00:00:34.000Of the trip now, left Brussels today and then went over to London, England, in the United Kingdom, where he's meeting with Prime Minister Theresa May, where he'll meet with the Queen tomorrow, and then he'll be on his way to Scotland and then to Helsinki by Monday.
00:00:50.000So we're going to be talking about that today.
00:00:51.000We're going to be talking about the conclusion of the NATO summit, which has been pretty good.
00:00:57.000We're going to be talking about his comments in the United Kingdom today, very consequential about the Anglosphere, about the relationship between the United States and the United Kingdom.
00:01:07.000We'll be talking about China and North Korea, which are now both back in the news.
00:01:13.000Yesterday, we intended to talk about the new tariffs on $200 billion worth of Chinese goods that were proposed yesterday.
00:02:53.000I would have liked to have started the show afterwards, but, you know, after you let it go for about, I think, five or 10 minutes, then you can no longer resume the same stream.
00:03:02.000So, yesterday, the show cuts out at like the 45 minute mark.
00:03:05.000And I will say it's always this Maddalena character.
00:03:08.000Whenever we talk about him, whenever we do a video with him, the show shuts down, right?
00:03:13.000Whenever we go after homosexuals or other groups, it always shuts down.
00:06:52.000I forget the details of it, but he's in this bar in some capacity, sells the car so he could buy pizza making equipment so he could start making pizzas at the bar.
00:08:14.000Get this in a private phone call with his marketing company or some kind of company associated with Papa John's, he's explaining to them how they can prevent bad publicity.
00:08:27.000And while he's on this conference call talking to this company, he's saying, you know, look, we try to get good publicity.
00:10:06.000However, in honor of Papa John, John Schnatter, I am calling on all of my viewers, all of my followers tomorrow to order Papa John's pizza.
00:10:18.000Wherever you are, whatever you're doing, cancel your dinner plans or change them.
00:12:42.000He left this morning after a press conference.
00:12:45.000And I don't know, he was kind of, he was a little off in the press conference.
00:12:49.000You can tell he's much more at home in the rallies because he's a little bit more casual and he's able to, I think he's a little bit more at liberty to say what he feels.
00:12:57.000But you can tell in the press conference situations, Maybe high stress situations.
00:13:02.000It's definitely a different side of him.
00:13:05.000And I just have to laugh at some of the things that he said.
00:13:08.000He goes, he says at one point, he's a stable genius.
00:13:13.000Some journalist raises his hand and says, Well, you know, is it going to be like the G7 summit where you say one thing here and then you tweet another thing when you're on the plane?
00:13:24.000And President Trump says, Oh, no, I'm very, very consistent.
00:14:29.000He doesn't have the opportunity to look at all these details.
00:14:31.000But to me, it's like, Shouldn't somebody say something?
00:14:36.000Shouldn't somebody who is in the administration say, hey, I love you, big guy, but actually it's Minnesota?
00:14:43.000And not for any other reason than it just makes the guy look bad.
00:14:45.000And this is something that I noticed even in the early months of the presidency people in his staff just not making him look good, giving him the best information, representing him well.
00:15:56.000All the major countries, with the exception of the UK, are not paying above 2%, which is what is called for in NATO.
00:16:02.000They say for this to be effective, for this to be efficient, we can't have America spending more than all the other countries combined by far.
00:16:12.000To have collective defense, you need it that every country is a player, not just America defends every country and takes on their defense budgets.
00:16:20.000So there's only five countries that are meeting those obligations Italy, France, Germany are paying far less, and they're getting the same protection.
00:16:28.000So, we talked about this at length yesterday.
00:16:31.000President Trump came out today and said they all have agreed to raise their contributions to 2% in a very, very, very short amount of time.
00:16:40.000We don't know what that's going to look like.
00:16:42.000We don't know if that's going to happen.
00:16:43.000He had hinted that they might go to 4%.
00:16:47.000Maybe then we'll start thinking about 4%.
00:16:49.000But then there was a big report that came out later today.
