In this episode of America First, host Nicholas J. Fuentes talks about William Barr's testimony before the DOJ hearing on the use of non-lethal rioting tools by police in response to anti-police rioting in the streets of Portland, Oregon, and other cities. He also talks about the Democratic National Convention, which is being held in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.
00:00:18.000But in spite of that, we have a lot to talk about.
00:00:21.000There's a lot to get into, lots to discuss, even though kind of a dry day.
00:00:27.000And our featured story tonight is about probably what most people in the news were talking about today, which was the Testimony in the hearing with the Attorney General William Barr.
00:00:39.000And we'll be talking about that tonight.
00:00:41.000I watched about an hour of it this afternoon.
00:00:46.000And if I'm being totally honest, I didn't know it was happening.
00:00:50.000I didn't know really what it was about.
00:00:53.000Typically, I look at these congressional testimonies and hearings and the endless procedural stuff and speeches as a bit of a waste of time and a little bit of a circus.
00:01:04.000And I don't actually feel differently about today's hearing.
00:01:09.000And so we're going to talk about the hearing today, but with a very specific angle in mind.
00:01:15.000And maybe you could tell by the title of the show tonight what that is.
00:01:19.000I watched the hearing today, and I know a lot of conservatives were really fired up by William Barr's testimony and this combative exchange between Republicans and Democrats.
00:01:31.000But the question remains where is the Department of Justice and all the riots going on in the United States?
00:01:40.000The main subject of the hearing today, of William Barr's testimony, was the use of certain non lethal aid, for example, in Portland and in other cities.
00:01:51.000Non lethal aid like pepper spray and tear gas and other chemical agents.
00:01:57.000And like I said, many Republicans watched the testimony and were fired up and excited because it was a fiery exchange between a member of the Trump administration, who I actually like, William Barr, and a lot of really nasty Democrats.
00:02:13.000And while it's nice to see, it's nice to watch on television, like I said before, we continue to see nearly every major city either under siege by rioters, still two months after the death of George Floyd nearly, as well as a surge in overall criminality and violent crime in particular.
00:02:37.000And unless and until the Department of Justice actually decides to charge any of these rioters, Actually, pursue serious charges against the organizers and some of the worst offenders in these riots, then this will continue.
00:02:53.000The riots will continue, the clashes with federal police will continue, and the political charade will continue.
00:03:16.000And I don't know how many people saw this on Twitter.
00:03:18.000It didn't really, as far as I know, make the rounds in any of the mainstream media.
00:03:23.000I didn't see this on Fox or The Hill or BBC or anything like that, but I did see it going around on Twitter.
00:03:31.000And like I said, it was reported by the Daily Wire and the Associated Press.
00:03:35.000And what's going to happen is the DNC is holding their convention.
00:03:39.000The Democratic, what is it, the National Committee is holding their convention, which is also confusingly called the DNC, at the end of August in Milwaukee.
00:03:49.000Nearly a hundred different police related agencies have announced that they're boycotting their contracts protecting the DNC because of the DNC's treatment of the police, which I think is pretty cool.
00:04:05.000And that's kind of a white pill, kind of after many, many months of being browbeaten and humiliated and just suffering defeat after defeat at the hands of the left.
00:04:17.000It's nice to see a little bit of pushback.
00:04:41.000That whole scene was totally boosted and elevated in an artificial way.
00:04:49.000And like I said yesterday, I don't know which organization or like what money propelled that into the mainstream media yesterday and was pushing this in all these conservative circles and in, like I said, in some of these major publications.
00:05:03.000But very quickly, in 24 hours, everybody's forgotten about them.
00:05:08.000And I'm sure that by next week, nobody will be paying any attention to these characters.
00:05:13.000But we talked about it for reasons I discussed yesterday that that represents, in my opinion, an effort to drag the entire right wing further to the left.
00:05:23.000And maybe not even with that podcast in itself, but simply by the virtue of giving a foil to other establishment actors like Turning Point USA.
00:05:33.000You know, maybe a podcast like Gen Z GOP that is Bill Crystal's Generation Z podcast.
00:05:39.000You know, maybe that's not going to gain a lot of traction, but it definitely does provide a foil.
00:05:44.000It, by contrast, makes Turning Point and Daily Wire and a lot of the usual suspects look a lot more based or authentic by comparison.
00:05:52.000So, we talked about that yesterday, and I don't want to spend too much time talking about this tonight because it's not a big deal, but it is kind of funny.
00:05:59.000Somebody brought this up last night, and I wasn't sure if it was true or not, but apparently, yesterday, when I was talking about that podcast, one of the guys on the podcast changed his Twitter bio.
00:06:14.000If you go on Twitter, there's a lot of different information in somebody's bio.
00:06:18.000They have a short description of themselves, there's a spot for their website, and there's a spot for their birthday, and a spot for their current location.
00:06:27.000And during the show last night, one of the members of the podcast changed his location to Nick Fuentes' head, meaning that he was residing in my head, like he's living rent free in my head because I was talking about their podcast.
00:07:42.000Some of their brand ambassadors, some of the TikTok e celebrities we clashed with.
00:07:47.000There have been many different battles, but what always remains the same is.0.94
00:07:52.000Their fascination with the Groypers.0.98
00:07:54.000And I find this, by the way, across the board, whether it's people like we talked about yesterday, who are almost in a category of their own.0.96
00:08:04.000I mean, we read through an article that was written by the four people on that podcast, and they're maybe like uniquely and exceptionally bad as far as Generation Z conservatives go.
00:08:16.000But I do find that clearly they, just like people in Turning Point USA, just like people that work for Cassie Dillon, just like people.0.98
00:08:25.000Really, across the entire right wing landscape from our generation, there is a fascination with the Groypers.0.89
00:08:33.000And even if they don't agree with us, sometimes even if they hate us, there is this sort of begrudging respect or interest.
00:08:43.000But they definitely know what we're about.
00:08:48.000And they're definitely curious about it.
00:08:50.000And I'm finding that to be more and more true.
00:08:52.000The more there is engagement with the Groypers and Some of these Generation Z people who might be sympathetic in various organizations or circles, I should say, you know, the more I realize the extent to which we really are influential in making an impact.0.91
00:09:11.000And their whole strategy with us since the Groyper War, and even before the Groyper War, was basically to pretend that we don't exist.
00:09:20.000You know, the official and the technical policy of Khan Inc., is that the Groypers don't exist.0.98
00:09:27.000Where this show is, where we have.1.00
00:09:29.000You know, between 5 and 10,000 people watching this show every night, and it's, you know, it's mostly teenagers, 20 somethings, it's Gen Z and millennials.
00:09:40.000Where that is happening, officially, it's just a giant black hole.
00:11:54.000And now all of that has just become commonplace, right?
00:11:59.000The rioting has been going on long enough.
00:12:02.000It's so regular and frequent and common that now it's not even news.
00:12:06.000When you talk about, even like last night, there was an incident outside the federal courthouse, if you've been following the situation in Portland, where they threw an actual IED at the federal courthouse.
00:12:22.000Attacking this building, I think, for weeks now.
00:12:25.000And they've been setting fires outside of it and shooting firecrackers and smashing the barricades in front of it and attacking the police that are inside of it.
00:12:35.000And that's been going on for a long time.
00:12:37.000And then last night, I think that's the first time that this has happened.
00:12:41.000One of those Antifa rioters actually took an explosive, which I put the video on my timeline, and threw it over the fence and exploded it in front of the federal courthouse.
00:12:52.000And I feel like in a normal time, that would be a noteworthy.
00:12:57.000That would be a noteworthy event, but because everything's been so crazy for the past 60 days, it in some ways even pales in comparison to the craziest weeks that we've seen since George Floyd died, right, in Minneapolis or in some of those other cities in Minnesota.
00:13:31.000Like I said, this is an article from Daily Wire, and they're getting the reporting from the Associated Press.
00:13:38.000And the report says that the DNC in Milwaukee may not even have police protection because all the police or anti police rhetoric, I should say, coming from the Democratic Party has forced the police to pull out all of their security details for the event, which is going to be held in late August.
00:14:00.000It says more than 100 law enforcement agencies have reportedly pulled out of security agreements to send personnel to help with the security at the Democratic National Convention next month, in part because they are concerned about recent efforts to limit law enforcement's use of tear gas and pepper spray in responding to violent riots.
00:14:20.000Milwaukee Police Chief Alfonso Morales was ordered last month to change the department's policies to ban the use of tear gas and pepper spray.
00:14:30.000Morales told a local source Since the Milwaukee order was issued, More than 100 law enforcement agencies in Wisconsin and across the country decided against coming to Milwaukee.
00:14:42.000He said they were concerned with directives placed on the police department, including not allowing tear gas or pepper spray.
00:14:49.000In Wisconsin, Franklin Police Chief Rick Oliva said, It is apparent there is a lack of commitment to provide the Milwaukee Police Department with the resources it needs to ensure the safety of peaceful protesters, attendees, citizens, and police personnel.
00:15:04.000I cannot send personnel if they are not properly equipped.
00:15:08.000Or will not be allowed to engage in appropriate actions which would ensure their safety.
00:15:13.000Waukesha Police Chief Daniel Thompson responded by indicating that his department would not be sending officers to the event, saying, I understand that the use of chemical irritants and pepper spray is serious, and those are to be used only when legally justified.
00:15:28.000But when you take that out of the continuum, that doesn't leave the officers much other than getting harmed or using deadly force, and that's not good for any officer or the public.
00:15:38.000The news comes as violent left wing riots have rocked multiple cities.
00:15:41.000Across the U.S. in the weeks since the death of George Floyd.0.97
00:15:46.000According to Attorney General William Barr, he said, Unfortunately, some have chosen to respond to George Floyd's death in a far less productive way by demonizing the police, promoting slogans like all cops are bastards, and making grossly irresponsible proposals to defund the police.
00:16:02.000The demonization of police is not only unfair and inconsistent with the principle that all people should be treated as individuals, but gravely injurious to our inner city communities.
00:16:11.000There is no harder job in America today than being a police officer.
00:16:22.000This, like many, many other things, is among the things that I've been saying on this show for a long time.
00:16:30.000I've been talking about this for months.
00:16:34.000And it's not even groundbreaking insight, it's just common sense.
00:16:41.000When you take away the ability of the police to apprehend and detain criminals, The police will simply not enforce the laws.
00:16:50.000And I know I've been saying it for a long time, and I've been right about this, and I'm proven right about this here, but many people have been saying this, and it's obvious.
00:16:59.000When you look at somebody like George Floyd, of all people, George Floyd was a massive individual.
00:17:07.000I think the guy was like 6'3 or 6'4, 200, 250 pounds.
