America First - Nicholas J. Fuentes - November 03, 2017


Ice Cream Truck Nationalism | America First Ep. 46


Episode Stats


Length

1 hour and 9 minutes

Words per minute

184.1948

Word count

12,734

Sentence count

1,093


Summary

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

Transcript

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00:00:06.000 Good evening, everybody.
00:00:06.000 You are watching America First.
00:00:08.000 My name is Nicholas J. Fuentes.
00:00:09.000 Tonight, we have a great show for you tonight.
00:00:12.000 Lots to talk about, lots to get to in the world of politics and other things.
00:00:18.000 It is a casual Friday, comfy, casual Friday live stream here.
00:00:23.000 No necktie.
00:00:25.000 And we're winding down a very busy week, a very stressful week for the old NJF.
00:00:31.000 A lot of content.
00:00:32.000 How many hours of content have we done?
00:00:34.000 We've done.
00:00:36.000 Five hours of America first.
00:00:37.000 No, no.
00:00:38.000 Five and a half hours of America first, plus three hours of nationalist review, an additional two hours tomorrow.
00:00:45.000 So, what does that put us at?
00:00:46.000 Ten hours of content in a week?
00:00:48.000 Ten and a half hours.
00:00:49.000 So, it's been busy, been a long week, but here we are just ready to celebrate with a little casual episode, comfy live stream.
00:00:58.000 We'll be getting in the live chat at about the half hour mark, and we can just decompress, have a chill episode here.
00:01:05.000 But before we do that, we got a lot of news to get to.
00:01:09.000 And I was very excited before I get to some of these stories.
00:01:12.000 I was very excited to see a lot of people reaching out to me this morning, yesterday evening, yesterday afternoon that want to get involved in the America First activism that I've been talking about.
00:01:24.000 Like I said, I've been reaching out to a lot of people that I know that are in D.C., that are involved in activism around the country, flexing my contacts a little bit, my networking, and trying to figure out just what kind of network and organization we could put together and what that would look like.
00:01:40.000 So thanks to everybody that.
00:01:42.000 Has emailed me.
00:01:43.000 We've had, I think, people in over 35 states now.
00:01:47.000 I think we're up to almost 100 people that have reached out.
00:01:50.000 So that'll be quite the formidable force.
00:01:52.000 And it's looking like this organization will take the shape of and take the form of student organizations in college.
00:02:00.000 I'm seeing a lot of young people that want to get involved, millennials, Gen Zers, people that are just getting into college, people that are a little bit older in college, and then local GOP activism.
00:02:12.000 A lot of professionals, a lot of middle class type people.
00:02:16.000 Who wants to get involved in the county GOP?
00:02:18.000 It's looking like those will be the two major expressions.
00:02:21.000 And then combined, you know, there could be sort of a general sort of organization that can do postering and that kind of thing.
00:02:28.000 But we're still hammering out what exactly that's going to look like.
00:02:31.000 We've got to look at what kind of resources we'll have at our disposal in terms of human capital and financial capital.
00:02:39.000 So we'll have more information by the end of the year.
00:02:41.000 But it's looking very promising, I have to say.
00:02:43.000 I compare this organization to.
00:02:46.000 Some of the other ones that have existed in looser or stricter forms on the fringe riot.
00:02:52.000 And I think it's pretty formidable, the kind of network that we've established in just three days on the fly.
00:02:58.000 So, very good stuff there, very encouraging.
00:03:00.000 But that's a little update on what I've been doing with that.
00:03:03.000 We've got a little spreadsheet going.
00:03:05.000 I'm feeling people out, party people, people in the think tanks, and things like that.
00:03:10.000 So, we should have more by the end of the year.
00:03:11.000 But lots of news to get to, lots of news.
00:03:16.000 To jump right into that happened today, probably the first major story.
00:03:20.000 This was very encouraging.
00:03:21.000 You know, lots of white pills this week with the president, with the movement, just lots of things in general.
00:03:27.000 But this was really encouraging today, what I saw this morning, which was what President Trump tweeted about the ISIS terror attack on Tuesday.
00:03:35.000 And I got to tell you, how quickly did we forget the ISIS terror attack on Tuesday, right?
00:03:41.000 That was the second deadliest terror attack in New York since 9 11.
00:03:44.000 Okay, you had eight dead.
00:03:46.000 That doesn't really come close to the 3,000 dead on 9 11, but technically it is the second.
00:03:51.000 Most deadly terror attack in New York City.
00:03:54.000 And how quickly did that exit the public consciousness?
00:03:57.000 How quickly did we move on from that one?
00:04:00.000 It's Friday, that's already stale, that's already old news.
00:04:04.000 Charlottesville, we were talking about for a month.
00:04:07.000 Charlottesville, the president came out with three different statements.
00:04:11.000 It was all over the news.
00:04:12.000 It was all over every news outlet in print, in television, on the internet.
00:04:18.000 We amped up all kinds of laws.
00:04:20.000 The president had to sign a legal, congressional condemnation of white supremacy and white nationalism.
00:04:28.000 We had all kinds of websites chased off the internet from Daily Stormer to Red Ice, which was under attack, some of these other ones.
00:04:36.000 Our guys were kicked off of Twitter, kicked off of Uber, kicked off of dating profiles.
00:04:41.000 This went on for weeks.
00:04:43.000 And yet, one person died, and it was accidental.
00:04:45.000 We don't even know if she was killed by the car.
00:04:47.000 There's a lot of rumors she just died of a heart attack.
00:04:51.000 And we talked about that for a full month.
00:04:53.000 Some ISIS terrorist who directly pledged allegiance to a foreign terrorist group that's been at war with us for four years.
00:05:02.000 Yeah, four years.
00:05:03.000 That's about right.
00:05:05.000 Kills eight people deliberately, children.
00:05:08.000 Too, you know, it wasn't even like a political protest where people had some reasonable expectation of violence.
00:05:13.000 It's people, some of them who are going to school on the school bus or riding their bikes to work, and we forget about that in 72 hours.
00:05:22.000 So, I mean, that kind of blew me away from the beginning, you know, the more that I think about it, because we didn't really get a chance to talk about it because we had the Halloween party on Tuesday, we had Enoch on Wednesday, and Thursday we kind of had to wrap up that little week of conversation.
00:05:37.000 So we never really got to it, but it just.
00:05:39.000 Is staggering to me how we just forget about that completely.
00:05:43.000 We're at war with a terror cell of which we have no idea how many of their operatives are in this country.
00:05:49.000 We have no idea how many people of the same political, ideological religion have sworn allegiance to that group.
00:05:57.000 And there's no laws.
00:05:59.000 There's no response from the internet.
00:06:00.000 There's no condemnation from the president.
00:06:02.000 There's no statement by the Congress.
00:06:06.000 And it's just, and everybody forgets about it within two days.
00:06:08.000 You go on Twitter moments and they're talking about how.
00:06:11.000 That girl from Modern Family owned all the people who were skeptical that she got plastic surgery.
00:06:17.000 Really?
00:06:18.000 You know, how long did we go on and on and on about Charlottesville?
00:06:22.000 Well, Charlottesville was terrorism.
00:06:24.000 Charlottesville was terrorism, and terrorism comes in all colors.
00:06:27.000 And, you know, even though she died of a heart attack, she wasn't killed.
00:06:31.000 It comes in all colors and shapes and ideologies.
00:06:34.000 Yet when the same group of people, which is less than 1% of the population, commits almost all the terrorism by body count, by deaths, Just ignore it.
00:06:44.000 They just go away.
00:06:45.000 You know, when it was Orlando, it was about gun control, right?
00:06:49.000 When it was San Bernardino, it was about gun control.
00:06:53.000 When it was in Nice, France, well, it was about how are we going to cope with this truck phenomenon?
00:06:58.000 We need to build barriers.
00:07:00.000 We need to build these concrete barriers at every pub.
00:07:03.000 We have to cope with this security threat, which is now part and parcel of living in a global city.
00:07:10.000 And then with the New York City attack, I read on NBC News two days ago, NBC News puts out.
00:07:16.000 A little opinion piece.
00:07:18.000 People in the United States must get used to terrorism being a routine part of daily life.
00:07:24.000 We have to get used to that.
00:07:26.000 See, again, again, whenever there's a terror attack, you got two options, which is NBC, like, okay, maybe, maybe we just have to get used to it.
00:07:35.000 Maybe, maybe that's true.
00:07:37.000 We live in a big city, there's a lot of people from all kinds of different places and all kinds of different ideologies.
00:07:44.000 And when you have 8 million people, when you have 8 million people, Incidents of the human person, you're going to get people that are a little bit off.
00:07:52.000 You're going to get people that are violent or hateful or Muslim, and they're going to blow you up.
00:07:56.000 So, maybe, well, we just have to cope with that.
00:07:58.000 We have Muslims in our country and we have daily terrorism.
00:08:02.000 And we just have to get over that.
00:08:06.000 Or the alternative nobody likes to talk about, the alternative you're not allowed to talk about is we ban all Muslims from coming into the country, the people that commit the terrorism.
00:08:17.000 We ban all Muslims, the 1% of people that commit almost all the terrorism.
00:08:22.000 They're not allowed to come in, they're not allowed to fly on planes, they're not allowed to drive cars because they're not here.
00:08:28.000 And the ones that are here, we keep them under a very short leash.
00:08:32.000 We keep them under a very close watch.
00:08:35.000 And we have no terrorism.
00:08:36.000 And we could get to fly on planes with our shampoo and our laptops.
00:08:40.000 And we get to drive around the city.
00:08:42.000 We get to have our festivals.
00:08:44.000 And those are the options.
00:08:46.000 You're never told the alternative, you're never told the second option.
00:08:49.000 We're always just told we can never compromise immigration for the sake of public safety, for the sake of the people living here.
00:08:57.000 But time and time again, we are.
00:09:00.000 Confronted with these two options, and they're the only two options.
00:09:04.000 You know, notice you look at Poland, you look at Hungary, you look at the Czech Republic, countries you don't hear about in the news because these are the ones that are sensible.
