take young over old any day of the week.
01:47:57.000 You know, in terms of political followers, I'll take the youth over the elderly any day of the week.
01:48:05.000 And 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.
01:48:11.000 We want it to be fresh.
01:48:12.000 We want it to be young.
01:48:13.000 That's a sign of a vivacious, growing, lively, energetic movement.
01:48:19.000 The elderly like that too.
01:48:21.000 I'm sure they like to be among the living for once, you know?
01:48:24.000 Michelle Malkin, I saw she was in an event recently.
01:48:29.000 Maybe like a year ago in Massachusetts.
01:48:30.000 And she went to this event in Boston.
01:48:32.000 It was a book talk. 0.89
01:48:34.000 And the people that turned out were it was a lot of old people. 0.70
01:48:39.000 And when she went to AFPAC, it was all like college kids. 0.95
01:48:43.000 And 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.
01:48:50.000 You know, the crowd went crazy when she got up there.
01:48:53.000 And it was like when we were in AFPAC 1, it felt like the room was shaking because it was so loud.
01:48:57.000 And, 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.
01:49:09.000 And that's what we want, so.
01:49:11.000 I agree, buddy.
01:49:12.000 We need more like you.
01:49:13.000 We need more youngsters.
01:49:14.000 That's good optics.
01:49:16.000 We want that.
01:49:18.000 Salvador says Hi, Nick.
01:49:19.000 If 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?
01:49:31.000 No, I don't think so.
01:49:32.000 They'll introduce ISIS itself because we don't control the Taliban. 0.99
01:49:36.000 Well, not anymore. 1.00
01:49:38.000 Maybe we do.
01:49:39.000 I don't know to what extent that we do.
01:49:40.000 Maybe it's honestly the extent of our control there.
01:49:44.000 It's possible, but I don't think it's true.
01:49:46.000 Slappy 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.
01:49:55.000 People don't learn, don't they?
01:49:56.000 No.
01:49:58.000 No, they don't. 1.00
01:49:59.000 Annoying Conqueror says Adam Waffen, fed up, confirmed, take my money, you filthy Italian. 1.00
01:50:05.000 Yeah, isn't that funny? 1.00
01:50:08.000 You're that Adam Waffen, Order of the Nine Angles, a few other groups, all literally on the payroll of the federal government.
01:50:16.000 That just came out last week.
01:50:18.000 Some key Adam Waffen leader was paid like $140 grand, $140 grand by the FBI because he was a CI.
01:50:28.000 He was a confidential informant.
01:50:30.000 So go figure, right?
01:50:33.000 How many times have I said it on the show?
01:50:35.000 People that are out there saying, we got to do something, we got to get on the ground.
01:50:39.000 I'm sick of sitting around.
01:50:40.000 And that is literally their MO.
01:50:44.000 They are out there, they are infiltrating, and that's what they sound like.
01:50:49.000 Case in point, Oath Keepers, Three Percenters, Proud Boys.
01:50:53.000 Now, they're not the same as Adam Loffin, but what do these guys all have in common?
01:50:57.000 They're all out there in a group taking names, out there doing actions and fighting and whatever. 0.96
01:51:05.000 And they're all filled with CIs, and all their people are in jail. 0.68
01:51:11.000 So, yeah, another lesson learned.
01:51:13.000 Not that they're comparable.
01:51:14.000 Adam Loffin's of like a different category, but it's the same principle, right?
01:51:19.000 So, you got to be careful.
01:51:22.000 Slappy says, Love you, Nick.
01:51:23.000 Found you last October.
01:51:24.000 You are a great role model in many ways.
01:51:27.000 I appreciate that.
01:51:27.000 Well, thank you.
01:51:28.000 Certainly, you're not supposed to emulate me in every way, but some ways I could see it.
01:51:33.000 But thanks.
01:51:35.000 I love you too.
01:51:36.000 360 NoScope says, Hi, Nick.
