The boomer generation and its consequences have been a disaster for the human race. Americanism, not globalism, will be our credo! America First, First, America! by Nicholas J. Fuentes and the rest of the crew at the on tonight s episode of the Talk of the Nation hosted by Nicholas and Betsy Jentes about the Baby Boomer Generation and its consequences for the human race and the boomer generation and its consequences as a whole and how they have been a disaster for the human race including Bigfoot and the Boomer Generation and s consequences have been a disaster . And the Boomer generation has been a disaster for us in the world which means we are not interested or interested in anything but I just can t do it. I'm sorry, Brittany and Betsy, but I just can't do it sorry, I can t do it, sorry Brittany and Betsy, but I can't do it, but I just can't. You re not interested, Sorry, , I can t, Sorry But I just Can t Do It, You're not interested , Not interested, I Can't Do It You know the rule No e Girls ... Hashtag , No e Girls, No Girls , No E Girls, No Clips Who s Got the Clip What's That? Have a Clip? Who's Got the clip? NoE Girls? No E Girls ? Never E Girls? I have never heard of Bigfoot who s got the clip ? Who has the clip no e ? No girls? no Girls? Not even once? Never e never ? Never girls Ever have ever heard of Bigfoot? not even once what s that? What s that ? I ve never heard ever heard of it?
Transcript
Transcripts from "America First - Nicholas J. Fuentes" are sourced from the Knowledge Fight Interactive Search Tool. You can also explore and interact with the transcripts here.
00:28:19.000So we'll talk about a few things and then we'll talk about the budget and that's our featured story tonight is the White House's budget proposal for 2021 fiscal year 2021 which was released today and it's pretty standard stuff it's a 4.8 trillion dollar budget it includes 4.4 trillion dollars in budget cuts over the next 15 years
00:28:47.000And it's got the usual more money for the military, less money for education, for the EPA, two billion dollars for a border wall which is disappointing, and there are some other features and we'll go over everything that's in it and what it means about the administration.
00:29:05.000Something to keep in mind about the budget proposal by the president, it really doesn't mean much.
00:29:11.000I'm not going to say it doesn't mean anything, but the budget that we see that the president proposes after the State of the Union, this is only a proposal.
00:29:21.000And as such, it's really only meant to reflect the priorities of the administration as opposed to resembling any kind of a final deal.
00:29:31.000So we're gonna look at it and we'll reflect on what those priorities are, what that means for the White House, but it's not like this is probably what the budget's gonna look like.
00:29:40.000Because of course you've got the Democrats that control the House and they get to weigh in and they get to decide what's gonna be in the budget, it's not just the President.
00:30:26.000So I was hoping, I don't know, maybe Xi Jinping is like underground, maybe he's in outer space, maybe he's in an ark in the ocean, and he's waiting out, he knows something that we don't.
00:30:57.000A story from South Dakota, which I don't know if you've seen this.
00:31:01.000It's sort of a smaller story, not like a huge deal, but in South Dakota they were considering a bill that would have criminalized using hormone treatments on juveniles.
00:31:14.000We've been talking a lot about this this past year or so, about in the case of James Younger for example.
00:31:22.000These young kids, you know, sometimes seven, eight years old, where the parents will put them on hormone replacement therapy trying to get them to become transsexual.
00:31:32.000And it's always so ridiculous because we all know children.
00:31:37.000Everybody knows that if a little boy or little girl says, oh, I'm a girl or I'm a boy or whatever, this is part of the socialization process.
00:31:46.000It's not indicative of some kind of gender orientation, some deviancy.
00:31:53.000And it's a good thing when you see these laws being proposed in more conservative states that target this practice because in a lot of cases you're just at the mercy of the parents.
00:32:03.000In the case of James Younger, which we talked about and he ended up being okay, we talked about that very famous publicized case, I think it was around summer or fall 2019,
00:32:14.000If it weren't for a huge outcry from conservative media, this was a case of an eight-year-old boy who was just at the mercy of his mother, who was going to put him on these drugs in spite of the fact that he was not trans, anything like that.
00:32:27.000And you know, even if he identified that way, I don't think chemically castrating is a great idea at that age, or any age for that matter.
00:32:35.000In any case, there was going to be this law in South Dakota criminalizing this stuff.
00:34:28.000And so it's gonna be Michelle Malkin, me, Scott Greer, Patrick Casey will be emceeing.
00:34:33.000It's gonna be a lot of high-profile guests, and I had announced this event I think just two weeks ago, but within one week we got close to a thousand applications.
00:34:44.000A crazy amount of emails, the volume, so many people interested in attending.
00:34:50.000And I regrettably had to announce this weekend that we had sent out all the confirmation emails.
00:34:56.000Unfortunately, we were only able to accommodate a fraction of the 1,000 people.
00:35:02.000I don't think anybody... We anticipated there'd be a lot of interest, but, you know, we're just not gonna be able to host 1,000 people anywhere near there, so...
00:35:10.000If you didn't get an email, you're not going to be able to go.
00:35:14.000If you did get an email, congratulations!
00:35:17.000And I do just want to put this out there because I saw some sort of mixed reactions to this announcement that, you know, we had closed the application process and we were at, I mean, we're at like over max capacity.
00:35:30.000There's like a maximum occupancy for our venue and we're actually a little bit over than that.
00:35:51.000Some people were just disappointed and I want to say obviously, you know, you're entitled to feel disappointed.
00:36:00.000We are sorry that we can't accommodate everybody.
00:36:03.000I just hope that if you are disappointed that you can't attend or you couldn't attend Kruiper Leadership Summit or both,
00:36:10.000I just hope that you will bear in mind and keep in mind that this is a obviously growing movement.
00:36:17.000You know, the Groyper War at the end of 2019 was really this huge, like, big bang, sort of, uh, I don't know what you would call that, like a pivotal boiling point moment for the America First movement, and we are
00:36:33.000Trying to build something, you know, so I hope that people are not upset that we can't accommodate a thousand people for the inaugural, I mean the first AFPAC.
00:36:42.000We are still trying to figure these things out and also, you know, not only is it that we're figuring these things out and trying to, you know, hold events and things like that, but also you have to keep in mind that we are grappling with challenges that nobody else has to grapple with.
