00:00:49.000So, it's been busy, been a long week, but here we are just ready to celebrate with a little casual episode, comfy live stream.
00:00:58.000We'll be getting in the live chat at about the half hour mark, and we can just decompress, have a chill episode here.
00:01:05.000But before we do that, we got a lot of news to get to.
00:01:09.000And I was very excited before I get to some of these stories.
00:01:12.000I 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.
00:01:24.000Like 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.
00:01:43.000We've had, I think, people in over 35 states now.
00:01:47.000I think we're up to almost 100 people that have reached out.
00:01:50.000So that'll be quite the formidable force.
00:01:52.000And it's looking like this organization will take the shape of and take the form of student organizations in college.
00:02:00.000I'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.
00:02:12.000A lot of professionals, a lot of middle class type people.
00:02:16.000Who wants to get involved in the county GOP?
00:02:18.000It's looking like those will be the two major expressions.
00:02:21.000And then combined, you know, there could be sort of a general sort of organization that can do postering and that kind of thing.
00:02:28.000But we're still hammering out what exactly that's going to look like.
00:02:31.000We've got to look at what kind of resources we'll have at our disposal in terms of human capital and financial capital.
00:02:39.000So we'll have more information by the end of the year.
00:02:41.000But it's looking very promising, I have to say.
00:03:21.000You know, lots of white pills this week with the president, with the movement, just lots of things in general.
00:03:27.000But this was really encouraging today, what I saw this morning, which was what President Trump tweeted about the ISIS terror attack on Tuesday.
00:03:35.000And I got to tell you, how quickly did we forget the ISIS terror attack on Tuesday, right?
00:03:41.000That was the second deadliest terror attack in New York since 9 11.
00:05:05.000Kills eight people deliberately, children.
00:05:08.000Too, you know, it wasn't even like a political protest where people had some reasonable expectation of violence.
00:05:13.000It'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.
00:05:22.000So, 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.
00:05:37.000So we never really got to it, but it just.
00:05:39.000Is staggering to me how we just forget about that completely.
00:05:43.000We're at war with a terror cell of which we have no idea how many of their operatives are in this country.
00:05:49.000We have no idea how many people of the same political, ideological religion have sworn allegiance to that group.
00:06:24.000Charlottesville was terrorism, and terrorism comes in all colors.
00:06:27.000And, you know, even though she died of a heart attack, she wasn't killed.
00:06:31.000It comes in all colors and shapes and ideologies.
00:06:34.000Yet 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.
00:07:26.000See, 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.
00:07:37.000We live in a big city, there's a lot of people from all kinds of different places and all kinds of different ideologies.
00:07:44.000And 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.
00:07:52.000You're going to get people that are violent or hateful or Muslim, and they're going to blow you up.
00:07:56.000So, maybe, well, we just have to cope with that.
00:07:58.000We have Muslims in our country and we have daily terrorism.
00:08:06.000Or 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.
00:08:17.000We ban all Muslims, the 1% of people that commit almost all the terrorism.
00:08:22.000They'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.
00:08:28.000And the ones that are here, we keep them under a very short leash.
00:08:32.000We keep them under a very close watch.
00:09:00.000Confronted with these two options, and they're the only two options.
00:09:04.000You 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.
00:09:12.000You 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.
00:09:17.000You 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.
00:09:26.000You 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.
00:09:35.000They're able to have these massive anti-migrant protests.
00:09:50.000Because the people that show up, the people that occupy these countries and these cities, are Polish or they're Hungarian or they're Czech.
00:10:07.000You 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.
00:10:17.000Of course, you would have to get used to that if that's what you want your country to look like.
00:10:22.000If 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.
00:11:09.000Do you want a hotel room with smoking or no smoking?
00:11:14.000Do you want to fly on a plane with Muslims or no Muslims?
00:11:16.000I 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.
00:11:34.000You could fly on the plane, you could take that chance.
00:13:36.000You know, you have the luxury of moving on.
00:13:39.000You have the luxury of saying, well, terrorism is a minor problem.
00:13:43.000And 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.
00:14:05.000The encouraging thing, however, was how President Trump reacted this morning.
00:14:09.000President 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.
00:14:20.000Based on that, the military has hit ISIS much harder over the last two days.
00:14:25.000They will pay a big price for every attack on us, which is a great statement.
00:15:30.000And 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.
