00:00:17.000Very excited to be back with you here tonight on Wednesday.
00:00:21.000We've got a lot to talk about, lots to get into.
00:00:25.000Last night, we didn't even finish the show because I got so excited about the Tucker Carlson monologue on Monday that I spent the whole show talking about it.
00:01:18.000So that's a one in a million chance that you can get sick.
00:01:21.000Well, if that's the case, then why pause it?
00:01:24.000If it's one in a million people get serious blood clots from the Johnson Johnson vaccine, then why pause it?
00:01:30.000And I read an article yesterday, and I was going to cite this on the show, which said that they could unpause it as early as Wednesday, which is today.
00:01:39.000Well, it's Wednesday, and it's not unpaused.
00:08:18.000So if you set notifications for my Twitter account, you'll be notified when I tweet on the dot tomorrow, 9 a.m. Eastern Time, reminding you to make the call.
00:08:28.000People are always asking me, almost every night, they're asking me, what can I do to get more involved in the movement?
00:09:31.000And I've been explaining this all week.
00:09:32.000But if we can get this bill passed in Florida, there's only two weeks left in the legislative session to get this thing passed.
00:09:39.000If we get this passed in Florida with the amendments, there is a strong possibility that other states will follow suit.
00:09:47.000They'll pass similar legislation, hopefully, taking what they learned from Florida and putting it in their bill.
00:09:56.000And if we get enough Republican led states, enough Republican state legislatures to pass bills like this, we could potentially solve the problem of big tech censorship.
00:10:06.000And wouldn't that be a great day to see big tech find a serious amount for censoring people?
00:10:12.000Wouldn't that be a great thing if they could not censor candidates for office, journalists, if all speech was protected, if they had to reinstate accounts of those that were previously banned?
00:10:23.000We can make that happen because Republicans wield the power of the government in more than 25 states, more than half, more than half of the states.
00:10:33.000We wield the power of the state legislature.
00:10:57.000And the amendments have not been introduced or added out of the bill either.
00:11:01.000He promised it would be passed in March, and DeSantis is one of the best governors in the country.
00:11:06.000And maybe it will wind up getting passed, but think of it two weeks left in the legislative session, and it's still not through.
00:11:12.000This is in the best Republican state in the country, the most productive, the most effective.
00:11:18.000So, these things are not going to pass clearly if there is not heavy pressure from the base, if there's not extreme pressure from the people.
00:11:26.000There's pressure coming from every other direction.
00:11:28.000There's pressure coming from big tech, there's pressure coming from the left, pressure coming from the establishment, the Chamber of Commerce, all the special interests.
00:11:38.000We need to apply our own pressure, but that only happens if we're organized and we're doing these activities that are effective, that are going to get their attention.
00:11:47.000And this is one of them, so make sure you call tomorrow and Friday.
00:11:51.000Okay, now with that out of the way, we can move on.
00:11:55.000I gotta tell you, my allergies are just, it's been brutal all week.
00:16:08.000Because I was thinking to myself at AFPAC, I'm like, should I do a speech that lays out what America First means and make it like the sort of manifesto speech?
00:16:18.000And I said, you know, of course, I included elements like that in the speech, but I said it would be extremely relevant to frame it in terms of the immediate short term goals of our organization.
00:16:32.000And In the context of what has just transpired, which is the Biden transition.
00:16:38.000And of course, Trump's transition out of office.
00:16:42.000So ultimately, I decided the speech was going to be about, in my opinion, the most relevant thing right now, which is that there's a civil war going on in the GOP.
00:16:50.000The GOP can either become the instrument of the traditional American nation, like I talked about yesterday, the Republican Party can have a platform that is against white genocide, that is against The Jewish media that is against the foreign wars, globalist special interests, New World Order takeover, and all of that.
00:17:13.000And with the Republican Party platform like that, the Republican Party can be used as an instrument, as a tool.
00:17:19.000We can wield it in order to make change on a national level.
00:17:26.000Alternatively, if the Republican Party goes in the same direction, it will be the antithesis of all those things, it will be facilitating all of those things.
00:17:35.000If the Republican Party does not cement The Trump legacy, which is nationalism opposed to globalism in a nutshell, if it does not cement America first and doesn't cement that America first realignment, then instead and necessarily it will revert to being a tool of the globalists to oppress us, a tool of the New World Order to further oppress us.
00:19:04.000People are not going to vote for that.
00:19:06.000What people will be fooled by and what they will vote for, but will nevertheless be just as harmful and treacherous to the America First foundational principles.
00:19:16.000Is a Madison Cawthorn, a Catalina Loft, a Dan Crenshaw.
00:19:21.000People that come in the name of America First, but are not really America First.
00:19:26.000That are the same establishment stuff.
00:19:28.000It's the same GOP snapback, that same violent reversal back to the status quo, but people are going to vote for it because it's maybe got a Trump former admin official.
00:20:25.000Today we'll launch the America First Policy Institute, a 35 person nonprofit group with a first year budget of $20 million.
00:20:34.000And the mission of perpetuating former President Trump's populist policies.
00:20:38.000Two top Trump alumni tell me that AFPI is by far the largest pro Trump outside group besides Trump's own Florida based machine.
00:20:50.000In the coming months, the group plans to take a large office space near the U.S. Capitol as a symbol that it will fight to be a muscular, well heeled center of the future of conservatism.
00:21:00.000And they intend to raise $40 million next year.
00:21:06.000$20 million this year, $40 million next year.
00:21:10.000Do you know what people could do with $20 million?
00:21:12.000Do you know what somebody like me could do with $20 million or somebody like Darren Beatty or somebody like anybody on the America First right?
00:21:22.000You know what we could do with $20 million, the real America First people?
00:21:27.000Think about what we do on a budget of nothing.
00:21:31.000What we did during Stop the Steal, that was a budget of I probably spent $20,000, which is, I mean, that's a considerable amount of money for me.
00:21:40.000Or anybody really, any private person.
00:21:44.000You know, I didn't spend money that I raised from like a nonprofit for Stop the Steal.
00:21:51.000That was all my private money that I just spent because it was necessary, and that was money that I spent for security, plane tickets, hotel, that kind of thing.
00:22:00.000That was a tight budget to do 13 different events in five different cities over the course of two months.
00:22:10.000That I achieved with a small sum, $20 million versus $20,000.
00:22:16.000And of course, they're doing things that are much bigger.
00:22:17.000They're opening offices in Texas and Miami and the Capitol, and they have 35 people and Trump admin officials.
00:22:24.000So it's bigger necessarily because they've got money on an order of magnitude, a thousand times more.
00:22:31.000But compare what America First people could do on an extremely limited budget and a limited amount of time compared to what these people do on an unlimited budget with an unlimited amount of time.
00:22:43.000It's clear that not only do they suck, but they're just blowing their money.
00:22:47.000I mean, you've got to go to the donors.
00:22:49.000That's what ultimately has to happen people like me and others have to go to the donors and say, What are you spending your money on?
00:23:04.000So, one of the big problems with think tanks and with a lot of these institutions that are being built up is that there is such a thing as a zero sum property.
00:23:14.000To this political game, in the sense that, you know, some people might look at an America First Policy Institute.
00:23:21.000Maybe they'll look at the National Conservatism Conference with Yoram Hazoni or other organizations that are really not that good.
00:23:28.000They're not efficient or effective with their money, and the message isn't what it needs to be.
00:23:32.000And people say, oh, well, you know, they're not perfect, but.
00:23:36.000Well, here's the problem they're not perfect, and they're sucking all the money out of the room.
00:23:41.000They're sucking all the donor money out of the room.
00:23:45.000Turning point, national conservatism, AFPI, you know.
00:23:49.000And organizations like this, Heritage, even, other prominent ones, they suck out all the donor money out of the room and then they just blow it.
