America First - Nicholas J. Fuentes - September 26, 2020


RIOT WATCH - Rochester Killing Triggers MASSIVE Protest | America First Ep. 673


Episode Stats


Length

2 hours and 28 minutes

Words per minute

168.40909

Word count

24,947

Sentence count

2,073

Harmful content

Misogyny

82

sentences flagged

Toxicity

239

sentences flagged

Hate speech

305

sentences flagged


Summary

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

In the latest episode of America First, we re covering the case of Daniel Prude, a black man who died in police custody in Rochester, NY. It s a rerun of a recurring segment where a black, drug-addicted, scumbag criminal gets caught by cops and dies in custody.

Transcript

Transcripts from "America First - Nicholas J. Fuentes" are sourced from the Knowledge Fight Interactive Search Tool. Explore them interactively here.
Misogyny classifications generated with MilaNLProc/bert-base-uncased-ear-misogyny .
Toxicity classifications generated with s-nlp/roberta_toxicity_classifier .
Hate speech classifications generated with facebook/roberta-hate-speech-dynabench-r4-target .
00:00:04.000 Good evening, everybody.
00:00:06.000 You are watching America First.
00:00:07.000 My name is Nicholas J. Fuentes.
00:00:09.000 We have a great show for you tonight.
00:00:11.000 I am very excited to be back with you here tonight on Wednesday.
00:00:15.000 We've got a lot to talk about, lots to get into.
00:00:19.000 In a lot of ways, the show tonight is extremely similar to the show we did yesterday, and extremely similar to a show we did a couple of months ago about Ray Shard Brooks.
00:00:35.000 And a show we did a few months ago about George Floyd, and a show we did months ago about Ahmaud Arbery.
00:00:43.000 It's a rerun. 0.98
00:00:44.000 It's another episode of our favorite, or I guess another rerun of a recurring segment on this show, which is black, drug addicted, scumbag criminal gets caught by cops and dies in police custody. 0.97
00:01:01.000 It's one of my favorites, and it's something that we do pretty often on this show. 0.96
00:01:05.000 Maybe one of the most.
00:01:07.000 Common recurring segments we do on the show.
00:01:10.000 And tonight, our featured story will be talking about one of these incidents in Rochester, New York, which maybe you've heard about this on Twitter, and we'll see if we'll be hearing about it the rest of the week.
00:01:24.000 I know yesterday we covered a killing or a death, I should say, in Los Angeles.
00:01:29.000 And tonight we are covering something very similar in Rochester, New York.
00:01:35.000 And we've got a case of a man named Daniel Prude, a black man from Chicago.
00:01:40.000 Who wound up in New York.
00:01:42.000 And this is a case actually from, I believe, months before George Floyd even died.
00:01:47.000 It was from March.
00:01:50.000 But the video just came out today and they're investigating.
00:01:54.000 But in the video, it depicts this guy who is high on PCP being detained by police.
00:02:01.000 And he's yelling out that he's got coronavirus and he's spitting on the police.
00:02:07.000 And the police put a spit hood over his head and they force him to the ground.
00:02:12.000 I think it took two, three, Officers to detain this guy and gradually he suffocates.
00:02:18.000 And so it's similar to George Floyd in some ways, dissimilar in other ways, but we'll get into all the details of the case, what's going on with that.
00:02:26.000 There's been some protests already, and who knows?
00:02:29.000 You know, yesterday I asked the poignant question why there seem to be riots in some cities after these kinds of incidents, like in Kenosha or Minneapolis or Chicago, but not in other cities like Los Angeles.
00:02:44.000 And others that we've seen, a video or a case of a dead black criminal, but no riots.
00:02:51.000 So we'll see what happens in Rochester.
00:02:53.000 One of the reasons I said maybe you had a riot in Kenosha, but not in L.A., is because there was a video.
00:02:58.000 So I'm wondering if, because there's a video with this case, will there be riots in New York tonight?
00:03:03.000 I guess we'll have to see.
00:03:04.000 So we'll be talking about that case.
00:03:07.000 We may also be talking about another case, yet another case tomorrow.
00:03:12.000 I guess there was something similar in Washington, D.C., which I don't believe all the details on that one are out just yet.
00:03:18.000 So, we may have to wait until tomorrow to cover that, but I did hear there were even some protests in D.C. as well for yet another story.
00:03:28.000 But tonight we'll be talking about Rochester, and who knows, maybe I'll be streaming tonight riot coverage.
00:03:34.000 We'll have to wait and see what happens.
00:03:36.000 We'll also be talking tonight about an exclusive report from Revolver News.
00:03:41.000 And if you haven't checked out Revolver News yet, I think everybody should give it a try.
00:03:46.000 It's called Revolver.News.
00:03:48.000 And I know that Columbia Bugle is very fond of that.
00:03:52.000 I see Darren Beatty retweets it a lot.
00:03:54.000 A lot of cool people seem to be on board with this.
00:03:57.000 And I think even Tucker Carlson mentioned it last night.
00:04:00.000 And I know that Drudge Report, they're sort of like not exactly a news source, but they're an aggregator of different links and conservative leaning.
00:04:11.000 Obviously, Drudge has been having some issues lately for whatever reason.
00:04:14.000 It seems like he's become more liberal or something.
00:04:18.000 So, Revolver seems to be a nice replacement for that.
00:04:21.000 But in any case, Revolver News put out an exclusive report earlier this week about the coronavirus.
00:04:28.000 And it's a pretty lengthy report.
00:04:30.000 So, you have to bear with me when we read through it.
00:04:32.000 But it talks about how the coronavirus lockdowns, and this is what I've been saying now for a few months, this is something that the president called from the beginning.
00:04:40.000 A lot of you even understood this before I did that the lockdown in the long run is actually going to have a higher human cost, more casualties.
00:04:51.000 They're measuring it in life years, which we'll get into, than the coronavirus itself.
00:04:56.000 The lockdowns have turned out to be more deadly than the virus, or at least.
00:05:03.000 The lockdowns have cost more life years than they have saved as a result of slowing down the transmission of the virus.
00:05:11.000 It's a pretty interesting report.
00:05:12.000 We'll be reading through it.
00:05:14.000 And I think it's obviously very important because up until about a few weeks ago, the media was covering nonstop this second coronavirus surge and talking about the need for another lockdown or maybe permanent lockdowns.
00:05:29.000 So it's very important to talk about that.
00:05:31.000 But that'll be our show tonight.
00:05:32.000 We'll be looking at the.
00:05:34.000 The Rochester, the coronavirus, and that's our 2020, right? 0.99
00:05:38.000 Pandemic, lockdown, Black Lives Matter riots. 1.00
00:05:42.000 We love it. 0.96
00:05:42.000 So, lots to discuss. 0.96
00:05:44.000 But before we get into any of that, I do just want to point something out that I think is so funny.
00:05:51.000 Obviously, we talked on Monday about the riots in Kenosha, and the riots in Kenosha were started because of the shooting, not the death, I guess he was just shot.
00:06:03.000 I think he's paralyzed now, but the shooting of Jacob Blake.
00:06:07.000 By police.
00:06:07.000 And we went into detail on Monday about the circumstances surrounding that shooting that the police were serving a warrant for his arrest at his home.
00:06:16.000 He put a police officer in a headlock.
00:06:19.000 He was resisting.
00:06:20.000 He got tased.
00:06:21.000 It didn't incapacitate him.
00:06:23.000 He ran away from police, around into the driver's seat of his truck.
00:06:27.000 We tried to draw a knife on the police.
00:06:30.000 And that's when he was shot seven times.
00:06:33.000 And that is what we knew, and that's what we talked about Monday.
00:06:36.000 But there's some new information about the father.
00:06:40.000 Of Jacob Blake.
00:06:41.000 And it's not a huge deal.
00:06:42.000 It's not anything crazy, but it is funny to me. 0.89
00:06:47.000 And the reason why I know this and where I saw it is that old Twitter account, Reagan Battalion, who you may remember, it's run by this Jewish pedophile named Benny Politsik, I believe. 0.77
00:06:59.000 Now that's suspected.
00:07:00.000 I don't think any of that's 100% confirmed, but we do have some sources on that.
00:07:05.000 They used to antagonize me a few years ago, back when I was on Right Side Broadcasting Network.
00:07:10.000 In any case, They put out a tweet today showing and exposing to the world, to my amusement, that Jacob Blake, the victim of that police involved shooting in Kenosha, his father turns out to be a huge anti Semite from his Facebook posts.
00:07:26.000 And I'll read you a small sample of them here. 0.63
00:07:29.000 This is from Reagan Battalion, which I think is kind of funny. 0.77
00:07:32.000 Jacob Blake's father wrote on Facebook The Jewish media picks and chooses who is a terrorist and who is not. 0.88
00:07:41.000 He wrote The same pink toe Jewish people that control the interest rate.
00:07:45.000 Control the media, they control minds and money. 1.00
00:07:50.000 Hero, the first Jews were brown, not pink, damn it. 1.00
00:07:55.000 White Jews know the truth. 1.00
00:07:57.000 The brown Jews was first. 0.99
00:08:00.000 White Jews want you to believe there were no brown Jews. 0.87
00:08:02.000 And he also wrote Abraham, the founder of Judaism, wasn't born until 1675 BCE. 0.89
00:08:10.000 That is 900 years after the pyramids in Egypt were built. 0.97
00:08:14.000 How could they possibly have been built by the Hebrew slaves? 0.96
00:08:18.000 And I think he's implying that it was black Jews who built the pyramids in that one. 0.81
00:08:24.000 He writes the Jewish controlled media tells you what they want you to hear. 0.94
00:08:30.000 And, you know, after reading all of that, I have to say, maybe there's something to this Black Lives Matter business after all. 1.00
00:08:37.000 You know what? 1.00
00:08:39.000 I think I've changed my attitude a little bit.
00:08:42.000 When I was looking at all these different cases, I'm seeing drug dealers, criminals, all sorts of people that probably belong in prison when it comes to Floyd and Jacob Blake and Rayshar Brooks.
00:08:56.000 But after reading these posts, I'm starting to think maybe there's something more to it.
00:09:01.000 Maybe they are a chosen people.
00:09:04.000 That are just simply getting a bad rap.
00:09:06.000 Maybe these are the people that built the pyramids, that erected the pyramids.
00:09:12.000 Maybe these are the real chosen people by God, the original Jews.
00:09:19.000 And more than that, maybe they know certain things that a lot of white people just don't. 0.60
00:09:25.000 I'm starting to rethink my position even on the Republican Party, all this pandering to blacks. 0.84
00:09:30.000 Maybe it makes sense to pandering to blacks, but not in the way that we've been doing. 1.00
00:09:34.000 We've been doing it wrong all this time. 0.79
00:09:37.000 We've been talking to them about economic opportunity zones, and we've been scapegoating the Democrats.
00:09:45.000 And I don't know, after reading this and seeing what's been going on in New York City and Baltimore over the past year or so, I'm starting to think maybe there's another angle.
00:09:56.000 Maybe there's another angle where we can win these people over.
00:10:00.000 These real chosen people, our real closest ally, the true Israel, the true chosen.
00:10:08.000 And maybe there's a way that we can bring them over to our side.
00:10:11.000 Maybe we don't blame Joe Biden.
00:10:14.000 Maybe we don't blame these Democratic mayors.
00:10:17.000 But it seems like Jacob Blake's dad has it all figured out.
00:10:20.000 Maybe he knows something that the rest of us don't.
00:10:22.000 Maybe even the evangelicals don't even know.
00:10:25.000 So I don't know.
00:10:26.000 It's kind of interesting.
00:10:27.000 And like I said, it's not groundbreaking news or anything, just kind of funny.
00:10:30.000 But Reagan Battalion was tweeting about this and coveting, as they do. 0.92
00:10:36.000 Reagan Battalion, run by some hardcore Hasidic Jew, Zionist, who happens, I. I'm led to believe, allegedly, is a pedophile. 0.88
00:10:46.000 He's saying, Oh, this is so anti Semitic. 0.96
00:10:48.000 This is terrible.
00:10:49.000 I'm reading it and I'm thinking, It's a free man talking.
00:10:52.000 That is a free black man talking. 1.00
00:10:54.000 Talk that shit, right? 1.00
00:10:56.000 He is spitting. 1.00
00:10:57.000 He says, The Jewish controlled media tells you what they want you to hear. 1.00
00:11:02.000 Now, I don't know about it, it sounds like a little identity politics in there, but certainly there is some truth to this. 1.00
00:11:10.000 The controlled media telling you what you want to hear, I know that's definitely true. 1.00
00:11:16.000 And he says it's the Jewish media. 0.95
00:11:17.000 What could he mean by that?
00:11:18.000 Well, I mean, who runs the top five media conglomerates in the country? 1.00
00:11:23.000 I know at least one of them is run by a non Jew. 1.00
