00:01:45.000Don't think the founders had that one in mind.
00:01:47.000And it also was intended for citizens, not for immigrants.
00:01:52.000You know, if the First Amendment protected everyone's right to have their religion and express it in every country, we'd have our police in the Congo or in Uganda fighting against the Lord's resistance army.
00:02:08.000I love the smugness while saying the most horrific and incorrect things.
00:02:12.000Why don't we hear about it in the mainstream media?
00:02:14.000We don't hear about it on Fox News, by the way, either.
00:03:11.000They are still unacceptable, inappropriate, and do not reflect the view of our team here at Rightside.
00:03:15.000We are currently reviewing the matter and will handle it internally.
00:03:18.000By the way, to give you a further sense that he wasn't joking, He, his producers later went on to retweet someone congratulating him for those comments.
00:03:26.000The rise in your profile has drawn attention to your social media output, which includes some political figures who might be considered outside the mainstream.
00:03:35.000For instance, on Jan 15, Nicholas Fuentes, who we believe attended the white nationalist rally in Charlottesville.
00:03:45.000Now, do you not think that you should be concerned about linking your social media?
00:04:38.000What I'm talking about, the change I'm talking about, is going back to the natural order of things, the natural order ordained by God, which prevailed in this great land up until just about 50 years ago.
00:04:50.000So we're not talking about going back hundreds of years.
00:04:52.000That's exactly what Muslims talk about.
00:05:46.000What kind of a person would I be if a woman gets in my face, if she gets all right up in my face and says, you know, listen, you pig, you either give up the thought patrolling or you're going to be, I'm going to be your mommy.
00:05:59.000And that's, what kind of a person would I be if I said, okay, mommy, I'm sorry for the thought patrol?
00:06:05.000So I had to tell her, I said, look, I like you, but not giving up the thought patrol.
00:06:09.000And she said, okay, well, I'm unfollowing for now.
00:11:16.000There was an audible gasp when I saw who it was, who it was behind the Reagan battalion.
00:11:21.000I saw that allegedly, allegedly, they're saying it could be, there may be potential evidence to suggest that Benny Policek is behind the Reagan battalion.
00:12:02.000So now the majority of this counter argument is built upon the assumption that withdrawing $4 billion a year, and probably a lot more, depending on how you look at what constitutes military.
00:12:14.000Aid would result in an all out war in the Middle East.
00:12:19.000He lists three reasons for why this might precipitate a Middle Eastern war of all against all in a very Hobbesian fashion.
00:12:26.000First, our aid given that could easily be bumped up to $4 billion if we reduced our $3.8 billion commitment or all foreign military assistance.
00:12:35.000Furthermore, Israel could not launch any kind of war against Syria, Iraq, Iran, Lebanon, Jordan, or Egypt because they do not have the manpower, they do not have the money to administer it.
00:12:44.000He says that there is no evidence that Israel is not a good ally.
00:12:47.000I would point him to the Lebanon affair.
00:12:49.000I would point him to a 1993 when it was found out that Israel had been selling American military tech to Chihuahua operation that is the worst out of all allies, more than all of our enemies put together, save.
00:12:59.000Russia and China, that is not a good alliance.
00:13:01.000Now, I don't know how much more time I have here, but I guess we can count to 50.
00:13:10.000So he says that there are lost jobs if we stop providing Israel with aid to buy things from our defense contractors.
00:13:17.000Here's a solution invest all the money in our defense contractors.
00:13:19.000From the intelligence community, which said that in 95% of contingencies in the Persian Gulf, which is where a conflict would inevitably happen, Israel would be useless militarily.
00:13:29.000He said that, well, most of these things are just stemming from the war.
00:13:33.000Most of these are just stumbling from the cataclysmic world.
00:13:35.000Refugee crisis, oil crisis, U.S. intervention would all be a contingency if there was a war, but I just took out all three reasons why there wouldn't be a war.
00:13:43.000And if you look in the 1973 war, the oil weapon leveled against the United States by the Arab countries was actually states that Israel is a liability to our strategic interests, not an asset.
00:14:41.000No, no, by the grace of God, it hasn't affected me, and it may affect me in the future.
00:14:46.000Well, but but okay, but understand, but understand what you're saying.
00:14:51.000Here, I will tell you the difference because you cannot prevent domestic crime, you cannot prevent Americans killing each other, you cannot prevent, I mean, to a certain extent, a society has crime, and you cannot prevent people from committing crimes without infringing on their constitutional liberties.