01:51:37.000 If you had to choose, who is your favorite Anglo throughout history? 0.98
01:51:40.000 Great show tonight, mate. 0.93
01:51:42.000 Favorite Anglo throughout history? 1.00
01:51:47.000 I don't know. 1.00
01:51:52.000 Maybe. 0.57
01:51:54.000 Does Donald Trump count as an Anglo? 0.55
01:51:56.000 He's what, German, Scottish?
01:52:00.000 So I guess that doesn't really count. 0.98
01:52:02.000 Maybe. 0.93
01:52:04.000 Pat Buchanan is basically Anglo, right? 1.00
01:52:06.000 I guess I'd go with Pat Buchanan. 0.89
01:52:10.000 Or Andrew Jackson.
01:52:13.000 Or George Washington. 1.00
01:52:15.000 You know, those are some good Anglos, right? 1.00
01:52:18.000 I guess I'd go with that off the top of my head.
01:52:20.000 It's kind of a hard question.
01:52:22.000 Think of every English person throughout history.
01:52:24.000 I don't know.
01:52:26.000 Pat Buchanan.
01:52:27.000 John Smith says if you were born 20 BC in Rome, what Hellenic philosophy would inform your morality and why?
01:52:34.000 Oh, I don't know.
01:52:35.000 I'm not a Hellenic philosophy expert.
01:52:42.000 20 BC, so before, obviously, before Christianity.
01:52:45.000 I don't know what I would be.
01:52:46.000 I probably believe in Aristotle.
01:52:52.000 I don't know.
01:52:53.000 Do they have, like, I'm not an expert on, like, what people believe that.
01:52:57.000 Did people read philosophy in ancient Rome, or were they just, like, peasants?
01:53:01.000 I don't really know enough about the day to day life.
01:53:03.000 I mean, what am I?
01:53:04.000 Am I the emperor?
01:53:05.000 Am I a peasant?
01:53:06.000 Am I a farmer?
01:53:07.000 Did farmers read?
01:53:08.000 Did farmers read philosophy?
01:53:10.000 Did farmers worship the emperor?
01:53:15.000 Did they worship the Roman gods?
01:53:18.000 Or did they worship Aristotle?
01:53:19.000 I mean, I don't know.
01:53:21.000 So, I mean, if I were in 20 BC Rome, I'd probably just believe what everybody else believes, right?
01:53:28.000 If we're talking like, unless you're saying, like, what's your favorite Hellenic philosophy, in which case that's a different question.
01:53:34.000 Vitus says, with based homeschool mom, there's a good example of how familiarity breeds contempt.
01:53:40.000 I've seen people flip on you like that maybe three dozen times over the year.
01:53:44.000 Why do you think they?
01:53:44.000 Flip like that.
01:53:45.000 I don't know.
01:53:46.000 But you're right, it does happen a lot.
01:53:52.000 I don't know what it is.
01:53:54.000 I don't even think it's that because it's not like we were really so familiar.
01:53:57.000 I didn't really talk to her.
01:53:59.000 I never talked to her husband.
01:54:01.000 She super chatted the show.
01:54:02.000 I reacted to the super chat.
01:54:03.000 So I don't think it's necessarily that.
01:54:05.000 I think familiarity is really more like exposure, you know, time with somebody maybe.
01:54:11.000 Because we didn't even really get to know each other that way.
01:54:16.000 We weren't really all that familiar.
01:54:19.000 I think it's as simple as a lot of people want to take advantage.
01:54:24.000 They can't get what they want, right?
01:54:26.000 Or it's not happening as fast for them.
01:54:28.000 And then they like to take it out on me.
01:54:30.000 They feel entitled.
01:54:31.000 I'm not doing enough, whatever, you know.
01:54:34.000 I think it's something like that.
01:54:37.000 As you write, many, many such cases.
01:54:40.000 Rural Australian says Hi, Nick.