00:09:12.000 You know, when they're going after George Soros and they're going after Muslim migrants, you don't hear about these countries in the news.
00:09:17.000 You hear about France, you hear about Pretty Boy, Justin Trudeau, you hear about Merkel, you know, she's the tough woman who hates her country.
00:09:26.000 You never hear about the Eastern European countries, but when you look at them, they're able to have their religious festivals, they're able to have their Christian festivals, their cultural festivals.
00:09:35.000 They're able to have these massive anti-migrant protests.
00:09:38.000 And guess what?
00:09:39.000 They don't need concrete barriers.
00:09:42.000 They don't need to be screened with an x-ray machine when they go into a political speech or a cultural festival.
00:09:48.000 They just have them in the streets.
00:09:49.000 And you want to know why?
00:09:50.000 Because the people that show up, the people that occupy these countries and these cities, are Polish or they're Hungarian or they're Czech.
00:09:59.000 They're nationals.
00:10:00.000 They love their country.
00:10:01.000 They love their people.
00:10:02.000 They're of that land.
00:10:03.000 They respect that land.
00:10:05.000 You will necessarily have terrorism.
00:10:07.000 You will necessarily have violence when you accept that you want people in your country that don't love your country, that don't respect your country, that they are not of your country.
00:10:17.000 Of course, you would have to get used to that if that's what you want your country to look like.
00:10:22.000 If your country is merely an economic zone, if your country is merely this little marketplace where people can buy cheap consumer goods, where people can get away from violence and actually bring it over here.
00:10:36.000 So that's the choice.
00:10:37.000 It's very easy.
00:10:38.000 And it is cut and dry.
00:10:39.000 It is black and white.
00:10:40.000 For everybody that says it's, whenever these things happen, people say it's so, it's a 21st century threat.
00:10:46.000 We've never, it's never been like this the way that you could just go on a bus and blow it up.
00:10:50.000 It never used to be like that.
00:10:52.000 And machine guns are much different than muskets.
00:10:55.000 And, you know, it's just a difficult problem.
00:10:57.000 We can all agree it's difficult.
00:10:59.000 It's not difficult.
00:11:00.000 So easy.
00:11:01.000 Easiest thing in the world.
00:11:03.000 Do you want Muslims, no Muslims?
00:11:06.000 It's like when you go to a restaurant.
00:11:07.000 Do you want smoking or non smoking?
00:11:08.000 It's that simple.
00:11:09.000 Do you want a hotel room with smoking or no smoking?
00:11:14.000 Do you want to fly on a plane with Muslims or no Muslims?
00:11:16.000 I don't know about you, but if I were offered a premium package for the airplane where they say pay an extra $15 and you have to eat pork to get on the plane, so there's no Muslims or maybe other people, there's no Muslims on the plane, I'm going to pay the extra $15.
00:11:34.000 You could fly on the plane, you could take that chance.
00:11:36.000 By all means, take the chance.
00:11:40.000 Get the discount rate that you.
00:11:43.000 I will pay for my right to discrimination.
00:11:45.000 I will pay for my right to freedom of association.
00:11:48.000 I mean, that's just one example.
00:11:50.000 We should be able to live in a country where we don't have to deal with that.
00:11:53.000 It just goes to demonstrate if people were able to choose, they would choose the latter.
00:11:58.000 They would choose the ability to not have to live with that.
00:12:00.000 And, like, what benefit do they bring anyway, right?
00:12:03.000 We talk about, well, no, but we can't get rid of them.
00:12:06.000 We can't get rid of them.
00:12:08.000 Why would we want to stop them from coming here?
00:12:10.000 Like, what benefit do they give to us?
00:12:12.000 What is different if we're all equal, right?
00:12:14.000 I mean, they tell us we're all equal, all cultures are equal, all, you know, it's the one race, it's the human race.
00:12:19.000 What's the difference between an Arab who's more likely to commit terrorism than, I don't know.
00:12:25.000 A Briton or a German, and I mean an actual German or Britain, not one of these new Europeans, what would be the difference?
00:12:31.000 Why should we accept the risk of these problematic peoples when we can import anybody else?
00:12:35.000 And why import anybody to begin with?
00:12:37.000 We have enough people.
00:12:38.000 We don't need any more people.
00:12:40.000 Unemployment is still 4.1%.
00:12:42.000 Let's get that down to zero before we bring in more unemployed people, right?
00:12:47.000 So that was, I mean, that's terrorism.
00:12:49.000 That's my reaction to that.
00:12:50.000 We kind of, that was a detour, but we never really covered that.
00:12:53.000 And it's just kind of a scandal that nobody's talking about this anymore.
00:12:57.000 Already forgotten about it, but you know the families of those eight people that died, they haven't forgotten about it.
00:13:02.000 They don't have the luxury to forget about it.
00:13:03.000 And you're basically just lucky that you're not one of those people every day, right?
00:13:08.000 You're basically just a lucky person that it wasn't you today that got sacrificed on the altar of mass immigration.
00:13:15.000 That could have been anybody in New York City.
00:13:17.000 A lot of them were tourists from Argentina.
00:13:20.000 Some of them were tourists.
00:13:21.000 They were celebrating their high school reunion.
00:13:23.000 They were from Argentina.
00:13:25.000 That could have been anybody.
00:13:26.000 That could have been you who was in New York City for your vacation, in New York City for a wedding.
00:13:31.000 In New York City, because you work there or you live there, you go to school there.
00:13:35.000 That could have been you.
00:13:36.000 You know, you have the luxury of moving on.
00:13:39.000 You have the luxury of saying, well, terrorism is a minor problem.
00:13:43.000 And it's not all of them, but not those eight people who died and not, you know, the tens and dozens of people who are related to them who have to live with that loss in their life.
00:13:52.000 They don't get to move on.
00:13:53.000 They don't get to.
00:13:54.000 This was not a small issue for them.
00:13:56.000 This was not just eight people for them.
00:13:58.000 This was not just a statistic for them.
00:14:01.000 That was very real.
00:14:03.000 You know, that could have been anybody.
00:14:04.000 So.
00:14:05.000 The encouraging thing, however, was how President Trump reacted this morning.
00:14:09.000 President Trump tweeted this morning ISIS just claimed the degenerate animal who killed and so badly wounded the wonderful people on the West Side was their soldier.
00:14:20.000 Based on that, the military has hit ISIS much harder over the last two days.
00:14:25.000 They will pay a big price for every attack on us, which is a great statement.
00:14:30.000 And people might criticize this.
00:14:30.000 This is beautiful.
00:14:33.000 A lot of people criticize the president and the way he tweets.
00:14:35.000 They think.
00:14:37.000 He just shoots these off in the morning.
00:14:38.000 Like he wakes up, he says, Ah, you know what?
00:14:40.000 I got something to say.
00:14:42.000 But you got to read into it a little bit more than that.
00:14:44.000 There's obvious calculation here.
00:14:46.000 He says that the terrorist is a degenerate animal.
00:14:49.000 Notice he doesn't say the name of the terrorist, he doesn't mention anything about this guy.
00:14:55.000 No identity, no name, doesn't say what country he's from, nothing.
00:14:59.000 He says ISIS.
00:15:00.000 He says ISIS claimed the responsibility for this degenerate animal.
00:15:04.000 And think about degenerate animal.
00:15:06.000 In years past, when you have terrorists, like look at Osama bin Laden, for example.
00:15:11.000 This guy's a world figure.
00:15:12.000 This guy's on Time magazine.
00:15:14.000 This guy is a hero to terrorists around the world, to Muslim extremists around the world.
00:15:20.000 There's an air of mystique, there's an air of prestige, of infamy associated with him.
00:15:26.000 He's the most wanted man on the planet.
00:15:28.000 And now the search is on to find him.
00:15:30.000 And he's in a massive, inside of a mountain complex where he's got a terrorist army, and they're fighting against the great colonialist, the great Western superpower, the great Satan.
00:15:43.000 Osama bin Laden, we're going to find him and we're going to kill him.
00:15:46.000 There's a dramatic Shakespearean element to this of a battle of wills.
00:15:51.000 And whether it's good or evil, depending on what side you're on, it's a major force.
00:15:56.000 And there's a face to it, and there's fame, there's glory to be had there for the terrorists.
00:16:02.000 And even in recent episodes, we hear about Omar Mateen, who is the Orlando shooter.
00:16:06.000 We still remember his name.
00:16:07.000 We can still remember those images from San Bernardino.
00:16:11.000 I don't remember the names, but you remember the wife and the husband that did this, those pictures with the other mass shooters.
00:16:18.000 Even with Stephen Paddock, he turns into a meme, and everybody's talking about him.
00:16:23.000 But with this terrorist attack and with a couple of other ones previously, President Trump called them stupid losers.
00:16:29.000 That was the first iteration of this.
00:16:30.000 I forget which terror attack that was.
00:16:33.000 But the loser, everybody was like, oh, that's so corny, that's so campy.
00:16:37.000 That was the first trial of this sort of strategy.
00:16:41.000 Degenerate animal, I think, hits the nail right on the head.
00:16:44.000 No soldier of Islam wants to go to war and be remembered by the country as a degenerate animal, as an animal.
00:16:52.000 As degenerate, right?
00:16:54.000 When you're Osama bin Laden, there's glory.
00:16:57.000 You get to be on pictures, you're getting interviewed by major networks.
00:17:01.000 What's Osama bin Laden doing next?
00:17:03.000 What's this evil mastermind?
00:17:06.000 But Trump has dehumanized these people, and that's the stroke of brilliance.
00:17:11.000 He's a degenerate animal.
00:17:13.000 These people see themselves as soldiers, as warriors of God.
00:17:16.000 They see themselves when they do these attacks as like they're martyrs in the image of Muhammad or his soldiers.
00:17:24.000 So, to be called by the President of the United States some degenerate animal, filth, you know, a stupid loser, that's a powerful rhetorical effect.
00:17:34.000 And, you know, you have all these scholars and experts talking about we have to win the war of ideas with ISIS.