00:15:08.000In a free society, we have to accept that to some degree.
00:15:10.000However, with immigrants and with illegal immigrants in particular, every act of crime committed by them is 100% preventable.
00:15:21.000Why can't you just, like, for all these people to come into the country, like all these Mexicans and such, third worlders, why can't you just, like, I don't know, castrate them so they can't have kids and, like, say this is the price to come in?
00:18:10.000If you want to get your mug, mine just came in the other day along with five broken ones, and we're not going to get into that.
00:18:19.000If you want to get your very own America First Media mug, 16 ounces, 16 powerful ounces of liquid, fluid, you could probably put solids in here, I imagine.
00:18:32.000Remember, you can get that at amfirstmedia.com.
00:18:35.000We're getting in a new shipment of those, and those will ship out after Christmas, unfortunately.
00:18:40.000We're all sold out after less than two weeks of the first run, but we're getting a second run in there, and we are looking into other merch.
00:18:48.000So if you want to check that out on amfirstmedia.com, we'll have more merch.
00:18:52.000Coming, but what an exciting announcement!
00:21:35.000Maybe it'll work That works donate more money to get us online if you if you donate money in the super jet Donate money to bring Nick back if you want to resume viewing.
00:21:49.000That's what the future is gonna look like by the way.
00:21:51.000It's gonna be like Watch an advertisement for Bud Light do a microtransaction to wake up in the morning.
00:21:58.000Hey, good morning Dave Do a microtransaction to brush your teeth.
00:22:03.000Do a microtransaction to activate toothpaste dispenser in the bathroom.
00:25:50.000It started on this fateful day, February 6th, 2017, on the Right Side Broadcasting Network.
00:25:57.000Since then, we've done 174 episodes of this show, 174 over the course of three seasons.
00:26:06.000I believe the first run was from February 6th until mid May, then from May 29th until Charlottesville, and then from late August until now.
00:27:31.000Right before, many of you saw, about 300 people saw our testing stream, which I accidentally made public.
00:27:39.000It was a private stream, and then I went in and I changed the settings to public so that when I streamed now, it would be public and not private.
00:27:47.000But it actually just made the stream where I was testing it public.
00:27:51.000So 300 people got to see me in my sweatshirt, messing around with people in the Discord.
00:28:11.000And I didn't get a chance last night, as we had so much content, to give a big thank you to our very own, she's not a thought, our honorary woman in the movement, Alyssa Cordelia, who knitted me a red scarf.
00:28:25.000Sent it to me yesterday because my heat was down.
00:31:23.000You got Megamine and you got the Super Soldier, so the Aryan Super Soldier, so that's pretty good.
00:31:28.000But I actually took a big L today because I drafted Katie Hopkins, and she got arrested by the South African police for spreading racism right now.
00:31:36.000She's being held hostage, so that wasn't good.
00:31:39.000Yeah, she's not going to be a very active player this week.
00:34:37.000But more broadly, I mean, to get a bigger audience, to answer the question on a more direct level, on a more general level, The key here is that we have to be appealing to a broader audience.
00:34:49.000That's the thing that I think the alt right doesn't understand.
00:34:53.000There was this decision that was made after Halegate by the leadership in the alt right that they would not, they decided they didn't want to be a big tent movement.
00:35:04.000Whereas before Halegate, before that NPI conference after the election, where Spencer said, Hail Trump, Hail victory, and people threw up the Roman salutes, there was a decision that was basically made.
00:35:14.000And that was kind of the line in the sand where Ramsey Paul, Vox Day, Jared Taylor, Greg Johnson kind of said, all right, we're not really alt right anymore.
00:35:23.000And the alt right became defined as this very isolated, very specific thing.
00:35:28.000Whereas before, the alt right was Milo Yiannopoulos, Mike Cernovich, Breitbart, Bannon, Trump.
00:35:33.000You know, it's this big tent kind of a thing.
00:35:34.000It was the pickup artists, it was anime people, it was irony people.
00:35:38.000It got shrunk to the very small clique, this very small clique of people who read the same books, who went on the same websites.
00:36:51.000You have to reach them through all the outlets, especially with the younger generations.
00:36:55.000Like, if we have more conservatives trying to switch stream entertainment on Twitch, you know, they mix their entertainment with their views, you know, back and forth.
00:37:06.000We have people out making music, just all the cultural aspects.
00:37:11.000And those are the things that I think resonate the most with people in the sense that you're going to get a very particular kind of person.
00:37:18.000You're only going to get a very small slice of people with long form political commentary.