00:16:53.000And we don't know how true this is, but some reporters said that there are sources who say from inside the closed door meeting that President Trump said, That if the rich countries in NATO, which he's referring to Spain, Italy, Germany, and France, if they don't get their contributions above 2%, America will, quote, do their own thing, which to me is awesome, right?
00:17:19.000And so President Trump and the White House have said that they were not planning on making that kind of an ultimatum, that they were not threatening to withdraw from NATO, but perhaps behind closed doors, that was the deal.
00:17:30.000Pay up or we're going to do our own thing, which is a beautiful thing.
00:17:33.000They say that he made that threat if they didn't raise the contributions by January.
00:17:39.000If by January they raise their contributions, then it was very successful.
00:17:43.000And it's worth noting, by the way, I don't think we talked about this too much yesterday, but this was the position of every administration for the past 25 years.
00:17:53.000People want to make it out like Trump is introducing chaos into the equation.
00:18:07.000They oppose the same pipeline, but Trump's the one who does something about it.
00:18:11.000So, you know, when he goes out and says promises made, promises kept, I think we have to really appreciate, we really have to appreciate that not only is Trump not failing, but he's doing better than people who were in the system.
00:18:25.000And what is scary about this to the establishment, what is really encouraging about this to us, is that what was the message?
00:18:34.000That they used against Trump in the election on both the Republican and the Democratic side.
00:19:11.000You wouldn't know what to do with yourselves if it weren't for us controlling things, making sure you're all right, taking care of you.
00:19:18.000And we understand how they govern very badly, not in the interest of the people.
00:19:22.000And so I think we have to really appreciate the fact that Trump gets in, he has zero experience in military or government, zero experience in Washington, D.C.
00:19:33.000And not only is he not failing, he's doing better.
00:19:35.000And so then the question becomes okay, so if he got in with no experience, Is that a testament to the fact that he is some superhuman?
00:19:44.000He is so incredible that, in spite of the fact that you require so much experience, he's able to succeed.
00:19:51.000Or is it that, well, maybe you don't need experience to succeed?
00:19:55.000Or perhaps, most damningly, does experience make you less effective?
00:20:01.000Does more time in Washington, does more experience being a senator, being a congressman, more time in the swamp, does that make you less effective?
00:20:11.000And maybe it's not even a question of effectiveness.
00:20:16.000Are the people in charge even trying to do what's best by us, do what's best for the American taxpayer and the American people?
00:20:23.000That's what's so damning about President Trump.
00:20:25.000And so we look at the media narrative, we look at a lot of things about President Trump, and we look at why it would be so dangerous if he were allowed to become a legitimate president, if his wins were allowed to be seen as legitimate.
00:20:39.000Well, then what you see, and I think the natural conclusion, is that not only do we not need these people, maybe they're parasites.
00:20:46.000Maybe they're sucking the blood out of the country.
00:20:49.000And it's not that Trump is some superhuman, it's not that he's able to succeed in spite of his lack of experience.
00:21:29.000Things that he said, which give us an idea of the direction we're taking with the UK, with this special relationship that everybody talks up.
00:21:37.000So, there were several comments that he made.
00:21:39.000The first is about the Brexit deal that they're making.
00:22:03.000Very, very simply in the 1950s, as the European coal and steel community.
00:22:08.000Or what it was after World War II was, well, let's just make it so that we can share our resources.
00:22:14.000And the idea was initially, if you're thinking about coal and steel, at that time, the thought was we can reduce the risk of war on the continent after two very devastating world wars in Europe.
00:22:26.000They said we can reduce the risk of war if these strategic resources, which are necessary for war, which are coal and steel, are tied up.
00:22:35.000In international exchange between all these different countries.
00:22:39.000And gradually, it only expanded in terms of the scope and the size and the jurisdiction of this common market.
00:22:46.000They eventually expanded into a common market where they lowered trade barriers.
00:22:50.000And then by the 1990s, they had the Maastricht Treaty.
