00:00:40.000The person who was called the bridge burner, the infighter, the subverter, all these names turns out I've got a lot of friends still.
00:00:48.000Turns out there's a lot of people who not only like me, who not only I haven't attacked, but who are great friends of mine, who want to come and be a part of the show and want to take part in what I'm trying to do.
00:01:00.000So it's just so funny because I talk about red elephants, Vince, who we actually started out fighting.
00:01:07.000I remember the first time I met him, it was on Baked Alaska's New Year's Eve stream.
00:01:12.000We got into a fight about something so dumb.
00:01:14.000But anyway, we ended up being very good friends.
00:01:46.000Because last week we talked about a similar subject, and I'd like to, in the spirit of this movement, which is focused on immigration, which is focused on these wonderful people that the world is giving us, that the globe is just sending us across the borders.
00:02:04.000We've got doctors, we've got physicians, we've got scientists, activists, humanitarians, all kinds of wonderful people.
00:02:14.000You've got some terrorists, people that stab people.
00:02:18.000You've got some criminals, some rapists thrown in.
00:02:21.000And so I figure what a great segment to introduce on the show that every Monday we review some of the finest, best examples of the migrants that are coming in and demographically transforming the country.
00:04:35.000Now, this could be, this could have something to do with the fact that I don't sleep at night and I rely exclusively on short naps during the day.
00:04:43.000However, I am also inclined to believe it has something to do with deficiencies in vitamins and minerals.
00:04:49.000I'm a big believer in that because the food that I eat, when I eat green stuff and meats and not fast food, I'm a big believer that the soil is depleted of all the good stuff.
00:04:59.000So by the time, after so much farming, after the farming techniques that allow us to be the breadbasket of the world, After the soil is harvested so many times, it loses the essential vitamins, nutrients, things that you need in your body.
00:05:13.000So, even though I eat for the most part Chick fil A, McDonald's, Taco Bell, when I do get around to mom making me dinner, I worry sometimes that it doesn't have the right nutrients.
00:05:24.000So, I go to the vitamin store, I get the top vitamins, so I'm able to feel a little bit better.
00:05:30.000I get B12, zinc, iron, magnesium, I get beta carotene, which is like a vitamin A thing, I got cod liver oil and a multivitamin.
00:05:41.000And then I believe that was everything.
00:05:42.000Calcium was also included with the magnesium.
00:07:19.000I know some people don't care for the personal anecdotes, but I'm like an Uber driver and you're just my passenger, okay?
00:07:25.000I'm like a deranged Uber driver back from the war and you're buckled in and you're going to listen to my stories even if you don't like it.
00:07:34.000So, our first story of the day, current events, is Kate Steinle.
00:07:38.000This is actually not so current, but it was this weekend, the third year since she was killed.
00:08:33.000If you've ever fired a gun, you know that for most guns, you know, if it hasn't been tampered with, it's not exactly easy to accidentally pull the trigger.
00:08:55.000He's on a bench, takes a little sleeping pill he finds in a garbage can, finds this gun, fires it, it ricochets off the wall into the back of 32 year old Kate Steinlee.
00:09:11.000Because this is a girl who should be safe in the country.
00:09:15.000She's 32, excuse me, walking on the pier with her father.
00:09:18.000So she's, you know, it's not even like, and you can say if you're in a bad neighborhood and you're unaccompanied and something bad happens to you, not like that's any less of a tragedy, but this is a person who is in a safe, well, who's in what should be a safe city, who's walking on the pier.
00:09:35.000It's not like she's in an alleyway, she's with her father.
00:09:38.000Gunned down tragically by somebody who had been deported five times.
00:09:44.000And we know this sparked outrage across the country, not only at the policy of open borders, but also the policy of sanctuary cities, the policy of catch and release.
00:09:53.000All these different policies which combine to create something that should have never happened.
00:09:58.000I think that's kind of the gravest thing to wrap your mind around.
00:10:01.000If we had a government that was enforcing the laws, this would not have happened, should not have happened.
00:10:06.000And of course, San Francisco is a sanctuary city.
00:10:09.000So not only do you have an individual who is deported.
00:10:11.000Five times and came back every single time, illegal.
00:10:15.000But he comes back the next time around and he's allowed to reside in San Francisco lawfully.
00:10:21.000Well, not lawfully, he's an unlawful alien.
00:10:24.000But nevertheless, he's not prosecuted.
00:10:45.0002017, when he was acquitted on all charges by the local court.
00:10:50.000He was then found to be guilty of first degree murder by federal courts, but nevertheless, a huge miscarriage of justice in the initial phase.