00:37:24.000You know, there are very few people already that would sit down and watch an hour of news politics content, of in depth analysis for an hour a night, every night, for five days a week, as you would for somebody who likes music or likes to watch video game streams or likes.
00:37:40.000Art or short movies, or you know, something like that.
00:37:43.000So, you're right, that's definitely a big part of that.
00:37:45.000And we see people, and again, there's this element as well here, even with the cultural stuff, where you have people that are making something that is very esoteric, something that is for a very small audience.
00:37:56.000I'm talking about the fash wave kind of stuff.
00:37:59.000And there's, I think, some overlap between the wave or the vapor wave aesthetic, which I think has a mass appeal, versus the fash wave, where it's very specific, it's very esoteric, it's inaccessible for a lot of people.
00:38:11.000And we just have to find a way to bridge that, to get content out there and form kind of a gradient, form kind of a scale, something that's more, I guess, scalar as opposed to just, you know, concrete Apollinean, where it's, you know, you have this, that, and the other, but rather have it be, you know, a scale, have it be a gradient of content.
00:39:24.000How I would reform the education system?
00:39:26.000I think we would totally reform it because, and this is actually something that I learned when I was in middle school.
00:39:31.000I was on the superintendent's leadership council, middle school, a very prestigious position, and actually very red pilling.
00:39:37.000That was a big red pill because they picked two no, I'm sorry, they picked four kids from every feeder elementary school two girls, two boys.
00:39:45.000And for my school, it was a black guy and a black girl.
00:40:00.000Anyways, what we learned in that council was that our school system right now is largely based on how America used to be economically, in the sense that we get the summer off because back 100 years ago, kids would have to go and work on the farms for the big harvest.
00:40:16.000You know, they would have to go home and work and make a little money or whatever.
00:40:20.000And that's why school was only nine months.
00:40:22.000That's why it was structured the way it was.
00:40:24.000And so we would have to reform the school system.
00:40:28.000But a lot of the traditions, a lot of the systematic things are because of the way things used to be.
00:40:33.000They're not really fitted for the 21st century economy.
00:40:36.000So, I mean, more broadly, if we're talking about logistical reforms, we would have to make the school system work so that it was tailored to how people are going to get jobs and how people can support themselves in the 21st century.
00:40:50.000So I know it's a meme, but things like computer science programming, that's a must.
00:40:54.000Have to be learning practical life skills.
00:40:56.000I would swap out a lot of the high level science and math with consumer economics, home economics, telling people how to buy insurance, how to do accounting, how to do these simple and basic things.
00:41:07.000And then I'd have to, you would look at Scandinavia and how it's structured over there, where you look at high school and people basically decide are they going to pursue a more technical path, a more of a trade, something like that, or are they going to go on to a higher academic thing if they're going to be an engineer, something more specialized, and fit it more towards that.
00:41:27.000In terms of politics, in terms of political reforms, we have to put The control of the schools back into the hands of the parents.
00:41:34.000Locally, you have to have local and parental and community control over what the kids are learning and how the school works because, of course, a school in the city of Chicago is not going to function the same way as a rural school in Bismarck, North Dakota, or in Moscow, Idaho.
00:41:49.000So you have to have the parents in control of it so that, you know, not only is the curriculum not being dictated by D.C., which gets money from Israel and Saudi Arabia, but, you know, also they can tailor the education to the needs of the community and the social values there.
00:42:08.000Yeah, I think it's a big moral conundrum that my state, they subsidize degrees in something I'll never get the job, or basically paying for people just to entertain themselves.
00:42:21.000And there was a gifted program I was in when I was a kid, and they just got rid of it because not enough minorities were getting into the program.
00:42:30.000So they just scrapped the whole thing.
00:44:10.000You know, there were a lot of rumors for people not in the Discord that the boomer was thinking about race mixing, a cardinal sin on the show.
00:44:18.000But I guess it was, but hey, he says it was Photoshopped.
00:46:10.000There are so many pieces that need to be put back together.
00:46:13.000And, you know, you're later in life coming back to the church, which is great because so few people, you know, they grow older, they grow cynical, and they don't come back.
00:46:21.000But especially for the young people to encourage them to go out there.
00:47:08.000I had an argument with an alt right guy when I first came into the server, and we were talking about optics, and I just disagreed.
00:47:15.000Like, I thought Charlottesville was a mess, you know?
00:47:19.000And I'm like, Nick's all about, you know, good optics, making a realistic movement that can get, you know, the everyday average American citizen behind it.