00:22:53.000They had the European Union fully come into effect with the euro.
00:22:57.000Now they have the European Commission, the European Parliament, the European Court of Justice.
00:23:03.000They have all kinds of different committees and things, all kinds of regulations.
00:23:07.000They've got the currency, they've got the European Central Bank.
00:23:10.000And so now it's a full fledged, what we call a supranational organization.
00:23:13.000And so what that means is that there is a level of sovereignty above the national government.
00:23:19.000So in the United States, ultimately we answer to the federal government, ultimately, for most matters.
00:23:24.000You know, for most matters of import, like if you're talking about treason or about interstate commerce or you're talking about conducting foreign affairs or if you're talking about the law, it goes to the Supreme Court or it goes to the Congress or it goes to the president.
00:23:39.000Well, in the European Union, the way it works is that ultimately it goes to the European Union.
00:23:43.000Court of Justice, or it goes to the European Commission, or it goes to the European Union.
00:23:47.000And what's so toxic about the European Union is that if the UK says, hey, this isn't really working for us, we're getting a lot of immigrants, they're ruining our country, they're not Englishmen, they're breaking stuff, they're not drinking tea, they're raping people, please stop.
00:24:04.000Well, you can't change it because the European Parliament writes the laws.
00:24:09.000So if it was one country, they could say, well, we'll send people to our parliament and we'll get it changed.
00:24:14.000Well, now, sorry, you're getting outvoted by Germany and France and Spain and all the others.
00:24:19.000And there's a multitude of problems happening it's trade.
00:24:22.000It's the economy, it's regulations, it's immigration, it's all kinds of issues.
00:24:28.000So Britain said, well, we need to get out of the European Union.
00:24:31.000So the way it works in Britain, they're a lot less democratic than the United States.
00:24:37.000And mind you, the referendum is not legally binding.
00:24:40.000They have parliamentary sovereignty in the United Kingdom.
00:24:42.000So when they say, we want a British exit from the European Union because it's not working out, they're only putting it to a vote for the people as basically a suggestion to Parliament.
00:24:52.000So they say, do you like Brexit, or rather, do you like the European Union?
00:24:55.000Or do you not like the European Union?
00:24:57.000Do you want to stay or do you want to leave?
00:25:01.000Well, then the parliament says, Thank you for your input.
00:25:04.000And then they go off and they decide what they're going to do with it.
00:25:07.000And it's been a very trying process because over the past two years, you've seen that the government really doesn't want to do Brexit because the government is full of globalists who like the European Union.
00:25:18.000They're all in this sick orgy of bureaucracy and government, and it's a very disgusting thing.
00:25:25.000So they've been dragging their feet on this for a long time.
00:25:27.000Even though people voted, and it stunned the world.
00:25:30.000All the polls said that Remain was going to win, they were going to stay in the European Union.
00:25:34.000It stunned the world that people voted and got a majority to say that we want to leave the EU.
00:25:40.000And so since that point, the government's been dragging their feet.
00:26:10.000This is something they're talking about in the UK.
00:26:12.000I think it's a building or maybe it's a place.
00:26:15.000But at this location called Chequers, they came up with a deal.
00:26:20.000The Conservative Party, the Tories, finalized the details of a deal that they've been working on for two years that would be the evolution of Brexit.
00:26:38.000So, what we're looking at now is a soft Brexit where basically we're still in the European Union, but we say we're not.
00:26:44.000I mean, that's effectively what the Checkers, the so called Checkers deal says.
00:26:48.000The Tories, the Conservative Party, they've been working on it for two years.
00:26:52.000They finalized the details and they come to the people after this lengthy process and they say, hey, so I know you wanted, we know you wanted an exit from the European Union.
00:27:37.000After all these years, they say, yeah, so we're still part of the market.
00:27:41.000The European Union still writes the rules for trade, for economy.
00:27:45.000And if we have a problem with that, well, we can go up to them and say, we have a problem with it, you know, so you're still effectively under the European Union.