00:23:57.000They embezzle it, they give themselves lavish salaries, they waste it, and they don't spend it on anything even that works all that well.
00:24:05.000They pay people way too much, they blow it on consultant stuff, right?
00:24:09.000And then that leaves the real, authentic groups, not just me, but others that have come before me.
00:24:15.000My organization's very new, but other organizations, it's a story often told, they get left with the crumbs.
00:24:22.000The ones that are actually perfect on the issues and very efficient with how they spend their money, they don't get any because all the imperfect ones that blow it, And the money is siphoned off in other ways, they drown out all the billionaire money and everything else.
00:25:20.000But literally, just go on their website and see what's going on.
00:25:24.000And this is what you have to do with anything that calls itself America First.
00:25:27.000You have to go to their website and see what it says.
00:25:30.000You have to do your due diligence because some people, when they say America First, they mean it.
00:25:36.000And some people, when they say America First, it's just a big trick, which is what this is.
00:25:42.000And this is what their website says it says that they have five major priorities, major policy priorities, which are jobs, opportunities, security, freedom, and innovation.
00:25:56.000I want to point out, in the first place, like I did earlier, that none of these things have anything to do with the America First agenda that Trump.
00:26:07.000Won the nomination and the presidency on in 2016.
00:26:11.000Because there were three things that differentiated Donald Trump from every other candidate in the primary and then from Hillary Clinton in the general.
00:26:19.000And that was protectionism on trade, non intervention on foreign policy, and immigration restriction.
00:26:27.000Maybe the last one was the most important.
00:26:30.000And of course, it was about a realignment away from small government, libertarian, individual liberty, constitutional conservatism of Ronald Reagan towards.
00:26:41.000Big government, populist nationalism of Donald Trump.
00:26:45.000And what that means is not so right on the economic axis and a subordination of the economic interest to a greater societal, social, cultural, nationalist axis.
00:27:01.000That is really what the alignment is, to summarize it briefly.
00:27:06.000So, specifically, it's those three issues, but broadly, it's about realigning what do we mean by conservative from conserving a libertarian.
00:27:15.000Caricature of what the founding fathers started with the Constitution to conserving our nation, our people, our heritage, our culture, and our way of life.
00:27:26.000None of these five priorities have anything to do with the latter.
00:27:30.000They have nothing to do with the latter and everything to do with the former jobs, opportunity, security, freedom, and innovation.
00:27:38.000You know, four out of the five, these are pro business platitudes and talking points that you would hear in any other Republican candidate's.
00:28:33.000It sounds like your archetypal 2017 Turning Point USA, Mont Pelerin, Heritage, Cato, American Enterprise Institute agenda, right out of the gate.
00:28:43.000Just by looking at their priorities, you can know just by looking at the headlines there's a big problem here.
00:28:49.000These are not America first priorities.
00:28:51.000But let's just go through the issues then.
00:29:52.000They've got five main categories, they've got a few subcategories in each one, probably a total of three or four pages of policy, maybe less.
00:30:03.000And they mention immigration one time, one time under security.
00:30:07.000And here's what it says about immigration it says, Our nation's unique heritage is a source of pride for all Americans, and our diversity of backgrounds is a major source of our national strength and greatness.
00:30:20.000It literally says, Diversity is our strength.
00:30:24.000You know, and I'm cutting out a little, some of the words there, but it literally says, Diversity is our strength.
00:30:33.000From efforts to dissuade social integration of immigrants to narratives proclaiming American iniquity to abuse of our asylum system, we are witnessing an unprecedented assault on what has made our nation great.
00:30:43.000The America First Policy Institute conducts research and develops policies to secure our borders, modernize our outdated ports of entry, and advance merit based policies.
00:30:53.000First and foremost, in the American interest.
00:30:58.000So secure the borders, modernize ports of entry, and advance merit based policies.
00:31:02.000Not cut immigration, not limit immigration, not deport the 30 million people here.
00:32:15.000On trade, it says this under the jobs category.
00:32:19.000Remember, one of the biggest pillars of the.
00:32:22.000Trump Revolution, the America First Agenda in 16, which differentiated him from the others, was that he was a trade protectionist, not a free trader, not in favor of NAFTA, not in favor of any other bad trade deal, WTO and these abusive supranational institutions.
00:32:40.000It was in favor of tariffs and in favor of an American system of trade.
00:32:47.000This is what it has to say about trade, according to the America First Policy Institute.
00:32:53.000Free trade is an intrinsic good, but only if it is also fair trade.
00:32:58.000And the America First Policy Institute will research and develop policies that champion free and fair trade.
00:33:05.000So, on immigration, they say diversity is our strength.
00:33:08.000And on trade, they say that trade is an intrinsic good.
00:33:52.000Not only does it completely Go against the 2016 platform, but it also has all the bad stuff from the 2020 platform.
00:34:00.000This is a section from their opportunity priority.
00:34:05.000It says, The American system of justice exists to safeguard our rights and, in doing so, create and sustain secure communities where Americans can live and their dreams can flourish.
00:34:15.000Too often, the justice system fails at both outcomes.
00:34:19.000A justice system gripped by metrics of performance, divorced from public safety and the public good, delivers outcomes ranging from unsafe communities and rising crime rates.
00:34:29.000To incarceration without clear purpose and beyond.
00:35:15.000So go ahead and introduce 150 million black people into China and then get back to me on their incarcerated population as a percentage of the overall population.
00:35:25.000Introduce 100 million Hispanics into China and see how that goes for you.
00:35:30.000Because it's not the Asians and the whites that are committing the crimes in America.
00:35:54.000It's necessary, but they said that's a problem.
00:35:56.000So it goes on, and it says the America First Policy Institute works to change all that.
00:36:03.000AFPI will envision a system of American justice, return to its first principles and to its best purpose.
00:36:10.000AFPI will research and develop policies to improve community safety, offender restoration, community safety, and respect for law enforcement.
00:36:21.000Americans deserve communities and neighborhoods where they can pursue the American dream and security and opportunity unbounded by fear.
00:36:32.000It says Sound policies brought about the greatest economy for America's most underserved communities, with record low unemployment and skyrocketing wages for the most distressed Americans.
00:36:44.000Solutions such as low taxes, reasonable regulation, and worker prioritization worked for all Americans, and the results speak for themselves.
00:36:53.000The America First Policy Institute will always strive for greater access to capital, food security, and clean drinking water while supporting entrepreneurship, capital inflow to opportunity zones, and family unification.
00:39:28.000This is the worst externality from the Trump administration all these swamp creatures, all of these liberals, all of these mainstream conservatives who can now call themselves America First.
00:39:48.000That's not putting America first to say that criminals should be released from jail and we need to just pour more welfare into these dysfunctional communities and that we need more immigrants, just merit based, and we need another Cold War.
00:40:04.000That's the lesson from the past 20 years we need more war and more spending on missiles and planes?
00:41:23.000But they literally just take the same platform and they just call it America First.
00:41:28.000What if we took the Heritage Foundation agenda?
00:41:30.000What if we took the American Enterprise Institute, neocon, neoliberal, Republican Jewish coalition agenda, and we just said, oh, but it's America First?
00:41:39.000And quick, let's get a girl from the Trump admin and this other one, and we'll call ourselves the AF Policy Institute.
00:41:47.000And it suckers a lot of boomers into buying into this.
00:41:51.000We have got to be very, very defensive.
00:41:54.000We have got to jealously guard what America First means, and we've got to be exclusive.
00:42:00.000No, America First does not mean innovation, freedom, jobs, security.
00:42:05.000America First means family, nation, community.
00:42:34.000That is the deregulation, devolution agenda from 30 years ago, which didn't work, which did not work, did not help one person, and created the conditions we're living in right now.
