00:00:35.000But after Kevin McCarthy and the Republican leadership in the House of Representatives declined to remove her from her leadership position within the party, state Republicans in Wyoming moved to censure her, which is largely a symbolic move, but nevertheless, a pretty big rebuke of the Republican Party.
00:00:57.000We'll also be talking tonight about an article in the Wall Street Journal, which came out yesterday, and it says that surprise, surprise, the COVID lockdown. Is never going to end.
00:01:08.000And for some reason, people don't think that that's the case.
00:01:13.000I see a lot of people online, even like right wing people, are acting and operating as though there's just going to be a termination of all the restrictions, mask mandates, fines, everything like that in like a reasonable amount of time.
00:01:29.000People seem to still be under the impression that this is just going to naturally sunset and it'll be like it was 2020 or 2019 all over again.
00:02:24.000Although, before we get into any of that, we have to talk about a few things.
00:02:29.000First and foremost, as always, I want to remind you guys to check out my Telegram channel, t.meslash nickjfuentes, and the official Telegram channel of the show, which is at t.meslash afupdates.
00:02:45.000And I encourage you to follow those Telegram channels for all news about the show, about me.
00:02:51.000It's my primary social media these days.
00:02:54.000And of course, subscribe to the email list.
00:02:58.000And with that out of the way, we have a really, really big announcement tonight.
00:03:02.000It's kind of a slow news day, so the show is not really huge about the news.
00:03:09.000But it's a big show because we have a big announcement.
00:03:12.000It's what you've all been waiting for.
00:03:14.000And believe me, We've been waiting too.
00:03:52.000You know, last year when we did the first half pack, everything was going great.
00:03:56.000You know, everything was going really smoothly.
00:03:59.000That was after the Groyper War, and everybody was so gung ho.
00:04:04.000And this has been the most difficult year of my career so far in 2021.
00:04:10.000It's been five, six weeks, and it's already been really difficult.
00:04:15.000So it's been some unprecedented challenges lately, and I'll actually get into those during the AFPAC conference, during my speech in the months ahead.
00:06:14.000You know, we had a few events last year GLS, AFPAC, no incidents.
00:06:19.000And we're taking the security from then and we're multiplying it by 10.
00:06:23.000So it is going to be basically the most secure event like in world history.
00:06:29.000And part of that is this year we're going to only be selling tickets with checks and cash in the mail.
00:06:36.000And we're doing that so that we don't have anybody's information in a third party system.
00:06:42.000We're doing that so that there's not a list.
00:06:44.000Somewhere online, you know, on a website or something.
00:06:48.000So, what you do is this you go to the website, you go to buy tickets, you fill out your information, you print a form, which will have your name, it'll have your email address, and you send that in with cash or a check for the amount, however many tickets you're buying, or what kinds of tickets you're buying, and you send that into the PO box.
00:07:10.000And then, once we get your check and we get your form, then you are officially going to AFPAC.
00:07:15.000And we'll be sending people emails when we confirm them.
00:07:18.000And then we'll be sending people emails the day of the conference telling them the location and all the details the day of.
00:07:27.000And hopefully that will assuage some people's concerns because I know this is a really hot political climate right now.
00:07:35.000And believe me, I mean, that is something that has weighed on me for a long time for my own sake and for the sake of everybody going to this event.
00:07:42.000But we have taken extraordinary measures to make sure that this thing is going to be secure, it's going to go off without a hitch, and nobody is going to have any reason to worry.
00:07:52.000And I will just say this straight up because I know that it's sort of a hairy time right now.
00:08:01.000If you feel extremely uncomfortable going to a private, in real life political conference and you have very, very extreme concerns about security or privacy, I would say maybe don't come.
00:08:14.000I'm encouraging everybody to go because there's nothing to worry about and we have it taken care of.
00:08:20.000But I just want to put that out there.
00:08:22.000I feel like it's my responsibility to remind people anytime that you go anywhere in real life, there is some.
00:08:32.000If you walk across the street, you could get hit by a car.
00:08:34.000And so I'm telling people, in light of extraordinary circumstances, if you're so, so paranoid or concerned, you know, maybe don't go, right?
00:08:42.000But we think that we have put together, and we know we have put together a security regime, we have put together a security system, which is so airtight that it's about as good as it gets.
00:08:54.000It is as good as it gets as far as our security measures go.
00:08:57.000And I don't even want to release all the details because.
00:09:01.000You know, if there are any shenanigans, we don't want to give anybody a heads up.
00:09:04.000But you can believe that when you go through this conference, it's going to be like going through an airport, maybe even more extreme.
00:09:14.000But it's going to be a really fun event.
00:09:16.000I don't want people to be deterred by everything that's going on.
00:09:19.000We're pressing ahead in spite of everything because that's what we have to do.
00:09:23.000We're in this political movement, we want to put America first.
00:09:27.000And, you know, ultimately, we always knew that it was going to get like this.
00:09:31.000Things were easier last year, and things have been easier for the past few years.
00:09:36.000And now things are getting harder, and now things are getting more difficult, and there's more scrutiny, and the stakes are higher, and the risks are higher in a lot of ways politically for everything that we're doing.
00:09:46.000But that's always been the name of the game.
00:09:49.000You know, when I signed up to do this show, and I never really signed up, but when I jumped into this with both feet four years ago, that is always what I had in mind.
00:10:00.000And so, against everything, against all odds, we are going to press ahead.
00:10:05.000And it'll be really something because the final weekend in February, you're going to have CPAC with Rick Grinnell and Steve Scalise and a lot of never Trumpers and establishment people.
00:10:17.000And then there's going to be AFPAC, and that's it.
00:10:20.000And I think that that is going to send a really powerful message about who we are and about our metal and about our character and what we're about.
00:10:29.000That, against all odds, in spite of deplatforming and blacklisting and censorship and everything, We are going to push through.
00:10:37.000We're going to stand tall assertively, and we're going to say that we're going to put America first.
00:10:43.000And not, by the way, just against the Biden administration, and not just against the Democratic Party and the globalists and the political left, but against, perhaps more importantly, the establishment of this party.
00:10:55.000Because I've outlined the stakes, I've outlined the context of the next four years for a long time, which is to say, I've talked about that in the event that Biden.
00:11:06.000Is inaugurated, which is what happened.
00:11:08.000I talked about this all throughout 2020 and even in the first few weeks of 2021.
00:11:14.000That what will take shape afterwards is a civil war within the Republican Party politically between the never Trump establishment and between the America First insurgency.
00:11:26.000In order to fight that battle, we got to show up.
00:11:33.000We have to stand tall and put the message out there that the America First Political Action Conference and this movement.
00:11:40.000Is where you want to be if you're a courageous, America first patriot and you mean it.
00:11:45.000You really mean that you're America first.
00:11:47.000So I think that it's very important to do this event in this time.
00:11:52.000You know, like I said, there were some concerns and there was some internal debate about whether or not to move forward because there's all this crazy stuff going on these days.
00:12:02.000But I always, my gut feeling always told me it's more important than ever because of what's going on to move forward.
00:12:09.000You know, not only are we not going to back down, but it's more important than ever to stand tall and to get up there and to do it.
00:12:17.000So, anyway, so that's the big announcement.
00:12:19.000We're going to have more information on that to come.
00:12:46.000You wouldn't believe the kinds of like customer service that me and Assistant Groyper have had to go through over the past month trying to put together this conference and the platform and all these different things.
00:13:16.000You put that with a check or cash into an envelope and you mail it to the PO box, which you'll get that information in the email.
00:13:24.000And then once we get your form, once we get your check, we're going to.
00:13:27.000Cross reference that with the form you submitted online so we get a little verification, and then we'll send you a confirmation email that you're going.
00:13:35.000And then the day of the conference, we'll email you the location and you'll show up, and everyone will have a great time.
00:13:42.000Everyone's going to have a really good time.
00:13:44.000Everyone's going to put America first, and I think it's going to be really terrific.
00:14:03.000This guy has been working tirelessly for probably hundreds of hours.
00:14:09.000It's insane the amount of work that this guy puts into this.
00:14:12.000And it's really inspiring because we have had so much support in the past month and in the past four years, but we have had so much support all together from people monetarily, from people with their time or their skills or whatever.
00:14:29.000And, you know, I've been doing this for four years by myself for the most part, largely.
00:14:34.000And you know that I put everything into this and I've got a passion for it and I want to put America first.
00:14:39.000And what's inspiring is that I've put all of that out into the world.
00:14:43.000And now you've got all these people that have now become a part of this movement.
00:14:50.000And not just to me, but to the movement.
00:14:53.000You know, everything that I've put out there, the risks I've taken, the work I've done, you know, the blood, sweat, and tears I put into it.
00:15:00.000And now you've got people from across the country, people in all kinds of different ways, are putting back into it the same blood, sweat, and tears, the same energy, the same passion, the same commitment, the same sacrifice.