00:27:54.000They compare it to the deal that Norway made, where Norway said, we don't want to be in the European Union.
00:27:59.000It's going to compromise our culture, it's going to compromise our way of life.
00:28:02.000We still want to be in on the money, we still want to be in on the trade.
00:28:06.000And so they're looking at a similar thing with that.
00:28:08.000Now, I talked about yesterday briefly people are leaving the government like crazy.
00:28:13.000You had the secretary, or rather the minister, Of Brexit, quit the government, he resigned.
00:28:20.000You had the foreign minister, Boris Johnson, he resigned the same day.
00:28:24.000And what they're saying is that Theresa May's really in, she's having a lot of problems, let's put it that way, where there's a revolt within her own party.
00:28:33.000She's losing the confidence and the support of her party.
00:28:36.000She's losing the support of the Brexiteers.
00:28:38.000She's losing the support of everybody.
00:28:40.000They're saying that she might have to go to the opposite party to get support for a Brexit deal.
00:28:44.000Maybe they won't even support her on that.
00:29:05.000Trump strolls in and he gives some comments in a conference and he says, you know, I told Theresa May to do it one way and she did it basically the opposite way.
00:29:16.000Maybe she took my advice and it would have happened a different way.
00:29:19.000And then he goes on to say, actually, I think Boris Johnson would be a fine prime minister.
00:29:24.000Because Theresa May, she's not doing such a good job.
00:29:26.000And then he says that actually, if this checkers deal gets approved, we would not be entering into a bilateral trade deal with the UK and the US.
00:29:34.000And you've got to understand that's a big deal because one of the big reasons that the UK said we might be okay if we leave the European Union is because they anticipate that they would get a very favorable bilateral deal with the United States.
00:29:48.000The US doesn't like to deal with the European Union because it's lots of regulations and bureaucracy and.
00:29:55.000And so the UK said, well, maybe we could mitigate the damage to our economy leaving the EU if we enter into some kind of an arrangement with the United States with this increased maneuverability, if we're liberated from the shackles of the European Commission and the European Parliament and all the rest.
00:30:12.000Well, Trump goes in and says, yeah, that Brexit deal that you're working on, yeah, that's not going to work for us.
00:30:27.000So, it's a lot of very positive things we're hearing out of the president.
00:30:30.000It's a very good situation, I think, for populism and nationalism in the world.
00:30:36.000I think Trump is, in a way, putting the pressure on the U.K. Who knows if that'll work or not?
00:30:41.000I think that's certainly an element that they're considering the bilateral trade deal that would be sacrificed if they went through with Theresa May's deal.
00:30:49.000If Theresa May's deal doesn't go through, she'll probably get replaced.
00:30:53.000She would probably lose a vote of confidence.
00:31:06.000But I think it's particularly good that we're talking about immigration now in the context of Europe.
00:31:13.000If you've noticed, if you've really been paying attention on this show and in the news in general, he's really been hitting this hard, talking about it in Italy, talking about it in Germany, now talking about it in the United Kingdom.
00:31:25.000It started out in the G7 summit when he was in Europe, or I'm sorry, he was in Toronto, he was in Canada, and he said that he really likes Salvini, who was.
00:33:41.000You look at China, you look at North Korea, not as the media likes to paint them, particularly a certain ethnic group, a certain neoconservative ethnic group, which says everybody is literally Hitler.
00:33:54.000You know, we find out that this country votes against Israel, and suddenly they're evil.
00:35:29.000And, you know, I basically predicted that.
00:35:31.000And look, I don't say that to brag, but I say that to shore up our position on Trump, which is to say that we are constantly trying to interpret his actions, constantly trying to interpret his rhetoric about foreign policy to try and predict what comes next, to try and see what the intentions are, what the motives are, because we can never be privy to all the information that the president has.
00:35:56.000But if we can look at what is public, what is said, what is done, and we adopt some kind of a narrative to interpret those events, we can get an idea of what's really happening.