00:17:14.000And you're talking about a guy like that who, in his case, I think that was what, May 28th or whatever.
00:17:23.000But when he was being apprehended for using counterfeit money at that gas station or at that convenience store, he was high on fentanyl and methamphetamine.0.83
00:17:33.000So you imagine you've got a giant, at least an above average black guy on fentanyl and meth, and you're trying to subdue this person who, by the way, is a criminal.0.69
00:17:46.000So criminals don't play by the same rules.
00:17:50.000And certainly, they're not going to pull any punches when they're trying to resist arrest by police.
00:17:57.000Certainly, and especially not when they're on drugs.
00:17:59.000So, you've got this giant individual totally strung out.
00:18:03.000He's not even in full control of his faculties, and he won't get out of a car.
00:18:08.000And police are supposed to be sent into a situation like that maybe one or two police officers and they're supposed to detain this guy, a violent criminal giant on drugs, without using chokeholds.
00:18:22.000Without using pepper spray, without using any other chemical irritant, anything that could cause injury.
00:18:30.000At that point, why would a police respond to any call at all?
00:18:33.000Why would a police officer respond to any call that would potentially involve a violent criminal?
00:18:38.000Or, in the cases of these riots, large crowds of people that are resisting police orders.
00:18:45.000If you look at any of these demonstrations in Chicago or Minneapolis or anywhere in the country, What you find is that the protesters vastly outnumber the police.
00:18:58.000What levels the playing field is those crowd control strategies and crowd control non lethal measures like the tear gas and the pepper spray.
00:19:07.000You take that away, and what are your options?
00:19:10.000Either you've got maybe 100 police against 1,000 protesters, so either you're outnumbered 10 to 1, and you're just going to get totally sacked.0.99
00:19:20.000You're either going to get humiliated or the shit kicked out of you, or you'll be forced to retreat.0.99
00:19:26.000Or you're going to have to bring out lethal equipment or batons.0.99
00:19:30.000And it's going to be basically a physical medieval battle between police with batons and shields versus protesters with baseball bats and football helmets.
00:19:43.000So, either that's the interaction or police are just going to have to open fire.
00:19:47.000But what is clear at that point is there are simply no good options for law enforcement.
00:19:53.000There are no options that work for police officers on their beat trying to detain and arrest violent criminals.
00:20:00.000And there's no options for police departments or municipal governments trying to control large groups of people.
00:20:07.000And even for the left that's always saying, well, these are peaceful demonstrations.
00:20:12.000These are mostly or largely peaceful demonstrations.
00:20:16.000Well, you're talking about mass organizations of thousands of people, which in many instances, by the way, that's a lie.
00:20:23.000But even if you were to say that you have a peaceful demonstration, that does not negate the fact that you've got hundreds or thousands of people gathered.
00:20:32.000During a very volatile time that could at any moment turn into a violent situation, turn into a situation that presents a risk to the people there or to property or to police or to residents.
00:20:43.000So, what we need, and we've been saying this for a long time, this is what underwrites everything in this country.
00:20:50.000This is what underscores our entire ideology.
00:20:55.000When you're having a protest, whenever you want to have a settlement or a civilization, to have a country, you have to have the ability of the state, of the sovereign.
00:21:09.000That if you're going to have a mob of people in the streets, it's unacceptable that that's not in control to some reasonable degree by the state, by the sovereign.
00:21:22.000And I'm actually glad to see that the police are just simply pulling out and not putting up with it.
00:21:27.000And maybe this will help people begin to think about their real priorities.
00:21:32.000In other words, I see a lot of these protests going on, for example, in my neck of the woods, in very wealthy neighborhoods.
00:21:40.000And in these wealthy neighborhoods, I don't see a lot of stores being destroyed.
00:21:45.000I don't see a lot of houses being burglarized.
00:21:48.000But maybe some of this lawlessness needs to creep into the institutions and the neighborhoods where all these people reside who oppose the police.
00:21:57.000Because they are truly having their cake and eating it too right now.
00:22:02.000At once, they are out there having their peaceful protests against these non lethal forms of crowd control and against chokeholds and against police and in favor of defunding the police.
00:22:13.000Well, at the same time, deriving the full and complete benefit of having a competent police department, fully funded and willing to use force to protect the nice neighborhoods and the nice sectors, the nice districts in the city, right?
00:22:28.000And so I see what's happening here with the DNC in late August.
00:22:32.000And why not take that and apply that to the entire city?
00:22:36.000And let's see some of the violence, for example, in Milwaukee or in Chicago.
00:22:41.000And let's see it spread from the south side in Chicago to the Gold Coast.
00:22:47.000Let's see some of that violence spread to the people that are paying serious property taxes and serious taxes and a serious cost of living to live in a downtown of a major metropolitan area.
00:23:00.000And let's see them pay that much money and in return get mugged at gunpoint, get carjacked.
00:23:09.000Don't get me wrong, I'm not endorsing that, I'm not in favor of that.
00:23:13.000But in other words, let's see some of the natural consequences of this agitation.
00:23:20.000In the neighborhoods where those people that are agitating for it actually live.
00:23:25.000Because I was in Milwaukee not too long ago, and Milwaukee is one of the most segregated cities in the United States.
00:23:32.000I was there for the 4th of July, and you can very easily, and I can tell you because I did this, drive from one of the worst neighborhoods in Milwaukee to one of the richest neighborhoods in Milwaukee in about five minutes.
00:23:48.000I was driving with a few friends of mine, we drove past a series of railroad tracks, and we came into this neighborhood, and it became very clear what kind of neighborhood we were in.
00:23:58.000Boarded up windows, people menacingly walking down the streets, people hanging out on the stoop.
00:24:05.000Just a lot of signs of urban decay, let's put it that way.
00:24:09.000And we turned around and then we drove five minutes in the other direction and we ended up in a neighborhood with giant mansions.
00:24:16.000And I saw there was a family outside on their patio watching a movie on a giant outdoor monitor, a giant outdoor LCD display on a fancy patio outside what I imagine was a multi, multi million dollar mansion.
00:24:32.000And I'm thinking it's actually not a very difficult equation.
00:24:35.000Let's take some of the people from this part of town, from the rough part of the town, and let's push them across the tracks into this part of town.0.86
00:24:44.000And let's see all of these Black Lives Matter liberals, all of these champagne socialists, all of these white anti white liberals hanging out on their patio, sipping wine, watching a movie on their outdoor monitor.0.99
00:24:58.000Let's have some of the ghetto BLM thugs and protesters, who are just criminals.0.98
00:25:03.000Let's see some of them march through the street in that part of town and see how people like it.0.95
00:25:09.000And then I think maybe there'll be a little bit of a change in attitude.
00:25:12.000So I see what's happening in Milwaukee here.
00:25:15.000And I think why not take that and apply that to the rest of the country?
00:25:20.000Let's apply that to the major cities.0.97
00:25:22.000And then when all of these white yuppies are calling the police along Lakeshore Drive or something, or in the Gold Coast, or up there in Lakeview or Lincoln Park, when they call the police, About, oh, my BMW just got stolen from me.1.00
00:26:00.000I don't even know what they're doing for the DNC if they're even having a big convention.
00:26:05.000I imagine if they were to hold the big convention.
00:26:08.000That would probably go against a lot of what they've been saying about the pandemic and the masks and everything.
00:26:14.000So, I can't imagine they're even going to be holding a really large convention with thousands of people.
00:26:19.000But, nevertheless, it'll be interesting logistically how they're going to manage any kind of security in a city like Milwaukee with any kind of major event, and especially at a time like this without police.
00:26:39.000I mean, the thing about Milwaukee is interesting to think about.
00:26:42.000And it's kind of like a little bit of foreshadowing for what's going to happen throughout the rest of the country in the coming years.
00:26:49.000Because, and honestly, it's not just going to be a matter of police making a game day decision or what's the way to say it, making a decision on their own to say, well, we're not going to attend this event or we're pulling out of our contracts for this event.
00:27:06.000Pretty soon, the police just will not be able, they will be unable to protect the entire city.
00:27:15.000Right now, they're making the decision, and they're saying, well, we're reviewing how these policies will affect our ability to protect this particular event, and we are making a decision not to show up.
00:27:28.000But soon, it won't be a matter of will we show up, will we not show up.
00:27:34.000There simply won't be enough resources.
00:27:36.000That's the end game of the defunding, right?
00:27:39.000So, the DNC to me is not really the news.
00:27:42.000The news is really more we're going to see a lot more of this, and what kind of country will we have when we're not going to.
00:27:49.000Even be able to have police protect anything, right?
00:27:52.000I mean, what really kind of a country can we have without police?
00:27:55.000But we're going to move on, like I said, and talk about William Barr.
00:28:20.000Has anybody learned and what really has come from any of these things other than sound bites for politicians to use in commercials for their reelection?
00:28:30.000You know, when I think about all the different hearings that were held for the Ukraine scandal and then the impeachment and the Russia hoax, I didn't watch any of those hearings.
00:28:42.000I don't think in total I watched one hour, 60 minutes of all of those combined hearings and testimonies between the impeachment.
00:28:51.000And on top of that, the initial impeachment inquiry with the Ukraine call, and then the Russia hoax, and then Robert Mueller's testimony.
00:28:59.000I don't think between all of those different things I watched more than 30 minutes of that, let alone a single hour.
00:29:06.000And it didn't really change anything for me.
00:29:08.000What that amounts to is end to end coverage by every major cable and network news outlet on the internet and on their TV stations, and all of the resistance boomers and all of the MAGA boomers.
00:29:24.000Flock to their TV at work or at home, and they're going to watch their guy, you know, their team, whether it's Trump or it's Barr, he's a member of the administration, it's Duncan, it's Trey Gowdy, one of these ridiculous people from Congress, Matt Gaetz, versus the other side, versus, you know, Mueller or Nadler or whoever.
00:29:46.000But at the end of the day, I think all this really serves to do is promote the illusion that any of that means anything.
00:29:56.000Nadler, Bar, all of this, none of this means anything.
00:30:00.000So, we're going to get into what exactly happened today, but then I think the real story to me is not what happened today, it's what's been going on for the past two months.
00:30:10.000Yes, we had a very fiery and really heated and dramatic exchange in the halls of Congress today.
00:30:19.000High drama this afternoon in the halls of the U.S. Capitol, where the Attorney General and the ranking House Committee Chairman Debated into the afternoon.
00:30:35.000Meanwhile, very, very important questions remain outstanding.
00:30:39.000So I'll read you this report about what happened today, what exactly took place in this hearing.
00:30:47.000This is a report from, I think, Fox News.