00:17:39.000 And notice they don't have any plan for that.
00:17:41.000 Trump is the one who's offering the solution there.
00:17:43.000 And then he goes on to say that ISIS will pay a big price for terrorism.
00:17:46.000 Now, I tweeted.
00:17:48.000 I tweeted, and people are going to say, oh, you know, wow, Nick, you're really, you're so smart taking advantage of a tragedy.
00:17:54.000 But I tweeted after.
00:17:56.000 After Raqqa fell in Syria earlier this summer, you would see terror attacks from ISIS escalate because as their prestige diminishes with their territorial claims, they will have to compensate for that with international terrorism, which is much more efficient in terms of resources, much cheaper, much easier to claim credit for a lone wolf terrorist or to supply a terrorist with weapons than to administer over a territory with people and roads and buildings and public services.
00:18:26.000 So that's how they compensate for the lost prestige with the land.
00:18:29.000 And I predicted this.
00:18:30.000 And you see this terrorist attack in New York City.
00:18:34.000 And Trump is responding.
00:18:36.000 He is matching that, where he's recognizing that ISIS will step up their terrorism as the United States increases their gains against ISIS in Iraq and Syria.
00:18:47.000 And he says, you know what?
00:18:49.000 I see more terrorism, and guess what?
00:18:51.000 Your prestige goes away more quickly.
00:18:54.000 I will accelerate the rate of your demise by stepping up our military efforts against you with every terrorist attack.
00:19:00.000 So, do you see how that dynamic plays out?
00:19:03.000 Where we are fighting them off in their territorial claims, they say, okay, well, we must compensate for this by attacking civilian targets in your home country with terrorism, which is cheap, inexpensive, relatively efficient if you're a terrorist, if you're a proto state in the Middle East, a terrorist proto state in the Middle East.
00:19:22.000 Well, Trump is saying, now that's not even a possibility.
00:19:25.000 Actually, the prestige you might have thought you would have earned with a terrorist attack, which you might have thought was relatively cheap compared to a militant offensive, Against ground forces in the Middle East, I will actually make it more expensive for you.
00:19:38.000 I will actually make that a liability for you.
00:19:40.000 Whereas you thought that was an asset for terrorism, where you would recruit people to your cause, you would get notoriety, publicity, infamy.
00:19:47.000 I'll actually make it so that every time this happens, you lose more resources, you lose more men, people become afraid to be associated with you.
00:19:55.000 And so he followed up on that this afternoon with the first U.S. airstrikes against Somalia in the war against ISIS.
00:20:03.000 So now you imagine that you're the leadership in ISIS, you imagine you're the leadership in the remaining strongholds, of which there are very few left, territorial wise, you know, in terms of cities and infrastructure.
00:20:15.000 And you think you're in a double bind essentially.
00:20:18.000 At once, Your only method to fight against the United States and Europe is terrorism.
00:20:23.000 That's the only thing you have left.
00:20:25.000 Your days are numbered.
00:20:27.000 But at the same time, every time a terrorist commits a terror attack, one of your guys is going to get killed.
00:20:33.000 And you don't know where and you don't know how bad it's going to be.
00:20:36.000 And people will think twice about joining your organization if they're just going to get a missile through their living room because some unrelated guy ran over people in New York City.
00:20:46.000 So, all around brilliant strategy by President Trump.
00:20:49.000 You just have to have the vision, you just have to have the imagination.
00:20:53.000 The strategic thinking to understand this kind of stuff.
00:20:55.000 It's very easy for people, low IQ establishment people, to say, I'm this Trump, he's so reckless with his tweeting, he's got to stop the tweeting, he's going to start a war.
00:21:05.000 Like, no, no, you dummy.
00:21:07.000 You know, people, oh, he needs to use it more responsibly.
00:21:10.000 He knows exactly how to use it.
00:21:12.000 It is bold, it is innovative.
00:21:15.000 That's exactly what we need.
00:21:17.000 You know, you want someone that looks like George W. Bush, by all means.
00:21:20.000 How's George W. Bush's record on terrorism?
00:21:23.000 How's George W. Bush's record on war in the Middle East, right?
00:21:27.000 Or Barack Obama, or any of these establishment clowns that think they have it all figured out.
00:21:31.000 So, very white pilling on that front.
00:21:33.000 And this is major, too.
00:21:35.000 A separate announcement, this was earlier in the morning, and this wasn't even the United States.
00:21:40.000 This was the Syrian and Iraqi armies.
00:21:43.000 They both, on the same day, they both reported today, both the Iraqi armies and the Syrian armies reported that they had taken over the last ISIS strongholds in those respective countries.
00:21:54.000 And that is a huge win because you understand that in 2020, We've already completed a number of Trump's campaign promises.
00:22:02.000 Repeal TPP and TTIP and TISA, the three globalist trade deals, those are already gone.
00:22:08.000 Defeated ISIS, that's already done.
00:22:11.000 Wall prototypes are being constructed.
00:22:13.000 Obviously, we need to see real progress on the wall, but that's already underway.
00:22:17.000 Obamacare is being undermined through executive orders, through all kinds of things.
00:22:21.000 He's just really ripping the heart out of this act.
00:22:24.000 Either it'll force the hands of Congress, and this will happen in the next three years, or it'll collapse on itself.
00:22:30.000 We are already on our way.
00:22:32.000 To achieving everything President Trump promised in terms of some of these policy areas.
00:22:40.000 I know people are a little bit dismayed by the progress on the wall, but just about everything else is under budget and ahead of schedule.
00:22:47.000 So this is a massive victory, and nobody talks about that.
00:22:50.000 Nobody talks about the fact that Obama was struggling against ISIS with no hope for victory, with no grand vision.
00:22:58.000 He was talking about how it would take decades to rebuild the Middle East.
00:23:01.000 We have it locked up in nine months with this guy, or 10 months now.
00:23:06.000 So that's big.
00:23:07.000 But that is ISIS.
00:23:08.000 That is our first major story.
00:23:10.000 Let me check on time here.
00:23:11.000 I love that water, you know.
00:23:18.000 People always ask me, are you drinking tea?
00:23:20.000 Are you drinking coffee?
00:23:21.000 Are you drinking alcohol?
00:23:22.000 I don't drink alcohol.
00:23:23.000 I don't drink coffee.
00:23:24.000 I don't drink tea.
00:23:26.000 Water, it's the perfect beverage.
00:23:29.000 Water is highly underrated, in my opinion.
00:23:31.000 I was never a big water drinker, you know, because it's kind of bland.
00:23:34.000 When you drink a lot of soda, when you drink a lot of pop, It's addictive, you know, and then when you drink water, it's just like it's boring.
00:23:43.000 It makes you sad.
00:23:44.000 It doesn't get those endorphins going like the good soda pop does.
00:23:48.000 But now that I've turned myself on to water, it's refreshing.
00:23:51.000 It's cool.
00:23:52.000 I'm a shill for big water now.
00:23:54.000 I'm a shill for big H2O now.
00:23:56.000 But that's a weird detour.
00:23:58.000 That's a weird little detour there.
00:24:00.000 But it's true.
00:24:01.000 The last thing I want to talk about, because we got about five minutes before 7 30, and that's when I want to take your questions.
00:24:09.000 So let's jump over into this Antifa thing real quick, and then we'll jump over to the live chat and we'll take your super chat questions and things like that.
00:24:17.000 But so.
00:24:18.000 Antifa, this is big.
00:24:19.000 This is coming tomorrow.
00:24:22.000 Tomorrow will mark the beginning of the Antifa Refuse Fascism protest.
00:24:28.000 And this will be in over two dozen cities across the country from Honolulu, I read, which I was like, what?
00:24:34.000 Nothing happens in Hawaii, I thought.
00:24:36.000 But from Honolulu to Atlanta, Chicago, Boston, New York, LA.
00:24:41.000 I mean, it's all over the country.
00:24:42.000 Two dozen cities they're targeting.
00:24:44.000 And this is from the organization Refuse Fascism, which is affiliated with Antifa.
00:24:49.000 And their goal is to protest.
00:24:52.000 Every day and every night until, excuse me, until President Trump and Mike Pence are removed from power.
00:25:01.000 And I think to myself when I see this, first of all, it's kind of a joke.
00:25:04.000 You know, these people who we heard during the women's protest, I was down there at the women's protest, the women's march in January of this year in Boston.
00:25:14.000 And I was talking to these people.
00:25:15.000 By the way, these people were nuts.
00:25:17.000 Okay.
00:25:17.000 These people were just delusional.
00:25:18.000 Some, some like tranny comes up to me, this like, I don't even know what the hell this person was.
00:25:24.000 I think it was a girl, but she was this.
00:25:26.000 Chimpanzee, the way she was yelling and screaming and jumping up and down, and like a psychotic person.
00:25:33.000 And she was telling me, We're going to be out here every day.
00:25:36.000 Get used to this.
00:25:36.000 We're going to be out here every weekend.
00:25:38.000 It's going to grow every weekend.
00:25:39.000 You're going to have millions of people.
00:25:42.000 And I said, You are being ridiculous.
00:25:44.000 You are being an insane person right now.
00:25:47.000 And no person in their right mind believes or could rationally believe that people are going to get out every weekend.
00:25:57.000 And protests like this.
00:25:58.000 Like, it's just, do you just have no conception?
00:26:01.000 Do you know any other people besides like your social justice crowd?
00:26:06.000 Like, do you know anybody that has a job or anybody?
00:26:09.000 Like, nobody cares about it that much that they're going to be there.
00:26:12.000 They're going to show up every weekend for this stuff.
00:26:15.000 So, these Antifa people, they're going to protest on Saturday every day and every night.
00:26:19.000 And they say it's going to grow from hundreds to thousands to hundreds of thousands to millions.
00:26:24.000 And I just think, what planet are these people on that they think this is like a movie?
00:26:29.000 This is like a flash mob in high school musical, where people are going to see these kids, these disgusting, obese animals.