01:54:41.000 Thanks for being such a good content creator. 1.00
01:54:43.000 Everything else, such as most things on YouTube, are boring and gay in comparison. 1.00
01:54:47.000 Thanks. 1.00
01:54:49.000 Filthy says, Hey, Nick, thanks for taking the hard road and being an inspiration to us all.
01:54:53.000 My pockets aren't deep, but here's a 20.
01:54:55.000 Keep up the great work, big guy.
01:54:57.000 You're a real one.
01:54:57.000 God bless.
01:54:58.000 Thank you, man.
01:54:59.000 I appreciate it.
01:55:00.000 Thanks for the 20. 1.00
01:55:02.000 Tenrio says, Don't trust women. 1.00
01:55:04.000 Don't trust blacks. 1.00
01:55:05.000 Not even me. 1.00
01:55:06.000 My innate biochemistry might take over and disintegrate the base from the inside out.
01:55:12.000 Stay safe out here in these streets.
01:55:15.000 I appreciate you.
01:55:16.000 Responsible enough to warn us.
01:55:20.000 Can't help himself. 1.00
01:55:22.000 Well, I think you could trust black men, but you can't trust any women. 1.00
01:55:26.000 You cannot trust any women. 1.00
01:55:29.000 You know, it's like the intro trust no hoes. 1.00
01:55:34.000 That's what Denzel Curry said in the old intro to this show. 1.00
01:55:37.000 Can't trust them.
01:55:38.000 Can't trust one.
01:55:41.000 Contrary 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.
01:55:53.000 It's like having a pet dragon or a lion or something.
01:55:56.000 It'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.
01:56:08.000 Don't trust them. 1.00
01:56:09.000 But I trust my black kings.
01:56:11.000 I trust them. 1.00
01:56:12.000 I'm going to be checking.
01:56:13.000 I'll be checked.
01:56:14.000 I'll verify and everything.
01:56:15.000 You know, I'll look over my shoulder.
01:56:18.000 But I trust my black kings. 1.00
01:56:22.000 I trust a nigga. 1.00
01:56:24.000 Especially Tenryo.
01:56:26.000 Nate Smokes says Big Papa Fascist said he didn't give a damn with letting his daughter race mix. 0.89
01:56:31.000 What the?
01:56:32.000 You can't come back from that.
01:56:33.000 Hell no, you can't.
01:56:34.000 Hell no, you can't.
01:56:36.000 Hell no.
01:56:37.000 There are even like parents out there that aren't red pilled or based or anything, and they're not okay with that, you know?
01:56:44.000 People that are just broadly traditional or ethnic or Catholic in some cases that aren't okay with that.
01:56:54.000 Protestants, too.
01:56:55.000 What am I saying?
01:56:56.000 Southerners, too.
01:56:58.000 So you don't even have to be like a hardcore red pilled race realist, whatever, to know how fucking dumb that is, right?
01:57:06.000 How could anyone say that? 0.99
01:57:08.000 Especially someone claiming to be like a Groyper.
01:57:11.000 I'm Big Papa Fascist. 1.00
01:57:13.000 You're a Big Papa Retard. 0.95
01:57:15.000 Entropy 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
01:57:25.000 L. Spurg, I don't even know who that is, but I don't care.
01:57:29.000 Brian says, Nick, when you do something you love, you never work a day in your life.
01:57:33.000 Love the show, Nick.
01:57:34.000 Well, I'll take your word for it.
01:57:36.000 Because I'm working real hard.
01:57:38.000 But thanks.
01:57:39.000 I appreciate it.
01:57:41.000 Max says, Good night, my bass brother.
01:57:43.000 Have a wonderful rest of your night.
01:57:44.000 I'm 15 and you're an inspirational hero.
01:57:47.000 Keep up the amazing work.
01:57:48.000 Love the show, merch, and the movement.
01:57:50.000 God bless.
01:57:51.000 Well, thank you, man.
01:57:52.000 I appreciate that.
01:57:54.000 Stay in school, all right?
01:57:56.000 Or if you don't stay in school, no drugs, no alcohol, no sex, no smoking.