00:15:14.000And that is maybe the most white pilling thing of all.
00:15:16.000And Assistant Groyper, I mean, he is like the guy, he is the example of this.0.93
00:15:23.000And there's a lot of people that do it, but this guy has been working harder, I think, than anybody, maybe almost harder than me.
00:15:47.000I put that out on Twitter or Telegram a long time ago, but I didn't mention it tonight.
00:15:51.000That this year's AFPAC will be in Orlando, which it makes it way better, in my opinion.
00:15:57.000CPAC, I've been there, I think, three or four times, and it's always a great time, but it's winter in Washington, D.C.
00:16:06.000And especially now with COVID restrictions and COVID lockdown and everything, it would just be a nightmare.
00:16:13.000Not only is it freezing cold and it's 12 inches of snow, But everyone's going to wear a mask, and you can't sit down at four people at a table or whatever the rules are over there.
00:16:22.000So, thank God CPAC has moved to Orlando, and we kind of took their lead.
00:16:27.000We're moving to Orlando too, which is going to be way better.
00:16:32.000I mean, it's going to be so much nicer to have an event with the nice weather, without the crippling COVID restrictions, and all of that.
00:16:39.000So, it's shaping up to be a really great time.
00:16:52.000And I almost feel bad because we had like thousands of people apply to get in, and we could only take like 200.
00:16:58.000We wanted it to be a small event last year.
00:17:01.000And for the people that were there, I'm sure that they will agree it was like electric.0.84
00:17:06.000You know, not only was it amazing having all the Groypers just roving around the National Mall or the National Harbor and the National Mall, walking around D.C. and just mogging all these conservatives, just terrifying everybody.1.00
00:17:20.000It was like the Groypers had arrived, you know.1.00
00:17:23.000But then the actual conference itself, it was a small room.
00:18:40.000It was, you know, Ethan Ralph and Cassandra Fairbanks at one table and Baked Alaska and Scott Greer and Jake and Jaden and me and everybody at the other table and, you know, Val and Brainsig and all these some controversial, but a lot of great people were there last year.
00:18:58.000And this year is going to be even bigger.
00:20:11.000And I'm always caught off guard because we have just been like swamped.
00:20:15.000Moving at this rapid pace, accelerating for so long that these things just kind of dawn on me, and I'm like, oh, I have like a balloon, or I don't, you know, congratulations, we're doing whatever.
00:20:28.000So it's our four year anniversary of the show, four years ago on Saturday.
00:20:32.000So last Saturday was the four year mark of when I did my first America First episode on Right Side Broadcasting Network, February 6th, 2017.
00:20:46.000And I did it at Boston University in my college dorm room, not actually even my college dorm room, a college dorm room which belonged to my friend.
00:20:55.000I couldn't do it in my college dorm room because I had a double, which means I was just me and a roommate, just two beds in a room.
00:21:03.000And my friend, who was also a Trump supporter, he had a single, so it was just him.
00:21:07.000And he was on board with my show, he was on board with what I was about, whereas my roommate was a liberal, so.
00:21:15.000I went up to his dorm room, which was on, I think, the seventh floor.
00:21:18.000And I went up to Warren Towers and I brought my laptop.
00:21:22.000And every night, I brought my laptop, my microphone, my lights, my green screen, these little metal bars that you would set up to hang the green screen.
00:22:00.000I would field the questions instead from Twitter.
00:22:04.000I would go to Twitter, and for people to ask a question on my show, they would write out their question on Twitter, and then they would add the hashtag AmericaFQ.
00:22:16.000And at the end of the show, for 15 minutes, I would field questions from Twitter with that hashtag.
00:22:21.000And most nights, I wouldn't even have enough questions to last the full 15 minutes.
00:22:27.000I would have to stretch it and end early sometimes.
00:22:30.000Most nights, it was the same few people that asked all the questions.
00:22:33.000Like this guy, Norway for Trump, was one of the original super chatters, as it were.
00:22:41.000And he would make up most of the super chats every night.
00:22:45.000And that's back when the show, I'd be lucky if I pulled 100 live viewers, 1,000 viewers in total, you know, when the replay was posted on the YouTube channel.
00:22:55.000And ultimately, the show got canceled in its first run because there weren't enough people watching it.
00:23:02.000And then we brought it back for a short time over the summer Monday, Wednesday, and Friday in the afternoon.
00:23:08.000And then I totally got canned after Charlottesville.
00:23:11.000And then in August 17, that's when I started my YouTube channel.
00:23:15.000That's when I started to do it more or less independently.
00:23:19.000And that's a little bit of a history of the show, but it was four years ago to the day on Saturday that I started all of this.
00:23:27.000And I think it's important to acknowledge, especially now in light of what's been going on, you know, we're now facing total deplatforming.
00:23:35.000Something which I always knew would happen.
00:23:37.000I mean, I always knew it would happen from the day I started this show that total deplatforming would occur.
00:23:43.000Deplatforming, in other words, from everything in a total capacity.
00:23:46.000And not just from the platforms, but from the services too.
00:23:50.000And I always knew that day would come.
00:24:47.000You know, if there's any hope, it's that the show started from nothing and it grew to these proportions and heights that I had never thought possible, that nobody expected and nobody saw coming.
00:25:01.000And if it could make it this far, if I started out in a dorm room four years ago and now I'm making it with tens of thousands of viewers on my own platform and surviving in spite of being deplatformed from YouTube and DLive, surviving multiple deplatformings from like everything, if I made it this far, Then that gives me a lot of encouragement that we can survive and we can make it through this transition.
00:25:24.000This is probably entering a new phase in the history of the show.
00:25:28.000If you had RSBN and then you had the YouTube saga combined with DLive, this is probably another chapter after that.
00:25:40.000It's a big one, it's the most precarious, it's the most uncertain, but it's that same spirit, it's the same passion.
00:25:49.000That same perseverance that got the show to where it was a few weeks ago when it was all time biggest on DLive, all time highest earning, competing with the biggest, the best.
00:26:00.000It's that same spirit that's going to keep the show going in spite of all this.
00:26:26.000So I don't want to spend too much time on that.
00:26:28.000You know, that's the way of America first.
00:26:31.000I don't spend a lot of time sort of going around in circles and patting myself on the back about different, oh, 500 episodes, 750 episodes, three years, four years.
00:26:41.000We're just focused on moving the ball down the field, right?
00:27:16.000Some of you guys during the train wrecks debate or internet blood sports, but.
00:27:20.000You know, it's really something when you take a look back and see how far we've come, how long it's been, how many challenges, how many different periods, fads, and trends, and news, people that have come and gone, and everything.
00:28:11.000I was going to say a little something about the Super Bowl, but I don't really want to because I didn't watch the Super Bowl and I never watched the Super Bowl.1.00
00:28:22.000And I basically think the Super Bowl is gay.0.72
00:28:25.000And I'm not one of these people that's totally anti sports.
00:28:29.000You know, some people are really autistic about this.0.81
00:28:31.000They're like, oh, you watch football more like zog ball, more like cringe ball, you know, sports ball.0.98
00:28:39.000See, I don't want to be like that because to me that is just sort of anti social and like a weird attitude.
00:31:33.000So, I mean, that kind of epitomized it, but there was that, and then there's these advertisements, Bruce Springsteen, the middle, and all this kind of stuff.
00:31:43.000So, please, you know, I don't have time for that.
00:31:45.000And then today, they're talking now about rounding up everybody who was in the stands and wasn't wearing a mask.
00:31:51.000The police are going to go and they're going to find everybody who was in the stadium during the game, watching the game without a mask, and presumably find them or arrest them or something.
00:32:01.000The mayor of Tampa came out with a statement today saying as much.
00:33:30.000When I see, oh, he won the big game, the big BLM game, the big BLM COVID Capitol Police Memorial game, I'm like, Yeah, it's really not that big of a victory to me.1.00
00:33:46.000So, anyway, I was going to talk a little bit about the Super Bowl.
00:33:50.000I guess I just did, but I don't watch it, and I just think it's stupid.
00:33:55.000I didn't like football when it was just throwing the ball around and it was Doritos commercials about, you know, stupid stuff.
00:34:02.000And now I definitely don't like it when it's Amanda Gorman and they do a memorial for the Capitol police who defended the Capitol against the insurrectionists.
00:34:11.000And it's Bruce Springsteen talking about we're all going to meet in the middle and everyone's getting arrested for not wearing masks.
00:34:21.000I guess you got to take the white pills where you can get them, but I'm just not feeling that one.
00:34:26.000All right, okay, but we're going to move on.
00:34:28.000I want to talk about this article from the Wall Street Journal about the COVID lockdown.
00:34:34.000And, you know, this article isn't really groundbreaking or anything, but it's really important to build the case, in my opinion, for you and for the people that you know, that the lockdown's not going to end because people don't believe that.
