America First - Nicholas J. Fuentes - June 21, 2018


Reclaiming Christ and Country feat. Faith Goldy | America First Ep. 185


Episode Stats


Length

1 hour and 49 minutes

Words per minute

186.27875

Word count

20,382

Sentence count

1,542


Summary

Summaries generated with gmurro/bart-large-finetuned-filtered-spotify-podcast-summ .

Transcript

Transcripts from "America First - Nicholas J. Fuentes" are sourced from the Knowledge Fight Interactive Search Tool. Explore them interactively here.
00:00:00.000 Good evening, everybody.
00:00:01.000 You are watching America First.
00:00:03.000 My name is Nicholas J. Fuentes.
00:00:05.000 We've got a great show for you tonight.
00:00:07.000 Another great guest, another challenger has appeared, joined us tonight.
00:00:12.000 We have the lovely, the talented, the Canadian, and the Catholic Faith Goldie here.
00:00:18.000 Welcome to America First.
00:00:20.000 It's great to have you.
00:00:20.000 It's your first time.
00:00:22.000 I came decked out for the content kitchen.
00:00:25.000 I know a woman's role, and I've got my little oven mix here, and I'm wearing my apron.
00:00:29.000 So I'm ready to rock and roll this evening, Nicholas.
00:00:32.000 Well, you've got the proper attire.
00:00:32.000 Excellent.
00:00:33.000 Tired.
00:00:34.000 You came prepared because I know a lot of my audience is actually going to get mad if I didn't bully you, if there wasn't some kind of women thing.
00:00:44.000 So you came prepared.
00:00:45.000 Don't worry, I'll patrol myself out of the gates.
00:00:47.000 I like it.
00:00:48.000 I like it.
00:00:49.000 So we're off to a good start already.
00:00:51.000 So, well, first of all, how are you?
00:00:53.000 What have you been up to lately?
00:00:54.000 It's been a while since we spoke on a podcast.
00:00:57.000 I know.
00:00:57.000 It's been too long.
00:00:58.000 Well, in before the Is Faith Goldie Really White comments, I just came back from Florida despite trying not to get a tan.
00:01:05.000 The med jeans are very strong.
00:01:07.000 So I've been fantastic.
00:01:07.000 My YouTube channel is off to great places right now.
00:01:10.000 We're at 60,000 subscribers.
00:01:12.000 I feel really good about that.
00:01:14.000 Preparing for my wedding in December.
00:01:16.000 And life is good.
00:01:17.000 My sister's expecting another baby boy in about three weeks' time now.
00:01:21.000 So I'm just counting my blessings right now, Nick.
00:01:23.000 And this being on your show is one of them.
00:01:26.000 Oh, I appreciate that.
00:01:27.000 Well, very good.
00:01:27.000 Yeah, it seems like you've been up to a lot of good things.
00:01:30.000 I know we were on kind of like a similar trajectory after Charlottesville, where it was like, Yeah, everything kind of.
00:01:37.000 What's going on?
00:01:38.000 Wouldn't everybody feel right?
00:01:39.000 I'm taking off my apron.
00:01:40.000 I hope you don't mind.
00:01:41.000 Oh, yeah, no, of course.
00:01:43.000 Go ahead.
00:01:43.000 But yeah, I mean, so it's nice to see that everybody is finding their way.
00:01:47.000 I know it was kind of like the Charlottesville Coalition it was me, you, Millennial Matt, Baked Alaska, James, Bryden.
00:01:55.000 And so it's kind of funny to see where the chips are falling, but it looks like, you know, you're back.
00:02:00.000 You're better than ever.
00:02:01.000 You got the YouTube channel, so it's very good.
00:02:04.000 There were a couple of setbacks.
00:02:06.000 I mean, you had the Patreon thing, which was.
00:02:10.000 Rough, which I know I had a whoops almost spilled my water there.
00:02:14.000 I had a similar thing with maker support.
00:02:16.000 So, have you been has that been coming along all right?
00:02:19.000 Have you been?
00:02:20.000 Yeah, so I did not appeal with Patreon, I don't need their shekels, frankly.
00:02:24.000 I've moved on to Free Starter, where I've been told that no matter what I do, basically say, you know, like something really, really heinous and actually illegal, which I have no intention of doing, I get to remain there.
00:02:35.000 I feel very comfortable there.
00:02:36.000 People have been kind of responding in kind, which is good.
00:02:40.000 I mean, I.
00:02:41.000 I don't want to get too much into the finances or whatever, but like, you know, I'm feeling great.
00:02:46.000 I was watching my buddy's video just earlier today, and he made a really good point about doxing.
00:02:51.000 And I think the same could be said to a lot of people, whether it be the post Charlottesville folks, the crew that were there, as well as, you know, folks who have been deplatformed on various cucky platforms like Patreon, that once you take away that which a person fears, the fear element completely goes away.
00:03:08.000 So for me, you know, there's a certain liberation that comes with every single time someone tries to get you down.
00:03:15.000 So, I've actually found myself rather energized, even more so, each time one of these idiots tries to knock me.
00:03:23.000 I like that answer because it's, you know, you are right about that to an extent that, you know, when we look at the establishment and it's sort of frustrating because I know you and I, we see a lot of people who are not talented, who are not telling the truth, and they have access to all these resources because, of course, they censor, because they say what the establishment likes.
00:03:45.000 But I think you're so right that there is something really beautiful.
00:03:49.000 About being independent and being free not only from the constraints of political correctness in all its forms, but also free from the system.
00:03:58.000 You know, and I think with alternative tech and some of these new ways to monetize content, I think we're really, we've really come a long way in that.
00:04:07.000 I think pretty soon, in like six months or a year, I think we'll be in a very good place where there should be robust infrastructure there for people to say what's really going on, you know, the alternative to the alternative.
00:04:18.000 Absolutely.
00:04:19.000 And people are gravitating towards it.
00:04:21.000 Like, I believe that, you know, an appetite for truth and a hunger for it is on everyone's heart.
00:04:26.000 And you see, that's why channels like yours are growing, channels like mine are growing.
00:04:30.000 And the mainstream is just to win nosedive, the failing New York Times, et cetera.
00:04:33.000 But there's something to it.
00:04:35.000 And it doesn't just apply to media, it's also applying to the ballot box right now, where you see that, you know, Mr. and Mrs. America, not to mention Mr. and Mrs. Europe, not of the Somalian and Syrian variety, but, you know, the real deal, the natives of the land, are voting likewise.
00:04:50.000 They want the truth, they want the alternative because they realize that everything that they've been fed is a bunch of brainwashing drivel and none of it's actually working out in their or their children's favor.
00:05:00.000 So I feel like we're on the winning side.
00:05:03.000 And I'm all about it.
00:05:04.000 Speaking of which, can I just really quickly interject?
00:05:05.000 Because talking about winning, I'm reminded of you and Donald Trump when I think of that.
00:05:09.000 I mean it really seriously.
00:05:10.000 And I watched the Patrick Little interview.
00:05:12.000 I was really out of the loop for the longest time, Nicholas.
00:05:15.000 I thought, damn it.
00:05:16.000 I didn't know who he was, to be honest.
00:05:19.000 I thought, okay, this is a big deal.
00:05:20.000 All the irony bros are talking about it.
00:05:21.000 I need to see what's going on.
00:05:23.000 So I pulled it out.
00:05:23.000 You schooled him.
00:05:24.000 I'm very impressed with you.
00:05:25.000 I mean, not that I'm not usually, but I think you held yourself very, very well.
00:05:30.000 And I think he certainly won that.
00:05:32.000 And he made a bit of an ass of himself.
00:05:34.000 Well, thank you.
00:05:34.000 Pardon my French.
00:05:35.000 I really do appreciate that.
00:05:37.000 It's something that's been very controversial lately.
00:05:40.000 But I really appreciate that because I went back and I watched the tape and I tried really hard during that segment.
00:05:46.000 I mean, I went on basically as a joke, but I watched it and I tried really hard to maintain a position.
00:05:52.000 And me and Jared Taylor talked about this last night that what we really dislike is not people that are trying to do something for our country.
00:06:01.000 And maybe you fall short, that's okay.
00:06:02.000 It's not people that are telling the truth, it's not people that are making these sort of quixotic efforts.
00:06:08.000 It's people that, because their emotions override the calculus behind politics, behind strategy, tactics, all the rest, the people that let their hearts choke their brains.
00:06:20.000 That kind of stuff does a lot more harm than good.
00:06:23.000 And I think me and Taylor talked a lot about that last night.
00:06:26.000 I know you and I have talked a lot about this in private, and also we've tweeted about it publicly.
00:06:31.000 So I appreciate that.
00:06:33.000 But I'm trying very hard to sew it back together because people don't like the infighting.
00:06:39.000 I don't care so much because I like to fight.
00:06:41.000 I think, I know, I know, you've got the Aztec blood, as you say.
00:06:45.000 But I think that there's also an element of egoism in it as well.
00:06:50.000 Because if you cannot understand that your asinine behavior is actually acting as a roadblock as opposed to a pathway for the movement, then you need to step the hell aside.
00:06:59.000 I don't care if you won 1.2% of the vote, if you put all your heart and soul in it and you were a flash in the pan, but you garnered some headlines, and we can chalk it as a half win for our guys if that's where we were.
00:07:12.000 But frankly, since Trump's win, think about how much the dissident right has grown.
00:07:16.000 We should be getting more than 1.2% if we're doing our job properly, even in a bid for office.
00:07:22.000 So you lose on paper, and then you continue to lose, not just on the ground war, but the air war as well, because you can't carry yourself accordingly.
00:07:29.000 Taking time off work to read a culture of critique.
00:07:33.000 Right, right.
00:07:34.000 Well, I mean, that's a really good point when you look at all the primaries this season.
00:07:39.000 I think Neilan was the best example of this, because here was a case where, and everybody knows I supported Neilan from the beginning.
00:07:46.000 I worked on his campaign in 2016, you know, and I supported him.
00:07:50.000 I had him on my show.
00:07:52.000 And the reason why I really believed in him was because we know that he knew the real deal.
00:07:58.000 He knew the score, you know, so to speak.
00:08:01.000 But here was a guy who he was campaigning in a district that was red, that went red for 20 years.
00:08:07.000 He was campaigning in a way that was Trumpian, that was America first, it was populist.
00:08:11.000 It was, it had that same kind of grassroots, exactly, that kind of like grassroots quality.
00:08:17.000 And Paul Ryan retires a few months later, and so the field's wide open, but he threw it all away because he wanted to.
00:08:25.000 Be the edgiest guy on the internet.
00:08:26.000 He wanted the dopamine from the likes and all the rest.
00:08:29.000 Losing strategy.
00:08:31.000 I'm sorry, men, but it's not a you know what swinging contest of who can be the edgiest.
00:08:36.000 If you want to play that game, go back to the playground.
00:08:39.000 If you want to win a war, not play a game, then you got to be smart about it.
00:08:44.000 And stop with, you know, and I'm not trying to, you know, lecture.
00:08:47.000 I think most of the sane people in the movement get this.
00:08:50.000 You have to be intelligent about your arguments.
00:08:52.000 One of the greatest things about your platform, about similar ones to it, is that you're giving people tools. to articulate the views that we have in a sensible and intelligent way so that way Joseph's pack who's watching this, whether he'd be a millennial or a base boomer, can go back to his dinner table, his water cooler and say, Hey, you know what?
00:09:09.000 Here are some arguments as to why I love my country, as to why I love my people, why, what I see for the future of my nation if we go either A or B route.
00:09:17.000 And so that is part of what I think our vocation is in this industry is to help people, um, be the best versions of themselves so that we can work towards the best versions of our countries and, and, you know, LARPing around with armbands and, you know, getting into, you know, edge wars is not necessarily going to cultivate virtue, desirability, or won elections.
00:09:42.000 Right.
00:09:43.000 Well, it's so true because I look at people like you and I look at people like Jared Taylor and I look at the content that comes out.
00:09:50.000 And this is just people that have been on my show recently.
00:09:53.000 And I see two normal people who are saying reasonable things, saying them in a reasonable way that anybody can understand.
00:10:00.000 And that is the biggest threat to the establishment because you're right, the boomer, the.
00:10:05.000 The white disaffected college kid, you know, all these different classes of people that we're trying to reach out to, voters, a more mainstream audience, they could watch this viral content and say, you know what, wait a minute, ethnic nationalism is not crazy.
00:10:18.000 It actually makes a lot of sense, you know?
00:10:20.000 And so when you have people, and then you have people at the same time that come out of the gate and say all this crazy stuff and they're running around like lunatics, like their heads are chopped off, it doesn't do us any favors.
00:10:33.000 And so I really think that's an important point to drive home.
00:10:36.000 You know, we talk about optics all the time on the show.
00:10:39.000 But I will extend somewhat of an olive branch to these kinds of people.
00:10:44.000 And it kind of goes along with that documentary that came out on Netflix with Jared Taylor.
00:10:48.000 Because, you know, I watched it.
00:10:50.000 We talked about it a little bit last night.
00:10:51.000 And to just kind of continue off of that, throughout the documentary, they had these people from the South who were, they were like blue collar, they were lower income, they were in the NSM.
00:11:02.000 And over the course of this documentary, you had this Indian filmmaker, or she's like Pakistani or something, Muslim.
00:11:10.000 And over the course of the documentary, she's trying to understand these people.
00:11:13.000 She's asking them, you know, why do you feel like your country's under attack, et cetera, et cetera.
00:11:17.000 And towards the end, you know, she said, okay, well, would you remove me from your country?
00:11:22.000 And in every case, they said, no.
00:11:24.000 I respect you.
00:11:25.000 I don't want to see any harm come to you.
00:11:27.000 We just don't want to feel under attack.
00:11:30.000 And I saw that.
00:11:31.000 And at first, I was kind of frustrated because I said, you know, this is browbeating.
00:11:34.000 This is so over the top.
00:11:35.000 But at the same time, I said, you know what?
00:11:37.000 People are really hurt.
00:11:39.000 People are really in a bad place right now where you see so many white people in the country where.
00:11:45.000 You know, they have been put off from the media and from the government, and there's no real outlet for them.
00:11:50.000 And I think we have to have some kind of understanding for that emotion.
00:11:54.000 We have to have an understanding for where they're coming from.
00:11:57.000 But at the same time, we also have to be smart and win.
00:11:59.000 So it's a balance, right?
00:12:01.000 It's a balance.
00:12:02.000 And, you know, to that point, I know it's something that we've discussed before, but it's something that I'm quite passionate about.
00:12:02.000 Absolutely.
00:12:06.000 I mean, if you want to look at just how hurt people are right now, they're literally dying because of the fact they feel so disenfranchised and so disaffected within their own neighborhood, literally strangers within their own workplace, their families, and their neighborhoods.
00:12:22.000 And, you know, when you have, I, New statistics out of my country now, I didn't think that we were as badly affected by it as middle America, where you've seen ER rates go up by 300%.
00:12:34.000 You see every single status of people, every group of people living longer and longer, except for middle aged, middle class white men who are dying at faster rates.
00:12:42.000 Their mortality rates are actually going down, and the number one cause being deaths of despair, namely opioids, fentanyl, et cetera.