00:11:25.000 I know at least one of them is run by the Murdoch kids, and that would be Fox. 1.00
00:11:32.000 But the other four, I don't know, actually.
00:11:35.000 Maybe we should do a fact check.
00:11:36.000 But anyway, don't want to spend too much time on that.
00:11:40.000 I don't want to dive into that, you know, because we've got to get on to our other news about coronavirus and about.
00:11:46.000 The other killing in Rochester.
00:11:48.000 Maybe we'll find out about this black man who was killed in Rochester. 0.78
00:11:52.000 Maybe he was another free black man talking, right?
00:11:55.000 Maybe he was another free thinking African American and another one of the true chosen.
00:12:01.000 We have to see what he thought about Jewish media until, right, before we make a judgment.
00:12:07.000 So, anyway, I just wanted to bring that up.
00:12:09.000 I thought it was kind of funny. 0.98
00:12:12.000 You know, we've been talking a lot of shit about these criminals, we've been really not respectful to the George Floyds of the world, but. 0.99
00:12:23.000 Maybe our true allies, our true closest ally was right in front of us all along. 0.99
00:12:27.000 But anyway, we're going to move on and talk about the coronavirus lockdowns here.
00:12:33.000 Very interesting report from Revolver.
00:12:35.000 And like I said, Revolver is kind of new on the scene.
00:12:38.000 I think they only came around like last month.
00:12:41.000 And by the way, I'm not like shilling for them or anything.
00:12:44.000 I'm not like being, I don't know who runs it.
00:12:46.000 I'm not, you know, being paid to say this.
00:12:47.000 I'm just saying Revolver is, seems to be a very good source.
00:12:52.000 Aggregator of news, and I'm always looking for a good website for news because obviously I have to cover different stories every night, and there's really nothing that's that terrific.
00:13:03.000 You know, I check the usual suspects BBC, Fox News, Daily Wire.su, the usual suspects, and I never really use Drudge because Drudge has always been kind of liberal, I think, really, for the past few years.
00:13:16.000 But I started to see this revolver news more and more on Twitter and a lot of interesting stuff, and I guess they aggregate links in the same way that Drudge does.
00:13:26.000 And it seems to be that whoever is in charge of it, whoever is aggregating the links, seems to be in alignment with America first, totally in alignment with our values, our objectives.
00:13:37.000 Everything that I read on there, I like.
00:13:39.000 So I check it almost every day now.
00:13:41.000 But they came out with a really good report this week, and that's what we're going to cover first about the coronavirus lockdowns and the health consequences of the lockdowns on young people, on everybody, but specifically on young people.
00:13:55.000 And this is an exclusive, it's their own methodology.
00:13:59.000 But it's very interesting because the way that they look at the lockdown and the way they analyze everything that's happened over the past six months is not in terms of strictly deaths, which is what everybody's been looking at coronavirus related deaths versus lockdown related deaths.
00:14:16.000 And how might we measure a lockdown related death?
00:14:19.000 Maybe that's an uptick in suicides, maybe that's an uptick in drug overdoses or things like that, these kinds of deaths of despair, which might have been brought on by.
00:14:32.000 The lockdowns and the social isolation that that creates.
00:14:35.000 But this analysis doesn't look at it in terms of death, which is, I think, difficult to measure if you're talking about coronavirus versus non coronavirus lockdown related deaths.
00:14:48.000 Because, of course, how many deaths can you really say with 100% certainty are a result of the lockdown?
00:14:55.000 It's difficult to say.
00:14:57.000 And more than that, even the coronavirus related deaths.
00:15:00.000 We're finding out there is all kinds of new information about how that data.
00:15:06.000 How that data pans out.
00:15:07.000 When you're looking at the coronavirus deaths, I think they found that only 10% or a very small fraction of the deaths actually were exclusively related to coronavirus.
00:15:17.000 They said that most, the vast majority of the coronavirus related deaths had comorbidities, meaning that these are elderly people who were overweight, they had other pre existing conditions, they had other chronic conditions.
00:15:33.000 And that's, I think, what people had been saying all along.
00:15:35.000 If you get somebody in the hospital who's 95 years old and they've got brain disease and they've got heart disease and they've got lung disease and they're overweight and they've got cancer and then they die and they had respiratory symptoms and on the death certificate they say coronavirus, well, is that really a reason to shut down public schooling for healthy children or teenagers or college age students?
00:16:01.000 That doesn't really make much sense.
00:16:03.000 Is that a true coronavirus death?
00:16:06.000 Is that somebody who would not have died if not for the coronavirus?
00:16:09.000 Probably not.
00:16:11.000 So that's why the study is very interesting.
00:16:13.000 And I'll read you this report here, and bear with me.
00:16:15.000 It's a little bit lengthy because it explains the methodology here, but I think it's worthwhile.
00:16:21.000 It says, A groundbreaking new study commissioned by Revolver News concludes that COVID 19 lockdowns are 10 times more deadly than the actual COVID virus in terms of years of life lost by American citizens.
00:16:37.000 Up until this point, there had been no simple, rigorous analysis that accurately and definitively conveys the true cost of the COVID lockdowns.
00:16:46.000 Accordingly, Revolver News set out to commission a study to do precisely that, to finally quantify the net damage of the lockdowns in terms of a metric known as life years.
00:16:56.000 Simply put, we have drawn upon existing economic studies on the health effects of unemployment to calculate an estimate of how many years of life will have been lost due to the lockdowns in the United States.
00:17:09.000 And have weighed this against an estimate of how many years of life will have been saved by the lockdowns.
00:17:15.000 The results are nothing short of staggering and suggest that the lockdowns will end up costing Americans over 10 times as many years of life as they will save from the virus itself.
00:17:27.000 So, again, to reiterate simply, they're comparing based on the economic data on the health toll that is caused by unemployment.
00:17:39.000 They're using that to quantify the human cost of the lockdowns, and they're comparing that to the same measure, those life years that are caused by the virus.
00:17:51.000 And comparing it, of course, to those life years that are saved by the lockdown.
00:17:55.000 That is the analysis.
00:17:56.000 They're using unemployment as the basis.
00:17:59.000 They're looking at studies that show how unemployment affects health, if that kills people, if that takes years off your life, and they're using that to quantify the human toll caused by the lockdown.
00:18:11.000 It says the COVID 19 lockdown measures that Americans have had to endure for the greater part of 2020 represent one of the most dramatic, consequential, and damaging policy measures undertaken in this nation's history.
00:18:23.000 For the first time in its history, America has experienced a situation so crippling and perilous that long term financial and social stability have been legitimately threatened.
00:18:33.000 Standard approaches to evaluating epidemic policy responses involving the value of a statistical life have conceptual problems and are biased towards the elderly and rich.
00:18:44.000 Using a life years criterion as an alternative shows that the lockdowns cost an order of magnitude more life years than they saved.
00:18:53.000 Most of the publicized cost benefit analyses of COVID lockdowns have used coarse measures like lives as units rather than life years, which misleads politicians and the general public.
00:19:06.000 COVID deaths disproportionately impact the oldest members of the population, whereas the economic impacts of lockdowns disproportionately harm the youngest of the working population.
00:19:17.000 Who have far greater life expectancies at the time of impact.
00:19:21.000 And so, again, to break it down simply, if you're looking at just coronavirus related deaths, as I said earlier, you're going to be looking at largely people that are old, people that are nearing the end of their lives already.
00:19:36.000 And that's not to say that it's not tragic if an elderly person dies of coronavirus, but it is, of course, a very different thing to say that a 90 year old with all kinds of conditions coincidentally contracts a respiratory virus or some kind of respiratory.
00:19:53.000 Problem, or maybe even the coronavirus, and that gets counted as a coronavirus death.
00:19:59.000 This person, you know, they may be on their way to the grave already in a few years compared to a healthy person, a young person, somebody with no pre existing conditions.
00:20:11.000 And of course, if you're looking strictly and only at those deaths, whether they be young people or old people, it's not taking into account the damage that is done by the lockdowns on the able bodied and young working population.
00:20:24.000 If you have people that, because of Opioid abuse, or because of depression, or because of social isolation, their lives are cut short at age 22 or 23 or 24.
00:20:37.000 To me, that represents a much greater human cost quantifiably than the virus hitting people that are very elderly with all kinds of health conditions.
00:20:47.000 That's why this analysis, I think, is so interesting.
00:20:51.000 It says Using prior research on workforce entrance and recent graduates entering into a market marred by an economic recession, empirical estimates of life year.
00:21:00.000 Life years lost can be determined.
00:21:02.000 Extensive research on job displacement can be used to estimate the economic impact in life years of starkly increased unemployment for mid to late career workers.
00:21:12.000 Combining these analyses, we found that an estimated 18.7 million life years will be lost in the United States due to the coronavirus lockdowns.
00:21:22.000 Comparative data analysis between nations shows that the lockdowns in the U.S. likely had a minimal effect in saving life years.
00:21:30.000 Using two different comparison groups, we estimate that the COVID lockdowns in the U.S. saved between a quarter to three quarters of a million life years.
00:21:41.000 So they say that the lockdowns saved at most three quarters of a million life years, 750,000 life years.
00:21:51.000 Yet it cost nearly 19 million.
00:21:55.000 So nearly 20 times as many life years cost by the lockdown as was saved.
00:22:01.000 And that to me, the life years is really just a sort of an abstract way to quantify.
00:22:08.000 That's maybe a more realistic unit that takes into consideration the age difference between the effect of the coronavirus on the elderly and the effects of the lockdown on the young working population.
00:22:19.000 So I don't think it's so important to totally understand life year versus something else.
00:22:24.000 It's just a way to quantify it, it's just a way to assign a number to the human cost on these policy measures.
00:22:32.000 And once you put a number on it like that, something that's a little bit more nuanced, a little bit more controlled, and makes much more sense, I think, than just looking at roughly suicides or those deaths of despair versus the COVID deaths, which in themselves I think is pretty inaccurate information.
00:22:50.000 Looking at this study, we find what I think a lot of people understood from the beginning, which is that the lockdowns are worse than the virus.
00:22:58.000 The lockdowns are causing more damage than the virus.
00:23:01.000 And certainly, if that's true, the lockdowns are causing more problems.
00:23:06.000 Then they're solving.
00:23:07.000 And I think everybody can see this.
00:23:09.000 Everybody's living this.
00:23:11.000 If you're somebody who has been laid off from your job and you can't make ends meet and the government's not helping you, if you're not collecting unemployment, you got $1,200 at most.
00:23:23.000 And that was back in May, right?
00:23:26.000 If you didn't get that personal paycheck protection program, you know, you're probably out of luck.
00:23:30.000 Maybe you get your hours cut or you have to find work elsewhere.
00:23:34.000 It's caused a lot of financial problems for people.
00:23:36.000 And that's just for starters businesses closed, jobs lost, hours cut.
00:23:41.000 There's complications on top of that, too.
00:23:44.000 If people have their jobs cut, or even if their kids aren't going to school, then there's added complications like now you have to have the kids in the house, even if you have a job.
00:23:55.000 It's difficult to go to your job when you don't know what your kids are going to be doing for most of the day when you're at work.
00:24:01.000 On top of that, then there's obviously the social costs, which is most people are not prepared to abruptly and suddenly cut off all human contact with the outside world and no longer show up to a place of work, no longer show up to school.