00:34:50.000Everybody is acting as though, and they're wrong, the COVID lockdown is going to sunset.
00:34:57.000And when I say sunset, I mean that it is going to gradually fade away.
00:35:01.000The restrictions, the lockdown, are going to gradually go away, and they'll go away, you know, basically without intervention from the people.
00:35:10.000That these things are going to go away, and nothing goes away by itself, but that the government is going to gradually lift these things, and people are just going to passively wait for this to occur.
00:35:21.000And in full compliance and cooperation with the government, we're just going to patiently await the day when they say mission accomplished, and now you can go to a concert again.
00:35:31.000People are acting as though that's the case.
00:35:34.000Because if that were not the case, and people knew, which is true, that the COVID lockdown would never end, they wouldn't be acting like they are now.
00:35:45.000Right now, all of the media and Hollywood elites are browbeating you into submission.
00:35:50.000And most people are along for the ride.
00:35:52.000If you look at most of the public opinion polling in the UK, in the United States, people support the mask wearing, they support the lockdowns, all of this.
00:36:03.000And they're going along with it because they're under this assumption based on psychological tricks from the government that if we play ball now and we play nice now, it's not going to be much longer, even though it's unbearable and it's unsustainable and it's ruining our lives.
00:36:20.000If we just wait a little bit more longer, well, they'll let us out of our houses and then it'll be just like it used to be.
00:37:07.000So, this is an article from the Wall Street Journal.
00:37:09.000This says as much from the scientists.
00:37:11.000All these scientists that liberals know so much about, liberals are apparently now avid science readers.
00:37:18.000They read science magazines and they're all doctors, right?
00:37:21.000Ask your average liberal asshole who's on Reddit or Twitter, and I'm sure they've all got MDs, they've all got their doctorates in medicine and they read science journals.
00:37:33.000They understand even how to read those things, right?
00:37:36.000I mean, these guys are really smart, brainy people.
00:37:48.000It says, Vaccination drives hold out the promise of curbing COVID 19, but governments and businesses are increasingly accepting what epidemiologists have long warned the pathogen will circulate for years or even decades, leaving society to coexist with COVID, much as it does with other endemic diseases like flu, measles, and HIV.
00:38:13.000It will circulate for decades, is what they're telling us, which we know.
00:38:18.000We know that COVID is not going anywhere because it's a novel virus, and you can't get rid of viruses.
00:38:24.000You could build up an immunity to viruses so that they're less lethal and the symptoms aren't as severe when you contract the virus, but there was never the intention, and this was never what the CDC said.
00:38:37.000You know, from a scientific point of view, nobody should have ever been under the illusion that the virus can be eradicated.
00:39:04.000The question then becomes if we cannot eradicate the virus, then how do we coexist with it?
00:39:11.000If it's going to be endemic to society, like measles, like HIV, like the flu, like anything else, and we have to coexist with it, What is that coexistence going to look like?
00:39:24.000Well, this is actually an extremely pragmatic and practical question.
00:39:29.000You know, this is acknowledging and accepting that the virus is just here now.
00:39:34.000It's not like it's something that happened and then we're going to put a lid on that and move on.
00:39:38.000And there was this weird time when COVID was here and then we got rid of it.
00:39:42.000No, once COVID arrived on our shores, it's here to stay and it's never going to go away.
00:39:48.000And so the pragmatic question is what are we going to do to get along while this is here?
00:39:53.000People like me have been saying for the past year that whatever the coexistence looks like, it has to be sustainable.
00:40:00.000And it has to be mindful of civil liberties.
00:40:03.000It has to be mindful of people's mental and psychological and social well being.
00:40:07.000It has to be mindful of the well being of the economy.
00:40:10.000In other words, the lockdowns that have been put in place for the last year are not really, these things do not really work with the idea that COVID is indefinite because the lockdowns and the measures that have been put in place are not sustainable for the long term.
00:40:27.000If COVID goes on for the rest of our lives, clearly these lockdowns cannot.
00:40:31.000These lockdowns were sold to us as temporary measures to stop the spread of the virus so we could gather more information when we knew nothing about it.
00:40:41.000That's how they sold this to us last March.
00:40:44.000You know, last March, it's still ongoing.
00:40:46.000So, almost a full year ago, they said, We're going to shut everything down and everyone's going to wear a mask and everyone's going to social distance and all of this because we don't know anything about this.
00:40:58.000And before it spreads and transmission increases in the United States, We want to stop that spread so we can learn more about it.
00:41:23.000Then it turned into, well, the lockdown needs to be maintained so we could permanently prevent transmission.
00:41:29.000Or the lockdown needs to be maintained until there's a vaccine, presumably to eradicate the virus.
00:41:34.000Or the lockdown needs to remain in place until there's herd immunity.
00:41:38.000Now they're telling us the lockdown, coinciding with the endemic virus, has to go on forever in some form.
00:41:45.000And the article goes on it says the ease with which the coronavirus spreads, the emergence of new strains, and poor access to vaccines in large parts of the world mean COVID could shift from a pandemic disease to an endemic one, implying lasting modifications to personal and societal behavior, say epidemiologists.
00:42:06.000Thomas Frieden, who is the former director of the CDC, said, Going through the five phases of grief, we need to come to the acceptance phase that our lives are not going to be the same.
00:42:18.000I don't think the world has really absorbed the fact that these are long term changes.
00:42:23.000Endemic COVID doesn't necessarily mean continuing coronavirus restrictions, infectious disease experts said, largely because vaccines are so effective at preventing severe disease and slashing hospitalizations and deaths.
00:42:38.000Hospitalizations have already fallen 30% in Israel after it vaccinated a third of its population.
00:42:45.000But some organizations are planning for a long term future in which prevention methods such as masking, good ventilation, and testing continue in some form.
00:42:56.000Meanwhile, a new and potentially lucrative COVID industry is emerging quickly as businesses invest in goods and services such as air quality monitoring, filters, diagnostic kits, and new treatments.
00:43:09.000So it says that it doesn't necessarily mean.
00:43:12.000That we'll have lockdowns forever, although it doesn't rule it out.
00:43:16.000It says it's not necessarily true, which doesn't inspire much confidence.
00:43:21.000But it does say that our lives won't be the same, and at least some of these measures will be here forever, specifically the masking.
00:43:29.000They say that among the measures that will be here indefinitely, that will be a part of the personal and societal changes that are permanent, one of them at least will be the masking and ventilation, which presumably is not just filtering, air vents, and things like that, but probably limited occupancy indoors, limited occupancy at At major public events like concerts or movie theaters or stage plays or political rallies or things like that.
00:43:58.000So, what this article is saying is it's trying not to send up too many red flags.
00:44:03.000It's trying not to make people go crazy thinking it's going to last forever.
00:44:07.000It says, well, it doesn't necessarily have to last forever, but some of the most important components will last forever.
00:44:17.000Diseases are considered endemic when they remain persistently present but manageable, like the flu.
00:44:24.000The extent of the spread varies by disease and location, according to epidemiologists.
00:44:28.000Rabies, malaria, HIV, and Zika are all endemic infectious diseases, but their prevalence and human toll vary globally.
00:44:36.000Very early on, after countries failed to contain the coronavirus and transmission raged globally, according to John Moscola, who's the director of the NIH, it was evident to most virologists that the virus would become endemic.
00:44:51.000Immunologists now hope vaccines will prevent transmission, a finding that would drastically reduce the virus's spread.
00:44:57.000An Oxford University study published last week found people given the AstraZeneca vaccine might be less likely to pass on the disease.
00:45:06.000Still, there are vast pockets of the human population that will remain beyond the reach of a vaccine for the foreseeable future, giving the virus plenty of room to continue circulating.
00:45:19.000So think very carefully about what they're saying.
00:45:21.000They're telling us the virus is here to stay forever and we have to live with it.
00:45:33.000But then they go on to say the lockdown restrictions are indefinite too.
00:45:38.000They say that, well, these emergency measures won't necessarily last forever, but definitely lots of them will.
00:45:44.000And unlike the flu and unlike AIDS and unlike Zika and unlike everything else, part of managing COVID means radically transforming society.
00:45:54.000You know, the AIDS epidemic hit America and H1N1 hit America.
00:45:58.000I mean, lots of diseases hit America and never in history.
00:46:02.000Have we seen the kind of extreme measures like we've seen under COVID?
00:46:07.000And unlike all those other endemic diseases, they say that these extreme measures have to be permanent.
00:46:13.000You know, when AIDS comes around and that's around forever, what does personal and societal adjustments look like to cope with that?0.75
00:46:27.000And when H1N1 and SARS and all these other diseases came to America, was the push to shut down all businesses and shut down schools?