00:36:06.000And when you think about the rhetoric that's been said by the president on immigration, about Russia, that their arrival, I think you can really strongly come away that Trump is who he says he is.
00:38:35.000And what's fascinating about this, if you look at the math, things start to make sense when you look at them in detail.
00:38:41.000China cannot even reciprocate with these tariffs.
00:38:44.000That's what they've been doing so far.
00:38:45.000You know, Trump puts down $3 billion, China puts down $3 billion, Trump puts down $36, they put down $36.
00:38:51.000Trump proposes $200 billion in tariffs.
00:38:54.000There are not even $200 billion worth of goods going from the U.S. to China for China to put tariffs on.
00:39:01.000The total volume of American exports that go to China are less than $160 billion, let alone $200 billion.
00:39:10.000So they're already, if you added on $200 to the already $39 billion, that's already a multiple of what we even do in total volume of trade with China in terms of exports.
00:39:25.000And so that's where, when Trump says, we can't lose a trade war, we're in such bad shape that we can't lose, I mean, that really starts to make sense.
00:39:43.000We just start running up, oh, we'll tariff this, we'll put a tariff on that, we'll put a tariff on that.
00:39:47.000And by the way, the $200 billion in tariffs that he's proposed is not only insane, I mean, that's a massive number, but it's also targeting industries that would destroy the Chinese economy.
00:40:34.000It's a game of chicken, as it always is.
00:40:36.000Who's going to blink first in this negotiation?
00:40:38.000The challenge is that although China might be more vulnerable in this case, in terms of the economy, Trump is much more vulnerable politically.
00:40:49.000In the sense that if we don't get oil under control, if we don't get this trade war under control, it could really hurt the economy, the American economy.
00:40:57.000If it hurts our economy in this month, five months out, four months out from the midterms, Trump could pay a really heavy political price.
00:41:05.000If it goes on for another two years, God forbid.
00:41:08.000Trump might not be in office after the next election.
00:41:11.000And so that's where it becomes difficult.
00:41:13.000That's where the negotiation comes into play.
00:41:15.000We can really hurt their economy, but if they can stomach the bleeding for a little while, it could hurt Trump and backfire in a big way.
00:41:24.000But then, of course, the North Korea part factors in.
00:41:26.000There was just this big announcement today that the U.S. is requesting from the U.N. that the U.N. shut down the transport of petroleum products into North Korea.
00:41:37.000North Korea is starving for energy, starving for all kinds of resources.
00:41:49.000They've been doing all kinds of things to help them out behind the scenes.
00:41:53.000And of course, that is to lessen the pressure that the United States can exert on North Korea.
00:41:57.000North Korea's only bloodline, or their lifeline rather, is China and to some extent Russia.
00:42:02.000And so China to punish America and Russia to punish America for other things, such as Syria, the arms race, whatever, they're going to try to relieve the pressure on North Korea.
00:42:11.000And so that's why it's all connected in a big way.
00:42:14.000So, Trump put out a statement to, and now he's really, you can see it's this full on offensive where he's going after China, saying, none of this is acceptable.
00:42:23.000And then he goes to North Korea, we're going to shut off your oil.
00:42:27.000And then North Korea, surprise, surprise, sets out this very, very, this very flowery, flattery letter to Donald Trump, calling him Your Excellency about 100 times, praising Trump, saying, we're making great progress and all the rest.
00:42:49.000You know, I think what people are learning as we look at the presidency is that it's not like you just win and then it's over, and then you lose or it's over.
00:44:19.000Yeah, some people caught the Kanye lyric thrown in there.
00:44:22.000You know, look, not to jump all over that again.
00:44:26.000People always give me a hard time about this because I'll have someone ask a question about something that happened a long time ago, and of course, I can't help myself.
00:48:52.000And so I know a lot of some people had a problem with that.
00:48:56.000I think the high IQ people who watch this show, who like me, They had no problem with what was said.
00:49:02.000But a lot of people were like, you know, Nick, you really didn't handle that right.