00:10:58.000And every year we look at this case as a pretty stark reminder of symbolically what's happening to the country.
00:11:04.000I mean, this is a pretty strong depiction of what's happening to the country.
00:11:08.000This is one individual who, as I said before, should have been safe, being killed by somebody, deported so many times that in each case you have a miscarriage of justice.
00:11:17.000Where he's not kept out of the country.
00:11:19.000He's allowed to come back in because we have a porous border.
00:11:23.000And then when he does something tragic like this, you know, he doesn't face a penalty, at least not until the Trump administration looks into it, right?
00:11:32.000And here you have, I think, a pretty great depiction of what's going on in the country in a much larger sense.
00:11:38.000This one tragedy is representative of what's happening in the whole country, which is to say that we have America, which is a young white country, a young white country.
00:11:51.000And what's happening to our country is we're going to have fatal wounds inflicted upon us by violent people who should not be here.
00:12:00.000And that's what's going on in the country.
00:12:01.000So every year we look at this example.
00:12:03.000And this is not exactly a topical thing.
00:12:05.000You know, last week we looked at illegal immigrants who had killed somebody in their driveway.
00:12:10.000We looked at how Mexico has been practicing human sacrifice for hundreds of years.
00:12:14.000I mean, we looked at all different kinds of examples in talks about the child separations and in talks about ICE and all the rest.
00:12:23.000But what we see in this case, which was, this should have been such a bigger deal than it was, in the sense that we look at a Trayvon Martin, a Michael Brown, it's always a big episode.
00:12:34.000We have a young girl who's killed, and nothing is said.
00:12:37.000And so we remember Kate Stinley three years later.
00:12:40.000We're never going to forget her death.
00:12:42.000And we always have to remind people that this is what this policy begets.
00:12:48.000I think overall, the fresh point to be made here, which, you know, we could look at the tragedy every year we mourn, every year we pray for the victims of this kind of thing.
00:13:16.000Forget about the Democrats for a second.
00:13:18.000Forget about Republicans for a second.
00:13:20.000The monoparty that is in control of both parties, the Democratic Party and the Republican Party.
00:13:27.000Click, you know, the certain cabal of transnational interests which controls that city, Washington, D.C., which, by the way, shares the same views both Paul Ryan and Nancy Pelosi, Chuck Schumer and Mitch McConnell.
00:13:41.000They both want this to be the future in the sense that they both want open borders.
00:13:45.000You look at the Republicans this week, and let's look at the Republicans this week.
00:13:50.000Donald Trump gets elected on a mandate of sealing the border, securing the border first and foremost.
00:13:56.000Even the guy who came second in the Republican primary, Ted Cruz.
00:14:01.000I mean, that was the issue which decided the Republican nomination this year.
00:14:05.000And even the second runner up was strong on that issue.
00:14:08.000The people that went first were the weakest Jeb Bush, Marco Rubio, others, people who wanted amnesty.
00:14:14.000Donald Trump gets put into office with that mandate in mind secure the border, deport the illegal immigrants, fix the immigration system, which is broken.
00:14:23.000This is not an immigration system, this is an invasion system.
00:14:26.000Immigration is when a few qualified people leave from one country and come to another.
00:14:32.000And they assimilate and they take its values, and they're a tiny, tiny, tiny percentage of foreign born.
00:14:39.000They're a tiny, tiny percentage of the general population.
00:14:43.000What we have right now is tens of millions of people pouring across the border, all from the same place, not adopting the culture, not even attempting and bringing their problems.
00:14:51.000So that's the mandate that Trump is elected on fix this broken system or just end it, stop the invasion, have some proper system or principles of immigration.
00:15:04.000What do we get with the so called compromise bill on the floor of the House of Representatives this week?
00:15:10.000We get a bill that promises that, oh, in three or four administrations, Congress promises to fund a border wall, Congress promises to secure the border.
00:15:19.000We get no real change, no net change on immigration, shuffling around the chain migration, kind of getting rid of diversity visa, but basically giving out an equal amount of green cards anyway.
00:15:32.000And then on the issue of DACA recipients give amnesty to a potential 400,000 previous DACA recipients.
00:15:39.000That's what we get on the Republican side.
00:15:42.000So, you know, people like to talk about Democrats.
00:16:47.000They would say the Republicans are so strong on it.
00:16:50.000And the Democrats are more compassionate, but they're not for open borders.
00:16:54.000Well, what did the Democrats come out this week with saying?