00:47:28.000And you can't do that with the LARPers.
00:47:30.000And he was like, well, Nick's optics aren't that good.
00:47:32.000You know, he's associated with these people in the past.
00:47:58.000And I always got into it, at least, particular to me, if the question is about my optics, with this excuse that I have plausible deniability.
00:48:06.000I'm learning, I'm growing, and I learned the hard way after Charlottesville, after seeing it degenerate to such an indefensible point, where I think I really do have a plausible deniability where I can say, you know, look, I was a young guy, as we all are when we're young, young and foolish and impulsive, and maybe subject to those passions, those extreme tendencies sometimes.
00:48:30.000And I am, I think, maybe a warning to people in the future, people in this movement, and maybe that gives me a little bit of credibility in that sense, where I can say, you know, look, I was there for people that might say I'm not a believer, for people that might doubt my sincerity.
00:48:46.000I can say, you know, look, I marched in Charlottesville.
00:48:48.000I was on board with the movement and I fell away because I saw that it wasn't working, you know.
00:48:54.000So I think that it kind of goes both ways.
00:48:56.000I think we can all make mistakes with optics, but it comes to, you know, are people going to make the correction?
00:49:01.000Are they going to go down the right course?
00:50:36.000Like going to church and going to the gym and everything like that.
00:50:40.000Well, you have to understand that a lot of this new right wing originated with Donald Trump.
00:50:45.000And this is something that I'm rediscovering now, which I think I always believed, but I kind of strayed a little bit when I got into the alt right.
00:50:53.000But really, Donald Trump was the progenitor of this new right wing.
00:51:00.000I think he was really the one who inaugurated this.
00:51:02.000And with the Make America Great Again message, I think was this vision, was this overall call on America of restoration, of a return to greatness.
00:51:13.000And when you hear a message like Make America Great Again, of course, what is America but a composite of all the individual pieces, all the individual components?
00:51:23.000And so when people hear a message like Make America Great Again, or they hear even Spencer, Become Who You Are, it is this call of restoring the country.
00:51:32.000You know, we can only make the country great again by making ourselves great, by going to the gym, by rebuilding our communities brick by brick.
00:51:40.000And we are the individual bricks that will make the new country, that will make the new civilization, that will send us to the stars.
00:51:47.000And so I think that's a big part of it.
00:51:48.000And it's funny because you contrast this with the left and look at the culture that the left champions in terms of personal conduct.
00:51:56.000Whereas we celebrate physical fitness, personal responsibility, going to church, having families, being a man, taking responsibility.
00:52:04.000The left celebrates conduct that is consuming porn, having hedonistic, degenerate sex, abusing drugs, smoking pot, sitting around all day, abusing your body, abusing your soul, abusing other people.
00:52:18.000And, you know, how many abusers are over there?
00:52:20.000So I think that highlights the contrast in the personal conduct, the virtues that motivate, the political aspirations that inspire.
00:52:28.000And those are, I think, the clearest differences.
00:52:31.000So I think that's why the right wing is dedicated in a lot of ways to self improvement.
00:52:37.000Yeah, I've just noticed this kind of a resurgence.
00:52:40.000And at like even my school, it seems like a lot of the right wingers who share this like opinion similar to mine, of course, not extreme, they seem to be working out, being active, and everything like that, expanding themselves in the mind and the soul and the body as well.
00:54:19.000But what do you think about the future of the alt right as far as maybe you leading like a new intellectual movement or political movement?
00:54:29.000And what do you think that would look like and what that would be called?
00:54:32.000Yeah, well, I mean, of course, the phraseology, a lot of these things are evolutionary.
00:54:38.000You know, the alt right didn't start out with like Richard Spencer and Paul Gottfried sitting in a room and saying, well, it'll be called this and these will be the memes.
00:54:46.000And a lot of the aspects of politics and specifically the nature, the physiognomy of politics.
00:54:52.000Of our resistance right now, of our dissent against the establishment, against the mainstream, is this very decentralized and simultaneous order politically.
00:55:03.000And so, the America first, you know, that's my brand, obviously.
00:55:36.000I think a lot of the alt right was this flirtation with a lot of people who are dissatisfied, who had this qualm with the mainstream, and they wanted to go out there and they wanted to make their statement.
00:55:49.000And I think as Trump channels these frustrations in productive ways, as he channels these things, as these grievances are heard, as we have our presence felt, I think the fanaticism and the extremism will proportionately go down.