00:49:06.000As things come out about this person, I think you're going to see a lot of people start to say, and just like Neilan, by the way, too, took a lot of heat for that one.
00:49:13.000Then we find out cheating on the wife, the money's going to the Mexican wife, and the situation with the campaign manager and all the rest.
00:49:52.000Instead of using logic and reason and thinking, and that's what you have to do as a political person, you're letting your emotions get the better of you.
00:51:19.000I mean, well, and it's funny because you look at the immigration situation where it's becoming Mexico in LA, in Texas, in many cities that are in the north.
00:51:36.000If you were to bring somebody from the past, if you were to go in a time machine and bring somebody from 1905 to America, And he took them to LA, they would be like, well, did Mexico invade America?
00:52:52.000Accelerates because as the foreign born population increases and they're very tight knit and they speak the same language and they're very tribal, well, then not only is it a static population of white people and an increasing amount of foreign people, but then the white people start to leave.
00:54:43.000To even understand what it is, you have to be pretty fringe.
00:54:47.000You know, you have to be one of these people who's online all the time, who's on the computer.
00:54:51.000You know, for example, my parents don't know what 4chan is, they don't know what poll is, they don't know who Q is and these posts and all that.
00:55:55.000If you're going to organize, get people involved.
00:55:59.000Say, call up your local GOP Congress office and say, hey, I've got about 25 volunteers who are going to work weekends and we'll knock on doors and we'll do phone banking, we'll contribute money, we will be your army.
00:56:14.000Or what if they all got together and said, hey, Let's all 25 of us join the local GOP.
00:56:20.000And within a year, we'll be the majority.
00:56:22.000We'll be calling the shots in this county.
00:56:24.000And then it's another county, and then another.
00:56:27.000Or in college, instead of having college kids put on armor and a cool mask, whoa, I built this, hey guys, I built this sword out of PVC.
00:56:38.000We're really going to hit a bunch of anarchists.
00:56:41.000Maybe instead get those people in the college Republicans, get them in the Leadership Institute, get them in Young Americans for Liberty, get them connected.
00:56:50.000People I know that are either, well, I don't want to say where they are, but people that are very influential, people that may or may not work in government, people that may or may not work in media, who are constantly asking me, hey, do you know anybody that's based, who has a clean resume, they're in college and can take an internship here, can take a job there, can write and work here?
00:57:58.000Let's vote for Republicans or let's not be leftists anymore.
00:58:02.000Antifa has probably done more good for the right wing than the entire alt right put together because Antifa is making people think twice about who's the good guys.
00:58:12.000And then when our guys get out there and fight them, what's the takeaway?
01:00:24.000Stereotypes resonate with people, but that shouldn't happen because if people didn't act the same all over the country, despite the fact that they're all individuals, they wouldn't relate to each other.
01:00:33.000You know, if I called up somebody from Massachusetts and relayed to them a very offensive stereotype, it shouldn't make sense because, of course, everybody acts totally independent of the group.
01:00:42.000But anyway, Kanye says, well, I was late, but they're racist.
01:00:49.000And, you know, I should be able to be late.
01:00:51.000It's a problem of accountability, you know, and in the end, if we're going to have true equality, and this is what started getting me to think about race relations in the country in a way that I didn't before.
01:01:02.000If you're going to have equality in the country, it has to be a two way street.
01:01:24.000How many times have you heard that in the media, in culture?
01:01:27.000I told you that story about, what was it, Jamie Foxx?
01:01:32.000When he was on Saturday Night Live, he talked about the movie Django Unchained, a movie where he gets to kill white people, and that's awesome.
01:01:39.000In his monologue for Saturday Night Live, he said, I star in Django Unchained.
01:01:44.000That's a movie where I get to kill a bunch of white people, which is pretty cool, or something like that.
01:03:06.000I have a strong feeling that in that case, there would be more animosity towards the white victim of a bad crime for saying a word than a black person committing the crime.