00:46:37.000And make everybody wear a mask and every restaurant install plastic shields behind their cash registers and between booths and tables and limit occupancy to 25%.
00:46:49.000But for COVID, they're saying, yeah, a lot of this is going to last forever.
00:46:52.000And lastly, and this is maybe the most important point, they say, well, at least these COVID restrictions will last until the vaccines allow us to manage the virus.
00:47:18.000What does controlling the virus look like to them?
00:47:20.000Well, it means having a really high rate of people getting the vaccine.
00:47:25.000At the same time, they say, however, that most people in the world are beyond the reach of the vaccine and will be for the foreseeable future.
00:47:34.000In other words, these extreme lockdown measures will last until we can get a handle on the vaccine, and getting a handle on the vaccine means vaccinating most of the world's population, and we're not going to vaccinate most of the world's population.
00:47:54.000If you follow that through to its logical conclusion, and I'm going through it rigorously and carefully to prove this to you, but what they're telling you is the lockdown is never going to end.
00:48:20.000And they're going to vaccinate 100 million people in America in Biden's first 100 days.
00:48:24.000So, Hopefully, this will all end by 2022, right?
00:48:29.000Well, wrong, because they're telling us that there is still so much room for the vaccine to grow and for these new strains to come out where the vaccine cannot reach in the third world.
00:49:32.000Think about the damage that's being done, not merely to the economy, but to people's mental well being, to people's, the rest of their lives in a holistic way.
00:49:42.000Think about all the kids that were going into high school last year as a freshman, and their freshman year has now been canceled, and their sophomore year is going to be canceled, and their junior year is going to be canceled.
00:49:55.000If we don't end the lockdown until 2024, you're going to have an entire generation of kids that didn't go to high school.
00:50:01.000Their whole high school, from the age of 13 to maybe 18 or 19, has been spent in their stuffy room on a Zoom call with headphones in their ears, on a screen, in the dark, in their bed, or at their desk.
00:50:57.000What about people entering the job market from college?
00:51:00.000What about people that are trying to get married and have kids?
00:51:03.000How are you supposed to get married in a time like this, just like with the kids?
00:51:08.000If you thought it was difficult to get married before with Tinder and hookup culture and pornography and contraception and abortion and OnlyFans, well, now add to that the fact that all the bars and all the restaurants and the schools are closed too.
00:51:24.000I mean, it cannot be said enough that this COVID lockdown is destroying society.
00:51:36.000But what will come next is actually even worse than the lockdown because when eventually we are freed from some of these shackles, you understand that the Great Reset has taken effect.
00:51:55.000They're pushing us into this unbearable situation, which is worse than anybody could ever imagine.
00:52:00.000It was already worse than anybody could imagine a year ago.
00:52:04.000And it's exponentially worse than that now, thanks to the COVID lockdown.
00:52:08.000And what the government is doing is it's pushing people into this state that is so intolerable and so unbearable that the minute that the government offers any kind of relief from this, people are going to be excited and they're going to beg for it.
00:52:23.000Things that we took for granted last year and that we are entitled to, in which any decent society or any decent citizen should expect, is going to be seen as a privilege.
00:52:34.000Like last year, going out to eat is just, I mean, yeah, that's what you do.
00:52:40.000America is in total decline and everything's terrible, but hey, at least you can go and enjoy a variety of good foods for a low price.
00:52:48.000At least there are some benefits to living in this globalist empire, right?
00:52:54.000The recreation's off the table, the leisure is off the table, all socialization, basically the lifeblood of a community, is taken off the table.
00:53:04.000And when the government offers to reintroduce that, people are going to say, wow, indoor dining at McDonald's?
00:53:24.000And all you have to do, says the government, is get your vaccine.
00:53:29.000All you have to do is download spyware on your phone and your computer for contact tracing.
00:53:34.000All you have to do is wear a mask all the time.
00:53:38.000All you have to do is give up your privacy, give up your rights.
00:53:42.000Give up all control to the government.
00:53:45.000And what's more, is because the government is giving this to you now, psychologically, it is just as easy for the government now to take it away.
00:55:07.000A few years ago, it would be unconscionable to tell people you're going to get fined and no fly listed for something as stupid as not wearing a mask.
00:56:03.000The rest of us are going to have to manage.0.99
00:56:05.000So let's inoculate the at risk populations and quarantine them.
00:56:10.000And then everybody else, like the flu, like AIDS, like everything else, should just be allowed to go back into the society and take their chances with the Constitution, with their rights, free from government control and surveillance and coercion, like they're trying to put on us now, which is more than ever before.
00:56:31.000Because otherwise, this is what we're going to get.
00:56:54.000But the good thing about human beings is that there is this wild card element where maybe the government expects that they keep people trapped in their homes and they think that people will just be sort of like willing lab rats in this big globalist experiment.
00:57:08.000Or maybe people are just going to start to go crazy.
00:57:12.000And do things that the government does not anticipate, like they're doing in Europe.
00:57:19.000In Europe, they're smashing windows and burning cars and blowing things up.
00:57:23.000Pretty soon, I imagine it'll get worse than that.
00:57:25.000I wonder if in Europe they might start to take actions against their own governments and extreme actions against their governments.
00:57:33.000I don't think that's outside the realm of possibility in Europe or in some of these other countries.
00:57:38.000I wonder if in the United States it would backfire in the same way.
00:57:42.000But unless and until the people demand an end to lockdown, it won't end.
00:57:46.000And this is like, you know, I know a lot of this is stuff you've heard before over the past year, but to put it succinctly, based on this article, excuse me, to build the case factually and, you know, with their own statements from the epidemiologists and the immunologists and all these people is to build the case and say, look, it's not a conspiracy.
00:58:25.000And what's more is less than we're going to like what's happening now, we're going to like what comes after this.
00:58:32.000Maybe they're going to start to unwind things in a year, five years, 10 years, whatever.
00:58:37.000And at that point, when we walk outside of our houses, we're going to be walking outside into a totally different world where we don't even have the option to resist.
00:58:48.000This is critical that the COVID lockdowns brought to an end.
00:58:51.000I don't know how people aren't freaking out more about this.
00:58:54.000It really is true what they say about the frog in the boiling pot of water.
00:59:00.000I mean, imagine if 10 years ago all of this just happened at once.
00:59:03.000Global pandemic, total economic lockdown, mask mandates with fines.
00:59:09.000I mean, there would be riots in the streets.
00:59:10.000There would be riots in America 10 years ago, 15 years ago.
00:59:14.000But things have gotten to the point, I think especially because of Trump, where people are just willing to accept whatever the government tells them, whatever the media tells them.
00:59:22.000And so now we are just accepting this as normal.
00:59:34.000Even if it doesn't feel like that now, even if you don't think that it's that way now, just think about how different things were 10 years ago.
01:00:10.000And she's completely out of step with where the Republican Party is at, which is pro Trump.
01:00:17.000And so there was a vote that was held in the House of Representatives last week on whether or not to remove Liz Cheney from her leadership role in the House Republican Party.
01:00:29.000I mean, it wasn't even close that they voted to keep her in her position.
01:00:34.000And I saw this last week, and it wasn't surprising, but it was outrageous.
01:00:39.000This is how the Republican Party operates, but it's outrageous that after everything we've been through in the past five years, everything that we just went through in the past few months, Liz Cheney, who votes for impeachment, can remain in the leadership of the Republican Party.
01:00:53.000It's not a surprise for the Republican Party, because, like I said, they've been pulling this kind of stuff forever.
01:00:58.000This is how the establishment operates.
01:01:00.000They hate their voters, they hate their constituency, they hate you.
01:01:04.000And they're more like Liz Cheney than they're like Paul Gosar.
01:01:07.000They're more like Liz Cheney than they're like Marjorie Taylor Greene or Donald Trump, for that matter.
01:01:12.000That's why they sabotage Trump at every turn.
01:01:17.000It comes after a series of political maneuvers, which are not dissimilar, where throughout the Senate runoff race in December and in early January, they were passing immigration bills, condemning Trump, wouldn't stand with Trump, things like that.
01:01:33.000They overturned the president's veto during the Senate runoff.
01:01:38.000So, this is just another decision like that.
01:01:40.000But the good news is that over this weekend, the state Republican Party in Wyoming acted against the national Republican Party leadership and they voted to censure Liz Cheney because she wasn't removed from the leadership.
01:01:54.000It says, The Wyoming Republican Party voted on Saturday to censure Representative Liz Cheney and also asked her to resign for her vote last month to impeach then President Donald Trump after the insurrection at the Capitol.
01:02:08.000On Sunday, Cheney defended her decision.
01:02:10.000She said, I think that people in this party are mistaken.
01:02:14.000They believe that BLM and Antifa were behind what happened here at the Capitol.
01:02:22.000This is what she told Fox News about the censure, in which just eight of the party's central committee's 74 members opposed the resolution.