00:24:18.000 No longer socialize with friends and family, or even just use public transportation or go outside in public without gloves or a face mask or hand sanitizer.
00:24:28.000 I think it's obvious.
00:24:29.000 We were trending in that direction already with the advent of social media, the internet, technology.
00:24:35.000 We were already heading there with higher rates of suicide, higher rates of opioid addiction, the opioid crisis in the heartland of the country.
00:24:44.000 And it's only exacerbated all those existing problems.
00:24:48.000 In a way that I think was unimaginable earlier this year.
00:24:52.000 So we look at the lockdown, and of course, this is something that has affected everybody severely in so many different ways and exacerbated so many existing deadly problems.
00:25:03.000 And not just for adults, but I think specifically and for the most part for kids, for people that are in school that are not returning or have their extracurricular activities cut, or they go back to school and they're sitting in some kind of like a tent or a box or whatever.
00:25:19.000 And you look at all the data now, all this information coming out now about the virus and how it doesn't transmit on services.
00:25:26.000 It's actually not that deadly.
00:25:28.000 Actually, it didn't kill as many people as we thought it did.
00:25:30.000 Actually, that second wave in August was just the delayed surge of cases that arrived late because of all the states that closed down before they got hit by it in the first place.
00:25:42.000 You know, we're looking at all this information from or about the coronavirus, and we're finding that it wasn't ever that deadly or that much of a problem in the beginning.
00:25:51.000 And this is what I said, I think, around back in May or June.
00:25:55.000 And I'll admit, I was one of the first people to say that we should have a lockdown and to defend the lockdown and say that people should stay inside and be cautious.
00:26:04.000 But it became apparent, and the facts came out within a couple of months that none of what we were told in the beginning of the year, February, March, and April, was remotely close to being true.
00:26:17.000 We were told one thing one day and the exact opposite thing the next day.
00:26:22.000 That it was going to be a five week lockdown and then it turned into a five month lockdown.
00:26:28.000 That the coronavirus is going to spread on surfaces.
00:26:31.000 That's why you need no contact delivery and you need to wipe down your envelopes with hand sanitizer and wipes and you need to wear gloves out in public.
00:26:40.000 And then the next day they said, actually, it doesn't spread on surfaces.
00:26:43.000 And they went back and forth and back again on that one.
00:26:47.000 And then first they said that the virus is not airborne.
00:26:50.000 You don't need a mask.
00:26:51.000 Then they said, just kidding.
00:26:53.000 We lied.
00:26:53.000 We only said that so that we could get doctors.
00:26:56.000 And nurses, the masks actually having a mask does help.
00:27:01.000 And things like that just going on over the course of months and months and months until here we are now in the fall, and we're finding out that probably none of it was true.
00:27:10.000 The virus was never that deadly.
00:27:13.000 It was something new.
00:27:14.000 It was something that probably was going to cause more deaths than normal because it's a novel, right?
00:27:20.000 It's a new virus which the population might not have been immune to yet.
00:27:24.000 But we look at who was affected, and it was largely elderly people with pre existing conditions. 0.99
00:27:28.000 And if that's the case, then the policy from the get go should have been to. 0.95
00:27:33.000 Protect and shield those people from the virus and to let everybody else carry on with their lives.
00:27:40.000 That's what should have been undertaken from the beginning.
00:27:43.000 And now we're seeing that after five months of lockdown, we have not only had all the people who would have died anyway die from the virus, we've seen all kinds of people die who probably were going to get it no matter what.
00:27:55.000 And we shielded them as best we could, but that should have been probably the baseline policy.
00:28:00.000 But on top of that, now we've destroyed the economy.
00:28:03.000 We've wrecked people's lives in many cases, destroyed businesses.
00:28:08.000 They say that in certain parts of China, something like 20% of the restaurants will just never come back after the pandemic.
00:28:15.000 I would guess it's probably a similar figure for not just restaurants, but many other businesses worldwide in the United States.
00:28:22.000 You look at some parts of the stock market, and a lot of industries still haven't recovered.
00:28:27.000 Everybody's bragging about the stock market today.
00:28:29.000 I guess the Dow Jones hit 29,000 points, and this is largely being driven by the top.
00:28:35.000 Four companies in the world.
00:28:36.000 You look at the NASDAQ, the SP, it's largely being driven by the top four companies, the big tech companies Amazon, Apple, Facebook, Google, and a lot of other industries are still lagging behind, still have not recovered, and may never fully recover, actually.
00:28:52.000 So we've destroyed the economy, wrecked people's lives, wrecked kids' lives, wrecked their school year, wrecked their extracurricular activities, wrecked families potentially, probably brought on a whole host of suicides, depression, drug abuse, and so on.
00:29:10.000 Radically change the way we live our lives in a way that who knows if we'll go back with remote learning and remote work and things like that.
00:29:19.000 And you look back, and honestly, it's hard to, it's hard for me to say that all this happened just because of incompetence.
00:29:28.000 Because I read this report and we see what's gone on the blatant lies, the blatant flip flopping on all these issues, like I described earlier.
00:29:37.000 And we look at the patterns that have emerged from this and who has benefited.
00:29:42.000 And it's hard for me to say after everything we've been through with this pandemic that it was just incompetence.
00:29:47.000 This was all just a big accident.
00:29:50.000 It was all unintended consequences, people that didn't know what they were doing.
00:29:54.000 I find it hard to believe, actually, because the way that it's all shaping up, who are the big winners out of all this?
00:30:02.000 Well, politically, it's the Democrats.
00:30:04.000 The Democrats are the winners because this sank the economy.
00:30:07.000 This was the best economy in American history going into the president's reelection. 0.54
00:30:13.000 And in some ways, it's coming back.
00:30:15.000 In some ways, they say it's a V shaped recovery, but obviously, we're not all the way back to where we were before.
00:30:21.000 Some metrics you are, like some of the stock indices, but you're not back in terms of employment.
00:30:28.000 You're not back in terms of GDP and a host of other metrics.
00:30:32.000 So the Democrats benefit from the crashing economy and the suffering from the coronavirus.
00:30:37.000 Let's see who else benefits.
00:30:39.000 The billionaires.
00:30:40.000 The billionaires have gotten, I think, hundreds of billions, if not trillions of dollars, richer.
00:30:46.000 Since the coronavirus pandemic started, just Google that.
00:30:50.000 Google billionaires, coronavirus, whatever, and you'll find that the world's billionaires got exponentially richer as this has gone on.
00:30:59.000 Specifically, the top companies in the world, those tech companies that I just listed earlier Amazon, Facebook, Google, Apple.
00:31:08.000 You look at the market cap of those companies, and it's exploded.
00:31:12.000 I don't know why nobody's talking about that, but Apple recently became the first company in the world to have a $2 trillion market cap.
00:31:20.000 Nobody talks about that.
00:31:22.000 How's your place of business doing?
00:31:23.000 Are you looking at success like that?
00:31:27.000 Look at the stock prices and the market caps of those kinds of companies since March.
00:31:32.000 They've done nothing but go up.
00:31:34.000 How's everybody else been doing?
00:31:36.000 Not so great.
00:31:37.000 So we look at the beneficiaries, and it turns out to be Big Pharma, who will buy the vaccines from.
00:31:43.000 It's going to be giant tech companies.
00:31:45.000 It's going to be the Democrats.
00:31:47.000 And who was the architect of all of this?
00:31:50.000 Well, largely it was social media that peddled all of this.
00:31:54.000 What was almost the first thing that they did when the pandemic started?
00:31:58.000 They created new rules on Twitter and Facebook and YouTube and all the social medias.
00:32:04.000 Saying that they would ban anybody for posting misinformation about the pandemic.
00:32:10.000 Misinformation that, for example, said that the coronavirus was overblown and that the lockdowns were unnecessary and that maybe there are cures like hydroxychloroquine, that there are therapies.
00:32:20.000 Now, I'm not a doctor, I don't know.
00:32:22.000 But that was the first thing they did they said that you cannot say anything about the virus other than the approved narrative.
00:32:29.000 And who did that benefit?
00:32:31.000 They made those rules on YouTube.
00:32:33.000 YouTube is owned by Google, Google's owned by Alphabet.
00:32:36.000 Take a look at the market cap of the Alphabet companies.
00:32:39.000 Since a lockdown.
00:32:40.000 And the same can be said for Facebook, and the same can be said for every other company.
00:32:46.000 And then it was the Democrats and the media.
00:32:48.000 Who was peddling all day long and scaremongering about the virus since March?
00:32:53.000 And even after the White House, even after the president started to soften his position on this, it has always been the media.
00:33:01.000 The media and the Democrats, Joe Biden in particular, fearmongering and panicking and criticizing the administration over that.
00:33:08.000 And they, all of these actors, Who promoted the stuff all turned out to be the biggest beneficiaries.
00:33:16.000 It's almost like stealing, it's like a giant racket.
00:33:18.000 So I look at this report, and this only confirms, I think, what we've known now for a long time.
00:33:24.000 Nobody even really talks about the virus anymore.
00:33:26.000 It was kind of interesting.
00:33:28.000 People talked about the virus for a while, and then Black Lives Matter started, and then they stopped talking about the virus.
00:33:34.000 And maybe that's because you had hundreds and thousands of people gathered in the city streets without their masks, and without gloves, and without social distancing.
00:33:43.000 But I guess, of course, that was okay because they're black and that's progressive and so on.
00:33:48.000 So he didn't talk so much about the pandemic. 0.79
00:33:50.000 They had a two month intermission there.
00:33:53.000 And then once the BLM protests subsided, it came back with a vengeance just in time for the conventions.
00:34:00.000 Right?
00:34:01.000 And just as the poll numbers began to narrow, they came back with all this criticism about how the president was failing on the pandemic and there's another surge and we need to shut down the economy again, conveniently, as the economy has been coming back stronger than ever.
00:34:18.000 And now, as BLM has resumed and the death and case numbers on a daily basis are falling and have fallen since August, now they don't talk about it anymore.
00:34:27.000 Now, total radio silence.
00:34:29.000 It's very interesting how that works.
00:34:32.000 It seems like the entire pandemic really was just pushed on us insofar as it was useful for the richest people in the world to gobble up market share, to expand their control and their surveillance over the population, and for the Democrats to sabotage Donald Trump in the election.
00:34:51.000 Do you think that's impossible?
00:34:52.000 Do you think it's impossible that that would happen?
00:34:56.000 And think about somebody like Jeff Bezos who gets $70, $50 billion richer from this virus.
00:35:03.000 It's a $70 billion incentive for him to do that.
00:35:07.000 Some people say, well, how could they do that?
00:35:10.000 Why would they do that?
00:35:11.000 What would be the motivation?
00:35:13.000 Well, for somebody like Jeff Bezos, the richest man in the history of the world, who made $70 billion since the pandemic, there is, hypothetically, theoretically speaking, a $70 billion.
00:35:25.000 Billion dollar incentive for him to put that together.
00:35:29.000 That's just him.
00:35:30.000 For Apple, that doubled their market cap, there's a one trillion dollar incentive, one trillion dollar incentive to participate in this.
00:35:40.000 For the Democrats, securing the White House is probably incalculable, the benefits of that politically and for their cronies.
00:35:48.000 So, you know, I look at everything that's gone on, and there's really no other way to describe this other than criminal.
00:35:55.000 And then we have to decide was this criminal negligence?
00:35:58.000 Or was this criminal conspiracy?
00:36:00.000 The lockdowns and the pandemic and the lies and the deception.
00:36:04.000 Was this all just a big accident?
00:36:07.000 It was all just unintended consequences?
00:36:09.000 Or was it clearly by design?