00:30:50.000It says, Attorney General William Barr testified before Congress on Tuesday that, violent rioters and anarchists have hijacked the protests over George Floyd's death.
00:31:01.000To wreak senseless havoc and destruction on innocent victims.
00:31:05.000In prepared remarks, Barr also offered a full throated defense of his much criticized conduct in the federal probe of Russian election interference, slamming the bogus Russiagate scandal and asserting President Donald Trump has not acted inappropriately.
00:31:24.000Very prescient, or I should say, very pertinent, very relevant information.
00:31:31.000On July 28th, I am very interested to hear from the Attorney General about the Russia investigation and the conduct of the Department of Justice throughout the Russia investigation.
00:31:43.000Two, three months out before the election, this is highly relevant information.
00:31:49.000Barr delivered an abridged version of that statement before the House Judiciary Committee, where he faced a hostile audience in the panel's Democratic majority.
00:31:57.000Barr's spokeswoman announced on June 24th that the Attorney General had accepted an invitation for a general oversight hearing.
00:32:05.000The hearing marks Barr's first ever appearance before the House Judiciary Panel during his tenure in the Trump administration and his first session before Congress in over a year.
00:32:16.000So, there was a lot of ground covered in the hearings today.
00:32:20.000I think it was like five or six hours.
00:32:25.000And they did cover a wide variety of things.
00:32:27.000The main focus, you know, the subject was general oversight, but the main focus was on the use of these chemical irritants and the deployment of federal troops and the conduct of those troops.
00:32:39.000In American cities, in response to these riots.
00:32:43.000I watched for about a half hour, and it was a few different female congresswomen acting as women do, and I guess as Democrats, as the opposition acts, questioning William Barr.0.94
00:32:54.000And they would ask him a leading question, and he would try to answer, and then they would cut him off.0.94
00:32:59.000And they would ask him a leading question, and he would try to answer, and then they'd cut him off.
00:33:03.000And they would come at it with Democratic talking points, and they would grandstand for their commercial about their constituents.
00:33:11.000And then William Barr would grandstand using our words and using our slogans and so on and not make the president look bad, right?
00:33:22.000To that end, try to not make the president look bad and try to defend the conduct of the administration.
00:33:28.000But fundamentally, I'm watching all of this and I'm much less annoyed at what's going on because this is just how Congress is.
00:33:35.000And it's funny to me to watch Republicans, you know, Nadler banging a gavel and Republicans interrupting Congress.
00:33:53.000That's how all these things always go.
00:33:55.000And it doesn't mean anything at the end of the day.
00:33:57.000What I'm frustrated about is William Barr is sitting there and he's defending the administration.
00:34:04.000But we're two months into the George Floyd riots.
00:34:07.000And there has not been any serious attempt by the Attorney General or his Justice Department.
00:34:14.000To actually bring charges against anybody that's been involved in the rioting.
00:34:19.000So I know a lot of Republicans are watching these hearings today and they're getting fired up and they're getting pissed off and they're watching the back and forth, they're watching the exchange.
00:34:29.000And I get it, I understand being frustrated at Democrats politicking and being frustrated at this process.
00:34:37.000But all of that is done by design, all of that is designed as a distraction.
00:34:42.000And actually, it helps the Democrats in some ways, I think, just as much as it helps the Republicans.
00:34:48.000It helps the Democrats to distract from Portland, which is on fire right now.
00:34:53.000And it actually helps Republicans distract from the fact that Republicans are in charge of the White House, we are in charge of the presidency, and all this continues with their permission.
00:35:07.000The scandal is that the Department of Justice is perfectly able to charge protesters, perfectly able to charge rioters, and in spite of rolling out hundreds of federal police into cities like Portland and Chicago, and I think they deployed some in Kansas City as well, something like 35, or maybe that was in Albuquerque.
00:35:26.000I think it was closer to 150 in Kansas City.
00:35:30.000In spite of these deployments, there's been no serious effort actually to lock any of these people up.
00:35:36.000And I'll read you a report about this from Revolver, which is a news source which people should look into.
00:35:43.000It says Earlier today, Attorney General Barr finally gave his long awaited testimony to Congress on the dire state of affairs in American cities.
00:35:51.000After two months of the Democratic Party's paramilitary forces laying siege to American cities, There remains one major elephant in the room that has gone largely unmentioned by Republicans the DOJ's seeming reluctance to arrest the rioters and bring them to justice, and their deliberate resistance to placing an active FBI presence in these war torn cities.
00:36:16.000One White House source and one DOJ source have independently confirmed that the DOJ is deliberately resisting putting an active FBI presence in riot torn Portland and Seattle.
00:36:28.000While the attorney general is generally good and much of his testimony was strong, internal resistance at the DOJ threatens the entire mission to restore law and order to Portland and Seattle.
00:36:40.000Quite simply, no matter how many heroic Border Patrol and DHS troops Chad Wolf is sending into the mayhem to protect the cities, the riots will not stop until the DOJ is prepared to throw serious criminal charges at the violent actors involved.
00:36:57.000This is the only way to decisively and permanently put an end to the violent riots.
00:37:01.000While the DOJ has recently charged some of the actors, it remains to be seen whether these are serious charges that will stick or, more than likely, this is some version of catch and release.
00:37:13.000Two sources close to the matter in the DOJ say that Barr is eager to stop the protests, but he is simply scared.
00:37:20.000While this might seem quite damning, it is an understandable human reaction.
00:37:24.000Along with the State Department, the DOJ is a key swamp stronghold, and any bold actions taken against Antifa on behalf of the American people will be met with sabotage and resistance internally.
00:37:37.000So, obviously, there's some editorializing in this statement.
00:37:40.000Revolver is a right wing source, but the sources are true.
00:37:45.000The sources are legitimate and the information is true.
00:37:48.000And by the way, the conclusions are true as well.
00:37:51.000Whatever you might think about the hearing today and William Barr's testimony, and whatever you think about William Barr himself, whether he's one of the good guys or intelligent, really, that's neither here nor there.
00:38:04.000The relevant question is not about our conduct in the Russia investigation, which concluded over a year ago.
00:38:11.000It's not about anything else besides the riots.
00:38:13.000It's not even about this frivolous debate about the chemical irritants used against the rioters today.
00:38:20.000The pertinent question is when the DOJ is actually going to get serious about restoring order on the streets.
00:38:27.000And that is still an outstanding question.
00:38:30.000As we debate all of this in Congress, the situation on the ground in Portland and Seattle is no better tonight than it was last night or than it was a month ago or two months ago when all this started.
00:38:43.000In fact, it's the same, and it's probably going to get worse.
00:38:46.000And that's not going to change anytime soon unless you have charges, unless you have the FBI, unless you have a serious willingness on the part of the federal government to actually start solving this.
00:39:02.000And so I'm watching the hysterics, I'm watching this debate unfold in Congress, and that's where my head is at.
00:39:09.000And that's been the case, I think, throughout this administration, whether it's this one or any other hearing for that matter.
00:39:15.000I think people will be well to, they'd be better off.
00:39:17.000Looking at what's really going on with these policies inside the administration and some of these competing forces inside these departments, as opposed to the debates playing out on the floor of the U.S. Congress, because they could do that all day.
00:39:35.000You know, I, like I said earlier, I understand getting excited and putting on the TV, and it is frustrating to watch Democrats make excuses for rioters because it's so dishonest and they are corrupt, and for what it's worth, they are our representatives.
00:39:50.000But at the end of the day, there has to be some basic resignation on the part of conservatives that the government does not represent us, the Congress does not represent us, even our Republican representatives.
00:40:02.000You know, people like Matt Gaetz and Trey Gowdy and all these guys, they shine during a hearing.
00:40:09.000And they shine during a hearing because that's when you have a TV camera on them.
00:40:12.000Matt Gaetz is really sharp when he's got a TV camera in front of his face and he gets to read off his little prepared statement.
00:40:22.000And he knows his parliamentary rules, and he's really going to give it to him.
00:40:26.000I don't think Matt Gaetz was at this one, but he's in a lot of these hearings.
00:40:30.000He's on Fox News all the time, and he's going to get his Fox News appearance the day after, right, or later in the evening.
00:40:38.000And that soundbite's going to be running all day in the news media, and that's going to be used in the campaign commercial.
00:40:44.000But then you go and look at how the guy actually is how he votes, what his issues are, who bankrolls the campaign.
00:40:52.000And the same is true with all these guys.
00:40:54.000Trey Gowdy's one of the worst offenders.
00:40:56.000Trey Gowdy's never met a TV camera that he didn't love when it comes to the hearings.
00:41:01.000And then look at his conduct during the Russia investigation.
00:41:04.000He's a real lion in front of the camera, but he was one of the first ones to throw Trump under the bus.
00:41:09.000So that's why, to me, I don't really look at these things as, to me, more than anything, these hearings are merely designed to reinforce the sort of conditioning about politics as usual.
00:41:22.000It's meant to reinforce this idea that when I turn on the TV, it's going to be Democrats versus Republicans.
00:41:29.000And we are supposed to be so offended at what the Democrats are doing that we are supposed to relate to and sympathize with and see ourselves as a part of the Republican side.
00:41:41.000I'm supposed to turn on the TV, and this is supposed to reinforce this idea that me and William Barr are on the same team.
00:41:50.000It's me and William Barr against the Democrats.
00:41:52.000I am vicariously with William Barr, and I am fighting for what William Barr is fighting for.
00:42:00.000And ostensibly, he is an extension of me in politics.
00:42:10.000None of the people in the hearings are.
00:42:12.000It's a lot more complicated than that.
00:42:13.000What it comes down to typically is these kinds of intra agency politics, like what's happening in the Department of Justice.
00:42:22.000It matters far more the fact that there are people, swamp creatures, probably left wing sympathizers, people that are trying to undermine and sabotage the Trump administration.
00:42:33.000That are working within Barr's own DOJ to prevent order from being restored in Seattle and Portland.
00:42:38.000But I'm supposed to say I'm vigorously defending Trump and Barr, and it's Trump 2020, keep America great.
00:42:45.000It is merely meant to reinforce that kind of conditioning.
00:42:49.000You have to watch these things and try to break out of it because that's all that that serves to do.
00:42:54.000The Fox and the MSNBC, the hearing between the Republicans and the Democrats, and I'm not even one of these people to say, you know, it's the two party system.
00:43:32.000If there was anything else going on today, I wouldn't be covering this.
00:43:35.000But you've got William Barr testifying in all this courtroom or You know, it's not really a courtroom, but all this drama happening on the U.S. Capitol.
00:43:45.000And meanwhile, our tireless Department of Justice or our tireless Attorney General is nowhere to be found when it comes to actually enforcing the law in our city streets.