01:02:32.000Evidence and arrests thus far have shown it was largely far right groups and pro Trump extremists who planned and carried out the Capitol attack.
01:02:40.000Cheney said, People have been lied to.
01:02:42.000The extent to which President Trump, for months leading up to January 6th, spread the notion that the election had been stolen or that the election was rigged was a lie, and people need to understand that.
01:02:52.000Cheney, the number three House Republican, was one of 10 members of her party who voted to impeach Trump for an unprecedented second time.
01:03:00.000She's come under fire from Trump loyalists for siding with Democrats in the impeachment.
01:03:06.000Cheney doubled down on her criticism of Trump, whom she said does not have a role as the leader of our party going forward.
01:03:13.000Cheney's censure by her state's GOP is largely symbolic, and it comes after House Republicans decided to let her hold on to her leadership role in Congress.
01:03:21.000The Wyoming committee also called on her to immediately resign, according to a copy of the censure published by Forbes.
01:03:29.000So, the reason why this is a white pill to me is it shows that there is still an America First insurgency going on in the Republican Party.
01:03:40.000It shows that the establishment is not going to so quickly erase Trump from the party and install Nikki Haley or whoever the status quo candidate would be, because there is mass resistance now.
01:03:53.000There is resistance from Within the House GOP, from people like Marjorie Taylor Greene, there's resistance from state GOPs.
01:04:01.000It turns out that it's not just Liz Cheney that might be censured, but also Tim Scott and Lindsey Graham may be facing censure in South Carolina.
01:04:09.000Ben Sass may be facing censure in Nebraska.
01:04:13.000And Mike Shirky in Michigan, who's a state legislator, but he may be facing censure as well from Hillsdale County.
01:04:20.000So, across the country, it seems like there is a little bit of an uprising in state and county GOP.
01:04:27.000In the state and county GOP across the country.
01:04:31.000And it also seems like that's happening on a national level, too.
01:04:34.000If Trump is going to stick around, if Trump is going to continue to influence, then it shows that there is still a little bit of a fire here for there to be an America first realignment in the party.
01:04:46.000I know people are very dejected right now about the ultimate result of the election, which was a Biden inauguration.
01:04:53.000And of course, the Republican establishment is moving quickly to, you know, cuck on everything.
01:04:58.000They took away Marjorie Taylor Greene's committee assignments.
01:05:02.000They failed to remove Liz Cheney from the leadership, but at the same time that that's happening, the people are not having it.
01:05:08.000The people in the states, the people in the local level, and even there are people with national leadership that are not going to allow this to happen.
01:05:17.000And so that shows that in the next four years, even though it's tough right now, even though this is like maybe the worst things are going to get, I don't know, maybe they'll get worse as years go on, but certainly it was a shocking blow to lose that election and then have this persecution after the Capitol riots.
01:05:35.000But If we zoom out and take a step back and look at the big picture, which is the next four years, it's a very promising sign that even in the aftermath of something as jarring as the Capitol riots, you still have what seems like institutional resistance to the Republican establishment from within the Republican Party.
01:06:02.000The message is that if you go to your county GOP, If you go to your state GOP, they're all going to be Trump supporters.
01:06:10.000They're all going to be mad as hell at the establishment.
01:06:14.000And it means that this is like the best opportunity for people that are truly America First to infiltrate and to take that anti establishment sentiment and direct it towards an authentic and productive America First nationalism.
01:06:30.000Take what Donald Trump started and complete it.
01:06:33.000All these boomers who are out there talking about fake news, CNN, And the Republican establishment, and all this kind of stuff, take them and push them across the finish line.
01:06:46.000Get in these county, local, state GOPs, infiltrate, riding this wave of anti establishment sentiment, pro Trump cults of personality, and guide them across the finish line.
01:06:58.000Yes, the media is a fake, and so is Fox News.
01:07:01.000Yes, the Republican establishment is corrupt, and so are a lot of these other actors.
01:07:05.000And ultimately, maybe what Trump wanted, which is this we all bleed red, white, and blue, let's just make the economy better and do some of the things he promised, maybe that's insufficient.
01:07:17.000We got to take these people and lead them to the promised land because it's there.
01:07:24.000And the conversation is, you know, I don't know what the word for it would be.
01:07:31.000The narrative right now is sufficiently malleable to actors like ourselves.
01:07:37.000And this is something that's going to scare the shit out of the left, but it's totally true.
01:07:41.000You've got all these boomers who, you know, they're very just generic Trump supporters.0.51
01:07:46.000Maybe they're not even all the way Trump supporters in the sense that.0.53
01:07:49.000They're repeating a lot of the Trump 2020 rhetoric as opposed to the Trump 2016 rhetoric.
01:07:54.000What I mean by that is when Trump ran in 2016, he was talking about globalists and trade and foreign wars and immigration.
01:08:02.000And now a lot of the Trump supporters are talking about tax cuts and a good economy and embassy move in Jerusalem and these kinds of things.
01:08:11.000And now more than ever is a good opportunity.
01:08:14.000Like I said, the narrative is malleable enough.
01:08:16.000We could take the anti establishment resentment, which is at a fever pitch, it's never been higher.
01:08:22.000We can obfuscate the distinctions between ourselves and many other conservatives because of this.
01:08:29.000Oh, Nick Fuentes and these guys are evil.
01:08:45.000And we could take that energy and direct it towards a far more muscular kind of conservatism, a far more muscular America first ideology, even more muscular than what Trump.
01:08:58.000I think the material is there, and we have a lot to work with here over the next four years.
01:09:06.000And the good thing is that material is not going anywhere.
01:09:10.000The Republican establishment is never going to become less corrupt.
01:09:14.000I mean, if they just refused to take Liz Cheney off of her leadership position, and if they just took Marjorie Taylor Greene off of her committee assignments, and After they lost the Senate runoff, and even during the Senate runoff, they were doing unanimous consent, temporary protected status for Hong Kong, and unanimous consent, limitless H 1B for India.
01:09:38.000If they were doing all of that in those contexts, and we know how the GOP is, they're never going to learn.
01:09:44.000They're never going to become less corrupt.
01:09:46.000So we are just going to have a steady supply.
01:09:51.000We could be as greedy as we want, a steady supply of GOP betrayal, GOP establishment hackery.
01:10:01.000It just makes people angrier and angrier and angrier.
01:10:05.000And it is going to make them desperate and looking for an alternative.
01:10:09.000And so, not only do we have a lot of material to work with after the past three months, we've got to build on the momentum we have right now and the energy that we have right now, but there's not going to be a shortage of it.
01:11:14.000Whether he follows through, that's the question.
01:11:16.000In any case, whether Trump reigned as the leader of this thing for five years or he'll wind up leading this thing for nine or 10 years, we have to think about it in terms of succession.
01:11:26.000This is a multi generational struggle.
01:11:29.000And so Trump was never supposed to finish it, he started it.
01:11:33.000Or you could say that it was started decades ago, but in any case, he either started it or he took it from here to here.
01:11:40.000But he was never supposed to finish it because this is an enormous task.
01:11:44.000And if you don't understand the enormity of it, then you just don't understand it.
01:11:48.000And so he did his job for the past five years, and who knows what he'll do for the next so many years.
01:11:53.000But the task of us and our posterity, that's the word I'm thinking of, is to take the baton from him and continue it.
01:12:09.000And if we have five or six great leaders, five or six successive generations of good leadership of this movement, we will overtake, we will take over the country.
01:15:50.000But yeah, no, there was an article in the Daily Wire about this about how they're going to push people into corporate owned cities where they're self contained, 15 minute cities where it's very walkable and they surveil everything, they own everything, and they control the distribution of all the goods and resources within it.
01:16:10.000I don't think it's outside their own possibility.
01:16:12.000I think that's probably coming sooner rather than later, something like that, if we don't already live in something like that, right?
01:16:19.000I mean, there really is no distinction anymore between public and private sector.
01:16:24.000People talk about public and private, there's really no distinction anymore.
01:16:30.000The public and private sector are totally there.
01:16:34.000The distinction is meaningless at this point.
01:16:37.000They might as well be the same entity.
01:16:39.000When you look at the intelligence community and big tech and the elite schools and How they interact with each other, it's hardly an important distinction anymore.
01:16:48.000So, you know, you say Facebook land with Facebook schools.
01:16:51.000How is that really that different from what we have, you know?
01:16:55.000But Edward Dutton, yeah, I mean, I've seen him around.
01:16:58.000I think I have one of his books, but I've never talked to him.
01:17:02.000Hater Times, years ago, I heard of some shitlibs from the Facebook manual review team getting red pilled on Trump and Jewish memes.
01:17:11.000Have you ever heard from any of these people paid to watch the show and tattle on you?
01:17:16.000Hydro says people see the Time article and clutch their pearls like, oh, I can't believe the left colluded to oust Trump and maintain their power.