00:12:49.000 In Canada, I just learned that there's been a 30% spike in just the past year.
00:12:53.000 So, you know.
00:12:55.000 That's why, when you see these people, you're like, oh, they're just a bunch of hillbillies, and I'm not counter signaling those people whatsoever.
00:13:02.000 I want their side to win because I care about their families.
00:13:04.000 I understand that when there is a man without a job because he's been replaced by either, frankly, foreigners at cheaper labor or his job's been outsourced, and he no longer has church in his life, he's seen his kid get divorced by the time he was 30, and he just feels absolutely no hope, just hopeless grief that he takes his own life.
00:13:25.000 I understand the pain doesn't end there.
00:13:27.000 That it affects the wife, the children.
00:13:29.000 You know, there are families in America where two generations have taken their own life from this.
00:13:32.000 So I want those people, like I want Middle America.
00:13:35.000 I really think that Middle America has to be the center of this movement, just as they were with the center of Trump's win.
00:13:39.000 So I want to help empower those people as much as possible.
00:13:43.000 I think we should all be, you know, on side with that and not just getting into a meme, you know, like shitposting just like for the sake of patting ourselves on the back.
00:13:52.000 You know, I'm not just interested in keyboard worrying, warriorship, if you will.
00:13:57.000 I want IRL activism.
00:13:58.000 And part of that is that we bring people.
00:14:01.000 Into the fold in the front lines.
00:14:03.000 Absolutely.
00:14:04.000 And I think that's such a good point you make about finding ways to empower people and do something with that grief, do something with that discontent, because you look at a guy like Patrick Little, and it is kind of a tragic story where here's a, I mean, we don't know if he's a federal agent or not, but, you know, let's say that his story's legit.
00:14:04.000 Well, yeah.
00:14:22.000 He comes home from the war and he finds that his country is drastically changed.
00:14:26.000 He finds out some information that is troubling to him.
00:14:29.000 And we need to find ways for people to.
00:14:32.000 Take that anger that is righteous and that is justified and direct it in a way that will advance our cause.
00:14:39.000 You know, I didn't come into this movement to join a circle jerk so that everybody would upvote my posts on Gab and say he's the fascist guy.
00:14:47.000 I joined the movement to save my race, to save my country.
00:14:51.000 I think we all did the same thing.
00:14:53.000 And so we need to take that anger that we have at the people that have taken so much from us and direct it in a way.
00:15:00.000 It may be boring, that it may be tough, you know, to go to a local GOP and talk about zoning issues.
00:15:06.000 But do it in such a way that's constructive and will lead to the advancement of the cause.
00:15:11.000 It's the illegal free zoning that I am interested in.
00:15:15.000 It's the border zoning that I am most interested in.
00:15:18.000 That's right.
00:15:20.000 That's right.
00:15:20.000 The zoning, which is called the wall.
00:15:22.000 But so that's a perfect transition.
00:15:25.000 I wanted to pick your brain.
00:15:26.000 It's the hot topic in America.
00:15:28.000 I also think it is in Canada, which is the children being separated from the families.
00:15:33.000 And so, what are you thinking about this?
00:15:37.000 Are you against Trump?
00:15:38.000 Are you glad that America is being punished by the UN and by the global homo complex for being so mean to the children?
00:15:46.000 Or, I mean, what's your take on this?
00:15:47.000 Well, okay, as I understand it, Trump has just signed this executive order, which will, in effect, ban children from being separated from their families.
00:15:56.000 But as I understand it even further, it's a bit of a 4D move because there is this sort of limitation statute, which actually was formed during the 90s under Clinton, and it says that children cannot be in adult facilities for longer than 20 days.
00:16:10.000 So it's going to be kind of confusing there going forward when it comes to the actual legislative pipeline, rather.
00:16:16.000 What do I actually make of it?
00:16:18.000 I think that this was a giant fumble, frankly, from the Republicans.
00:16:21.000 I actually, this is my own kind of conspiracy.
00:16:24.000 Melania is an angel.
00:16:25.000 So understand that I say this with absolutely no hostility towards her.
00:16:30.000 I love her.
00:16:30.000 I think she is like the Slav goddess who will help deliver America.
00:16:35.000 But that being said, I think that she probably was in her husband's ear after she saw the despicable threats on her son by the likes of verified Twitter calling for his kidnapping and his being placed in a cage with a bunch of pedophiles, like weird stuff where the left.
00:16:52.000 Left mind goes.
00:16:54.000 So I think that probably happened.
00:16:56.000 Melania says, Donnie, we need to do something.
00:16:58.000 And then he says, okay, I'm going to sign this EO.
00:17:02.000 I think it was a giant cluster F.
00:17:04.000 I think what the Republicans should have said was first of all, are you an idiot?
00:17:09.000 Do you want us to put children in adult facilities?
00:17:13.000 Like, what kind of cruel and unusual beasts are you?
00:17:16.000 Because if we were, you'd be calling for them to be in just more kind of mild and just kid friendly.
00:17:23.000 So, this is kind of strange that you're calling for harsher treatment for these children.
00:17:23.000 Places.
00:17:28.000 And number two, the fact that it was a complete propaganda botched job from verified Twitter using all of these pictures that were basically like it was just propaganda pieces from rallies, et cetera, of kids in cages that were not actually found to be the real situation on the ground.
00:17:43.000 So, I think that this was a really unfortunate situation of the Republicans buckling to their critics when they should have remained quite firm that, okay, you want to keep families together?
00:17:53.000 No problem.
00:17:54.000 We'll deport them as soon as they get here.
00:17:55.000 Like that way, they stay together.
00:17:58.000 Other than that, they're getting separated.
00:17:59.000 Like, there's just this is just one of the costs of being a criminal.
00:18:02.000 And not just if you illegally cross, but you know, if you commit any heinous offense, you're separated from your children.
00:18:08.000 It's called prison.
00:18:09.000 Like, you don't see them all out there, you know, trying to help the white collar criminals get with their kids again.
00:18:15.000 So, I think that this could have been handled in a very, very different way.
00:18:19.000 I think that Trump should have probably held a firmer line because otherwise, what you do is you embolden your critics to whine and then they get what they want.
00:18:27.000 And let's be very clear.
00:18:29.000 They didn't want what's best for the kids.
00:18:31.000 These are satanic, anti-child, anti-life freaks.
00:18:36.000 Most of them who've aborted their own children are in like homosexual, like childless relationships as it is.
00:18:42.000 They don't care about kids.
00:18:44.000 Um, this is all just a farce and, and appealing to emotion as opposed to actual numbers and facts.
00:18:50.000 So I think that this was a little bit of a fumble as opposed to a touchdown for Trump from my end, regrettably.
00:18:58.000 Do you see differently?
00:19:00.000 No, I basically agree with that assessment.
00:19:02.000 I mean, my view from the beginning was that you're so right that the Republicans completely botched the messaging on this one.
00:19:09.000 I think that's the biggest takeaway is that this was just a gigantic missed opportunity to change the narrative and the frame on immigration because you're right.
00:19:18.000 I mean, the messaging could have been so much more effective if most of them took Trump's lead, and even the White House didn't take Trump's lead.
00:19:24.000 I'm talking about the comms department and the press secretary.
00:19:28.000 If they had said, you know what, this is do you want borders or do you not want borders?
00:19:33.000 You know, Trump made it about.
00:19:35.000 He made it about MS 13.
00:19:36.000 He made it about all these things on Twitter.
00:19:38.000 But when you watch the press conferences, when you got from the White House and what you got from the GOP establishment, was we care about the kids, but it's the Democrats that need to fix the law.
00:19:48.000 It was confused.
00:19:50.000 It wasn't really effective.
00:19:52.000 And so I don't think it was like a disaster.
00:19:55.000 I don't really even think it was a failure, but fumble is the right word for it because it was a missed opportunity.
00:20:01.000 And you're right about the executive order.
00:20:03.000 The executive order is not the end of the world because the language isn't really clear.
00:20:08.000 And what it actually.
00:20:10.000 Impedes people from being able to come into the country because if you keep the kids with the parents for longer, the kids don't go into foster homes and then they're not eligible for DACA.
00:20:19.000 And so it actually cleans it up a little bit.
00:20:21.000 But regardless of the substance of the EO, what the EO does, like you said, is it creates moral hazard.
00:20:28.000 If the Democrats know that, well, if we just make a big stink and there's crying children and we wave the bloody flag all over the place, Trump will concede.
00:20:38.000 Trump will have to make some kind of a compromise.
00:20:41.000 He'll have to adjust.
00:20:42.000 And so going into the midterms, I don't like the precedent that that sets.
00:20:45.000 I don't like that the Democrats think, oh, well, if we just do the latest and greatest crying child picture or crying child audio, we can get him to budge.
00:20:55.000 Right.
00:20:56.000 CNN and MSNBC, from biblical scholars to now child welfare experts.
00:21:03.000 You mentioned, first of all, we have to tip our hat to Melania, who went down to meet some of the illegals today and was wearing that based Zara jacket.
00:21:12.000 See this?
00:21:12.000 Did you?
00:21:13.000 I did see that.
00:21:14.000 I really don't care, do you?
00:21:15.000 I was a control level expert, Melania.
00:21:19.000 But that aside, you mentioned about the moral hazard when it comes to the Dems.
00:21:22.000 There's also a moral alibi that we've now, in effect, at least as long as this EO stands, and until we start getting into sort of a weird gray area with other legislation, we've given these illegals a moral alibi to, frankly, continue on with their human trafficking, which is what most of these people are doing.
00:21:37.000 Out of the 10,000 children that are currently in custody, only I think it's like 2,000 of them are really the children of the parents who.
00:21:45.000 Came in, the rest of them were basically trafficked in.
00:21:48.000 They're being used as drug smugglers and drug mules by these gross coyotes, et cetera.
00:21:55.000 So I have a bit of an interesting idea of how we could turn this crisis into an opportunity.
00:22:03.000 It might be expensive, but I feel like if you need anything down at the border, it's going to cost money.
00:22:07.000 I feel like what you could do is, in order, if we've given them this moral alibi for them to bring their children, we could deploy a bunch of DNA kits to actually basically Mori Povish them.
00:22:18.000 To see whether they are in fact the father.
00:22:20.000 But then above that, we could also collect more of their DNA to essentially create a registry to, okay, that's going to sound really bad as soon as that gets played out if anyone's actually listened to this.
00:22:30.000 But I mean it really seriously of any sort of sicknesses they might be bringing in, as well as just having their DNA, should there be any sort of crimes, as is known to happen on occasion with illegals, be they sexual or murderous.
00:22:42.000 And so I think that could help make some of our law enforcement's job, not to mention your medical community's job, a little bit easier down the road.
00:22:51.000 I like the biometric data.
00:22:53.000 It's like when they catch sharks.
00:22:54.000 Very good.
00:22:55.000 Very 2050s.
00:22:56.000 Yeah, right.
00:22:57.000 That's very good.
00:22:58.000 It's so true.
00:22:59.000 Throw away people not existing.
00:23:01.000 Yeah, all right.
00:23:02.000 Well, I mean, that's, I think, the point that needs to be driven home is that this is a scam.
00:23:08.000 You know, the children that are here, like you said, 2,000 of them are actually related to the people that brought them over here.
00:23:16.000 10,000 of them were brought over by smugglers.
00:23:19.000 And so once you understand that the vast, vast, vast majority, were brought over not by the parents, you understand they're playing the system.
00:23:26.000 Because what happens is the parents send their kids across the border with a coyote or with some kind of a smuggler.
00:23:33.000 The smuggler and the child enter the country.
00:23:36.000 The child enters into a foster home.
00:23:38.000 Now the child's eligible for DACA.
00:23:40.000 If there's a legalization for DACA, guess who comes over through chain migration?
00:23:44.000 The rest of the family over from Mexico.
00:23:46.000 So the child has completed their mission.
00:23:48.000 They're in the foster home.
00:23:49.000 Now they get to bring in the reinforcements.
00:23:51.000 The smuggler gets to apply for asylum because they have the child.
00:23:55.000 That's their ticket to stay in the country.
00:23:57.000 Because of catch and release, if they don't have the facilities to detain them, the asylum seekers are released into the country while their application is processed.
00:24:04.000 You never hear from them again.
00:24:06.000 So.
00:24:07.000 It's such a disaster for messaging.
00:24:10.000 And that's when you get to the heart of the matter, which is that the Republicans don't want to win.
00:24:15.000 They want open borders as much as the Democrats.
00:24:18.000 If they wanted to build a wall like Trump does, if they wanted to end chain migration, they would be on this.
00:24:25.000 Of course they would.
00:24:26.000 But the Republican leadership, they were the first turncoats like five days ago to say, we unanimously are against the separation of children and their parents at the border.
00:24:35.000 So these people are scum.
00:24:37.000 But that should have been the messaging from day one, which is this is a scam.
00:24:41.000 I think that Trump should use executive orders way more.
00:24:45.000 That's where I'm at.
00:24:47.000 I think he should just, you know, like casually repeal the Hard Cellar Act, just like casually just build the wall.
00:24:53.000 Just be like, this is what we're doing now, fam.
00:24:55.000 I was elected.
00:24:56.000 I'm just going to get it done.
00:24:57.000 I don't need Congress anymore.
00:24:58.000 Obama did it all throughout his eight years.
00:25:00.000 I'm just going to start EOing my way through the rest of my, what now, six, seven, hopefully, God willing, 2020.
00:25:06.000 I think Little doesn't beat him.
00:25:09.000 Yeah, well, hey, fingers crossed that we don't get Little Farrakhan 2020.
00:25:13.000 Right?
00:25:14.000 Might be President Little.
00:25:15.000 I'd be in a lot of trouble.
00:25:17.000 Okay, but Buchanan, Coulter for 2024, are you with me, fam?
00:25:21.000 Oh, I'm with you on that one.
00:25:23.000 That would be because Ann Coulter, they are talking about her running in 2020 as in the same way that Buchanan ran in 92, which is to drag Trump to the right.
00:25:35.000 But yeah, no, I mean, and this is why it's so immigration is the central issue for Trump, you know, speaking of 2020 in the midterms.
00:25:43.000 Oh, yeah, and also.
00:25:44.000 It is the most important issue for the world.
00:25:47.000 Everyone cares about immigration right now.
00:25:49.000 And if you don't, you're about to be steamrolled by people who have it within their interest to see that your people cease to be the nation within your nation.
00:25:59.000 Right.
00:26:00.000 Well, it's demographics is destiny.
00:26:03.000 And that adage could not be more true.
00:26:05.000 When you look at a nation, I think the biggest fallacy is we tend to look at it like it's the economy, it's the markets, it's all these individuals hanging out together on the land.
00:26:16.000 A nation is its people.
00:26:17.000 A nation is only as good as the people inside of it.
00:26:20.000 And so the idea that we could just drag the third world north into America, that we could just drag people from countries that don't work into our country, and our country could continue to work, is asinine and insane.
00:26:33.000 So it's important for the midterms.
00:26:35.000 It's important for 2020, but it's important for the next like five centuries.
00:26:39.000 It's important forever.
00:26:40.000 So.
00:26:41.000 Well, really, I would say like the next two and a half decades more than anything.