00:15:43.000Osama bin Laden, we're going to find him and we're going to kill him.
00:15:46.000There's a dramatic Shakespearean element to this of a battle of wills.
00:15:51.000And whether it's good or evil, depending on what side you're on, it's a major force.
00:15:56.000And there's a face to it, and there's fame, there's glory to be had there for the terrorists.
00:16:02.000And even in recent episodes, we hear about Omar Mateen, who is the Orlando shooter.
00:17:13.000These people see themselves as soldiers, as warriors of God.
00:17:16.000They see themselves when they do these attacks as like they're martyrs in the image of Muhammad or his soldiers.
00:17:24.000So, 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.
00:17:34.000And, you know, you have all these scholars and experts talking about we have to win the war of ideas with ISIS.
00:17:39.000And notice they don't have any plan for that.
00:17:41.000Trump is the one who's offering the solution there.
00:17:43.000And then he goes on to say that ISIS will pay a big price for terrorism.
00:17:56.000After 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.
00:18:26.000So that's how they compensate for the lost prestige with the land.
00:18:36.000He 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.
00:18:54.000I will accelerate the rate of your demise by stepping up our military efforts against you with every terrorist attack.
00:19:00.000So, do you see how that dynamic plays out?
00:19:03.000Where 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.
00:19:22.000Well, Trump is saying, now that's not even a possibility.
00:19:25.000Actually, 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.
00:19:38.000I will actually make that a liability for you.
00:19:40.000Whereas you thought that was an asset for terrorism, where you would recruit people to your cause, you would get notoriety, publicity, infamy.
00:19:47.000I'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.
00:19:55.000And so he followed up on that this afternoon with the first U.S. airstrikes against Somalia in the war against ISIS.
00:20:03.000So 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.
00:20:15.000And you think you're in a double bind essentially.
00:20:18.000At once, Your only method to fight against the United States and Europe is terrorism.
00:20:27.000But at the same time, every time a terrorist commits a terror attack, one of your guys is going to get killed.
00:20:33.000And you don't know where and you don't know how bad it's going to be.
00:20:36.000And 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.
00:20:46.000So, all around brilliant strategy by President Trump.
00:20:49.000You just have to have the vision, you just have to have the imagination.
00:20:53.000The strategic thinking to understand this kind of stuff.
00:20:55.000It'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.
00:21:43.000They 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.
00:21:54.000And that is a huge win because you understand that in 2020, We've already completed a number of Trump's campaign promises.
00:22:02.000Repeal TPP and TTIP and TISA, the three globalist trade deals, those are already gone.
00:23:29.000Water is highly underrated, in my opinion.
00:23:31.000I was never a big water drinker, you know, because it's kind of bland.
00:23:34.000When 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.
00:24:01.000The 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.
00:24:09.000So 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.
00:24:52.000Every day and every night until, excuse me, until President Trump and Mike Pence are removed from power.
00:25:01.000And I think to myself when I see this, first of all, it's kind of a joke.
00:25:04.000You 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.
00:25:58.000Like, it's just, do you just have no conception?
00:26:01.000Do you know any other people besides like your social justice crowd?
00:26:06.000Like, do you know anybody that has a job or anybody?
00:26:09.000Like, nobody cares about it that much that they're going to be there.
00:26:12.000They're going to show up every weekend for this stuff.
00:26:15.000So, these Antifa people, they're going to protest on Saturday every day and every night.
00:26:19.000And they say it's going to grow from hundreds to thousands to hundreds of thousands to millions.
00:26:24.000And I just think, what planet are these people on that they think this is like a movie?
00:26:29.000This is like a flash mob in high school musical, where people are going to see these kids, these disgusting, obese animals.
00:26:36.000And 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.
00:27:44.000You'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.
00:28:16.000You know, nobody says anything about this.
00:28:19.000The mainstream media doesn't say anything about this.
00:28:21.000It just goes to show that striking double standard.
00:28:26.000Whenever 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.
00:28:35.000It's just fundamentally a different ballgame with the left and the right.
00:28:39.000The left can have Antifa, the left, it hurts them to have Antifa.
00:28:43.000They have to come out and condemn this.
00:28:44.000This will be a major liability for them going forward.
00:28:48.000But they get the benefit of the doubt.
00:28:49.000In the media, they don't get called, you know, they don't get called communist organizers, subversive communists.