00:16:56.000Bill de Blasio, mayor of New York, says he's in favor of abolishing ICE.
00:17:01.000Cynthia Nixon, running for governor of New York, says she's in favor of abolishing ICE.
00:17:06.000The one who primaried Crowley this week, Crowley, who was fourth in line in the Democratic Party in Congress, who was primaried by Alexandria.
00:17:16.000From New York's 14th district, from the Bronx.
00:17:19.000She's actually from a pretty wealthy zip code, but she says she's from the Bronx.
00:17:24.000She's in favor of getting rid of ICE and open borders.
00:18:52.000But what actually Republicans have been able to do are Donald Trump, in particular, and the White House has been able to do is actually reverse this and force the Democrats into a corner.
00:19:01.000Where now the messaging has gone from something very effective, which is the Republicans are too tough.
00:19:08.000It has now turned into the Democrats are too weak because the Democrats have backed themselves into a corner and going so aggressively on this issue that they now cannot say anything in the way of border security.
00:19:19.000Their platform is now completely open borders explicitly.
00:19:24.000That was always their platform for 25 years.
00:19:27.000But now they're explicitly and overtly open borders, explicitly and overtly against immigration enforcement.
00:19:35.000And if you think that's a scary thing, if you think that's bad, you're not alone.
00:19:41.000There was a big poll that came out this week from Harvard and Harris, which showed that 73% of swing voters in 2018 opposed the abolition of ICE.
00:19:53.000Nearly 70% of Americans overall opposed it.
00:19:58.000So if we're looking at 2018, if we're looking at 2020, if we're looking at 2022, the vast, vast majority of Americans, the majority of Mexicans, I'm pretty sure, included in this poll, but the majority of swing voters, the majority of Americans, This new platform that the Democrats are on, they don't like it.
00:20:20.000More than that, two thirds of Americans support reducing total legal immigration, and more Americans support zero immigration, cutting all immigration, than support the current levels of immigration.
00:20:33.000So what you have here is actually kind of a good thing.
00:20:37.000You know, we see that this is something that cannot work, that is wildly unpopular, and we are in the vast majority, not only of Americans, but of swing voters.
00:20:45.000And not only opposed the farthest extent of it, which is Bill de Blasio in basically a third world country, New York City, basically a banana republic, it's Democrat central, but also the Republican and Democrat consensus of the current immigration situation.
00:21:03.000So in that way, it's actually kind of a positive.
00:21:07.000We see that people are changing their minds on this issue, or if not changing their minds, they're being awakened to what's going on in the country.
00:21:45.000Because the axiom right now, or maybe the gradient, the spectrum of the immigration issue, the strengths and weaknesses are the following.
00:21:55.000The Democrats have their strength in the compassion angle.
00:21:58.000You know, you can play on two really strong emotions on the immigration debate.
00:22:01.000You could say we have to be compassionate or we have to be strong.
00:22:05.000These are really the predominant forces here.
00:22:08.000And underlying those are order and disorder.
00:22:10.000And the Democrats will play to the emotions, they'll play to feelings of compassion, of sympathy, of all the rest, and say, well, we have to be.
00:22:18.000Charitable, we have to be benevolent, we have to be nice.
00:22:21.000And that's kind of the sentiment which put Barack Obama in, which put Hillary Clinton into the spotlight in the Democratic Party.
00:22:28.000That was the force that was driving her in the campaign.
00:22:31.000That's what led us or allowed the immigration system to get as bad as it is this idea of, you know, they're so poor, give us, you're tired, you're helpless, we're going to make it okay for you and all the rest.
00:22:42.000And that's the big sentiment that the Democrats play on.
00:22:44.000And you see it's effective when they say, oh, look at the children.
00:23:01.000The Republican principle, the Republican value, the emotions they're playing to are the anxieties, the fears, the insecurities of an open border.
00:23:10.000Saying, you know, this brings crime, this brings friction, this brings disorder, and we have to combat that.
00:23:31.000We saw the compassionate side, they played their hand in about a minute.
00:23:35.000That was a flame that burned twice as bright but lasted half as long.
00:23:39.000And we see that the vast majority of people don't feel so compassionate when they see the crime.
00:23:44.000They don't feel so compassionate when they see the transformation, when they see what these winners are bringing over across the border.
00:23:51.000And so that's why, and we've been talking about it a lot on the show with the immigration issue, we're in a very tight space here where we're in this transition between a white country and a truly multiracial country where it's a white plurality.
00:24:09.000The Democratic strategy is to get that number down.
