Tonight we have a lot to discuss, lots to get into, and a whole lot to talk about. First, we have an update on an old story about a bill that has passed both chambers of Congress with an amendment that would force the Defense Department to rename military bases that bear the names of Confederate generals. We also have an investigation by the Office of the Inspector General against all of the federal police deployments the President has made to cities like Portland and other cities in recent weeks. Finally, we hear that no federal investigation will be launched into the burning of a federal building in Portland.
00:00:41.000It's a bit of an update on an old story, which is about this old defense authorization bill, which we talked about, I think, back in June, which congressional Republicans and Democrats are using to force the issue of renaming military bases that bear the name of Confederate generals.
00:01:02.000And like I said, we talked about this when this process started, shortly after the death of George Floyd.
00:01:09.000And now it has come to pass in the Version of this bill, this authorization, defense authorization bill, in both the House and the Senate, it has passed both chambers of the Congress with the amendment included that it would force the Pentagon to rename all the bases named after Confederate generals, take down any monument memorial to Confederate soldiers, generals, or political leaders, and it's veto proof.
00:01:39.000It passed the House earlier this week.
00:01:46.000So, even in the event that the president were to veto this bill, if the same number of votes held that voted to override the veto that passed it, it would be the law of the land no matter what.
00:02:50.000We'll also be talking tonight about another kind of a black pill.
00:02:54.000There's going to be an investigation by the Office of the Inspector General against all of the federal police deployments that the president has made to Portland and other cities in recent weeks.
00:03:08.000They're going to investigate claims at the behest of Congress that federal police are improperly detaining people or hurting people or whatever.
00:03:20.000But this is going to be yet another obstacle, yet another mechanism that the left has used to slow down the government.
00:03:27.000And, you know, what's interesting about this announcement is there will be no federal investigation of people blowing up and setting on fire the police union building.
00:03:38.000I don't recall a similar announcement about that.
00:03:41.000In case you were wondering, there will be no federal investigation about the torching of the federal courthouse building in Portland.
00:08:07.000These are the dates, blah, blah, blah.
00:08:09.000Get it all set up, and I'm feeling great.
00:08:11.000I checked it off on my list, and then they announced just a few hours later it's all canceled.
00:08:16.000So now I put on the bottom of the list cancel RNC trip.
00:08:20.000So I don't know how many of you guys were going to go.
00:08:23.000I was going to announce it so that maybe I'd see some of you there, but it's been canceled.
00:08:28.000And, you know, like I said, I don't have too much to say about that.
00:08:30.000It's a big news story because it's a big deal.
00:08:33.000I mean, this is the nominating convention where they formally select the nominee for president.
00:08:39.000And in fairness, what they're technically doing is they're not actually canceling the formal nomination process, they're just canceling the large scale convention gathering that was supposed to happen in Jacksonville, which, if you weren't following it, the plan was initially.
00:08:58.000They were going to hold the convention in Charlotte, North Carolina.
00:09:02.000And then, when coronavirus happened, North Carolina did not want to hold the convention because they didn't want transmission of the virus.
00:09:10.000So, the Trump campaign forced the GOP to move the RNC to Jacksonville.
00:09:17.000And so, the way that it was supposed to work is that the formal mechanics of the nomination would happen in Charlotte still, I think on August 24th.
00:09:27.000And then the convention would take place in an arena.
00:09:30.000For the rest of the week in Jacksonville.
00:09:32.000And that's where Trump would make his speech, and that's where all the other speeches would be held.
00:09:37.000And there's going to be a big gathering like every other year.
00:09:40.000So they made a big stink about moving it to another state, to a stadium, so they could have a proper convention.
00:09:47.000So that 30 days before, close to it, they could just cancel it altogether because of the coronavirus.
00:09:54.000So, you know, I guess the significance of it is that it's a huge retreat by the Trump campaign.
00:10:00.000Whereas he held his rally in Tulsa, Oklahoma, a couple months ago.
00:10:04.000And he was moving full speed ahead towards a full scale convention.
00:10:08.000He's totally backed off and retreated and said, actually, no convention, no speeches, no nothing.
00:10:16.000And maybe in itself, it's not that big of a deal, but in light of everything else that's going on, it's pretty disappointing.
00:10:23.000It just feels like we can't win on anything.
00:10:26.000And, you know, I said yesterday if you look at immigration, it's going really well on legal immigration, and that in itself is enough to vote for the president for reelection.
00:10:36.000But I just feel like we can't win on anything, anything major, anything visible, anything decisive.
00:10:45.000You know, like with the legal immigration thing, it's amazing that we're cutting legal immigration in half, which I talked about last night.
00:10:53.000But this has taken place over four years.
00:10:55.000It's been grueling, and we've been gradually adding new rules and regulations and fighting the courts.
00:11:01.000And I mean, you know, if you've been watching the show, you've been following all of that.
00:11:51.000I mean, what we'll talk about tonight is the federal police being deployed and therefore then being inspected or investigated, and then the Confederate names on the military installations being changed.
00:12:05.000And in both cases, you've got the president, the duly elected president, given a mandate by the American people with, again, a landslide electoral victory.
00:12:15.000And we've talked about that before, but in technical ways, it's a landslide victory.
00:12:21.000And the Congress, the state governments, the municipalities, the deep state, the DOJ, the Senate, they are all going to collude, even when the president is pushing for law and order, protecting the Confederate heritage, and so on.
00:12:36.000They are all going to conspire and collude and converge to thwart that agenda and erase all of that.
00:12:43.000And that's been the story of the past three or four years.
00:12:46.000For better or for worse, you know, and sometimes the president is complicit in it, and sometimes he's less complicit in it.
00:13:47.000We're going to get into our news because there's a lot to discuss.
00:13:50.000We're going to start with this OIG investigation, which came as kind of a big surprise to me because I thought the inspector general was based.
00:13:59.000And maybe that's because my brain is still a little bit stuck in QAnon theory.
00:14:05.000Because I remember back in, I think it was 2018 or 2019, there was this, there were these whisperings that Michael Horowitz, the inspector general who was producing a report for the OIG about the Mueller investigation or the conduct of the special counsel, was supposed to blow the lid off of this big conspiracy by Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton.
00:14:31.000This OIG report was going to be so damning that they were going to arrest all the government officials.
00:14:37.000I don't know if anybody remembers this, but I was pretty into that stuff back in 18.
00:14:42.000And I remember all the, what do they call it? The crumbs left by QAnon and these rumors online.
00:14:50.000The rumor was that Michael Horowitz had this great reputation and solid guy, you know, and impartial when it comes to the law.
00:14:58.000So I'm a little bit surprised, but, you know, why should anything surprise us these days?
00:15:03.000Michael Horowitz, the inspector general, is now leading a DOJ investigation into the conduct of the federal police that have been deployed in Portland for the past few weeks.
00:15:17.000And it's outrageous for no other reason other than look at the state of our country.
00:15:22.000When we look at Chicago or New York City, we look at just the criminality.
00:15:27.000Forget even about the political mobilization, but just the criminality.
00:15:32.000The homicides, the shootings, all the other violent crimes through the roof, arson.
00:15:37.000I went and got my hair cut, and my barber said there were like three arsons in his neighborhood alone since the George Floyd thing happened.