00:26:45.000 We've, I mean, every single Western nation saved.
00:26:48.000 You know, the center part of the Schengen area, namely Hungary, Slovakia, Czech Republic, and Poland, the rest of the Western world basically has 25 to 40 years before their native populations are completely replaced.
00:27:00.000 That's basically our window of opportunity to stop them from coming in and to start ourselves for breeding more, basically.
00:27:08.000 You saw that headline today, I can't remember if it was Pew, where basically there are more white people dying than are being born right now in the United States.
00:27:14.000 And I tweeted it out, it's like, this is just math, it's not conspiracy theory, fam.
00:27:18.000 And more and more people are waking up to it, which is The good news, but because it is such a salient truth, there are going to be so many people who aim to basically shut us up.
00:27:26.000 That's why y'all in America are very, very, very blessed that you have Donald J. Trump as your president.
00:27:31.000 I mean it really seriously.
00:27:32.000 As much as I might knock him on occasion, this sort of a fumble, et cetera, it is nothing.
00:27:37.000 It pales in comparison to how much I understand how much of an absolute miracle he is to have at the helm of your country.
00:27:43.000 Because, of course, compare him to Boy Trudeau, soy boy in chief over here, who has literally erased our southern border without a mandate.
00:27:50.000 We didn't have a southern border problem when he was elected.
00:27:53.000 Now we do because he's literally opened it up.
00:27:56.000 And he's talking about essentially pulling out from the safe third country agreement with America, which would completely, like, day of rape would actually occur.
00:28:06.000 Yeah, well, it is true that Trump is a blessing.
00:28:09.000 It's important that as frustrated as people get with him, and I understand it, frankly, you know, the wall, it's a shame that it's not being built.
00:28:17.000 I don't totally lay that at his feet, but, you know, we understand that there are frustrations because it's a tough business in government.
00:28:23.000 You know, what we're up against is a lot.
00:28:25.000 But when you put it in context, when you put it in perspective against a Trudeau, against Merkel, against Theresa May or Macron or any of these people, he is providential for this country.
00:28:37.000 And, And I will say there is a big white pill about this whole episode, which is you can see that immigration is becoming central to the conversation.
00:28:47.000 Whereas it was all about taxes a few months ago or North Korea, immigration's back in the spotlight.
00:28:53.000 And not only that, but the rhetoric is getting spicy.
00:28:56.000 You know, Trump, to defend his policy, brought up Germany and what's going on there.
00:29:01.000 He met with the Italian prime minister who got elected in Italy.
00:29:05.000 Blessed Italy, my ancestral homeland, yes.
00:29:09.000 Lega is now ahead.
00:29:10.000 Yes.
00:29:11.000 Of the, was it four star, five star?
00:29:13.000 But anyway, those guys are basically the star movement.
00:29:15.000 They're basically populist.
00:29:16.000 Lega is like an actual nationalist movement.
00:29:19.000 Like they're hardcore and they're even surpassing, they're number one on the polls right now for the base boot of Europe.
00:29:26.000 Right.
00:29:26.000 Well, and Salvini in Italy is talking about cleansing migrants neighborhood to neighborhood in Germany, miracles on the verge of getting a vote of no confidence or government shutdown.
00:29:37.000 So there was a really good point that Trump made.
00:29:40.000 I forget if it was at a rally, I think it was.
00:29:43.000 In an interview after North Korea.
00:29:45.000 Yeah, he came out on the White House lawn to talk to the reporters there.
00:29:48.000 I don't know if you saw this.
00:29:49.000 It was pretty funny.
00:29:50.000 He went out for Fox and Friends.
00:29:52.000 And he said it very much kind of in passing.
00:29:55.000 A lot of people didn't really catch it, but he said, you know, it's kind of funny.
00:29:58.000 It seems like strong on immigration wins these days when he was talking about Italy.
00:30:02.000 And that was such a strong point that he's totally cognizant of the fact that you look across Europe, across America, the tide seems to be turning.
00:30:11.000 You know, what we said earlier, it seems like we're on the winning side these days.
00:30:15.000 You know, and you can like think.
00:30:15.000 Absolutely.
00:30:17.000 Thank Hegel for his dialectic here.
00:30:19.000 But quite seriously, I think that the facts have become so stark and so painfully obvious.
00:30:25.000 And you're like, oh, wow, so like 1,400 English girls raped by a bunch of Pakistani men?
00:30:30.000 Okay, that doesn't sound like the sort of thing I want in my town.
00:30:32.000 Oh, women being raped across Cologne?
00:30:34.000 Okay, like Muslim no go zones, madrasas all across.
00:30:39.000 We're seeing the fact that populations can literally be replaced across Europe.
00:30:43.000 There, it's very much the Muslim question, if you will, and the North African question.
00:30:47.000 And then you see that.
00:30:49.000 Southern U.S. has essentially been balkanized into Mexico North.
00:30:54.000 And people are starting to say, like, I was just down in Florida and there were certain stores I went to where no one was speaking English.
00:30:59.000 And at one point, I literally said, speak American.
00:31:02.000 I had to.
00:31:04.000 I was like, oh, the rage right now.
00:31:07.000 I'll tell you right now, there's a store really close to where I live called Canadian Tire.
00:31:10.000 Any Canucks who are watching this right now, you know, we call it crappy tire, whatever.
00:31:13.000 But it's like a Canadian landmark.
00:31:15.000 It's kind of like a Home Depot or a Home Hardware.
00:31:19.000 And it's like where Canadians go to be Canadian and get paying things for your barbecue and your lawn, et cetera.
00:31:23.000 Well, there's one by my house, and I live in a part of town which was like a de facto part of the ethno state within Toronto.
00:31:31.000 So, despite the fact that we are a majority minority city, there were a lot of kind of yuppie Anglos, et cetera, around this area.
00:31:38.000 I went there, and I was the only woman within three aisles, and I am not kidding you with this, who was not wearing a niqab that is full ninja.
00:31:47.000 So, I think that it's like, even if you don't read the headlines, you go out to your local store and you're like, what?
00:31:47.000 Okay.
00:31:54.000 I was here two, three years ago, and everyone was in shorts and a tank top this time of year.
00:31:57.000 What's going on?
00:31:58.000 You know?
00:31:59.000 And so that's why, to Trump's point, it seems like strong immigration is winning these days.
00:32:04.000 It's because it's become too hard to conceal the truth from the people now.
00:32:09.000 And that what people are looking for, frankly, is a pair of balls.
00:32:12.000 Someone who's going to say, you know what, EU, you know what, George Soros, you know what, Democratic establishment and APEC and whomever else, we're sick and tired, or we're not going to take it anymore.
00:32:23.000 We're going to build that wall.
00:32:24.000 We're going to close the borders.
00:32:25.000 We're going to build a wall and deport them all.
00:32:27.000 I wish.
00:32:28.000 But so for me, as you said, it's very much a giant white pill because things had to get so bad in order for us to start to make them better.
00:32:38.000 And so, in a strange way, when you see all the blood, the guts, and the horror in the stats and in the daily papers, it's like, well, you know what?
00:32:47.000 At least it's starting to red pill people.
00:32:49.000 And I'm seeing that, especially in my daily life.
00:32:52.000 I've got friends from all over and through different segments of my life.
00:32:56.000 I've always been very outspoken politically, but obviously I've I've veered further right with time.
00:33:00.000 I've got friends who now, you know, in the deep, dark corners, our cell phone calls are like, Faith, I think I agree with you on immigration.
00:33:06.000 I'm like, Faith, I'm so happy for you.
00:33:10.000 Of course you do, because I'm right.
00:33:12.000 And so it's, it's, it's, like you said, it's a white bill.
00:33:14.000 Absolutely.
00:33:15.000 Right.
00:33:15.000 Well, that's a good point that you make about how people are seeing it.
00:33:19.000 I think that's the most encouraging thing.
00:33:21.000 I think, you know, we talk a lot about how time is on the side of the globalist, because of course, it's like you said earlier, it's math.
00:33:30.000 In terms of the population replacement, you look at the fertility rates of the native people versus the fertility rates of the foreign born, and it's a matter of arithmetic.
00:33:38.000 But in a certain sense, time can also be on our side because as this progresses, people will start to see what's happening.
00:33:47.000 They'll start to feel it in ways that they could have escaped before, in ways that they were insulated from before.
00:33:53.000 But now when they're driving down the street and all the signs are in Spanish or a gang killing happens in their neighborhood, now suddenly they start to.
00:34:01.000 Think a little differently.
00:34:02.000 When their kids are in school getting bullied or raped or killed by MS-13 or by some of our new neighbors, some of our new classmates, then people are going to start to feel a lot differently.
00:34:12.000 And that's essentially what happened in the country because this invasion was happening for 50 years.
00:34:17.000 You know, you had every year increasing amounts.
00:34:20.000 I think it was 20 million new immigrants in the 70s, 30 million in the 90s, 40 million in the last decade.
00:34:27.000 And in the initial phases as it was coming through, people didn't really feel it.
00:34:31.000 The thought that America would not be an Anglo, English speaking, patriotic country was so outside of our experience.
00:34:38.000 It was laughable.
00:34:40.000 And people were warning us then, but now we're feeling it.
00:34:42.000 Now we see it.
00:34:43.000 And so maybe there is something to be said about a certain degree of acceleration that as we move down the line towards a place where we really don't want to go, more and more people are going to say, hey, maybe we should pump the brakes.
00:34:55.000 Maybe it's time to go back.
00:34:56.000 So I certainly think it is white pilling.
00:35:01.000 Acceleration is hardcore.
00:35:04.000 So we don't have to go down that road right now.
00:35:06.000 I'm very familiar with the arguments.
00:35:08.000 Look, I'll tell you this, and I've mentioned this to you before because I think Canada is so much a canary in the coal mine.
00:35:13.000 So far as we are the country now experiencing the fastest rate of ethnic change, more than the UK, more than Germany, more than Sweden, more than all of the crazy European caliphate states.
00:35:25.000 And this is 100% because of immigration.
00:35:28.000 In 14 years, we will see 100% of our population growth occur because of immigration, not because of natural replacement whatsoever.
00:35:36.000 And so it's happening so fast.
00:35:38.000 And keep in mind that Canada is a country where in 1971, we were, I believe, 96% European.
00:35:45.000 And then all of a sudden, Trudeau's Papa.
00:35:48.000 Pierre Elliott Trudeau Sr., our way back when prime minister, ushered in a policy of multiculturalism, which completely began the hardcore brainwashing process of the Canadian people.
00:36:01.000 That number one, told us the lie that we are a nation of immigrants.
00:36:05.000 We are not.
00:36:06.000 Like America, we are a nation of settlers and pioneers.
00:36:09.000 It's very different to come here and to found a country from trees and the hinterland than it is to come here and look for mugids.
00:36:18.000 Okay?
00:36:19.000 Those are very different experiences.
00:36:20.000 So don't tell me that.
00:36:21.000 Canada was a nation of immigrants when, at the time of Confederation, we were 79% people who were born here.
00:36:28.000 But I won't bore you with that.
00:36:29.000 But the more perhaps applicable thing to the American experience is that the Canadian policy of multiculturalism has indeed, we are the very first nation in the entire world to have ever passed at a federal mandated level a policy of multiculturalism.
00:36:45.000 And ours has been the example for the world.
00:36:49.000 And what is it?
00:36:50.000 It's this cultural Marxist idea of essentially moral but cultural and Ethnic relativism, where we are a country for all people and therefore no people in particular.
00:37:01.000 We are a country of all cultures and therefore no cultures in particular, of all languages and therefore no languages.
00:37:08.000 And it's led to a very, very, very real identity crisis among the Canadian European psyche and indeed his spirit, really.
00:37:19.000 And you'll talk to Canadians who are in and around my cohort, you know, the older millennials, if you will.
00:37:24.000 Are you Gen Z technically?
00:37:26.000 I am technically.
00:37:26.000 I am.
00:37:27.000 Gen Z. Gen Z is the future.
00:37:29.000 It's so totally the hope.
00:37:30.000 I think they're going to church to the tune of three times as much as their millennial compatriots, so it's very good.
00:37:35.000 But you talk to folks in the Gen Z millennial zone, even some of these boomers are sort of out to lunch and they're like, I don't know what it means to be Canadian.
00:37:42.000 Like, why people have no identity.
00:37:44.000 Like, Canada, but it's just like, you people are so, I'm sorry to say, you're brainwashed.
00:37:49.000 And so, but the thing is, is that I think that there's a hunger and thirst for identity in all of our hearts.
00:37:54.000 We need it.
00:37:54.000 We can't live as just like in this nihilistic abandonment.
00:37:57.000 It becomes too dark.
00:37:57.000 Abyss.
00:37:59.000 And so once people start to wave your flag and say, no, we are a people.
00:38:02.000 This is our land.
00:38:03.000 This is our language.
00:38:03.000 These are our customs.
00:38:05.000 We're not just some damn multi melting pot or mosaic or some other, you know, fruit or beverage or whatever the hell you find at the buffet.
00:38:13.000 We are America, damn it.
00:38:15.000 And these are our roots.
00:38:16.000 These are our myths and our mythology.
00:38:18.000 And this will be our future.
00:38:20.000 All of a sudden, people kind of get attracted to that sort of machismo, frankly, especially in a time when there's such a deficit of, frankly, order and patriarchy, which Any civilization needs.
00:38:32.000 Well, yeah, there is a craving for that, some kind of binding, some kind of feeling that we are together, a feeling that we are connected to the soil that we're on.
00:38:42.000 You know, because you're right, we have white children.
00:38:45.000 I see this all the time among, I'm later or early Generation Z, so I see a lot of millennials and very early Generation Z, and it's this feeling of what are we doing?
00:38:54.000 Why are we here?
00:38:56.000 What community do we really define ourselves with?
00:38:58.000 Because, you know, black people in America, Have this feeling that they've got, you know, black people have a lot going for them in the 21st century.
00:39:06.000 They've got their own culture.
00:39:07.000 They've got, it feels like an extended family.
00:39:09.000 They're called the black community.
00:39:11.000 You know, so they have this tremendous, I think, power of identity.
00:39:14.000 The same is true with all kinds of other minority groups.
00:39:17.000 For white Americans and white Canadians, we feel like we're the default setting.
00:39:22.000 You know, we don't have a rich, cool, tribal culture where we can beat on primitive drums and, you know, shake, you know, maracas and things like that.
00:39:31.000 We're just kind of lame.
00:39:32.000 We're just kind of standard.
00:39:33.000 And so that's where a guy like Donald Trump really comes in, reminding people of the mythology, the heroes, the history.
00:39:40.000 And this is where I think a lot of people.
00:39:42.000 Have gone wrong in the last year.
00:39:44.000 We've kind of, I think a lot of people have gone in this direction of fringe, weird, foreign sources of identity.
00:39:54.000 You know, you look at some of the symbols and some of the things that they say, and they're so eager to discard America, so eager to discard the Constitution and, you know, oh, ma this, ma that, you know, we're all above it all.
00:40:06.000 But I think it's a tremendously powerful mythology to say, we're the Americans.
00:40:11.000 We, like, American nationalism, American patriotism has been abandoned.
00:40:16.000 By both sides, it's sitting there, all these powerful symbols and stories and myths and legends and all the rest.