00:44:50.000I'm in favor of individuals having liberty.
00:44:52.000I'm in favor of the economy doing well.
00:44:54.000But the things that define America first, only a few things can define something, are nationalism, immigration restriction, trade protection, non intervention, opposition to globalism, BLM.
00:45:10.000And COVID, and did I say that one already?
00:46:44.000The AstraZeneca and the Johnson Johnson are the two traditional vaccines.
00:46:50.000Those are the two vaccines that act in the traditional way that vaccines do.
00:46:54.000I think it's called like an adrenal something vaccine.
00:46:59.000But basically, that's how your polio, your flu shot, that's how vaccines used to work.
00:47:05.000It's the Pfizer and the Moderna vaccines that are the mRNA.
00:47:10.000So in Europe, Canada, and the United States, the only vaccine now that you can get is an mRNA gene therapy vaccine, which may permanently alter your genes, which may cause neurological complications.
00:47:22.000Some people have said that these diseases called Alzheimer's cause major brain problems, decrease life expectancy dramatically.
00:47:31.000I saw one person say that people could be dead within like five years after taking this thing.
00:47:36.000I just saw some random person say that on TikTok.
00:47:40.000We're talking about something that's never been tried before on human beings.
00:47:44.000Like I said, you've got four vaccines, two have been eliminated, and those two were traditional vaccines.
00:47:51.000The two that you're still allowed to take are mRNA gene therapy vaccines, which means they don't work like other vaccines.
00:47:58.000They inject something into your blood, which enters your cells and.
00:48:03.000Re engineers your DNA, re engineers the cell completely.
00:48:09.000Whereas a normal vaccine, you inject a protein from a virus and your antibodies see the protein and they attack it, and then they're able to recognize the virus when it enters for real because they've dealt with that protein before.
00:48:54.000And this has never, ever in history been tried before on human beings.
00:48:59.000They've experimented on it with animals.
00:49:01.000They've never experimented on it with human beings.
00:49:04.000And now 187 million people in the United States of America have gotten a dose, or rather, 187 million doses of the virus have been administered.
00:49:14.000I think it's only 80 million, 72 million people that have actually gotten one or two doses.
00:49:24.000This is, I think this is from the New York Post.
00:49:27.000It says, The Center for Disease Control indicated in an alert on Tuesday that the Johnson Johnson vaccine could resume as soon as Wednesday, which wasn't true.
00:49:37.000The alert came after a chaotic day when the FDA recommended there be a pause for the vaccine.
00:49:43.000Leading virtually every state to halt the use of the single dose shot.
00:49:47.000The CDC's Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices will convene Wednesday for an emergency session with a vote scheduled on updated recommendations for use before the group adjourns at 4 30 p.m. Eastern Time.
00:49:59.000Dr. Anthony Fauci, President Biden's chief medical advisor, told CBS Evening News anchor Nora O'Donnell on Tuesday night that it appeared that the adverse effects occurred within 6 to 13 days.
00:50:11.000And so if you've had it a month or two ago, I think you really don't need to worry about anything.
00:50:25.000I just injected this mystery chemical into my blood, and well, that reassures me.
00:50:31.000I'm very confident that I won't get a blood clot and die.
00:50:34.000Fauci emphasized that the chance of these adverse side effects is less than one in a million, but he said to be alert to the symptoms, such as severe headache, some difficulty in movement, such as in a neurological type of a situation, or some chest discomfort and difficulty breathing.
00:50:50.000As of Monday, more than 6.8 million doses of the Johnson Johnson vaccine have been administered across the U.S., a small portion of the overall 190 million COVID vaccine shots given nationwide, most of them from Pfizer and Moderna.
00:51:07.000The White House said on Tuesday that the pause will not have a significant impact on the nationwide vaccine plan.
00:51:13.000President Biden assured Americans that he had made sure the U.S. had enough vaccine doses for all American adults from Pfizer and Moderna alone.
00:51:25.000Pfizer and Moderna, as they're sometimes called on this show.
00:51:30.000He said treatment, or rather the agency, the CDC, said treatment of this specific type of blood clot is different from the treatment that might typically be administered.
00:51:40.000Usually, an anticoagulant drug called heparin is used to treat blood clots.
00:51:45.000In this setting, administration of heparin may be dangerous and alternate treatments may need to be given.
00:51:55.000Seem to be extremely rare, but that the pause is important so that healthcare providers can be made aware of the reactions and properly recognize and manage the cases given the unique treatment required.
00:52:06.000So, I don't really know what's going on here, but none of this sounds right to me.
00:52:10.000They have six out of six to seven million people that have had an adverse reaction to the vaccine.
00:52:27.000What that sounds like is either they're shutting down the vaccine for a different reason or they're shutting down the vaccine because it's way worse than they're telling us.
00:52:35.000But it does not seem remotely correct to me that we're in a pandemic with all the alarmism, all the hype, all the scaremongering, and the demand for vaccines.
00:52:47.000And they paused the Johnson Johnson vaccine, which is a PR disaster.
00:52:50.000And also, I'm sure it limits the amount of people getting the vaccine because less than one in a million people have an adverse reaction.
00:53:00.000Either more than one in a million are having a bad reaction, deadly or not, or they're shutting it down for a different reason.
00:53:33.000And by bad information, I don't mean information that's not true.
00:53:36.000I mean, you can't say anything bad about the vaccine on social media.
00:53:40.000And all of the advertisements which are being pushed nationwide in every form of advertising on billboards, television, radio, social media, they're all telling you, get the vaccine, protect your community, save grandma, there's no problem, get the vaccine.
00:53:56.000Nobody's telling you that it's dangerous.
00:53:59.000But yet, even though they've been telling us for four, five months now to get the vaccine, two of them, Two of them had been stopped from being distributed.
00:54:08.000So something's not right here, right out of the gate.
00:54:11.000Just at first glance, they tell us there's nothing wrong with it.
00:54:15.000And if you say there's something wrong with it, that's misinformation and we'll stop you from spreading it.
00:54:20.000But yet, two out of the four have been suspended because of adverse effects, because people are getting blood clotting, which is a pretty big deal.
00:54:28.000And I don't think that it's one in a million, I think it's a lot more than that because they don't report on the adverse effects.
00:54:34.000That doesn't make the media, and I'm sure the information they're gathering is not correct.
00:54:40.000What's more, is let's say that that's not the case.
00:54:42.000Then there's probably some other reason.
00:54:44.000I don't believe them when they say that we're pausing the distribution of the vaccine because one in a million people get sick.
00:54:51.000Either it's more than they're letting on, or it's for some other completely different reason.
00:54:56.000The reason why I feel justified in my skepticism is because they have lied about everything else.
00:55:36.000Don't buy masks because they don't work.
00:55:38.000They said the masks, they're not secure enough, they're not dense enough to prevent a virus particle from being inhaled through your mouth or nose.
00:55:48.000And then do you remember a few weeks later, they said, actually, now masks work.
00:55:53.000And now everyone has to wear them at all times, whether you're immune, whether you've had the disease, whether you've gotten the vaccine.
00:56:00.000You have to wear them at all times, even if it's a cloth mask that doesn't work.
00:56:05.000Even if you're just walking from the front of a restaurant to your table and then taking it off of the table, you have to wear it.
00:56:13.000Well, the first lie was that masks don't work, or at least the first contradiction, I should say, because masks don't work.
00:56:20.000But first they told us masks don't work, then they told us they do work.
00:56:25.000But there's something interesting about what they told us.
00:56:28.000The reason they told us they didn't work was not because they wanted us to believe they didn't work because the medical experts tested it and found that they don't work.
00:56:37.000They told us that they didn't work because they didn't want us to buy them, because they wanted to first secure masks for first responders and medical personnel.