00:15:45.000But there's that, and then there's the political mobilization.
00:15:48.000And then you've got these people marching through the streets.
00:15:51.000It's graffiti, it's vandalism, often arson, tearing down monuments and statues, assaulting police, throwing projectiles at police, terrorizing innocent people.
00:16:03.000And in the midst of all of this, the only people, the only people that are being prosecuted, investigated, charged with anything are law abiding people or law enforcement.
00:16:17.000And that's the story of anarcho tyranny that we've been talking about for the past three months.
00:16:21.000People break laws regularly and flagrantly without even pretending that they're not, without even trying to hide it.
00:16:31.000And only the people that try to put a stop to that, whether it be law enforcement or law abiding people reciprocating, it's only that category, it's only those groups of people that the laws seem to apply to.
00:16:43.000So I'll read you this is a report from CNN about all of this.
00:16:47.000It says, The Justice Department's independent watchdog agency said Thursday that it will investigate the use of force by.
00:16:55.000Federal law enforcement officers in Portland, Oregon, and Washington, D.C., where violent crackdowns on protesters have punctuated a summer that's been rocked by protests against police brutality.
00:17:28.000It says Justice Department Inspector General Michael Horowitz said in a statement that his review of the law enforcement response would include an examination of the instructions that officers received and their compliance with policies regarding proper identification and the use of chemical agents.
00:17:46.000So, the problem with the federal police is that maybe they didn't properly identify themselves and maybe they used chemical agents like tear gas.
00:17:58.000The rioters in front of the White House.
00:18:01.000They were trying to tear down a statue of Andrew Jackson and trying to breach the Secret Service held line.
00:18:09.000That's the investigation that's occurring.
00:18:11.000The Department of Homeland Security's Inspector General is also probing the responsive officers from his agency in Portland, including allegations that they improperly detained and transported some protesters.
00:18:24.000The Trump administration's treatment of the protests in both cities, which swelled after the killing of George Floyd. Has drawn sharp criticism from the president's detractors, including accusations that they amounted to authoritarian suppression.
00:18:39.000Yeah, God forbid we see something like that, right?
00:18:43.000The announcements from the inspectors general on Thursday represent some of the federal government's most serious attempts to account for the violence and follow a litany of requests for oversight from current and former public officials and key congressional Democrats.
00:18:59.000In Portland, federal police have clashed nightly for the past several weeks with rioters.
00:19:04.000Who have attacked a complex of federal buildings in the city's downtown?
00:19:09.000Some of the confrontations have been captured on video and gone viral, including one instance where U.S. Marshals beat a protester who did not appear to be resisting.
00:19:18.000In another episode, federal law enforcement officers dragged a man into an unmarked police van for questioning.
00:19:25.000In a letter on Thursday responding to a group of Oregon congressional Democrats that had requested an investigation, the Homeland Security Inspector General said he would probe the allegations of improper detention and transportation.
00:19:37.000Of protesters in Portland, as well as the department's broader response in the city.
00:19:43.000Most of the 114 federal officers deployed by the Trump administration into Portland come from DHS, but some, namely the marshals, report to the Justice Department.
00:19:53.000In a statement earlier this week, a spokesman for the marshals said the agents used proper force after the man who was beaten with batons and pepper sprayed in the video refused to comply with an order to move back.
00:20:47.000It is an open insurrection in the streets.0.89
00:20:50.000And the response to the open insurrection, not being the federal police, is to investigate the police that are attempting to put it down.
00:20:58.000The police, by the way, that are not using live rounds, not killing anybody, not torturing anybody, but police that are detaining those people, detaining the insurrectionists, questioning them, arresting them, not properly identifying themselves.
00:21:16.000Do you see what's going on in Portland?
00:21:25.000And we've been talking about this for the past couple of months.
00:21:28.000The laws clearly do not apply to the left, they just don't.
00:21:33.000Because you can be a leftist and go out to a major downtown area and break how many different ordinances, how many different felonies can you commit without even being arrested?
00:21:44.000You can, for example, in Louisville, Kentucky, we covered this last week, they went to the home of the attorney general.
00:21:52.000And they said, We're going to burn your house down.
00:22:58.000And they brought in the city government and they finished tearing down the statue.
00:23:02.000So when it comes to the left, they cannot commit crimes because there are no laws for them, because there are no arrests, there are no charges.
00:23:17.000Because you're doing it in the name of Black Lives Matter, because you're doing it for the sensitivity of black people.
00:23:24.000But the laws clearly and certainly and vigorously apply to everybody else.
00:23:30.000If you're a federal policeman and you're not following the procedure down to the letter of whatever the code is, the office of the inspector general is conducting a full investigation.
00:23:42.000Where's the investigation about the anarchy in the streets?
00:23:44.000Where's the investigation about our cities being destroyed?
00:24:35.000Maybe the Justice Department might want to take a look into the rampant criminality being conducted, not just in much larger numbers by regular average criminals, but by it's a concerted political movement that is surrounded and entrenched in criminality.
00:24:53.000That's not a matter of interest to any of these inspectors generals or any other government official.
00:25:00.000At the behest of politicians, they're doing this.
00:25:03.000The inspector general, at the behest of the Oregon congressional delegation, Portland is on fire.
00:25:09.000The federal courthouse is literally on fire.
00:25:13.000And the petition is about protesters' First Amendment rights.
00:25:17.000They should be out there in the streets like Tiananmen Square at this point, as far as I'm concerned.
00:25:25.000What else does the government exist to do other than that?
00:25:28.000Or the police or the military or any of it for that matter?
00:25:31.000Where's the justice, the investigation for all the people that are being harmed by these things or are being bankrupted because the city's being destroyed?
00:26:05.000You know, when you get up in arms about these things and say, this is madness, you have to understand they don't want the same things as us.
00:26:12.000You know, when I look at Chicago, for example, which is the metropolitan area that I'm in, I want the city to be safe.
00:26:44.000You know, when we're at war, for example, in Europe or we're at war in the Pacific, we're not worried about destroying cities because we've got a conflict to win, right?
00:26:53.000If you're in, you know, Italy, for example, and the Allies are in Italy, they fought their way through North Africa, if they have to bomb or destroy a town over there, people say to themselves, well, I mean, we're just trying to win a war.
00:27:10.000If there's not total victory, then there's no guarantee that there will be cities.
00:27:15.000If they're not under our control, it doesn't matter if they're cities.
00:27:18.000So, all of this is really collateral damage.
00:27:34.000When they're out there in Portland or Chicago or New York City, at least the political activists, they don't see that as such a terrible thing because the overriding objective is to destroy this traditional American nation, unseat the government, change the regime, and to destroy any reminder, any legacy, all the architecture of the old world.
00:28:17.000You know, in Chicago, for example, they had a banner that had the original American Indian name for Chicago.
00:28:26.000If you're a Chicagoan, maybe you know some of the etymology.
00:28:29.000But the word Chicago comes from this French pronunciation of an Indian word, which means stinky onions, because that's, we had, I guess, a native onion plant growing here.
00:28:42.000And they had that original American Indian name.
00:28:45.000I don't know how to pronounce it, but they had that name on the banner.