00:43:57.000So that's that, but we're going to move on and take a look at our Super Chats.
00:44:02.000Kind of a boring day, I don't know what to tell you.
00:45:43.000But it remains true that Charlottesville was a total screwdriver in the sense that when you look at Charlottesville, A lot of what they're falsely claiming about these riots truly happened at Charlottesville.
00:45:57.000And what I mean by that is, with a lot of these protests and riots happening over George Floyd, the activists will claim that the police are causing the violence, right?
00:46:08.000That the police are forcing the crowds into these violent confrontations.
00:46:14.000And that's not true, it's crowd control.
00:46:16.000You know, for example, I think this happened in Chicago or something.
00:46:22.000They were complaining that the police blocked off.
00:46:28.000And then they were forcing protesters to retreat through this one street or this one, I don't know if it was an alley or a street, but one passage basically.
00:46:37.000And they were saying, this is outrageous.
00:46:51.000They're upset because it thwarted the effort for a riot to destroy statues and cause havoc and mayhem.
00:46:58.000But in Charlottesville, that actually did happen in the sense that the Charlottesville police forced the right wing demonstrators directly into the path of the Antifa.
00:47:09.000And I don't want to get too into the weeds about all the details, but this was covered in a police report that came out.
00:47:15.000There was an audit of police conduct that happened at Charlottesville, and I think that was released December of that year, which would have been December 2017.
00:47:26.000And the police report showed that the police deliberately pushed all of the right wing protesters in Lee Park directly into the path of left wing Antifa protesters.
00:47:38.000And this was the cause of most of the violence.
00:47:41.000Compared to the violence in these riots, this looked like the march in Selma.
00:47:48.000This looked like the million man march on D.C. with MLK compared to the George Floyd riots.
00:50:56.000But what I started to say on the show some time ago is that, like, People think that if you read enough books, you're really going to increase your IQ.
00:51:11.000I think, really, what it comes down to is people think that books are magical.
00:51:17.000They think that if you're just reading lots and lots and lots and lots of books, this is going to improve your life by leaps and bounds and really change your universe.
00:51:27.000I just think that books are overrated, that's all.
00:51:29.000I just think that as a form of information or content delivery, I think that books are good for a few things.
00:51:36.000I think that books are good for your attention span.
00:51:38.000I think they're good for your brain in the sense that when you're on Twitter all day, I think it really destroys your brain.
00:51:46.000Because what your phone basically is, is like a slot machine.
00:51:51.000You click on Twitter and you reload it and you get a hit, right?
00:51:56.000Or you refresh your notifications and you get a hit.
00:51:58.000You open up your app and you get new content.
00:52:01.000And that's really how all of these apps are designed to work.
00:52:05.000That's how Instagram, Twitter, That's how the entire internet is made to work.
00:52:10.000It's meant to use these just basic psychological tricks to trap you.
00:52:14.000And I think that just basically destroys your brain.
00:52:17.000So I think that, and honestly, that's really more a case for mitigating the use of mobile phones and mitigating the use of the internet more than it is for books.
00:52:27.000But I think that books are maybe good for recovering from that.
00:52:30.000I think it's good for discipline and for your attention span.
00:52:33.000I think books are good for your vocabulary.
00:52:36.000I think books are good for expanding your general knowledge and maybe your general horizons.
00:52:42.000But I just think that casual reading, short of being an academic, I think as far as your IQ goes, as far as how much information you can recall, I honestly think that it has its limitations, especially as you get older.
00:52:57.000I think, especially once you reach a certain age, I think that it's vastly overrated this idea that you're going to read all these books and what?
00:53:04.000Then you're going to become Ben Shapiro?
00:53:06.000You're going to read enough books and then you're going to have this perfect recall and become an historian.
00:53:44.000To actually sit down and be pensive and engage in critical thinking without consuming information.
00:53:52.000It's really more about cynicism about this idea that it's about self improvement and consumption.
00:54:00.000To me, my criticism of books comes from this angle that it's this idea that every waking moment is dedicated to self improvement, and self improvement consists in these few, very simple, Universal activities like working out and reading.
00:54:18.000And, you know, if you're reading, if you're just consuming information, then I think that what is sorely lacking these days is people sitting in silence and challenging themselves to just think about their own world as opposed to, like, tell me a book I should read.
00:54:35.000And what are you doing when you're reading?
00:54:37.000I mean, you're reading what someone else is saying.
00:54:40.000It's still consuming information, which there's nothing inherently wrong with consuming information, but I think an over reliance on sort of outsourcing critical thinking to other people, I think.
00:55:04.000People are like mad at me because I'm, as if I'm like preventing people from reading.
00:55:10.000I just think that people should think more.
00:55:13.000Because I'll often find myself, when I have a problem, for example, or I'm thinking about a political subject, it's very easy for me.
00:55:23.000To go on Amazon and buy a book about it.
00:55:25.000It's very easy for me to Google, you know, how to X, what to do if X.
00:55:31.000But I often find myself, when I have my best thoughts or when I find the best problems to solutions, when I really think of something insightful, it's when I stop and say, well, wait a minute, you know, maybe I'll just try to figure it out.
00:55:47.000As opposed to automatically and instantly just looking for a book on Amazon that I can order and say, okay, now this book is on the way.
00:55:56.000Or Googling something and finding an article, sometimes I'll sit down and think, well, wait a minute, let me take a stab at it.
00:56:03.000If I'm thinking about the world or philosophy, and by philosophy, I don't mean anything pretentious, I just mean thinking about the way things are or thinking about your life.
00:56:17.000I think that the book reading thing has been part of this onslaught of frenzied activity that we are prescribed.
00:56:26.000You know, if you have a problem in your life, if you have a deficiency in your life, you just need to fill up your schedule.
00:56:32.000And that means you need to wake up at 4 a.m. and take a cold shower, and then go for a jog, and then take a hot shower, and then read your book, and then drink your green protein shake, and then you're going to go to work, and then you're going to work really, really hard at your job, and then you're going to meditate.
00:56:45.000And then you're going to, you know what I mean?
00:56:46.000So it's really in the context of that that I tell people, you know, don't worry so much about the books.
00:56:55.000Worry more, I think, about contemplating.
00:56:58.000We're worrying more about contemplation.
00:56:59.000I think that's really where I'm coming at it from.
00:57:14.000It's like a lot of these book people are so one dimensional because all they know how to do is read words, all they know how to do is recollect things that they've read.
00:57:24.000And they've totally outsourced that, like, their brain into the written word.
00:57:31.000It's not to say that there's anything wrong with reading.
00:57:33.000It's good to call on authors and, you know, other people have had really great insights and learning them, I think, is, you know, it's insightful for your own contemplation.
00:57:46.000But to, you know, completely get rid of your own thought, to completely rely on books and on the consumption of information and on this like task completion, frenzied mentality of accumulation, accumulating knowledge.
00:58:01.000I think it's kind of missing the bigger picture.
00:59:07.000And that is because when everything is staying the same, then nobody's paycheck is really uncertain.
00:59:15.000You know, if we're doing the same things and we're doing the same programs and singing the same songs and doing the same song and dance, Then that means that the gravy train is going to keep going.
00:59:27.000The endless battle against fiscal irresponsibility and the endless train of donor money to the GOP and various institutions.
00:59:36.000So, this is why we on the show think differently about our own lives and about politics.
00:59:57.000That's pretty funny and kind of surprising.1.00
01:00:02.000Big Globe says, On Sunday, you said 80% of the population are retards.1.00
01:00:06.000I keep thinking about how true this is, especially when you work with the public.1.00
01:00:10.000Well, and you know, I don't say that maliciously.
01:00:13.000I just say that as somebody that deals with people on a massive scale.
01:00:17.000You know, the amount of people that I deal with is orders of magnitude greater than the amount of people that the average person interacts with on a day to day basis.
01:00:27.000And what I mean by that is, when I do this show, I'm doing this show in front of between 5,000 and 10,000 people every night.
01:00:35.000When I'm on Twitter, I'm getting 20 million impressions a month.
01:00:42.000And I'm getting thousands of super chats over the course of a month.
01:00:46.000And I'm not saying that it's like, I'm just saying that that's a fact of, that's the nature of what I do my exposure to people and the variation and the scale is orders of magnitude greater than the scale of.
01:01:02.000People's interaction with other people, the average person's interactions with other people on their day to day basis.
01:01:09.000And what I've learned from that over the years, and having a YouTube channel and reading through comments, Twitter replies, super chats, live chat comments, I've kind of gleaned a lot about people and experiencing what it's like with people, emails, things like that.
01:01:28.000And yeah, the biggest red pill to me is the Pareto Principle.
01:01:31.000The Pareto Principle, which says that what is it?
01:02:08.000And I don't think there's a perfect way to do it.
01:02:10.000I haven't found the perfect way to describe that dynamic or the distinction between this majority and this minority.0.99
01:02:17.000But you've got most of the population, which, if it's maybe low IQ, maybe it's something else, they're just kind of unthinking.
01:02:26.000In a sense, they're almost like more complicated ants, like a more complicated ant farm, in the sense that they respond very predictively to certain stimuli, but they're just more on a more Complex and sophisticated level, and maybe there's a small percentage of the population that is just a little bit more awake than that.
01:02:49.000And maybe that sounds like pretentious because presumably then I put myself in the latter category.
01:02:55.000Of course, I'm not an ant, but you know, so maybe that comes off as like I don't know, lacking self awareness or arrogant or something.
01:03:04.000But I just tend to find that there are some people that there's almost just like no evidence that they're thinking about what they're saying, what they're doing, what they're communicating, you know.
01:03:15.000And so I think that's true throughout human history.
01:03:18.000I think that this is just the nature of the world.
01:03:21.000The nature of the world has always been hierarchical in that way.
01:03:27.000And I don't know what exactly is the basis for that hierarchy if it's IQ, if it's some kind of more intangible level of self awareness.
01:03:37.000I don't know what exactly you'd call that, but I mean, society today is really not much different than it was in ancient Egypt.
01:03:45.000And yes, in ancient Egypt, most of the population was slaves building the pyramids.
01:03:50.000And is it really all that much different today?
01:03:53.000Slaves building the pyramids, and you've got a pharaoh, and you've got some people in the court of the pharaoh, and you've got people building the pyramids.
01:04:01.000I mean, what do you think it is when you go and work at an insurance company?0.52
01:04:04.000What do you think it is when you're doing coding, or you're really like any service job, or any other job for that matter, manufacturing job, and then agriculture, which is timeless.
01:04:19.000Service, manufacturing, I mean, is this, how is that really much different from building pyramids?