00:40:24.000 Nobody wants to use it.
00:40:25.000 And we're the ones that get to inherit that and say, no, no, we're the ones that can embrace the founding fathers, manifest destiny, these great wars of exploration and discovery.
00:40:35.000 And people are like, a lot of people in the movement for the past year have been like, nah, that's all zog and that's all this or that.
00:40:43.000 So I think that has to be the direction of the country.
00:40:46.000 And this kind of leads us into.
00:40:49.000 The big topic, which we share in common, which is Catholicism, which is that we are Catholics.
00:40:56.000 And I think you're not going to be able to build an identitarian movement without a sense of religious identity and one that is grounded in authority.
00:41:04.000 I mean, what do you think the interplay is between Catholicism, which many people will say is pro amnesty, is pro immigration?
00:41:11.000 The Pope kissed a migrant's foot one time.
00:41:13.000 How does that fit in?
00:41:15.000 How does that complement this similar cry for identity and nationalism?
00:41:19.000 Well, first of all, I'll start off by saying I think that having a Christian moral compass, period, of course, in America, it tends to be more towards sort of the Protestant, sorry, predilections, but having Christianity as a part of any sort of a European, and by that I include we Europeans here in North America, identitarian movement is absolutely crucial because without it, you lack a moral civic consensus.
00:41:46.000 And without a moral civic consensus, believe me, my ethnostate is not going to be so pretty because Even if you do have, say, limited immigration, you're bringing people in.
00:41:57.000 What are you asking them to assimilate to?
00:41:59.000 Oh, look, we have Pride Month over here in the ethno state.
00:42:03.000 Right.
00:42:04.000 Cool.
00:42:05.000 Great values.
00:42:06.000 Yeah.
00:42:06.000 And like Nicki Minaj isn't allowed to live here, but like here are her billboards.
00:42:09.000 Like, you know, we need to figure out what we actually stand for.
00:42:12.000 So, with that just saying, I think it's a fundamental ingredient because, first of all, it also helps temper the fact that, you know, one man, one woman, families, which of course are the nucleus of the state going forward.
00:42:24.000 The justification for nationhood.
00:42:27.000 And frankly, a more tempered understanding of immigration within the Bible.
00:42:32.000 I will say this nationalism is absolutely justified within the holy book, and I'm happy to get into it.
00:42:38.000 But, huge but, and I can hear people in the comments without even saying it.
00:42:42.000 When people call us Christ cucks, first of all, it's enlightenment cucks that you should be worried about, not us.
00:42:51.000 There has been, regrettably, over the past, let's say, 60 to 70 years, the church has followed, they've taken their cues.
00:43:00.000 From the popular culture, from high to low.
00:43:03.000 So, we have veered further left.
00:43:05.000 And oftentimes you'll hear people say, in the spirit of Vatican II, in the spirit of Vatican II, nowhere in Vatican II does it say open up your borders and everyone should start intermarrying.
00:43:15.000 Like, that's not in Vatican II.
00:43:17.000 So, if you look at both the Old Testament and the New Testament, you realize very quickly that God is sort of obsessed with nations.
00:43:25.000 In Genesis 10, he lays out a table of nations.
00:43:28.000 And what you see in it is that God, not only does he endorse nations, He endorses an ethnic tie to nations.
00:43:38.000 And not only does he endorse all that, he separates the nations.
00:43:41.000 And so, for centuries, literally across Christendom, it was understood that Europeans came from the names escaping me right now.
00:43:52.000 Is it Jaffar?
00:43:53.000 Jaffa?
00:43:54.000 Jaffa?
00:43:55.000 Semites came from another person, and Africans came from another.
00:43:59.000 Okay, so it was very, very clear.
00:44:00.000 It's like, okay, so we're all the nations, we look different, we have different ethnicities, and God made it this way.
00:44:06.000 And, and therefore it is great.
00:44:08.000 God, God is not the bungler.
00:44:09.000 It's not up to us to undo all of that.
00:44:12.000 In fact, God tells us what happens when we do try to undo it.
00:44:15.000 When we call him the bungler and ourselves, you know, the divine masters, ourselves, you know, the ones who are here to reorder, um, the chaos that God has fashioned of separating the nations.
00:44:25.000 Well, it leads us to the Tower of Babel.
00:44:27.000 And so, and so I think that regrettably there has been a co-opting of the pulpit, um, whether it has been planned.
00:44:35.000 We know that the cultural Marxists, um, Laid out very, very, very conspicuously what their plans were to attack the church, because of course, what they sought to do was to sow disorder in order to create essentially a state solution to a very, very lost people and state, if you will.
00:44:57.000 And so, what were the two biggest ordering forces?
00:44:59.000 It was family and the church.
00:45:01.000 And so, you see from the Frankfurt School, Fabian School, Antonio Gramsci, his disciple Solowlinsky, each one of them talks about how important.
00:45:09.000 Important it is to destroy the healthy body that is, say, America, by taking direct aim at her spiritual life.
00:45:17.000 And I don't know if these people are plants.
00:45:20.000 I'm not saying that that's what I believe, but there has been a systemic attack, and it's from the top down, especially now, forgive me, with Pope Francis.
00:45:30.000 And I'll get into this.
00:45:32.000 There is a doctrine of papal infallibility.
00:45:35.000 Right now, the Pope has not stepped out of line.
00:45:37.000 And of course, he's not going to ever step out of line because so far, so good on all of the prophecies as far as, you know, Jesus and the good.
00:45:44.000 Goes.
00:45:45.000 Papal infallibility will apply until the time that Jesus comes back, but papal infallibility only applies to matters of theological ordinance, not practical ordinance.
00:45:55.000 So the Pope can say, I think that we need to recycle more, and I can be like, I don't.
00:46:02.000 That's fine.
00:46:03.000 We can agree to disagree.
00:46:05.000 But the Pope cannot come out and tomorrow say that this is no longer the body and blood of Jesus Christ.
00:46:10.000 And he won't do that because Jesus has promised us that what he binds here on earth will also be bound in heaven.
00:46:15.000 That is the papal infallibility.
00:46:17.000 And all this comes down to Of course, from the rock of the church, which is Simon Peter and his inherited, his heir, if you will, in the current Pope.
00:46:25.000 So while Pope Francis, who strikes me as a bit of what is he, Argentinian, kind of like neo Marxist, very confused on the issues when it comes to immigration, very confused.
00:46:36.000 And I've grown very, very tired of standing up for his, I think, sloppy and misinformed ideas around refugees and immigration, et cetera, that does not invalidate the Eucharist.
00:46:53.000 It does not invalidate the church.
00:46:54.000 It does not invalidate the Bible, all of which has historically been very pro nation.
00:47:00.000 And it's only really been, really, since the Enlightenment that we have seen a complete degradation and indeed a subversion of what is inherent, not only in the magisterium and the understanding that we get from the revelation that we get from that, but also within scripture itself, where you see even in the New Testament, and I'm not checking in the comments right now, but I'm sure someone's talking about the there is neither Jew nor Greek, et cetera.
00:47:25.000 Apostle Paul is often cited as, you know, like the first Democrat, like, you know, like whatever it is.
00:47:33.000 No, not at all.
00:47:34.000 Okay, so if you think about Apostle Paul, he was of Jewish heritage.
00:47:40.000 Okay, so a Jew, his family came from Israel.
00:47:42.000 He was born in Sicily, so he had Roman citizenship, and he later converted to Christianity.
00:47:50.000 So, time and time again, he was a Pharisee, not just any Jew, okay, he was a Pharisee.
00:47:53.000 Time and time again, in the New Testament, he describes himself not as a Christian, not as a Roman citizen.
00:48:03.000 He describes himself as an Israelite, even though he wasn't born there, okay?
00:48:08.000 And he actually goes through and talks about which tribe he's from, the tribe of Benjamin, which is to say what?
00:48:14.000 In the Bible, you see the words brethren used in two different ways.
00:48:18.000 One of them is brethren, my kinship, you know, Israelites, whatever it is.
00:48:23.000 Brethren by kin, brethren by nation, brethren by blood and soil, if you will.
00:48:30.000 And the other one is a different sort of brotherhood, which is a spiritual brotherhood, right?
00:48:34.000 And the two are not.
00:48:36.000 Camps of self quarantine.
00:48:37.000 You can exist in both.
00:48:39.000 For me, I don't see any cognitive dissidence in saying, yeah, God has offered up salvation to everyone.
00:48:46.000 That's really cool.
00:48:47.000 I'm going to see all these people, like, you know, not all these people, like I said, heaven's the ultimate ethnostate.
00:48:51.000 There's a lot of separation that goes on over there.
00:48:55.000 But I can divorce that and say, yeah, we all believe in Jesus Christ, but my country still has a border, right?
00:49:01.000 Like, I'm still a European Canadian.
00:49:03.000 So I don't understand why people think that these are camps of self quarantine.
00:49:08.000 Or why Catholic doctrine would in some way foster a pro refugee stance.
00:49:14.000 Now, I can understand when it comes from the point of bad marketing and bad salesmen.
00:49:20.000 That's fine, but it doesn't make it any more true.
00:49:22.000 These are people who are subverting scripture and subverting revelation, and they should be admonished and, frankly, exposed because what they're doing is wrong and it's destructive.
00:49:33.000 And who the hell, what kind of Christian, I'm sorry, would ever want to bring in non Christians?
00:49:39.000 Into their country.
00:49:41.000 Like, above all, like, even like, let's leave aside the ethnicity, the race stuff, everything.
00:49:45.000 What kind of Christian should advocate for non Christians to come into their country?
00:49:49.000 I just, it just sounds crazy to me.
00:49:52.000 So, we the laity, regrettably, it's one of those times in history where we the laity actually have to awaken and red pill our shepherds, so to speak, on these particular issues and tell them there's an appetite for it.
00:50:04.000 Because when it comes to my home parish, about an hour outside of Toronto, it's, you know, Like, I'm two minutes late for mass and there's no seats for me.
00:50:13.000 It's all very young European Anglo families.
00:50:15.000 And the priest talks about immigration, about a spiritual replacement by Islam.
00:50:21.000 He talks about abortion.
00:50:22.000 He talks about transgenderism, all this different stuff in a very, very serious and refreshing and enlightening way.
00:50:29.000 And that's why his pews are full.
00:50:31.000 The church is dying right now.
00:50:33.000 The numbers are dwindling in the West because they're not teaching the truth.
00:50:37.000 They're teaching political correctness.
00:50:38.000 And guess what, Pope?
00:50:40.000 Guess what, pastors and priests?
00:50:42.000 We got enough of that on the television.
00:50:44.000 Inside our political offices and inside the academic pulpits.
00:50:49.000 We do not need it in the religious pulpits.
00:50:50.000 So, I think it's time that we Catholics look back, first of all, at our scripture, look at our history within the faith, but also we European Catholics need to also consider the symbiotic relationship between our faith and our sense of national identity.
00:51:09.000 Because I'll remind folks that while there are so many nuggets and lessons for us as people who are literally being invaded by barbarians at the gate, when we look at the historical stories of Rome, say in the fall of Rome, I'll remind everyone what pulled Europe.
00:51:25.000 Outside after the fall of Rome and the complete decimation and the so called dark ages, but depending on your read of history, they were anything but dark.
00:51:32.000 What pulled Europe really out of those dark ages was Christianity.
00:51:38.000 It reinvigorated its poetry, its architecture, its literature, its art.
00:51:43.000 I mean, Venice became a huge trading outpost when we're talking about raising money, et cetera, for the Crusades.
00:51:49.000 And they invested all of this money into Christian just culture, really.
00:51:58.000 And so European culture at its zenith cannot be divorced from its Christology as well and just being part of Christendom extended.
00:52:10.000 While Christendom might have started in the Middle East, they've been wiped out over there.
00:52:14.000 It moved on to Europe, and Europe is where we saw it really fully realized and brought into the modern day.
00:52:20.000 I fear that I've gone off on a massive, massive tangent.
00:52:24.000 I think, I don't know who's worse, you or me.
00:52:25.000 It's like I'm like a balloon.
00:52:26.000 Whatever space you give me, I'll fill up.
00:52:29.000 No, it's good stuff.
00:52:30.000 It's good stuff because.
00:52:32.000 I mean, these are the kinds of ideas that have to be said about Christianity.
00:52:37.000 And you make so many good points about this from so many different angles because it's a complex issue when you look at faith, when you look at religion.
00:52:44.000 And so I think the best point and the biggest point to make is that this is a faith that's about nations.
00:52:50.000 I mean, you read the gospel, you read, or maybe read the Old Testament.
00:52:55.000 The Old Testament is a book about tribes, the Old Testament is a book about nations.
00:52:59.000 It's a story of one tribe, you know?
00:53:01.000 And so I think that it's something that's so fundamental.
00:53:05.000 And at the same time, it's one of these issues where you're right, the laity has basically allowed the shepherd, so to speak, the church leadership to take it in a direction, maybe in terms of the narrative, in terms of the rhetoric, in terms of the messaging, in a place that is not the truth.
00:53:21.000 And so, you know, I talk about it a lot on my show.
00:53:24.000 It's one of the most asked topics, you know, whenever I do the super chats at the end of the show.
00:53:30.000 I may spend 45 minutes talking about immigration, and the last 15 minutes, invariably, no matter the first topic, will be.
00:53:37.000 Explain why you obey the Pope no matter what.
00:53:40.000 Explain, you know, this, that, and the other.
00:53:42.000 And so, but it's an important thing because, as you said.
00:53:44.000 I was, I was, I was, sorry.
00:53:46.000 Go ahead.
00:53:48.000 I wasn't always Catholic.
00:53:50.000 I converted.
00:53:52.000 I was Greek Orthodox.
00:53:53.000 Oh, really?
00:53:53.000 I was baptized regularly.
00:53:54.000 And then I converted to Eastern Greek, Ukrainian, Ukrainian Greek Catholicism.
00:53:54.000 Yeah.
00:53:59.000 It's basically the Byzantine right.
00:54:01.000 So we are, as far as I'm concerned, a bit of the handmaid for the eventual church unification that will happen under the.
00:54:07.000 Sorry, folks, but this is the way it's going to go.
00:54:07.000 The Pope.
00:54:09.000 And I do believe that the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church will act as a handmaid for this unification because we have the pomp and circumstance of the Orthodox Church.
00:54:18.000 We see the divine liturgy of St. John Chrysostom, so we don't have to deal with any of this new order business.
00:54:23.000 We don't have any female Eucharistic ministers.
00:54:26.000 Thank God for that.
00:54:28.000 And I don't keep the Eucharist in my hands either.
00:54:30.000 And like some of the priests just look at me when I go like church hopping, I'll be standing there and they're like, taking your hands.
00:54:35.000 I'm like, I'm not doing it.
00:54:36.000 I'm not doing the Vatican II thing.
00:54:36.000 I'm sorry.
00:54:38.000 And if it's, and my fiance and I both will only go to the line with the priest.
00:54:41.000 We don't go to Eucharistic ministers.
00:54:42.000 And I'm sorry to say, it's a matter of respecting our church's tradition for that.
00:54:46.000 We just, we will not go to the laity to receive the body and blood of Jesus Christ.
00:54:50.000 Sorry, not sorry.