00:24:12.000They realized in the 1970s and 60s, we're never going to win a national election again the way that we're going.
00:24:18.000The Republicans have got a pretty strong stranglehold on the country because you've got Republicans in the heartland, you've got them all over the place.
00:25:01.000So you look at the trajectory we're on demographically, and white people are headed towards a minority.
00:25:05.000You look at that, and the Republican coalition of mostly white, mostly Christian, mostly evangelical voters.
00:25:12.000Is going to be a lot smaller, and therefore Republicans are going to be insolvent or they're going to have to change.
00:25:17.000But right now we're in that transition of going from a country where Republicans like Donald Trump can still pull out a win, can still motivate that kind of white nativist sentiment, and a point where the white vote is going to have to combine with somebody else, some other group.
00:25:32.000It's not going to be enough in and of itself, even if they were all united behind one goal.
00:25:37.000And so right now we're in this very, very precarious transition for the Democrats.
00:25:42.000And you can look in the polling, it shows this.
00:25:44.000They're going to give up their hand if things continue to go this way.
00:25:47.000There was another poll, a Reuters poll, which showed that young white voters went from 33% support of Republicans to 39% in 2018.
00:25:57.000They went from 33% in 2016 to 39% in 2018.
00:26:01.000Support for Democrats among young whites went from 47% to 39%.
00:26:08.000So what you see here is that this is going to be a very, very important time here.
00:26:49.000By virtue of the situation getting bad, it is making the situation more favorable for us to solve it because people are feeling the pain.
00:26:56.000So it's a little counterintuitive, but that is what's going on with the immigration situation.
00:27:02.000We're going to move on to what happened in Mexico this week, basically the same, similar, at least parallel, which is, of course, Lopez Obrador, who is the left wing candidate.
00:27:13.000He started his own party and he acceded to the presidency this weekend with more than 50% of the vote.
00:27:30.000They regained it with Peña Nieto, but he is not able to serve, or he's not able to run as an incumbent this year, so he was beaten out by the super left wing guy, a populist by the name of Obrador.
00:27:43.000And you know, it's funny because you could check out any major online publication, any major paper, because I did, looking up who this guy is, and every paper compares him to Trump.
00:27:54.000Very curious, very strange, because you know, you would think that this president, who's a nutcase, his platform is like, make Mexico socialist.
00:28:28.000But the big news out of today, it's kind of funny because he runs this whole campaign of saying, you know, Mexico's going to stand up to the United States.
00:28:38.000He runs and several times during the campaign, he calls Trump arrogant.
00:29:17.000But nevertheless, I think the big takeaway from this election is that Mexico is fully in control here, right?
00:29:23.000I mean, isn't that kind of funny when you look at it this way?
00:29:27.000When the Mexican president tells us they're using it as a bargaining chip that they're going to stop sending people over the border, doesn't that kind of tell you something about the situation?
00:29:37.000I think a lot of people have it in their heads that libertarians, liberals, People are fleeing a war zone, basically.
00:29:44.000They're fleeing unfortunate circumstances to find opportunity in America.
00:29:50.000Well, in that case, it's individual actors who are making these decisions.
00:29:55.000Oh, you know, they're coming up and they have to be taken care of.
00:29:59.000When you phrase it like this, where the Mexican president says, yeah, we can curb the immigration situation if you give us money, we're going to shake you down.
00:30:07.000And in exchange, we won't be sending over all these criminals and people taking your jobs and all the rest.
00:30:12.000Then you start to understand, of course, it's not just some natural organic process.
00:30:20.000They have been doing this for 20 years.
00:30:22.000And you can look, in many cases, the Mexican government will go into the worst slums, they'll go into the poorest Mexican states, and they will give out pamphlets with instructions about how to get to America, the right magical legal words to save them so they could get asylum or so they could get caught and released.
00:30:40.000So, what we see here is, I think, almost an accidental admission by the media when they.
00:30:46.000Oh, well, the Mexican president says if you give us money, if you give us economic investment, then we will stop sending in people.
00:30:52.000It's just like what's happening in Turkey, in Europe.
00:30:56.000Turkey is letting in millions of Muslim migrants from the Middle East into Europe, sending them on their way.
00:31:03.000And what do they do when these migrants get into the Netherlands?
00:31:05.000What do they do when they get into Denmark and Germany?
00:31:08.000Well, Erdogan, who's the leader of Turkey, mobilizes them in all kinds of capacities to vote, to riot, to commit terrorist attacks, all kinds of things.
00:31:18.000So, you see that in every case, what you have is that the third world is fully in control of these things, and therefore they have responsibility.