00:56:48.000So it's not like they got new information.
00:56:51.000It's not like they had incomplete information and then they learned more and they adjusted their posture.
00:57:08.000They wanted us to wear masks all along.
00:57:10.000But they knew that if they told us that masks worked, that everybody would go and buy them all out, stores would be sold out, supply wouldn't keep up with demand, and doctors couldn't have them, so they lied.
00:57:22.000It's not important whether or not the masks actually work.
00:57:25.000What matters is, for the sake of this argument, what matters is that.
00:58:41.000Well, then why is it that Florida, which had no mask mandate and no lockdown, is in the middle of all states in both infections and deaths?
00:58:51.000And they have comparable infection and death rates to California, where they've been locked down for a year.
00:59:31.000Like I described earlier, a normal vaccine, they inject a protein from the disease.
00:59:36.000Your immune system recognizes it, battles it, you get a little bit sick, and then when the virus is transmitted to you for real, your immune system can recognize it and battle it, and then you don't have severe symptoms.
00:59:50.000You may never even contract the disease.
00:59:56.000These vaccines have never been tried before on human beings.
01:00:00.000They inject mRNA, genetic sequence, into your bloodstream.
01:00:04.000It goes into your cells, inside of your cells, and it teaches your cell how to code on a genetic level to create cells that can battle the virus.
01:00:16.000They are modifying your DNA, they're modifying your genes, they're manipulating you.
01:00:23.000On a genetic level, it's gene therapy.
01:01:46.000I'm going to go now to CVS and trust them to inject an experimental mRNA vaccine into my blood, something that they developed in.
01:01:56.000Less than a year, did little to no clinical trials on and rushed through the regulatory process with an executive order and mass produced and distributed it.
01:02:07.000In some places, they messed up the formula.
01:02:09.000In some places, they were injecting nothing in the people's blood.
01:02:13.000I'm going to go in and just say, okay, well, the television told me to.
01:02:17.000Nobody gets hurt because I haven't seen it on TV.
01:02:26.000Within five to ten years, if you're not going to see serious complications, I seriously do wonder if in five, ten, maybe even many more years than that, you're going to see serious complications arising from this.
01:03:18.000Let's spray down the whole neighborhood.
01:03:20.000Fluoride in the drinking water, no problem there.
01:03:26.000And it's like people just don't even care.
01:03:28.000People just, they just don't even care.
01:03:30.000You have one body, you have one life, and people are just willingly putting themselves in a situation to do irreversible damage to their one body, their one mind, their one blood, their one heart.
01:04:55.000And some people are like, you know, today I put out on Twitter, I said, mRNA vaccine that's never been tried up until 187 million doses have been administered.
01:07:31.000You haven't read the Wall Street Journal today like I have.
01:07:34.000Yeah, and I'm smarter because of it, because it's full of lies, obviously.
01:07:39.000Go and read the press that never lies.
01:07:42.000The press that never lies about Ukrainian aggression.
01:07:47.000Quid pro quo with Donald Trump, that never lies about Russian collusion with Donald Trump, that never lied about weapons of mass destruction, that never lied about everything else for the past 50 years, never lied about Waco, never lied about any of it, apparently, 9 11.
01:11:52.000And now they're like, they're giving the big institutions a hand job.
01:11:57.000Not to be vulgar, but seriously, I can't imagine a more appropriate way to describe how undignified it is, how humiliating it is, what they're doing with these institutions.
01:12:22.000These institutions that brought us war in Iraq, the institution that brought us forever war in the Middle East, war on terror, complete death of civil liberties, these institutions that brought us the fake media entertainment complex, same institutions that brought us 2008 recession, that brought us this de linking between the stock market and the overall health of the economy.
01:13:19.000What would we do without the fucking New York Times?
01:13:21.000What would we do without the World Jewish Congress and the Jewish Federation of San Francisco and the Zionist Organization of America and the ADL?
01:13:31.000And what would we do without the American Israeli Public Affairs Committee?
01:13:34.000What would we do without our institutions?
01:13:36.000What would we do without the Federal Reserve and JP Morgan and Bank of America and Lockheed Martin and the Atlanta Council and NATO?
01:14:15.000I retweeted something by a Chinese official today.
01:14:20.000Some guy from the State Department was like, Oh, or some government official was like, My son, who's a veteran, asked me, Did we lose the war in Afghanistan?
01:17:20.000Why are we asking why Hawley has nine staff members dedicated to foreign policy and four of them are working on the Middle East specifically?
01:18:31.000A case comes before the court before the election in Pennsylvania about whether or not it's constitutional for the state Supreme Court to extend the deadline for mail in ballots.
01:18:42.000And the decision is 4 to 4, and Amy Coney Barrett recuses herself.
01:19:06.000This organization, America First Policy Institute, clearly has to be vetted.
01:19:11.000Donors are giving tens of millions of dollars to something that is in favor of diversity, Cold War, free trade, dem programs, and criminal justice reform, and they need to know that.
01:20:38.000I remember Baked Alaska chanting yoba or something.
01:20:42.000I remember we were talking about doing a college tour.
01:20:46.000And I remember somebody came in clutch with like five bags of McDonald's, gave me a Big Mac and large fry, and then they brought pizzas, and I had a lot of pizza.
01:21:21.000Anyway, no, I haven't talked to Jacob Wall in a long time.
01:21:28.000Yeah, the last time I talked to him, he texted me because he had a new number, but I don't think I've talked to him in like a year, maybe longer.
01:22:54.000I don't think there's anything in the Bible that says you can't hold hands.
01:22:58.000I think there's a limit to PDA, but that doesn't sound too inappropriate to me.
01:23:02.000Although I am against this premise that, like, we have to incrementally move back this idea, like, oh no, don't be Catholic or you'll alienate people.
01:23:12.000People are looking for something that is opposed to the modern world.
01:23:16.000You know, a lot of people are like, well, if we're too traditional, that's going to turn people off.
01:23:20.000That turns a lot of people on, not sexually, but, you know, being traditional, being meaningfully, you know, virtuous, not cucking to, Like the liberal, progressive view of things, that's actually the big appeal for a lot of people.
01:23:36.000I don't know that we should try to, on another note, on a separate note, I don't know that we should really be trying to appease lots of people.
01:23:43.000For a lot of people, that's a big part of the attraction of Catholicism is that it is hardcore.
01:23:50.000It does treat it and take it seriously.
01:23:53.000Triggered Red says, Am first people should start reverse social engineering people by posing as apolitical normies and then slipping in the messaging.
01:24:01.000Example start ad companies that make ads for apolitical normie companies.
01:24:06.000And then have all ads have white families of six.
01:24:57.000Well, then, isn't the democratic government just going to send people?
01:25:00.000Let's cross that bridge and we get there.
01:25:03.000What is important is growing the network, achieving power.
01:25:07.000It's about wielding large institutions for our benefit.
01:25:11.000And then once we're a player, then we can decide how to go and proceed from there.
01:25:14.000But having that discussion right now is very premature and actually would allow the enemy to anticipate what we're doing.
01:25:21.000So Jackson says I'm still learning about foreign policy and such, but why do Jews support a globalist organization like the UN, even though it creates so many resolutions against Israel?
01:25:43.000Have always been different from the sort of diaspora Jews in the world cities, and it's true today.
01:25:49.000Because you've got atheist, liberal Jews in like finance and media in major cities who are internationalist, progressive, revolutionary, liberal, and they think that Israel is a racist country.
01:26:03.000They think that Israel is colonial or colonizing, and you know, they support the mission of supranational organizations, and that's one side of the spectrum.
01:26:14.000And the other side is, of course, the hardcore.
01:26:16.000Zionist Jews who have moved to Israel believe in the project of building a homeland for the Jews, and they're against the UN.