01:04:31.000So that's sort of, I think, the white pill on that, which is that society's always going to be this way.
01:04:35.000And that's like the reactionary red pill, which is to say that some people say that the problem with the world is that it's not of, by, and for the people.
01:04:46.000The problem is that people are not educated.
01:04:49.000The problem is that people aren't critical thinkers.
01:04:52.000The problem is, and it's like the idea that the masses need to be led, I think that's intrinsic.
01:05:00.000You know, when people are saying, like, well, we just need to create a populace that is educated in civics, it's like society is never going to be horizontal like that.
01:05:11.000Society is never going to be completely flat, and it's just going to be a matter of, you know, totally equal.
01:05:18.000Like, do you understand what I'm saying?
01:05:21.000I've never believed that that is a solution to our problems.
01:05:24.000I think that there will always be the problem of people being uneducated or not critically thinking or not having common sense.
01:05:31.000You know, that is the nature of the crowd.
01:05:34.000That is the nature of the population as the sum of all of its constituents.
01:05:41.000And so to me, that has never been the question.
01:05:44.000But some people, it's the antithesis to that, which I'm suggesting, which a lot of populists and dissidents sometimes think.
01:05:55.000Well, if only the people were in charge, if only we got a say in things, if only people were more educated, it's like I don't think that's the problem.
01:06:05.000I think maybe just taking the decision making power away from most of them in meaningful ways and giving it to responsible people, benevolent leaders, wise leaders.
01:06:18.000I think that has always been the only sustainable solution.
01:06:23.000Anyway, Cold Cheese says figured since I dropped some money for Jaden, I'd give some to the king himself.
01:06:29.000Shout out to Millennial Matt for the Aso Taco post.
01:06:46.000And hey, yeah, it's good to spread the wealth around a little bit.
01:06:48.000Sometimes I'm watching Jaden, and God bless him, he's doing well.
01:06:52.000Sometimes I'm watching Jaden and Patrick, and the lemons are stacking up, and I'm thinking, oh, I'm thinking, oh, how about kicking a little percentage upstairs for the boss of the family?
01:07:42.000You've got the post World War II model and the post Cold War model, which is to say that after World War II, it was a bipolar world order.
01:07:51.000It was the United States and the Soviet Union.
01:07:54.000The United States did not have global hegemony after World War II, it had hegemony over certain regions, but you certainly would not say that the United States had total hegemony in Europe.
01:08:06.000The United States did not have total hegemony in Asia or the Middle East.
01:08:13.000So the United States did not, it was contested.
01:08:16.000The United States had hegemony in the Western Hemisphere, in Western Europe, in certain parts of the Third World, and the rest was contested, right?
01:08:26.000And so that was the bipolar world order.
01:08:29.000After the Soviet Union implodes, then you've got the United States emerge as a hyperpower, and this is the unipolar world order, which is to say that there's only one pole.
01:08:39.000And the United States has such a gap between.
01:08:42.000Itself and every other country that it is able to achieve hegemony in every region.
01:08:47.000You know, the Department of Defense then has this regional command in every part of the country.
01:08:53.000And we're basically able to project power without a challenge in every region in the world.
01:09:00.000And what I think will replace that is not necessarily another power displacing America and becoming comparably a hyperpower or a different unipolar power, but I think that.
01:09:13.000Just the power projection capability of the United States will recede.
01:09:18.000And I think that's what we're seeing, which is to say that maybe China doesn't rise up and become a global hegemon like the United States has been for the past 30 years, but maybe instead the United States just does not have hegemony in East Asia, right?
01:09:35.000Maybe some other regional power rises up and the United States does not have hegemony in all of Asia because you'll have Russia, India, China all capable of projecting power regionally.
01:09:48.000With offensive and defensive capabilities that we cannot match from the United States with conventional military means.
01:09:57.000So, I think that it's not necessarily true that, you know, I don't think China, by the way, is going to even create a bipolar world order.
01:10:05.000I don't think they'll be as powerful as the Soviet Union.0.70
01:10:07.000I think there are a lot of systemic flaws in China that are going to prevent them from even challenging us in that way.0.90
01:10:15.000But I do think that the U.S.'s power will recede.0.77
01:10:17.000It will continue to recede as it already has been.
01:10:20.000But the United States will be the most powerful country in the world, probably for the foreseeable future.
01:10:26.000The United States will not be able to be challenged.
01:10:29.000In any meaningful way on our own turf or as the uncontested, the global superpower for a long time.
01:10:37.000I think that China may become a superpower.
01:10:39.000They may become a proper great power and they might achieve some level of regional hegemony, but I don't think they'll become like us.
01:10:48.000Top 10, but that's a good IR question.
01:10:52.000Returning to my international relations roots, that's what I used to study in college, and that was always my favorite subject international affairs.
01:11:02.000So, it's actually very interesting to me.
01:11:04.000Top 10 Xbox Moments says Have you met many reformed leftist types in dissonant right movements?
01:11:10.000In my experience, they're almost as common as former libertarians.
01:11:15.000I know some former leftists, but I got to be honest, most of the people that I talk to in my circles are conservatives, and they were either basic bitch conservatives or libertarians.
01:11:27.000And I find that typically in the America First movement in particular, it's not to say that there aren't any former leftists or people that were leftist when they were like, In high school.0.94
01:11:37.000But I find that generally the people that gravitate towards this were like shit posters or gamers or they were libertarians or something like that.0.73
01:11:48.000I personally tend not to find too many people that were like hardcore leftists.0.94
01:11:55.000Okay, Schneider says seeing that joyous smile manifest on your face when you realize someone has exceeded their third super chat limit for the night is all the evidence I need to know that you made the right call on that decision.
01:14:34.000We did a very brief debate on DLive, so maybe that counts, I guess.
01:14:39.000But other than that, it's been a while.
01:14:42.000Epic Swag says, crazy to think that in 10 years, when someone says Nick in a political context, it will be universally understood that they are referring to Nick Fuentes, like when someone says Tucker now.
01:14:54.000Well, I mean, the thing about Tucker is that's kind of a unique name, so I don't know if it'll ever be exactly the same.
01:15:00.000You know, the benefit of people like Milo or Tucker or a few others is that they have a relatively uncommon name.
01:15:09.000Like, what other Milo's exist in politics?
01:15:12.000What other Tucker's exist in politics, you know?
01:15:16.000So, I don't know if it'll ever be exactly the same, but yeah, I mean, hey, hopefully we'll reach that level of prominence that it's sort of universal and.
01:17:45.000You're getting 260 hours of content per dollar, which means you're getting 10 days, 10 days worth of content more, probably closer to 11 days, 11 days worth of content for $1.
01:18:28.000Penn Statist says I know a couple of Groypers willing to crowdfund an America First billboard that would be on Charlie Kirk's route from his house to the airport.
01:18:39.000All we need is his address and permission to use your likeness.
01:18:42.000Is this projector level or is it funny?
01:20:24.000I probably like gorillas more than monkeys, if I'm being honest.
01:20:29.000I look at monkeys and I think gorillas are cooler.
01:20:33.000When I was a kid, I thought that gorillas were all the size of King Kong.
01:20:37.000When I was like, I think I got to be like 10 years old before I realized that gorillas were a little bit bigger than human beings.
01:20:47.000Because until then, I thought that gorillas were like the size of the jungle canopy, I thought that they were like giant, like 50 feet tall.
01:21:33.000I had, well, I never had a pet turtle, but we used to have this science center at my grade school, and there was a turtle there that I befriended.
01:21:46.000I was a big fan of insects, things like that.
01:21:49.000I wasn't really so much into, because I know when you're a kid, like, you know, you all have your, like, some kids are into, like, trucks or cars or, you know, everybody's got their own whatever thing.
01:22:00.000But I was really interested as a kid in tornadoes, spiders, sharks, the human body.
01:22:07.000I was very interested in, like, medical stuff.
01:22:12.000And, like, I wanted to be a doctor when I was a kid.
01:22:34.000You know, at the end of the day, it's all, you know, like, for example, I was driving the other day to McDonald's, and I was thinking to myself, when I was driving, I think this was actually yesterday morning.
01:23:21.000No matter how rich I get or how successful I get or what I have in my life or how old I am, that experience will remain fundamentally unchanged.
01:23:31.000The experience of getting in my car and driving to McDonald's and getting a couple of sausage burritos and oatmeal, no matter how much the rest of my life will change, that experience will fundamentally stay the same.
01:23:47.000Maybe I'll drive there in a nicer car.
01:23:49.000Maybe I'll drive there and I'll have back pain.
01:28:43.000I think maybe the political shills, that's true.
01:28:47.000Am First Investments says, Fam just started fostering two little girls and after seeing a BLM sign, the seven year old says, Oh, that's still going on.0.90
01:29:03.000And that's when I say America First is inevitable, it's all these things that are baked into that are baked in along with the demographic change.
01:29:12.000You know, the liberals think that all they're going to get is a demographic change, but of course, you're going to get reaction.
01:29:18.000You're going to get, once you change the demographics, you're equally going to get racial consciousness.
01:29:24.000You can't replace people, target white people, and not have white people become aware that they are white people.
01:29:31.000And when I say AF is inevitable, people might not like white identity politics now, but it's the future.
01:29:38.000People might not like reaction now, but it's the future.0.85
01:29:42.000When I was talking about big government, order, police state, white identity, you know, traditionalism, when I was talking about all this stuff three years ago, for a lot of people it fell on deaf ears.0.79
01:29:56.000Now that we've got Drag Queen Story Hour, we've got riots in the streets, we've got BLM, Black is King, and all this, now all of a sudden, white identity, traditionalism, you know, this meme about big government and, you know, fascism.
01:30:11.000All of this stuff now seems a lot less, that seems a lot less out there.
01:30:17.000Not that I'm a fascist, but, you know, talking about that's what they call us, but talking about a bigger government and law and order and order above everything, you know, that sounded maybe out of touch a few years ago.
01:30:28.000People would say, you're not going anywhere with that.
01:30:31.000Okay, well, you keep doing your thing.
01:30:32.000And, you know, that's going to make a lot of sense right now, but it's like what Henry Ford said about horses and buggies, right?
01:30:45.000He said something to the effect of, you know, if I asked people what they wanted, they'd say more, better horses and buggies or something like that.
01:30:53.000And the point is, the people that are, you know, obviously the people that are looking at what is prosperous right now, they're not able to look in the long term at what will be prosperous tomorrow.
01:31:07.000But that's how you make the big leaps and bounds.
01:31:10.000You know, you don't make the big money, for example, in the 1980s and the 1990s by.