01:03:18.000Not in that exact way, but it happens all the time that you see murder, that you see rape, that you see things like this by the black community.
01:03:27.000But a white person says the wrong word, even in the right context, and it's suddenly a genocide.
01:03:33.000So it really tells you a lot about the country.
01:03:37.000American Rebel says, When are you going to have Greg Johnson on to throw you around, bury Christianity into the ground, and basically make all Christians look stupid?
01:04:48.000He's a smart guy, he's a philosophy professor, and I'm continually disappointed by these academics.
01:04:54.000Everybody, all these academics think they're so much smarter than me, and every time I look at what they write, I look at what they put out there, and I say, you know, this is nothing really remarkable, this is nothing really exceptional.
01:05:05.000Now, that's not to say that they're very clever, and they have no problem convincing themselves that they're clever, but, you know, for example, with Will Chamberlain, Georgetown lawyer.
01:06:32.000You know, when you become somewhat famous, I'm not saying I'm famous, when you deal with people on a mass level, on any scope, you realize how, and this is going to sound bad, but you realize something very crucial about people, which is that the average IQ in the country is 100.
01:06:53.000And what that means is that half the population is at or below 100.
01:06:57.000And a sizable proportion are probably hovering around that anyway, even the people that are above.
01:07:02.000And when you realize that, you start to think about the world differently.
01:07:06.000People who comment in Facebook posts getting into arguments when there's a viral video and people are like, ha ha, Steven Crowder, you're so funny.
01:07:17.000And somebody is like, no, it's not funny.
01:07:19.000I mean, people who get into arguments on Facebook.
01:07:22.000People that you see shopping in Walmart in pajama pants.
01:07:26.000This is the vast majority of the population.
01:07:28.000These are the people you're dealing with.
01:07:30.000And so it makes you think differently.
01:07:31.000And this is, you know, people who get baited where I say something so, so obviously bait, you know, as if I'm like this normie who's just constantly, I really need the world to know God is not a woman.
01:07:41.000Of course, bait every time, but people fall for it.
01:08:47.000Look at the state of the movement since August of last year until now, whether it was optics war, thought wars, all these different formative conflicts, and in each case, who has come away the victor?
01:09:32.000But that said, I think it would not be unfair to say that I've been the most influential figure in the entire dissident right in the past year.
01:09:40.000I'm really remaking it in a way that just hasn't been done before, at least done successfully.
01:09:46.000I think I'm having the most success out of anybody.
01:09:49.000I'm bridging the gap between alt light people and connections in the establishment with ideas that before were outside the Overton window, outside accepted parlance.
01:10:01.000And I'm really doing it in a way that has never been done before.
01:10:03.000I think I've shown remarkable leadership in that area, and I think I should get a lot of credit for that.
01:10:08.000So, you know, as we look back on the many battles we've had with pagans, with spurgs, with Patrick Little's meme army, with all these different groups, women, you know, I say, thoughts, I say that I think we've been pretty decisively victorious.
01:10:26.000If you look at the long arc of history, I think it bends towards the Knicker Nation, it bends towards Vindication Nation.
01:10:48.000Is that not Nick Fuentes and his optics all over or what?
01:10:52.000And we see that the alt-right is completely marginalized for the most part in terms of you look at League of the South, Heimbach, all these people who have suspended their projects or they've gone into hiding or they've shut it down, which I either predicted or called for.
01:11:07.000People are basically on the same page in favor of Trump, in favor of political action, rallying around the American aesthetic flag optics.
01:12:06.000Kind of interchangeable, kind of redundant.
01:12:08.000But yeah, no, the MAP thing, you know, that's not really going anywhere.
01:12:13.000I think the far right has a way of taking really out there stuff and presenting it like it's this imminent thing, which is.
01:12:19.000A fine rhetorical strategy, but I mean, let's not pretend like it's anything more than it is.
01:12:24.000But I mean, yeah, these people, and this is what happens when you have no morality, this is what happens.