01:58:03.000 Okay.
01:58:03.000 Read books.
01:58:05.000 Do something productive, all right?
01:58:06.000 That's my advice to you.
01:58:07.000 But.
01:58:08.000 I appreciate it, buddy.
01:58:10.000 Enjoy.
01:58:11.000 You're 15.
01:58:12.000 Enjoy, you know?
01:58:14.000 But I appreciate it.
01:58:15.000 You're a patriot.
01:58:16.000 Dr. Zoom versus Model UN was awesome.
01:58:19.000 The biggest clash we had was over small islands.
01:58:22.000 Wanted to see where you would have sided.
01:58:24.000 Who do you think is the rightful owner of the Falklands?
01:58:26.000 We debated this for an entire session.
01:58:31.000 I don't know, dude.
01:58:32.000 I'm not an expert on the Falklands.
01:58:35.000 I mean, it's British territory.
01:58:38.000 So, you know.
01:58:39.000 Argentina tried to take it, but it was British. 0.70
01:58:43.000 That's not how it's resolved.
01:58:44.000 You don't just show up and occupy it as British land, sovereign British land.
01:58:49.000 So I think the British, I think it belongs to the British.
01:58:55.000 But yeah, good times in Model UN.
01:58:57.000 I've been in, hey, I've seen many committees in my day, many cabinets, many committees, many countries.
01:59:03.000 I represented almost every P5.
01:59:05.000 I think, well, I was Russia, China, US.
01:59:09.000 I was never UK or France, I don't think.
01:59:14.000 I represented USA, Russia, China, South Korea, Iran, Saudi Arabia.
01:59:22.000 I represented Palestine once, Iraq, Denmark, Peru, Egypt.
01:59:34.000 And I represented, I think that was it.
01:59:37.000 I think that, oh, in Indonesia and India.
01:59:41.000 Those were good times.
01:59:43.000 I was in an Iranian cabinet.
01:59:45.000 I was in a Russian cabinet.
01:59:46.000 I was Sergei Lavrov, the foreign minister.
01:59:49.000 I was in a balance of powers committee cabinet where I was America.
01:59:56.000 Good times, man. 0.99
01:59:57.000 Those were good times.
01:59:58.000 I'm not going to go.
01:59:58.000 Hey, it's almost the end of the show.
02:00:00.000 You almost tricked me there.
02:00:02.000 Almost got me to go way down in memory lane.
02:00:06.000 I was in Ecofin.
02:00:07.000 I was in the General Assembly.
02:00:09.000 I was in SpecPoll.
02:00:11.000 I was in DISEC.
02:00:12.000 I was in the Disease Security Council already.
02:00:15.000 I was in the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces in Egypt.
02:00:17.000 I was in the Iranian cabinet, the Russian cabinet, the G20.
02:00:23.000 I was in the G20 twice.
02:00:24.000 Once as China, once as Saudi Arabia.
02:00:26.000 One, both times.
02:00:28.000 One in Northwestern as China.
02:00:30.000 One is Saudi Arabia at Washington University in St. Louis. 0.98
02:00:34.000 Those were good times, man.
02:00:36.000 Oh, I miss it.
02:00:37.000 I do miss it.
02:00:39.000 I got an honorable mention at Harvard as Peru.
02:00:42.000 As Peru, do you know how hard that is?
02:00:44.000 I was an EcoFan 200 person committee.
02:00:47.000 And you know how the rankings went?
02:00:49.000 I think China was number one.
02:00:51.000 Number two was USA and Russia.
02:00:53.000 And the honorable mentions were me, Palestine, and France, or something like that. 0.74
02:00:59.000 But in other words, All the awards went to P5s except for me in Palestine.
02:01:04.000 I was Peru.
02:01:05.000 Do you know how hard that is?
02:01:07.000 And honestly, I got cheated.
02:01:09.000 My efforts weren't recognized by the chair.