00:28:56.000They don't get rooted out by Facebook and Twitter when they have a rally.
00:28:59.000They don't get doxxed and fired from their jobs for showing up to these things.
00:29:03.000And if they do, you have to try really, really, really hard.
00:29:06.000With the right, you could have a Fed rally.
00:29:09.000You 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.
00:29:38.000There'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.
00:29:52.000A 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.
00:30:04.000So 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.
00:30:24.000We're going to move into our live chat here.
00:30:26.000We'll see what we have in our super chats and in our live chat at large.
00:30:30.000We'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.
00:30:51.000You know what's unfortunate is the decline of ice cream trucks.
00:30:55.000That, 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.
00:31:15.000Because you talk, and I use this expression a lot, but social trust is an abstract expression.
00:31:21.000People can't wrap their heads around it.
00:31:22.000You 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?
00:31:58.000And this is noted, of course, in the studies by Putnam, who's a sociologist from, I think, Harvard University.
00:32:05.000But 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.
00:32:11.000No ice cream trucks for the kids because, you know, you don't know who's going to be driving that ice cream.
00:32:16.000It'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.
00:32:22.000It's some Mexican, you know, or it's some Indian guy.
00:32:37.000You'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?
00:33:06.000I'm not letting you swim in that community pool.
00:33:08.000You got people from Africa that just moved in down the street.
00:33:11.000You have literal refugees from Africa where the black plague is breaking out on the southeastern coast.
00:33:17.000I'm not letting you swim in that pool with those people.
00:33:21.000All 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.
00:33:37.000And you look at the places with the highest rates of happiness, and it's all homogeneous Scandinavian countries.
00:33:59.000The 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.
00:34:24.000But 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.
00:34:34.000And so, all those, you know, fine, you can have your cheap consumer goods.
00:34:37.000You can have Jose mow your lawn for 20 bucks.
00:34:40.000And you can have, you know, your low skilled worker in the factories.
00:34:44.000And you can have your multicultural country where you have authentic tacos.
00:34:49.000But 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.
00:34:59.000Going 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.
00:35:13.000That'll be what will be sacrificed on the altar of neoliberalism.
00:35:17.000So for anybody, and that's quite the extrapolation, right?
00:35:20.000From popsicles in America first to social trust.
00:35:24.000But 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.
00:35:30.000It's got to be some mystery me driving the ice cream truck.
00:35:33.000It 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.
00:35:53.000Not some dirty, ratty truck with like superhero posters and you don't know where the hell these people are from.
00:36:01.000So, all those fun things, all the good things go away when you have the People.
00:37:17.000It really takes you back to that aesthetic of this melancholy America that's going away.
00:37:23.000It takes you back to that movie, Stand By Me.
00:37:26.000It 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.
00:37:41.000There wasn't this ubiquity, this tyranny.
00:37:45.000There wasn't this tyranny of man's inventions, this tyranny of man's control and domination over nature.
00:37:51.000There 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.
00:38:04.000And I think in the 80s they were feeling nostalgic for that because that's when it started to go away.
00:38:08.000That's when it started to go away slowly and it gave way to the 90s.
00:38:11.000And that's when you saw the birth of nihilism.
00:38:14.000And why do you think people are all over the show Stranger Things all of a sudden?
00:38:19.000Or over 80s culture, vaporwave and synth music and that kind of thing?
00:38:26.000Because 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.
00:40:16.000You 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.
00:40:29.000Omar Mateen, whose father is an Afghan refugee, does it in the name of Islam.
00:40:50.000Tap 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.
00:41:01.000I go for the bottled stuff only because, and there's no really guarantee that it's any different than the tap stuff, but.
00:41:08.000At 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.
00:42:10.000You know, Justin Trudeau is a straight homo, okay?
00:42:13.000The 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.
00:42:21.000I 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.
00:42:37.000And 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.
00:42:44.000And that's, I mean, that's your real dichotomy.
00:42:55.000But those are the conflict of visions.
00:42:57.000Those are the visions in conflict that are constantly struggling for supremacy and have been for the past 25 years.
00:43:06.000That's Merkel and Obama and Trudeau and Macron and Theresa May versus Donald Trump, Nigel Farage, Marine Le Pen, Vladimir Putin, and those crowd.
00:43:18.000I mean, that's the real conflict of visions here in the world today.