01:26:23.000They're against this internationalist position.
01:26:26.000Sometimes there's people that are in favor of nationalism for Israel, in favor of internationalism for America, and they oppose the UN when it does things like that.
01:26:38.000But it's because there's basically two different concentrations of Jewish power.
01:26:55.000That shit hurted says, Why do leftists associate weakness with intelligence?
01:27:00.000It's like the more a guy looks like he was shoved into lockers in high school, the more correct his worldview must be when all he does is overcomplicate things like race, gender, and sexuality.
01:29:03.000And really, I don't think it's really even fair to say that there is a second in command.
01:29:09.000There's one, HMFIC, then is the nucleus.
01:29:13.000And then there's sort of these planetary orbits, lunar orbits, asteroid fields that sort of orbit around the nucleus, the giver of light, the sort of solar entity in the center.
01:29:28.000I don't know that it's pyramidal so much as it is concentric circles, divine spheres.
01:29:47.000And I've said this to people privately, and it's just true.
01:29:51.000The guy always had a chip on his shoulder, and everyone remarked upon this about him.
01:29:56.000They said that it was obvious that he thought that he should have been the leader, he thought he should have been something that he wasn't, and that he was seething about that.
01:30:06.000And it was clear that he was resentful towards me, never deferential, never gave me the proper respect that I deserved, never gave me the proper deference or loyalty that I deserved.
01:30:16.000And that was a big problem that far preceded AFPAC 2.
01:30:20.000That's why he didn't organize AFPAC 2, because he was such a fuck up with AFPAC 1, to tell you the truth, and because for a year he was disloyal.
01:30:29.000And you know, I don't know if people maybe know me in real life, and I'm a pretty congenial guy, but I'm also very perceptive, and I'm also not a dummy.
01:30:37.000So, I don't know if he thought things were just hunky dory or whatever, but, you know, there was a problem for a long time.
01:30:45.000And, you know, look, it is what it is.
01:30:49.000If you don't give the proper respect and deference, then you don't get the same opportunities.
01:30:54.000You know, why would I give you opportunities?
01:30:56.000Why would I deal you in if you have no respect?
01:31:00.000You know, you're not entitled to that.
01:31:02.000And I think that's ultimately what happened he got a little bit too big for his little baby britches.
01:31:08.000He got a little bit too big for his diapers.
01:31:12.000And I don't know, he thought that he had more relative importance than he did, or he thought he was entitled or something.
01:31:18.000And this is often the case pride before the fall.
01:32:01.000And I don't actually really like that because, you know, I've been doing America First for four years, and Patrick came along after, after he made a big public break with me years before, said some nasty things about me publicly and privately, after he said American nationalism wouldn't work, after he said that optics was futile.
01:32:20.000So he came along years after the fact and bandwagoned, and out of my graciousness, I accepted him.
01:32:27.000I accepted his nominally sincere conversion, and then he had the audacity to say, CEO, CEO.
01:32:37.000What he should have said is, that's very flattering and it's funny, but it's just a joke.
01:32:42.000With all due respect, we wouldn't be here without Nick.
01:32:45.000And by the way, it's not just an ego thing.
01:32:50.000It's not like I need that to reassure my stature or anything, obviously, because, you know, it's not like I had to say, oh, hey, Don't say that.
01:37:57.000People would have that perception that he's, you know, and that was a very cynical, very cynical sort of what's the word?
01:38:06.000Insinuating himself into the publicly, at least publicly, according to public perception, into the inner circle or into that number one or number two position.
01:38:17.000And, you know, people should not be focused on that.
01:38:19.000People should be focused on the mission at hand.
01:38:22.000People should be focused on these things.
01:38:24.000They should not be focused on elevating their stature.
01:38:29.000Within this thing, they should be focusing on advancing the whole.
01:38:35.000And, you know, I could recognize that from a mile away because I've been on many teams.
01:38:39.000And I know it's not exactly the same, but, you know, when I was in high school, I was on the Model UN team and I was on the speech team and I was in student council.
01:38:46.000And I know that's obviously very different, but ultimately it's the same relationship dynamics, which is to say that you have people that are committed to advancing the mission of the organization, and then you have people that are far more worried about elevating themselves within the organization, playing the office politics.
01:43:04.000It's like a safer route, it's tried and true.
01:43:08.000But these new technologies really are turning all that over on its head.
01:43:12.000And now you've got people that are Bitcoin millionaires, GameStop millionaires.
01:43:18.000You've got people that do e commerce, you know, they do drop shipping and they make tons of money.
01:43:24.000Figure out some kind of an exploit arbitrage, something like that with Alibaba and Amazon or, you know, something, Facebook marketing, whatever.
01:43:34.000And they become a new money millionaire.
01:43:40.000People with no degrees, people in high school, people that are young and old, using things that are little understood.
01:43:47.000And that's actually a white pill because those kinds of people, I think, tend to be more sympathetic to our views.
01:43:55.000People become professional Fortnite streamers and gamers and that kind of thing.
01:44:00.000And so, the wisdom of our parents, which said, study hard, go to a good school, get a job, save your money, buy a house, invest in this.
01:44:10.000It's like, or you could drop out of school, start drop shipping, invest all the proceeds into some shit coin on Coinbase, and then take out 200 grand in student loans, move to another country, never pay them back.
01:44:27.000And then become like the equivalent of a multi millionaire in Vietnam.
01:44:32.000So, zoomers are totally changing the game.
01:44:35.000And by the way, if you want to get ahead, that's how you got to think these days.
01:46:03.000College is expensive and the job market's not what it used to be.
01:46:06.000So, if you really want to get ahead, you've got to figure it out and you've got to make it happen in ways that are innovative and that nobody's told you how to do.
01:46:19.000And not everybody, by the way, not everybody can count on this.
01:46:22.000There's very few stories where, in a lot of cases, people get lucky.
01:46:25.000Some people are smart, but a lot of people get lucky.
01:46:28.000But increasingly, that's how people are making it.
01:46:32.000It's not like they go to Harvard and it's the fucking 1980s and they trade stocks and, oh, it's like, you know, literally you could put money into anything and get rich.
01:46:42.000Now, if you really have these large ambitions, you've really got to be a hustler.
01:46:47.000But that's probably always been the case.
01:49:26.000In some ways, it was complicated, but simple in comparison to now.
01:49:30.000I mean, I thought it was complicated then, and in some ways it was, but I miss the old days.
01:49:39.000Going to the library, going to the Thomas Ford Library when I was a junior and studying with all my friends, hanging out, going around, driving around town, going to Taco Bell, you know, usual shenanigans.
01:53:09.000I don't wake up every day and think, oh, these fucking people.
01:53:12.000I don't wake up every day and think that.
01:53:14.000I mean, defensively, sometimes, because, you know, I'll be under attack by the ADL, SPLC, whatever.
01:53:20.000And then I wake up, I see an article, and I'm like, okay, you're a fucking liar.
01:53:25.000But the mission overall, I don't care about any other country other than America.
01:53:29.000I care about American Israeli policy insofar as that is a part of America's foreign policy, not insofar as it's part of something directed exclusively towards Israel.
01:53:48.000I believe that you've got these states, I believe in national sovereignty, and I believe that we can have respect for other states and respect that each state is pursuing their self interest.
01:53:58.000We've just got to be doing the same thing.
01:56:07.000And we go through periods where we're more enthusiastic or more depressive.
01:56:14.000But by and large, it's a lot of boredom, tedium, day to day.
01:56:19.000You know, what can you do every day that's going to make you so happy?
01:56:23.000I don't know what people think is what that is, really.
01:56:27.000I mean, if people lived a day in the life, I mean, people, for the most part, their attitude is like, well, this thing is going to make me happy.