02:01:12.000 I made the biggest voting coalition.
02:01:14.000 I wrote the resolution that got passed.
02:01:16.000 I gave the best speeches.
02:01:19.000 I was the hardest working man in Ecofin, Economic and Finance Committee.
02:01:27.000 Really pissed me off.
02:01:30.000 But I was proud.
02:01:30.000 I was proud of the performance.
02:01:31.000 It wasn't about the award, the chair didn't recognize.
02:01:34.000 Performance, that's okay.
02:01:35.000 It was about the performance.
02:01:36.000 It was about one great performance.
02:01:38.000 You know?
02:01:41.000 Oh, no, I did represent France.
02:01:42.000 I represented France in Ecofin.
02:01:44.000 So the only P5 I never represented was the UK.
02:01:50.000 Yep, those were the days.
02:01:53.000 Okay.
02:01:53.000 All right, all right, all right.
02:01:55.000 We got to move on.
02:01:58.000 Got to move on.
02:02:01.000 In more ways than one, but you got to move on.
02:02:04.000 Yeah, I used to love it.
02:02:12.000 I was a badass, man.
02:02:13.000 Everybody knew me on the circuit.
02:02:17.000 I would walk in and see old people that I'd been in committee with before, and they'd be like, hey, great to see you.
02:02:25.000 Remember, we were in this committee?
02:02:26.000 I'd be like, hi, how's it going?
02:02:29.000 And one time I walked into a committee, and this guy from arrival school was like, oh, shit.
02:02:37.000 You're in my committee because I was so good.
02:02:39.000 I wiped the fucking floor with him.
02:02:41.000 He was trying so hard, too.
02:02:42.000 I wasn't even breaking a sweat.
02:02:43.000 He was writing notes, passing them to everybody in the committee, and he was writing resolutions.
02:02:48.000 And I totally fucking bossed on him.
02:02:52.000 In the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces, Egyptian cabinet, I was Mohammed Masri, the commander of the Western Military District.
02:03:02.000 I did so good, I got assassinated.
02:03:04.000 Anyway, no one wants to hear about my model UN exploits.
02:03:08.000 People didn't even want to hear about it then.
02:03:10.000 It was a big faux pas when your session ended and you get back with your.
02:03:14.000 Your teammates from your school, and everybody's like, Oh, in my committee, I did this.
02:03:18.000 And it's like, No one gives a shit, okay?
02:03:19.000 No one cares.
02:03:20.000 Keep it to yourselves.
02:03:21.000 It's really not that interesting.
02:03:23.000 So if they didn't care then, no one cares now, but.
02:03:27.000 But yeah, I remember that dude was in my committee.
02:03:30.000 He was trying so hard from UC Labs.
02:03:35.000 But I just have that X factor.
02:03:37.000 I have that X factor that you can't make, okay?
02:03:40.000 You can't train, you can't make that way.
02:03:42.000 I have that X factor.
02:03:46.000 Which, you know, he just didn't have.
02:03:48.000 So.
02:03:52.000 Good times, and I do miss it.
02:03:59.000 That's the funniest thing.
02:04:00.000 The funniest thing was beating people that were trying harder than me. 0.99
02:04:03.000 Like, there was this hick from Georgia at Washington University when I was in the G20 of Saudi Arabia. 1.00
02:04:14.000 And I forget what country he was, but. 1.00
02:04:16.000 He was trying so hard.
02:04:18.000 He brought a research binder.
02:04:19.000 He had like a hundred pages of research.
02:04:23.000 And the topic was like nuclear energy or something.
02:04:25.000 And he knew everything about nuclear energy, knew everything about nuclear centrifuges and all this.
02:04:30.000 I didn't do any research.
02:04:32.000 I did like a Google search the day before.
02:04:34.000 I wrote my white paper and black paper the day before it was due.
02:04:37.000 And 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.
02:04:48.000 Get a feel for the room.
02:04:49.000 I like to let it play out.
02:04:50.000 You know, I like to let it play out.