00:26:36.000 And then on the other side, these skinny, like, trannies in the streets with black clothes and, you know, their converse and regular working people are going to open up their windows and lean out and say, Look, they're out there protesting the fascist Trump regime.
00:26:52.000 Let's get down there.
00:26:53.000 And it's just going to be like, it's just going to be a glorious revolution.
00:26:58.000 And, you know, Trump, BTFO, he's going to go to jail.
00:27:01.000 I mean, what do these people believe?
00:27:02.000 Do they believe that's going to happen?
00:27:05.000 Got to be realistic.
00:27:06.000 So that's coming down on the 4th.
00:27:10.000 And the other thing that I think about when I see this is the striking double standard.
00:27:15.000 Could you imagine if, what's that organization, Atomwaffen, which is like the Nazi Turner Diary group?
00:27:24.000 Could you imagine if they announced that they were going to start a day in, day out protest in the streets, in the cities?
00:27:32.000 They're going to overthrow the government.
00:27:35.000 Could you imagine if that was announced for November 4th?
00:27:37.000 You would have FBI everywhere.
00:27:39.000 You would have Homeland Security rounding people up.
00:27:42.000 You'd have plastic handcuffs.
00:27:44.000 You'd have those, you know, you'd get people zip tied in their homes, you know, getting picked up from their mom's basements, thrown in police trucks, hauled off to Guantanamo Bay.
00:27:54.000 We would never hear the end of that.
00:27:56.000 It would be remember when the Nazis tried to overthrow the country?
00:27:59.000 The news would be all over this Nazis taking over the country, Nazis overthrowing the government.
00:28:05.000 It's 1933 all over again.
00:28:07.000 But the left does it, Antifa does it.
00:28:10.000 They want to overthrow the government.
00:28:12.000 And it's just going to be allowed?
00:28:14.000 This is just going to happen?
00:28:16.000 You know, nobody says anything about this.
00:28:19.000 The mainstream media doesn't say anything about this.
00:28:21.000 It just goes to show that striking double standard.
00:28:26.000 Whenever people talk about the right and the left as though they're comparable, as though there's any kind of parallel or comparability between the two, it's just nuts.
00:28:35.000 It's just fundamentally a different ballgame with the left and the right.
00:28:39.000 The left can have Antifa, the left, it hurts them to have Antifa.
00:28:43.000 They have to come out and condemn this.
00:28:44.000 This will be a major liability for them going forward.
00:28:48.000 But they get the benefit of the doubt.
00:28:49.000 In the media, they don't get called, you know, they don't get called communist organizers, subversive communists.
00:28:56.000 They don't get rooted out by Facebook and Twitter when they have a rally.
00:28:59.000 They don't get doxxed and fired from their jobs for showing up to these things.
00:29:03.000 And if they do, you have to try really, really, really hard.
00:29:06.000 With the right, you could have a Fed rally.
00:29:09.000 You could have a rally of all federal operatives like you did in Florida in 2007, and you still get the bad rap like the Nazi takeover.
00:29:18.000 So.
00:29:19.000 Double standard, and that must inform our strategy moving forward.
00:29:24.000 That it's just there's no equality between the two.
00:29:27.000 People who say, you know, Antifa does this.
00:29:29.000 Antifa, number one, is a liability.
00:29:31.000 Number two, they have the benefit of the doubt.
00:29:33.000 We don't.
00:29:34.000 So that's Antifa.
00:29:35.000 I'm not too scared.
00:29:37.000 I don't know, though.
00:29:38.000 There's been a lot of conspiracy theories going around that they're going to test that this weekend of rage or whatever coincides with a test by the Department of Defense to shut off all communications to simulate.
00:29:52.000 A coronal mass ejection, like there's going to be a massive burst of radiation from the sun, and they're simulating what that would look like with defense communications and intelligence communications.
00:30:04.000 So people are saying, kind of weird that this Antifa Day of Rage event is happening the same day that the Department of Defense is doing a little test, a drill to shut down all military communications.
00:30:19.000 But I don't buy into that.
00:30:21.000 We'll see what happens.
00:30:23.000 So that's the day of rage.
00:30:24.000 We're going to move into our live chat here.
00:30:26.000 We'll see what we have in our super chats and in our live chat at large.
00:30:30.000 We'll try and hang out with you guys a little bit for those that didn't get to call in during the show or didn't get through during the call in show on Tuesday.
00:30:39.000 So let's see what we got here.
00:30:41.000 J22 report says Popsicle plus America first equals an awesome Friday night.
00:30:47.000 Hey, popsicles are not bad.
00:30:49.000 I do enjoy the popsicle.
00:30:51.000 You know what's unfortunate is the decline of ice cream trucks.
00:30:55.000 That, I mean, the more I get older and the more I remember things from my childhood that are going away because of low trust, heterogeneous societies, the more I am building an argument for why America must remain homogenous, why we must oppose immigration, not just on economic grounds, but on cultural grounds.
00:31:15.000 Because you talk, and I use this expression a lot, but social trust is an abstract expression.
00:31:21.000 People can't wrap their heads around it.
00:31:22.000 You know, people look at the poor Mexicans that come here or the poor Asians that come here and they say, oh, well, why can't they?
00:31:28.000 Just be a part of the American dream.
00:31:30.000 What if they can assimilate?
00:31:31.000 What if they're peaceful and they get jobs?
00:31:33.000 And isn't that the American dream?
00:31:35.000 And you think, well, okay, maybe.
00:31:37.000 But this will come at the cost necessarily of social trust.
00:31:41.000 You will have less social trust, less community social capital when you have people that look different in the same place.
00:31:48.000 That's just how it works.
00:31:49.000 You know, look at any diverse city or town.
00:31:52.000 You have conflict.
00:31:53.000 You have a lot of dissonance.
00:31:56.000 You don't have a lot of trust.
00:31:58.000 And this is noted, of course, in the studies by Putnam, who's a sociologist from, I think, Harvard University.
00:32:05.000 But here's what that means in practice here's what that means it means when you're raising your kids, there's no ice cream trucks.
00:32:11.000 No ice cream trucks for the kids because, you know, you don't know who's going to be driving that ice cream.
00:32:16.000 It's not somebody you know from down the street who you know who they are, you know their family, you know who runs it, they get paid a decent wage.
00:32:22.000 It's some Mexican, you know, or it's some Indian guy.
00:32:26.000 Or you don't know who it is.
00:32:27.000 It's just some mystery meat guy who you've never seen before selling your kids ice cream.
00:32:31.000 I don't think so.
00:32:32.000 I'm not going to let that happen.
00:32:33.000 No more ice cream trucks.
00:32:35.000 Trick or treating on Halloween?
00:32:37.000 You're going to let your kids go knocking door to door on houses where you don't know the people inside, where they could give your kids candy that they're going to eat?
00:32:37.000 Not going to happen.
00:32:45.000 There won't be any trick or treating.
00:32:47.000 Block parties.
00:32:48.000 Not going to happen.
00:32:49.000 The people across the street don't speak the same language.
00:32:51.000 The people down the street speak a different language than the people across the street.
00:32:55.000 There's not going to be a block party.
00:32:56.000 They don't have the same traditions.
00:32:57.000 You're not going to be able to organize that with the municipality.
00:33:01.000 You're not going to be able to organize that.
00:33:03.000 All these little things.
00:33:04.000 The community pool.
00:33:06.000 I'm not letting you swim in that community pool.
00:33:08.000 You got people from Africa that just moved in down the street.
00:33:11.000 You have literal refugees from Africa where the black plague is breaking out on the southeastern coast.
00:33:17.000 I'm not letting you swim in that pool with those people.
00:33:21.000 All the things that we love about our lives, about our childhood, about being an adult, all the things that make life interesting, besides having a job and consuming things, are a product of high social trust, are a product of community, a product fundamentally of homogeneity.
00:33:37.000 And you look at the places with the highest rates of happiness, and it's all homogeneous Scandinavian countries.
00:33:45.000 It's Norway, it's Sweden, it's Denmark, it's Finland.
00:33:48.000 And what do they all have in common?
00:33:49.000 They're all very religious, they're racially.
00:33:52.000 Ethnically, the same.
00:33:54.000 They see each other in Sweden, or maybe it was in Norway.
00:33:57.000 I forget which country.
00:33:58.000 I think it was Sweden.
00:33:59.000 The reason why their welfare state, why they wanted it so badly, and they thought it could work there more than anyone else, is because they saw each other as family.
00:34:08.000 They see each other as family.
00:34:09.000 They're their fellow countrymen, their fellow neighbors.
00:34:12.000 They see themselves like they all know each other.
00:34:15.000 It didn't work there.
00:34:16.000 It's worth noting it didn't work, and actually, it degraded and eroded trust that you had socialism or social democracy.
00:34:22.000 That's not really the point.
00:34:24.000 But the reason that they thought it could work, that very sophisticated and advanced form of technocracy of government could work, is because they all saw each other as family.
00:34:34.000 And so, all those, you know, fine, you can have your cheap consumer goods.
00:34:37.000 You can have Jose mow your lawn for 20 bucks.
00:34:40.000 And you can have, you know, your low skilled worker in the factories.
00:34:44.000 And you can have your multicultural country where you have authentic tacos.
00:34:47.000 And that's great.
00:34:49.000 But you must recognize that it will come at the cost of no more of the things that you love no more trick or treating, no more ice cream trucks, no more pool, no more block party, no more.
00:34:59.000 Going to the same church and seeing your neighbors, no more being able to go to the PTA and organize nice little events, no more Little League Baseball, no more, no more of that.
00:35:09.000 It all goes away.
00:35:10.000 You can't have it all.
00:35:12.000 And that'll be the thing that'll die.
00:35:13.000 That'll be what will be sacrificed on the altar of neoliberalism.
00:35:17.000 So for anybody, and that's quite the extrapolation, right?
00:35:20.000 From popsicles in America first to social trust.
00:35:24.000 But just reminded me because I saw an ice cream truck the other day and I was thinking, you know, what a shame, what a shame that.
00:35:30.000 It's got to be some mystery me driving the ice cream truck.