01:17:24.000When in reality, we should be doing that too.
01:21:59.000Some of these super chats, it just doesn't, like, what are you thinking?
01:22:03.000It really shows, you know, it's like the people pill, you know, the real red pill is people.
01:22:13.000To think about the mindset that a person would have to be in to say a lot of this stuff that I read in the super chats, it really shows this is where people are at.
01:22:23.000And what you're expecting people to do, what you're asking of people, what you want from people.
01:22:35.000Anyway, American Crusaders says, Hey, Nick, been watching you for about eight months, and this is my For a super chat once you're settled with the website and everything.
01:23:43.000But let me check with Assistant Groyper.
01:23:47.000Amp First Investments says AFPAC is daddy daycare and CPAC is the preppy daycare that no one wants to go to anymore.
01:23:56.000You able to give, I don't know what that means, you able to give times of when it starts and ends yet, wondering if it's worth it to fly down after work.
01:24:04.000Yeah, the itinerary is on the website.
01:24:06.000If you go to the website, the itinerary is on there.
01:24:26.000Yeah, so it starts at the private reception, which is extra, starts at 6, and then the event starts at 7 and ends at 11.
01:24:36.000So if you go to the reception, it starts at 6, and there's appetizers, you get to hang out with me and everybody else, and then the event starts at 7.
01:24:45.000And that's when they have dinner, dessert, and the speeches are given.
01:25:20.000You know, like that Discord copypasta.
01:25:23.000It's like it wasn't enough that they said.
01:25:26.000That I like, you know, that I did had an accident or whatever.
01:25:31.000But they're also like, well, he offered to smoke powder with all his friends and they wouldn't hang out with him, and he's fighting with the church across the street, and they just added on all of that.
01:25:41.000And it's like, okay, so you're a fucking idiot, you know?
01:25:44.000And then with the latest copypasta they send in, they're like, watch, he's going to announce Laura Loomer and Miley Anopoulos as the AFPAC speakers.
01:25:52.000Yeah, okay, well, hold your breath on that one because you're going to die, you know, that's never going to happen.
01:25:58.000Because those are not the speakers for AFPAC.
01:26:01.000But hey, thanks for the money, I guess.
01:26:04.000So, you know, I'm not going to tell you who the speakers are.
01:26:06.000I'll tell you next week, but I could tell you who the speakers will not be.
01:26:13.000You know, and look, I have to say, Laura Loomer, I'm friendly with her and I'm friendly with Milo, but the values maybe don't totally align.
01:26:22.000Obviously, there's a little bit of a conflict of values.
01:26:27.000So, but yeah, that's not going to be it.
01:27:14.000He then he's like going around, he's eating garbage, yeah, yeah, and then he eats garbage, yeah, and then he's like, oh, he's actually 50, and he's, oh, and Milo's speaking at the conference, yeah, yeah, and then, I mean, this is what people have to resort to.
01:27:32.000This is literally what people resort to because America First is doing so well, you know, we're pushing through everything, we've come so far, it's unassailable from an objective point of view that people have to go online, and that's literally what they do.
01:27:45.000And then they post it, and then they're like, Mission accomplished.
01:28:39.000A lot has happened since then, in case you haven't noticed.
01:28:42.000Like the election, and Stop the Steal, and the Capitol riots, and getting banned from DLive.
01:28:49.000And yeah, so we're a little busy here.
01:28:53.000Master Euphoria says, if we wanted to pay by check to make our ticket purchase more secure, should we not use an alias at all when checking out on the site?
01:29:00.000Would you reject the ticket purchase if the check doesn't match the name on the guest list?
01:31:13.000George Groypington says, While I've always disliked Brady as a New Yorker, I recently saw a video where he talks about how his wife is a good witch who makes him wear crystals and do all sorts of witchcraft before each of his Super Bowls.
01:31:32.000Bing Bong says, The train wrecks debate got me here.
01:31:34.000If Twitch wasn't cringe, you'd have the biggest political stream there by far.
01:31:38.000It's sad that Hassan and others can spew their garbage unchallenged on that platform.
01:31:43.000Well, I mean, at this point, It's just undeniable that it's clearly undeniable that the success of this movement and the show is being significantly, and not marginally, I mean dramatically and substantially hindered by tech censorship.
01:32:01.000You know, and that's just not even a question anymore.
01:32:05.000Banned from YouTube, banned from DLive, banned from Twitch.
01:32:51.000I mean, these are supposedly in their minds, the story that they tell themselves about themselves is that they're fighting against the system.
01:37:00.000You're a dog on your hands and knees eating out of the trough like a little piggy, little slave, little livestock animal on the Atlanticist plantation, on the globalist farm.
01:37:25.000That's why we're the ones that are hated by the system.
01:37:28.000I mean, what is the system other than law enforcement, you know, FBI, DOJ, NSA, CIA, but big tech monopolies, oligopolies, but national security apparatus, deep state, liberal mainstream media, elite universities, which are designing artificial intelligence for the social media platforms to ban right wing content?
01:38:27.000You're banned from TSA PreCheck and banned from every payment processor, banned from every bank, banned from every social media, banned from Visa and MasterCard, banned from all these kinds of things, right?
01:38:41.000If you're a reactionary, this is the range of things that can happen to you.
01:38:45.000And if you're a leftist, you're, you know, nobody gives a shit.
01:39:08.000Moogle says, Did you see the Asians up in arms over the recent streams of attacks and blaming it on things like COVID and historic racism?1.00
01:39:17.000You think Asians refuse to talk about black criminality because it may hinder their rise to hegemony?1.00
01:39:25.000And Are you talking about Asian Americans or are you talking about like the Chinese Communist Party?
01:39:32.000Because I don't think that Asian Americans are a part of a conspiracy with the Chinese government.
01:39:39.000Some of them are spies, which makes them the Chinese government, but I don't think that your regular liberal Asians in California are in league with China.0.55
01:39:49.000Okay, China, here's the game plan.0.85
01:39:51.000We're not going to talk about black crime because if we do, I mean, that just doesn't make any sense to me.1.00
01:39:58.000But China should be talking about black criminality in America.1.00
01:40:01.000I think that'd be very smart, like, what aboutism.1.00
01:40:05.000Texan Samurai says only positive side of COVID illegal immigration at an all time low.
01:41:52.000Well, I think there were a lot of thresholds that could have been the breaking point, and you'd be surprised.
01:41:58.000People are willing to put up with a lot more, I think, than we anticipated.
01:42:03.000James says all of this should bring back a quote from Thomas Jefferson A government big enough to give you anything you want is a government big enough to take away everything you have.
01:44:38.000Thanks for the extreme vetting to protect us.
01:44:40.000Yeah, and trust me, it is expensive to do extreme vetting.
01:44:46.000This option, I didn't even know existed before, but we're implementing this very costly option, but I think which is really going to help us out.
01:44:56.000And some people had some concerns about the event.
01:45:53.000But I figured that that, and I thought this when the pandemic started, that's going to be a good way for people to conceal their identities.
01:46:00.000And it's like socially acceptable to do that.
01:46:05.000So if people are really that concerned, hey, just wear a mask.
01:47:33.000Swagger Dagger says the lack of environmental pressure we have gotten used to as a society is largely to blame for the reason nobody seems to care about the endless lockdown.
01:48:40.000So, after that, and I should add, not only did the ballots get thrown out, you know, your vote didn't count, but add to that that every constitutional step of the process failed as well.
01:48:54.000The state legislators, the governors, the courts, the Supreme Court, the Congress, the vice president, there was a systemic failure at every level.
01:49:04.000So, when people say things like that, I understand it, but I understand it as an emotional statement.
01:49:27.000I haven't been saying, never vote again, and everyone who says voting is a shill.
01:49:32.000And these kinds of absolute statements.
01:49:36.000And that kind of purity spiraling, it's self serving.
01:49:40.000It's a very self serving thing when people do that because it says, trust me, and everyone who disagrees with me, well, they're just a bad actor.
01:49:49.000I don't think that telling people to vote makes them a bad actor necessarily.
01:51:50.000So, in my opinion, to say we're not going to meet the enemy at the ballot box, we're not going to meet and engage the enemy on that battlefield.
01:51:58.000Why would we forfeit that battlefield?
01:52:01.000Why would we forfeit that and accede to the downside when it costs us nothing to guarantee, or not guarantee, but like I said, to create the possibility that there could be an upside?
01:52:44.000It did in the House races, and that actually mattered somewhat.
01:52:49.000Winning the House races, winning some of the races in the Senate, it turned out to matter to some extent.
01:52:55.000You know, Marjorie Taylor Greene getting in there, Paul Gosar getting in there.
01:53:00.000So, no, I don't think that we should abandon electoral politics.