00:29:46.000That's what's motivating the two sides.
00:29:49.000You know, if we were on one team on the same page and this was just an expression of, you know, some kind of political disagreement, then I think that equally the opposition would be disturbed at the destruction and the anarchy and the criminality.
00:30:06.000So, it's the people that still want to live in the United States of America and Chicago and Portland and Seattle and the people that still want to have a nice, safe city like we've had.
00:30:16.000And then you've got the people that want to destroy and revolutionize and change all of that.
00:30:37.000George Floyd is the pretext for all of this, just like 9 11 or the sinking of the Lusitania or Pearl Harbor, and obviously not comparing that.
00:30:46.000I mean, George Floyd dying was hardly a tragedy.
00:30:50.000But the point being is it merely served as a catalyst and a convenient pretext.
00:30:56.000This is the bloody shirt or the atrocity propaganda that is used as the moral justification to wage a war against our country.
00:32:17.000And instead of having skyscrapers and the Empire State Building and the John Hancock Building and the White House, And the Capitol building, you're going to have pyramids.
00:32:28.000You're going to have new grass pyramids, new mud huts.0.70
00:32:32.000And, you know, it won't be exactly like the old world, but largely the country that will be created will resemble whatever was here when we arrived, when Europeans arrived here in 1492.0.96
00:32:44.000Does anybody doubt that this is the case?0.88
00:32:46.000You know, who's coming into the southern border?1.00
00:33:44.000Brazil, Mexico, what is that other than the resumption of pre colonial indigenous life in all these different countries where they threw off the yoke of European colonial rule triumphantly?
00:33:58.000And what does that look like in Haiti when they threw off the oppressive colonial rulers?
00:34:04.000It looks a lot like Africa and Mexico.
00:34:08.000What did that look like when they threw off the French and the Spanish?0.99
00:34:13.000It looks a lot like the Mayans and the other Indians.1.00
00:35:20.000That's why, by the way, you know, not to get too, like, not to zoom out too much, but, you know, I come on the show and we've got the dog barking.
00:35:42.000It's so common sense, but it's only common sense if you're on our team.
00:35:47.000People don't even realize there's other teams or what the other team's about.
00:35:51.000But we're going to move on and talk about the military base names very much along the same lines about the destruction of American identity.
00:36:03.000There was a defense authorization bill, an appropriations bill.
00:36:07.000It's a must pass bill that was supposed to be passed by the Congress back in June.
00:36:14.000And the congressional leadership from both parties took that as an opportunity to shoehorn in radical cultural change, where they took, again, this must pass defense.
00:36:26.000This is military stuff, so it's necessary.
00:36:28.000A defense authorization bill, and they slapped an amendment on it that said the Pentagon must change the names of all the military bases that are named after Confederate generals.
00:36:40.000Now, that is under the jurisdiction of the president.
00:36:43.000The president is the commander in chief.
00:36:45.000And this is a decision that should be made by the Army, a decision that should be made by the military.
00:36:51.000But Congress is trying to usurp that authority and take advantage of the situation by, like I said, slapping an amendment onto this must pass appropriations bill.
00:37:01.000That happened about a month and a half ago.
00:37:04.000And now we've finally seen that come to fruition.
00:37:07.000It passed the House earlier this week with the amendment intact, and it passed the Senate today with a veto proof majority.
00:37:15.000And I think I said earlier it was 84 to 14, 86 to 14.
00:37:32.000It says The Senate on Thursday passed a mammoth defense policy bill that sparked a veto threat from President Trump over its inclusion of a plan to rename bases named after Confederate figures.
00:37:44.000The Senate voted 86 to 14 on the National Defense Authorization Act.
00:37:49.000That is above the two thirds majority it would take to override a potential veto.
00:37:54.000Though senators could flip their votes on a potential override vote.
00:37:58.000The Senate's vote comes days after the House passed its version of the annual NDAA.
00:38:03.000The two chambers will now have to reconcile their bills and craft a final deal, but with both versions containing plans to rename the basis, it will likely be difficult to keep the issue out of a final agreement.
00:38:15.000The Senate's bill includes broad outlines for Pentagon policy initiatives and allocates a total of $740.5 billion.
00:38:24.000Including $636.4 billion for the Pentagon's base budget, $25.9 billion for national security programs within the Department of Energy, and $69 billion for the Overseas Contingency Operations Account, which is a war fund not subject to budget caps.
00:38:44.000But the language over renaming Confederate named bases quickly emerged as a flashpoint after protests over racial injustice put a national focus on lingering tributes to the Confederacy.
00:38:56.000Including statues and military installations.
00:38:59.000The Senate's bill would form a commission to come up with a plan for renaming the bases.
00:39:04.000The defense secretary would then, quote, implement the plan submitted by the commission and remove all names, symbols, displays, monuments, and paraphernalia that honor or commemorate the Confederate States of America or any person who served voluntarily with the Confederate States of America from all assets of the Department of Defense within three years of the bill being enacted.
00:39:27.000The language was agreed on in the Senate Armed Services Committee by a voice vote, but it sparked the threat of a veto from Trump.
00:39:34.000The president said, I will veto the defense authorization bill if the Elizabeth Pocahontas Warren of All People Amendment, which will lead to the renaming plus other bad things of Fort Bragg, Fort Robert E. Lee, and many other military bases from which we won two world wars, is in the bill.
00:40:37.000Put an amendment like this in a bill in spite of all that, but Republicans went along with it too.
00:40:41.000And not just some Republicans, but most Republicans went along with this.
00:40:47.000Most Republicans in the Senate and the House going along with the bill to rename all the military bases.
00:40:54.000And for example, Dan Crenshaw, I saw on Twitter today, was bragging about how he voted for this.
00:41:00.000He said, Our history as Republicans is winning the Civil War and blah, blah, blah.
00:41:07.000And the Democrats' history is the history of KKK and slavery.
00:41:11.000And I'm going to help Democrats confront their racist history.
00:41:16.000And I've heard this from Dinesh D'Souza, and he's not a congressman, but all the usual suspects in Con Inc. that, of course, it is conservative to want to destroy our identity.
00:41:27.000It is conservative to destroy our culture and our heritage and our history, because, of course, the Democrats were the real racists.
00:41:35.000You know, we Republicans are not racist.
00:41:41.000So when we destroy all of our American history, that's just.
00:41:46.000Fine with us because that represents racism from the opposition.
00:41:51.000And I put in a tweet to Dan Crenshaw today what they're effectively doing is they are sacrificing and conceding and destroying our own identity for a short term partisan game.0.79
00:42:03.000They think that if we take down these monuments, we will somehow be spared from the wrath of militant blacks, people of color, white liberals.
00:42:16.000If conservatives come up with a clever slogan or this clever rhetoric, oh, you want to destroy Confederate monuments?0.60
00:42:23.000Well, sweetie, what if I told you that the Confederates were Democrats?1.00
00:42:28.000They think that if we can just come up with a clever piece of bullshit like that, that all these blacks kneeling for the anthem and all these other liberals burning the flag in our streets and torching federal buildings and all the others, frankly, that are just shooting and raping and killing.0.99
00:42:49.000They're going to stop and they're going to look and say, Wow, I never thought of it that way.0.99
00:42:54.000And I guess they'll flock to the Republican Party in droves, or they will not flock to the Democratic Party in droves.