00:36:58.000if you're a mainstream conservative organization obviously you can rent any venue anywhere and for the most part not have to worry about antifa and in some cases they do but more than that also don't have to worry about journalists
00:37:16.000Other nefarious actors trying to cause problems.
00:37:18.000So the reason we've had to keep these events small, like the Groyper Summit was relatively small, this conference is going to be relatively small.
00:37:26.000The reason, you know, not only are we this fledgling movement and we're growing and we're figuring things out and so on, but the reason it has to be small is because we're grappling with the challenges of trying to accommodate security, privacy, all those things.
00:37:43.000If we just open it up, General Admission, and we announce the address, well, number one, you could get people that are going to call the address and say, hey, there's a neo-Nazi gathering, and a hotel is going to shut us down, or a big venue is going to shut us down.
00:37:58.000or number two we do it publicly in a bigger venue and you know even if they don't cancel us even if they don't call in threats or whatever which has happened before which happened with Miami we could get journalists that might show up or other people that might show up and say hey why are you here taking pictures of attendees whatever
00:38:17.000So those are some of the challenges that are uniquely ours as a nationalist, dissident, reactionary movement.
00:38:25.000And it's because of those challenges that we have to take extra precautions and have to be extra careful and ensure that none of that happens.
00:38:33.000And that's why we have to vet everybody that comes through and we have to constrict the amount of people that are attending.
00:38:38.000So I just hope everybody is understanding.
00:39:26.000People are willing to spend money and fly out, and they want to participate, and that's great.
00:39:30.000And so far, because of these constraints, which I hope you understand, we haven't been able to accommodate as many people as we'd like to, or as many people that are interested.
00:39:38.000So, and I don't know how viable or doable this is going to be.
00:39:42.000I don't want to make a huge promise, but what I'd like to do is over the summer, I'd like to really make a concerted effort to do a big event where everybody wants to come, can come,
00:39:54.000And I'm thinking maybe this time it'll be in like Texas or a real conservative stronghold.
00:40:24.000You know, there's so much demand, there's so much interest at this point, and we are just scrambling to build up the resources and logistics and everything to make it happen in a very short amount of time, because this America First thing is moving very quickly.
00:40:54.000The other housekeeping thing I wanted to talk about is for tomorrow's show.
00:40:59.000Tomorrow is the New Hampshire primary and the polls close at 7 o'clock central, which is when this show starts every night at exactly that time.
00:41:09.000It's so convenient the way that works out.
00:41:11.000I was looking up when did the polls close and it says they close between 7 and 8 p.m.
00:41:40.000Last week only this time I hope we actually get the results.
00:41:43.000You know last week I was so excited we were all prepared I had beverages and you know I had my New York Times dashboard set up on the monitor and then it was like five it was like 5,000 hours 127 hours and we never got the results.
00:42:01.000So hopefully tomorrow we get the results, but special show tomorrow if you're interested.
00:42:05.000It's kind of a big night, you know, because the Iowa thing was a fluke, so this will be like our first legitimate, real, hopefully, contest in the Democratic primary.
00:42:15.000Okay, so those are our major housekeeping things.
00:42:18.000One item of interest, curiosity, before we dive into the news, I saw this tweet today, and maybe you saw it, maybe you didn't, I put it on my timeline, but I saw this tweet today by Joe Scarborough, who is the host of Morning Joe, the show on MSNBC.
00:43:40.000And it's incredible to me because I feel like the whole reason that I'm ostracized by Republicans and conservatives and Young Americans for Freedom and Turning Point USA and the Republican Party and everybody associated with me is treated the same way
00:44:01.000Is because we talk about demographics.
00:44:04.000We talk about how demographics are driving the future of our country and not in a good direction, I should add.
00:44:14.000That is like the lodestar, is that the word?
00:44:17.000That is like the foundation of our ideology or the foundation of our political orientation
00:44:25.000At least what differentiates us from the rest of the conservatives and why they hate us is because we are willing to say no, it's not entitlement mentality, it's not the deficit, it's not socialism, it's not taxes.
00:44:43.000It's that you've got all these people coming here, and people that don't know how to live here, people that don't speak the language, and even if they do speak the language, they're stabbing, and killing, and stealing, and shooting, and even if they're not even doing any of that, they've got bad manners, or they're chewing too loud in the cafeteria.
00:45:12.000And so in light of the fact that we're continually ostracized, we're made on the fringes and marginalized, made out to be like the worst people in the society.
00:45:23.000You're a white nationalist if you talk about this.
00:45:25.000You're a neo-nazi if you talk about this.
00:45:29.000But yet the left will acknowledge this, and even in many cases the right, will acknowledge this every day of the week like it's no big deal.
00:46:02.000I mean, that's what a freight train is.
00:46:05.000And he's saying that demographics like a freight train are bearing down on Republicans, bearing down on white America.
00:46:12.000They are sending the Democrats into total political domination in the future.
00:46:17.000That is nothing that we don't say on this show, right?
00:46:22.000And he puts that out and the New York Times puts that out and the Atlantic puts that out and everybody talks about this on their side and smugly and
00:46:31.000They're celebrating it and they acknowledge it because it's math and everybody knows it's happening.
00:46:40.000Democrats say demographics are gonna be the freight train that delivers them and, you know, whatever.
00:46:46.000That's gonna be their ace in the hole.
00:46:48.000Democrats will never lose because of demographics.
00:46:51.000Hey, maybe we should stop the demographic change that's driving Democrats to victory because, you know, we don't like what the Democrats stand for.
00:47:19.000I just... And you know, it's not anything new.
00:47:22.000We've been seeing this for the past like three years and you know it goes back to things like Charlottesville and
00:47:29.000People like Peter Brimelow or Jared Taylor, this is nothing new.
00:47:32.000This kind of stuff has been going on for like 30 years.
00:47:35.000White people and reactionaries and nativists, immigration restrictionists will stand up and point out the obvious and say, this is math, this is history, we know what's going to happen.
00:47:48.000Immigration, demographic change is inevitable, it is in motion, and we know what the consequences of it will be.
00:48:40.000And on a certain level, maybe it's the 80% white, maybe it's the Christian Universalist.
00:48:47.000Maybe it would be nice if everybody could get along, right?