01:31:15.000Going in on the blue chip stocks then by going in and Sears and GE, and you'd get in by going into Apple and Microsoft, right?
01:31:25.000And that was a similar premise with America first, started with a very similar premise, which is, you know, I and other people saw an opening, but mostly me, saw an opening that look, there's going to be this huge appetite for what I created.
01:32:39.000There's, you know, if you understand Catholic sexual morality, there's things that you can do as long as you do it in a certain way, but this is not the sex show.
01:32:52.000So why don't you just Google that if you're really interested?0.72
01:32:55.000Jockey says, I'm not racist or homophobic.0.99
01:32:57.000I wish all people of color were gay.1.00
01:33:05.000Was there anything that was particularly difficult for you to come around on when you were first learning dissident ideas like race realism, et cetera?
01:33:25.000Individualist, like classical liberal type, but he was red pilled.
01:33:31.000This guy from Australia, not Capoy Cami, a different guy from Australia when I was at college.
01:33:37.000And he was, I think, like an exchange student or something, or just a foreign student.
01:33:42.000I think it was an exchange program, though.
01:33:44.000But in any case, I remember distinctly one time we were having a conversation on the green line, and we were talking about Stefan Molyneux, and he was saying, Do you buy this Molly meme stuff about race and IQ?
01:33:58.000And I was like, I think it could be true.
01:34:01.000I was like, And I think it might be true.
01:34:03.000I said, But I don't know what the efficacy is of talking about it.
01:34:07.000I said, You know, I think that if you started to talk about.
01:34:11.000Race and IQ, the consequence of this would be, you know, like racial hatred, basically.
01:34:21.000And that was the conversation we had.0.95
01:34:23.000I said, I think it could be true, and I think it probably is.
01:34:26.000I said, but I think that it's probably not useful for a political movement to talk about it openly.
01:34:33.000I don't think it's useful for, like, political, you know, for trying to create a political infrastructure, a political.
01:34:41.000Machine, I said, but more than that, I think that it could lead to bad things.
01:34:46.000And then eventually I realized that there is really no way, like many other people, I eventually realized there's no way to talk about our current situation without talking about that.
01:35:01.000You know, because what we're talking about is demographic change.
01:36:25.000And honestly, I'm not even increasingly, don't get me wrong, I'm still a gamer.
01:36:30.000I play games, but I do think there's excess.
01:36:34.000You know, when I see people playing games nonstop and it's at the detriment of everything else in their life, I think it's a problem.
01:36:43.000You know, when I say I'm a gamer, I mean that I grew up as a gamer.
01:36:47.000I grew up playing games and I play games sort of recreationally.
01:36:51.000Now I play them with my friends to socialize.
01:36:54.000But I don't like to wake up and play games for six hours.
01:36:58.000I don't like to wake up and I don't even play games by myself anymore.
01:37:02.000I can't remember the last time I just played a game by myself.
01:37:06.000You know, sometimes I'll do it to pass the time if I pull an all-nighter and I literally need to stay awake in order to reset my sleep schedule.
01:37:13.000But aside from that, I don't remember the last time I've just played for leisure with the exception of Civ 5 and like some strategy games.
01:37:20.000So I have too much to do to invest hours on hours doing that.
01:38:16.000But no, I'm not interested in debating you.
01:38:18.000If you want to send more super chats, but there are like 700 prophecies in the Old Testament that were fulfilled by the coming of Christ.
01:38:25.000There are prophecies in the Old Testament about the manner in which he would die.
01:38:30.000In the Old Testament, they said that he was going to die by crucifixion, which is before crucifixion was even used as a method of execution.
01:38:40.000And you could go through the list of different prophecies, but there's hundreds of them.
01:38:44.000So, you know, to say, oh, well, you know, where's the prophecy?
01:38:49.000It's all the whole Old Testament talks about the Messiah and the coming of a Savior and the Son of God and all of the stuff.
01:38:56.000It's throughout the Old Testament.0.89
01:38:59.000Mike Oxlong says, I like this girl in my class and she's really cute, but I don't want to talk to her because you inspired me to hate women.
01:41:15.000My life does not orbit, especially around women or my pursuit of women or my pursuit of one woman in particular or any woman in particular for that matter.
01:41:26.000And I think that's that sort of calculated indifference that, you know, I've got my goals.
01:41:33.000I'm trying to be the man that I want to become.
01:41:37.000And on my journey towards that, I'm sure I will meet a woman and settle down and have kids and so on.
01:41:43.000But that is not, you know, that's not the North Star of my entire life.
01:41:46.000So then that's what the show preaches.
01:41:49.000And the show is also contextual because, you know, when people watch the show and they say, oh, you know, you go too far, as far as I'm concerned, that's context denial in the sense that.
01:42:00.000You know, look at the world around us.
01:42:03.000You cannot be anti woman enough, in my opinion, for that reason alone.
01:42:08.000Because you could watch any other show.1.00
01:42:10.000You could watch any other media anywhere from anyone, and it is way too pro woman.0.99
01:42:17.000So, in that way, I don't see myself just as offering wise insight about women and their role in society, but I am also having to act as a counterbalance.0.98
01:42:28.000I'm not addressing, I'm not coming up with like a formal address and my.0.83
01:42:35.000This is a cultural statement during this time in our civilization when we have got the worship of women and this fear of women and the enabling and emboldening of women.0.67
01:42:48.000And so it's in the context of that.0.59
01:42:50.000If I were doing this show 60 years ago, the tone would be very different.
01:42:54.000If I were doing this show 100 years ago, I, well, you know, this show would be possible 100 years ago, but you understand.0.71
01:43:00.000My position on women would be different 100 years ago.0.88
01:43:05.000You know, aggressive and a lot less over the top.1.00
01:43:10.000But it's in this time when you've got women that are literally like naked in the streets, shaking their asses.1.00
01:43:17.000And that's even the most extreme expression of it.1.00
01:43:20.000But you've got women dominating the workforce, women dominating government.1.00
01:43:24.000I had a friend of mine, QAnon, today.0.97
01:43:27.000Well, I don't even know if I could tell this story.
01:43:29.000I don't want to blow his cover or anything.
01:43:31.000But I heard a story from Washington, D.C. about, I don't want to say where this occurred, but in some office.
01:43:39.000He told me that a friend of his had to deal all day with this situation in their office where a woman had a breakdown and was crying.
01:43:49.000And the management and a few other office personnel were tied up with this episode for the entire day.
01:43:58.000And this was in an important office pertaining to things that are happening in the country.0.99
01:44:03.000And it's like, this is the absolute state of women in the workforce.
01:44:07.000And I'm sure you could see this all over the place.1.00
01:44:11.000You're in the workplace and you've got women that are carrying on or crying or petty or whatever.
01:44:15.000And it's in the context of this pervasive problem that the show is here.0.99
01:44:20.000So I don't know what you're trying to get at.
01:44:23.000Interdimensional Harmony says I bought some books to learn French and German.
01:44:27.000Not sure learning two languages at the same time is a good idea.
01:44:30.000Anything you have done differently or would recommend because of the lockdown?
01:44:35.000I've heard actually it's better to learn multiple languages at once because you, I don't know how it works, but I guess they kind of like bounce off of each other in a way.
01:44:44.000So, I've heard that that's actually better.
01:44:49.000But hey, knock yourself out if that's what you want to do.
01:44:51.000I think that's a productive use of your time.
01:44:54.000Anything I would have done differently, in what way?
01:47:11.000Assuming, people assume that it's like I'm holding myself back from drinking, that if I didn't have like this, you know, if I didn't impose this on myself, that I'd be drinking and I'd be getting drunk or something.
01:47:23.000But I don't, I literally just have zero, zero inclination, zero interest in drinking.
01:47:36.000I mean, I am as interested in trying alcohol as I am interested in trying marijuana or meth or heroin or getting in a car crash for that matter.
01:47:48.000It's just something that I just have zero interest in.
01:48:59.000Where they're pissing and carrying on.0.99
01:49:02.000In some cases, they're pissing and shitting, and they're carrying on, and God knows.0.94
01:49:06.000God knows where their bodies have been.0.90
01:49:08.000I don't like to shake people's hands, let alone be sitting in a pool with them, let alone be sitting in a giant tub of water with them and their whole self and everything in them and on them.
01:49:53.000But I think I don't even call them minorities anymore.
01:49:56.000If you've ever noticed on the show, I've gotten away from calling them minorities.
01:49:59.000You should just call them non whites because when we say minorities, we're referring to people that are not white and they're not going to be the minority for long.0.90
01:50:08.000I'm not being like, oh, no, no, you've got to play the word game.
01:50:11.000But I'm just saying it's something to reflect on.
01:50:15.000I know what you mean when you say minorities, but it's something to think about.
01:50:36.000Josh the Remover says, it's always so weird seeing normies use that hello base department reaction image of you without any idea of who you are.
01:50:59.000That's kind of funny to think about that I'm like a meme.
01:51:02.000So, on that Zoom call with those TikTok Zoomers, they said that everybody uses that meme.
01:51:10.000And they also used the don't care, didn't ask, plus your white meme, which is kind of funny to think that this show has penetrated the mainstream, even just with like a few viral memes.
01:52:49.000Your roots really matter that much to you in your neighborhood?
01:52:52.000Or do you want to be safe and secure and live in a place where your kids are going to grow up safe and secure and so on?
01:53:00.000I mean, it's a legitimate question.0.73
01:53:02.000Yamato says, What do you think white-black relations would be like today if not for the cultural Marxist subversion of the mainstream culture?0.88
01:53:12.000I think it would probably be the same-ish.
01:53:17.000He goes, well, without the subversion of culture, because you can't ignore culture, but I still think, honestly, it would basically be the same.0.64
01:53:29.000A lot of people think that the media has caused the conflict, and a lot of people, this is the argument, they say, like, this black white thing is a distraction.
01:53:37.000They don't want us to work together against the elites.
01:53:40.000And there's some truth in this, but why do you think the elites are manufacturing diversity?
01:53:49.000The elites are manufacturing diversification, racial diversification, because they know.
01:53:55.000They know the sheer improbability, close to impossibility of a moment ever happening where racists are going to hold hands and act in a collective fashion against the elites.
01:54:10.000And if that doesn't tell you what you need to know about diversity, then you have no clue, right?
01:54:16.000I mean, the elites, the bankers, the These global planners and elites and bureaucrats, I mean, they know what they're doing here.
01:54:25.000They know exactly what they're doing and they know it works, right?
01:54:30.000And so when they're doing that to us, I think we should learn from their playbook and say, well, if the elites are staking their control, if their big play is to diversify the country in order to sow discord and chaos, I think discord and chaos is probably what you're going to get.