00:56:04.000I think it will reduce, and we will find ourselves in a moderated position back towards around where Donald Trump was in 2016, which is those American optics, that America first, traditionalist kind of an ethic.
00:56:18.000And in a much more, I think moderation is the key word, a more moderated movement.
00:56:22.000Maybe not in principle, but in its aesthetics, in its optics, in its methodology for how they want to achieve reform.
00:57:00.000I think that a lot of us who are kind of dissatisfied with the alt right already kind of see you as a leader, one of the main leaders, at least.
01:00:04.000Well, number one, College Dropout, because Change the Game, the inaugural album, it's the best.
01:00:10.000It's the best, in my opinion, in terms of changing things.
01:00:13.000So College Dropout's number two, or excuse me, for number one.
01:00:17.000For number two, I would have to say Graduation.
01:00:20.000You know, it's just an instant classic.
01:00:21.000I don't know if it changed everything as much as College Dropout, but you have a lot of great songs.
01:00:26.000Number three, I would have to say late registration.
01:00:29.000I know that's kind of a basic bitch lineup because it's the trilogy and those are the classics.
01:00:35.000People might say beautiful, dark, and twisted fantasy.
01:00:37.000People might even say 808s because that, you know, really radically changed it, really put in place that more RB kind of pop, hop, you know, hip hop sound.
01:01:25.000But I'm trying to figure out how would I red pill my club and try to get the message out there rather than getting a normie conservative message?
01:01:40.000I get this question a lot from people who are in their college organizations or they're in high school or they're among.
01:01:45.000Basic conservatives, and that's how we all start out, I think, in some way, shape, or form, maybe some more than others, in sort of this Republican or libertarian mindset.
01:01:56.000The easiest way to red pill that I've found, the easiest way to get people on board with us, is to simply ask questions.
01:02:02.000I think a big problem that we have we have a lot of autists in our movement, and that's not necessarily a bad thing, but I think we come on a little bit strong because of that.
01:02:11.000We have all these answers, we're all very well read, we all know the arguments and the memes, and there are so many things that other people don't know.
01:02:40.000Anyway, but I think the proper approach is the inquisitive approach, asking questions, asking about these patterns, asking about what's going to happen in the next 50 years.
01:02:54.000Why do non whites vote nine to one for Democrats?
01:02:59.000If it was all non whites who were voting in the next election, don't you see something wrong with that?
01:03:05.000The fact that not a single state would go red, not a single state would go Republican.
01:03:08.000I always start with the electoral angle, but then you got to ask questions like if you're a constitutionalist, if you're for these liberal, individualist American values, how do you reconcile that with the fact that the millions of people coming over here?
01:03:24.000Come from countries where they have no tradition of that, and they've never had that, and they've never had wealth, and on and on.
01:03:29.000And so I think a passive, inquisitive approach is far more valuable.
01:03:35.000And I don't really even think it matters the substance, so long as that's the approach, than the direct, the assertive, the aggressive, angry, you know, combative kind of a thing, which can be useful if you're trying to make a demonstration.
01:03:47.000But if it's a one on one, I think the inquisitive is the winner.
01:03:51.000Yeah, I've found that I've red pilled a few friends by going slow and careful in terms of demographics, but.
01:03:57.000Whenever I mention marriage between two different demographics and how it's actually bad when you're sort of going against the white demographic and damaging that, I've come across a few friends who immediately just, oh, this guy's a Nazi.
01:04:16.000And the funny thing is, it's like I'm a minority, but even so, I still understand the white demographic is imperative to restoring the nation.
01:04:28.000And that even lends itself to the alt right thing, which is very exclusionary, where you can have minorities that believe that this should be a majority white or a super majority white country, you know, as it was for a long time, which is, I think, a stark difference between this new movement and the alt right.
01:05:16.000My question was kind of about electoral politics.
01:05:19.000So, down the road, a lot of people say that the Republican Party will lose states like Texas and Florida just due to the demographic disadvantage.
01:05:31.000What do you think the Republican Party should do to compensate for that?
01:05:36.000Yeah, well, I mean, the long term electoral advantage is with the Democrats because of the birth rates.
01:05:42.000I mean, you look at the Hispanic birth rate, and it is on the decline.
01:05:45.000It is only about 2.3 or 2.4 these days, which is only slightly above the replacement rate.
01:05:50.000But you contrast that with the white birth rate, and you look at how many babies are being born.
01:05:57.000And the Republicans are in a very bad situation.
01:05:59.000If they can't bring over non whites, they continue to rely on the white vote, which I think will, you know, whether or not they choose, I think that's the course.