00:31:25.000That's what it all comes down to on the show.
00:31:30.000We have to stop asking what is our responsibility to these people.
00:31:33.000If Mexico can stop them, if Mexico can provide for them, this president is saying, I'm going to end poverty, I'm going to bring back investment, I'm going to nationalize health care and all the rest.
00:31:46.000If Mexico can take care of its people, if it's such a wonderful place, if they can stop the immigrants, then they are responsible for the entire situation.
00:31:55.000And guess what that puts them on the hook for?
00:31:58.000That puts them on the hook for solving the immigration issue.
00:32:02.000And so I think we get a pretty clear picture of what's going on at the border from this election.
00:32:08.000A lot of this is due to the domestic situation in Mexico.
00:32:11.000I would be remiss to say that it's totally an international thing.
00:32:15.000He got put into office largely because of domestic politics, because Mexico's economy isn't doing well, because NAFTA has actually been not so working out for Mexico's middle class.
00:32:28.000Rather, the imports into Mexico, agricultural in particular, has taken out, especially along the border, the border states with America, has taken out a lot of industry there, a lot of farming there.
00:32:40.000And so, a lot of what propelled this left wing guy into power was the violence of the drug cartels, the terrible economic situation, all the rest.
00:32:48.000So, you know, I would caution anybody to read too much into it from the lens of America, from the lens of Trump.
00:32:54.000The left wing guy got into power for these reasons, but I hear an admission like that, I hear a deal made like that, and I think this is not.
00:33:02.000The immigration situation that the mainstream media is presenting to us is just, oh, well, what can you do?
00:33:09.000You know, you have all these poor people, they got nowhere to go, and they're pouring across the border.
00:33:14.000We've got to accommodate them in every step, whether it's a person who chooses to cross the border illegally, or it's the government who sends them there, or it's the government who doesn't provide for them in the first place.
00:33:25.000At every step of the way, you find responsibility for this humanitarian disaster that does not belong to the American taxpayer, that belongs to them.
00:33:51.000I want to see a trade war with Mexico.
00:33:54.000Few understand America's leverage against these kinds of countries.
00:33:58.000And that's one of the things that I love so much about Trump, whether he's, you know, you could say, oh, he hasn't done a wall yet, he hasn't done this yet.
00:34:05.000And we understand the obstruction and the opposition he's up against.
00:34:09.000But predominantly, why I love Trump, I think a lot of people love Trump, is that we're not being pushed around by these tiny, poor, sad little countries anymore.
00:34:20.000We've got Mexico, who, if we got into a trade war with Mexico, it would end Mexico as they knew it.
00:34:26.000We could destroy Mexico like this if we wanted to, with terrorists, with the trade war.
00:34:32.000The same thing is happening with China, the same thing is what's happening with Europe.
00:34:36.000And so, I really, really love, above all else, about the Trump presidency.
00:34:42.000Is that he's really throwing our weight around.
00:34:44.000He's flexing on these third world plebs, which I enjoy so much.
00:34:49.000So I like, as an accelerationist, I like the idea that this very antagonistic kind of a guy has acceded to the presidency in terms of the intercourse or the relationship between these two countries, that finally we're going to be able to really punch back.
00:35:07.000The thing with Nieto was that he was kind of more of a centrist, he was much more reserved, much more conservative in his responses.
00:35:15.000And so it's hard to really inflame this situation, hard to really create a flexible and fluid negotiating situation environment, but this guy will.
00:35:25.000It'll be very dynamic, hopefully very antagonistic, and therefore it'll give us a pretext to really punch these people in the stomach and get what we deserve.
00:35:34.000So that's a good thing overall with Mexico and lets you know what's happening at the border.
00:35:40.000The last thing I wanted to cover, we got about five minutes before I start taking your Streamlabs and Super Chats.
00:35:47.000I feel like the show has just flown by.
00:35:48.000You know, you start talking about some of these bigger things and it just takes up so much of the show.
00:36:47.000A Massachusetts reporter from the newspaper The Republican was fired after they tweeted that the shooter dropped a MAGA hat on the floor of the media building as he was shooting it up.
00:37:00.000And then we found out today that Brian Ross of ABC is out after seven months, is out seven months after he falsely claimed that Michael Flynn would testify before the Mueller investigation that Trump ordered him to make contact with the Russians.
00:37:16.000So he got fired because that false announcement actually sent the stock market tumbling 350 points.
00:37:23.000And so I think what the message of this show is is just a big fat white pill.