00:36:11.000 Well, if you're going to begin to ask that question, you might want to establish the motive, who might have been involved, things like that.
00:36:17.000 And I start to see a pretty clear picture of what's going on here.
00:36:21.000 So I will not be getting a vaccine.
00:36:24.000 I will not be wearing a mask anymore.
00:36:26.000 I'm really not worried.
00:36:28.000 We heard all these stories back five months ago about healthy, Able bodied young people dying of coronavirus, then you look at the data and you find that virtually every single person, virtually everybody who died from coronavirus was overweight and had pre existing conditions and was elderly and had comorbidities.
00:36:50.000 So we're finding out that not only is this disease less deadly than the flu, but the people that it's killing are people that all diseases, any disease, would kill, right?
00:37:02.000 So, but I think a lot of people have been out of this for a long time.
00:37:06.000 We've been talking about this for a while, and I'll admit, you know, I'll be the first one to admit people called me out initially because I was one of the first ones to say we should have a lockdown and we got to take this seriously and all that.
00:37:18.000 And I admit, I was fooled.
00:37:20.000 I was tricked.
00:37:22.000 I was lied to, you know, and I don't think you could really blame me.
00:37:25.000 Maybe you can.
00:37:27.000 People probably do blame me.
00:37:29.000 I still get comments to this day people are antagonizing me.
00:37:31.000 I said, I said, look, you know, I was wrong.
00:37:34.000 I'm man enough to admit it, but I mean, we were told from the beginning that it was this horrible thing.
00:37:40.000 The death rate could be seven.
00:37:43.000 And it's this seven what's the seven percent of people that get it die?
00:37:48.000 They said that was the mortality rate.
00:37:50.000 We didn't know anything about it.
00:37:50.000 And we just didn't know.
00:37:53.000 And we were being told that kind of information.
00:37:56.000 And then as new information came out and we saw these inconsistencies and the lies and the real data, it became obvious after a matter of months what was going on, right?
00:38:07.000 Even weeks, you could say.
00:38:09.000 And like I said, and I talked about this back, I think, in the beginning of the summer when it was all about coronavirus, they were just flip flopping on every aspect of it.
00:38:20.000 You don't need a mask.
00:38:21.000 You do need a mask.
00:38:23.000 It spreads on surfaces.
00:38:25.000 No, it doesn't.
00:38:25.000 Yeah, it does.
00:38:26.000 Actually, it doesn't.
00:38:28.000 Oh, it's right.
00:38:29.000 I mean, every single thing that they told us turned out to not be true.
00:38:33.000 And then it was true, and then it wasn't true.
00:38:35.000 So at a certain point, and then you look at, like I said, those patterns, who stands to gain, and it's like, okay, duh.
00:38:41.000 So, anyway, but that's that report.
00:38:43.000 We're going to move on and talk about Rochester.
00:38:45.000 I think you get it at this point, but I'm freaking out.
00:38:48.000 But that's what happens in this country.
00:38:50.000 9 11, coronavirus, the people that run this country and the people that run this world inflict terrible things on the population.
00:39:01.000 And the evidence is all there.
00:39:02.000 And it's obvious.
00:39:04.000 The evidence is all out there if you look for it.
00:39:08.000 And it's, you know, maybe it's not obvious, but it's definitely information that you can find.
00:39:14.000 And it's very plain what goes on.
00:39:16.000 It's just that nobody really cares to find that information.
00:39:19.000 And if they do care to find it, They can't spread it anymore because of all these rules now on social media.
00:39:25.000 And even if they could, people just wouldn't believe it.
00:39:28.000 Because people believe we live in a world where everything is what it seems.
00:39:33.000 Where, you know, Jeff Bezos is just a capitalist who made a lot of money and he's just a businessman.
00:39:38.000 He's not like some lizard.
00:39:40.000 And the people in government are our public servants and they work for us and all this kind of stuff.
00:39:47.000 The people that run this world do terrible things to this population for profit.
00:39:52.000 Never forget that.
00:39:54.000 They're not like us.
00:39:55.000 They're different from us.
00:39:57.000 Do you think you and I are anything like somebody who's worth $200 billion?
00:40:02.000 Do you think we're even playing the same sport?
00:40:07.000 Forget being in the same ballpark.
00:40:08.000 We're not even playing the same sport.
00:40:10.000 We're not in the same universe as these people.
00:40:14.000 Even if you're like a millionaire, you're not playing the same sport as these people.
00:40:18.000 Even if you're a high millionaire, a low millionaire, middle class, it doesn't matter.
00:40:23.000 These are people that our lives, we can't even fathom how they live.
00:40:28.000 And to think that their motivations, their thinking is the same as ours, that they are the same as us, it's totally mistaken.
00:40:36.000 You know, you've got to look at these things hypercritically.
00:40:38.000 It's very disturbing.
00:40:41.000 This kind of stuff is what will make you lose your mind.
00:40:43.000 That's why you kind of have to temper that with, you know, I don't know, a little bit of, I don't even know.
00:40:50.000 You just have to sometimes look away because you look too closely at it and it's maddening, especially things like this.
00:40:56.000 Think about the lockdown, all the fallout, all these consequences.
00:40:59.000 To think it was inflicted on us intentionally.
00:41:02.000 It's like unconscionable.
00:41:03.000 It'll drive you insane.
00:41:05.000 Yet, it seems to me that all the evidence points in that direction.
00:41:09.000 But anyway, we're going to move on.
00:41:13.000 We're going to talk about Rochester, and we'll see what's going on with that.
00:41:19.000 Another one of our favorites.
00:41:21.000 Like I said, it's our favorite segment on the show.
00:41:25.000 And we're doing it to death lately, but it's because it happens so much now. 0.71
00:41:30.000 We've got another black guy killed by cops or dead at the hands of cops, I guess you could say. 0.91
00:41:36.000 And in this case, you've got wouldn't you know it, a black guy who is high on PCP running naked through the streets, spitting at the police, saying he had the coronavirus, and he was kneeled on by the police. 0.96
00:41:51.000 Epic kneeling moment. 0.77
00:41:52.000 This is, by the way, before George Floyd died, and he dies in police custody.
00:41:57.000 So we'll read through the report here and everything that's going on over there in Rochester.
00:42:01.000 It says Protesters gathered outside the public safety building in downtown Rochester after allegations against the police officers.
00:42:09.000 In connection with the death of a Chicago man, were brought to light on Wednesday.
00:42:14.000 Family members of Daniel Prude alleged officers' actions led to his death back in March.
00:42:20.000 On Wednesday, protesters assembled in response to the news in downtown Rochester.
00:42:25.000 The local news source at the scene says the crowd had been peaceful while its members were chanting that they wanted justice.
00:42:33.000 Community advocates are calling for charges to be filed against several Rochester police officers.
00:42:39.000 They say they caused the death of a man suffering from a mental health crisis.
00:42:44.000 A mental health crisis.
00:42:45.000 Last March, during a news conference on Wednesday morning, Free the People called attention to the death of Daniel Prude.
00:42:53.000 Organizers say Prude was in the midst of a mental health crisis when Rochester police responded to the 400 block of Jefferson Avenue on March 23rd.
00:43:03.000 They say that Prude was unarmed and unclothed.
00:43:06.000 And he complied with officers' orders.
00:43:09.000 They say officers mocked Prude and placed a bag over his head.
00:43:13.000 Prude's death was caused, they say, after one officer put his knee on Prude's back, another held his legs, and a third pushed Prude's head into the ground with his full weight.
00:43:23.000 Joe Prude said his brother was cut off from oxygen for nearly 20 minutes.
00:43:28.000 He says his brother was taken to the hospital and put on life support. 0.99
00:43:33.000 He said, They treated my brother like a piece of garbage. 1.00
00:43:36.000 What do you do to garbage? 1.00
00:43:37.000 You throw it out.
00:43:38.000 So that's basically what they've done to my brother.
00:43:40.000 Well, I happen to agree, but I think it was totally appropriate.
00:43:45.000 Right? 0.99
00:43:45.000 They treated him like garbage. 0.99
00:43:47.000 What do you do to garbage? 1.00
00:43:48.000 You throw it out.
00:43:49.000 That sounds like something I would say about Daniel Prude, but approvingly. 0.94
00:43:54.000 What do you do to garbage? 0.95
00:43:55.000 You throw it out.
00:43:57.000 When I see people like Daniel Prude and George Floyd, that's the kind of thing I'm thinking.
00:44:01.000 I look at George Floyd, high on fentanyl and meth and using counterfeit money and robbing pregnant women at gunpoint, and I think, what do you do with the trash?
00:44:10.000 You take it out.
00:44:12.000 You throw it out on the curb and it gets removed.
00:44:15.000 I agree.
00:44:16.000 I agree. 0.98
00:44:16.000 They did treat him like trash. 0.98
00:44:18.000 Now, whether or not that was justified and appropriate is an entirely different question. 0.89
00:44:24.000 Let's see.
00:44:25.000 So it says an autopsy report from the Monroe County Medical Examiner's Office ruled Prude's death a homicide, which, by the way, means nothing.
00:44:34.000 Under the cause of death was listed complications of asphyxia in the setting of physical restraint, excited delirium, and acute.
00:44:43.000 PCP intoxication.
00:44:45.000 Now, this was just one article, okay?
00:44:48.000 This is what most of the news reports said about this case.
00:44:54.000 They said it was an unarmed, unclothed black man who was suffering a mental health crisis.
00:45:02.000 They put a bag over his head and then they kneeled on him and he asphyxiated.
00:45:08.000 Those are the six key points.
00:45:11.000 And I counted them out on my hand just so you could see.
00:45:14.000 Those are the six key points.
00:45:16.000 In all of the news coverage of this story, he was unarmed.
00:45:21.000 He was unclothed.
00:45:22.000 Mental health crisis.
00:45:23.000 They put a bag on his head.
00:45:26.000 They kneeled on him to restrain him.
00:45:29.000 And he died from asphyxiation.
00:45:32.000 Well, there's another article, and these are some details that I actually didn't find in any other source.
00:45:41.000 And I tried.
00:45:41.000 It was on Jaden McNeil's timeline.
00:45:43.000 I think this is from the Democrat and Chronicle.
00:45:46.000 But I'll read you this report.
00:45:47.000 Because this is interesting.
00:45:48.000 I didn't see this anywhere else.
00:45:50.000 Every other report only talked about that, which just reading that report, you would think maybe there's something to this.
00:45:56.000 They put a bag on his head.
00:45:58.000 Was it the mafia killing this guy?
00:46:01.000 Why'd they put a bag on his head?
00:46:03.000 If you just read that report, you might be asking why he's unclothed?
00:46:06.000 What mental health crisis was he suffering?
00:46:08.000 Was he schizophrenic?
00:46:09.000 Was he bipolar?
00:46:11.000 Was he autistic?
00:46:13.000 You know, because you could imagine maybe you've got an adult who's freaking out, tweaking out, they're naked, and they. 0.95
00:46:20.000 Force this guy to the ground, put a bag on his head, shoved his face into the pavement, right?
00:46:26.000 You might say to yourself, What's going on in Rochester?
00:46:29.000 This is terrible.
00:46:30.000 But then you read this report and it gives you some more details.
00:46:33.000 It says after the spitting began, after Daniel Prude was spitting at the police officers, police officers covered Prude's face and head with a white spit hood intended to protect police from a suspect's bodily fluids.
00:46:50.000 Prude had claimed to officers he was infected with the coronavirus, which likely raised concerns about his spitting.
00:46:57.000 Oh, okay.
00:46:59.000 So.
00:47:01.000 They didn't just put a hood on his head to be mean.
00:47:04.000 They didn't put a hood on his head to terrorize him.
00:47:08.000 They put a spit hood on his head because he was spitting at the police.
00:47:13.000 Which, if he's spitting at the police, would imply that he's probably not cooperating.
00:47:18.000 The article says he was cooperative.
00:47:21.000 Cooperating while spitting on the police and yelling, I've got the coronavirus?
00:47:27.000 That's a very different story right out of the gate.
00:47:30.000 What you're reading in every mainstream news source is this.
00:47:33.000 They put a hood on his head and they beat him up, and then they forced his head into the pavement.
00:47:38.000 Then you read this article, and it says, Oh, he was spitting at the police, saying at Corona they put a spit hood to protect them from his bodily fluids.
00:47:46.000 It says, The hood was the only covering he was given.
00:47:49.000 Prude remained naked in temperatures just above freezing as light snow fell throughout the episode.