00:48:50.000I mean, it would be nice if everybody could get along and America could welcome everybody in and they would just learn how to behave and everything.
00:49:04.000And, you know, some days you'd like to believe the left when they say, oh, you know, that's just a fever dream, or a conspiracy theory, or it's hateful, or whatever, and maybe we could just, you know, join into this delusion, but then you see tweets like this and you remember, oh no, I mean, obviously this is totally legitimate.
00:49:20.000Because I feel like it's gaslighting at this point, which is what we get from the media.
00:50:14.000This is a report from a local source in South Dakota.
00:50:17.000Like I said, there was this bill that was going to criminalize certain aspects of these transgender hormone treatments for young people, but it was shut down by Republicans in a Senate subcommittee.
00:50:29.000It says, quote, a Senate committee on Monday rejected a bill that would have prohibited medical professionals from providing hormone treatments and gender confirmation surgeries to transgender youths.
00:50:42.000The decision by the Senate Health and Human Services Committee followed emotional testimony from both advocates and opponents of the bill.
00:50:50.000About 20 opponents who rallied against the proposed legislation prior to the hearing helped pack the hearing room where the crowd filled the floor space and spilled out into the hallway.
00:51:04.000Senator Wayne Steinhauser, who is a Republican, made the motion to defeat the bill.
00:51:11.000So the bill that was supposed to prohibit doctors from performing what really amounts to chemical castrations or surgical castrations on children, a Republican voted to defeat that bill.
00:52:18.000They, the globalists, have been driving these deviant practices, just horrible, ghastly procedures.
00:52:28.000It started with, well, you know, we could go way back, but it was the homosexuality, it was the gay marriage, and then it was transgender acceptance, and now, if the transgender acceptance wasn't enough, if the gay marriage wasn't enough,
00:52:42.000Now it's transgender surgeries on children.
00:52:45.000Like it wasn't enough that they got acceptance for these freaks that you see, like that Charlotte Clymer, Charlotte Clymer character and all these others.
00:52:54.000These like freakish, ghoulish looking men with makeup.
00:53:27.000This is what we're told by conservatives all the time.
00:53:30.000Whenever we want to create the kind of society that is decent and orderly and healthy and safe and all those things, what are we told by the Republicans?
00:53:41.000Well, it's not the government's duty to do that because of a thing called the Constitution.
00:53:47.000You know, you can't create a moral society through government mandate because the government is just supposed to collect your money and give it to minorities.
00:53:57.000That's the only... Well, they don't say that, but that is in effect what it is.
00:54:13.000You know, it's a state issue when it comes to all these things.
00:54:16.000Well, the best we could do is bring it down to the states.
00:54:19.000When we talk about abortion, when we talk about weed, when we talk about all these different things, can we ban it at the federal level?
00:54:27.000No, but you can delegate it to the states.
00:54:30.000Okay, well in this case, you know, for this Federalist argument that we hear from Republicans, the least we could do with our government is to govern our states the way we want.
00:54:39.000That's what all these people have a hard on for the framers tell us, is that we have a Republican, you know, the framers created this laboratory of democracy where you can have policies that are the way you like them in one state and another way in another state, and here you have South Dakota, which couldn't be more conservative, which couldn't be more white and Christian.
00:55:18.000The devil, literally Satan himself, wants doctors to be going into children's private business with scalpels and knives and all that.
00:55:28.000And here you have a bill that says we will prohibit this horrible, I mean it's like insane that this is even going on in the 21st century, that will prohibit this terrible practice.
00:57:08.000People that are the most helpless, the most vulnerable in the society.
00:57:12.000It's children, it's babies, and you've got women, or you've got, I guess just bad parents in general, that want to do these horrible things, just mutilating them.
00:57:24.000I mean, a person is a child, and they're vulnerable and helpless, but they have to live the rest of their life.
00:57:29.000Think about what that does to a person when at seven, eight years old, somebody's messing around with that, or messing around with your hormones.
00:57:38.000If somebody, and in the case of like James Younger, these chemical castrations they call them, the hormone treatments, what they do is they prescribe medication that will thwart puberty.
00:57:49.000And you only get to go through puberty once.
00:57:52.000You only get that process happening one time.
00:57:55.000If you're on some kind of pill regimen or something like that,
00:57:59.000During puberty, or you're messing with your hormones in that critical stage of development, you don't get a do-over.
00:58:06.000You just become some weird, stunted freak, and you have to live with that for the rest of your life.
00:58:12.000And in a lot of cases, that could leave men in a position where they're infertile.
00:58:16.000It could mess with their testosterone.
00:58:20.000They don't reach their full development in terms of height, or size, or other features, maturation.
00:58:26.000And so think of what the kind of life that you're that you're sentencing a person to with these chemical treatments at that age.
00:58:34.000It's a horrible it's like it's it's just a terrible thing.
00:58:38.000Gut-wrenching is like the understatement of the year when you're talking about this or worse yet when they do these surgeries or procedures.
00:58:46.000I don't want to get into it but if you've ever looked up an animation of what is done during these gender transition surgeries
00:58:55.000And you know viewer discretion is advised if you want to look something up like that But I saw it and it's like it makes you want to vomit makes you want to throw up the kinds of Maneuvers that are done the kinds of things to create genitalia out of you know other genitalia It's sick, and you hear all the all kinds of stories of post-op transsexuals where they're killing themselves It's worse than before or whatever you know they start out mentally ill and then it's like they have all these health complications constant surgeries and
00:59:25.000Anyway, I don't want to get into vulgar and graphic detail on that.
00:59:29.000In any case, he says it's a gut-wrenching issue, but it's one that should be left with families and not the legislature.
00:59:36.000Family is the building block of the society, and it takes some balls on this guy to blame it on the family.
00:59:43.000You know, to put this on, oh well, at the end of the day, I'm just a family guy.
01:00:35.000Somebody like this... I don't know what you do with somebody like that, but...
01:00:39.000This, at the end of the day, is how Republicans think.
01:00:42.000When he says it's not a matter of the legislature, it's a matter of family, you know, this is in a lot of ways not really any different from the argument that the left makes about abortion.
01:00:54.000And then apply that logic to everything that's happening, all the moral decay in the society.