00:43:00.000That at the minimum, the expectation is this will dampen turnout for the Democrats because it will obfuscate the issue.
00:43:15.000We know that no amount of clever sloganeering, no amount of linguistic kill shots from Scott Adams, whatever, none of that consultant type politicking is going to change the reality, which is these people hate our country.
00:44:10.000If Robert E. Lee was a racist, George Washington was every bit as racist, maybe more, because Robert E. Lee only fought for the South because it was his home.
00:44:19.000George Washington owned slaves, right?
00:44:22.000And the founding fathers owned slaves, and slavery was in the Constitution.
00:44:26.000So, what's the clever, how do you wiggle your way out of that one?
00:44:31.000What makes Washington materially different than the racist Democrats like Wilson and Johnson and Robert E. Lee and all the others?
00:46:36.000No matter what they did, whether it's justified or not justified by historical standards or modern standards, Democrat or Republican, they are a part of the fabric of this country.
00:46:47.000And the fabric of this country is intergenerational.
00:46:51.000That's what it means to be a nationalist, is to understand that this country is not alone the people living in this country as a snapshot or as a cross section through time.
00:47:04.000And what I mean by that is not to say the country is the 300 and some million people living in this country right now, if we took a picture, the nation and the American people is intergenerational.
00:47:19.000This is this country, it's the same country because it descends from the people.
00:47:24.000That came over here on the Mayflower and on the Nina and the Pinta and the Santa Maria.
00:47:29.000Of course, that was a little bit prior to North America, but you get the point.
00:47:34.000The colonization of the New World is part of an unbroken chain.
00:47:39.000That's what makes it the same country.
00:48:07.000And their story and their experience and their legends and their God, that is what America is about.
00:48:16.000If you're okay with conceding all of that easily, capitulating without caring, you're bragging about it, you're proud about it, you're not an American.
00:49:01.000Let's just destroy all the historic parts of the home.
00:49:05.000This is what we're doing to our country.
00:49:06.000And people say a lot of supposed conservatives are just okay with this because they think that if we're like clever enough, that we can keep some parts of it if we just get rid of the ugly parts of it or something like that, not knowing that it's all or nothing.
00:49:47.000And we get to pick and choose how this arrangement is going to go.
00:49:50.000You either defend the whole part of it, Robert E. Lee and Washington and every nasty thing you think they did, or you can have none of it.
00:49:58.000Because the same people that are condemning Lee will condemn Washington and Jefferson and all the rest for the same reasons, and they will.
00:50:06.000And it's going to happen, and they're going to take everything away from us.
00:50:10.000And people like Dan Crenshaw, I mean, they're just going to keep moving the goalposts.
00:50:14.000They're just going to keep bargaining and negotiating, bargaining away our heritage until we have no country, until there's nothing left, nothing left to take.
00:50:25.000And it sounds dramatic, but of course, this would have been unthinkable 10 years ago.
00:50:30.000It would have been unthinkable 30 years ago that a coup against Donald Trump, you know, that Donald Trump would be president, but.
00:50:38.000That a coup against a Republican president would happen, and you'd have monuments being taken down across the country like it's Iraq or like it's the Russian Revolution or something, it would have been unthinkable.
00:51:00.000And within the century, all the slave owners and white supremacists, and like I said, everybody that came before Martin Luther King Jr. and Barack Obama will be erased from the national character.
00:51:13.000And this will be, you know, the, I don't even know what you'll call it.
00:51:17.000It'll be the, you know, commune of indigenous peoples.
00:51:23.000And it'll be, you know, there will not be a District of Columbia, there will not be a Washington, there will not be, you know, a Boston, a New York, or anything like that.
00:51:36.000And what do you think they'll rename these Confederate monuments or Confederate bases to?
00:51:41.000It's going to be the John Lewis base, the Nelson Mandela base, the MLK Jr. base, the George Floyd base, you know, replacing every last bit of it until, you know, you've replaced all the parts.
00:52:09.000If you take your car and you take out the engine and you take out the transmission and the tires and the wheels and you take out the steering wheel and the seats and you take out the body, you take out and you replace it with all new parts gradually over 50 years, is that the same car?
00:53:27.000We live in a different country than them.
00:53:29.000Dan Crenshaw lives in a different country than us.
00:53:32.000When you're a congressman, And you get to fly around and you get to make speeches for a living and you get to live in Washington, D.C. You don't live in the same America as the rest of us.
00:53:53.000And as far as I'm concerned, that's all of these major coastal cities.
00:53:57.000If you're living in Manhattan, if you're living in downtown Los Angeles, if you're living in Washington, D.C., what about these different places is truly American?
00:54:07.000And you might be surprised about a city like Washington, D.C., but the monuments, the National Mall, it's like Disney World.
00:54:17.000It's a museum, it's a relic of a lost and a bygone time.
00:54:24.000You know, none of that that is in Washington, D.C. is living history.
00:54:28.000The Lincoln Memorial, the Washington Monument, it's a museum.
00:54:32.000It might as well have sarcophagi and pyramids and ancient Egyptian artifacts because.
00:54:39.000It doesn't represent anything significant to those people.0.99
00:54:41.000That is a city full of homeless blacks and white liberals that could care less about all of that.0.99
00:54:47.000And that is the case in every one of these cities Los Angeles, San Francisco, New York City, D.C., Boston.0.99
00:54:53.000These people are living in some kind of post American, transcendent, you know, global nation now, you know, part of a global constellation of satellite city states.
00:55:08.000And they don't live in the same country that we live in.
00:55:11.000Disconnected, rootless, transnational, post national.
00:55:15.000That's what describes a person like Dan Crenshaw.
00:55:28.000I'm a troop respecter and a veteran respecter, but let's not pretend that Washington, D.C. isn't full of political climbers who thought that if they could talk about how 9 11 happened and they packed up and went off to war, that that wouldn't look really good in a campaign ad.
00:55:45.000And I'm sure Dan Crenshaw's no different.
00:57:42.000And I love, I say this all the time, and all the drug heads, all the weed brains are always like, Oh, so you've never had caffeine then, right?
00:58:17.000But what I hate about weed and about depressants in general, it's not to say that I'm not equally against stimulants, but something like weed is particularly bad because it leads to laziness.
00:58:31.000You know, it subtracts from your IQ.1.00
00:58:34.000It is quite literally like the perfect post history drug because it makes you stupid.1.00
00:59:16.000So I think that drugs like that are horrible.
00:59:21.000And maybe what's worse about a drug like that is it alters your state of consciousness.
00:59:27.000You know, I'm a big believer in sort of an unmolested clarity of your state of mind and of your reason, unimpaired reason.
00:59:38.000And marijuana, I mean, the whole point of smoking marijuana, there's one thing with like alcohol, I've never drank alcohol, but.
00:59:45.000You know, you might get a buzz or you might get a little bit of a good feeling.
00:59:48.000You could even enjoy a glass of wine, really, without even affecting your state of mind, really, at all.
00:59:56.000You know, if you get a sip of wine at communion.