01:56:35.000You know, when I was a kid and I wanted this toy and I got it, well, that didn't make me happy for the rest of my life.
01:56:40.000But if I just get this thing, oh man, I'm sad.
01:56:59.000Then you go to bed or whatever and you wake up the next day and oh boy, time to go to work.
01:57:04.000So, what do people actually mean by that when they say happiness?
01:57:08.000If they mean you want to chase something that you think you like, that you think will give you some kind of permanent state of happiness, I mean, that just doesn't happen.
01:57:19.000That is a feeling, it's a passing feeling, it's temporary and it's insatiable.
01:57:25.000The desire for comfort, Pleasure, satisfaction.
01:57:28.000You will never be satisfied all the time, never comforted or pleasured all the time.
01:57:34.000So, pursuing that is not going to work.
01:57:39.000What you want is to be in a situation where, generally speaking, you know, I think like the most that you could want out of life is to do a job that, like, you don't mind, probably have a wife that you're compatible with, have kids that will take care of you and they'll.
01:57:59.000Keep things interesting and keep the circle of life going and all of that.
01:58:03.000I think probably people want to achieve a certain level of material comfort.
01:58:09.000They want to make enough money where they're not stressed out to pay their bills.
01:58:12.000They could have relative freedom and how they choose to live their lives.
01:58:16.000I think those are pretty reasonable goals for people to have.
01:58:18.000When people say, you know, you want to be happy, I don't know.
01:58:26.000I think that for most people, it's pretty standard.
01:58:30.000What are the range of activities that are going to make people really happy?
01:59:02.000And when I go on vacation, I want to work.
01:59:04.000And when I work really hard, I want to go on vacation.
01:59:06.000When it's winter, I want it to be summer.
01:59:08.000When it's summer, I want it to be winter.
01:59:10.000And really, people just have to learn to enjoy and then be practical.
01:59:13.000Learn to just enjoy life and then just be practical.
01:59:17.000Roll out the punches, cope with the losses.
01:59:19.000Be practical about what's going to make you more or less comfortable, allow you to do the things that actually do bring you happiness.
01:59:26.000If that's you like to go out to eat, if that's you like to travel once in a while, if that's you like the water, you like to have a hobby or something.
01:59:35.000But people have really got to bring their expectations for their life in line with reality, which is the problem.
01:59:43.000I don't know what the fuck people think is going to happen to them in their lives.
01:59:45.000They think, I'm going to be a Marvel superhero.
01:59:54.000At a certain point, and you die unexpectedly, and nobody plans for it.
01:59:58.000You may live another 40 years, you may live another day, nobody knows.
02:00:03.000And every day is the same you wake up, you brush your teeth, you take a shower, you put your pants on one leg after the other, you eat three meals, you undress and go to bed.
02:00:14.000And what fills the gaps is mostly things that you've already experienced before, even the things that you may dream about the most living in a big house, driving a nice car.
02:00:45.000These are practical guidelines for living.
02:00:47.000Thinking about what it's like when you're going to get older.
02:00:49.000Well, when you get older, 40 years of decisions will catch up to you.
02:00:53.000So think about that when it comes to your money.
02:00:55.000Think about that when it comes to your relationships, your health, what you eat.
02:00:58.000All of that, because you're going to wake up one day and you're going to be 30, and then you're going to wake up one day and you'll be 40, and then you'll be 50, and then you'll be 60.
02:01:06.000And the decisions that you make every day, practical decisions, are going to create what that day looks like when you wake up over the successive decades or years.
02:01:14.000And you want to be making decisions that are going to give you more freedom, more options, the ability to do things that are going to brighten up your day and that you're not going to be filled with pain and misery, or you do the opposite.
02:01:28.000Really, it's more about not being miserable than it is about being happy.
02:01:32.000I think if you're not miserable, you won the jackpot.
02:01:35.000If you didn't get your life ruined by making bad health decisions, marrying the wrong person, making really bad financial decisions, getting addicted to drugs, doing crime or something, as long as you don't wind up miserable, you're probably in good shape.
02:02:40.000What do I like about my life now and how can I perpetuate that in the future?
02:02:45.000What's going to, what do I want my life to be like when I wake up one day and I'm 50?
02:02:50.000And don't say, I want to be a rock star.
02:02:52.000I want to sell out Madison Square Garden.
02:02:54.000I mean, you know, take a look around at the people you know.
02:02:57.000Take a look at the people who live a life where you could see yourself doing that and take a look at the people who are fucking miserable.
02:03:04.000Take a look at the people that wake up every day and wage slave and they're old and, you know, they're lonely or whatever and say, gee, how do I not wind up like that?
02:03:13.000And it's not no shade on people like that.
02:03:22.000When people say, like, that's the biggest thing is people just don't really even, it's almost like they don't know that they're going to die.
02:03:30.000Maybe they're so anxious about it, they don't like to think about it.
02:03:32.000But that's a problem because you need to think about it.
02:03:35.000That's this prolonged adolescence, is this failure to accept.
02:03:41.000It's acceptance that you will get old, you will die.
02:03:48.000A lot of people are like, I'll be young forever.
02:03:51.000I, when I, all these girls are like, when I grow up, I want to be, there's some fucking tweet, I forget what it is, but it's like, oh, I want to be the, I want to be the cool aunt who has a mysterious amount of money and travels three times a year and has a nice condo downtown or something.
02:04:08.000And it's like, you know, that's what you want when you're 20, but do you really want that when you're 50?
02:04:14.000You know, you have to resign yourself to the fact that you're going to get old and that you're going to die.
02:04:21.000Memento mori, remember that you will die.
02:04:30.000That's the biggest, one of the biggest problems with the world is people forget that they're going to die.
02:04:36.000They literally forget because what do people do?
02:04:37.000They wake up and they go on their phone.
02:04:40.000They wake up, they go on their phone every day, all day, and then they put on their earbuds and they sing and they dance and then they talk and then they go on their phone and then they work and then.
02:04:51.000All these diversions, and nowhere in there do people get a silent moment to contemplate that you will die.
02:06:57.000So, when people say don't have kids, now most people should have kids because I think the biggest thing that people miss out on when they get older without kids is companionship.
02:09:03.000And you've got little babies, and their new parents, and the new grandparents, and then you've got these elderly people, and they're all together.
02:09:12.000And isn't that a nice thing as opposed to everybody goes and retreats to their little apartments and their cold bedrooms?
02:09:18.000And they watch their fucking shows and drink a glass of wine, drink their sorrows away.
02:09:24.000That's the kind of pro life family society that we want.
02:09:28.000So, you want to be a great grandparent.
02:09:32.000You want to go to the family reunion and be the sort of respected elder, the patriarch, or the matriarch.
02:09:39.000You want to go and have the nice family meal, the Christmas dinner, see the little kids running around.
02:09:45.000Doesn't that bring a smile to everybody's face?
02:09:47.000And the little kids talk to the grandparents.
02:10:42.000Believe me, that's not going to happen.
02:10:44.000MAGA man says, Sorry if you have already talked about this, but today, Representative Scott Perry said, For many Americans, what they believe right now is happening is what appears to them is replacing natural born American, native born Americans to permanently transform the landscape of the nation.
02:11:56.000You're not going to get banned because you're not a right wing e celebrity with national news coverage, but I don't think there's anything wrong with using Coinbase.
02:12:05.000Kraken, Gemini, those are another couple of ones to use.
02:12:10.000I know a lot of people that use those.
02:13:45.000In combination with the mountain views, funny enough, WV just announced they're offering $12,000 along with free passes for outdoor activities to anyone who wants to relocate and work remotely from West Virginia.
02:14:55.000Custodian Groypers' Middle Eastern countries all have internal problems because borders were drawn to include as many ethnicities and religions as possible.