00:35:33.000 It can't be some clean cut white guy from down the street who you know, you know his mother, you know his family, or a young college kid who's trying to pay off the bills or something in a clean white truck, in a clean white uniform with his little hat, you know, because that's what the good humor bars were back in the day.
00:35:53.000 Not some dirty, ratty truck with like superhero posters and you don't know where the hell these people are from.
00:36:01.000 So, all those fun things, all the good things go away when you have the People.
00:36:05.000 That's fine.
00:36:05.000 You know, fine.
00:36:06.000 Whatever.
00:36:07.000 Whatever.
00:36:08.000 If you think it's worth it to have more superhero movies and cheaper goods and the food court nationalism, fine.
00:36:15.000 You know, throw all that shit away.
00:36:17.000 Who cares, right?
00:36:18.000 Who cares?
00:36:19.000 It's all about consumption.
00:36:21.000 Wake up be something, something.
00:36:24.000 Cool handle.
00:36:25.000 Dropping the 10 shekels.
00:36:27.000 Thank you for that.
00:36:28.000 Joe Cracker says t shirt under the dress shirt.
00:36:31.000 Really, Nibba?
00:36:32.000 This is not a dress shirt, my friend.
00:36:35.000 This is not a dress shirt.
00:36:36.000 A dress shirt is not a button down shirt.
00:36:39.000 Difference.
00:36:40.000 And yeah, you can wear an undershirt that's kind of standard for a lot of people.
00:36:45.000 Yeah, really, Joe Cracker.
00:36:47.000 Simon Skola, new order is better than Depeche Mode.
00:36:51.000 I don't know Depeche Mode.
00:36:52.000 It's very European, very Euro trash kind of stuff.
00:36:56.000 Not to take a dump on Spencer's style over there, it just never was my thing.
00:37:02.000 My favorite genre of music these days I've been getting into is yacht rock.
00:37:06.000 I've really been getting into America, the band.
00:37:09.000 I've been really getting into Bob Seeger.
00:37:12.000 The Eagles, that's so implicit.
00:37:15.000 It's so good.
00:37:17.000 It really takes you back to that aesthetic of this melancholy America that's going away.
00:37:23.000 It takes you back to that movie, Stand By Me.
00:37:26.000 It takes you back to that aesthetic of the small American town where there was still culture, there was still family, there was still kind of this mystic quality about life where you would have the town, but you would also have the outskirts of town.
00:37:41.000 There wasn't this ubiquity, this tyranny.
00:37:44.000 Of corporations.
00:37:45.000 There wasn't this tyranny of man's inventions, this tyranny of man's control and domination over nature.
00:37:51.000 There was this mystery that you go outside the city limits and there's ghosts or there's murderers or, you know, there's wildlife, but in the town there's culture and, you know, it harkens back to a different time.
00:38:04.000 And I think in the 80s they were feeling nostalgic for that because that's when it started to go away.
00:38:08.000 That's when it started to go away slowly and it gave way to the 90s.
00:38:11.000 And that's when you saw the birth of nihilism.
00:38:13.000 So.
00:38:14.000 And why do you think people are all over the show Stranger Things all of a sudden?
00:38:19.000 Or over 80s culture, vaporwave and synth music and that kind of thing?
00:38:26.000 Because it is calling back to a time, a similar time, when we were remembering and reminiscing and having nostalgia for the 50s or the 40s or the 60s when everything made a little bit more sense.
00:38:37.000 You know, we had struggles.
00:38:38.000 Don't get me wrong.
00:38:39.000 It wasn't the.
00:38:40.000 It's not like we had it made completely.
00:38:42.000 You know, we had our issues.
00:38:44.000 It wasn't as rich of a country.
00:38:46.000 It wasn't as safe of a country, maybe, in some regards.
00:38:50.000 Militarily, maybe, because you had the Cold War.
00:38:52.000 But the fundamentals we had right.
00:38:55.000 The fundamentals, we had those down.
00:38:58.000 Life was worth living.
00:39:00.000 Simon Skola, Goodfellas is better than The Godfather.
00:39:05.000 See, now I don't know about that.
00:39:08.000 I was with you when you were taking a dump on Depeche Mode, because I'm not with that Eurotrash stuff.
00:39:14.000 But now you're insulting The Godfather?
00:39:16.000 I don't know.
00:39:17.000 Good Fellows is good.
00:39:18.000 Great movie.
00:39:18.000 Don't get me wrong.
00:39:19.000 It's a masterpiece.
00:39:20.000 One of my favorites.
00:39:22.000 You know, it's one of those movies where you can just turn it on whenever and you just finish it.
00:39:26.000 But The Godfather is a masterpiece.
00:39:28.000 Godfather is the greatest of all time.
00:39:31.000 Godfather 1 and 2.
00:39:33.000 So I don't know about that.
00:39:34.000 I like Goodfellas.
00:39:35.000 It's a cult classic.
00:39:36.000 You know, it's a favorite.
00:39:37.000 But I think it's like.
00:39:40.000 I think Goodfellas is more of like a pop kind of a movie, and Godfather is more of an artistic expression.
00:39:45.000 You know, there's a little bit more of a sophistication about.
00:39:49.000 A little bit more of a maturity about The Godfather as opposed to Goodfellas.
00:39:53.000 Not that there's anything wrong with that kind of movie.
00:39:55.000 I mean, that's Martin Scorsese's style.
00:39:58.000 But I think in terms of the artistic value, I think Godfather is just.
00:40:03.000 Edges it out a little bit for the top spot there.
00:40:06.000 Howard Morton dropping us a single shekel.
00:40:09.000 Thank you.
00:40:10.000 Simon Skola, the young Turks still say Orlando had nothing to do with Islam.
00:40:15.000 Yeah, and then they're in denial.
00:40:16.000 You know, it's funny because when that car accident happened in Charlottesville, right away it was white supremacist terrorists and shut them down, keep them off the internet, get them off Twitter, get them off Uber.
00:40:29.000 Omar Mateen, whose father is an Afghan refugee, does it in the name of Islam.
00:40:33.000 He's shouting Allahu Akbar.
00:40:35.000 They're like, was he Muslim?
00:40:37.000 I don't know.
00:40:38.000 You know, so quite the double standard.
00:40:41.000 Eric Wright says, Nuke Mexico.
00:40:44.000 Yeah, I wouldn't go that far.
00:40:45.000 We just got to keep them out.
00:40:47.000 Spoiler alert bottled or tap?
00:40:49.000 Bottled.
00:40:50.000 Tap water has fluoride in it, and God knows what else they put in the tap water, whether they're putting in birth control or friggin', I don't even know what, estrogen.
00:41:00.000 Tap water scares the hell out of me.
00:41:01.000 I go for the bottled stuff only because, and there's no really guarantee that it's any different than the tap stuff, but.
00:41:08.000 At least you have some kind of choice whether you could buy different brands or purified, or you get a little bit more control than you just turn on the faucet and you get what the government gives you.
00:41:17.000 I don't know.
00:41:18.000 Is there any legitimacy to that fluoride stuff?
00:41:20.000 I hear a lot.
00:41:21.000 I hear a lot of bad about that, but I also hear there's a lot of good to it.
00:41:24.000 I mean, the argument goes that fluoride, what is it?
00:41:27.000 It's good for the health of your teeth, it's good for the enamel on your teeth.
00:41:32.000 But I've also heard that fluoride shuts down some organ in your body or something, it stops you from producing some kind of a hormone.
00:41:40.000 I don't know.
00:41:41.000 Are science right?
00:41:42.000 Can give me the answers on that.
00:41:45.000 Rake enthusiast says, and whoops, scrolled down too far there.
00:41:50.000 What's your take on the current state of Canada?
00:41:53.000 We're paused out the wazoo up here.
00:41:55.000 I don't know anything about Canada.
00:41:56.000 I'm in America, okay?
00:41:59.000 So you got to ask Faith Goldie that.
00:42:01.000 You got to ask Jordan Peterson that.
00:42:03.000 Canada's gay.
00:42:04.000 I mean, it's Justin Trudeau, okay?
00:42:06.000 I guess Canada's not gay.
00:42:08.000 It's their leadership that sucks.
00:42:10.000 You know, Justin Trudeau is a straight homo, okay?
00:42:13.000 The way he goes up on television, he's supposed to be the pretty boy, and the way he kowtows to these women and these feminists and the indigenous people.
00:42:21.000 I mean, that's your real conflict of visions here in the West you have Donald Trump, who's of the people, who's of the heartland, who's of tradition and what a country's supposed to be, you know, the town, the culture.
00:42:37.000 And then you have the man of civilization, you have Justin Trudeau, the man of the world city, the man of globalism, the man of feminism.
00:42:44.000 And that's, I mean, that's your real dichotomy.
00:42:46.000 You have these two titans.
00:42:48.000 And they're both ruthlessly pragmatic in their politics.
00:42:51.000 That's the one thing that they have in common.
00:42:54.000 Maybe that's why they get along.
00:42:55.000 But those are the conflict of visions.
00:42:57.000 Those are the visions in conflict that are constantly struggling for supremacy and have been for the past 25 years.
00:43:06.000 That's Merkel and Obama and Trudeau and Macron and Theresa May versus Donald Trump, Nigel Farage, Marine Le Pen, Vladimir Putin, and those crowd.
00:43:18.000 I mean, that's the real conflict of visions here in the world today.
00:43:22.000 Canada, I don't know.
00:43:23.000 I don't know anything about Canada.
00:43:25.000 So it's tough to say what the situation is there.
00:43:29.000 They have a better shot at us.
00:43:30.000 Their population of whites is higher than ours.
00:43:32.000 And they were traditionalists.
00:43:34.000 Faith was telling me in a very real way.
00:43:36.000 I mean, they were the original conservatives, whereas Americans were liberals and we threw off the crown to create this government influenced by Rousseau and Montesquieu and people like that.
00:43:48.000 The Canadians stuck true to the crown.
00:43:51.000 They were the real conservatives there.
00:43:53.000 They stuck to their traditions, their hierarchy, their culture.
00:43:57.000 So I like Canada.