01:06:10.000I mean, there's a couple of things that we can do.
01:06:11.000I think, for starters, if we converted the Republican Party to more of a labor party, to more of a socially democratic party, I know people don't like to hear that because I don't agree with the economics, and many people don't agree with the economics, but you appeal to the whites in Minnesota, you appeal to the whites in Vermont, in Maine, in New Hampshire, Massachusetts, and you can probably stave off a complete demographic apocalypse if you can shore up all the states that Trump won.
01:06:39.000Plus, a few more, maybe even Washington, maybe even Oregon, if you can get that remaining liberal white vote by becoming more of a labor party.
01:06:47.000I think you could also bring over a sizable proportion of the Hispanic vote or the Asian vote if you did that kind of a thing.
01:06:53.000And if we accentuated maybe the traditionalist stuff and the working party credentials, we could probably bring over a lot of Hispanics in Texas and Florida as well.
01:07:02.000People don't like to hear that, but that is another way we could stave off a complete electoral winter.
01:07:07.000But short of those few tricks, those are not.
01:07:27.000And when that happens, they take away our First Amendment, our Second Amendment.
01:07:30.000They take away the Internet, and on and on and on.
01:07:33.000And the long term solution has to be ending all immigration and making it so that the middle class can have kids again, making it so that the middle class has franchise again, economic franchise.
01:07:45.000And so, the way that you do that is you have an economic system in place where people can have kids, which means that you have paid parental leave.
01:07:53.000It means that you have cheaper health care.
01:07:56.000I don't know if that means you have a nationalized health care.
01:07:58.000I don't know if that means that you have subsidies.
01:08:01.000If you have some kind of, I think Ann Coulter has talked about making it so that high deductible insurance or extreme type insurance is universal, but then everything beyond a certain point is privatized.
01:11:07.000It's just something I thought was weird, but you just sent all the clips you sent me for the video were just you talking about Catboys, and I guess that's funny, but I just thought it was kind of weird for your year anniversary to be all Catboy videos and one Paultown video.
01:11:23.000So I kind of took some creative liberties.
01:11:26.000I actually had to dig for clips myself of good moments about the show.
01:11:30.000So I don't know if you've got a chance to look at it.
01:11:32.000I just sent it to you a couple hours ago.
01:11:43.000Oh shit, I no, what's oh shit, I'm in fucking Pacific Northwest, man, and I'm not used to being out of town, usually central time.
01:11:53.000And I've I haven't changed my fucking god damn it, okay, sorry, uh, hey, so I'm live right now, and it okay, sorry, man, yeah, yeah, no, I I know, I saw, hey, as long as it's out there, I saw he did edit out all the Catboys and Paul Towns I sent you.
01:12:10.000I left one of each in, and I love Paultown.
01:12:13.000I hate to not include more Paul Town, but the Catboy thing, it's just something I don't know.
01:12:21.000I took a creative liberty and I hope everyone liked it.
01:15:54.000So do you think that Paul Nealon, coming from Wisconsin, I myself, southeastern, I live a little outside Milwaukee, Do you think Paul Nealon's ruining his chances for a seat in the Congress with what he's doing on Twitter, going full?
01:16:08.000I don't know the word for it, but he's just gone totally focused on talking about Jews now.
01:16:14.000Yeah, I was a big supporter for a long time.
01:16:21.000I think what he's doing is interesting now.
01:16:23.000But the reason that I got on board with him in such a big way was because I said, look, here's a guy who's kind of being, he's memeing on the internet.
01:17:13.000So I thought it was interesting what he was doing initially, where there was kind of this illusion, these subtle things on Twitter, but now the fixation, he's become the Jew guy.
01:17:46.000But when he's no longer talking about trade or immigration or the things that Wisconsinites care about, then he's not trying to win, I don't think.
01:17:55.000That's a different kind of election, then.
01:18:49.000Well, again, the high schools have to be geared towards are you going to go into vocational schooling or are you going to go into a more specialized field?
01:18:59.000The way that high school works now is it's basically it's a like a do you have the audio going on?
01:19:20.000At my high school, they were just trying to get their numbers off of what percentage of seniors went on to college and what percentage graduated.
01:19:27.000And it's turned into a whole industry in and of itself.
01:19:30.000They get the counselors and they get the advisors coming in.
01:19:35.000And it can't work like that because not everybody should be going to college.
01:19:40.000And part of the problem now, what you're seeing is that the market is oversaturated with professionals, people with degrees.