01:00:59.000What does the left argue about abortion?
01:01:02.000Since Roe v. Wade and before Roe v. Wade, the mainstream argument, and up until very recently, the mainstream argument from the left was, we are not pro-abortion, we don't like abortion, and again, I'm speaking about like,
01:01:15.000mainstream you know obviously you have and increasingly it's becoming mainstream left-wing people that are saying no abortion is good and you should get as many you know so i'm not saying that doesn't exist or that's not you know becoming more prevalent and prominent but for a long time presidential candidates i'm talking like major figures
01:01:34.000They would never say outright they're in favor of abortion.
01:01:36.000They would say they're in favor of the right to choose.
01:01:39.000This is like what Pete Buttigieg says.
01:01:41.000This is what they say during the Democratic debates.
01:01:43.000Oh, it's a horrible decision for a mother to have to make.
01:01:47.000Buttigieg says, I caught this on Twitter the other day in one of these town halls.
01:01:52.000He said, but I don't trust the government to make that decision.
01:01:56.000It's a personal decision, and it's a hard, terrible, it's a horrible, could you imagine?
01:02:02.000It's a gut-wrenching, just like this guy.
01:02:04.000It's a gut-wrenching decision, but I trust a woman, I trust a family to do its best and not the government.
01:02:11.000And of course, what is our response to this?
01:03:30.000To permanently thwart and chemically castrate a prepubescent child?
01:03:35.000You would think in the same way that a baby in the womb or a fetus in the womb would have the right to see that pregnancy, to see that birth, go all the way through it and become a person.
01:03:47.000In the same way, wouldn't you then say that that baby or child has the right
01:03:56.000In the same way that a fetus, a pre-born baby has the right to become born and become a human being in the same way a person has a right to unimpeded biological development?
01:04:39.000That should be like the base expectation of every person, regardless of ideology, regardless of political orientation, alignment, anything like that.
01:04:51.000That should be like the basic, in the same way that you believe that, you know, the government should say you can't go out and murder people.
01:05:00.000And then it should actually be taken a lot further.
01:05:03.000We should take the protection of children much further beyond that and look at all kinds of things.
01:05:08.000Look at what's on television, what's on the internet, we should look at what's in the water, what's in the food, we should look at medications.
01:05:14.000I mean, there's a whole host of things we could look at for
01:06:29.000Years ago, we used to think that was funny because, obviously, it's ridiculous.
01:06:34.000And you didn't need an academic debate to show why that's ridiculous.
01:06:38.000You didn't need to invite David French and invite Sora Bomari and invite all these characters and have some faggy symposium and invoke Burke and philosophers and bring in data to explain why that's not something we should have in our society.
01:07:00.000We do have, and this is the mainstream position, this contingent of Republicans that have put this idea of the market, or freedom, or liberty, the Constitution, ahead of what we know to be the best for society.
01:07:15.000You know America First doesn't just mean like about foreign policy.
01:07:20.000Often America First is invoked when we talk about like the interest of the United States government or the interest of the United States abroad as compared to the interests of corporations or Israel or Mexico or whatever.
01:07:36.000Right, or in the context of trade even.
01:07:38.000We talk about putting American workers first instead of immigrants, migrant workers, foreign workers through free trade, things like that.
01:07:47.000America First is about putting the welfare of America, the country, the welfare of the people first.
01:07:55.000And so when we're thinking about putting the welfare of the people first, well, what does that look like?
01:08:01.000That means that we have to have a population that is strong and healthy and virtuous.
01:08:06.000Public virtue is really at the core of America First.
01:08:10.000Putting America First means the good of the society, the public welfare, and the only way to ensure the public welfare is public virtue.
01:08:19.000Men with good character in particular, but also everybody else,
01:08:23.000And obviously, things like this, and there's a whole host of other things which are probably less offensive to most people, but things like drugs, things like pornography, all these things that these libertarian conservatives say, you have a right to do, you have a right to try them, this is your idea, you know, or it's up to the states, but it's not up to the government.
01:08:45.000From our axiom, we say things that are going to hurt the public good, things that are going to thwart the development of our people, should be prohibited.
01:08:54.000They should be stopped, or at the bare minimum there should be harsh regulations, extreme penalties, things like that.
01:09:16.000But libertarians say, well, this is not the purview of the state.
01:09:20.000This is not the purview of the government.
01:09:21.000We should not address these things with the force of law.
01:09:24.000It's just up to everybody to decide whether they will destroy lives, whether they will do things that are corrosive and ultimately detrimental to the society, or not.
01:09:37.000And what do you think is the consequence of that ideology?
01:10:02.000And we should not give them that choice.
01:10:04.000I'm sorry, but you're not permitted to kill civilization.
01:10:08.000That should go without saying, just like a host of everything else that builds up to that, right?
01:10:14.000So I saw that story today in South Dakota and I saw that quote and it just stuck with me and I thought that this is really... and there it is.
01:10:22.000Therein lies where we are with the American right and with the whole country in general.
01:10:29.000But particularly with these fake conservatives.
01:11:23.000Here you have a guy who initiates a motion to stop a bill that would save people from having their lives destroyed.
01:11:30.000You know, they will be mutilated, they will be castrated, they will not go through puberty because this guy shut down a bill that would have prohibited doctors from doing that to these people.
01:11:42.000And you gotta wonder, like, in some capacity, should there be a cosmic sort of balance there?
01:12:02.000Because you'll have a lot of innocent children who will bear the cost for his actions, and it seems like he will not bear the cost for his actions.
01:12:10.000I'm sure that's fine, you know, and this is why we are where we are, is people that are kind of like unaccountable.
01:12:17.000People that are doing really horrible things, and we can see it, by the way.
01:12:21.000It's not like it's a question of culpability or blame.
01:13:04.000I'm kind of, you know, on some level, I'm good at this show because I'm good at talking and I'm smart.
01:13:10.000But on another level, I was never really made to be like a mainstream content creator, because on some level, to be a mainstream content creator, you have to be a salesman.
01:13:44.000On some level to be successful, I imagine, you have to be somebody that's going to come on reliably every day and say everything is the biggest news in the world.
01:13:54.000It's the biggest, it's the most exciting, the most interesting.
01:13:57.000And I see this budget stuff and I'm like...