00:43:34.000Faith was telling me in a very real way.
00:43:36.000I 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.
00:43:48.000The Canadians stuck true to the crown.
00:43:51.000They were the real conservatives there.
00:43:53.000They stuck to their traditions, their hierarchy, their culture.
00:44:07.000Probably, 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.
00:44:22.000That's one of my favorites for ideology.
00:44:24.000For personal conduct, he says, when it comes to, I'm going to butcher this one, but something to the effect.
00:44:31.000I 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.
00:44:41.000So basically, the two expressions mean conservatism, reaction in particular, is not radical.
00:45:45.000It's about men's disillusionment in the modern world.
00:45:49.000I 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.
00:46:02.000I 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.
00:46:11.000I mean, that's a reflection, that's a criticism of postmodernism, that's a criticism of.
00:46:16.000Of the society of spectacle, you know, that we don't really know what makes us human anymore.
00:46:22.000We don't know what makes us alive anymore in this world where you got machines and all kinds of other things.
00:46:29.000And 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.
00:46:34.000We still don't know if Ryan Gosling was or not.
00:46:37.000Or he ended up, I don't want to spoil it.
00:49:58.000No, because of that, we're the ones that have to get.
00:50:01.000Blown 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.
00:50:17.000And, you know, we are the pawns that live and die at the behest of rulers and all kinds of things.
00:50:23.000And we have to go out of work and fix cars and, you know, do all this, protect our families.
00:50:29.000We're the ones that got to go investigate if something goes bump in the night.
00:50:32.000That's a good place to be if you're a woman, you know?
00:50:35.000If I were a woman, I'd just be like, okay, that's fine.
00:50:39.000You think you're smarter and you're going to do all that?
00:52:46.000In the last 200 years, we figured it all out.
00:52:48.000We 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.
00:54:41.000Men do things, irrational things sometimes, just to prove that they are irrational, just to prove that they are not slaves to determinism.
00:54:50.000They'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.
00:54:59.000Men 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.
00:55:14.000Just to prove that they are men and not robots.
00:55:18.000So that's kind of what I got out of Blade Runner, and that's what people feel in this day and age.
00:55:22.000I mean, that's everybody's put in the hamster wheel, and we're just supposed to go and then we're gone, you know.
00:55:29.000We're supposed to go to elementary school, and you're supposed to just be a number, you know.
00:55:33.000You're just supposed to show up in your uniform, go in your gym uniform.
00:55:47.000And 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.
00:55:59.000And if you're not doing your homework, you got to go to a therapist and get yourself straightened out.
00:56:04.000And then they got to put you on drugs so you're quiet.
00:56:07.000And then you got out of high school, you go to college, and then you're under somebody else for another four years.
00:56:14.000And then maybe another four years if you go to graduate school.
00:56:30.000That you're supposed to just broker and facilitate and be the middleman for transactions.
00:56:34.000You 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.
00:56:46.000And 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.
00:56:56.000And that would have been, and I tweeted about this, that would have been fine.
00:56:58.000People would have been okay with this, I think.
00:57:00.000People were okay with this for a long time.
00:57:03.000If 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?
00:57:17.000And they came down in a cowboy costume, you know, look, I'm the Lone Ranger.
00:57:22.000And then there was a nice, delicious, warm dinner waiting for you.
00:57:25.000And 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.
00:58:13.000You'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.
00:58:20.000And 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.
00:58:27.000And if that's how it was, people would be fine, by the way, I think, or at least people could cope with this system.
00:58:34.000But the problem is, by nature of the system, it extracts.
00:58:50.000How, 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.
00:59:03.000He 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.
01:03:27.000I like to pass out every time I get blood work.
01:03:29.000So I've been staying away from that for a long time, but I don't know what my tea is.
01:03:32.000It'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.
01:03:39.000You know, I don't know what the measure of tea is because I know people that are athletic.
01:03:43.000I know people, you know, that do sports.
01:04:50.000One day I'm going to have a real confrontation with one of these individualists, and it will be a game changer.
01:04:55.000I'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.
01:05:04.000I 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.
01:05:13.000That will be, and if I do it well, which I think I will, that'll be a turning point in the conservative movement.
01:05:21.000J22 report fall decorations sound great.
01:07:28.000It really does, it boosts our numbers.
01:07:31.000And 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.