02:15:03.000100 years ago, but in America, diversity is a strength?
02:16:25.000Kevin Bro says, Tomorrow the House Judiciary Committee will take a vote on H.R. 40, a federal commission with reparations, with 173 representatives signed on as co sponsors.
02:16:35.000The bill will advance through the House.
02:16:38.000If it weren't for the Senate cloture rule, the government would approve a $12 trillion subsidy for black criminals and low lifes.
02:17:42.000McPaddy says, Is it possible that enough people are refusing the vaccine that they're going to scrap all four and continue with the masks and lockdowns?
02:17:50.000No, I don't think so because 70 some million people have gotten it.
02:17:55.000I think there is a scenario where they say, well, we haven't gotten everyone vaccinated, so the lockdowns will continue.
02:18:02.000I don't know that they'll scrap it, but they definitely, I think it's definitely plausible that they'll say, well, not enough people got it, so the lockdown must continue.
02:18:11.000Or the vaccine's not proven effective.
02:18:13.000In other words, they'll come up with a pretext to keep the lockdown going, even with large vaccine distribution numbers.
02:19:04.000Now we're going to do the napping portion of the show where I take the America First post show nap.
02:19:11.000The mid show nap, you could join in, you could just watch, or you could join in, you could take your nap, get a pillow, whatever, and we could rise, we could sleep and then rise together.
02:19:27.000I'm trying so hard to suppress a yawn, I can't do it.
02:19:33.000I can't get the yawn out because my allergies are blocking it.
02:20:37.000Optics Respectress says my friend's co worker was just admitted to the hospital after having major seizures following a second dose of the vaccine.
02:20:48.000I'm sure it's perfectly safe, and it was just his immune system building immunity.
02:21:24.000Yoked Anglo says, I actually was forced to read How Democracies Die because my extemp coach was super gay and thinks these books make people smart.
02:21:32.000Imagine telling people to unironically read this.
02:22:42.000It was something about how like Obama wasn't.
02:22:45.000I don't know what even the thesis of the speech was, what even like the thesis statement was, but the intro was like, Using baseball as an analogy to describe international relations.
02:22:58.000And I was saying, like, the punchline, I forget the setup, but the punchline was like, although you could forgive Barack Obama for not knowing that about baseball, considering that he wasn't born in America.
02:23:11.000And then I went on and I could see the judges, the judges, like, immediately, like, look down right on their notes.
02:23:57.000Of, I don't know, public use material, for lack of a better word.
02:24:01.000They would just use this like treasure trove of imminently relatable cultural references, Greek mythology, pop culture, whatever, and their intro would be like, I reckon Israel and Palestine are kind of like Jim and Dwight on The Office.
02:24:17.000And Dwight, the blah, blah, blah, and Jim, the cool guy, always find each other.
02:24:21.000And that's why, and it was like, hey, what if I got on top of my desk and I pulled out a gun?
02:24:28.000And I pointed it at your fucking head and I pulled the trigger until bullets stopped coming out of it.
02:24:34.000What if I turned you into a pink fucking slime all over the wall?
02:25:45.000And all these, and I made it a point too because the way, so the way the event would work is you would have, I think I've explained this on the show before, so sorry if you've heard this, but the format was this.
02:25:58.000You go to the event, and for my event only, you go to the conference, you take a bus to another high school where they're hosting the tournament, you get there early in the morning on a Saturday.
02:26:11.000And if you're in extemporaneous speaking, which was my event, you go to that school's library.
02:26:18.000And all the other extempers are there.
02:26:21.000All the other people competing in your event are in the library.
02:26:25.000And you get, they call you up one by one, and they have an envelope with little slips of paper with topics on them.
02:26:32.000And the topic might be like, you know, what should the government do about Boko Haram?
02:26:39.000You know, China's building islands in the South China Sea.
02:26:42.000How should the international community respond?
02:26:45.000After the wake of the Michael Brown shooting, it was all like current events questions.
02:26:49.000And you would pick three slips of paper from this envelope with topics on them.
02:26:55.000And you get to pick one of them, I think, or two of them.
02:28:51.000People would go before their speech in the hallway.
02:28:55.000They would go somewhere in the high school because you could just go and roam the high school.
02:28:59.000They would go somewhere in the high school before they were supposed to be in the room where they performed, and they would stand in front of a locker and give their speech.
02:29:08.000They would stand in front of a locker, they'd put their paper on the ground, and then they'd stand in front of a locker face to face, and they'd do their speech.
02:29:17.000And this is why, according to CNN, Israel and Palestine is kind of like Michael Jordan and LeBron James.
02:29:26.000It's a fun competition, but with bombs.
02:29:31.000And so, firstly, I'd like to say that blah, blah, blah.
02:29:35.000Second and third, and then they do their little transitions, right?
02:29:45.000Instead, because I was like, not only am I going to fucking win, and not only am I going to break all the rules, but I'm going to be a jerk about it too.
02:29:56.000I'm going to go and I'm going to be cocky.
02:29:59.000So I would never do this locker thing.
02:30:01.000Instead, I would just walk around the halls.
02:30:04.000I would go through it in my head, and I would just kind of stalk around.
02:30:07.000People giving their speeches, walk behind them and stuff, and just sort of walk around.
02:30:12.000I made it a point to just sit at the table like I was my arms folded at the table the entire time.
02:30:21.000So that people would see me, and then when they see me in the thing, they'd be like, he didn't even prepare.
02:30:30.000So I would sit around, I'd, you know, just put it all together in my head, like Tony Stark, you know, moving things around.
02:30:36.000So, I would sit back and I'd say, hmm, what's my speech going to be about?
02:31:33.000I'd get on the bus, I'd sit in the back of the bus and listen to music on my way there.
02:31:37.000I'd get out, I'd go to extemp, I'd do my whole day alone, and then, uh, You know, I'd get back on the bus, sit in the back, put my music on, game over.
02:31:47.000And everybody'd be like, oh my gosh, Samantha.
02:31:50.000You know, there was no Samantha on the team.
02:31:52.000But they'd be like, oh my gosh, you did so good.
02:31:54.000Oh my gosh, we're such a team, whatever.
02:33:47.000I'm not getting on a plane for 15 hours.
02:33:49.000I mean, maybe eventually in my lifetime, but I'm not eager to get over there to get stung by a Portuguese man of war and bit by a scorpion and a tarantula and, you know, killed by a giant bird or something.
02:34:06.000Uncle Scrooge Groyper says Michael Moore said Bush's neglect and incompetence caused 9 11, but wouldn't touch real inside job truth or stuff.
02:34:26.000At least they had this appearance that they were challenging power, and in some ways they were.
02:34:32.00012 Pool Groyper says if you had to choose between enacting your own personal policies.
02:34:37.000But unable to prevent the left from enacting their own or stopping the left from pushing forward, but you couldn't enact your own policies, which would you choose?
02:35:01.000If you had to choose between enacting your own policies, but unable to prevent the left from enacting their own or stopping the left from pushing forward, but you couldn't enact your own.
02:35:10.000We would have to push our policies because we're already in a liberal position.
02:35:14.000So even if the left stopped, we'd still be in a bad spot.
02:35:19.000Sawyer says, just listen to the newest Sam Hyde Gumroad podcast.
02:35:24.000He said he only follows crypto accounts on Twitter and nothing political.
02:35:29.000Anyways, God bless and have a good night.
02:35:31.000MMM says, my vetting question came off wrong.
02:35:34.000What I meant was that right wingers often give people a pass that do not put America and our children first because they get distracted by BS.
02:39:05.000All his friends, all the people that he knows, all the, you know, Gruyper leaders or whatever, all this best friends crew, big reunion, haven't seen each other in a long time.