01:19:46.000And now you have a lot of people that took on $100,000 in debt and they wasted four years of their prime.
01:19:51.000Where they should have been getting experience and getting skills and working their way up.
01:19:55.000And they come out at 22 or 23 or 24, they have no credit, they have no money, and they have no job because there's too many people with degrees.
01:20:03.000So high school's got to be geared towards getting people prepared for life.
01:20:06.000We have to rethink what is the purpose of high school.
01:20:09.000It's not to get people to read Jane Eyre.
01:20:11.000It's not to get people to get like a liberal arts education.
01:20:14.000It's to get them prepared to go out and provide for a family.
01:20:18.000And so a big part of high school should also be rearing people in virtue, rearing people in a social capacity.
01:20:23.000We hinted at this a little bit last week.
01:20:26.000Somebody called in and asked about should high schools, instead of sex ed, maybe they should have people dating or something like that.
01:20:33.000I think that should be a big part of it.
01:20:34.000They should be instilling children with Christian.
01:20:38.000Morals, with Christian virtues, building character, making these matches happening, building families, building communities, and making high school not this secular church, but turning into something that's a little bit more productive.
01:20:51.000So I think a lot of these, if we rethink the purpose of high school and we rethink of it, or we think of it now as a means of creating strong, virtuous, moral people that can go out and succeed in the world, I think that's got to be the objective for reforming high school.
01:21:57.000I'd just like to say, talking about Paul Nealon there, when you were referring to Donald Trump, when you said that he could talk about things like saying that all Mexicans were coming across the border and they were like rapists and stuff, but people thought that he was kind of funny.
01:22:14.000And that's why he could get away with that.
01:22:16.000You got Paul Nealon was on Twitter telling people to eat a bullet.
01:22:20.000I don't think you can put those two together with what he's doing now.
01:22:24.000I don't think he has the same kind of funniness.
01:22:49.000It's, again, it's one of those things where it used to be a small part, it used to be a feature.
01:22:53.000It was kind of funny, it was subtle, and then it consumed the whole thing, and the tone changed.
01:22:59.000And you're right, that is a big difference.
01:23:01.000Trump never went out and said, you know, it's these Mexicans.
01:23:05.000He didn't, you know, double down so hard.
01:23:07.000He played kind of like, oh, I didn't really know what I was saying, and it wasn't totally that.
01:23:13.000And I think that was a big part of it Trump understood that there are still rules, but you can kind of get around them in some ways.
01:23:21.000And so, but yeah, I think that's a good observation.
01:23:26.000It's real hard because I'd like to help them out a lot more, but when you use your real name and you're out there doing things, it's hard to associate, especially if you feel that they're kind of throwing away their chances.
01:23:40.000But that's what you get when you run up against Orion, I guess.
01:24:41.000How do you think he's been doing so far, his job, the Justice Department?
01:24:46.000I think he's been missing an action almost because when Trump was about to release the memo, the FBI director and the Deputy Attorney General, Roy Rosenstein, went to the White House to advise Trump against releasing the memo.
01:25:01.000So, my question is if the Justice Department was against releasing the memo, why didn't Jeff Sessions go there and tell Trump not to release it?
01:25:10.000Yeah, no, I think we will find out by March or April.
01:25:16.000I mean, my theory on Jeff Sessions is that he is busy right now.
01:25:20.000And if you look at, for example, the unsealed indictments, there's about 10,000 unsealed indictments right now.
01:25:26.000Normally, at this time, you only have about 1,000.
01:25:32.000What that indicates typically when you have sealed indictments, when they're not being released publicly, when the attorney general has made it a deliberate point to stay out of the limelight, to not Be too public, not be too visible, is that there is something going on where if the public knew too much information, it would compromise it because there's a network of people, right?
01:25:58.000But if there is a network of things, you know, you look at all these human trafficking arrests that have been going on, a lot of the drug things that's been advancing, the Inspector General report, which is coming out where they're investigating the Clinton Foundation, the FBI, the DOJ, the Obama administration, and all those different capacities.
01:26:19.000If we see a lot of major happenings, a lot of arrests, a lot of high profile arrests, I'll say that's probably where he was.
01:26:25.000But if we don't see that, I'll agree with you.
01:26:27.000If we don't see those major developments, I'll say he's not doing his job.
01:26:31.000But I think until we see the IG report come out, until we see what's behind these sealed indictments, it'll be hard to tell if it's a deliberate play and he can't jeopardize an investigation or if he's just not doing his job.