01:53:05.000And people who say that we should abandon electoral politics, I don't automatically assume they're bad actors, but I definitely question their motives because there's no reason not to engage in electoral politics.
01:53:17.000Somebody tell me what the damn alternative is to the system because everybody wants to point out the problems, which you will hear no counter argument from me that there's voter fraud, believe me.
01:53:30.000You hear no counter argument from me that the GOP is corrupt, that That it often doesn't matter who wins office or who controls Congress.
01:53:39.000You will not hear any argument from me about that.
01:53:42.000But what is the alternative for people?
01:53:44.000And I see this on my timeline more frequently these days since the Capitol siege.
01:54:19.000We're not going to vote our way out of this, is one thing that some people say.
01:54:22.000We're not going to vote our way out of this.
01:54:24.000Is anybody saying that the only thing that we're going to do is vote?
01:54:28.000Is anybody saying, or is the message on this show infiltrate the fucking system?
01:54:33.000Infiltrate the system, work out, leave the cities, save your money, start a business, form close friendships in your community, get firearms, train with firearms, these kinds of things.
01:54:46.000You know, at any point in this entire show, in the past four years, have I said, We're just going to vote and win.
01:55:27.000So let's say that political solutions are out.
01:55:30.000Political parties, voting, running for office, fundraising, influencing the political parties, influencing the government, trying to get control over state or local government, infiltrating the system.
01:55:55.000You'd be annihilated before you even think about that.
01:55:58.000Take a look at what happened at the Capitol.
01:56:00.000Take a look at what happened at the Capitol as evidence of how something like that is basically, you know, I would maybe never say never, but certainly that is not in the cards indefinitely and in the foreseeable future.
01:56:15.000And I'm only entertaining that to dismiss it because it's ridiculous.
01:56:19.000And often when people say that, they say that so that you will do something impulsive and illegal, and then the people saying this will have achieved their objective because they're federal agents, you know, because they are literally feds.
01:56:32.000And they are trying to suss out people that are prone to political violence.
01:56:37.000Agitate for political violence on social media.
01:56:40.000And like a moth to a flame, they wait for at risk people to be attracted to this, say the wrong thing, do the wrong thing, and then go to jail forever.
01:56:48.000Now, I'm not saying that's everybody that says this, but it is something that happens.
01:56:52.000Take a look at the Proud Boys Enrique Taria was a federal informant.
01:56:57.000And the Proud Boys are full of federal informants.
01:56:59.000Take a look at that plot to kidnap the governor in Michigan.
01:57:02.000The guy that organized that was a federal informant.
01:57:05.000So, this is something that we know happens.
01:57:07.000This is something we know that's their modus operandi.
01:57:11.000And don't fall into that kind of thinking.
01:57:13.000Now, we can engage in a pragmatic conversation about how we are going to make the society the way we want it to be.
01:57:21.000But these kinds of absolute statements about if you don't support something that's illegal, if you don't support something that's going to get the full weight of the federal government emboldened and more powerful than ever, crushing your life, then you're a shill.
01:57:34.000I mean, this is either emotional, it's ignorance, certainly.
01:57:39.000Or it is just not being pushed in good faith.
01:57:44.000So I don't know who you're referring to that said that, but that is a totally stupid thing to say.
01:57:51.000And I don't think that voting is a waste of time.
01:57:55.000I don't think that voting is a waste of time.
01:57:57.000I think that voting doesn't even cost that much time.
01:58:01.000It doesn't cost anything for that matter.
01:58:03.000So that's not even the right critique.
01:58:05.000And most of you could say voting is useless, but to say it's a waste of time, What are you going to do with that 10 minutes?
01:58:30.000Voter fraud has been occurring in this country for 60 years.
01:58:34.000There was voter fraud in the 2016 election and it didn't succeed.
01:58:37.000Do you think that there wasn't voter fraud in 2016?
01:58:40.000Of course there was, it didn't succeed.
01:58:43.000And we just got rocked by the most overwhelming, the most ambitious, the most systematic voter fraud effort in American history, maybe the history of the world.
01:58:54.000And people say, oh, in light of that, now voting is just, it's a no go forever.
01:59:22.000And people, when they face hardship head on, they're like, no, no, no, we got to go around and we got to take the route where we're not going to encounter any resistance.
01:59:33.000We want to save the country, but do it in the way where it's not difficult, where there's no institutional counterattack, which is what voter fraud is.
01:59:42.000There's no institutional counterattack that's overwhelming.
01:59:46.000We want to save the country and win the battle.
01:59:49.000Where we don't get really any resistance at all, where there's not a lot of fighting, where it's just kind of easy and it's completely simple and it's only the things I want to do and it's only things that I like and I don't have to be patient and I don't have to wait.
02:00:02.000I mean, this is ultimately the frame of mind of a lot of adolescent, impulsive, emotional people who are pushing that kind of thinking.
02:00:10.000What I'm telling you is win at any cost, fighting for our entire lives, intergenerationally, slow and steady and doing whatever it takes, even if that means.
02:00:20.000Biding our time and being cautious and being patient, taking advantage of everything, of all of our options, and taking advantage of, yes, electoral politics and institutional power.
02:00:32.000You know, these people think like, oh, well, if we don't play, then we can win.
02:00:37.000No, I mean, to some extent, we have to play with the cards that were dealt.
02:00:43.000And there's no magic, you know, cinematic option where we get to just like ignore reality and, you know, there's going to be this fantasy like.
02:00:54.000You know, climactic collapse, and then we take over, and then President Sam Hyde.
02:01:00.000I mean, like, you know, we have to be grounded in reality.
02:01:03.000And people who reject the efficacy of politics, I think, are people that are fundamentally delusional and in a state of denial.
02:02:07.000Tangible, nothing actionable, nothing that's going to yield results any sooner than politics.
02:02:13.000It's just an excuse to say, you know, all these people that are out there working, all these people that are problem solving, all these people that are putting their nose to the grindstone, well, you know, they're just shills.
02:02:25.000All these people that are pushing uphill, yeah, well, they're just wasting their time.
02:04:17.000I told people, look, if the GOP won't fight voter fraud, why would we vote in this another fraudulent election, which is what it was?
02:04:24.000So I'm perfectly okay with holding votes, but to swear off voting as a concept and therefore electoral politics and therefore government, it's like, what are you thinking?
02:04:34.000So we're not going to win through government.
02:04:35.000We're not going to win through big tech, academia.
02:04:38.000We're not going to win through any institutions.
02:05:18.000It's one of the big questions because there does seem to be a difference.
02:05:23.000Between certain peoples, in the sense that clearly, and it's not even an IQ thing, but clearly there are some people that are just not like there.
02:05:36.000I don't know if that's a statement theologically supported by the Catholic Church, and I haven't lived very long and I haven't looked into this scientifically, but clearly there is some sort of a hierarchy within the human population.
02:05:54.000Just like how there's a queen bee and worker bees, and just like how there's a queen ant and worker ants, there appears to be something similar within the human population.
02:06:07.000That's all that I could say about it descriptively, is that it's comparable to other sort of social structures in the animal kingdom.
02:06:14.000Because it's true that there seem to be people that just, like you said, is that they lack critical thinking, that they lack an internal monologue?
02:06:22.000I can't exactly put my finger on it, but there does seem to be some kind of a disconnect.
02:08:37.000Then I read about this reverse osmosis.
02:08:39.000It seems like there's merit to it, actually.1.00
02:08:42.000Maybe he didn't explain it the best, but I think it's true.
02:08:46.000Trendy Storytime says Are you aware of any credible efforts to build alternate cloud computing or payments infrastructure for conservatives?
02:08:56.000Not that I'm aware of, no, unfortunately.
02:08:59.000Hopefully something like that's coming along, though.
02:09:02.000I'm really feeling it's been watching you since Ronnie debate on Stream Me.
02:09:26.000I also, you know, just like white liberals, I think they're just, I don't know that they're conspiring to cover up what they know about, you know, the fact that they are race realists.
02:09:37.000I think they're like white liberals, like any liberal.
02:10:09.000Irish says, in 2020, St. Louis was the 14th most murderous city in the world, topping cities like Juarez, Mexico, and Cape Town, South Africa, some of the most dangerous cities in failed states.
02:10:59.000What keeps me going is the thought that if I make it through all this, I am going to be such a fucking legend.
02:11:06.000Honest to God, that's what gets me through.
02:11:10.000Bad things happen, and I'm like, man, if I get over this, I am going to be such a hero.
02:11:17.000And that's like this sort of crazy, maybe like narcissistic, borderline narcissistic kind of mentality that you have to have to push through this kind of stuff.
02:11:27.000It's that kind of self belief and things.
02:11:33.000That's the kind of mentality that this movement needs.
02:11:35.000That's the kind of leadership that this movement needs somebody who's going to push through the bullshit, somebody who's going to be able to take it all on the chin, a true man of steel like Stalin, a true man of steel and take it all and be able to push through and do what needs to be done.