00:47:55.000 Four minutes after the police arrived, officers stood around in a semicircle around Prude as he sat in the middle of Jefferson Avenue, his hands still cuffed behind his back.
00:48:04.000 He yelled unintelligibly, then clearly shouted, Give me that gun, give me that gun, I mean it.
00:48:10.000 As he yelled, he scooted on his rear toward an officer and began trying to get to his feet.
00:48:15.000 Well, you know, that certainly sounds like a very cooperative person.
00:48:19.000 That sounds like a cooperative, non threatening thing to do.
00:48:23.000 To beg for a police officer's gun and while naked and covered in a spit hood, because you're spitting at everyone, you try to get to your feet, presumably to grab a cop's gun.
00:48:34.000 You know, all of that says to me cooperation.
00:48:38.000 It says later in the article that the autopsy report, in addition to calling the death a homicide and that the cause of death was asphyxiation, the autopsy report also listed several health conditions, including two different lung diseases, heart inflammation, and a brain injury that were also complications of the death.
00:49:01.000 Okay.
00:49:02.000 So, in every other report, it says this guy died because the police choked him.
00:49:10.000 The police choked him to death.
00:49:13.000 What they don't really talk about is he was high on PCP.
00:49:17.000 He had two lung diseases, heart inflammation, and a brain injury, which is remarkably similar to George Floyd.
00:49:24.000 What was the same thing with George Floyd?
00:49:26.000 What did the medical examiner say in the autopsy report?
00:49:30.000 That he died from heart disease.
00:49:32.000 And he had heart disease, and he had hypertension.
00:49:36.000 And he also was intoxicated from fentanyl and meth.
00:49:40.000 And in just the same way, you've got another kneeling, asphyxiation death.
00:49:44.000 And in just the same way, oh well, then we look at the autopsy and we find he's high on very dangerous drugs.
00:49:51.000 He's got lung disease, a brain injury, and heart disease.
00:49:55.000 Nice. 1.00
00:49:56.000 So clearly, just like with all these other blacks, just like with all these other criminals that die in police custody, very easy to avoid this. 1.00
00:50:07.000 For starters, don't take PCP. 1.00
00:50:11.000 I think that's the easiest thing of all, right?
00:50:13.000 Don't be high on PCP.
00:50:14.000 Then, in addition to that, don't resist arrest.
00:50:18.000 In addition to that, don't be high on PCP and don't resist arrest.
00:50:23.000 When you've got lung disease, when you've got heart disease and brain disease, this is a guy who, if he was playing football, probably would have died.
00:50:31.000 If he participated in a foot race down the block, ran a mile, he probably would die.
00:50:39.000 Right?
00:50:40.000 If you're under these conditions, it doesn't, it's not strictly a police officer detaining you.
00:50:46.000 It's probably this kind of physical contact and physical exertion, right?
00:50:54.000 That is killing these people who have all these pre existing conditions.
00:50:57.000 It's like these coronavirus victims, right?
00:51:00.000 He died of racism, really?
00:51:02.000 Because he had heart disease and lung disease and he was on drugs.
00:51:06.000 You know, just like Corona.
00:51:08.000 So I see the story.
00:51:09.000 It's not anything we haven't seen before.
00:51:11.000 Now they're protesting.
00:51:12.000 Now they're rioting.
00:51:12.000 It was racism, they say.
00:51:14.000 You've got somebody who's naked and on PCP.
00:51:16.000 This is a drug that gives people superhuman strength.
00:51:19.000 They detain him and he happens to die because he's got all these diseases and drugs in his system.
00:51:24.000 And now it's another indication of racism in the system, right?
00:51:30.000 And it's so infuriating to see this time and again because even when you look at the mechanics of how this works, what they did to this guy in itself doesn't choke people.
00:51:41.000 Getting on somebody's back does not choke somebody, getting on somebody's head does not choke somebody.
00:51:49.000 You know, how do you choke somebody?
00:51:50.000 Just think about it off the top of your head.
00:51:52.000 What do you do to choke somebody?
00:51:54.000 If you see me and you're approaching me, how would you choke me?
00:51:57.000 Would you tackle me, knock me to the ground, and then push down on my back?
00:52:03.000 Or would you do this? 0.97
00:52:04.000 Would you go for my esophagus? 0.82
00:52:05.000 That is how you choke somebody. 0.65
00:52:06.000 You choke somebody by grabbing their esophagus, right?
00:52:10.000 You cannot choke somebody by pushing their head down.
00:52:14.000 You cannot, generally speaking, choke somebody by putting your weight on their back.
00:52:18.000 Now, maybe if you put like a car on somebody's back, you're going to have problems, but generally speaking, you've got a big individual, somebody goes on your back with partial weight.
00:52:29.000 I don't believe that that is going to asphyxiate somebody.
00:52:32.000 Moreover, if somebody is saying, I can't breathe, It takes air to say words like that.
00:52:39.000 If your breathing is restricted, it's probably difficult to talk, right?
00:52:45.000 So, in any case, you know how this works.
00:52:47.000 There's a million problems wrong with this story. 0.99
00:52:49.000 Every time a black criminal or some black junkie dies in police custody or is killed by police in a shootout, we're supposed to believe that the only reason that this happens is because of racism. 0.99
00:53:03.000 The reason that this happened is because white police. 0.99
00:53:06.000 Used excessive force against a black man for no reason, strictly because he was black, simply because of the color of his skin. 0.67
00:53:15.000 But nobody ever starts at the beginning of the story, which is you've got a population, you've got people that are committing crimes, they're doing drugs, they've got conditions, they resist arrest, and so on.
00:53:25.000 And we all know this.
00:53:26.000 How many times do we got to do it?
00:53:28.000 And now, probably and potentially, we'll see another city burn to the ground, more riots, more problems, if not now, in the future, when another one of these things happens, because of this.
00:53:42.000 And honestly, at a certain point, you have to say that there's really two problems here.
00:53:48.000 The problem is that you've got this population that's committing all these crimes.
00:53:52.000 And we've established that. 1.00
00:53:53.000 You've got 13% of the population, which is blacks, who commit a vastly disproportionate amount of crime. 0.99
00:53:59.000 And it's not even close. 1.00
00:54:01.000 It's not even close. 0.99
00:54:03.000 As far as crime goes, a useful thing to think about is that it's really blacks and everybody else. 0.98
00:54:09.000 Even Hispanics don't come close to the criminality of blacks in this country. 0.98
00:54:14.000 Now, Hispanics commit more crime than whites, certainly, but they're closer to whites than they are to blacks. 1.00
00:54:20.000 It is truly exceptional. 1.00
00:54:21.000 And we know this.
00:54:22.000 This is why this happens.
00:54:23.000 This is why there's such a high incidence of this kind of thing happening.
00:54:29.000 It's because of the sheer volume of crime that's being committed in these neighborhoods by this population. 1.00
00:54:34.000 And more realistically, it's really like 7% of the population because it's black men. 1.00
00:54:38.000 And maybe even smaller than that because it's young black men. 0.99
00:54:41.000 We all know this. 1.00
00:54:43.000 Everybody knows this.
00:54:44.000 The police know this.
00:54:45.000 Anybody who lives in a city knows this.
00:54:47.000 Anybody who's ever driven through the ghetto knows this, how this works.
00:54:51.000 And you could bicker all day long about.
00:54:53.000 The causes of this or how to solve this, but that is a fact cannot be ignored.
00:54:59.000 There's no way to argue around that.
00:55:00.000 Now, that's one of the problems.
00:55:02.000 The other problem is that the media lies all day long.
00:55:06.000 And we've covered the crime aspect of it, but maybe the bigger problem is that the media is totally complicit in promoting all of this, promoting this deception, promulgating all these falsehoods.
00:55:21.000 When it comes to a story like this, why does the media not?
00:55:24.000 Put in all the facts.
00:55:25.000 The PCP, the Spit Hood, going for the gun, all these different things.
00:55:30.000 When it's Ray Sharp Brooks, why don't they talk about the fact he was drunk driving?
00:55:33.000 Why don't they talk about the fact he stole the cop's taser or George Floyd?
00:55:38.000 That the official cause of death was heart disease. 1.00
00:55:42.000 And we all know the answer, but to me, that is almost the bigger problem because you've got all these riots happening and that is just another consequence of the black criminality. 0.98
00:55:53.000 But to me, the Maybe even the bigger cause of all that is that the media is, in particular with the riots, the media is fomenting all of this racial animus. 0.99
00:56:03.000 The media is inciting these riots.
00:56:06.000 At what point do you hold the media accountable for this?
00:56:09.000 You see Kenosha on fire, certainly.
00:56:12.000 And the people that set the fires are accountable for that.
00:56:17.000 But at what point do you say that the media that is filling the heads of these people with lies and promoting this?
00:56:25.000 On social media and promoting this on television and instigating this.
00:56:29.000 And then when the riots do happen, they cover it up.
00:56:32.000 At what point do you hold them accountable?
00:56:34.000 How is there no accountability on their part?
00:56:36.000 I find it fascinating that the president will put out a tweet that Twitter disagrees with the information in it and they're going to slap a fact check on it.
00:56:46.000 Or the president will put out a tweet and Twitter will put a warning on it and disallow people from liking it or seeing certain analytics about the tweet.
00:56:54.000 And conservatives and right wingers all day long are banned.
00:56:59.000 Blacklisted, shadow banned, suppressed in search results and through the algorithm because it's disinformation or it's Russia or it's whatever.
00:57:09.000 But there's no responsibility on the part of the media when it comes to things like this.
00:57:13.000 And it's cut and dry.
00:57:14.000 And it's not even like right wing or partisan, anything like that.
00:57:17.000 It's just facts.
00:57:18.000 The media said about this, about the one on Monday, about Rayshard Brooks, about Ahmaud Arbery, about George Floyd.
00:57:26.000 It's racism.
00:57:27.000 It's racism in the system.
00:57:29.000 They omit certain facts.
00:57:31.000 They promote certain falsehoods and they just get away with it.
00:57:35.000 And I guess maybe the question after that is well, who would hold them accountable?
00:57:41.000 That's a question that you have to ask and that people are going to have to ask increasingly in this country how does power work in this country?
00:57:48.000 You know, as we've been talking for the past couple of days about the coup that's coming up, this color revolution that's going to happen with this election, you're going to have to ask yourself well, what happens if social media intervenes?
00:58:03.000 To install Joe Biden in a coup attempt against the elected president.
00:58:08.000 What would happen?
00:58:08.000 Who would stop them?
00:58:09.000 Who could stop them?
00:58:10.000 How would you stop them?
00:58:13.000 How do you stop the most powerful media and social media companies in the world?
00:58:19.000 How would you even begin to address that?
00:58:20.000 How would you and I begin to address that?
00:58:22.000 If we can't do it, who can?
00:58:24.000 The state?
00:58:26.000 What part of the state?
00:58:27.000 The Congress?
00:58:28.000 Good luck with that.
00:58:30.000 The bureaucracy in the executive branch?
00:58:33.000 They're in bed with them.
00:58:34.000 The executive branch and the bureaucracy is all these major companies.
00:58:38.000 Who's going to put a stop to it?
00:58:40.000 We are powerless in the face of this kind of stuff.
00:58:43.000 The media promotes these lies, the rioters come up and they commit crimes.
00:58:49.000 Politicians are participating now to steal the election.
00:58:52.000 They're all in bed, they're all colluding.
00:58:55.000 And they won't be held accountable because they are the power.
00:58:58.000 They are the power in the country.
00:59:01.000 Because all these institutions represent the most powerful institutions that there are.
00:59:06.000 And more than that, they are the most powerful institutions in this country, which is the most powerful country in the world.
00:59:14.000 This empire, which dictates what goes on not just in these borders, but in the entire world, which sets the rules and the standards and the supranational institutions and precedents and things like that.
00:59:27.000 Those institutions control this empire.
00:59:31.000 So, who's going to stop Facebook, Google, Apple, and Amazon, the lords of the American empire?
00:59:37.000 Who can do that?
00:59:38.000 Nobody.
00:59:40.000 So, that's really what's scary about all of that, but that's what people have to wake up to.
00:59:45.000 And everybody's in on it the media, the GOP, the government, they're all in on it.