00:59:58.000But smoking pot, the whole point, I mean, the only and exclusive intention of smoking pot is to impair your reason, is to alter your state of mind, is to put you in a different state of mind.
01:00:23.000You know, when people say, oh, I need it, I need it, I need something to mellow me out, it's like, why don't you grow up and be a man?
01:00:30.000You know, and don't get me wrong, if there's like a medicinal application, I'm actually kind of more open minded about that.
01:00:37.000You know, if some people are like dying of cancer, like, you know, you've got some kind of serious pain management that you have to do, then I understand.
01:00:46.000But if you're talking about like the existential pain, Than, you know, grow up, right?
01:02:06.000When you ask me, because I get this question like every night now, what can I do to help out?
01:02:10.000And it's a good question because people like what we're about and they want to help and everything, but I'm never going to respond by saying, well, you can come over and we'll play Xbox, we'll hang out.
01:02:21.000You can call me and I have a job for you and I'll pay you.
01:02:25.000And not like you in particular, but my answer is the same for everybody.
01:02:31.000What you can do at this point for the movement, I'm sorry if you don't like the answer, but what you can do is become a winner, you can become successful, you can become resourceful and useful.
01:02:41.000And when the time comes, and it will, for this to become a real mass movement, then you'll be able to contribute your skills, your time, your money, whatever it is, your labor, whatever you can accumulate and acquire in that time.
01:02:56.000Because right now, the problem is that we're not quite there yet.
01:03:02.000We haven't quite reached the critical mass where.
01:03:05.000People can start like coming out, so to speak, en masse and saying, I'm America first.
01:03:11.000And, you know, maybe not like standing up on a desk in their office and saying, I'm America first, but, you know, increasingly just becoming more public, like posting America first talking points on your Facebook or openly identifying with some of our talking points or our future politicians or thought leaders or whatever.
01:03:32.000And I think at that point, we're going to have an open talent search and we're going to be looking to hire people and there'll be different organizations and whatever.
01:03:39.000There'll be politicians, hopefully, that you can campaign for.
01:03:42.000But for now, we're still working up to that.
01:03:46.000We're still building up to that, and it's very delicate.
01:03:50.000So at this time, I'm telling people rather than risk life and limb, really, in a system that we just can't accommodate, we've got more people we can manage already.
01:03:59.000We're trying to systematize and get everybody sort of on the same page.
01:04:06.000At this point, you just got to become a valuable asset so that when that critical time comes, You're going to be an America firster and you're not going to be a loser.
01:04:15.000You're going to be a really influential, resourceful person.
01:04:19.000Imagine if in 10, 20 years, and I know people don't like to think like that, but if you're not like a child, that's how you have to think in terms of decades.
01:04:29.000That's when all appreciation and maturity happens in finance and everywhere else.
01:04:34.000Think in 5, 10, 15, 20 years, if everybody who's watching the show does that, the America first stock, so to speak, will only increase in value.
01:04:45.000Every year, this movement will become more influential, more resourceful, more powerful.
01:04:50.000Because every year, we're going to have young people growing up and ascending, and they'll be getting more resources, they'll be getting more influence, more powerful positions in their work, more friends, a bigger network.
01:05:04.000The network will become more interconnected, and we will put ourselves on a trajectory if everybody's doing that, such that every year, the movement will be more capable of mobilization than the year before.
01:05:38.000And to go from high school to college is no big, that's not a big leap in a bound.
01:05:42.000But it has actually made quite a difference because now some of these people who have been watching for years are able to organize on campus.
01:05:49.000And there's going to be a lot to come in the coming years with AFS, America First Students, thanks in large part to some of these guys who started watching the show when they were 16, 17, and now they're in college.
01:06:02.000And now they're, and some of them now are, you know, getting nice careers.
01:06:06.000And some of them are moving up the ranks in their college Republicans and they've got connections in the GOP.0.99
01:06:12.000And just think if we had tens of thousands of people doing that, you know, tens of thousands of Groyper sleeper cells, so to speak.1.00
01:06:21.000All around the country, and they're not on a list, so nobody's gonna know who they are.1.00
01:06:26.000You know, the government would love that.1.00
01:06:28.000The left would love that if every Groyper was on a spreadsheet somewhere, but they're not.1.00
01:06:35.000I don't know the vast majority of you, but if you're out there and you're doing your part, you're taking responsibility for yourself, and you're going to be a winner as a Groyper, then every year we're going to have more high powered Groyper than the year before.
01:06:50.000They'll be everywhere, and they're going to be important.
01:06:53.000And it's not to say, it's no shade of people that aren't in professional careers or anything, but I mean, We're not going to have a movement by having like a thousand henchmen.0.99
01:07:04.000And what I mean by that is people that are unemployable, doxxed, and they can just show up at a retard rally.1.00
01:07:10.000We're never going to win the country with a thousand henchmen.1.00
01:07:13.000We're going to win the country with a thousand really high powered people or 10,000.
01:07:46.000That is the worst nightmare of the left.
01:07:49.000I swear they're, and they might not say it, but I'm sure they're terrified at the prospect that 10,000 people are watching the show every night, and I'm telling them, don't tell anyone your views.
01:08:01.000Become red pilled, become all the things that they say about us, and then disappear, right?
01:08:11.000You're not, you know, because if you form an organization, well, then somewhere your name is on a list, right?
01:08:17.000Somewhere there's, you know, a point of failure.
01:08:21.000But if everybody's just out there doing their own thing for now, then in five years, when the Groyper call goes out, when the Groyper signal is cast in the sky, you're going to have lawyers, accountants, doctors, millionaires.
01:09:13.000You got to think about your life like you're in the military or like service, in the sense that, you know, my advice to all the Groypers, if they really want to help, is don't be a deadbeat.0.83
01:09:25.000Don't be out there being a degenerate partier, drinker, drug abuser, whatever.0.98
01:09:33.000Be studying, networking, saving your money, starting a family.
01:09:37.000You want to conduct your life in a way where You know, you're going to be an asset to the Groypers and make the Groypers proud.
01:09:43.000You're going to be able to protect and advance the Groypers cause.
01:09:46.000And, you know, some people don't like to hear that.
01:09:48.000People want to hear about, oh, do you want to be on a gaming stream with me?
01:11:33.000I'm sorry if you already answered this.
01:11:35.000I'm only partway through the thousands of hours of content for just $5.
01:11:39.000Mexicans love Jesus and the Virgin Mary.
01:11:42.000They are revered everywhere in South America.0.99
01:11:44.000Blacks get into shootouts at funerals and love abortion.0.99
01:11:47.000Why do Mexicans vote for Democrats?0.99
01:11:50.000Well, in fairness, Hispanics do vote more for Republicans than blacks.
01:11:56.000I think Mexicans or Hispanics went, what, 46% for Bush?
01:12:00.000In 2004, they went 40% for George Kemp in Georgia in 2018.0.92
01:12:06.000So they're a little bit more winnable.0.94
01:12:08.000But I think that, much like the blacks, it's about culture and identity, in the sense that I think that a lot of Mexicans are conservative in that way.1.00
01:12:19.000A lot of Mexicans are conservative about religion, about abortion, about homosexuality.0.94
01:12:25.000I think actually, if you look at any of the polling on the different demographics on LGBT and on abortion, Blacks and Hispanics are more conservative than whites, if I'm not mistaken.0.56
01:12:37.000But I think that, like the blacks, the Democratic Party has come to represent, for all non whites, it's sort of like their interest group.