00:43:59.000 Jeff Sheldon, what's your favorite quote from Julius Evola?
00:44:04.000 Hmm.
00:44:05.000 Favorite quote from Julius Evola?
00:44:07.000 Probably, I mean, I think probably the best on ideology is the quote, it goes something to the effect that his beliefs are only the things that every person prior to the French Revolution would find sensible.
00:44:22.000 That's one of my favorites for ideology.
00:44:24.000 For personal conduct, he says, when it comes to, I'm going to butcher this one, but something to the effect.
00:44:31.000 I mean, this is essentially what it means, was, When you're confronted with what needs to be done, neither pain nor pleasure should enter in as a consideration.
00:44:41.000 So basically, the two expressions mean conservatism, reaction in particular, is not radical.
00:44:48.000 It's not extreme.
00:44:50.000 It's what everybody thought was okay before this monumental event that happened in 1789.
00:44:55.000 And then in personal conduct, saying, look, what's done needs to be done and nothing else matters.
00:45:01.000 Your personal feelings, the sensations that you'll undergo should not be a factor in when you have.
00:45:08.000 Obligation when you have duty.
00:45:11.000 Excuse me.
00:45:12.000 So, those are my favorites.
00:45:15.000 Ozzy, did you see Wee's vlog about Goon Rally Optics?
00:45:18.000 I did not.
00:45:20.000 Wee's, he kind of creeps me out with that when the Saxon began to hate poem.
00:45:25.000 I can't watch his stuff without thinking of that anymore.
00:45:27.000 I watch that and I go, this guy's nuts.
00:45:30.000 I don't know if that was a joke or not.
00:45:31.000 If it was, it's hilarious.
00:45:32.000 But, Wee's a little, he's an odd cat there.
00:45:36.000 Ozzy says, why do women hate Blade Runner 2049?
00:45:40.000 Quick rundown.
00:45:41.000 It's about men.
00:45:42.000 It's about men.
00:45:43.000 It's for men.
00:45:45.000 It's about men's disillusionment in the modern world.
00:45:49.000 I really think it's an existential picture about man in a world that is increasingly materialistic, that has deprived us of identity and authenticity beyond anything else.
00:46:02.000 I mean, that's what I think that's the prevailing theme that the Blade Runners don't know whether they're human or whether they are an imitation of humanity.
00:46:11.000 I mean, that's a reflection, that's a criticism of postmodernism, that's a criticism of.
00:46:16.000 Of the society of spectacle, you know, that we don't really know what makes us human anymore.
00:46:22.000 We don't know what makes us alive anymore in this world where you got machines and all kinds of other things.
00:46:29.000 And that was the theme in the first one where we still don't know if Harrison Ford was the robot or not, or a replicant or not.
00:46:34.000 We still don't know if Ryan Gosling was or not.
00:46:37.000 Or he ended up, I don't want to spoil it.
00:46:39.000 I'm not really sure.
00:46:40.000 I'm not really sure what he ended up being or not.
00:46:45.000 So women hate that because women, I don't think they understand that.
00:46:48.000 I think women fundamentally just have.
00:46:51.000 A different consciousness than men.
00:46:52.000 You know, they're just not concerned about that kind of thing.
00:46:55.000 You know, I mean, picture a woman in the position of Ryan Gosling in that movie if you've seen it.
00:47:01.000 It's just they don't have that, they don't have that like, that inner longing that men do.
00:47:06.000 They don't have that, that responsibility that men do, that, that like, that obligation, that need to give your life to something.
00:47:15.000 And Ayn Rand talks about this women's ethic, the pathology of women is hero worship.
00:47:22.000 They want to worship a man.
00:47:24.000 They want to give themselves to a man.
00:47:25.000 And a man wants to give himself to God or to country or to something.
00:47:29.000 And that's why I think women don't really relate to that.
00:47:34.000 You know, that's why I don't think they get it.
00:47:35.000 It's a dark movie.
00:47:36.000 It's a violent movie.
00:47:38.000 They might think it's boring, you know, because it's not flashy and colorful and pleasant in some cases.
00:47:44.000 You know, you listen to the soundtrack, if you could call it, of that movie, and it's very dark.
00:47:49.000 It's very cynical, a very jaded soundtrack.
00:47:52.000 I mean, it's not something you would listen to on your iPhone.
00:47:55.000 It's not like.
00:47:56.000 Pitch perfect, too, where it's just, God, I mean, that's probably the good foil to Blade Runner's.
00:48:03.000 Pitch perfect, where it's just loud and it's goofy and it's silly and it doesn't mean anything.
00:48:08.000 It's popcorn, you know?
00:48:10.000 I just think, and it's not like I don't like women.
00:48:12.000 It's not like I'm disrespectful towards women, like, women are dumb.
00:48:16.000 But women are fundamentally different than men.
00:48:18.000 Their sensibilities are different than men.
00:48:21.000 Their temperament is different from men.
00:48:23.000 Their tastes are different from men.
00:48:24.000 Their purpose is different from men's.
00:48:27.000 And that's not.
00:48:27.000 That's not to say it's a lesser purpose.
00:48:29.000 That's not to make a judgment about it all, but it's just different.
00:48:32.000 And that's okay.
00:48:33.000 That's a fine thing.
00:48:35.000 You know?
00:48:36.000 People all the time, they tell me, Nick, I'm a woman fan of yours and I'm offended by that.
00:48:41.000 No, I don't care.
00:48:42.000 You know?
00:48:43.000 That's just how it is.
00:48:44.000 And read in the Bible.
00:48:45.000 You know, I get all these Christian women too.
00:48:47.000 It's in the Bible.
00:48:48.000 Woman was created out of man, lesser than man.
00:48:51.000 That's the order.
00:48:52.000 That's how it goes, sweetheart.
00:48:54.000 It goes God, then man, then women, then children.
00:48:57.000 It's just.
00:48:58.000 You get God, God puts man on earth, man's lonely.
00:49:01.000 So God takes a rib out of Adam, and from that, he creates the woman.
00:49:05.000 So she is out of man, she is a complement to man.
00:49:09.000 And out of man and woman comes a child.
00:49:12.000 And that's the pecking order.
00:49:13.000 Sorry, folks, it's a little thing called hierarchy.
00:49:17.000 And it doesn't mean that you're lesser just because you're under in the cosmic order of things.
00:49:23.000 That doesn't mean you're lesser.
00:49:28.000 You think of being above somebody in the hierarchy, it's more responsibility, it's more peril, it's more risk.
00:49:34.000 You know, that's why men have to fight in the wars.
00:49:36.000 That's why men have to go last out of a burning building.
00:49:39.000 That's why men hold the door open for women.
00:49:41.000 That's why men have to court women and they have to spend their money on engagement rings.
00:49:44.000 And that's why they don't get the kids if you get divorced.
00:49:47.000 And that's why you can't hit women.
00:49:48.000 And that's why, you know, so you talk about this male privilege, you know, men have it so much better.
00:49:55.000 Men are smarter.
00:49:56.000 Men are the top.
00:49:57.000 Wow, what do you hate women?
00:49:58.000 No, because of that, we're the ones that have to get.
00:50:01.000 Blown to smithereens in trench warfare and die of mustard gas inhalation, and get, you know, we're in the trenches, and I'm not in the trenches, but historically men have been in the trenches getting spears rammed through them and getting their heads chopped off.
00:50:17.000 And, you know, we are the pawns that live and die at the behest of rulers and all kinds of things.
00:50:23.000 And we have to go out of work and fix cars and, you know, do all this, protect our families.
00:50:29.000 We're the ones that got to go investigate if something goes bump in the night.
00:50:32.000 That's a good place to be if you're a woman, you know?
00:50:35.000 If I were a woman, I'd just be like, okay, that's fine.
00:50:39.000 You think you're smarter and you're going to do all that?
00:50:42.000 Hey, no problems with that.
00:50:44.000 By all means.
00:50:46.000 So you have to have hierarchy.
00:50:47.000 And don't believe me?
00:50:48.000 Fine.
00:50:49.000 Try and thwart it.
00:50:50.000 Try and thwart it, women.
00:50:51.000 Go out, be a professional, get your degree, get a job.
00:50:54.000 Try and climb through.
00:50:55.000 Try and be a ruthless lawyer and accountant.
00:50:59.000 See how that goes for you.
00:51:00.000 See what happens when you're 45 and you're alone and you've got no kids and nobody wants to marry you.
00:51:04.000 Then you tell me you made the right decision.
00:51:06.000 Then you tell me.
00:51:07.000 That you were right all along about egalitarianism.
00:51:10.000 People who want to thwart the cosmic order of things, people that want to thwart God's will, they always pay the price.
00:51:18.000 I mean, that's a little thing called hubris.
00:51:21.000 That's a little thing called arrogance.
00:51:23.000 That's what happens.
00:51:25.000 You know, prove me wrong.
00:51:27.000 Please go out, ladies.
00:51:29.000 If you're out there, become the first major female political philosopher because there's never been one.
00:51:34.000 Become the first major female industrialist.
00:51:36.000 Become the first major female inventor of something useful.
00:51:41.000 Hey, and I'll say I was wrong.
00:51:44.000 I'll eat my hat if in 100 years you can get that proportion of women as representative of the female population.
00:51:52.000 But everybody that tries ends up miserable and sad and it hurts themselves.
00:51:56.000 And it's like, We tried to help you.
00:51:58.000 We said it was for your own good and you didn't believe us.
00:52:01.000 And now there you are.
00:52:02.000 You're on a clock, ladies.
00:52:04.000 It's tough.
00:52:06.000 That's just how it goes.
00:52:07.000 These women, they think because they're young that they have this power over men forever.
00:52:13.000 And then they find when they're 45, no childbearing potential.
00:52:17.000 They've lost their natural beauty.
00:52:20.000 They haven't taken care of themselves because they've been spending time on work.
00:52:24.000 And women age worse than men because they're not built for work.
00:52:29.000 And then they find themselves, they lost everything that they were supposed to have, that they were divinely ordained to have.