00:59:50.000 You've got some pockets of resistance.
00:59:53.000 Donald Trump, the man, the man, not the White House, not the presidency, Donald Trump personally.
01:00:01.000 But even he, of course, is subject to the influence of Juror Kushner and subversive elements surrounding him in the White House, right?
01:00:09.000 But Donald Trump might be one pocket of resistance and people that are personally loyal to him in the administration.
01:00:15.000 But that's by no means the majority of the people in the administration or the most influential people in the administration.
01:00:22.000 Tucker Carlson on Fox, but it's not all of Fox, as we know.
01:00:26.000 It's literally Tucker Carlson and the people that are loyal to him in that network.
01:00:30.000 It's people like me, it's a few other independent people.
01:00:34.000 That's what we got.
01:00:36.000 And the point of all of this is to infiltrate these institutions, whatever they are, to build our own institutions, to further the infiltration so that we can punch back against them.
01:00:48.000 You look at the bureaucracy of the United States.
01:00:51.000 If we could get people into the bureaucracy who are friendly and like infestation, we could fill up certain parts of the government or certain parts of different institutions in the country with our guys.
01:01:05.000 That's all it takes.
01:01:07.000 Become the gatekeeper, become the goalie, and then wave all of our guys through into the institutions.
01:01:14.000 Then gradually we'll have the teeth and we'll have the muscle to start to affect change in the country.
01:01:21.000 But that's how we have to start thinking.
01:01:23.000 Not in terms of ideology, but in terms of political power and dispensing political power.
01:01:29.000 Because you see how this stuff goes on all day long, and it's like who can stop the riots?
01:01:33.000 Who can stop the lies?
01:01:34.000 Who's got the legal authority?
01:01:37.000 Who has a solution for how to push back on this stuff?
01:01:40.000 It all comes down to that power dynamic.
01:01:43.000 So I hear this story in Rochester.
01:01:47.000 And if you're tired of hearing the same old, same old, which is, oh, 13 do 50, and oh, Black Lives Matter's a hoax, and blah, blah, blah, all the stuff we've been talking about for months.
01:01:58.000 What we all really need to get on the same wavelength on is creating or infiltrating institutions that actually pack a punch, that kind of collective action.
01:02:08.000 It's the only way to do it.
01:02:09.000 It's the only way to do it.
01:02:11.000 Because I think that's what should terrify people.
01:02:13.000 I don't even think people think about this.
01:02:17.000 Amazon, Apple, Facebook, and Google are the four biggest companies in the world.
01:02:22.000 You might think big tech, and you might think big tech is like a part of the economy or a part of the market.
01:02:28.000 Big tech is becoming all of the market.
01:02:31.000 Big tech is becoming all of the stock indices.
01:02:34.000 When you talk about the stock market going up, increasingly you're talking about these four companies going up that are the biggest in the history of the world.
01:02:42.000 And that's where almost all the money is invested in these indices.
01:02:46.000 In these stock indices, there are controlled and directed by these four companies.
01:02:50.000 It's immense power and influence.
01:02:52.000 And then it's the nature of these companies.
01:02:54.000 We're not talking about General Electric.
01:02:56.000 We're not talking about a gas company.
01:02:58.000 We're not talking about companies that control information, that control the internet, that control all e commerce.
01:03:06.000 Think about Amazon 30 some percent of all the market share of transactions on the internet.
01:03:13.000 You look at Apple.
01:03:14.000 What's the market share on smartphones that everybody has in their pocket?
01:03:17.000 And what information do they have?
01:03:19.000 Facebook.
01:03:19.000 What does Facebook know about you if you have it on your phone?
01:03:24.000 And Google, which you can just imagine what they've got their hands into.
01:03:27.000 When Google searches and YouTube, it's ubiquitous.
01:03:31.000 People really need to think about that.
01:03:33.000 It should terrify you.
01:03:34.000 Who's really in charge of this country?
01:03:37.000 That's why I push back all the time on this idea about socialism.
01:03:41.000 Am I that afraid of the government?
01:03:42.000 I mean, in some sense, I am.
01:03:44.000 But in some ways, big tech and these powerful forces outside the government are almost.
01:03:51.000 The government power proceeds from them.
01:03:55.000 Government power is an extension of them because it is these companies which are directing the traffic in the bureaucracy, in the elections.
01:04:02.000 They're funneling the donor money, they're creating the information ecosystem that elections take place within.
01:04:09.000 You know, think about that.
01:04:11.000 Sure, the government is comprised of elected officials, and elected officials appoint the bureaucrats.
01:04:17.000 But who controls all the information that you see before you vote those people in?
01:04:23.000 So, I mean, that's what you got to think about when it comes to our future.
01:04:28.000 And less about, you know, what's the role of the state?
01:04:31.000 Does socialism work?
01:04:33.000 No.
01:04:33.000 And here's why.
01:04:34.000 Okay, meanwhile, you're being raped. 0.94
01:04:36.000 You're being gang raped by four giant tech companies at the same time while you're, you know, bickering back and forth at Hillsdale College about the originalist interpretation of the Constitution. 0.97
01:04:48.000 Really?
01:04:49.000 The originalist interpretation.
01:04:51.000 And I know I hear this all the time from conservatives.
01:04:53.000 They're like, The Constitution is a timeless document.
01:04:56.000 I don't think anybody at that time, you know, Amazon, Apple, Google, you think they had any concept of that?
01:05:03.000 It's a different world we live in now, you know, anyway.
01:05:06.000 But it's kind of a tangential, but it's still true.
01:05:11.000 We have to start thinking in terms of that kind of stuff because otherwise, I mean, we're not going to make it out alive.
01:05:18.000 But it looks like we're running out of time, so we're going to move on and take a look at our super chats.
01:05:22.000 I think you get the picture. 1.00
01:05:23.000 It's a freaky situation with this BLM stuff. 1.00
01:05:27.000 And don't get me wrong, the demographics are still destiny. 1.00
01:05:30.000 It is still, you know, blacks terrorizing these cities with their crime and then with the riots. 1.00
01:05:35.000 But you look at who's instigating it, you look at this coup, the pen, I mean, all of it, all of it. 1.00
01:05:40.000 And it's a terrifying reality.
01:05:44.000 But that's the real story of our time this American empire controlled by Silicon Valley and a select other number of institutions.
01:05:52.000 But we're going to move on and take a look at our super chats.
01:05:55.000 We'll see what you guys are saying about all this.
01:05:57.000 We've got Racist Incel who says, What do you think about that Vitty Malchug guy becoming a girl?
01:06:04.000 Didn't you used to be mutuals with him? 0.65
01:06:05.000 I did.
01:06:06.000 Yeah, and you know that because I tweeted about it.
01:06:09.000 Yeah, that guy, he was in that Feel with No GF documentary.
01:06:14.000 And you might know him as Drone Diary on Twitter, Vitty Malchuk.
01:06:18.000 And he had good content.
01:06:20.000 I did used to follow him.
01:06:21.000 We used to be mutuals.
01:06:23.000 And at some point last year, he unfollowed me, which is very, that's not taken lightly.
01:06:30.000 Very frowned upon in this community to break mutuals.
01:06:32.000 Very disrespectful.
01:06:33.000 Also, because I'm me, that's a lot of clout to break mutuals.
01:06:38.000 Who do you think you are?
01:06:39.000 I break mutuals with you, but he broke mutuals with me. 1.00
01:06:43.000 And now he's trans. 1.00
01:06:46.000 Now he wants to be a girl. 1.00
01:06:49.000 He broke mutuals with me, and now he wants to become a girl and remove his penis. 1.00
01:06:53.000 So, I mean, that kind of just says it all. 0.99
01:06:56.000 People that I block, people that block me, people that break mutuals, many such cases, right? 1.00
01:07:02.000 It's another Groyper curse. 1.00
01:07:05.000 You've got people, they talk badly about me online, and then they get beat to death by Black Lives Matter. 1.00
01:07:10.000 Groyper curse. 1.00
01:07:12.000 They break mutuals with me, and then they become trans. 1.00
01:07:15.000 Groyper curse. 1.00
01:07:18.000 Stefan Molyneux disavows me, throws me under the bus, and he gets banned from everything.
01:07:22.000 Groyper curse.
01:07:23.000 How many times do people have to?
01:07:26.000 How many different entries do we have to have in that long list of Groyper curses before people realize you just shouldn't mess with me? 0.96
01:07:34.000 You shouldn't mess with me. 1.00
01:07:36.000 You shouldn't mess with the Groyper's. 1.00
01:07:37.000 You shouldn't mess with America first. 1.00
01:07:39.000 It never ends well. 0.64
01:07:40.000 It never ends well, does it?
01:07:42.000 Tell me one success story.
01:07:45.000 Nick Colling says, as in rocks.
01:07:48.000 Oh, back and forth.
01:07:49.000 I said, my mate thought you were cool, but Jaden rocked.
01:07:52.000 I hope you understand now.
01:07:53.000 Okay, yeah.
01:07:54.000 Thank you for clarifying for the fourth time.
01:07:56.000 I appreciate that.
01:07:59.000 But yeah, Jaden does rock back and forth for whatever reason when he's doing the salute.
01:08:04.000 He's very squirrely, very squirrely guy.
01:08:08.000 So, Polish American Groyper says, Polish American Groyper, aka Groyper Polish on Twitter, is approaching 200 followers on Twitter.
01:08:16.000 I couldn't have done it without you liking some of my tweets.
01:08:20.000 Given that I am a super chatter, I'm thinking that my follower giveaway will be a free super chat.
01:08:26.000 Congrats on 40K.
01:08:28.000 Well, thank you so much, buddy. 1.00
01:08:30.000 We love Polish American Goiper. 0.95
01:08:31.000 Congrats on 200. 0.94
01:08:34.000 And hey, thanks.
01:08:35.000 Yeah.
01:08:36.000 We did hit 40K last week.
01:08:38.000 I don't even think I've acknowledged that yet.
01:08:40.000 I didn't even really notice.
01:08:43.000 I think somebody might have brought it up in a super chat last week.
01:08:46.000 We don't even have time to celebrate because there's so much stuff going on.
01:08:49.000 But yeah, 40,000.
01:08:51.000 Followers on DLive.
01:08:53.000 Pretty good, right?
01:08:55.000 In how many months?
01:08:57.000 I started doing this show on DLive full time back in February.
01:09:01.000 So 40,000 in six months.
01:09:04.000 I was at 76,000 on YouTube when I got banned.
01:09:07.000 And that was after three years.
01:09:08.000 So not bad, right?
01:09:11.000 Gandhi says I literally just moved to Rochester three weeks ago.
01:09:14.000 Please not now.
01:09:16.000 But excited to see what will happen.
01:09:16.000 LOL.
01:09:18.000 Yeah, I'm excited.
01:09:20.000 I wonder what will happen.
01:09:21.000 I hope we get a riot.
01:09:23.000 Not because I want people to get hurt or their property destroyed, but because it'll be fun to watch.
01:09:31.000 Jake Jorgensen says, listen to Vince Patrick and now you since I got home.
01:09:35.000 If they don't send you guys to Gitmo before it's finished, the AF streaming platform will host the best political content on the net.
01:09:42.000 So excited.
01:09:43.000 God bless.
01:09:43.000 Well, thank you very much.
01:09:46.000 Yeah, it's coming.
01:09:47.000 It's coming along.
01:09:48.000 It's a very difficult project because, I mean, we literally have to create technology that doesn't exist.
01:09:54.000 Like, that's the thing.
01:09:56.000 With the AF streaming, I don't think people even realize what an undertaking it is because it's not as simple as using a service because we can't use services.
01:10:04.000 That's the whole reason I'm creating a platform, you know?
01:10:07.000 If it was as simple as like calling a vendor who does streaming service and calling somebody who does this or that service, we could have had that website set up in two weeks.
01:10:20.000 But we are literally having to create new technology to make it cost effective and to make it proprietary and independent.
01:10:29.000 So, I mean, what we're working on right now does not exist.
01:10:34.000 And I told you it's that P2P.
01:10:36.000 We actually found something even better than that.
01:10:39.000 And I don't want to get more specific than that.
01:10:42.000 It's because it's a trade secret.
01:10:43.000 But we were working with P2P to cut down on the bandwidth costs.
01:10:47.000 And we might still go with that in the end.
01:10:49.000 But we're actually one of our developers who is brilliant, who is a total top notch, world class guy, just from his resume, but also just from what he's able to do. 1.00
01:11:01.000 If I told you some of the places he's worked, you'd be like, holy smokes, Groypers are everywhere. 1.00
01:11:07.000 You'd be like, wow, Groypers are really rising up. 1.00
01:11:10.000 Our world class programmer, we've got a few of them actually. 1.00
01:11:13.000 We've got Zoomer Dev in there, we've got my old pal.