01:14:05.000It's not exciting, it's boring, but we're gonna talk about it.
01:14:09.000But hey, but we're here and I have to give you a show, so we're gonna talk about this budget... Yeah, good job Nick.
01:14:16.000We're gonna talk about this budget deal.
01:14:18.000Like I said, so the president every year... the budgetary process doesn't even work the way it's supposed to.
01:14:26.000The way it's supposed to work is that in the beginning of the year the President outlines a budget proposal and you'll have people from the Congress that will take this proposal and they will sort of build like a proposal that like kind of matches it.
01:14:41.000They'll have like an answer for it and then there's this process of debate.
01:14:45.000All the budgetary bills originate in the House of Representatives because the House has the power of the purse.
01:15:29.000Which will fund the government until the next time, right?
01:15:32.000And that's what it's been for the past so many years.
01:15:34.000That's why we have these government shutdowns, because you don't have this orderly, nice process where all the different, you know, the chambers of Congress are convening and the president convenes and so on, but instead you've just got this sort of neurotic, insane, ad hoc process where
01:15:51.000You race at the last week to put something together and it's shutdowns and it's leverage and so on.
01:15:56.000So, in any case, what I mean to say is this is very much a formality.
01:16:00.000The president putting out his proposed budget, and it's been like this since he got inaugurated, it is very much a formality.
01:16:07.000So the President proposes the budget for next year, for fiscal year 2021, and that really is not what the budget is going to look like.
01:16:15.000The House will come up with their own version, and the Senate will negotiate, and the President really doesn't play a huge role in that process, and whatever comes out of Congress will look drastically different from what the President proposes.
01:16:28.000All this really is is a reflection of the priorities of the administration.
01:16:32.000You know, for example, when they set out so much money for a certain department,
01:16:37.000They are simply saying that this White House thinks this is a priority.
01:16:41.000You know, for example, there are some items which we'll read through in this budget.
01:16:45.000They give, I think, $3 billion more for NASA for lunar landers or something like that.
01:16:52.000And that probably, that figure, that exact figure may not materialize in the budget, but that they're giving a sizable increase in NASA's funding says that for this administration, space exploration is a priority.
01:17:07.000The White House on Sunday unveiled a $4.8 trillion budget proposal that would slash spending dramatically on foreign aid.
01:17:44.000The package set to be formally announced on Monday, as is, stood little chance of passage in the House of Representatives, which the Democrats have controlled.
01:17:53.000Still, it serves as a signal of the President's priorities, as Republicans have aimed to retake the chamber in the 2020 elections.
01:18:02.000The plan aims to eliminate the federal deficit, or the differences between spending and revenue, that is slated to exceed $1 trillion this year by 2035.
01:18:12.000So in other words, a balanced budget by 2035.
01:18:15.000In all, the White House is seeking to cut $4.4 trillion in federal spending over the next 10 years, including reductions in spending on food stamps and federal disability benefits through more stringent work and eligibility requirements.
01:18:29.000Total cuts to non-defense discretionary programs, which do not include Medicare or Social Security, amount to $2 trillion in savings under the plan.
01:18:38.000The budget additionally calls for renewing the Trump administration's tax cuts for individuals and families.
01:18:45.000I don't believe Israel is included in this
01:19:14.000It seems like, and I'm not making this up, our foreign aid agreement with Israel, the current one, was passed in 2016.
01:19:23.000It's called the Memorandum of Understanding and the MOU was passed in 2016 and that's just a fancy way of saying we promise to pay Israel 3.8 billion dollars per year for 10 years.
01:19:40.000And I'm not an expert on this legislative stuff, but it seems like literally every year since that was passed in 2016, there was a bill in the Senate confirming and rededicating us to that plan.
01:19:55.000And I should note, prior to the Memorandum of Understanding,
01:19:59.000There was another 10-year agreement which was $3.6 billion per year.
01:20:04.000So prior to 2016, it was a 10-year agreement, $3.6 billion a year, $36 billion in total.
01:20:10.000In 2016, they passed the Memorandum of Understanding and it's more money, $3.8 for 10 years.
01:20:18.000And I kid you not, I've seen it many times since I've been doing this show.
01:20:22.000There's a bill in the Senate, passes 100 to nothing.
01:20:25.000Senate confirms that we're sending them 3.8 per year.
01:20:28.000So I don't believe, well at least in this budget proposal, this is not anything concrete, but I don't even think in the proposal they're proposing to cut the foreign aid to Israel.
01:20:39.000It's more like the foreign aid to like NATO and you know.
01:20:43.000Afghanistan, maybe, Jordan, countries like, you know, those countries, but not the big one.
01:20:50.000We're cutting the foreign aid for the other allies, but never for our closest ally.
01:20:54.000Anyway, the Environmental Protection Agency would face a massive 26% reduction in funding.
01:21:00.000The Trump administration has rolled back Obama-era EPA regulations and oversight, saying they've hurt the economy for little benefit.
01:21:08.000The proposal would also cut the Department of Housing and Urban Development's budget by 15% while incorporating $2.8 billion for grants for helping to combat homelessness.
01:21:21.000And the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention would see a 9% cut, although its $4.3 billion allocation for fighting infectious diseases would remain amid the coronavirus spread.
01:21:32.000And lastly, Homeland Security's budget would grow by 3%, the National Nuclear Security Administration's by 19%, and the VA by 13%.
01:21:44.000So all in all, it's kind of a mixed bag with this budget.
01:21:47.000I have to say, generally with the budget, it's important.
01:21:52.000For the reason that this is the stuff of politics.
01:21:56.000The reason that we elect a president on some level, you know, as far as our goals administratively for the government, should be to reallocate resources.
01:22:07.000Like, one of the best things that we can do politically is to change the shape of the government.
01:22:12.000You know, we talk a lot on this show about this idea of the nature of the American government.
01:22:18.000It is uniquely a question in our country.
01:22:58.000And more than that, the government is so big, and it's never going to shrink any time soon, in any meaningful or significant way.
01:23:05.000I think we're kind of past that point.
01:23:07.000So now, if we understand that we have a big government, and that's the way it is, and by the way, all the people that talk about small government are dependent on the mega state.