02:39:17.000So he leaves the hotel, gets in his car and drives, I kid you not, two blocks away, parks his car on the street and starts streaming from his phone.
02:39:27.000I mean, Jaden gets there at the hotel.
02:44:31.000Joy Moose says, I literally never watched Patrick because his hair looked like a mop head and his go to outfit was a sandstone short sleeve polo from Kohl's discount rack.
02:44:41.000And his rhetoric was too robotic, and some people are clearly just fat from inactivity versus genetics.
02:46:05.000The day after that, then he started it all up again.
02:46:09.000And Scott came to me actually and he said, this needs to be addressed by leadership.
02:46:15.000The longer this goes on, people think that we approve of this.
02:46:18.000It sends a bad signal if we let this go on any further.
02:46:22.000And I said, and I stand by this, I said, you know what, Scott?
02:46:26.000I said, it also sends a bad message when four out of the seven people in this group chat who call themselves leaders are not going to our flagship annual event.
02:48:58.000When we were riding high, when things were going as good as they ever were, when we were traveling the country like rock stars and giving speeches to these big crowds at state capitals, and it was a lot of fun.
02:49:10.000Nobody had any problem getting with my security detail, taking my megaphone, talking to the crowd that I rallied.
02:49:17.000Nobody had any problem flying out to do that.
02:49:21.000But the minute that things went south, and I asked people to come out and support me, I'm doing this thing.
02:50:18.000And unless you have a really legitimate reason, you should be there to support me.
02:50:21.000But people that had no problem taking the megaphone and talking to the crowd, all of a sudden when it came to AFPAC, oh, can I take a rain check?
02:50:30.000Now that there might be a risk, now I think I'm going to stay home.
02:50:35.000Now that was a big problem for me initially.
02:50:38.000And I even went to Beardson and I said, look, you went too far.
02:50:42.000You don't have to apologize, but just don't do it anymore.
02:50:45.000And he apologized and then he went right back at it.
02:51:36.000Could you have ever guessed at any point over the past year that it would have been easier to swing Paul Gosar, Steve King, Michelle Malkin, and John Miller than Patrick Casey at AFPAC?
02:53:32.000And like that, that was really bad judgment.
02:53:35.000Like I said, it was disloyalty, and obviously it was the wrong call.
02:53:38.000Not only, I mean, even if it was the right call, it still would have been, in other words, even if they were right that we, if AFPAC was a disaster, and even if they were right that AFPAC was going to be a disaster, it still would have been the wrong call not to go.
02:54:02.000You're there when it's good, you're there when it's bad.
02:54:04.000You got to be there to support the team.
02:54:07.000And I think that if he had just not gone, people would have just looked down on that and they would have been skeptical of that as they should have been.
02:54:14.000And I thought that's all that would have came of it, honestly.
02:54:17.000But then he surprised everybody and then went two days later and said, Oh, they're trying to destroy me.
02:55:01.000But he would always tell me, You know, I don't fire people, people fire themselves.
02:55:05.000I bring people in, I tell them the expectations and, you know, where they're not falling short, and I tell them, You know, you fired yourself.
02:57:43.000And if he ever, if there ever was a real problem, we would address it with him.
02:57:48.000And I said that for a long, long time.
02:57:51.000So, so don't, a lot of people think of like it was this, oh, it was this play or something.
02:57:56.000It was like something weird was going on.
02:57:59.000No, there was a trajectory where Patrick could have been, could have been the number two.
02:58:02.000If he had stepped up, And if he had been competent and if he had taken the initiative and been like a team player, there's a scenario where he could have been, you know, right there helping lead the internship team and would be on this platform and et cetera, et cetera.
03:01:01.000All the disagreements have to be settled privately, and none of the information can go public.
03:01:06.000I mean, there has to be a very extreme control between what we deal with internally and what we deal with externally because we have got many external enemies, and you know they don't miss anything.
03:02:22.000And we can have no tolerance for that, especially that.
03:02:27.000Because I talk to some pretty high level people.
03:02:30.000And if I ever breached confidentiality, it sends a ripple effect.
03:02:35.000We can't have people in here leaking things because there are major people that would have a lot to lose if their information or identities were compromised.
03:02:42.000So the idea that you would have somebody that's just going to fly off the handle like that and just, oh, hey, here's all this information, what kind of message do you think that that sends to everybody that has ever talked to Patrick Casey?
03:03:04.000Then you have to go back and think about everything you've ever said to him, everything he knows about you, every picture you've ever sent him, every DM, every group chat, everything he knows about you, right?
03:04:00.000Jack Royper says For finding happiness, I have never been more happy than to serve and love unconditionally like Christ constantly told us to.
03:04:08.000Seriously, devote time to serving others with Christ's love.
03:04:14.000Anyway, but I take that kind of stuff very seriously because that kind of stuff really matters.
03:04:21.000Those dynamics, very, very, very important.
03:04:25.000And, you know, some people are saying, like, oh, well, you know, Nick, Nick this, Nick that, whatever.
03:04:31.000It's like there's no excuse for that move.
03:04:34.000There's no excuse for the leaking and the lying.
03:04:37.000There's no excuse for not supporting the leader.
03:04:40.000And there's no excuse for, you know, honestly, just being wrong about AFPAC.
03:04:44.000You should have been right about that.
03:04:47.000I mean, it was just, at the end of the day, it was a total vindication on every level because everybody was wrong who said, oh, it's a bad idea, you shouldn't do it.
03:04:55.000I mean, clearly, it was a necessary thing to happen.
03:05:03.000And the attitude that I expected and the only thing that was deserved was for people to say, even though I don't think it's a good idea, I'll be there to support you.
03:05:12.000I'll be there to support America first.
03:07:33.000You know, everyone's talking about socialism, and it's like, nah, I. Think that they're probably going to do all of those things before they do socialism.
03:07:42.000They're going to get rid of voter ID, total big tech, total COVID lockdown, make new states, pack the courts, right?
03:07:50.000I mean, they're going to do all these process things.
03:07:52.000They're going to rig the system so they never lose an election.
03:07:54.000And people are like, but they'll raise taxes.
03:07:58.000Sammy teases democracy always chooses Barabbas over Christ.
03:09:53.000You have a few units, and you maneuver around the country to try to take over.
03:09:58.000Key strategic supply centers on the continent by sending in orders.
03:10:02.000And without getting too into the weeds with it, there's a part of the turn where you diplome, you know, which is, I don't even know if that's a word, but you conduct diplomacy with all the other countries.
03:10:14.000What you're supposed to do, and what they used to do, is write letters.
03:10:16.000Write letters to each other and say, Hi, you know, I'm Russia.
03:10:20.000Can Germany move the unit in Berlin, you know, here and there?
03:12:21.000The joke is that you'd have girls on the team, guys on the team, and of course, like any clique in high school, you had the sort of arranging and rearranging of relationships.
03:12:33.000This one's going out with this one, and then they, you know, now this one's going out with another one.
03:13:15.000There's not many people that really influence me.
03:13:17.000I can't think of a whole lot of people that I would say, like, Because I used to have people that I would be like, oh, this guy's so smart.
03:13:31.000I have influences and I have people that I look up to for advice and things, but there's nobody that could tell me something against my core beliefs.
03:13:41.000And I'd be like, oh, well, you're right.
03:14:10.000Based electrician says just buried my grandpa two days ago, and me and my three siblings are sure it was the vaccine, or three of my siblings are sure it was the vaccine.
03:14:20.000Timeline resolved, but sure, kills me.
03:17:21.000You'd think that, uh, If he was out there telling people that feds were going to break through the fucking ceiling and burst through the doors and raid the place, you'd think that he didn't know that a sitting congressman would be there speaking.
03:17:34.000Because if he did know that, then he'd be an idiot, wouldn't he?