01:11:16.000 I don't want to dox him because I think he's back trying to reintegrate into some normie work, but the guy who's built my old website, he's there, another world class guy, and we've got this other guy on there who's working on this proprietary thing, and it's new, and it's going to blow literally everything that exists out of the water if we're able to pull it off.
01:11:36.000 So I'm very excited.
01:11:38.000 It's coming along, and it's a difficult thing because, like I said, we're really building it from scratch.
01:11:44.000 If we're able to pull this off, it's going to be huge.
01:11:47.000 And people say all the time, like, I saw, for example, we talked last night about some person on Twitter who was like, oh, Nick blocked me.
01:11:57.000 He was all upset.
01:11:59.000 And he was saying something like, oh, all Nick does is talk.
01:12:01.000 And there's this perception that, like, I do this show and that's all I do.
01:12:04.000 But that streaming website is one example of something huge.
01:12:10.000 If we could have our own thing and it's proprietary, it's better than anything that exists, that's huge.
01:12:17.000 And that's one of many things that are going on behind the scenes.
01:12:21.000 So, if that gives you a little bit of confidence, I'm sharing that with you just so you know.
01:12:27.000 If you're feeling demoralized, you're thinking, what's the plan?
01:12:30.000 What are we doing?
01:12:32.000 You just got to trust, got to trust.
01:12:34.000 And if you don't trust, hey, you're lost, but there's a lot happening.
01:12:40.000 Dad Taco says, how do you think the problem of post World War I Europe should have been solved? 0.67
01:12:47.000 How could Poland be nationalist if they had a great minority of Germans?
01:12:51.000 Also, should I show girls clips of you during parties?
01:12:55.000 Wow, great questions.
01:12:56.000 How should World War I Europe, blah, blah, blah, should have been solved?
01:13:01.000 I don't know, dude. 0.65
01:13:02.000 Really great historical question.
01:13:05.000 Well, I think the big problem with the resolution of World War I was that the United States intervened on the side of the British and the French because.
01:13:18.000 What you had was basically a stalemate in World War I until the United States intervened.
01:13:23.000 And that we intervened pushed it decidedly in the favor of our side.
01:13:29.000 And that allowed, at the Treaty of Versailles, Germany in particular to get totally screwed over. 0.97
01:13:34.000 And I know this is the conventional wisdom, but it also happens to be true. 0.69
01:13:38.000 And to take from them their industry, and to take from them their ability to have a military, and to take from them their territory, it created some problems in the Balkans. 0.94
01:13:48.000 And so, you know, the real problem, I mean, what was really happening with both world wars in that first half of the 20th century, it was really the real story there is the rise of Germany.
01:14:03.000 The real story is that Germany is unified in 1871.
01:14:07.000 You've got the Industrial Revolution happening, and Germany, through its industrial power, is rising to match Britain, which had been the hegemon in Europe.
01:14:18.000 That's the real story.
01:14:20.000 And the story of World War I and World War II is how do you sort of transition from a situation, this balance of powers in the 19th century, where Great Britain is.
01:14:35.000 The hegemon, right, and is more powerful and has naval power, to now having Central Europe, having Germany specifically rise against Britain and sort of challenge them for hegemony in the region.
01:14:45.000 That's sort of what the world wars were sorting out.
01:14:49.000 And that's the big mistake of World War I to try and totally crush them. 0.98
01:14:52.000 It doesn't work because they have to deal with Germany. 0.89
01:14:55.000 And in some ways, to this day, that's an issue.
01:14:57.000 That's in some ways kind of what Brexit was about this political battle between the continental powers of Europe versus Britain.
01:15:06.000 So.
01:15:07.000 That was always fascinating to me, the international relations perspective on that.
01:15:11.000 But anyway, so I don't know why that's relevant, but thank you for that.
01:15:18.000 Antics is Did you see that Jacob Blake's father absolutely hates Jewish people?
01:15:23.000 I didn't see anything like that.
01:15:25.000 I think he said they were on the media.
01:15:26.000 I don't know how that is hatred of Jewish people.
01:15:29.000 His Facebook is full of it.
01:15:31.000 Biden is meeting him tomorrow, but the media won't allow this guy to make it any further, especially if Jacob Blake feels the same.
01:15:39.000 Tuatha says, You've stressed your approval for a heavy police presence.
01:15:42.000 I worry about a full blown police state, especially with these shadow elites roaming about. 0.61
01:15:47.000 All I want is a logical and truth abiding government.
01:15:50.000 Well, it's no secret that we have to get in power before anything like that would happen.
01:15:57.000 I mean to say that when we want a police presence, we want to have a police presence once we're running the show.
01:16:03.000 You know, because you're right.
01:16:05.000 That goes for a lot of these things.
01:16:07.000 A lot of people are like trying to fix the government and everything.
01:16:11.000 In some ways, we kind of have to wait to implement what we want until we or somebody aligned with us is in some meaningful way running the government.
01:16:21.000 And the reason for that is because, you know, let's say, for example, last week somebody said, well, we should raise taxes on the wealthy so the government can get more tax money and, you know, then we'll be able to not go into more debt.
01:16:34.000 And I'm thinking, why would we want to fund this government more?
01:16:38.000 Why would we want to give this government more money?
01:16:41.000 The money that we give the government will be used to hurt us.
01:16:44.000 So, ostensibly, if there's anybody who's like us who is giving up more money in taxes, using their capital as people that are aligned with us and giving it to the government so that they can use it against us, why is that a policy we would be in favor of?
01:16:58.000 And Paul Gottfried actually talks a lot about this.
01:17:01.000 Paul Gottfried calls himself a libertarian.
01:17:04.000 And he says he's not a libertarian because he's in favor of rights or total freedom or permissiveness.
01:17:11.000 He says he's a libertarian because the state is left wing.
01:17:15.000 And the state, insofar as it is big and powerful, is enforcing the hegemony of left wing ideas and policies and values and the left wing agenda and things like that.
01:17:28.000 Now, I wouldn't go that far, but I definitely don't want to empower the government any further so long as they're our enemy.
01:17:34.000 So there's a lot of truth in that.
01:17:37.000 Mango says, Which K on girl is your favorite?
01:17:41.000 I don't know what that is.
01:17:42.000 Bobby Gray with a big super chat.
01:17:44.000 Thank you so much.
01:17:46.000 Big shout out.
01:17:47.000 I appreciate it.
01:17:47.000 Thank you very much.
01:17:49.000 He says, I just saw that Destiny was defending the kid who shot the protesters in self defense. 1.00
01:17:54.000 Pretty cool to see Vosh spur out. 1.00
01:17:56.000 I still despise Destiny, though. 1.00
01:17:58.000 Also, I had $1,500 stolen, but I got it all back.
01:18:02.000 My car got hit but didn't leave a scratch and had a successful surgery.
01:18:06.000 I'm feeling blessed.
01:18:07.000 Excuse me.
01:18:09.000 And I hope I can share that blessing with the movement.
01:18:11.000 Well, thank you very much.
01:18:12.000 Thank you for the big super chat.
01:18:15.000 Congrats.
01:18:16.000 Congrats on your luck.
01:18:17.000 Sounds good.
01:18:18.000 Congrats on the surgery and the miraculous car accident and the return of the money.
01:18:25.000 Good to hear it, buddy.
01:18:27.000 Kato says 23andMe results came back.
01:18:29.000 Found out I'm 2% Italian. 0.78
01:18:31.000 Feels good being a member of the master race. 0.98
01:18:33.000 Do I get the D word passed now? 0.99
01:18:35.000 2% Italian. 0.62
01:18:36.000 I think that's pushing it.
01:18:38.000 Cold Cheese says, had a blast playing Among Us last night.
01:18:42.000 And thanks to you, Beardson and Jaden, for making it a fun night after work.
01:18:45.000 There's no better group of people than those in America first.
01:18:48.000 Ah, well, thanks, buddy.
01:18:49.000 It was fun playing with you, too.
01:18:50.000 You know, I got to say, playing games with people from the live chat again was kind of refreshing because I used to play games with people from viewers, or I used to play games with viewers from the show.
01:19:06.000 All the time when I first started out because there weren't that many people watching the show.
01:19:11.000 So I would do a gaming stream and I just invite random people in Discord to play Fortnite or whatever.
01:19:16.000 And it turns out that's actually how I met a lot of people that I'm friends with today.
01:19:20.000 Now, at some point during like Groyper Wars or during that debate with Trainwrecks TV, there were just so many people watching the show.
01:19:31.000 There was just like an avalanche of people.
01:19:33.000 There was no way to accommodate everybody.
01:19:35.000 It got overwhelming.
01:19:36.000 But when I was doing it on Jaden's stream, And we were having a good time with Cold Cheese and some others.
01:19:44.000 It was like, maybe these super chatters aren't so bad after all.
01:19:48.000 These are actually some pretty solid people.
01:19:51.000 It was fun.
01:19:51.000 So I agree.
01:19:53.000 Yamato says Vincent James recently made a video showing that the only demographic that has a net negative support for BLM is white males.
01:20:02.000 And yet people wonder why we were the only ones allowed to make the big decisions back in the day. 0.95
01:20:06.000 So true.
01:20:07.000 Well, that was the red pill for me.
01:20:09.000 It was looking at the different voting demographics.
01:20:13.000 In 2016, during the election, and showing like, here's what the result would have looked like if only white men voted in 2012.
01:20:20.000 Here's what the result was in 2008, and so on for all the different demographics. 0.66
01:20:26.000 And I said, gee, white men are the only ones making the right decision, the obvious decision, voting Republican. 0.68
01:20:33.000 And of course, and that's not to speak so much about the candidates, but so much about common sense. 0.98
01:20:38.000 They're the only ones that aren't crazy liberals like everybody else, like women, like blacks, like Hispanics, like Jews, gays.
01:20:46.000 And that was the beginning of a long process of looking into these different groups and realizing, you know, basically rejecting equality, rejecting equality in all its forms. 0.95
01:20:57.000 Men and women are not equal.
01:20:58.000 The races are not equal. 1.00
01:21:00.000 You know, straight and gay people are not equal. 1.00
01:21:03.000 Christians and Jews are not equal.
01:21:04.000 They're not the same, they're not interchangeable.
01:21:08.000 They're distinct.
01:21:10.000 And those distinctions are significant and have consequences.
01:21:16.000 You know, when I say men and women are not equal, I don't mean that they're not both human beings with dignity and all of that. 0.62
01:21:21.000 I mean that men and women are not the same.
01:21:24.000 There is difference, and the differences are not small, they're big.
01:21:27.000 And big differences means big implications for how the country works.
01:21:33.000 If they're voting and if they're occupying the same spaces and so on, it makes a big difference.
01:21:39.000 They're not interchangeable.
01:21:40.000 And the same goes for all those other categories.
01:21:42.000 And that's really what, you know, the right wing is a rejection of equality and the affirmation of hierarchy.
01:21:49.000 And the affirmation of difference and of groups.
01:21:52.000 That's really what it's about. 0.99
01:21:54.000 The young are different from the old. 1.00
01:21:56.000 Christians are different from Jews. 1.00
01:21:58.000 Men are different from women. 1.00
01:22:00.000 Whites are different from Asians, are different from Hispanics and blacks. 1.00
01:22:03.000 They are different. 1.00
01:22:04.000 And it's not to say that one is better or worse than the other, but just different.
01:22:08.000 And we have to think about those differences and take those differences into consideration.
01:22:13.000 And we make decisions based on what we want.
01:22:16.000 And what we want is safety, stability, prosperity, order, peace.
01:22:21.000 We have to make decisions on how we're going to run the country to get more of those things.
01:22:29.000 And we have to take.
01:22:30.000 Those inequalities into consideration.
01:22:32.000 That's the essence of what distinguishes us from every other conservative.
01:22:37.000 Other conservatives, they might call themselves conservative, but they embrace equality.
01:22:41.000 They say, we want women working.
01:22:43.000 We want women in the workforce. 0.99
01:22:44.000 We are the real feminists.
01:22:46.000 We're the real anti racist. 0.98
01:22:47.000 We're the real whatever.
01:22:50.000 There's nothing conservative about that.
01:22:51.000 That is a liberal disposition.
01:22:54.000 So, and it's true.