01:12:46.000I mean, I think that it's not so much about to what extent the party is advancing their political beliefs.
01:12:54.000I think it's more about the extent to which they're advancing their ethnic self interest, which is to say that the Republican Party broadly is just perceived as racist, right, or white supremacist, or anti Mexican.
01:13:08.000And so I think that it's a lot of that.
01:13:11.000I think it's a lot of propagandizing.0.83
01:13:12.000It's a lot of, you know, I think the Democrats have invested very heavily in this idea that the Democratic Party is the party of non whites.
01:13:20.000It's the party of, if you're an immigrant, if you're, you know, marginalized, you're not the perfect archetype of white, you know, apple pie, you know, Johnny Appleseed America, then you're with the Democrats.0.54
01:14:38.000I mean, if I were to, and I hate doing this, I hate when people try to read into world events like a religious narrative in the sense of like God's punishment or God's reward because we don't know God's plan.
01:15:56.000We weren't undergoing demographic displacement, then what?
01:16:00.000You know, the story of mankind is misery.0.94
01:16:03.000So, you know, you can't be black pilled.
01:16:06.000You can't, in other words, don't use this as an excuse to be, you know, well, it's just because of what we're going through uniquely right now.
01:16:16.000Yeah, nobody else has ever had it hard.
01:16:18.000Nobody else has ever had it difficult.
01:16:20.000You know, the real ahistorical time was what, you know, what we lived through in the past half century.
01:16:28.000You know, it was the time of white pill.0.99
01:16:30.000When everything was looking up and everything was nice.0.97
01:16:33.000And we could look at that sort of like longingly or nostalgically.
01:16:35.000I mean, I don't have a problem with people doing that, but people blackpilling and saying, oh, it's just over, it's all, things are so bad, things are so terrible.
01:16:48.000You know, it's like that's life, folks, that's life.0.70
01:16:52.000So I don't understand the black pill, I just can't relate.
01:16:56.000Jordan B says, my first job when I was 14 or 15 was as a referee and umpire in my local YMCA.
01:17:04.000The kids who were lackadaisical and just messed around in the outfield were always funny and made the job fun, as opposed to the try hard kids and parents who acted like it was major league games.
01:18:32.000You know, what's great about being me is the vindication.
01:18:36.000I guess, you know, when God made me be, I don't know, doubted or ridiculed or mocked or surrounded by people that antagonized me, I guess he always had it in mind that the great reward is that I would be.
01:21:26.000You see, here's how it goes you have to take shit from everybody, and then when you completely blow them out of the water, then you have to be very gracious.1.00
01:24:29.000But they were just very, it was a very goofy look.
01:24:34.000So I wore the AeroPostal shirts and just like jeans.0.94
01:24:38.000And I just looked like your average schmuck, you know, your average, you know, Chadrool.
01:24:46.000And, you know, it wasn't until college that I was actually like, oh, you know, I kind of like a hoodie like this.0.85
01:24:52.000Or, you know, maybe I like Doc Martens, right?0.74
01:24:54.000I asked Party Goy, he turned me out of that.0.72
01:24:56.000Kind of like a, Different look, you know, like more of an intentional look as opposed to just like, you know, jeans and whatever from American Eagle.
01:25:05.000So, so yeah, so I look back on those pictures.
01:25:18.000I want my clothes laid out, I don't, I want it to be modular.
01:25:22.000You know, I like, I like the base, which is like, you know, socks, underwear, t shirt, jeans, and then I like, like, A modular component that you add on, like a sweatshirt.
01:25:36.000It's like I know everything except for maybe I'll wear this sweatshirt instead of this one.
01:25:42.000And I'll wear, you know, same shoes and like the same few pairs of pants.
01:28:04.000It's crazy that when we got to Africa, the interior of Africa in the 19th century, we had railroads and electricity and Firearms and they hadn't discovered the wheel or built a two story building or had their own written language.
01:28:21.000You know, but that's just how it goes with everything, with statistics, with differences, disparities.
01:28:27.000You know, I was talking to a couple of, you know, like people that were sort of leaning, I don't want to say any names, but I was talking to a couple of guys who were leaning Groyper recently.
01:28:39.000They think they're based, they think they're red pilled.
01:28:41.000And I said, You know, we're talking about politics, and it came up, I forget the context, but I said, you know, yeah, I mean, there's just group differences between the races.
01:28:51.000And they both looked at each other like, oh my gosh.
01:28:55.000They both looked at each other like, oh man, whoa, this is like crazy.
01:29:03.000I'm like, you know, you people, these white cucks, talk all day long about, you know, black athletes like, oh my gosh, oh, they run faster, jump higher, they're stronger, whatever.0.97
01:29:16.000And then you, Start to talk about a disparity that works in the other way, and all of a sudden, oh, no, no, no.0.96
01:29:33.000Mitchell says boomer Republicans are the bulwark making the party viable, but they are also the force stopping any real and necessary changes to save our country.0.94
01:29:43.000With current demographic and social and cultural trends, what is the path forward to get the younger generation on?0.98
01:29:49.000Board with our ideas and movement, and are boomers a lost cause?0.96
01:29:56.000The plan for getting Zoomers on board, you know, honestly, I think they're going to come to us eventually because they will be persecuted.0.93
01:30:05.000I've talked about this for weeks and years, honestly, that the Zoomer generation, Generation Alpha, the generations that come after, they will be targeted as whites and for being whites.0.90
01:30:18.000And they will be racially conscious because this will be a multiracial country.0.99
01:30:22.000I mean, that in itself is a comfort to me.
01:30:25.000You know, boomers, why are boomers not racially conscious?0.54
01:30:29.000Because they grew up in a society that was 90% white.
01:30:32.000Conversely, I think that Gen Z, Gen Alpha, at least, And all the generations thereafter necessarily will have to be racially conscious because they will grow up in a country where race is the focal point of politics and race is salient and race is noticeable, and so they'll be conscious of it.0.76
01:30:52.000And I think that in itself brings them more into our world than the boomers ever can be, and just by the simple fact of the trajectory of the country.0.78
01:31:44.000He does support universal health care, and he does support a tax plan that benefits the middle class.
01:31:50.000Him and Bannon were actually pushing for a middle class tax cut, but it was thwarted by Paul Ryan, who wanted to do the corporate tax cut first.
01:32:14.000He was the only one in the entire Republican field.
01:32:17.000That said, he supported universal health care.
01:32:20.000He said, we'll take care of everybody.
01:32:22.000His health care proposal was not, you know, like privatize Medicare.
01:32:27.000His health care proposal was eliminate the lines between the states so that insurance companies can compete nationwide.
01:32:35.000But he also said that there would be, you know, government plans.
01:32:39.000He didn't get too specific, but there would be government supplements that would make sure that everybody had health insurance and everybody was taken care of.
01:32:47.000People do not understand the difference between single payer and universal health care because they're ignorant.0.80
01:32:53.000There is a big difference between having a system where everybody can have health care and a system where government provides all the health care, right?0.56
01:33:02.000Where you can only get health care through the government.