01:54:49.000You know, largely, When you're looking at racial antagonisms, it's largely due to the behaviors of the races.
01:54:56.000It's largely due to these naturally occurring frictions between groups of people because of their different behaviors, because of their different mannerisms, customs, because of their different expectations for one another.0.77
01:55:09.000I think that the conflict is naturally occurring.
01:55:11.000I mean, the media is exacerbating it, but I think that you're going to get it no matter what.
01:55:16.000Because there was racial conflict ever since the civil rights era.
01:55:55.000Life in Hell says, I'm starting to realize a number of high profile blacks are unironically adopting the black Hebrew Israelite reality of black supremacy.0.99
01:56:04.000It's easy to dats right them, but do you see majority blacks adopting it to justify black supremacy actions?0.99
01:56:27.000I mean, maybe they won't be religious adherents, but I could see black people being taught and believing that they are like, you know, ancient aliens or something, that they're the real tribe of Israel and this and that.
01:56:41.000I could see that becoming mainstream, certainly.
01:56:43.000It's definitely been gaining traction.
01:56:46.000State Hater says if you could live a thousand years, would you?
01:56:49.000Can you say for sure that the possibility is negligible?
01:56:52.000Yeah, I would live for a thousand years if I could.
01:58:31.000Drew says America first and the Groypers have inspired me to participate in local politics and start a family.
01:58:38.000So far, lost 75 pounds, quit drinking and smoking pot, and following your advice on building a small network of people I can trust if protesters ever visit.0.77
01:59:23.000I remember being in college and I would go on yik yak.
01:59:26.000If you remember what that app was, maybe you guys do, maybe you don't, but it was this social media app and it would have posts that were anonymous from people in your area based on your location.
01:59:42.000So you would go, for example, I was in Boston University, so it would be like this Twitter feed essentially, but for people within a certain radius geographically.
01:59:54.000And so everybody within that radius could post anonymously these short Twitter like posts.
01:59:59.000In this feed, and you would upvote them and downvote them.
02:00:03.000But I remember I would go on there from time to time, and every single post, every single post was like, I have no friends, I'm so alone, I hate myself, I'm an alcoholic, I'm addicted to drugs, blah, blah, blah.0.89
02:00:19.000And all these people, and I'm sure that this happened, you would have all these people on Twitter who would say, when I was first getting my start doing this show, they would say to me, Oh, you're a loser, you don't go to parties.
02:00:31.000Oh, Nick Fuentes on campus, that guy doesn't have any friends or whatever.
02:00:35.000And I'm sure it was those same people that are signaling about going to parties and getting wasted and all this that then go on yik yak when it's anonymous, right?
02:00:46.000You know, when it's the daytime and they're on Twitter, then they're going to talk about, oh, you're not a part of the party scene and that means you're not cool.
02:00:55.000And then at 3 a.m. at night, when they're all alone in bed and it's just them and God, right?
02:01:03.000Then, when you're anonymous on Yik Yak, then you're talking about, oh, I hate myself and blah, blah, blah.
02:01:08.000So, you know, that's a real difference.
02:01:11.000You know, if you are wondering, gee, well, Nick Flensis is right wing and you've got people that are equally left wing, I guess everyone just has a point of view.
02:01:19.000It's like, no, our point of view is clearly right because our point of view makes people actually live lives that they are designed to live.
02:01:26.000You know, we're playing by the manual, we're using the handbook, which is called the Bible.
02:01:41.000Because, you know, it's not something like an economic calculation where you're weighing the value of one thing versus the value of something else and you're calculating the value of those things and getting a number and comparing them or anything like that.1.00
02:02:00.000It's that racial diversity is going to destroy the character of this country.1.00
02:02:06.000Like, it's not even a question of pros and cons, it's all cons.1.00
02:02:13.000You know, we get an increase in economic output.
02:02:18.000And maybe to some extent there is like, you know, more culture in the sense that, not better culture, but more variety of culture, which is not even necessarily a good thing.
02:02:30.000There's some expressions of it that are good.
02:02:33.000And the cons are that like our civilization will be destroyed.
02:02:37.000That's like saying, have you weighed the pros and cons of like letting strangers come in your house and live with you?
02:02:44.000And then replace your family in your own house and then you're homeless?
02:02:47.000Like, no, it just seems like it makes sense to me.0.52
02:02:51.000So, no, I mean, the idea of mass immigration, there are certain fundamentals that are just violated in that.
02:02:59.000You know, it's like there's no, there's no like benefit, there's no quantifiable benefit that outweighs having a homeland.
02:03:09.000There's no quantifiable benefit, no matter what it is, that would justify the elimination of my people or the threat that that would be possible.
02:03:44.000Hater Times says the Justice Department, which is to arrest and charge as many people as possible, it at least would take money away from their political campaigns.
02:03:57.000Bobby Grace says, I don't want anyone else to get jealous, so don't say anything, but I was one of the 15 patriots Trump chose for a special donation.
02:05:00.000You know, I am coming at this conversation with four generations basically of experience in the city.
02:05:07.000Not like I've lived my ancestors' lives, but, you know, obviously my worldview has been shaped by the people that have lived here.0.91
02:05:15.000And I've got like fat retards that don't even live here that are telling me, like, oh, no, no, well, this meta analysis says you're wrong.0.99
02:05:36.000Literally, I will be driving down 290.
02:05:39.000This has happened two times in my life.
02:05:41.000That I will, this is not the only time I've ever been in the ghetto, but this has happened two times in my life that I've been driving home and I don't like that there's traffic on the highway, so I'll get off at an exit in a really bad neighborhood.
02:06:05.000And you could hear it, and it's lived, right?
02:06:09.000So, and this is my parents growing up in the city.
02:06:13.000This is my parents growing up in the city when they had a business.
02:06:16.000And there was a program with the city, and I forget, I don't want to give away all the details, but there was this program they had to comply with with the city to support minority owned businesses where they had to do some of their, I don't know what exactly the requirement was, but because they did business with the city, their small business did business with the city.
02:06:38.000There was some requirement that they had to support minority owned businesses in Chicago, like black owned businesses in Chicago, or some initiative for whatever.
02:06:54.000And this was through the program, by the way.
02:06:56.000This is what all the businesses did.0.60
02:06:57.000They would literally just find some black guy, right?
02:07:00.000Or some, not like off the street, but they would get hooked up with somebody through a program or through people that had to comply with this program as well.
02:07:08.000And they would literally just find random people through this program.
02:07:11.000And they would go to a store like Best Buy, for example, if they needed a computer, and they would give a minority person the money to go into Best Buy and buy the computer.
02:07:21.000The minority person would go into Best Buy, buy the computer, come out, give them the stuff.
02:07:27.000And that is an example of one of the programs that existed.0.89
02:07:31.000They did business in a really bad neighborhood, they did business in the South Side.
02:07:35.000Again, I don't want to reveal too many details for personal reasons, but for privacy reasons, I should say.
02:08:55.000Yeah, and I've talked about that all the time on the show.
02:08:59.000And I actually even asked my priest this when I was going through CCD.
02:09:04.000My priest would come in every now and again and field questions from people in CCD.
02:09:10.000CCD is like religious education for Catholics.
02:09:15.000And I asked the priest, I said, because he used to be a monk, and I thought monks were only like Buddhist monks at the time because I was a kid.
02:09:23.000I thought that monks were only like, you know, Eastern.
02:11:28.000Ass Mad Woman says, in regards to social media and speaking of turning off everything, lots of my family members are huge hunters for the simple fact that they enjoy being alone in the woods.
02:11:38.000And can truly reflect on their lives and faith.
02:12:37.000Nova Courses I know I'm late, but it's crazy that Tucker, a guy who flew out to have a private meeting with Trump, This story on the Malkin protest, who retweeted you during that time frame, which means Tucker probably saw and looked at your account.
02:13:21.000So if you think that's good, think about what you don't know.
02:13:24.000Tactical Nuke says, used to think Daily Caller was cool a year ago, but they're so cringe now and shout, We're not racist, please, we're not racist, whenever some random blue check mentions them on Twitter.
02:13:40.000Anadose says, What do you think about the right switching to a bigger focus on mental health solutions such as trauma based therapy for mentally ill or LGBT people in the future?1.00
02:13:50.000It seems like many on the left stay because they feel like there's no way out for them.
02:13:55.000If the right offered a clear, real path to a better life in society, it might be very powerful.
02:14:09.000You know, I know everyone thinks we're just going to trick people into coming along with us, but the disadvantage is we don't have the media.
02:14:15.000So our message has to be compelling, and the only way it can be compelling enough to win is because it's true.
02:14:20.000So the idea that we're going to try this gambit where it's like we're going to come up with something clever, like, What if we champion mental health and climate change?0.97
02:15:18.000But the bigger focus is the idea that we're going to create this diversion where, oh no, it's going to be secular liberal humanism, but a little bit different, but a different take on it.
02:15:52.000So I agree with the premise, but the solution is right in front of us.1.00
02:15:59.000You know, what is the answer for LGBT people?0.99
02:16:02.000I mean, I understand there's a psychological argument, and I think that LGBT behavior is a response to trauma.
02:16:10.000But I don't think that that's compelling because, on purely secular grounds, because according to the left, I think that they believe that homosexuality is an adaptive behavior.
02:16:23.000They think that even if homosexuality is the result of trauma or the result of psychological problems, they don't.
02:16:31.000But even if they did, I think that the argument is that it's a, even if they were to concede that, it is a, It is an adaptive behavior, which is to say that that's like a form of coping or something like that.
02:16:44.000But no matter what, the point being is they don't see it as an immoral behavior.
02:16:49.000They don't see it in itself as a behavior that causes problems.
02:16:55.000You know, they think that it might be the consequence of problems or something like that, but they think that it's okay.
02:17:00.000And the overriding moral imperative on their part is people's right to their expression of sexual identity.
02:17:08.000And so, you know, like Darren Beatty said, Darren Beatty did a really good podcast with.
02:17:14.000I think it's Chris Buskirk from American Conservative or American Mind.
02:17:19.000He did a podcast with him recently, and Darren Beatty said something to the effect of moral imperialism wins every time.
02:17:26.000I forget what he was contrasting that against with Republicans, but strictly talking about the left and their moral imperialism, the imposition of their morality on us, these moral imperatives, saying like, silence is violence.
02:17:42.000In other words, you must play by our moral code.
02:17:46.000It's not like we can have our different moral codes.