02:04:52.000 I don't like to go with a game plan.
02:04:54.000 I like to let it play out.
02:04:55.000 I get in, I size up the crowd, I see, you know, what people are thinking, and then I get to work.
02:05:03.000 But 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.
02:05:16.000 And I beat his fucking ass because he.
02:05:19.000 Just wasn't that good.
02:05:20.000 I mean, he did a lot of research, but he wasn't using his personal powers very well. 0.57
02:05:26.000 So, 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
02:05:39.000 And what else are they going to do?
02:05:40.000 Like, roll around in the mud or whatever?
02:05:42.000 So, all they had to do was speech team, model UN.
02:05:45.000 In all the extracurriculars, they were way more prepared every time.
02:05:49.000 You know, because that's all they have to do.
02:05:52.000 Every 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.
02:06:00.000 And their parents are, you know, their parents are involved and they've, you know, because that's all they got to do.
02:06:05.000 What else are they going to do?
02:06:07.000 Ride on a tractor?
02:06:09.000 So, 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.
02:06:25.000 They 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.
02:06:35.000 I would just, like in Speech Team, I remember I made it to finals and extemporaneous.
02:06:41.000 And there was this girl from Southern Illinois, and she gave her speech, and it was on a technical level a very good speech.
02:06:48.000 But I came in, I had a very funny joke in my intro.
02:06:51.000 The whole room was dying laughing.
02:06:54.000 All my teammates were there to back me up, and they thought it was the funniest thing.
02:06:58.000 And I won first place.
02:07:00.000 And I basically won that round off of that joke.
02:07:05.000 And it was like, yeah, hey, darling.
02:07:08.000 You know, she tried, she tried it, she did everything she was supposed to do.
02:07:13.000 And still, still couldn't cut it.
02:07:18.000 There's something about the Chicago way.
02:07:20.000 The Chicago way.
02:07:22.000 It's different.
02:07:23.000 The Chicago school, which is sort of shysty, you know.
02:07:31.000 Unscrupulous, shysty.
02:07:33.000 This was the method in Model UN, and I brought that to the speech team, you know.
02:07:36.000 There 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.
02:07:46.000 And they designed the rules at that conference to be different than any other conference.
02:07:50.000 If you go on the East or West Coast, you get a different set of rules.
02:07:53.000 And what they incentivize is consensus building, and the rules are built around that.
02:07:58.000 The rules are built around passing one resolution, taking everyone's ideas into account, and compromising.
02:08:05.000 But Chicago is different because all the schools in Chicago, their big national conference was the Chicago International Mon Conference, run by.
02:08:16.000 Mundo was the organization.
02:08:19.000 And their philosophy was we want to make it realistic.
02:08:24.000 And when the real UN is in session, North Korea is erratic.
02:08:29.000 Iran is erratic.
02:08:30.000 You know, the United States is an imperialist and it's cynical and you don't get consensus and it is dysfunctional. 0.97
02:08:40.000 And so they didn't care about consensus.
02:08:41.000 They didn't want an idealized version of the UN.
02:08:44.000 They wanted the real UN.
02:08:45.000 And they rewarded you based on how well you were able to.
02:08:48.000 Be an effective representative of your country's interest.
02:08:52.000 And so, because that was their rules and that was our conference, that shaped all the schools in our area.
02:09:00.000 So, all the schools in our area, when they hosted their one day conferences, it was like that.
02:09:04.000 And 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.
02:09:20.000 So.
02:09:23.000 Anyway, anyway, see, you got me going, you got me going talking about my glory days.
02:09:29.000 Can't do that.
02:09:34.000 Ah, but those are good times.
02:09:37.000 I don't know why.
02:09:38.000 I 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.
02:09:55.000 I do like southerners.
02:09:56.000 I have lots of southern friends.
02:09:59.000 But 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.
02:10:11.000 I hated process.
02:10:12.000 I 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.
02:10:23.000 We would get physical, we'd push people around.