00:37:27.000Every day things are just getting more encouraging because when you see these people get fired, What this is, is an admission of guilt.
00:37:35.000You know, it's funny that probably more people have been fired by the media.
00:37:39.000More people on the left have been arrested, have been destroyed, whether it's Hollywood actors or media people, businesses.
00:37:47.000More people have bent the knee, have been forced to concede than anybody in the Trump administration, right?
00:37:54.000I mean, Trump, he had to fire like one guy because of pressure Michael Flynn, technically.
00:38:00.000You know, that was probably the one case where Trump.
00:38:03.000Maybe bowed to pressure, you could say made a misstep or something to that effect.
00:38:07.000But in every case, we see that when the media does something like this, that's an admonition that Trump is absolutely correct.
00:38:13.000You know, they can say that Trump was colluding with Russia.
00:38:16.000Well, they have no evidence, they have no smoking gun.
00:38:55.000So I think that everywhere you look, these people are on the back foot.
00:38:59.000And so this tells us a lot about the midterms.
00:39:01.000We've got our eyes on the prize on the midterms.
00:39:03.000And when we look at this holistically, when we look at this week, And all the stories in totality directed towards a particular end goal here, we're told about Blue Wave, right?
00:39:15.000We're told that the Democrats, the system, the establishment, it's impossible.
00:39:54.000Even if they make mistakes like this, the media should try their best to prevent them because that's going to be very costly for them.
00:40:01.000But even in the case where a Brian Ross or one of these guys makes a mistake, from a strategic point of view, they got to protect these people.
00:40:09.000They start firing these kinds of people.
00:40:11.000I don't know, maybe from a business point it makes sense.
00:40:13.000But from a political perspective, all they're doing is admitting guilt.
00:40:17.000You know, it's the same thing when a politician apologizes or something to that effect.
00:40:23.000You know, when you retract something, when you issue, you know, any kind of.
00:40:27.000Statement that is saying, I was in the wrong, or I'm sorry, or that kind of thing, or I feel bad.
00:40:33.000You're effectively saying that I was in the wrong and I've lost this battle.
00:40:37.000So to me, it's very stupid when the media does this thing.
00:40:39.000It's the right thing to do, ultimately, but I mean, their goal is open borders, their goal is taking down Trump.
00:40:45.000They got to protect these people because they're really making it pretty easy for us.
00:40:49.000So it's been a good week on all fronts.
00:40:52.000We're at 745, so I'm going to jump into our Streamlabs and Super Chats.
00:40:58.000And I want to take a little bit of extra time because I got to answer the ones from Friday as well.
00:43:21.000My church, I could point to somebody who is the successor of St. Peter, okay?
00:43:26.000Who Jesus Christ, whether you agree with the interpretation or not, pretty strong case that this is the correct one, said he builds the church on the rock of this disciple, and our leader is the successor of that person directly.
00:43:39.000Peter chose his successor, that successor chose the next one, and so from Peter, you have an unbroken line of apostolic succession, where even if you don't particularly care for the pope, the pope who preceded him put in place the procedure that would choose the next one.
00:43:55.000So, for me, if you're a Protestant and you're trying to look into it, you want more information, number one, learn about the faith, learn about the tradition, read the early church fathers, read some of the more modern works about it, Chesterton, among others.
00:44:10.000But read about it, pray on it, and just think about it from a logical standpoint.
00:44:19.000Well, I didn't survey the whole of Christian history and metaphysics and theology and say, well, after evaluating everyone, Case by case, thoroughly.
00:44:40.000Greggs says in 2020, there will either be a peaceful retention of power by Trump or a peaceful transfer of power to a Democrat presidential elect.
00:45:03.000Who would think that we are where we are?
00:45:06.000I mean, in 2016, my most profound emotion was just disbelief.
00:45:10.000You know, I remember watching the election in a friend of mine's dorm who was all of us, all the Trump supporters, all five of us, in his apartment room, watching it on the laptop.
00:45:23.000We were just watching the New York Times.
00:45:24.000We weren't even watching a YouTube live stream on one computer, I think, and then we had the New York Times on one laptop, but just watching the.
00:45:32.000The meter goes at 50% in Trump or 60% for Hillary.
00:45:36.000And I remember we saw him just get closer and closer.
00:45:39.000The New York Times projecting, okay, he's at like 80% likelihood in Wisconsin.
00:46:34.000The thing is, it would have to get really bad.
00:46:36.000For people to take up arms, you have to realize that what you see on television, what you see on the internet, is a very inflated, maybe a grossly exaggerated expression of what's happening in the country.