02:17:49.000No, if you don't like our moral code, if you're not an active participant in our moral system, you're like our enemy and you're a bad person.0.99
02:17:59.000So I think that's why it has to be Christianity.1.00
02:18:02.000Mark says, I appreciate how you have some beliefs that repel autists.0.99
02:18:07.000For starters, wives cheating is worse than husbands cheating, but it's equal before God.0.89
02:18:11.000Race mixing is wrong, but it's not a sin.0.61
02:18:14.000But can you explain to spurreds like me how these are possible?
02:18:18.000I mean, look, you either get it or you don't.
02:19:13.000If your wife cheats on you, it's a betrayal, and she's stabbing you in the heart, and in some ways, it's like, you know, it's almost like a runaway slave.
02:19:44.000Not like I'm looking to get married anytime soon, but a friend of mine just got engaged, and I was thinking to myself, I'm like, you know, how much does a wedding ring actually run?
02:19:52.000Just out of curiosity, and I looked it up $8,000.
02:20:11.000And then it's a down payment on a house.0.64
02:20:13.000And then if she's going to be the mother of your kids, it's you're putting up money for her to live in your house, and you're putting up money for her food, and you're taking care of her, and you're taking her on dates, and it's flowers, and it's this, and it's that.0.68
02:20:26.000And she's the mother of your kids, she's the mother of your children.0.86
02:20:30.000And she goes out and she's messing around with some other guy.
02:23:28.000And if you fail on that, I think that's more of a failing of discipline than it is that you're committing or you're not committed to your wife or something like that.
02:23:37.000But I think with a wife, it's very different.
02:23:38.000I think with your wife, it's very different.0.99
02:23:40.000Now, if everyone wants me to explain all of these obvious things, look, books suck.1.00
02:23:45.000Women cheating should get the death penalty.1.00
02:23:48.000Race fixing should be reported to the FBI.1.00
02:23:50.000I mean, if you don't understand this, then you're just not intelligent, okay?
02:24:13.000I have my finger on the pulse of the universe, okay?
02:24:17.000It's like you see all these, like, you know, in the same way that an atom, the atomic structure looks like the solar system orbiting, I am in tune with that, like, vibration of the universe.
02:24:28.000It's in that vein that I know these things.
02:24:54.000So, it's probably not even equal before God.
02:24:56.000I mean, I say that because I don't know officially, you know, okay, well, the Catholic Catechism says, I don't know what the technical thing is.
02:25:04.000I haven't consulted classical theists on this one.0.73
02:25:07.000But it seems to me that cheating is qualitatively different between the genders, and therefore it'd be like a different sin.0.61
02:28:46.000I never wanted to be an academic, so I'm not interested in that.
02:28:49.000I'm not interested in some people, love that, and good for them.
02:28:52.000But the ceaseless going around and around in these fruitless discussions, I think it's way more fruitful, in my opinion, to gain life experience.
02:29:02.000And not like the two are mutually exclusive.
02:29:04.000It's not to say you shouldn't think or read books, but I think for most people, I think even for people that are academics, The things that are most fruitful and maybe insightful are your life experiences.
02:29:13.000You know, I think what gives meaning even to good books, what gives meaning to the things that you read is the experience in your life often.
02:29:22.000You know, I know for my own sake, I didn't really understand even the significance of a lot of music and movies until I became an adult.
02:29:31.000You know, I remember listening to songs and when I went through like puberty in high school or in middle school, I guess, you know what I mean, when I became like an adult.
02:29:44.000And you start crushing on girls and you start living a life, you start gaining independence, you start having your own thoughts, everything starts to mean something different.
02:29:53.000You know, the songs you used to listen to take on a different meaning, the things that you watch in movies take on a different meaning.
02:29:59.000You know, once you become an adult, once you become like a thinking, functioning, complete person, you know, then that's actually what gives that stuff meaning.
02:30:07.000So, uh, but I also agree that typically experiences are way more insightful than books on like a one to one level.
02:30:28.000Goofy Goober says Spent a couple of days in Texas with my fiance's family, prayer before meals, conservative, and her cousin is a trad wife with four wonderful, healthy white kids.0.86
02:30:41.000You know, I still cringe when people say, like, oh, white kids.0.90
02:33:19.000Yeah, I mean, I have a lot of Mormon friends, but I don't think Mormons are real Christians.
02:33:25.000And Mormons literally had to swear, right up until recently, they had to swear this oath.0.67
02:33:32.000That they wanted God to avenge Joseph Smith against America.0.91
02:33:37.000So recently I did a show and somebody asked me about Mormons and I was like, not real Christians, enemies of America.
02:33:45.000And all these Mormons flipped out on Twitter.0.87
02:33:47.000All these Mormons got so butthurt about it.0.99
02:33:51.000This Mormon was like, well, Nick is just gay anyway.1.00
02:33:55.000And he changed his username to like, fuck Nick Fuentes and all this, which is so typical.0.99
02:34:00.000But what I meant by that is like, There was a phenomenon where, up until I think it was the 60s or the 40s, it was part of Mormonism that you would have to swear this pledge.0.98
02:34:13.000It was part of like your initiation or something where you said that you wanted God to avenge Joseph Smith.
02:34:21.000And the implication was against America.
02:34:27.000It was like they wanted God basically to punish America, to punish our country because of this war between the Mormons and the U.S. government.
02:34:37.000Back in the 19th century, this massacre that happened.
02:35:24.000You could say that it's an offshoot of Christianity in the same way that, like, Muslims, in the same way that Islam is roughly an offshoot of Christianity.
02:35:34.000You know, up until I think the 15th century, they treated Islam as a heresy, as a Christian heresy.0.87
02:35:42.000And I feel similarly basically about Mormons.0.73
02:35:48.000I mean, I think they'll have the same fate as anyone else that's not Christian, which is to say that, I mean, yeah, they're probably going to hell unless they have God's mercy.1.00
02:35:57.000I believe in no salvation outside the church.1.00
02:36:00.000So, you know, you're either Catholic or, you know, basically you're going to have to make your case.0.83
02:36:06.000You're going to have to require God to step in.
02:36:09.000And, you know, of course, we all require God's grace to have salvation.
02:36:12.000But, um, Our rules are pretty specific.
02:36:29.000And I also think that they're, I mean, they, again, I mean, they could stop doing the loyalty pledge or whatever, whatever that pledge is, but I still think they have an animus against America.
02:37:31.000It's the And the carcinogens that are involved in the actual cigarettes.
02:37:35.000I don't even think it's the nicotine that's so bad for you.
02:37:40.000And alcohol, I think, can be enjoyed responsibly.
02:37:43.000But I think that if we were to simply draw the line that all these illicit drugs remain illicit and taboo, then I think that that's good enough to me.
02:37:53.000Yeet Peterson says Boston Groyper slash Eternal Cringe can be found nightly providing oral sex under the Queensboro Bridge for $5 per month.0.98
02:38:03.000Also, for $5, you can send a super chat or subscribe to Nick's website.0.95
02:38:08.000Okay, over 1,300 hours of content for only $5 a month.
02:40:21.000A lot of these books that are really worth reading, most people wouldn't even be able to understand.
02:40:25.000Like, I remember James Alsop, when he used to do his videos, he had a bookshelf in the background in his set, and it had Revolt Against the Modern World on the bookshelf by Evola.
02:40:41.000And I remember when I read that book for the first time, I was like, there is no way in hell that James Alsop could understand this book.
02:40:50.000I'm sure if I asked him to explain a handful of concepts from that book, he would be unable to.
02:41:47.000I will especially not tolerate that by women.1.00
02:41:50.000You think just because we have a nice rapport and we have a friendly relationship, I'm going to allow a woman to come in this chat and call another man gay?1.00
02:42:37.000And don't get me wrong, I didn't agree with that guy, but I will stand side by side with a MGTOW incel woman hater any day of the week before I allow some woman to call a fellow king a fag because he's disillusioned about women, right?0.94
02:42:55.000Or for some woman to start trying to emasculate a man because of his views on women.0.99
02:44:42.000You know, whenever I see a lot of them lately deer, raccoons, possum, geese, or other birds.
02:44:52.000And every time there's a little part of me that's like slowly trying to steer towards them, and then I'm like, no, you don't want to do that.
02:46:14.000I was engaged to a girl literally a week away from moving across the country together and she cheats on, leaves me for some fag, but she wants to travel and go to festivals.0.97
02:46:23.000My biggest red pill by far death penalty for sure.1.00
02:47:09.000He said that women cheating is worse than men.0.96
02:47:12.000But my wife, I mean, I'll lay my jacket, I'll take off my suit jacket and put it over a puddle so she can walk over it because that's what a man's supposed to do.1.00
02:47:50.000In the same way that it's worse for a man to beat the shit out of a woman, it is worse for a woman to cheat on her husband.0.99
02:47:58.000You know, that's how I think of it.0.99
02:48:00.000That's one way to, that's not how I think of it, but that's one way to think of it.0.98
02:48:06.000I would never uppercut a woman unless my life were threatened.1.00
02:48:11.000Now, if a woman was coming at me with some kind of a weapon, like a pen or a slingshot, I mean, maybe I would need to intercept her jaw with a vicious uppercut.
02:48:26.000But that is only in the most extreme case, and I would never, I would never, you know, drive pleasure from that, from an engagement like that.
02:48:37.000That is not something I would find to be funny.
02:48:42.000Life and death, security of my person and my well being, I don't joke around about that.
02:48:48.000So, if a woman came at me, I don't know, with a rock or a baseball or, like I said, a pencil or something, and I had one shot to intercept her head with my fist, I mean, if that's the only way, I would use all other non lethal tools except for these.
02:49:11.000But, you know, sometimes you got to defend yourself.
02:49:16.000But I would never do that unless in a life or death situation.
02:49:19.000Or, you know, if she was just trying to attack me or anything like that.
02:49:25.000Ben says, I was scrolling through the comments on a TikTok about you and some female liberals said, wow, Nick's cult of personality is so scary.0.91
02:49:32.000And all I could think was, you're damn right, sweetie.0.93
02:52:36.000Like, just getting fucking crippled or something.0.99
02:52:39.000Because, you know, when men fight each other, men fight.0.99
02:52:43.000When a man beats his wife, I mean, don't get me wrong, there's severe cases of domestic abuse.
02:52:47.000But most of the time, when they're talking about the abuse, it's like, you know, you get hit or you get slapped or whatever.
02:52:53.000I'm not saying it's okay, but if, like, two men are going at it, it's like a woman's going to get hit, and there's not really going to be a lot of it, it's not really going to be an exchange.
02:53:03.000It's just going to be, like, really one sided.
02:53:05.000But if you've got two men going at it, it's like, what are they going to break the coffee table?
02:53:10.000They're going to be doing spine busters on the coffee table and show slams to the cabinets?