00:52:37.000 The folly, the folly of Western man who thinks we think we're so smart.
00:52:41.000 We think we're so.
00:52:43.000 We conquered everything.
00:52:44.000 We figured it all out, guys.
00:52:46.000 In the last 200 years, we figured it all out.
00:52:48.000 We were doing it wrong for the past 5,000 years, and then we figured it out through the power of our intellect, through the power of experiments.
00:52:57.000 We figured it out.
00:52:58.000 And everyone that was doing it differently before us, Was doing it differently because they were not smart enough.
00:53:04.000 They were not educated enough.
00:53:06.000 They were ignorant.
00:53:07.000 They were hateful.
00:53:08.000 They were old.
00:53:08.000 They were bigoted.
00:53:09.000 They were archaic.
00:53:10.000 But now we know.
00:53:11.000 Now we know better than all the people that came before us.
00:53:14.000 We know better than the ancient elders, than the ancient scroll keepers, the ancient monks and ascetics.
00:53:21.000 We know better than God himself.
00:53:23.000 We killed God, right?
00:53:25.000 And how's that working out, right?
00:53:27.000 So, there you go.
00:53:28.000 There's Blade Runner.
00:53:29.000 There's Blade Runner 2049.
00:53:32.000 Good movie.
00:53:33.000 I recommend everybody watch it.
00:53:38.000 Yeah, that was a fantastic picture, old Blade Runner, because that's how young men feel.
00:53:44.000 We feel like replicants.
00:53:47.000 That's why you have mass shootings.
00:53:49.000 Read Dostoevsky's notes.
00:53:50.000 Here's my reading list, impromptu reading list.
00:53:52.000 Read these two together Dostoevsky's Notes from the Underground.
00:53:57.000 Short read, 130 pages, comes in two parts.
00:54:01.000 Well, it doesn't come in like in two separate parts, but it's a two part book.
00:54:05.000 And read Ride the Tiger by.
00:54:07.000 Julius Evola.
00:54:08.000 And you'll see this evolution of things, of thought.
00:54:13.000 You'll be able to diagnose what's been going on.
00:54:17.000 In Ride the Tiger, Evola talks about nihilism.
00:54:20.000 In Dostoevsky's Notes from the Underground, he talks about autonomy, human autonomy, and free will.
00:54:27.000 He talks about how, and it's a difficult read because the funny thing is the narrator is not a likable person.
00:54:33.000 He's relatable, but he's not likable.
00:54:35.000 And you get through to a point where he says that men sometimes.
00:54:40.000 Are counterproductive.
00:54:41.000 Men do things, irrational things sometimes, just to prove that they are irrational, just to prove that they are not slaves to determinism.
00:54:50.000 They're not slaves to some formula that somebody could have drawn up years ago if they had all the variables and numbers and they had the law of rationality.
00:54:59.000 Men want to throw off these shackles of convention and predictability and rationality sometimes, and they want to destroy great things just to prove that they can, just to prove that they're not on a track, just to prove that they're not on some predetermined course.
00:55:14.000 Just to prove that they are men and not robots.
00:55:18.000 So that's kind of what I got out of Blade Runner, and that's what people feel in this day and age.
00:55:22.000 I mean, that's everybody's put in the hamster wheel, and we're just supposed to go and then we're gone, you know.
00:55:29.000 We're supposed to go to elementary school, and you're supposed to just be a number, you know.
00:55:33.000 You're just supposed to show up in your uniform, go in your gym uniform.
00:55:36.000 Hello, Mr. Teacher, sir.
00:55:38.000 I love black people, sir.
00:55:43.000 We're all equal, sir, you know.
00:55:46.000 Oh, man.
00:55:47.000 And you go through elementary school, and you go to gym class, and you run in circles in your gym uniform, and, you know, everyone's expected to be the conformist, and, um, And then you go to high school, and everyone's supposed to do their homework.
00:55:59.000 And if you're not doing your homework, you got to go to a therapist and get yourself straightened out.
00:56:04.000 And then they got to put you on drugs so you're quiet.
00:56:07.000 And then you got out of high school, you go to college, and then you're under somebody else for another four years.
00:56:14.000 And then maybe another four years if you go to graduate school.
00:56:16.000 And then you work.
00:56:16.000 And that's your life for 50 years, day in and day out, for money to buy things.
00:56:22.000 And you come to a point where you feel like you're just there to facilitate.
00:56:27.000 Nice burp, Nick.
00:56:28.000 Gross.
00:56:29.000 Excuse me.
00:56:30.000 That you're supposed to just broker and facilitate and be the middleman for transactions.
00:56:34.000 You are just one node between your employer and the government, where you're filling out taxes for the government and expenses for your car payment and expenses for your house and expenses for this.
00:56:46.000 And you just essentially become this automaton and you go to work and you do your data entry job or you do your assembly line job.
00:56:56.000 And that would have been, and I tweeted about this, that would have been fine.
00:56:58.000 People would have been okay with this, I think.
00:57:00.000 People were okay with this for a long time.
00:57:03.000 If they went home to a wife that loved them, if they went home and they walked through the door and it was, Hi, honey, how was your day?
00:57:10.000 You know, wow, what a great day.
00:57:12.000 And your kids ran up, Hi, dad.
00:57:13.000 Hi, you know, look at the thing I built in school.
00:57:16.000 Look at this, you know, whatever.
00:57:17.000 And they came down in a cowboy costume, you know, look, I'm the Lone Ranger.
00:57:22.000 And then there was a nice, delicious, warm dinner waiting for you.
00:57:25.000 And you got to take off your hat, your coat, jacket, you know, and you sit down at the dinner table and then everybody talks about their day.
00:57:31.000 It's very pleasant.
00:57:32.000 And then you get to.
00:57:34.000 I don't know.
00:57:34.000 You get to sit down in the study and read.
00:57:36.000 You have a little drink, maybe.
00:57:37.000 And the wife comes in, you know, hey, babe, you know, a little plate of cookies or something.
00:57:44.000 And that's the week.
00:57:45.000 And that takes the edge off.
00:57:46.000 And then on the weekend, you have family time.
00:57:48.000 On Saturday, you hang out with the kids.
00:57:50.000 You go see the ball game.
00:57:51.000 You go do something.
00:57:53.000 You go volunteer at the local Rotary Club meeting.
00:57:55.000 You go to the fraternal meeting.
00:57:57.000 Sunday, you go to Mass.
00:57:59.000 And you confess to all your sins.
00:58:01.000 And you have this real confrontation with the spiritual.
00:58:04.000 With the heavenly bodies outside of this temporal materialist world.
00:58:10.000 You're there with your neighbors.
00:58:12.000 It's a religious experience.
00:58:13.000 You're there with your family and they're learning the tradition of people thousands of years before you and that'll continue thousands of years after you.
00:58:20.000 And then every month or every so often you have a holiday and you get to go all out and there's gifts and you get to see your family.
00:58:27.000 And if that's how it was, people would be fine, by the way, I think, or at least people could cope with this system.
00:58:34.000 But the problem is, by nature of the system, it extracts.
00:58:37.000 All the joy.
00:58:38.000 It extracts all the authenticity, all the genuine parts of life right out of it.
00:58:43.000 It sucks the soul out of it.
00:58:44.000 And that's the chief problem.
00:58:46.000 That's your issue.
00:58:48.000 That's Blade Runner.
00:58:48.000 That's what Blade Runner is about.
00:58:50.000 How, you know, if Blade Runner, if Ryan Gosling comes home after a long day of retiring Dave Batista and he's got a real wife with a real dinner and it's a nice house and it's his own property, but it's not.
00:59:03.000 He comes home to a shoebox apartment and it's disgusting and it's dirty and you got drug dealers outside, you got people speaking different languages.
00:59:10.000 And it's a hassle.
00:59:11.000 You got to climb upstairs.
00:59:13.000 It's dirty.
00:59:15.000 The atmosphere is bad.
00:59:16.000 It's loud.
00:59:17.000 You get in.
00:59:18.000 Your apartment's small.
00:59:19.000 There's nothing artistic about it.
00:59:21.000 Your wife is fake.
00:59:23.000 She's a hologram.
00:59:25.000 You're eating like meal packets, you know, and that would make you want to kill yourself.
00:59:30.000 That would make you want to kill other people, too.
00:59:32.000 So that's Blade Runner.
00:59:35.000 Simon Scola, ice cream trucks are better than taco trucks.
00:59:38.000 I'm going to use that.
00:59:39.000 I like that.
00:59:41.000 George Menta, can you talk about, whoops, skipped a little bit down there.
00:59:46.000 Can you talk about the tax code?
00:59:48.000 Thanks, Goy.
00:59:48.000 The new tax code.
00:59:49.000 Sure.
00:59:51.000 Trump's tax proposal, I assume you're referring to.
00:59:54.000 Tax plan is good.
00:59:55.000 It includes an increased child tax credit.
00:59:58.000 It introduces a non child dependent tax credit.
01:00:02.000 So you get $500 tax credit for people like sick, elderly, disabled adults, that kind of thing.
01:00:10.000 It's cutting the corporate tax rate from 35% to 20%, I believe.
01:00:16.000 It's reducing the amount of tax brackets from 7 down to 3.
01:00:20.000 So before you had a tax bracket from, I forget the low end, but up to 39.6%.
01:00:26.000 Now it's three tax brackets.
01:00:27.000 It's 20.
01:00:29.000 It's 20, 25, and 35 percent, I believe.
01:00:32.000 Don't quote me on that.
01:00:33.000 It's been a while since I looked over, but it cuts it down to three tax brackets.
01:00:38.000 It raises the standard deduction.
01:00:41.000 So that creates more people that are not paying any tax.
01:00:43.000 So, for example, if you make 10 grand, I forget what they raise the standard deduction to.
01:00:49.000 I think they double it to $12,000.
01:00:51.000 That's a standard deduction.
01:00:52.000 So if you make $12,000, you don't pay taxes.
01:00:55.000 So that creates a good 0% income tax for a lot of people.