00:46:50.000Because the people that you hear are the extremes.
00:46:53.000You know, when you see people clashing in the streets, this is the furthest 2% or 5% on either side that show up to these things.
00:47:01.000When you're talking about Antifa, when you're talking about Proud Boys, Proud Boys, you know, that kind of thing.
00:47:08.000So, when these people are clashing in the streets and they're fighting online, the vast majority of people are independent, mostly apolitical, and would not take up arms for most things.
00:47:19.000So, now that said, you look at like the Revolutionary War, it was a very small percentage of people that actually committed to making violence happen.
00:47:26.000But I think it's a different situation these days for that kind of thing to be permitted.
00:47:31.000I think that if any kind of violence really got out of hand, I think people would just support the government, right?
00:47:37.000If you saw violence on either side, by the left or the right, Given the nature of the electorate right now, or the body politic, I would say that the vast majority of people would not pick sides in the Civil War.
00:47:49.000They would just be more and more in favor of institutional governing powers.
00:47:53.000They'd be in favor of the managerial class to protect them and keep them safe.
00:47:57.000Because most people are like, I want to watch television.
00:48:15.000Given that that's the situation right now, it would take a long time and for conditions to get much worse to see any kind of large scale fighting on either side.
00:48:27.000Greg's, or I'm sorry, I just took that one.
00:48:29.000Rawhide says Ron Paul did nothing wrong.
00:48:32.000And God bless my favorite Latinks, Nicholas Valentes.
00:48:47.000Of the cultural Marxists depicted as an anti Semitic Jewish caricature, a racist black caricature, Mexican and Chinese caricature, and they're all punching America with a combined communist fist led by the Jews.
00:49:04.000And, you know, I say he did nothing wrong because it wasn't actually him who posted such a disgraceful image, such a racist and horrible image.
00:49:15.000Not because there was nothing wrong with the image.
00:49:17.000Of course, You know, even though it is true that the Frankfurt School, which created cultural Marxism, was, I think, mostly or all Jewish, even though that is technically true, and that the Jewish Frankfurt School served as the intellectual underpinnings for the kind of subversion that created the infiltration of the country by the Third World, even though, like, the spirit of the cartoon is offensive but technically true, it is beyond the pale and we have to disavow.
00:49:46.000Brossev says, Do you see the U.S. annexing or imposing some sort of economic? Extrajudicial will on Mexico andor Canada in the next 50 years or even sooner.
00:49:57.000Probably not only because that would be more costly than trade war.
00:50:01.000I mean, the kind of leverage we can exercise against Mexico would be much cheaper than a war in the sense that if we just shut down trade with Mexico, Mexico would die.
00:50:29.000If you look at some kind of a military intervention or taking over, I mean, that would be kind of an archaic expression of power or leverage.
00:50:39.000It would definitely take place in the economic or the diplomatic realm, which would be more than sufficient.
00:52:21.000A pure civic nation will be oppressive to check racial tensions.
00:52:26.000A pure ethno nation will be divided along religion, politics, and culture.
00:52:31.000Well, you have to look at it in terms of identity.
00:52:34.000You know, I think identitarian, I used to think it was not such a good label.
00:52:38.000I now think it is good as a descriptor.
00:52:41.000In the sense that if we look at identity, which is a very complex thing for people, it has many levels.
00:52:46.000And so a civic identity is your adherence to the political culture and the political system of a country, which is a big component of identity, particularly for Anglos, particularly for Americans, because we're descended from an Anglo Protestant tradition.
00:53:00.000So civic nationalism is necessary, but also you need a component of ethnic nationalism.
00:53:06.000The idea that America is not just a civic entity, is not just.
00:53:11.000The institution of government, but is the people that comprise it, that is the individuals descended from a common ancestry, sharing those racial characteristics.
00:53:25.000And Sam Huntington points this out in Who Are We?
00:53:28.000His famous book about identity says it is a false dichotomy.
00:53:32.000And so I get all these very low IQ type people.
00:53:35.000One guy is like, Oh, I'm reading Who Are We off of your recommendation, but it sounds like CivNat crap or some low IQ comment like that.
00:53:44.000And I think to myself, You know, this is what happens when left side of the bell curve people use right side of the bell curve terminology or ideas.
00:53:53.000Every time, you know, you have left side of the bell curve people in every movement that will always degrade and debase the ideas.
00:53:59.000It is, of course, a much more complicated question than merely are you ethnic or are you civic nationalist?