00:54:50.000 And also, we won't go without going to confession.
00:54:52.000 That's very, very important to me that we've missed.
00:54:54.000 But what happened is what brought me, like the red pill that brought me to, you know, doing whatever the Pope says, so to speak, is that I think I might have told you this before.
00:55:02.000 I took a year off school between first and second year to discern a call to the nunnery.
00:55:06.000 And God made it very clear that was not that calling.
00:55:08.000 But during that time, I had like a lot of time to actually study the Bible with a spiritual director, et cetera, et cetera.
00:55:13.000 It was very, very cool.
00:55:14.000 He was a PhD and a bishop.
00:55:16.000 And I'll never forget when it just dawned on me that, that, Christ did not leave us a Bible.
00:55:24.000 He left us a church, and it is a church that is very explicitly based on the rock of Peter, of Simon Peter.
00:55:33.000 And that from there, it is his heirs, the vicars of Christ that came thereafter, that are a direct, literal, like spiritual bloodline, if you will, going right back to Simon Peter.
00:55:44.000 If people are ever interested in any sort of church hagiography and different sort of Christology, et cetera, there are records that every priest that you've seen.
00:55:54.000 There's essentially an ancestry.com for his spiritual roots, and that includes obviously the Pope as well.
00:56:01.000 And so once I took that pill, it became very, very difficult for me to go forward as an Orthodox person who, of course, we had our patriarch in what should be Greece, or it should be Constantinople, but apparently it's called Istanbul these days.
00:56:16.000 Reclaim it, fam.
00:56:17.000 So there's that.
00:56:19.000 Yeah, so I basically was faced with this crossroads.
00:56:23.000 Do I carry on with dead dogma, or do I accept the fact that there is this truth that's been revealed to me?
00:56:28.000 And act accordingly.
00:56:29.000 And so I went with the latter and became a Catholic and have never, ever, ever looked back.
00:56:34.000 And it's so, so amazing.
00:56:36.000 And I honestly feel bad for Protestants and Anglicans because their religion is only like what, 50%, 75% of what we've got going on.
00:56:45.000 Like, how could you ever develop like a really serious love with that church when you don't have Christ in it?
00:56:53.000 I'll tell you an interesting story.
00:56:54.000 I was in DC two weeks ago, if you don't mind.
00:56:56.000 Indulge me for two seconds.
00:56:57.000 Oh, go for it.
00:56:58.000 I just put in National Cathedral because I figured Cathedral kind of sounds like Catholic.
00:57:02.000 It's got to be Catholic.
00:57:03.000 Right.
00:57:04.000 So, like Sunday Mass.
00:57:06.000 So, I show up and it was the oddest thing.
00:57:08.000 And sorry, this is only for fellow Catholics out there.
00:57:11.000 I walked in and I felt hollow.
00:57:14.000 And I was like, what?
00:57:15.000 What is that?
00:57:16.000 And then, as the Mass starts going on, I realize it's hippie dippy.
00:57:21.000 It was beautiful architecture, but it was some sort of Presbyterian, I don't know what.
00:57:25.000 And I just thought, oh, that's what it is, Faith.
00:57:27.000 The body and blood of Jesus Christ is not inside this building right now.
00:57:30.000 That's why you feel hollow.
00:57:31.000 So, what I would tell our brothers in Christ is that come on over, check out.
00:57:37.000 A Latin Rite Mass, if you're into the old trad scene, just come, just check it out because if you believe that Christ is real, you're really going to feel his presence in a Catholic church.
00:57:50.000 And then once you get into our history, just so much like the early church desert fathers, we have so much about Aquinas, we've got all of these based intellectuals that are part of our heritage.
00:58:03.000 And like, y'all have Martin Luther, like, cool, he made 99 points, like, great.
00:58:08.000 They all suck.
00:58:09.000 Nowhere in the Bible does it say sola scriptura.
00:58:11.000 Sorry, nowhere in the Bible doesn't say Bible alone.
00:58:13.000 Like it's a bit of an oversight.
00:58:15.000 And so, yeah.
00:58:17.000 Yeah, no, it's, you know, look, I respect the Protestants.
00:58:20.000 There's a lot of Protestants in the audience.
00:58:22.000 They always remind me.
00:58:23.000 So I respect the Protestants.
00:58:25.000 I do respect them.
00:58:26.000 But you're right.
00:58:27.000 I mean, for me, it's always been about Peter.
00:58:30.000 It's always been about unity proceeding from one.
00:58:34.000 I look at the Catholic Church, and to me, it's the only coherent way to look at religion with authority, with tradition.
00:58:41.000 With hierarchy.
00:58:42.000 You know, only in the Catholic Church do you find all these things.
00:58:45.000 I mean, the idea, because I can relate when Protestants will say it's just about the Bible, it's all about the Word.
00:58:51.000 And I understand that because it's revealed, but the role of the church was instrumental in the gospel.
00:58:58.000 And the point that you make about how Christ left us a church and not a book is exactly right.
00:59:03.000 And that's what he said.
00:59:04.000 The church, the gates of hell would never prevail over his church.
00:59:08.000 And so I think for a lot of people in this day and age that are looking for identity, I don't think they're going to find it just in race.
00:59:15.000 It's a part of it, but it's not going to be just there.
00:59:17.000 They're not going to find it just in the nation.
00:59:19.000 It's a big part of it, but it's not all of it.
00:59:22.000 They will find the answers to the big questions.
00:59:24.000 Why are we here?
00:59:26.000 Why do we suffer?
00:59:27.000 Why do we die?
00:59:28.000 They find those answers in the church.
00:59:30.000 And not only in the word, not only in the theology, which is a big component of it, but they find it in the human aspect, which is the rituals, the rites, the traditions, all those beautiful things that connect us, like you say, a direct line from Christ to the modern day.
00:59:47.000 You just can't find a better source of identity than that.
00:59:50.000 So, you're here.
00:59:51.000 And if I could just add just one last thing here, I think there's also a moralizing element that comes in that is a healthy thing and a healthy ingredient when it comes to identitarian ideology, because you don't want to get beyond, you know, memes and really think that like all these like edgy posts are really a way forward.
01:00:09.000 Frankly, I'm sorry if that sounds kind of cocky.
01:00:12.000 I don't mean it, but I really, I approach this really from a moral standpoint.
01:00:16.000 I want Europeans to have a homeland.
01:00:18.000 I want Africans to have a homeland.
01:00:21.000 I don't want Syrian refugees.
01:00:22.000 I want Syria to honestly be a healthy and beautiful place for Syrians to live and to prosper.
01:00:28.000 I mean it really, really seriously.
01:00:29.000 I don't wish ill on anyone.
01:00:31.000 I want everyone's nation to be wonderful where they feel like they can stay with their families.
01:00:36.000 I don't want to say that the most moral thing to do is to open up our floodgates to the entire world because it's not going to work.
01:00:44.000 The most moral thing to do is to say, say, stay put and fix your country, please.
01:00:50.000 And so, and so that's, I think, a healthy sort of Angle and just some texture that could be added so we're not just like, you know, physically removed, which is fine, but like sometimes we can get a little bit beyond that, let's be honest.
01:01:03.000 Yeah, no, it's true.
01:01:04.000 That's a really good point that you make.
01:01:05.000 That at the end of the day, it's not so much about how Christ can help our political goals.
01:01:11.000 We have to understand that we believe in Christ because he is real, because it is true, because it is the right thing.
01:01:18.000 And so, and I see that so often, the excesses in a lot of cases where I think there are a lot of young people who get led into.
01:01:26.000 Some weird stuff, and you see with some of the other organizations, they've lost that.
01:01:31.000 I think they've lost themselves.
01:01:32.000 I think in some cases, they've become the monsters they tried to fight.
01:01:36.000 It's like Nietzsche said you look into the abyss long enough, and you know, you find the abyss staring back at you.
01:01:41.000 So, I think that is a very good point about having some kind of centering about who are we, what are we doing, and why.
01:01:48.000 At the end of the day, like you say, it's about having everybody be healthy and happy, but in their own separate nations and separate developments.
01:01:55.000 But, like the way God designed it.
01:01:58.000 To quote Muhammad Ali, the bluebirds fly with the bluebirds and the redbirds fly with the redbirds.
01:02:04.000 Why would I hate my race?
01:02:06.000 You know, and it's just that's just the way God designed it.
01:02:09.000 I don't hate God.
01:02:09.000 I love God.
01:02:10.000 And I love the way that He's designed the universe.
01:02:12.000 I love the way that He's designed all the different races.
01:02:15.000 I love the way that He's designed all the different nations.
01:02:18.000 And I want to continue to honor Him by making sure that they are maintained.
01:02:23.000 God wills it.
01:02:23.000 That's right.
01:02:24.000 Well, it's been a great hour.
01:02:26.000 We're running out of time, but thank you so much for coming on.
01:02:29.000 I had a great conversation, very spirited conversation.
01:02:32.000 Very holy.
01:02:34.000 And I'd love to do it again sometime.
01:02:35.000 So thanks so much.
01:02:37.000 God bless, my friend.
01:02:37.000 It was so great to chat.
01:02:38.000 And thanks, everyone, for tuning in tonight.
01:02:40.000 Great to have you.
01:02:40.000 Thanks.
01:02:41.000 Bye bye.
01:02:42.000 Bye, Nick.
01:02:43.000 All right.
01:02:44.000 It's a great conversation with my friend Faith.
01:02:48.000 Let me just get that window out of there.
01:02:51.000 Well, there you have it.
01:02:52.000 Another great interview.
01:02:53.000 I can finally take the cans off.
01:02:56.000 I can finally take.
01:02:59.000 What's something that a pilot would say?
01:03:02.000 We have now turned the seatbelt sign off.
01:03:04.000 These things are so obnoxious.
01:03:06.000 I understand.
01:03:07.000 But it's the only headset that I had the littler headset before, but now I have so many Bluetooth devices.
01:03:15.000 Coming from under the desk.
01:03:17.000 You've got the keyboard, the mouse, that it's, you know, there's all kinds of radioactive waves that interfere with it.
01:03:23.000 So, but it's been a great interview.
01:03:24.000 It was great to have Faith on.
01:03:26.000 I appreciate her taking the time.
01:03:28.000 Very, you know, look, on this show, I may have the appearance of being anti woman.
01:03:34.000 I'm the least anti woman person you've ever met.
01:03:37.000 And that proves it.
01:03:39.000 When we have a woman on who's smart, who is moral, who is Catholic and a good person, they're welcome anytime.
01:03:46.000 That's how God, in Intended it, right?
01:03:48.000 Men and women, not the trad thoughts, not the e thoughts, the gamer girls.
01:03:53.000 They want them to be like Faith.
01:03:55.000 So it's a great show.
01:03:56.000 It's great to have her on, but we're not done yet.
01:03:58.000 We're going to take your Streamlabs and Super Chats.
01:04:01.000 So don't go anywhere.
01:04:02.000 We are going to take those.
01:04:04.000 And we'll see.
01:04:05.000 We had Faith on.
01:04:06.000 Now we have to hear from the masses.
01:04:07.000 Now we have to hear what the unwashed masses have to say.
01:04:12.000 I know there's going to be a lot of commentary about the Catholic portion.
01:04:17.000 Look, it's one of those subjects that carries a lot of weight.
01:04:21.000 You know, it's.
01:04:23.000 It's something that people take very seriously, so it is understandable, but it does get a little contentious at times.
01:04:29.000 So let's see.
01:04:29.000 We've got rawhide.
01:04:32.000 I got a little burp work in there.
01:04:33.000 Just give me a sec.
01:04:35.000 All right.
01:04:36.000 I had a couple of stuffed peppers for dinner.
01:04:39.000 Is there a lot of water content in green bell peppers?
01:04:43.000 Because every time I eat a couple of stuffed peppers, you know, I just feel like a balloon.
01:04:49.000 I feel like a hot air balloon.
01:04:51.000 Is there a lot of water content in the peppers?
01:04:51.000 I don't know.
01:04:54.000 I feel like that's the case.
01:04:55.000 So.
01:04:56.000 Anyway, Rawhide says, Hey, big guy, we need a review of the new Death Grips album, Year of the Snitch.
01:05:03.000 Also, you picked the wrong girl.
01:05:05.000 Asaka is clearly the best.
01:05:07.000 Anyway, keep up the good work.
01:05:08.000 My favorite guy.
01:05:10.000 Thank you, fellow Fashi Goyan.
01:05:14.000 I don't listen to Death Grips.
01:05:16.000 I, you know, I don't know.
01:05:17.000 Does that make me not really a rap fan or whatever?
01:05:21.000 I try to listen to the few singles that they dropped before the album came out.
01:05:26.000 It just doesn't sound good to me.
01:05:28.000 You know, I can only take this idea of.
01:05:30.000 It's not supposed to sound good so far.
01:05:33.000 You know, Yeezus, that's about my threshold for so bad it's good in terms of there's an element that it's supposed to be uneasy, unpleasant.
01:05:41.000 Like, I got it in Yeezus.
01:05:43.000 In Death Grips, I don't really understand it.
01:05:45.000 I have been listening to Tentacion since he died.
01:05:49.000 I wasn't really interested in it beforehand.
01:05:51.000 You know, Paul Town listened to it a lot.
01:05:54.000 I didn't really listen to him that much, but since he died, I've been checking out his music.
01:05:58.000 It's pretty good.
01:05:58.000 It's pretty good.
01:06:00.000 And on Asuka, no, look, Asuka, if you like Asuka, you have mommy issues.
01:06:05.000 Okay, because I'm watching, I watch the show, and you know, people say they love Asuka.
01:06:11.000 They love this character in the show.
01:06:13.000 She's a bitch.
01:06:14.000 Okay, how do you like?
01:06:16.000 She's always yelling.
01:06:17.000 She's always angry.
01:06:19.000 She's so unpleasant.
01:06:21.000 If you like that, I think that says a lot about you.
01:06:24.000 Rey, on the other hand, is traditional.
01:06:26.000 She reveres her father.
01:06:28.000 She is very quiet.
01:06:29.000 She's very shy.
01:06:31.000 She helps Shinji, you know, so.
01:06:34.000 But of course, we know the real winner is Kawaru.
01:06:36.000 We know the real winner.
01:06:38.000 The real deal is Kawaru.
01:06:40.000 He's the only one that actually cares about Shinji.
01:06:45.000 So, you got to watch that.
01:06:46.000 If you haven't watched it, I don't know what you're doing at this point.
01:06:49.000 You're not really going to understand the show if you don't watch Evangelion.
01:06:53.000 Jake Lloyd says Great points from both of you.
01:06:55.000 I think a lot of Americans are insulated from the reality of the situation.
01:07:00.000 As a Texan, the demographic shift is very real and very unsettling.
01:07:04.000 People are waking up, so the situation's not hopeless, but we need to work hard.
01:07:08.000 Well, if that's the real Jake Lloyd, thank you very much, my guy, for.
01:07:13.000 For jumping in, for watching the show.
01:07:15.000 You know, Jake Lloyd, he's like, I've seen him before on InfoWars a few times, and he had me on, he had Faith on.
01:07:23.000 He's a real treasure.
01:07:24.000 I mean, because I know he only stepped up to do Owen Schreuer's show, subbing in, but they got to put him on like every day.