02:10:27.000 One of my, I was in a double delegation once, and I think I've told the story.
02:10:31.000 A few times we were in the security council, me and my buddy, and he played rugby and he was like a huge guy.
02:10:38.000 I went up and distracted the chair while he, like, he ran into some guy and like knocked him on the ground.
02:10:48.000 I went up to the chair and I'm like, Hey, and I held up my paper.
02:10:50.000 I'm like, Hey, so what do you think about this?
02:10:53.000 And he came like barreling down the aisle and smashed into this guy.
02:10:57.000 He's like, Oh, I'm so sorry.
02:11:02.000 Oh man.
02:11:04.000 And that's now that's fun.
02:11:06.000 And that's politics.
02:11:06.000 Now that's fun.
02:11:07.000 But this kind of bullshit, we're pre writing clauses.
02:11:10.000 You can't do that. 1.00
02:11:11.000 Now that's fucking gay. 1.00
02:11:17.000 But yeah, he came flying down the aisle like a cannonball. 1.00
02:11:22.000 We did a lot of creative stuff.
02:11:24.000 Okay, all right, all right, all right.
02:11:26.000 It was fun.
02:11:26.000 It was fun.
02:11:27.000 You don't care.
02:11:28.000 You don't care.
02:11:28.000 You don't know.
02:11:29.000 You could never understand.
02:11:32.000 Basterous, because I wish you could construct a whole K through 12 curriculum for homeschoolers.
02:11:37.000 And then I could go back and give it to my parents and convince them to homeschool my baby self.
02:11:43.000 Yeah, me too.
02:11:45.000 Vitus says familiarity in a one sided way since it's a parasocial relationship.
02:11:50.000 Yeah, maybe.
02:11:50.000 They're getting a little too comfortable, perhaps.
02:11:54.000 360 NoScope says Nick, I think Buchanan is Irish. 0.94
02:11:58.000 Easier question favorite British ruler. 0.94
02:12:01.000 That's easier.
02:12:04.000 I don't know, man.
02:12:07.000 King George.
02:12:08.000 I don't know.
02:12:09.000 Favorite British ruler.
02:12:10.000 I'm not really a history buff on Britain.
02:12:15.000 Black Roypers says, I know, I know, I know. 0.98
02:12:17.000 Race mixing is bad and I will never do it, but sometimes I see white women and it's like they aren't even human in a good way. 0.99
02:12:24.000 You got to check that, my brother. 1.00
02:12:27.000 Hey, listen, man.
02:12:28.000 Listen, brother.
02:12:30.000 Listen, brother. 0.99
02:12:33.000 We both, we both need to repopulate our races, okay? 0.54
02:12:38.000 Because America's getting invaded and we both stand something to lose.
02:12:43.000 Connor Monroe says, Hey, Nick, praying that you can continue to overcome the persecution you're facing.
02:12:49.000 Have you ever thought about making amends of Michael Knowles and Matt Walsh?
02:12:52.000 They could further mainstream you. 1.00
02:12:54.000 That's a really retarded question. 1.00
02:12:57.000 What else do we have? 1.00
02:12:59.000 Okay, that's our last question.
02:13:01.000 That's going to do it for me tonight.
02:13:04.000 You haven't thought of that.
02:13:05.000 Let me call him up.
02:13:05.000 Let me call him on the phone.
02:13:06.000 Hey, Matt Walsh, Daily Wire employee.
02:13:10.000 Let's be friends again.
02:13:11.000 Yeah, great idea.
02:13:13.000 Okay, that's going to do it for me.
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02:13:23.000 As always, thanks for watching.
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02:13:28.000 We love you.
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02:13:30.000 Until then, have a great rest of your evening.
02:13:33.000 Americanism, not globalism, will be our credo.
02:13:40.000 It's going to be only.
02:13:42.000 America first. 0.99
02:13:49.000 The American people will come first once again.
02:14:01.000 With respect.
02:14:19.000 America