02:12:56.000I think that prayer, one of the most helpful things about prayer is that it's a time for true introspection, especially now in a time where there's none of that.
02:13:12.000And that's, I think, what is required to think about these larger things and to maybe be open to have something like that.
02:13:20.000Because so many people, there's no breaks anymore.
02:13:24.000I remember when I was a kid, before mobile phones and before social media came around, the internet was still around and computers were around, but no mobile, no smartphones, I should say, and no social media.
02:13:34.000When I was a kid, you would just, you know, sometimes you would just not be doing anything.
02:13:40.000That is something that doesn't occur anymore.
02:13:45.000I remember when I was a kid going to the waiting room at the doctor's, and it was unbearable because you'd just be sitting there.
02:13:54.000And you'd have nothing to do, or you go on a car ride, and you'd have nothing to do before even iPods, before MP3 players.
02:14:00.000I know I sound like a boomer, but when I was really young, you would go on a long drive, and you just have to sit there and occupy yourself with the same old Game Boy game.
02:14:15.000But sometimes you just have to sit there, just look out the window, and count stuff.
02:14:20.000Or sometimes in a waiting room or your timeout or whatever, you just have to sit there.
02:14:25.000And now, what the mobile phone has done and what the applications and social media has done is it's eliminated that state where there would even be a possibility to think, to really think.
02:14:40.000You know, there have been studies done on this stuff that people completing tasks with music playing, whether it's music with words or it's music that's instrumental, they perform worse cognitively than people that are not listening to anything.
02:14:58.000And think about all the ever present distractions, whether it be listening to music just like that in itself, or listening to something, having a show on in the background, having a conversation going on on Snapchat or on a text, on direct message or something, being on social media constantly, watching YouTube videos constantly, always being plugged in.
02:15:24.000And this is just a broader rant in general now, but it's true.
02:16:06.000So, one of the things that's so useful about prayer is that you're just tuning all of that out.
02:16:15.000And that's good for you in general now, but it's of course also where I think an encounter with God would occur, where you really begin to reflect.
02:16:22.000And I would really, it's difficult to do, but I would really reflect on death.
02:16:29.000This is something I've been getting into recently.
02:16:33.000Well, a friend of mine, that's a weird thing to say, a friend of mine recommended a book to me.
02:16:52.000And there's been different iterations of it written over the years.
02:16:56.000But he recommended one version of it to me by one of the popes, I think, in the 14th century.
02:17:01.000And the last four things are death, judgment, hell, and heaven.
02:17:07.000And there have been many Catholic authors who have written about the last four things over the years.
02:17:14.000And I think one of the popes or one of the people on the back of the book said, Look, if the Catholic Church doesn't start teaching about the last four things, we're going to lose people.
02:17:23.000And the book goes into what Catholic doctrine is, what Christian doctrine is on those last four things what happens to you when you die, what happens at the judgment, what happens in hell, and what happens in heaven.
02:17:36.000And I encourage everybody to read that book if you're Christian because it's really sobering, it really puts things in perspective.
02:17:43.000And I would say, if you're not a Christian, to read that book.
02:17:45.000And maybe if you don't even believe in all of that, let that be an introduction to thinking about these kinds of things because I don't know how people don't have a preoccupation with death.
02:17:58.000It's something that is inevitable for all of us and can happen at any minute.
02:18:02.000It's something that is going to be totally foreign.
02:18:05.000By its very nature, it's the antithesis of life, it's unlike everything that we know, that we are, and experienced.
02:18:13.000And I don't know how you could be hurtling towards this ultimate destiny and not be.
02:18:19.000Not have some interest in that or concerns, or at the very end, maybe more than that, a preoccupation, right?
02:18:27.000Not that it's healthy to be totally, you know, obsessed with it because it's going to happen no matter what, but to have some kind of a thought about that.
02:18:34.000And I think thinking about death and thinking about the eternal and about judgment, about morality, these bigger questions, at least for me, that's what brought me closer to God, honestly.
02:18:44.000Because I, and I'll just say this, I never had an experience where I really felt like.
02:18:56.000You know, I became more religious in college, and it was not because like an apparition appeared to me or like I heard a voice or anything for that matter.
02:19:05.000It's because I just started to think about these bigger questions logically because I'm a very sort of systematic thinker, and I just started to think about, you know, that we're here.
02:19:15.000I was able to kind of take a step back from the, you know, engaging with our lives.
02:19:22.000As, like, a narrative and as a story and as tasks and events, and take a look back at, like, gee, like, hey, I'm here.
02:19:30.000You know, like in a video game when you, like, you know, POV, like, pan around and then you have your, then it's a first person shooter.
02:19:46.000I started to ask these bigger questions.
02:19:48.000And I'm not going to belabor the point any further, but I think that to begin that process of questioning and introspection and thinking and it just, You know, tune things out a little bit.
02:20:00.000You know, I'm not going to guarantee that you're going to have some great big spiritual experience, but I think that that's where an encounter like that can happen.
02:20:09.000It is nearly impossible to have an encounter with God outside of that.
02:20:13.000If you're just sort of passively being dragged along in life from, you know, event to event, these sort of socially constructed events in our lives.
02:20:22.000Oh, today I've got to get up and go to work.
02:20:32.000And if you never get out of this sort of like hamster wheel rat race mentality and look around and look up and kind of ask these bigger questions, I think that is a state where you're never going to encounter God.
02:20:47.000You're never going to encounter those bigger things.
02:20:50.000And it's like, even for me, it's a constant fight to liberate myself from that.
02:20:55.000Sometimes I'll break away from my phone and I feel like I'm free.
02:21:05.000With my phone, I get my phone, I feel like Venom, you know, and I'm dancing and I'm eating that girl, that immigrant girl's cookies, and I'm just like a jerk, you know?1.00
02:21:15.000And then I get off my phone and I'm like, I feel like Peter Parker again.1.00
02:21:19.000I feel like a human being, like Red Spider Man.
02:21:21.000I'm a real human being again, damn it.
02:21:41.000How do you find God if only it were that simple, you know?
02:21:44.000Kevin Brose says In August 2019, Hassan Piker almost lost his Twitch because he said America deserved 9 11 due to CIA arming Muslim extremists to temper Soviet presence in Afghanistan.
02:21:56.000He dropped the smug attitude and apologized because he got a taste of what dissident politics can bring.
02:22:02.000Only Kyle Kalinske and Sticks had his back 100%.
02:22:08.000There are a lot of these pussy leftists.0.73
02:22:10.000Who will say something controversial, they get blowback, and then they're like, oh, sorry, sorry, sorry.0.98
02:22:17.000So, yeah, there's definitely a lot of truth in that.
02:22:21.000XCOM Groyper says, I've never apologized for anything, okay?
02:22:27.000XCOM Groyper says, because of COVID, I've missed what will amount to about one third of high school, and it is basically the consensus that we haven't learned anything since we got out.
02:22:36.000Very sick stuff they're doing to kids.
02:22:39.000Well, I'm really sorry to hear that if you're in high school.
02:22:41.000I think that's what you're saying, right?
02:22:44.000I'm very sorry to hear that because high school is a great time.
02:22:48.000And it's a fond memory because once you get into the real world, you realize that it's like now I just hang out and I love my friends and I love the people that I talk to.
02:22:59.000But now it's like it's all like work and it's all guys that are kind of like older than me.
02:23:07.000And, you know, we have more in common than my friends in high school, but it's just a different ecosystem.
02:23:13.000You know, in high school, You're never again, and for better or for worse, you're never again in this controlled ecosystem where it's all people the same age and you have this constant interaction, you know, six or seven hours a day, five days a week, and you build a rapport with lots of different people.
02:23:30.000People that you like, people you don't like, people are acquaintances.
02:24:35.000But hey, for the high schoolers watching the show, you got to protect yourself because you're in a very formative period of your life.
02:24:43.000When you hit puberty until the time when you're about 25, you're in this formative period of development where it's easier to.
02:24:52.000Develop muscle, it's easier to learn music, learn a language, learn anything.
02:24:57.000And I haven't even experienced this yet, but this is what happens once you hit your mid to late 20s, that slows down.
02:25:06.000And even if, and so, you know, you figure I'm 22.
02:25:09.000If I started to learn something now, I would be at a disadvantage against somebody that started to learn something when they were 14.
02:25:17.000Because not only do they have a head start, you know, just in terms of magnitude, they've got, you know, what is it, eight more years than me, but they've got more years of that.
02:25:29.000Development, those developmental years.
02:25:32.000You know, I mean, if I started something when I was 50 and you started to learn something when you were 40, well, we probably would learn at the same rate, more or less.
02:25:42.000But if I started to learn something at 22 and you start to learn something at 14, well, you're going to learn at a much greater rate.