01:07:31.000 They got to give him his own show because, you know, I only recently discovered him, and man, the content is really solid.
01:07:39.000 I like to see this axis of people who are Christian and nationalist and so sensible because, you know, I watch Jake Lloyd.
01:07:47.000 I watch Faith Goldie.
01:07:48.000 I watch Jared Taylor, Lauren Rose.
01:07:51.000 I watch this group of people, and I say, This is a real force to be reckoned with.
01:07:55.000 Here are people that have got the right ideas.
01:07:58.000 They say them in a way that is right.
01:08:00.000 They're normal people, likable people, myself included.
01:08:05.000 And I say, This is the future of the movement.
01:08:07.000 This is something we can build off of.
01:08:08.000 As long as we can remain on Twitter and YouTube and we don't get shadow banned and stuff like that, I think that's, you know, we're vibing on the future here, as Kanye West would say.
01:08:19.000 Ultralight Beam.
01:08:20.000 Flowing, we're vibing on the future.
01:08:23.000 So we're stunning on the paradigm, shifting it when we feel like.
01:08:27.000 But you make a good point, though, Jake, about how the change is being seen.
01:08:32.000 And that's something I really try and drive home as somebody from Chicago.
01:08:36.000 Well, not really from Chicago.
01:08:38.000 I say that people give me a hard time.
01:08:40.000 They either give me a hard time or they're from Chicago and they say, oh, well, I was from this street and that street.
01:08:47.000 And okay, I don't actually live inside Chicago.
01:08:50.000 The city of Chicago.
01:08:51.000 I live like 25 minutes away.
01:08:53.000 It's shorter than saying, I live here.
01:08:56.000 It's a little bit.
01:08:57.000 But as somebody who's from the area, you drive down, I don't want to dox myself, but you drive down a certain street for 25 minutes and you're in Mexico.
01:09:07.000 You're in Pilsen, you're in Little Village.
01:09:10.000 Welcome to Mexico.
01:09:12.000 They speak Spanish.
01:09:13.000 The signs are in Spanish.
01:09:14.000 It's taquerias, all the rest.
01:09:16.000 That's not America.
01:09:18.000 You know, and it feels like, to me, it feels like the more America becomes less like America, Liberals say it's becoming more like America.
01:09:27.000 Right?
01:09:28.000 Is that crazy?
01:09:29.000 They say the less America resembles what it looked like before, the more actually America it becomes, because of course America was never a place with an identity, a people, a language, a tradition, a culture.
01:09:42.000 It was always just a container to be filled.
01:09:45.000 It was all trash and boring, lame.
01:09:49.000 And it was here.
01:09:51.000 It's a big bucket for the third world that just shovel their slop in there.
01:09:55.000 You know, let's throw in the criminals, the gang members, the terrorists.
01:09:58.000 We'll throw it.
01:10:00.000 And now you've gotten America, right?
01:10:02.000 No, I don't think so.
01:10:03.000 So people are waking up to it.
01:10:05.000 If they don't talk about it in public, if they don't say it on television, they're feeling it.
01:10:11.000 Everybody's sick and tired of it.
01:10:13.000 You know, we want to live in a, we want to have what everybody else has, which is a home where we speak English, not Spanish.
01:10:22.000 I'm so sick of hearing Spanish.
01:10:24.000 I'm so sick of hearing these other languages.
01:10:27.000 And, you know, these low IQ liberals will say, oh, is it uncomfortable that you have to learn another language?
01:10:34.000 Yeah, it is.
01:10:35.000 I want to speak English in my country.
01:10:37.000 I don't want to have to go to college, to graduate school, to understand the people on the subway, okay?
01:10:44.000 I don't want to have a president who is speaking to a whole segment of the population in a language I can't understand.
01:10:50.000 And by the way, what's the expectation of these people learning a second language, right?
01:10:55.000 So, but you raise a good point.
01:10:59.000 You know, obviously, it's something we're feeling very strongly.
01:11:02.000 And look, you know, I said this at US Inc. when I did my speech about immigration.
01:11:08.000 My last name is Mexican.
01:11:09.000 My ancestors came here four generations ago through Texas.
01:11:14.000 They were Texans, but they were Mexican.
01:11:16.000 They came here to leave Mexico.
01:11:18.000 They did not leave Mexico to pick it up, come across the border, put it down over there.
01:11:24.000 You know, generations ago, that was the program.
01:11:28.000 First of all, immigration was like this much.
01:11:32.000 And then if immigration is this much, and then let's say these are all the immigrants, this many came from not Europe.
01:11:39.000 Okay, so that's when they came in, and the program was you come here, you learn the language, and you're an American now.
01:11:46.000 You come here, you get a job, you know, nobody's gonna give you welfare, nobody's gonna let you into a university with a below 50% score.
01:11:56.000 So, I hear you.
01:11:59.000 Reagan says Nick's right about rejecting corny foreign Euro nationalist optics.
01:12:05.000 We gotta revive esoteric Americana.
01:12:08.000 Ours is the way of the eternal frontier.
01:12:11.000 Cowboy futurism, Theodore Rooseveltian mystery cults.
01:12:15.000 The cross is our compass, the rifle is our Excalibur.
01:12:19.000 That's a very good way to put it.
01:12:20.000 I like that.
01:12:22.000 It's true.
01:12:23.000 I find myself, as I discover America, as I learn about what America really is, you find yourself falling in love with America all over again.
01:12:32.000 When you start to realize that America is not the zog dung heap of the world, America was the best country in the world.
01:12:41.000 People came here, they conquered the whole continent.
01:12:45.000 Just like crazy.
01:12:47.000 You know, we started out on a tiny settlement in the Northeast, and over the course of a couple hundred years, just guns blazing, cleared the whole place out.
01:12:57.000 It's ours now.
01:12:58.000 I mean, that's something.
01:13:00.000 That's the frontiering spirit, guns, the Constitution.
01:13:05.000 It's what it's all about, folks.
01:13:07.000 That's our bread and butter.
01:13:08.000 We have to embrace that.
01:13:09.000 It's who we are.
01:13:10.000 Become who you are.
01:13:12.000 You know, people say, oh, but actually, we should become European pagans because that's what we were 3,000 years ago.
01:13:19.000 Yeah, okay.
01:13:20.000 Well, you know, my dad was not a pagan.
01:13:23.000 My grandfather was not a pagan.
01:13:25.000 My great grandfather was not a pagan.
01:13:28.000 There were no pagans thousands of years down the line.
01:13:30.000 So I'm not, we're not planning on doing that anytime soon.
01:13:33.000 It's foreign.
01:13:34.000 Let's take a look at our super chats now.
01:13:37.000 And we'll see what we've got here.
01:13:40.000 Let's see.
01:13:41.000 We've got, oh, we got a lot of super chats.
01:13:44.000 You got to, remember, you got to use the Streamlabs.
01:13:47.000 Super chat goes to Google, okay?
01:13:50.000 And you know who runs Google.
01:13:52.000 You know who runs Google.
01:13:55.000 Google.
01:13:55.000 You know, think of it, right?
01:13:57.000 I'm trying to be very subtle and also ironic, but you've got to go to the Streamlabs.
01:14:02.000 That's okay.
01:14:03.000 Simon Scola says, Faith's pee wouldn't taste good.
01:14:06.000 Gamer Girls only.
01:14:07.000 Okay, you know, there you have it.
01:14:09.000 That's the America First audience, right?
01:14:12.000 I guess I have that coming, joking about Gamer Girl pee.
01:14:15.000 You've got to, you know, if you're going to make that joke, you've got to be ready to, you know, really lay it out there.
01:14:20.000 But Gamer Girl pee only.
01:14:22.000 Sticking to that.
01:14:23.000 You know, there's going to come a time when I'm really going to have to make the transition into a serious pundit, stop making jokes about Gamer Girl Pee and Catboys.
01:14:33.000 I don't think it's going to happen anytime soon because it's fun and it's funny to me.
01:14:37.000 So, you know, I'll never forget I had a reporter in Boston University when I was making trouble as a campus conservative.
01:14:46.000 I had a reporter come over there, I think from AFP or from the Boston Globe, and we were sitting in my dorm room, okay, sitting on my bed.
01:14:54.000 I was sitting on my desk chair, the reporters were sitting on my bed.
01:14:58.000 And they're like, you know, Nick, you went out to the protest against the Muslim refugee ban and wearing a Trump hat, a Trump shirt, and a flag.
01:15:09.000 What did you hope to gain?
01:15:09.000 Why did you do that?
01:15:10.000 And I was like, I thought it would be funny.
01:15:14.000 I saw what was going on.
01:15:16.000 So I went out to my dorm room.
01:15:18.000 I got the most obnoxious outfit possible.
01:15:20.000 And I came downstairs because I thought it would be funny.
01:15:22.000 And they're like, well, didn't you hope that it would start a conversation?
01:15:25.000 Or what was really your goal?
01:15:28.000 I mean, did you think that you would be.
01:15:30.000 Introducing new ideas.
01:15:31.000 And I'm like, really?
01:15:32.000 I just thought it would be funny.
01:15:34.000 And so, a lot of what you see on the show and what you see on my Twitter timeline is just what I think is funny at the moment, what's bothering me at the moment.
01:15:45.000 And there's something to be said about that.
01:15:47.000 It's a realness that's brought about.
01:15:50.000 Liberty Prime says Do you think Trump supporters should point to Hungary as an example of a strong nationalist slash pro Christian country, like how Bernie Bros praised Denmark?
01:16:01.000 I would be careful about that because although the leadership in Hungary has embraced Christianity, Orban, who's their prime minister, is it the president?
01:16:11.000 I don't know what the title is, the system.
01:16:14.000 But I know Orban in Hungary has embraced Christianity and nationalism and borders.
01:16:20.000 But if you look at the demographics of Hungary, it's not a very religious place.
01:16:24.000 You know, because it is former Soviet Union, unlike Russia and Poland, you see that there is a lot of atheism in Hungary.
01:16:31.000 So I point to Poland as the best example.
01:16:33.000 Poland is a good example.
01:16:35.000 For many, many reasons.
01:16:38.000 Nationalist, against migrants, against the EU.
01:16:41.000 It's a very far right wing government.
01:16:43.000 They are a religious people, a Catholic people.
01:16:47.000 And also, there was that whole controversy about the you know what with the you know who's.
01:16:53.000 I'm talking about trade, I'm talking about the economy and the European Union bureaucrats.
01:17:00.000 But so, Poland is really the ideal that we're going to look at.
01:17:04.000 It's funny, a lot of people in my family aren't too keen on.
01:17:08.000 Well, I don't want to go there.
01:17:09.000 I don't want to go there.
01:17:10.000 Look at Chicago.
01:17:11.000 There's a lot of Polish people.
01:17:12.000 You go back a couple of generations, and there's ethnic conflict in Chicago.
01:17:16.000 But I like Poland.
01:17:18.000 It should be used as the model.
01:17:20.000 Cracker Jack says, Love what both of you are doing.
01:17:22.000 You've both inspired me to make content of my own.
01:17:25.000 Keep up the great work, folks.
01:17:26.000 Very good.
01:17:27.000 Well, that's good to see.
01:17:29.000 And as Jared Taylor said last night, if you put in the work, if you have the right ideas, you can have a voice.
01:17:37.000 You can have a seat at the table in the conversation.
01:17:39.000 So, very good.
01:17:40.000 Baked Alaska says, Love you both.
01:17:42.000 God bless.
01:17:43.000 Thank you, big guy.
01:17:44.000 Love you too.
01:17:45.000 Baked Alaska, another strong Christian.
01:17:47.000 And we love him.
01:17:50.000 He's gotten back on the content train.
01:17:52.000 We missed him for a little while.
01:17:56.000 It was getting in closer touch with the religion.
01:17:59.000 And then one day I pull up the live stream and I'm watching him sleep.
01:18:03.000 I probably should have turned it off after a few minutes, but I did watch it for like a half hour.
01:18:09.000 But he's back making content.
01:18:10.000 We love you too, Baked.
01:18:11.000 I got to go back out to LA and see my LA friends.
01:18:15.000 Michael Jones says, Could you recap your rebuttal to Steven Pinker's enlightenment now and his idea of progression?
01:18:23.000 Well, the basic premise is this.
01:18:26.000 Jordan Peterson, Steven Pinker, Sam Harris, Christopher Hitchens, these kinds of people, they say that we don't need God or God is anachronistic.
01:18:35.000 We've basically figured it out.
01:18:37.000 They've embraced liberal humanism.
01:18:39.000 They say that the answer to our problems is material comfort it's the ending of disease, it's the ending of war and strife and poverty and basically enhancing the material conditions and comforts of life.
01:18:53.000 And so they say, Oh, well, people are saying things are bad, but look at how capitalism has solved poverty.
01:19:00.000 Look, you can buy a television for much cheaper now.
01:19:04.000 And that would be true if God didn't exist.
01:19:07.000 And if God didn't exist, there wouldn't be a much stronger appetite within the soul for something else.
01:19:14.000 But there is that.
01:19:15.000 There is a God.
01:19:16.000 There is that appetite.
01:19:18.000 And so what you find is that in this country, we've never been better off, never been safer.
01:19:23.000 There's no war.
01:19:24.000 You know, I mean, we're doing pretty well.
01:19:26.000 Pretty well, better than anybody in human history in terms of material comforts.
01:19:30.000 Yet the suicide rate is skyrocketing.
01:19:32.000 Opioid abuse, skyrocketing.
01:19:34.000 Drug use, skyrocketing.
01:19:36.000 Degenerate, hedonistic sex, depression, profound misery follows us everywhere for the most part.
01:19:43.000 And that's because we have fed all our appetites food, clothing, water, shelter.
01:19:50.000 Not so much the water, there's contaminants in the water.
01:19:52.000 But you know, we have all the material comforts, but there is nothing.
01:19:56.000 To satisfy the soul.
01:19:58.000 And what did Jesus Christ say in the gospel?
01:20:00.000 He said, Worry about the appetite of your soul, and everything else will follow.
01:20:06.000 He said, You don't even have to eat as long as your soul is satisfied with those appetites, that religious appetite.
01:20:14.000 And so that's the refutation of Steven Pinker.
01:20:17.000 It's BS because if progress were real, people wouldn't be upset still, but they are.
01:20:23.000 Michael Jones says, It is a sin to betray your own people.
01:20:26.000 True.
01:20:27.000 True.
01:20:28.000 Dante's Inferno.
01:20:29.000 You read Dante Alighieri's Divine Comedy, and the major theme who are the people burning in the lowest layer of hell?
01:20:37.000 The traitors to their country.
01:20:40.000 You know, think of that.
01:20:41.000 You go back, the Inferno was written, I think, in the 14th century, and Dante assigned to the lowest level, the most suffering, the last ring of the lowest level of hell inside Satan's jaws was Brutus, Cassius, and Judas, the traitors to their country.
01:21:00.000 I mean, that says it all right there, folks.
01:21:02.000 If it was an open borders, you know, freewheeling, hippy dippy, anything goes, you don't see that.
01:21:07.000 But as Faith said, the church, the establishment has been infiltrated by modernists, cultural Marxists, and they will never prevail over the doctrine.