01:12:30.000You could go to somebody 10 years ago and say, hey, you know, those Christopher Hitchens videos are cool, but if you don't have morality and you're not bound to your morality by religious belief, who's to say that pedophilia is wrong?
01:12:45.000And they would say, that's outrageous.
01:13:28.000You need to know that the morality is objective, is true.
01:13:31.000It comes from an authority, which is not man.
01:13:34.000And then you need to be bound to it, which is if you believe in that God and everything that he represents, well, then you have to play by the rules.
01:13:42.000In the absence of that, you get literal pedophilia.
01:16:11.000It wasn't fun, folks, because I would say something controversial in high school, and high school Twitter would be like, Nick Fuentes is an asshole, 100 likes.
01:16:20.000And at that time, that was like a big number because I would get like, Five or ten because I was a smaller account.
01:16:26.000But like a regular account would be like, Nick Fuentes is a jerk.
01:16:28.000It would get crazy numbers because I was like the anti hero.
01:16:32.000But now it's wonderful because now I have so many followers.
01:16:36.000People from high school try and challenge me and I just embarrass them.
01:19:11.000I basically get to fin dom the haters for them to say, so get it all out.
01:19:15.000Hey, ask me another one and I'll collect the money.
01:19:19.000But no, Beardson's a good friend of mine.
01:19:21.000And the only people that hate Beardson are people that are weak, weak, insecure people because Beardson is a good guy and he's a funny guy.
01:19:29.000Now, you could say that the persona that Beardson has is silly or goofy or whatever, and that's the joke.
01:19:38.000But if you're just a guy, if you're a regular person, you understand he's funny.
01:23:17.000Not only that, but almost all the growth is caused by spending, and the spending is financed by debt, debt that they can't even keep track of, local and national debt.
01:23:29.000And so the Chinese economic situation is a lot more complicated than people make it out to be.
01:24:47.000Marcus Antonius says, I see morality and religious beliefs are on the table, so let's talk about the morality of race mixing or marrying a non Christian.
01:25:30.000If we understand that that's the purpose of marriage, we want marriages to last long, we want them to be compatible, and it's no longer for the benefit of the two people in the marriage, it's for the benefit of the children.
01:25:41.000You're finding not just a wife in the case of men, you're finding a mother to your children.
01:26:05.000But Generation Z is actually, there was this big article I was reading called Looking for Love Within Your Own Race, where people are actually having relationships within their own race increasingly among Generation Z in contrast to the previous two generations.
01:26:18.000But anyway, the point is this what's wrong about race mixing is that.
01:26:24.000You're decreasing the chance that the marriage will succeed, that it'll be harmonious, that the children will be raised with a coherent identity that's healthy for them, and that's immoral.
01:30:31.000But those are the ones that unite our people.
01:30:34.000You know, the boomers get together and they talk about, oh, you remember all this stupid stuff from a million years ago nobody even remembers?
01:30:43.000Nobody cares, boomer, about how everybody used to smoke cigarettes everywhere all the time.
01:30:48.000They were smoking on the Johnny Carson show, they were smoking on an airplane.
01:31:08.000I met, you know, me, my parents, and their friends the other day were at dinner or something, and they were watching some comedy video, and the guy was like talking about some old thing that nobody even knows about, and he was like, I bet the kids think that's an iPhone app.
01:33:20.000I have a huge brain, bigger than yours.
01:33:22.000But when you just go in for the low ball, left side of the bell curve kind of stuff, it's like, you know, you're just embarrassing yourself.
01:33:29.000And you're paying to embarrass yourself.
01:34:45.000It gets you the weekly World Report podcast, the weekly 2018 Election HQ podcast.
01:34:51.000You get this show every day, audio only, podcast format, and you get a special role in the Discord server.
01:34:58.000All you have to do, once you sign up, and I think there is a bar for that when you're making your account and everything, But if not, on the premium page for existing members, it says edit login information.
01:35:09.000You go in, you put it in, I'll get you all hooked up.