00:54:05.000Identity of the national variety is very comprehensive, and you have to have elements from both, and they're not mutually exclusive.
00:54:13.000So I wouldn't say I'm a civic or an ethnic nationalist completely.
00:54:17.000Everybody has to recognize the importance of salient identities, which can be of a biological but also of a more political nature.
00:54:28.000And that's the problem, it's a deficiency on both sides.
00:54:30.000Ethnic nationalists say, I don't care about religion, I don't care about economics, we just want it to be this way.
00:54:37.000And what happens then is you get people who are pagans, people who are homosexuals, people who are all kinds of varieties of degenerates and unrepentant sinners.
00:55:20.000In my vision, the Catboy serves as the vanguard class until we destroy thoughtery because, you know, we're going to have to weed out the thoughtery somehow.
00:55:31.000Nobody wants to talk about solutions, everybody wants to talk about problems.
00:55:35.000And once again, I am attacked for presenting new ideas, as I did on Night Poster Century last night.
00:55:41.000So I would just say, before you knock it, you just got to think what we're up against, folks.
00:55:48.000I get a lot of people on Gab and Twitter who they follow me and they reply to all my posts with screenshots from my Discord, which was hacked.
00:55:57.000And the Catboy channel that was in there, like that's some kind of checkmate.
00:56:01.000Like it's a public post in a public channel on a public server that I post and talk about publicly.
00:56:09.000People are like, oh, no, we found him.
00:56:29.000I feel like he knows deep down I'm homophobic.
00:56:31.000Should I quit or stay just to piss him off even more?
00:56:34.000I'm like, those considerations shouldn't really enter into your mind with a job, you know?
00:56:40.000I've worked with difficult people for a long time, but you've got to put those kinds of considerations aside.
00:56:46.000It's tough, I know, but if you can find an alternative that pays the same and it works out the same, it's kind of more of a personal question.
00:56:54.000But I wouldn't make a job decision based on personnel or based on spite unless it was something that was unbearable.
00:58:11.000I just, or just because I haven't super chatted you doesn't mean you can ignore me like this.
00:58:17.000So, I guess he was not getting into the voice call for the call in show.
00:58:25.000Michael Jones says Joe Rogan posting a dinner photo with Shapiro, Harris, Peterson, and Rubin is far more irritating than any predictable leftist antics.
00:59:03.000And Jordan Peterson deliberately, I'm sure he's laughing and carrying on one moment, and then deliberately affects this very solemn, like deliberate, serious expression for the photo.
00:59:14.000As if to say, I am such an, I am so smart.
01:01:09.000George Lopez, I caught every now and again, but I never really liked it.
01:01:13.000I don't like these race based sitcoms, you know, when it's like, oh, this is the Asian show, this is the black show, this is the Mexican show.
01:04:47.000Cloudstar says our illegal immigrant processing should only involve one step buy them a plane ticket to Canada would be much cheaper and quick.
01:05:56.000And anyway, I was talking in context about people at the border, in the sense that people at the border come in and they are processed and then they have constitutional rights.
01:06:06.000Just keep them out of the country, physically impede them from entering the country.
01:06:11.000People do not have rights to be processed and to have amendments and all the rest.
01:07:25.000He's talking about Emily Ukas, I think.
01:07:27.000He gave her a chance to play by the rules and she didn't.
01:07:30.000She was kind of, I didn't see the whole stream, but from what I hear, people say she was kind of passive aggressive and kind of rude and insincere.
01:07:39.000And by the end of it, she was just being careless.
01:07:41.000So, you know, then again, I don't know the whole story.
01:11:25.000Democratic socialism would be getting from late stage capitalism actualizing into socialism, which would be the unions, the workers taking over.
01:11:36.000But see, the difference is that democratic socialism in this country is administered by the state, not the workers.
01:11:43.000You know, it's not like that's what's happening.
01:11:45.000What's happening is that it's a democratic political system, but they just nationalize certain industries.
01:11:51.000And so it is technically, it's kind of like communism.
01:12:30.000You know, I get in stages where you get down and you realize bad things are happening, but I'm always reassured by the fact that I'm a high IQ individual.
01:13:21.000We're up to almost a hundred signups, which is crazy.
01:13:25.000It took us three months to get to two hundred and fifty some in the initial run, three or four months, and we got right up to a hundred within a week or two.
01:14:07.000I mean, symbolically speaking, In a very human consciousness, I will knock on the door of your spiritual outlook with a metaphorical knife bursting your worldview, which is predicated on hate and meanness.
01:14:21.000So I totally mean that in a joking way, not serious.