01:23:17.000They're dependent on huge government, most conservatives included, and I'm not saying that like it's a bad thing,
01:23:25.000And maybe it is in some sense, but whatever.
01:23:28.000If we have a big government and it's not going anywhere, then the question is, how do we influence where the money's going?
01:23:35.000How do we influence the activities of this government?
01:24:09.000And so, rather than thinking about these stupid, abstract, useless questions about what is the role of government, we should be thinking what are the practical, logistical, tangible ways that we can change the shape of government and make it work for the right people.
01:24:30.000That should really be the dialectic at this point.
01:24:37.000When we look at this budget, cutting the EPA is huge.
01:24:42.000Whenever we get a Republican president into power, we have to, or whenever we get a Republican Congress, anything like that, we have to do things like this, and do things like this radically.
01:24:53.000Don't just cut it by 25%, just get rid of it.
01:24:57.000Just get rid of the EPA, get rid of the Department of Education, just get rid of these departments, because
01:25:04.000When you look at a lot of these departments, and it's most of them, but a lot of them, they are just funneling money, not just in any direction, but towards our enemies.
01:25:14.000You know, if you look at, for example, the EPA, this is stuff that's terrible.
01:25:18.000This is giving subsidies to all the wrong corporations.
01:25:51.000You know, the money from the federal government, in a general sense, is going towards things like the media, or it's tax cuts for big corporations, whatever.
01:25:58.000And somebody who's more with it, with the details of this kind of stuff, who's with it really with the particulars of the administrative process, has to go through and identify who are our enemies that are getting money, and then just close off the money.
01:26:14.000That's like the biggest thing that we can do.
01:26:17.000Once we get political power, shut off the money for our political adversaries and let the money flow for people that are good for us or things that are good for us in general.
01:27:16.000Instead of looking at it like we should just sort of like mitigate progressivism, mitigate the damage of you know what Obama and Carter and you know Bill Clinton did, instead we should reorient it and say let's take all this government and use it to build our political apparatus.
01:27:36.000That's what the Democrats do and we never do that.
01:27:41.000So, you know, I see this, I see this tax bill or this budget proposal, tax bill, budget, it's all the same, whatever.
01:27:49.000I see this budget proposal and it is sort of a good opportunity to remind people that this kind of administrative stuff is critical.
01:27:58.000It's crucial because the money has been flowing from the state to build up the Democrats, to build up their apparatus, to build up all these, I mean, it doesn't come from nowhere.
01:28:10.000In a lot of cases, it does come from the government to build up these nefarious institutions, and when we wield political power, we have to do a 180 with that.
01:28:20.000We have to do a complete 180, instead of just, you know, this sort of gentle, soft, mitigating approach, which is what I think the past so many Republican administrations have done, going back, you know, really since, like, Reagan.
01:28:35.000Eh, it's the budget, but it's whatever.
01:28:38.000It's not what the budget's gonna look like.
01:29:21.000The potential that was at our disposal was, at one point, has been squandered.
01:29:26.000It could have been transformative, like a real realignment, a real change.
01:29:32.000And I said this at the State of the Union.
01:29:34.000You know, a lot of people said, oh, it was a great speech.
01:29:36.000And I mean, yeah, it was like it was an okay speech, but but it could have been so much more, but it could have been so transformative.
01:29:43.000And that's where people get on my case.
01:29:45.000They say, oh, well, you say nice things about Trump or you say bad things about Trump.
01:29:49.000I just I and I think a lot of people understood that getting him in office represented probably the biggest opportunity to turn things around in our country to date.
01:31:17.000When it comes to this budget stuff, and here's something bigger than that, kind of going back to my point about the day-to-day affairs of the state, the logistical aspect, this is what we have to be doing.
01:31:30.000I can't stress this enough, because I was in the belly of the beast.
01:31:35.000You know, I went to the, excuse me for the sniffle, I was at the Leadership Institute, I was at Young Americans for Liberty, I've been to all these different, like,
01:31:57.000For the most part what these things are designed to do in some capacity is to build up like email lists and databases and things like that and you know that's maybe a topic for another show.
01:32:07.000But in a lot of cases what they do is they just have these like debates and conversations.
01:32:12.000I see conservatives across the country are fixated on having like philosophical debates.
01:32:20.000Like, useless, rather, conversations about the issues.
01:32:25.000Which, you know, it's not like entirely useless to talk about politics.
01:32:28.000It's not entirely useless to have debates and a dialectic and so on.
01:32:33.000But we're at the stage where we have enough of that.
01:32:37.000We have enough people reading conservative books.
01:32:40.000We have enough people that are, like, doing intellectually stimulating stuff.
01:32:45.000You know, I look at the breadth of these conservative institutions, things like ISI, the Intercollegiate Studies, I think that's what it is, Institute, and LI, and YAL, and Heritage, and...
01:33:07.000But how many organizations are showing young conservatives or young right-wing people how to actually get in power and wield power?
01:33:17.000Because that's what the Democrats are doing.
01:33:19.000You know, whenever I see this, like, budgetary stuff, this administrative stuff, it always reminds me of how, like, such a huge deficit we have on our side of people that understand how to move the levers of power.
01:33:31.000Because on the Democratic side, there is no shortage of resources to train
01:33:36.000People that are interested in young people in community organizing and getting involved in campaigns and getting involved in data and technology and getting involved in administration and so on.
01:33:49.000They've got an army of bureaucrats in training, basically.
01:33:54.000Just waiting for a democrat to become president.
01:33:56.000Just waiting for a democrat to become a congressman or a senator.
01:34:00.000And these bureaucrats are just waiting to get in there and just F stuff up.
01:34:05.000Get in there and write regulations and write rules and mess with procedure and so on and steal money.
01:34:23.000I don't want to tip my hand, but maybe that's in the works.
01:34:25.000Maybe that's, you know, something that's being talked about behind the scenes, but that to me just always stands out when I look at this like administrative, when you look at like the budget, it's like where are our guys?
01:34:36.000Where are our guys who are in these offices?
01:34:39.000Putting together documents like this that understand how this political game works, that are committed to building a serious apparatus.
01:34:47.000And that's detail, boring, like underground in the Congressional Office of stuff, but it is essential for us to turn things around.