01:33:05.000Do you think that the only way we can administer health care to every man, woman, and child in the country is by outlawing private health insurance?1.00
01:34:01.000Where do you think the money comes from?
01:34:03.000So, when you're talking about getting universal health care, largely, not in every case, but largely, you're talking about insuring people.
01:34:13.000You're talking about giving health care to people.
01:34:15.000When you're talking about expanding health care resources to people that don't get them, you're talking about people that don't pay and will never pay.
01:34:22.000And the effect of that is people that don't get health insurance will now get health insurance.
01:34:27.000And people that pay for health insurance and have paid for health insurance, the quality of their care will go down.
01:35:08.000Either the quality's got to go down or the cost has got to go up.
01:35:12.000You know, if you're talking about people that are not going to be paying for it, which is what we're talking about when you talk about universal health care.
01:35:18.000And additionally, then you're going to have the government administering the whole program.
01:35:24.000So not only do you have a finite amount of resources, but now you have to pay for government bureaucrats to administer the health care.
01:35:31.000And don't get me wrong, I'm in favor of universal health care, but it doesn't mean single payer.
01:35:36.000Universal health care should not and should never mean in this country single payer.
01:35:40.000It won't work, and we will pay the price.
01:35:43.000What that's going to mean is that, you know, well, you know what that's going to mean.
01:35:48.000Hospitals full of you know what, and people not paying.
01:35:52.000We will be footing the bill for everybody's health care.
01:36:05.000You know, um, There's a famous story in my family about the quality of the hospitals in Chicago, where, you know, if you look at the care that people used to get in this country 50, 60 years ago, the quality of care that a lot of hospitals could afford to provide versus now, it's a joke.
01:37:58.000I mean, a lot of our generations cringe, but it's definitely turning around.
01:38:02.000And you could see that my influence and the influence of America First is everywhere.
01:38:08.000I mean, look at the Zoomers these days like Jaden and me and Jake Lloyd.
01:38:15.000Even look at a guy like John Doyle, it's a perfect example.
01:38:19.000You know, John Doyle is somebody who, I mean, he follows the mold or the model in some ways of a Crowder or a Ben Shapiro, but listen to the content of his stuff.
01:38:33.000So, you know, to me, that's like the litmus test.
01:38:38.000That when you talk to young people in politics, young conservatives in politics, with some exceptions, it's almost like 50 50.
01:38:45.000It might even be like 60 40, 70 30, but a lot of these guys are like under the table America firsters, under the table paleocons, nationalists.
01:39:33.000I kind of like that because it makes it impossible to ignore.
01:39:36.000You know, for a long time, people could, like, white people could ignore that and escape from it, and now they're being forced to confront it, which is probably a good thing in the long run.
01:39:46.000Top 10 Xbox moments says As the AF movement grows, do you anticipate factionalism becoming a problem?
01:39:53.000Seems like political dissidents and anti establishment types are prone to contentious infighting.
01:40:38.000Look at all the attempts to attack and slander me.
01:40:41.000And has it really had a significant effect?
01:40:45.000You know, I mean, I got deplatformed, and there have been so many shots at the title, shots across the bow from everybody, from Con Inc., from Wignatz, from the left, from libertarians.
01:40:57.000And, you know, and I'm still behind this desk, and I'm, you know, still handling the mantle of this show and the mantle of this movement.
01:41:57.000So, if there's ever like a Groyper insurrection, you know, all the Groyper's have to, they'll have to be convinced that you're better off with us than against us, right?0.99
01:42:10.000So, but I think that, you know, that very well will be a concern if it's not already, but I think that it's manageable, is the point I'm trying to make.0.99
01:42:22.000That's amazing says one of the biggest red pills is that you need to make sure you're eating fruit that's in season.
01:42:28.000Right now, peaches and plums are really good, way better in season.
01:42:33.000Wagey Rage says, Nick, Nick, alert the presses.
01:42:36.000I went to the store to get some ice cream, and when I got to the frozen section, all the ice cream was melted because the doors were left open.
01:42:44.000Appalled, I followed a trail of $1,000 bills, and who did I find?
01:43:46.000I guess there's nothing wrong with it.
01:43:48.000I've never said there's anything wrong with passively investing your money.
01:43:54.000What I've said is, we all know the kind of person who, maybe it's in my head, but who like downloads Robinhood and they're like, ho guess I'm like, A little Wall Street investor now, huh?
01:46:35.000The thing about women is, I think with women in particular, and I think I've said this before, but they want to enter your world.1.00
01:46:43.000You know, they want to be a part of your world.0.99
01:46:46.000They don't want to, you know, like have their own world and like share it with you.
01:46:51.000They don't want them to be your world.0.99
01:46:55.000You know, I think what women really like, and this is just based on my own sort of, you know, my own musings.
01:47:02.000I think that, like, what attracts women, maybe more than most things, is the idea that a man has purpose and direction and is, like, independent.
01:47:13.000Like, that a man's course of action and trajectory is independent of her and of anything else.
01:47:21.000And that if she died, he would still exist and would still be on that trajectory.
01:47:26.000Not that you like to think about that, but.
01:47:28.000But to speak to the idea that he's got his own thing cooking, I think that if I were to imagine that for a moment, I would think that that is what is compelling.
01:47:44.000The idea that a guy is just hanging out, just kind of aimless, whatever, I think that is a very mediocre and probably a very common and average state for most men to be in.0.75
01:47:57.000And I think that probably women are like, oh, like somebody that's got their own thing, that's like, you know, this will to power, so to speak.0.94
01:48:06.000And not even like in a cringe way, but the idea that there's like a plan, there's like a direction.0.57
01:48:12.000I think that that is, I think that's, and that's something that I think men should take note of.
01:48:18.000You know, you got to figure yourself out.
01:48:20.000Some people, their whole mission is like GF.
01:49:22.000The reason that white people don't take the hard labor jobs is because the hard labor jobs don't pay enough.0.56
01:49:30.000But understand that necessarily, if there was nobody to do those jobs, the wages would rise.0.57
01:49:37.000The market wage for those jobs would rise to the point where white people would begin taking those jobs.
01:49:44.000Let's entertain a scenario hypothetically where there was no low skilled migrant work or labor, I should say, to do the agricultural work or to do the landscaping work or whatever.
01:49:59.000Do you think that we would be unable to harvest agricultural produce?
01:50:04.000Do you think we'd be unable to mow lawns and clean up houses?
01:50:09.000Or do you think that the people that employ those services would just have to increase the wage and benefits to a point where The high school graduates or the teenagers or the young people in the country would start to take those jobs.
01:50:26.000You know, that is just one of these nice things that people like to.
01:50:28.000It's like, I don't know, an argument that sounds good to people and it sounds right, but it kind of conforms to people's prejudices about our country.
01:50:38.000But no, that is completely like counterfactual.
01:50:43.000Junk Bucket says, May I get a prayer for my friend Lewis?
01:52:09.000And the other thing, and maybe I'm going to hell for saying this, but the tweet, the guy tweeted it and he was like, I'm the toughest son of a bitch on this website.0.93
01:52:19.000And all the replies were like, Legend, dude, you're a legend.0.93
01:52:24.000I'm thinking, like, you know, don't get me wrong, don't get me wrong.