01:26:44.000But I think we've got to give him a chance.
01:26:46.000I think we've got to wait and see what happens there.
01:27:20.000And remember, If you are a premium member, five bucks a month on Maker Support, you get the priority on the call in show.
01:27:28.000So if you didn't get in this time, you want to get in, make sure you sign up on Maker Support and we'll get you in on the next one on Friday.
01:27:44.000We're going to remove the headset here and I will take your super chats and then we will call it an evening.
01:27:49.000We'll call it an evening on this very fun, very celebratory, One year anniversary show.
01:27:55.000Let's check our super chats here, real quick before we go.
01:28:00.000Third guy says, large military parades, my dude.
01:28:04.000And of course, he's referring to the report that came out today that Trump met with people in the Pentagon to plan a military parade, a large military parade sometime this year, which is very big, very exciting, showing his autocratic spirit, which I am excited about, more monarchical flair.
01:29:13.000You know, in the Bible, in the New Testament, Jesus Christ tells a parable about a man who had little and he didn't use it and it was taken away.
01:29:23.000But people who have a lot, much is expected of them.
01:29:25.000I believe the parable was in reference to, he talked about somebody who left his money with his servants and then he went away for a little while and he came back and one of the servants invested it and he got a bunch of money back and he said, Look, I'm glad you're back.
01:31:38.000This is a white community besieged by opioid addiction, very poor, working class.
01:31:46.000And so obviously, that carries a lot of symbolism that Joe Kennedy from this Boston political dynasty coming out to Fall River in an auto shop in front of an American made car.
01:31:58.000They were aiming for that working class white vote because they understand they need it.
01:32:01.000They need it in 2018 because the whites show up for the vote better than anybody else.
01:32:06.000And they need it for 2020 because they're going to need these states like Wisconsin and Michigan and so on.
01:32:11.000So that was actually the optics they were going for.
01:32:14.000And maybe it would have worked if it wasn't so fake, so phony, and also if their guy wasn't drooling.
01:32:20.000So I actually think that wasn't the worst thing in the world.
01:32:22.000The problem is they just didn't pull it off.
01:32:25.000If they could have pulled it off, it would have worked.
01:32:27.000If they had Bernie Sanders go and do it, maybe it would have worked.
01:32:30.000If they had, the problem is they don't have any good people.
01:32:32.000If they had somebody who was truly talented, who was truly a good orator, Who had some kind of credibility with working class people, they could have pulled that off, I think.
01:32:43.000But the problem is, the optics were so dissonant.
01:32:46.000Here's this rich guy who comes from political royalty, and he's going to go and talk to the plebs in Fall River, and he looks like a disaster anyway.
01:33:30.000And again, I've reiterated this on the show before.
01:33:33.000We believe in the Catholic faith because we think it's true.
01:33:37.000Regardless of the sins or the errors of the human institutions, the missteps, We believe because we think it's the truth.
01:33:44.000And so there may be scandals, there may be bad leadership at times or leadership we disagree with, but that doesn't take away from the divinity of the church, or rather, the divine authority of the church guided by Christ.
01:33:57.000And one last one from Ben Orr who says to watch Rainbow Nisha Rikobu no Shin.
01:35:01.000Another day as usual tomorrow, but a big celebration here.
01:35:04.000And thanks to everybody who was a part of it.
01:35:06.000Thanks to everybody who's been on this journey with me from the start.
01:35:08.000Thanks to the supporters of the show that have been here from the beginning people who have watched the show, people who have donated to the show, people who are sponsored by the show during the right side days.
01:35:18.000People who bought merch, people who have helped me along the way with computer stuff, who sent me advice, sent me pieces and gifts and things.
01:35:26.000Thank you to everybody that's been a part of it.
01:35:28.000Thanks to the Right Side Broadcasting crew for launching the show, for getting us started.
01:35:33.000Jake Seals, Joe Seals, my man, Big D, Brandon D, over at the Right Side.
01:35:39.000My buddy Steve Lookner over there, all the people there.
01:35:43.000And in some way, shape, or form, even thanks to James and Matt for giving us a start with America First Media for seeing the potential.
01:35:51.000That's unfortunate, but these things happen.
01:35:53.000And thanks to everybody that's watching us here tonight, as always.
01:35:56.000And thanks to the Super Chatters, the Discord callers, the supporters, Alyssa for sending me the scarf, my guy Dominic for sending me the earpiece.
01:36:14.000Remember, if you want to support us, you want to continue to support us in the future because we'll be here every weekday, as always, until the end of time.