01:35:00.000Aside from, you know, it's a proposal, it doesn't have much real-world impact aside from kind of like symbolically showing where the President's at.
01:35:07.000And aside from, you know, I'm happy about foreign aid and EPA and all that being cut, and I'm not so happy with the fact that there's only two billion dollars for a wall, I can say my overriding message is we need to understand this stuff better.
01:35:22.000We're gonna move on and take a look at our Super Chats.
01:35:24.000We'll see what you guys are saying about all this.
01:35:27.000I'm gonna start on DLive with our lemons and then I will make my way over to Entropy and we'll see what everybody's saying there.
01:35:36.000So let's see, uh, I'll be on DLive here, it says, uh, LG, or LGBT Democrap, Democrap, says Mary F. Kill, Faith Goldie, Cassie, uh, Cassandra Fairbanks, Ashley Rae Goldenberg.
01:35:56.000It's a tough one because I'm friends with Faith Goldie, so I don't know, it's a little offensive, it's a little rude to talk about her in that way, and, uh, Cassandra, I,
01:37:24.000So with a woman you're kind of just you're set you just got to be a woman and uh you know could you imagine honestly I feel bad for these women they've really got it tough out there.
01:37:36.000I don't mean to be too down on women as like a category uh you know not like that's anything new for the show but think about the fact that they've got like 30 years
01:37:51.000As a woman, it's like you got 30 years to get your act together and then you start aging and then you get, you know, big and you start looking older and your eggs dry up.
01:38:05.000And it's like, for me, I'll compare it to this analogy.
01:38:10.000When I was a kid, whenever I played video games, the ones that I hated the most were the timed challenges.
01:38:20.000You know, when you play a video game and you have all kinds of different missions, but you always have like a speed run, a timed trial where it's like two minutes on the clock.
01:38:29.000And that's the way, and I could never handle that urgency, that sense of like, that pressure, the time limit.
01:38:35.000And I feel like if I were a woman right now, a 21 year old woman, and I'm facing down like, I've got nine years to find a husband, have kids, or else I'm like, I'm one of these wine roasties, these wine drinking, you know, hads, life has passed them by.
01:38:52.000I don't, I don't know if I, I don't know if I could deal with that.
01:40:56.000You know, all these people talking about, you know, normal pitchforks are all these people that if they got asked at work if they have right-wing views, they would say,
01:41:39.000People on the internet, you know, I don't need to tell you.
01:41:43.000But, uh, I used to be just with bodybuilders, but now it's with everybody.
01:41:47.000It used to just be with these, like, uh, you know, musclehead, uh, gym cell types, where they'd be like, oh, I'm, I'm so tough, I'm a big, strong, whatever.
01:41:57.000And it's like, oh, okay, see you at work tomorrow, you know?
01:42:01.000Oh, and I've done this bit plenty of times.
01:42:03.000I'm not gonna do the whole bit over again, but I imagine like Mr. Incredible in his insurance office, you know, hulking giant guy, but situated in a cubicle and having to answer to customers and some diminutive, tiny, bureaucratic-type boss coming up and yelling at them in the face and, you know, the powerless just have to take it, you know?
01:46:20.000I saw that America First Highlights posted a video today, it was like Nick Floynce's leg reveal, and I said, yeah, I wear jeans on the show, and somebody's like, jeans with the blazer?
01:46:38.000But that's how it goes like every it's always the needling the nitpicking the So we're just at I'm just at that stage now in my career in my life where it's just you can't you can't do this And I'm just gonna keep doing what I do.
01:47:49.000I'll put that in Google so I remember.
01:47:54.000Did they say my name or did they talk about gripers?
01:47:58.000I don't know to what extent they talked about me.
01:48:03.000Zimundas is relating to the accordion vibe.
01:48:06.000You the type to look for beat samples.
01:48:09.000Uh, yeah, I mean, occasionally if it's a really good sample.
01:48:13.000Yeah, but that song, Accordion by Madvillain, it's a great song, and I've been listening to it all weekend.
01:48:18.000It's really sort of captured my, uh, my energy.
01:48:22.000Being, uh, having vertigo, you know, just like a lot of, look, I'm like this, uh, eccentric, neurotic, hermit sort of character, and that song really fits that, how I was feeling this weekend.
01:48:38.000Accordion by mad villain and you know you ask about the sample It's interesting that you ask that because the sample for that song is amazing, too I've been listening to that as well the sample being of course Experienced by Daedalus.
01:50:47.000All the people look up to this guy who told them that the answer is... I mean, I imagine going to Jordan Peterson's house would be like that movie, Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?
01:50:57.000You know, all these completely over-educated, egghead academics.
01:51:03.000His book, Maps of Meaning, is just like hot trash.
01:51:14.000You know, Jordan Peterson wants to have his own take whatever, but he sells his self-help brand under the guise of like Christianity, but it's a Gnostic brand of Christianity.
01:51:24.000In other words, it says the path to salvation is through something other than Christ.
01:52:06.000He saved everybody, and I'm very weary of anybody that tries to get around that.
01:52:12.000I'm very weary of anybody that, you know, and especially people that say they're Christian, but when they're asked about God or Christ, it's always, well, basically or technically, it should be very straightforward and simple.
01:52:47.000You know, and this is this is the refrain that we hear from psychologists and psychiatrists.
01:52:52.000They say that emotional problems and depression and personality disorders are the result of chemical imbalances and drugs correct chemical imbalances.
01:53:04.000I don't think doctors know what the hell they're talking about.
01:53:07.000I don't think they can measure these chemicals.
01:53:09.000I don't think they know what the correct balance is.
01:53:12.000I don't think that they can correct them through medication.
01:53:16.000I don't think they know what they're doing.
01:53:17.000I think it's like the equivalent of bloodletting.
01:53:20.000As far as science goes when they talk about correcting chemical imbalances.
01:53:24.000Some of these drugs that are commonly prescribed lead people to commit suicide or they destroy their life so bad because of mood changes and mood swings and temper outbursts that they end up killing themselves because of all that.
01:53:38.000Because the drugs destroy their lives in other ways.
01:53:41.000People have no idea what they're consuming and it's like
01:54:55.000He's very good, and he's got a great series.
01:54:58.000I encourage everybody to read the UNZ review.