01:00:59.000 But at the same time, it gets rid of a lot of the deductions and other things that you can get out of there.
01:01:05.000 So that's the gist of it.
01:01:07.000 There's some other more business measures.
01:01:10.000 And it also doesn't allow deductions for state and local income taxes, which will help red states.
01:01:15.000 We did a show about this a while back.
01:01:17.000 I should have titled it, but that's the tax plan.
01:01:22.000 Loco Murray.
01:01:23.000 Nick, great show as always.
01:01:24.000 Thank you.
01:01:25.000 Do you know anything about the Rise Above movement?
01:01:27.000 They seem like good Goya.
01:01:28.000 I do not know anything about that movement.
01:01:32.000 10-4, good buddy, says V-neck undershirts for peak Nick Fuentes optics.
01:01:37.000 I don't like the undershirt or the V-neck.
01:01:40.000 I always feel like exposed where the V is supposed to be.
01:01:43.000 I always feel like, I don't know.
01:01:46.000 I know it's a weird feeling.
01:01:47.000 I know that's going to sound kind of lame, but that's just how I feel.
01:01:52.000 And Commander Rockwell dropping the two shekels.
01:01:55.000 Thank you.
01:01:56.000 LC1707, have E. Michael Jones on the show, Nick.
01:02:00.000 No, no, too explicit.
01:02:02.000 Sorry, I looked into that.
01:02:04.000 Not going to happen.
01:02:07.000 Ozzy says, Weave agrees with you completely on optics.
01:02:10.000 Good, then he's a smart guy.
01:02:12.000 Jason E. Double weekend shekels.
01:02:14.000 That was a good week, Nick.
01:02:16.000 Well, thank you, my man.
01:02:17.000 Much appreciated.
01:02:19.000 Rake enthusiast always listen to Waffen SS LARPers on optics.
01:02:23.000 Yeah, they're brilliant.
01:02:24.000 You know, they know what's going to happen, right?
01:02:26.000 Owen says, Anyone marching with swastikas and Hitler stuff wants this movement to fail.
01:02:30.000 We should not welcome these people in our movement.
01:02:32.000 Agreed.
01:02:33.000 Agreed.
01:02:34.000 It's just counterproductive.
01:02:35.000 You cannot have them at the same time.
01:02:37.000 You know, these cannot exist at the same time.
01:02:41.000 Hitler's waifu or waifu, would you have Ann Coulter on?
01:02:45.000 Yes, Ann Coulter is brilliant.
01:02:46.000 I love Ann Coulter.
01:02:48.000 Spoiler alert, not to harp on it, but what's your favorite slash usual bottled water brand?
01:02:54.000 I don't want to lose my high test edge, and you're obviously not suffering from any xenoestrogenic effects, etc.
01:03:00.000 Thanks, mate.
01:03:02.000 I drink Ice Mountain primarily.
01:03:04.000 I mostly drink filtered water from my refrigerator, but if I do drink bottled water, I drink Ice Mountain, Aquafina.
01:03:10.000 I don't think it has an effect on your.
01:03:11.000 Tea, so much.
01:03:13.000 I think you just got to be cognizant of what's being in your food in general.
01:03:18.000 But yeah, I don't know.
01:03:20.000 I don't know if I've never gotten my tea tested because I don't like getting blood work done.
01:03:24.000 I get really weird about that.
01:03:25.000 Not a fan.
01:03:27.000 I like to pass out every time I get blood work.
01:03:29.000 So I've been staying away from that for a long time, but I don't know what my tea is.
01:03:32.000 It's probably high, you know, because compared to people that work out and people who get fit sometimes, I have bigger balls than those people.
01:03:39.000 You know, I don't know what the measure of tea is because I know people that are athletic.
01:03:43.000 I know people, you know, that do sports.
01:03:46.000 I know people that go to the gym.
01:03:48.000 And I'm not a big gym guy.
01:03:49.000 I'm not a big athletic guy, obviously.
01:03:51.000 But then I see the way some of these people behave, and it's like, Cut, like submissive, passive, weak, effeminate behavior.
01:03:58.000 And I think, like, I don't know, what is it?
01:04:00.000 Am I low T for not going to the gym or am I high T for being aggressive?
01:04:03.000 I don't know.
01:04:05.000 It's probably bad for my T that I don't sleep and eat.
01:04:07.000 So I probably, you know, that's probably hurting me.
01:04:11.000 J22 report, request, dress like a pilgrim for Thanksgiving.
01:04:14.000 Not going to happen, but we will have a cornucopia.
01:04:17.000 I'm going to try and work on some fall decorations for November.
01:04:22.000 And Phalangista Criollo says, Pray the rosary every day and enroll in Our Lady's Brown Scapular if you haven't already.
01:04:29.000 Nick, you are the future.
01:04:31.000 You need all the graces you can get.
01:04:32.000 It's true.
01:04:33.000 It's true.
01:04:34.000 And that's good advice for anybody to get on that, to start going to church, start praying, doing those kinds of things.
01:04:40.000 And it'll give you meaning in your life again.
01:04:42.000 It'll give you that connection that people have been looking for.
01:04:45.000 Individualism is broken.
01:04:47.000 It won't work.
01:04:48.000 And I can't wait.
01:04:50.000 One day I'm going to have a real confrontation with one of these individualists, and it will be a game changer.
01:04:55.000 I'm going to sit down with Ben Shapiro or Lucian Wintrich or one of these individualist type people, and I will lay out the communitarian case.
01:05:04.000 I will lay out the communitarian manifesto, and I predict that when that happens, when it's a major individualist type person, mark my words, that will be a turning point.
01:05:13.000 That will be, and if I do it well, which I think I will, that'll be a turning point in the conservative movement.
01:05:21.000 J22 report fall decorations sound great.
01:05:23.000 Have a nice weekend.
01:05:24.000 Well, thank you.
01:05:25.000 We're getting up to the.
01:05:27.000 Whoa, we're getting past 8 o'clock.
01:05:28.000 So I think we're going to call it a night.
01:05:29.000 I'm tired.
01:05:30.000 I'm fatigued.
01:05:31.000 I'm exhausted.
01:05:33.000 I got one more.
01:05:34.000 Trump said he liked the torch rally flash mobs, okay?
01:05:36.000 No, he didn't.
01:05:39.000 So we're going to call it a night.
01:05:40.000 I'm tired, folks.
01:05:41.000 I got national review for two hours tomorrow.
01:05:45.000 I got more of this next week.
01:05:47.000 And I'm taking a vacation the week after.
01:05:50.000 I'll be.
01:05:52.000 What is it?
01:05:53.000 So it'll be.
01:05:55.000 From the 13th to the 15th, I'll be taken off of the show.
01:05:58.000 So that's a Monday to a Wednesday in November, the 13th to the 15th.
01:06:03.000 I'll be off of the show, taking a little vacation then.
01:06:06.000 So I got to rest up.
01:06:08.000 And here we got one more from Simon Skola.
01:06:10.000 I give Ramsey Paul $5 a month.
01:06:12.000 He was the first YouTuber I ever gave money to.
01:06:15.000 And now you are the second one.
01:06:16.000 I'm going to give you as many shekels as I possibly can.
01:06:18.000 I've given you 100 so far.
01:06:20.000 Wow.
01:06:20.000 Well, thank you, Simon.
01:06:21.000 Really much appreciated.
01:06:23.000 We appreciate all the help we can get.
01:06:25.000 Very generous of you.
01:06:26.000 To give us your money.
01:06:27.000 You know, we don't ask for money so much.
01:06:30.000 We really do just rely on good natured people who like the content they're getting to give.
01:06:36.000 So we do appreciate it.
01:06:37.000 Really, we do.
01:06:37.000 So God bless.
01:06:38.000 And David Kay with another five.
01:06:40.000 So thank you for that.
01:06:42.000 But we got to go.
01:06:43.000 We got to go.
01:06:44.000 It's past the bedtime.
01:06:45.000 I'd like to lay down, read my book, drink a little water, have some leftover mozzarella sticks from dinner.
01:06:51.000 But that's going to do it for us tonight.
01:06:53.000 Remember, if you want any questions, comments, concerns addressed in the super chat, That's how you do it.
01:06:59.000 If you click that dollar sign right below the live chat, that is how you ask a question and all that.
01:07:04.000 Remember to email me, njfuentesblog at gmail.com, to get involved in America First activism.
01:07:09.000 Just tell me name, age, location, experience, interest level, and we'll get you set up by the end of the year.
01:07:16.000 You'd find all my information below social media.
01:07:18.000 I'm on Gab now too, at Nick J. Fuentes, Twitter, at Nick J. Fuentes.
01:07:23.000 Please subscribe, like the video, click the notification button.
01:07:27.000 It helps us out tremendously.
01:07:28.000 It really does, it boosts our numbers.
01:07:31.000 And if you want to donate, if you want to help a brother out, if you want to help this brother out, you know, because I am a down and out brother fighting up against the system, fighting against people, you know, the certain people, you can donate to my PayPal, Patreon, Bitcoin.
01:07:47.000 We got all that down below.
01:07:49.000 If not, That's okay too.
01:07:51.000 But that's going to do it for us tonight.
01:07:52.000 Remember, we're on the air Monday through Friday, 7 p.m. Central, 8 p.m. Eastern Standard Time.
01:07:57.000 James Alsop's Overdrive is Tuesdays and Thursdays at 8 p.m. Central, 9 p.m. Eastern Time.
01:08:02.000 I'm Nicholas J. Fuentes.
01:08:04.000 This was America First, as always.
01:08:06.000 Thanks for watching.
01:08:06.000 Thanks for donating.
01:08:08.000 Thanks for liking and sharing and all of that.
01:08:12.000 We'll see you on Monday.
01:08:13.000 Have a great rest of your weekend and enjoy Nationalist Review tomorrow morning.
01:08:22.000 Americanism, not globalism, will be our credo.
01:08:29.000 It's going to be only America first.
01:08:34.000 America first.
01:08:38.000 The American people will come first once again.
01:09:00.000 From this day on, it's going to be only America first.
01:09:05.000 America first.