01:21:17.000 But the political stuff is kind of going through a dark age right now.
01:21:21.000 Aussie conservative says, G'day, Nick.
01:21:24.000 I love the Aussies.
01:21:26.000 I like the Aussies because they're always up when I'm up, you know, and it's 3 a.m., 4 a.m., and all the boring people are asleep.
01:21:33.000 The Aussies are always there.
01:21:35.000 A big fan here from Australia.
01:21:37.000 I noticed some time ago you dropped the paleoconservative tag.
01:21:40.000 What was your reason for this?
01:21:42.000 I still identify as a paleoconservative.
01:21:45.000 I identify as a paleoconservative, a nationalist, a traditionalist, a perennialist.
01:21:50.000 I mean, these all basically describe the same thing to an extent.
01:21:54.000 I don't use it so much because it's not really catchy.
01:21:58.000 It's much easier to say a nationalist and really own nationalism, really own patriotism and country and that kind of thing.
01:22:06.000 Paleoconservative, it's like, what is that?
01:22:09.000 You know, old conservative, you know, it's not really fresh.
01:22:13.000 So we want to present old traditional ideas in fresh new ways.
01:22:17.000 Buchanan tried the paleoconservative thing.
01:22:19.000 Sam Francis did as well.
01:22:21.000 I like the label.
01:22:22.000 It's descriptive, but is it catchy?
01:22:25.000 I like nationalist a little better, but I still describe myself as that.
01:22:30.000 Gaius Gracchus says, What happened to the Jesuits?
01:22:33.000 Weren't they the ones that organized the Counter Reformation and kicked the proddies in the teeth?
01:22:37.000 Well, again, we want to be respectful of the Protestants, but what happened with the Jesuits is, I don't really know all the history of it, but what you see is just a trend of profound.
01:22:51.000 Liberalism in the tradition of the Jesuits in the New World.
01:22:55.000 And so I don't know what you can ascribe that to.
01:22:57.000 I know they put down a lot of parochial schools and they built up a lot of church establishment all over the world, missionaries in a lot of places.
01:23:06.000 But yeah, it's gotten decidedly liberal.
01:23:09.000 So I don't know what happened.
01:23:10.000 Gaius Gracchus says Charles V didn't do nothing.
01:23:13.000 That's true.
01:23:14.000 That's true.
01:23:14.000 Hey, you know, pagans are always talking about might makes right.
01:23:19.000 Odin is strong.
01:23:20.000 I'll take a hammer over a cross any day.
01:23:22.000 And Christians.
01:23:24.000 Destroyed paganism.
01:23:26.000 We crushed it.
01:23:28.000 Christianity steamrolled.
01:23:30.000 And to add insult to injury, you wouldn't even know about paganism if the Christians didn't convert them all.
01:23:37.000 And then because they were literate, translate all their texts and store them and keep them around until the present day.
01:23:43.000 So you can thank Christianity that you even know what your ancient religion is, pagan.
01:23:49.000 But yeah, Charles V is a real hero.
01:23:52.000 Guy Scrakis says Nick, what are your thoughts on Celtic Christianity?
01:23:56.000 I don't know enough about Ireland, I gotta be honest.
01:23:59.000 I know there's a big Catholic Protestant divide, but I would say as long as it's in communion with the Church of Rome, we're all good.
01:24:11.000 We're all set.
01:24:12.000 Frederick White says, I love my ethnic European Catholics, Poles, Italians, Hungarians, Irish.
01:24:19.000 We need a pan European Catholic nationalist movement.
01:24:22.000 Hey, I think the Catholic nations are the ones that are doing it.
01:24:25.000 You know, I mean, you don't even need to.
01:24:26.000 Call it a confederacy or anything.
01:24:29.000 Look at the most traditionalist nations in Europe, the ones that are reasserting their borders.
01:24:33.000 Is it Sweden?
01:24:35.000 Is it Finland?
01:24:36.000 Is it Denmark and the UK?
01:24:38.000 All these Anglos and Nords who think they're so much better.
01:24:41.000 And it's not all of them, but there are some Nords who think they're so above it all, right?
01:24:47.000 But no, it's not those countries.
01:24:48.000 It's Italy.
01:24:50.000 It's the based meds.
01:24:51.000 It's Hungary.
01:24:52.000 It's the based Slavs.
01:24:54.000 And above all, it's the Catholics, right?
01:24:56.000 So, You know, I'm an Italian.
01:24:58.000 We take a lot of abuse.
01:24:59.000 We take a lot of abuse from the Northern Europeans who make fun of us and say we're not really white or we're African and they call us black.
01:25:09.000 But hey, we're the ones who elected an anti migrant government.
01:25:12.000 We were one of the founding countries of the EU, the only founding state to be anti EU and anti migrant.
01:25:17.000 So, you know, we have to be a little smug.
01:25:20.000 We have to be a little smug.
01:25:22.000 We're real mad.
01:25:24.000 I'm a really proud Mediterranean, I have to say.
01:25:26.000 You know, it's unfortunate that I don't say it's unfortunate because.
01:25:31.000 I am proud of my whole identity, but my last name's Fuentes, so people assume, oh, well, he's just Mexican.
01:25:36.000 Well, I'm mostly Italian.
01:25:38.000 I'm mostly Southern European, 80% Southern European.
01:25:43.000 So I really am proud of that identity in a big way.
01:25:46.000 Proud of all of it, but also proud to be Italian and seeing what they're up to.
01:25:52.000 Joshua Larson says, Have a few shillings, big guy.
01:25:55.000 Keep up the good work.
01:25:56.000 Thank you, my friend.
01:25:58.000 Seneca the Reader says, Hey, Nick, what's the best anime of the current season?
01:26:02.000 I don't really watch anime, I've only watched.
01:26:06.000 Neon Genesis Evangelion, and that was it.
01:26:08.000 I had a really good friend in college who turned me on to it, and that's the only reason I watched it, but I don't really like Scott it out.
01:26:16.000 Raging Papist says, What's the name of the book you used to kill destiny with the Pillars of America that we lost?
01:26:22.000 Excellent message, as usual, guy.
01:26:25.000 Stay true.
01:26:26.000 The Pillars of America that we lost.
01:26:30.000 The Pillars.
01:26:31.000 I'm trying to think because I referenced a few books.
01:26:33.000 I think the one you're referring to is Who Are We by Sam Huntington, which explains the.
01:26:39.000 No, I'm sorry.
01:26:42.000 I think it was that because in Sam Huntington's book, he describes the six.
01:26:46.000 Big reasons why Mexican immigration is very, very different from all other kinds of immigration.
01:26:53.000 Is that what you're referring to?
01:26:54.000 Because it's in the back of my memory.
01:26:58.000 I believe there was also a different excerpt about the core definition of what America is.
01:27:04.000 I'm almost positive there's another segment in the same book about that.
01:27:07.000 I would have to go back into the first and second chapter.
01:27:11.000 Yeah, so I would get up and go grab it.
01:27:15.000 But I don't want to leave the command post.
01:27:19.000 A fantastic book.
01:27:19.000 But that is the book.
01:27:21.000 I recommend everybody read that.
01:27:23.000 Who Are We by Sam Huntington?
01:27:25.000 It is a classic.
01:27:27.000 And the guy's brilliant as a scholar, meticulous, and it presents the arguments in a way that nobody can argue with him.
01:27:36.000 I mean, I read the book, and it's hard for me to even understand how a liberal could find any problems with it.
01:27:43.000 And that's not to say that it's not true to its principles, it's that it's so persuasive and rigorous.
01:27:50.000 In its evidence and its arguments and all the rest.
01:27:52.000 So, really a fantastic book.
01:27:54.000 And, you know, he is a liberal.
01:27:55.000 He does want to see people be incorporated.
01:27:58.000 If you put aside his opinion on, like, how America can salvage identity and just look at the facts, you know, I think you're golden.
01:28:06.000 But he is a little bit liberal on the issue.
01:28:08.000 But it's indisputable, the facts of the book.
01:28:11.000 Simon Skola says, Womp Womp.
01:28:14.000 Spook says, Womp Womp.
01:28:16.000 Rosef says, Womp Womp.
01:28:18.000 The Womp Womp heard around the world, right?
01:28:18.000 Yes.
01:28:21.000 The Americanner says Hungary is 80% Christian, although 50% Catholic.
01:28:25.000 Are you sure about that?
01:28:28.000 Maybe I'm mistaking them for a different country.
01:28:31.000 Americanner says Trump needs to host a summit between Austria, Bavaria, Italy, Hungary, and Poland.
01:28:37.000 It would be pretty great.
01:28:38.000 Well, he's got to realign America away from Western Europe and back towards Eastern Europe.
01:28:43.000 That has to happen, you know, because these Western European countries don't share our interests, don't share, you know, they don't even, they actively hurt us in their trade, you know?
01:28:55.000 So, we absolutely have to reorient from France and the UK and Germany towards Poland, Hungary, Italy, Russia, you know, because these Western European countries aren't really doing us any favors at the moment.
01:29:07.000 Gaius Gracchus says Ireland minus the progressives equals strong.
01:29:12.000 Yes, very true.
01:29:14.000 It's a shame, though, the referendum about abortion and all the rest.
01:29:19.000 But Ireland is strong.
01:29:21.000 Unhyphenated American says Why did the black family do so well in the early 1900s, but it's in shambles today?
01:29:29.000 IQ does not explain that.
01:29:30.000 Actually, it kind of does.
01:29:32.000 You know, you look at the black family from slavery until the Civil Rights Act or until the Civil Rights Movement, and what you'll find is that in these cases, black people conformed to, you know, and I think it was inhumane the way they were enforced, but conformed to an Anglo Protestant norm for families, for work ethic, for all the rest.
01:29:56.000 And so I will agree with you.
01:29:59.000 The studies and the statistics do show this.
01:30:01.000 You look at black wages, you look at black Family structure.
01:30:04.000 And in some years, they were doing better than white family structure, white income in the 1940s.
01:30:11.000 But what you find, many people will attribute the destruction of the black family exclusively to welfare.
01:30:19.000 And they say, well, if you look at children born out of wedlock, it skyrockets after the Great Society in the late 1960s.
01:30:27.000 Actually, it starts to fall out or it starts to fall apart a little bit before that.
01:30:31.000 It really starts to fall apart in the 1950s.
01:30:34.000 And we know what started in the 1950s.
01:30:36.000 It wasn't the welfare state.
01:30:38.000 It wasn't incentivizing single parent households, although that was a part of it.
01:30:42.000 It was the civil rights era.
01:30:44.000 And so, you know, for people that say, well, IQ doesn't explain everything, it doesn't explain everything, but it does explain a great deal.
01:30:52.000 And what you find is that when the Anglo Protestant and white, fundamentally white system was explicitly the dominant system, and I don't think it was totally humane, that's why I think there was a little bit more semblance.
01:31:07.000 But once you see people take things into their own hands, then it starts to fall apart a little bit.
01:31:12.000 So the IQ denial is just kind of absurd to me at this point.
01:31:15.000 If you recognize the fact that, and Jared Taylor actually just released a very good video this afternoon about it on American Renaissance.
01:31:23.000 And he talked about this latest issue of National Geographic where they try and refute the existence of race.
01:31:29.000 And there's a really, I think, telling point in the video where in the magazine they say that this baby and this monkey share 99% of the same DNA.
01:31:40.000 And Taylor makes a really profound point saying, hmm, so in the same magazine where they deny that race exists, they admit that a 1% difference in DNA has drastic consequences.
01:31:51.000 And what we see with epigenetics and, you know, microevolution on different continents is that tribes, peoples have evolved different characteristics.
01:32:01.000 And, you know, people say, is that supremacist?
01:32:03.000 Is that ranking?
01:32:04.000 Is that hierarchy?
01:32:05.000 No, it's not.
01:32:06.000 Because you look at some people who have evolved to their particular biome and they are superior in different categories.
01:32:13.000 There could be smell, there could be.
01:32:15.000 Bone structure, there could be capacity to run or to lift objects.
01:32:19.000 I mean, all kinds of things.
01:32:21.000 So, but once you understand that there are differences and there are differences in crucial areas, to say that, well, IQ, that certain countries in Africa have an average IQ of 65 doesn't impact their success, it's absurd.
01:32:37.000 It's absurd.
01:32:38.000 You know, for people to say that, well, this country's average IQ is about 35 points lower than this country and that doesn't have an impact on their success.
01:32:47.000 I don't know how anybody with a straight face could say that.
01:32:49.000 And then it always goes into, okay, but so what are we supposed to do?
01:32:53.000 What are we supposed to do?
01:32:54.000 Kill them all?
01:32:55.000 Like, what?
01:32:56.000 No, nobody said anything like that.
01:32:58.000 You know, every conversation I've entered into about this always devolves into that.
01:33:03.000 It's always, well, you know, look, groups are different, and that's okay, but we have to acknowledge that they're different.
01:33:08.000 And people say, what?
01:33:09.000 So you think you're better?
01:33:10.000 You think that we're just going to kill all the other ones?
01:33:12.000 It's like, what?
01:33:14.000 No, that's how do you extrapolate one from the other?
01:33:18.000 I'm over here saying apples and bananas are different.
01:33:20.000 And you're saying, so that means that, well, the bananas are better and we should get rid of all the apples?
01:33:26.000 No, of course not.
01:33:28.000 But to deny the reality that there are differences, to me, it's kind of asinine.
01:33:35.000 Gaius Gracchus says, people attack Russia, but they torture Antifa.
01:33:39.000 So circles and roundabout.
01:33:41.000 Wait, what?
01:33:43.000 People attack Russia, but they torture Antifa.
01:33:45.000 I don't know.
01:33:46.000 That's a little bit confusing the way you phrase that.
01:33:49.000 Gaius Gracchus says, I read an article defending Muslims moving to the Scottish Isles.
01:33:54.000 It's so disgusting.
01:33:55.000 Iona in the islands is the Jerusalem of the British Isles.
01:33:59.000 What would Richard Lionhearted think, not to mention St. Combs?
01:34:04.000 Okay, so I don't know if my brain's malfunctioned, but the syntax is a little bit incomplete here.
01:34:11.000 But I do get what you're saying.
01:34:13.000 You know, the thought about our ancestors, what would they think about this?
01:34:17.000 You know, for people that say, oh, things have to be this way, or is this really who we are?
01:34:24.000 You know, go back 150 years and ask that question.
01:34:27.000 You know, and they say, people support this government that puts children in detention centers.
01:34:32.000 Is that really who we are?
01:34:33.000 Go back 150 years.
01:34:34.000 Who were they?
01:34:35.000 You know, go back 200 years.
01:34:36.000 Who were they, right?
01:34:38.000 George Washington, Alexander the Great, Napoleon, all these great people.
01:34:43.000 You know, what do you think they would say about these things?
01:34:45.000 Do you think they were just blindly prejudiced?
01:34:49.000 They had no idea that everybody was the same and equal and we should just create a deracinated global race.
01:34:49.000 They had no reason.
01:34:57.000 You know, that was so obvious.
01:34:59.000 But for 10,000 years, they just were oblivious to that fact.
01:35:04.000 Or, They were blindly prejudiced, all of them.
01:35:07.000 I mean, that's where it falls apart for me.