01:55:01.000He's got this great series called American Pravda, and he goes through a lot of these sort of false historical narratives, the lies that have been told,
01:57:01.000I mean obviously you know I got into Star Wars later on but I wish that I mean that's like in other words that's not a bad thing when people do that these days it's like so much is passed on as child abuse you know and there's obviously the extremes with the left where they say if you gender your children that's abuse but I mean even a lot of conservatives are kind of pussies about this you know what I mean like it was a good thing that
01:57:42.000Feminine you know what I mean just just end up it's particularly with men But in some cases with women without like a guiding hand to kind of and I'm not like oh No, I go over the top, but to kind of push you in the right direction This is why you get a lot of these guys now wear makeup or their simps or their simps Hello, or their coons or whatever so so your dad was based your dad was right warrior says what's one value you'd want your kids to have and
01:58:11.000One valley I'd want my kids to have...
01:58:30.000I think my biggest strength is probably just judgment.
01:58:33.000Because, you know, where I have a deficit in some characteristics, I make up for it in others because I think I have basically good judgment.
01:58:46.000risk-averse when it's necessary and you know I think I don't want to get too much into myself but you know what I mean I think prudence prudence good judgment goes a really long way as far as values go and can not a substitute for everything but I think it can make up for
02:00:44.000For women, it's a bit more of an emotional thing.
02:00:47.000And so when a woman cheats on her man, it's like... Well, not only is it that she's emotionally invested in another man and they're not sexual, so it's like something else, but more than that, women are like... I don't want to say... Well, I can't say that.
02:01:35.000You know, you could say whatever you want about it, you could dress it up any way you want, but we all know that it's like, who's the boss and who's in charge and, you know, how that arrangement works.
02:01:46.000So when a woman goes against her man like that, it's just like a total subversion of that, of that arrangement.
02:01:51.000It totally subverts the power structure, the sort of chain of command of the relationship, if that makes sense.
02:06:00.000My neck's still messed up, but again, I don't think topical thing is gonna help that.
02:06:06.000Probably just, I don't know, I probably just have to wait until I expire as a human being.
02:06:13.000You know, I feel like with a lot of my medical problems, I've just sort of resigned myself to like, ow, my neck hurts.
02:06:20.000Well, I only have 70 more years at most.
02:06:23.000That's kind of how I look at it with everything.
02:06:25.000It's like, oh, ow, ow, my neck hurts and I need to get my wisdom teeth out.
02:06:32.000Well, the good news is I can probably really let myself go in like 50 years.
02:06:38.000Well, I can't live forever, so I guess...
02:06:42.000You know, and it'll be resolved one way or another.
02:06:46.000I don't want, you know, when I look at these medical treatments, invasive procedures and medications, I'm like, I'd rather die than fight all that.
02:06:56.000I think about, you know, having blood drawn.
02:10:08.000Password says women can go to heaven, gays cannot.
02:10:12.000Yeah, but what are we talking about here?
02:10:14.000You didn't say a... well, I guess it's intrinsic and homosexual that you're, like, acting, but the idea is that if you're... if you're gay, you could just not do that.
02:10:26.000That's sort of like the get-out-of-jail-free card, you know?
02:10:29.000So if the question is you have to be gay or be a woman, I guess... if the question is you have to be a gay that's actually involved in gay sex, and not just somebody that, you know, is attracted to people as, like, a gay attraction paradigm,
02:10:44.000If you actually have to participate, then I would say, I'll take the woman.
02:10:48.000I'll take the woman card, because you're right.
02:10:50.000Because you're right, couldn't get into heaven, but I saw, I thought sort of like a sly technicality would be, well, you know, you could just not play ball.
02:11:00.000You could just, you could, no pun intended, you could just not play ball and then it's like, you know,
02:11:08.000But, uh, yeah, well, if, if the, if the choice is, if the choice is you have to be a woman or be an active member of the gay community, I would regrettably choose woman.
02:16:00.000So there's something about that aesthetic 1960s cantaloupe aesthetic which which died out Chad but he would obviously don't agree with everything he did so so that's that's kind of the question so I would say Andrew Jackson would be up there and then maybe George Washington and then I don't I don't know maybe I
02:17:51.000But I'm just saying we all know it's not as bad if you're promiscuous or a cheater as a man than if you are as a woman.
02:17:59.000Now they're both wrong, but we all know.
02:18:03.000Greatest story says Molyneux gathering Intel from e-girl kingpin you see no, I don't know what that means When us is Nick pray three Hail Marys every morning and night.
02:18:50.000Bulbin says, those white people kissing black boots.
02:18:53.000Yeah, yeah, did you see that black Israelite video?
02:18:56.000I put that on my timeline to raise the white racial consciousness.
02:19:00.000I'm hoping that if people see that, because it's hard not to, not to feel something bubbling up inside of you, and we all know what that is.
02:19:10.000So I was hoping by putting that on the timeline it might activate, it might open the, might open the third eye.
02:20:01.000In all these cycles, I feel like a clock!
02:20:04.000I feel like a clock with all these gears turning and just the constant pattern, the constant tempo of all these different things you have to do at different intervals.
02:20:22.000If my life is a song, you've got the brutal, percussive intervals of all these patterns, all these rituals, habits that you have to engage in, sleep, eating, socializing, the holidays, the calendar, you know, all the different things, and I am like the melody that sort of swims, that transcends all these different things, or complements them, I don't know.
02:24:09.000Jay Renz, has ever noticed how lefties will use any excuse to bring up the Islamic Golden Age?
02:24:14.000Basically the Muslim equivalent of we was.
02:24:17.000Still, it's only the second worst Abrahamic religion.
02:24:20.000Okay, yeah, they do bring that up a lot.
02:24:25.000Sammy says, why is everyone sleeping on Soph?
02:24:28.000She's one of the best dissonant right-wing voices at the moment making amazing socially conservative arguments, but just doesn't value government that much.
02:25:15.000Just got to know what you want to do with it.
02:25:18.000Josh the Remover says for this is the will of God that by doing good you may put to silence the ignorance of foolish men as free Yet not using Liberty as a cloak for vice, but as bond servants of God.
02:25:28.000Yes, that is so true RJ says Nick's really simping for his own fans.