01:52:29.000You know, it's horrible that somebody's gonna get carjacked, you know, and get almost killed for any reason, but it's like, legend for what?
01:53:34.000This is a show where you put in super chats for prayer requests and you talk about tragedies.0.97
01:53:39.000This is the serious show where, you know, we're going to talk about how the world's going to shit and then everyone's going to, you know, cry about their, you know, everybody's going to watch it.0.98
01:53:51.000That sounds insensitive, but everybody's going to talk about their, you know, their thing that's going on.0.98
01:53:58.000Not that I'm not compassionate, not that I'm not sorry, but it's like I'm over here, I'm having a field of questions, I'm making jokes, having a good time.
01:54:05.000People are like, hey, Like, you know, my friend died.
01:54:08.000Hey, Mike, can I have a prayer for my friend?
01:54:11.000It's like, I mean, sure, but can we keep it lighthearted?
01:54:14.000For the news is bad enough, and then the super chat's got to be like, you know, you're lighting a candle at church.
01:54:20.000Anyway, but yeah, hey, sorry to hear it.
01:54:49.000Well, if you really were an OG knicker, you'd know I wrote them in middle school.
01:54:53.000And I don't believe they were ever online.
01:54:57.000Manley Groyper says, Some Lowbert group called Faker Tarians are going after Dave Smith for having you on his show and gasp, getting along with you.1.00
01:55:07.000Libertarianism is full of some of the most insufferable retards.1.00
01:56:02.000But, yeah, I mean, the Dinesh D'Souza movies, that's the equivalent of, like, a, you know, when Sean Hannity writes a book every other year.
01:56:10.000And it's like him on the cover, like this, and it's the same talking points.
01:56:13.000You know, it's just meant to make money.
01:56:16.000Right Field All Star says it's hard not to show power level when at work, and normies just don't get who these elites really are.
01:57:33.000I just wonder if that'll be used for nefarious purposes.1.00
01:57:37.000Manly Groypers says, I'm so tired of these pee brained women on my Facebook timeline posting snarky diagrams about the positive effects of wearing a mask.1.00
01:57:46.000Yeah, you literally fuck random guys and just believe them when they tell you they don't have an STD, whore.1.00
01:58:13.000Johnny says, if your future wife tries to make you sleep on the couch after an argument or something and you comply, are you a loser of a man?0.85
01:58:21.000Well, you know, I can't really speak to this because I'm not married yet.0.90
01:59:39.000I love the idea of just like never being alone.
01:59:42.000Maybe there's a novelty in the beginning, but like, After a year, after two years, three years, ten years, twenty years, it's like, you know, give me some space, give me some room.
01:59:55.000So I don't know, I'd be sleeping on the couch.
01:59:58.000There'd be some kind of an arrangement, I think, eventually, where I'd just be like, you know what, I think I'm gonna go do my own thing and see you at breakfast.
02:00:49.000Says Abby Shapiro is getting canceled by leftists for making trad YouTube videos for young women.
02:00:54.000I don't really care either way, but what do you think, Nick?
02:00:57.000I don't really think anything about that.
02:00:59.000D Zam says they're worried about winning a war, which they are winning, and most Americans are worried about winning the coolest mask contest.0.99
02:01:27.000Groyper Grifter says, You see, Mayor Lightfoot's conversation with the police union president goes to show why women shouldn't be involved in politics.0.99
02:01:35.000Chicago not only elected one as mayor, but one with a mental illness.1.00
02:01:41.000Windham says, A group of 11, mostly Syrians, tortured and gang raped a German teenager, and all of them were sentenced to less than five and a half years in prison today.
02:01:52.000Our daughters are raped and killed, and no one will do anything to stop it.0.53
02:02:40.000I mean, maybe in some ways similar, obviously, but in a lot of ways, before social media, mobile phones, before the real and true advent of the internet.
02:02:50.000That was a show that was a, you know, throughout that show, there's this narrative of like white people not trusting Muslims and then being proven right.
02:02:59.000Could you imagine that's primetime television on a major network?0.96
02:03:04.000Because throughout the whole show, consistently, I think in every season, there's a subplot where a white person is like, I think that Muslim is a terrorist.1.00
02:04:41.000He goes into a hole in the wall behind like a painting or something, and he's got like cash and like bomb making materials, and it turns out he's a terrorist.
02:04:51.000And that, like, that was a very, I was like, wow.
02:04:54.000And I was thinking about that the other day.
02:04:55.000I was like, that was sort of like a very jarring memory.
02:05:28.000That's one of those shows, you know, you got to love it when, you know, Jack Bauer comes in, he's screaming and yelling, he's on the case, killing terrorists.
02:05:40.000What is better television than that, right?
02:05:42.000I mean, that's the epitome of, or I guess the apogee, you might say, of American television the like gruff, like American policeman or like American government official.
02:06:45.000Rod says that scene when Joker is laughing while leaving in the back of the cop car while chaos is going on is exactly how I feel right now.
02:08:29.000I think it's pretty disingenuous to say the Confederates and Hitler are basically the same.
02:08:38.000Because, of course, Of course, if you were arguing that Confederate statues should still stand, you know, the analogous argument would be that, like, you know, other statues would still stand.0.90
02:12:05.000But now it's clearly demographics.0.98
02:12:07.000These problems, you know, the way that you have to look at it is I mean, we're in deep shit every way you cut it.0.90
02:12:14.000But some of these problems are unsolvable once the demographics replacement happens, you know.0.98
02:12:20.000It's like your house, you know, it's like if you had a building and the roof was caving in and the basement was flooding and there was a fire.0.99
02:12:29.000And all of these things are threats to the house.
02:12:31.000But unless you have people in the house that are going to take care of these problems, fix the roof, Bail the water, put out the fire.
02:12:53.000That was the change of mind that I had when I went from libertarian to nationalist.
02:12:59.000I was like, gee, well, if immigration makes this country full of people that can't manage a complex, sophisticated first world country, then.0.86
02:13:09.000It doesn't matter, all these problems.0.78
02:13:11.000So, Anand says, Glad to see Nick is woke on the stimulant question.
02:13:17.000Popping another, what is that, Vivance while studying, infiltrating the Ivies for the movement.
02:13:22.000Well, I'm not in favor of stimulants, but, you know, I guess in terms of categories are a little bit better, but I think all drugs are gross.
02:15:42.000Polish American says, as I have been waging away in my multiple opportunities, I've been watching Sam Hyde's video because you're too risky to get caught with.1.00
02:15:51.000He gives a lot of great advice on likability.0.99
02:15:54.000Be skilled, competent, and not an asshole.0.99
02:17:46.000I don't remember being in anything like that.
02:17:48.000Bobby K says, as a guy who sells tech certifications, you're right about Indians, except I think the future American Indian statues will have dots, not feathers.0.99
02:18:00.000You wouldn't believe how many Krishman Patels are eating up high level certifications.0.99
02:23:34.000Polish American says, My dad was reminiscing about his past in communist Poland.
02:23:39.000He said that one of his proudest moments was placing first in the communist scout jamboree in marksmanship, beat out all the Germans and Czech.0.76