01:35:10.000 You know, you think about the fact that for thousands of years, we acknowledged that tribes were different.
01:35:17.000 And then, and then miraculously, a bunch of enlightened teenagers who didn't know any better, who had never experienced the world and who only knew a white country and a white academia, they made the discovery wait a minute, they were all wrong.
01:35:32.000 The people going back for 10,000 years, they had it all wrong.
01:35:36.000 They were too stupid or they were just.
01:35:39.000 Weirdly prejudiced in one direction to not realize that we're all the same on the inside and we should all be in the same place.
01:35:47.000 Duh, it's that, come on.
01:35:49.000 They're over there, they should be over here.
01:35:51.000 What are you, bigot?
01:35:52.000 You know, so that's when it falls apart for me.
01:35:55.000 The idea that everybody got it wrong, they were just so blinded by prejudice and anachronistic tradition, archaic tradition, that they couldn't see what was staring them right in the face, which was human equality.
01:36:09.000 No.
01:36:10.000 Or maybe human equality was wrong from the start, right?
01:36:14.000 Of course, we believe in dignity before God, all equal in dignity before God, but in certain attributes, there is a great diversity.
01:36:22.000 Simon Skola says, RIP Charles Krauthammer.
01:36:25.000 A lot of us didn't agree with him, but it's amazing how much he accomplished after being paralyzed at such a young age.
01:36:30.000 Very true.
01:36:31.000 You know, I certainly did not agree with him about the Iraq war, or do not agree in retrospect.
01:36:37.000 Somebody put in the comments, because I said that one time, and they were like, Nick didn't agree with the Iraq war, what, when he was like five?
01:36:43.000 I'm talking about in retrospect.
01:36:44.000 They don't agree with his assessment about the Iraq war in retrospect.
01:36:48.000 I didn't agree with his neoconservative agenda.
01:36:51.000 I didn't agree with him on Trump or things like that.
01:36:55.000 But he was a smart guy, very eloquent, very thoughtful.
01:36:58.000 I read his book back when I was a more basic conservative.
01:37:01.000 But it was good writing.
01:37:02.000 And I think it's an inspiring story that he was paralyzed and he really got this sorry lot in life, but he made the most of it.
01:37:10.000 So good guy.
01:37:12.000 And he will be missed.
01:37:15.000 Do we have any more Streamlabs or is that going to do it for us?
01:37:15.000 Let's see.
01:37:19.000 Looks like we've got a couple more here.
01:37:19.000 Tonight.
01:37:22.000 Gregs says, Love faith and love the Catholic discussion.
01:37:26.000 I always learn something new.
01:37:28.000 It's nice to take a break from reviewing the news and really focus on God.
01:37:31.000 Much love from the conservative Lutheran gang, Gregsnog.
01:37:35.000 Well, appreciate you, big guy.
01:37:36.000 Glad you enjoyed the Catholic discussion.
01:37:38.000 You know, I am Catholic, but in all seriousness, we're just trying to get Christians on board.
01:37:44.000 I, you know, I want people to convert to Catholicism because I'm Catholic.
01:37:47.000 I believe that's true.
01:37:49.000 But I'll take Christians any day of the week over.
01:37:52.000 Atheists and pagans, and Muslims, even, and other religious groups who we don't have to mention.
01:38:00.000 So, we do appreciate the support, even from the Lutheran gang.
01:38:03.000 Glad you enjoy the news.
01:38:05.000 It is, or rather, the new information and the discussion about the fundamentals.
01:38:10.000 It is important always to put it back into perspective that there's politics, there's the day to day, but to really orient around God, I think you get a bigger, a sense of the bigger picture, and that's the way to go.
01:38:23.000 Rawhide says Asaka is a girl who deep down wants a man to control her.
01:38:28.000 You gotta fight, Nick.
01:38:30.000 Don't take the easy way out.
01:38:33.000 I kind of see what you mean, but see, to me, you know, maybe it's because of my temperament.
01:38:40.000 I'm a very irritable person.
01:38:42.000 I don't know if you know this or not.
01:38:44.000 When one audio issue goes wrong, I tend to fly off the handle a little bit.
01:38:49.000 When people are difficult like that, and I have a lot of difficult.
01:38:53.000 I've had a lot of difficult people in my life, a lot of difficult scenarios, difficult situations.
01:38:59.000 It doesn't do anything more for me than to just make me really mad.
01:39:03.000 So, this idea of, oh, well, you just need to tame, you just need to fight.
01:39:08.000 I'm at the point where it's like, I am trying to take the path of least resistance because the mission that I'm on is already so difficult.
01:39:16.000 It's like, if people are telling me, you know, you can either completely reconfigure Windows and re download all your apps and it'll be working good, or you could just buy this adapter, I'm going to buy the adapter.
01:39:28.000 You know, if people are telling me, well, he could jump through all these different hoops or he could.
01:39:32.000 So when we look at Ray and Asaka, it's like, yeah, Nick, well, you just have to tame Asaka.
01:39:32.000 I'm just going to.
01:39:38.000 You just, you know, you just have to fight it.
01:39:40.000 It's like I'm fighting a battle every day just to not get killed by the Jewish mafia.
01:39:45.000 Okay, you know, that's ironic, of course.
01:39:49.000 But I'm not really looking for new fights.
01:39:52.000 I got a lot of fights on the daily, right?
01:39:55.000 So I've.
01:39:56.000 Because I've been in situations where people are difficult, where people want to play games.
01:40:01.000 I really don't like to play the games.
01:40:04.000 It just really makes me angry.
01:40:07.000 And that's not healthy.
01:40:08.000 It's not healthy.
01:40:10.000 Rawhide says this is the most boomer video you will watch.
01:40:13.000 React to it on stream.
01:40:17.000 I love when people give me commands.
01:40:18.000 I love when they tell me react to this or that or the other on stream.
01:40:22.000 Let's see.
01:40:24.000 Is it short?
01:40:24.000 If it's short, I'll consider it.
01:40:26.000 Let's take a look.
01:40:30.000 Oh, it's this one.
01:40:31.000 I think we've watched this one actually on stream before.
01:40:34.000 Clavin's, well, I'll just give you a little screen cap of it because we're already at, geez, we've been streaming for an hour and 45 minutes.
01:40:43.000 So we're going to try and wrap it up, but I will throw it up on the air here real quick.
01:40:48.000 And just because it is a pretty funny boomer video here.
01:40:55.000 Let me pull it up on the stream.
01:40:57.000 I'm getting a little exhausted.
01:40:58.000 The space heater is still on.
01:41:00.000 Space heater is still chugging.
01:41:02.000 It's 100 degrees out there, it's 100 degrees in here.
01:41:05.000 And when you're going for two hours, it takes a physical toll.
01:41:09.000 But let's take a look here.
01:41:12.000 Let me just show you a few screen caps.
01:41:13.000 This is my favorite.
01:41:14.000 I watched this back when I was like a NormieCon and I was watching these unironically.
01:41:19.000 And I was like, yeah, this makes a lot of sense.
01:41:21.000 He basically makes the case.
01:41:23.000 I mean, come on, really?
01:41:25.000 Come on, folks.
01:41:28.000 This is what they're telling us.
01:41:31.000 Am I a conspiracy theorist?
01:41:33.000 Am I a wackadoo for talking about greater Israel?
01:41:37.000 This guy, Andrew Clavin, is there a close up of him at some point?
01:41:41.000 This guy, okay, really?
01:41:44.000 This guy who works for PragerU in concert with Ben Shapiro and the others is telling us this is the solution for the Middle East.
01:41:52.000 Haha, it's totally a funny joke.
01:41:55.000 It is totally a funny joke, not a 70 year completely serious design.
01:42:02.000 Oi vei, the whole Middle East should just become Israel.
01:42:05.000 Isn't that funny?
01:42:08.000 And then he says America.
01:42:10.000 Then he says America should be controlled.
01:42:14.000 You see, he has these Jewish people dancing over America.
01:42:16.000 Yeah.
01:42:18.000 You know, this image seems kind of familiar to me.
01:42:22.000 I see dancing Hasidic Jews, and it makes me think of something.
01:42:27.000 When I see dancing Israelis, that's what I'm looking at.
01:42:33.000 It's an Israeli who's dancing.
01:42:35.000 I kind of think of something.
01:42:36.000 It kind of makes me think of something when I see dancing Israelis.
01:42:41.000 I can't quite put my finger on it.
01:42:43.000 Definitely don't Google dancing Israelis.
01:42:46.000 Definitely do not Google.
01:42:48.000 The dancing Israelis.
01:42:50.000 You know, I can't put my finger on it, but I'm sure something will jog my memory in the future.
01:42:56.000 Maybe something around here.
01:42:57.000 I don't know.
01:42:59.000 But yeah, I mean, that's my.
01:43:00.000 I've seen that one.
01:43:01.000 I think we've actually watched that one on stream before.
01:43:03.000 But, you know.
01:43:05.000 But of course, I'm just.
01:43:06.000 I don't know.
01:43:07.000 Crazy.
01:43:08.000 What am I even saying?
01:43:09.000 It's just crazy conspiracy theories.
01:43:11.000 Greater Israel spanning from the Nile to the Euphrates or to the Tigris.
01:43:16.000 You know, this idea that Ben Gorion said in private speeches that, you know, they would.
01:43:21.000 Conquer the Sinai and the whole Levant.
01:43:23.000 It's crazy, crazy.
01:43:26.000 But it looks like those are all our super chats.
01:43:29.000 Is that all of them?
01:43:31.000 Let me check back.
01:43:33.000 You guys are killing me.
01:43:34.000 It's dragging me back.
01:43:37.000 Let's check super chats.
01:43:38.000 If there's no more super chats, then we'll call it a night.
01:43:41.000 We'll call it a show.
01:43:42.000 I think we got one more.
01:43:44.000 Galtz Gooch says, What is your opinion on democracy slash monarchy?
01:43:48.000 It said, Oh, great.
01:43:48.000 You know, an hour and 45 minutes in, a very simple question.
01:43:53.000 What do you think about democracy and monarchy?
01:43:56.000 Well, you know, I've talked about these issues a lot before about democracy and monarchy.
01:44:02.000 Democracy is deeply flawed.
01:44:05.000 We're not a democracy, we're a republic.
01:44:07.000 So I'm pretty much against democracy.
01:44:09.000 Democratic systems, mechanisms, are they useful?
01:44:12.000 I think they're very useful.
01:44:13.000 I think they were useful at the founding.
01:44:16.000 But a democracy, a pure democracy, of we want everyone voting on everything, we want to enhance suffrage, and we want to expand suffrage, and everyone should be voting, and we want.
01:44:29.000 The link between the people and the government to be as seamless as possible.
01:44:34.000 I definitely am not on the same page as Rousseau.
01:44:37.000 Let's put it that way.
01:44:38.000 But I do believe that democratic mechanisms, elections are useful.
01:44:42.000 We just have to rethink the idea of this universal democracy.
01:44:46.000 Everybody votes, and every representative body is direct, every executive is a direct election.
01:44:52.000 We got to rethink that.
01:44:54.000 Monarchy is useful for maintaining tradition in some cases.
01:45:00.000 Britain just goes to show, obviously, it's not foolproof, and maybe democracy is better in some cases, or Republican systems are better in some cases.
01:45:08.000 But of course, it depends on the size and the scale and the country.
01:45:12.000 You know, although I don't agree with Rousseau on his idea of, you know, this, like, religious commitment to democracy, he did write a lot about in the social contract how governments vary.
01:45:24.000 You know, the ideal government varies by the size of the country, the population of the country, the.
01:45:30.000 The history of the country.
01:45:31.000 So, you know, I think it depends on the country you're talking about.
01:45:35.000 For America, I think a republic is ideal.
01:45:37.000 For the UK, it's probably a monarchy.
01:45:39.000 I think there's pros and cons to both.
01:45:40.000 You just got to recognize that man is deeply flawed.
01:45:44.000 No system is going to be perfect.
01:45:45.000 No system is going to fix all those things.
01:45:48.000 There's going to be trade offs in every instance.
01:45:50.000 So, you know, people who think, oh, and this goes on both sides.
01:45:55.000 The Marxists who say, if we just get the Maoist, Leninist, you know, my brand of communism in power, then we're living in utopia forever.
01:46:04.000 Or the far right people, you know, the National Socialists who say, if we just get the scientific National Socialist government, you know, everything will be perfect.
01:46:13.000 Everything will be great.
01:46:15.000 That's the wrong premise.
01:46:16.000 I'm a Catholic, so I believe that we only get the kingdom of God in the next life.
01:46:20.000 And, you know, we shouldn't try.
01:46:22.000 We should try to make it ideal here, try to make it good here, but there has to be a healthy understanding that you're always going to have a flawed nature.
01:46:29.000 You've got to accommodate that.
01:46:30.000 You've got to account for that.
01:46:32.000 And no system is going to be, no system is really going to work.
01:46:36.000 You know, different degrees of dysfunction, right?
01:46:39.000 But that's a short answer, I guess, for a very big question.
01:46:43.000 But that's going to do it for us on the show tonight.
01:46:47.000 A long show, a long show.
01:46:49.000 Very drained, right?
01:46:52.000 Got to be drinking more water.
01:46:53.000 But that's going to do it for us on the show tonight.
01:46:55.000 Remember to check out NicholasJFuentes.com.
01:46:58.000 We have fixed the paywall.
01:46:59.000 It is all automated, it's all simple, fixed.
01:47:03.000 You know, we were having some issues earlier in the week where it would take a little while for an email to get sent out, but it's all clean, efficient, reliable now.
01:47:11.000 You sign up, you get the email, you set it all up.
01:47:15.000 So go to NicholasJFuentes.com to sign up for your premium membership.
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01:47:44.000 If you like what I'm doing, if you like to see the content, you know, I can't totally sustain myself just on prayers alone.
01:47:51.000 We talk about the spiritual appetite, but I do also get hungry for McDonald's.
01:47:55.000 So it always helps, but that's going to do it on the show tonight.
01:47:58.000 Remember to subscribe to our channel, give us a big thumbs up, leave a comment, and be nice.
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01:48:12.000 We're on the air Monday through Friday, 7 p.m. Central, 8 p.m. Eastern Standard Time.
01:48:16.000 I'm Nicholas J. Fuentes.
01:48:17.000 This was America First.
01:48:19.000 Remember to check us out tomorrow.
01:48:20.000 We've got J.F. Garaibi coming on the show to close out the week strongly.
01:48:26.000 And also a big surprise tomorrow, which is going to be pretty fun.
01:48:30.000 But thanks to Faith Goldie for coming on the show tonight.
01:48:33.000 We really enjoyed her presence, her thoughts, her wisdom.
01:48:38.000 Thanks to everybody who donates to the show Streamlabbers, Super Chatters, Premium members.
01:48:43.000 We love you folks.
01:48:44.000 Thanks to everybody who watches and shares the show.
01:48:47.000 We will see you tomorrow for JF Garipe on America First.
01:48:51.000 Until then, have a great rest of your evening.
01:48:57.000 Americanism, not globalism, will be our credo.
01:49:05.000 It's going to be only America first.
01:49:07.000 America first.
01:49:08.000 The American people will come first once again.
01:49:24.000 With respect