01:22:56.000 I mean, and it's funny, I put this on my alt Twitter account recently. 0.81
01:23:00.000 I said that I was like, you know, everybody talks about demographics and like, Oh, it's whites and non whites.
01:23:06.000 Everybody talks about, like, oh, it's whites and it's this demographic time bomb of when the non whites outnumber the whites. 0.58
01:23:13.000 I said, but you know, it's also all these other groups that you got to look at. 0.77
01:23:15.000 It's not strictly whites and non whites, it's really white men and everybody else, right?
01:23:21.000 It's white men being displaced, not just by non whites, but by white women and non whites and Jewish people and homosexuals and Muslims and trans and all these different categories. 0.65
01:23:38.000 And it's like, who are the inventors, the presidents, the pioneers, settlers, explorers, conquerors, kings?
01:23:46.000 Who are all those people that created?
01:23:48.000 Who is the golden goose that laid all these golden eggs?
01:23:53.000 It was a very specific demographic, a very specific demographic, a narrow demographic.
01:24:02.000 Just saying, just saying.
01:24:05.000 So, you know, everybody's looking at like, You know, it's a color thing.
01:24:12.000 No, it's demographic.
01:24:13.000 It's all demographic categories. 0.77
01:24:15.000 If you're replacing white men with white women, sorry, not much better. 0.93
01:24:20.000 Not much better. 0.93
01:24:22.000 You're replacing a white man with a white woman? 0.88
01:24:25.000 No, thank you. 0.94
01:24:25.000 No, thank you. 0.94
01:24:27.000 Give me the white man every time. 0.56
01:24:29.000 Give me as a president, as the CEO, as the whatever.
01:24:34.000 Mechanic, you name it.
01:24:37.000 My mom was telling me at one point, she's like, you have to talk to a financial advisor.
01:24:41.000 This was years ago.
01:24:42.000 She's like, I know someone.
01:24:44.000 I'll give you her number.
01:24:45.000 I'm like, save it.
01:24:46.000 Save the number. 0.94
01:24:48.000 Find me a male financial advisor. 0.99
01:24:50.000 She got all offended.
01:24:52.000 She said, I can't believe you.
01:24:53.000 I can't believe you would say that.
01:24:55.000 I'm like, do you think it's a joke what I say on the show every night?
01:24:58.000 Do you think it's a joke?
01:24:59.000 I come on the show every night and say men and women aren't equal. 1.00
01:25:02.000 Their brains are different. 0.99
01:25:02.000 They're different. 0.99
01:25:04.000 They don't do the same things. 1.00
01:25:05.000 And then I'm going to go and take financial advice from a woman. 1.00
01:25:08.000 I mean, what do you think? 1.00
01:25:09.000 I'm a liar?
01:25:10.000 You think, oh, you were serious about all that?
01:25:13.000 I mean, really?
01:25:15.000 No, sorry. 1.00
01:25:16.000 I don't want a female to tell me what to do with my money. 1.00
01:25:20.000 I just, I don't. 1.00
01:25:22.000 I don't trust it.
01:25:23.000 Look at the statistics on this.
01:25:25.000 Who makes more money? 0.92
01:25:25.000 Men or women? 0.92
01:25:27.000 Who has more net worth? 0.57
01:25:28.000 Men or women?
01:25:29.000 Look at the list of the world's billionaires, millionaires.
01:25:32.000 Are there more men or women? 0.85
01:25:35.000 And I'm going to take advice from women on my money.
01:25:39.000 You know, I went and saw a male financial advisor and we were talking like bros.
01:25:43.000 We were talking like guys.
01:25:44.000 And I know that's like their job to just be.
01:25:47.000 You know, just be personable, but you have that rapport, that dynamic that can only exist when you've got men. 0.76
01:25:55.000 When it's women, I mean, she's probably going to tell me to invest in God knows what. 0.75
01:25:59.000 She's going to tell me to invest in Sephora, Sephora, Ulta. 0.99
01:26:03.000 She's going to say, take your money and go to Ulta and spend $50,000 at Ulta.
01:26:10.000 She's going to say, you know, if that's what you want, you can do whatever you want.
01:26:14.000 Oh, really? 1.00
01:26:16.000 Shut up. 1.00
01:26:18.000 Oh, really? 1.00
01:26:18.000 Shut up. 1.00
01:26:19.000 Where's your boss? 1.00
01:26:21.000 Can I talk to your male supervisor? 0.99
01:26:23.000 Can I talk to your husband?
01:26:25.000 Okay, I'm kidding.
01:26:26.000 Anyway.
01:26:29.000 Anyway, Joe, so that's a long tangent there, but true, but true.
01:26:37.000 Joe the King says, Hey, Nick, check out the video by Father James Altman. 0.60
01:26:42.000 You cannot be Catholic and a Democrat.
01:26:44.000 He speaks to why Catholics have to vote according to Catholic teaching, which is antithetical to the pro abortion and anti family Democrat BLM platform, and calls out leftist priests and bishops.
01:26:55.000 Really powerful. 0.65
01:26:57.000 I'll watch that.
01:26:58.000 Lewis McPee, but it's true. 0.98
01:27:00.000 I mean, you cannot be Catholic and vote Democrat. 0.82
01:27:02.000 Totally true. 0.99
01:27:05.000 And, you know, I've seen some liberal Catholics say, oh, you can't vote for Trump because Trump is like, or I saw one trad cat say, like, you can't vote for Trump because he's pro LGBT. 0.68
01:27:15.000 And it's like, it's pretty clear. 0.84
01:27:17.000 Democrats are in favor of genociding babies, destroying the family, destroying God in this country.
01:27:24.000 I mean, you know, it's a pretty clear choice.
01:27:27.000 Lewis McPee is praying for American nationalism.
01:27:30.000 God bless America first.
01:27:31.000 God bless family.
01:27:32.000 So true.
01:27:34.000 Robert says, I love how there are super chatters who are worried about Amazon delivery drones or asking questions like, when will people start dressing smart and wearing suits again?
01:27:42.000 I know, right? 0.99
01:27:44.000 I mean, we're about three months away from some George Floyd type Nibba kicking down your door and like blasting you in the face with a shotgun for being white. 0.99
01:27:56.000 And people are like, why can't people dress nice anymore? 0.98
01:27:59.000 What's going to happen when Amazon drones are making noise?
01:28:03.000 I don't know, man.
01:28:04.000 Great question. 0.77
01:28:06.000 Camel says, Did you know that Britney Spears has a mulatto half brother named Chuck? 0.63
01:28:12.000 No. 0.68
01:28:13.000 Hater Times says, It's a good thing that liberals.
01:28:15.000 Oh, Chuck Spears.
01:28:18.000 That's funny. 1.00
01:28:20.000 Hater Times says, It's a good thing that liberals don't understand optics every time that fat faggot Vosh talks. 1.00
01:28:25.000 It is repulsive. 1.00
01:28:28.000 Even if what he was saying was true, which it isn't, I still wouldn't let a disgusting glutton teach me anything valuable. 0.99
01:28:34.000 So true. 0.98
01:28:36.000 Well, yeah, he's just gross to look at.
01:28:39.000 And it's honestly, you know, it's not hard to look good. 0.97
01:28:42.000 Just don't be fat.
01:28:44.000 Just don't be fat. 0.51
01:28:44.000 I mean, some people are born really ugly, but generally speaking, just don't be fat and you're generally fine. 0.51
01:28:50.000 Don't be fat. 0.69
01:28:51.000 Take good care of yourself.
01:28:52.000 Groom yourself. 0.82
01:28:54.000 But he's fat. 0.99
01:28:54.000 He's got this gross beard, the ponytail. 0.99
01:28:57.000 It's too much hair. 0.98
01:28:58.000 It's dirty.
01:28:59.000 Get rid of that, you know?
01:29:03.000 He's also got autism in his eyes.
01:29:04.000 You can see it.
01:29:05.000 You can tell.
01:29:06.000 Easy.
01:29:07.000 I don't know if you know enough people with Asperger's, but at a certain point, you can kind of pick out certain traits and you could just see it in his eyes. 0.75
01:29:15.000 I can't articulate exactly what it is, but you look at his eyes, it's the way they look, and he just looks autistic.
01:29:23.000 I could just tell before I even heard him talk, I'm like, yeah, this guy's got it. 0.61
01:29:28.000 He's got the tism, he's Asperger's.
01:29:31.000 Unironic Asperger's syndrome. 0.92
01:29:34.000 Modern Monarchist says, Nice to see your show, Nick.
01:29:38.000 Wagey Life is killing me.
01:29:39.000 You helped to make it a better evening. 0.99
01:29:41.000 It's truly amazing, all this crap. 0.94
01:29:44.000 Nick, do you ever watch links people send you over the Super Chat? 0.96
01:29:46.000 I have something interesting to show you.
01:29:49.000 Well, thanks.
01:29:49.000 Glad you liked the show.
01:29:51.000 No, I don't.
01:29:52.000 I honestly don't really watch the links.
01:29:55.000 Sometimes, yes, sometimes, no. 0.81
01:29:59.000 Uppercut Productions says, Hello, Nick, and hello, fellow white people.
01:30:04.000 First super chat, keep up the great work, Goyim. 0.51
01:30:07.000 Okay, thank you for that.
01:30:08.000 Albanian Groyper says, So proud that Illinois is the land of Lincoln.
01:30:12.000 Lincoln saved the nation, crushed a rebellion through his enemies in jail, and was more powerful than any other president before or after.
01:30:20.000 It was only if only we had a Lincoln for today.
01:30:22.000 Truly a great man of history.
01:30:24.000 So true.
01:30:26.000 So true, yeah. 1.00
01:30:27.000 Dixie is seething over that.
01:30:29.000 But we love, I love my tyrant Lincoln. 0.93
01:30:32.000 You know, John Wilkes Booth said, Death to tyrants.
01:30:36.000 It's like, no, long live the tyrant Abraham Lincoln.
01:30:39.000 Long live. 0.97
01:30:40.000 Hail to the chief.
01:30:41.000 Hail to the king of America, Abraham Lincoln.
01:30:44.000 I wish we had a monarchy like that.
01:30:47.000 King, King Abraham Lincoln.
01:30:50.000 I would be fine with that.
01:30:52.000 King Lincoln, King Trump, King Roosevelt.
01:30:57.000 King Jackson.
01:30:59.000 We need something like that. 0.97
01:31:01.000 Dr. Zumer says TikTok bans Christian Groypers but allows 14 year old girls talking about getting piped to trend. 1.00
01:31:07.000 Ban them, Trump. 1.00
01:31:08.000 Yeah, get rid of TikTok. 0.99
01:31:10.000 It's disgusting.
01:31:12.000 I got to tell you, I immensely enjoy TikTok, but we have to get rid of it.
01:31:17.000 But we have to get rid of it for the good of the nation.
01:31:21.000 I'll sacrifice those, what do they call those? 1.00
01:31:25.000 Those boxes that those Asian girls make. 1.00
01:31:28.000 What the hell do they call them? 1.00
01:31:30.000 They make these cute little boxes.
01:31:33.000 Oh, it drives me crazy.
01:31:34.000 They make these cute little boxes where it's this one account in particular. 0.66
01:31:38.000 It's this like Southeastern Asian girl, and she makes these lunches for her kids and her boyfriend. 1.00
01:31:44.000 Kind of degenerate because she's not married, but she's got kids. 1.00
01:31:47.000 But it doesn't matter because she's making these little boxes and they're modular.
01:31:53.000 They're modular, it's separated out, it's compartmentalized, and she'll put some cookies and a little.
01:31:59.000 Sleeve and put it in one part of the box, and then she'll fill up the other part of the box with noodles and beef.
01:32:05.000 And then, and it's perfect.
01:32:07.000 It's very, it's everything that I like.
01:32:10.000 It's modular, it's variety, it's small portions, it's compartmentalized, it's clean, it's self contained.
01:32:18.000 You eat it, you package it back up, it's perfect.
01:32:22.000 It's prepared by a woman who is Asian, it's perfect. 1.00
01:32:25.000 So I'll have to sacrifice, I'll take one for the team. 1.00
01:32:28.000 I'll sacrifice, what do they call them, like Banto boxes or something, whatever it's called. 1.00
01:32:35.000 I'll sacrifice. 1.00
01:32:38.000 I'll sacrifice my Asian prepared lunch girlfriends on TikTok and all my other girlfriends on TikTok doing the dances. 1.00
01:32:49.000 Here's the difference between me and you I just watch them.
01:32:51.000 I don't post them on Twitter drooling over them like you.
01:32:56.000 I watch them for my enjoyment, I watch them for my amusement.
01:33:00.000 And I just simply keep it to myself, unlike people that are like me.
01:33:04.000 You know, they're going to post a dancing TikTok girl with a fashy background. 0.65
01:33:09.000 Oh, it's a dancing e girl, but it's Hitler in the background. 0.69
01:33:11.000 And they're like, see, it's ironic. 0.86
01:33:13.000 It's funny.
01:33:14.000 It's not funny.
01:33:15.000 It's not funny at all. 0.93
01:33:16.000 You're drooling over a girl on the timeline and you're trying to, oh, but I throw Hitler on it and now it's funny. 0.60
01:33:22.000 Not funny. 0.50
01:33:23.000 Cringe.
01:33:24.000 You're simping.
01:33:25.000 I don't want to see that on the timeline.
01:33:26.000 If I want to watch that, I will go to my TikTok account and I will watch it there.
01:33:30.000 Okay?
01:33:32.000 On my own time, you know, anyway.
01:33:36.000 I just hate when that happens.
01:33:38.000 I hate seeing that on the timeline.
01:33:40.000 Keep it off the timeline.
01:33:42.000 Everybody under the guise of irony is going to start simping.
01:33:45.000 They're simping ironically.
01:33:47.000 Oh, I'm simping, but I'm doing it ironically.
01:33:50.000 You're not doing it ironically. 0.98
01:33:51.000 You're horny.
01:33:52.000 You're horny and you're simping and you're putting it on the timeline for everyone to see. 0.51
01:33:55.000 And you think we can't tell the difference because there's a swastika on it.
01:33:58.000 But I can tell the difference.
01:34:00.000 Or I can tell that there is no difference.
01:34:03.000 I see right through you.
01:34:04.000 You know who you are.
01:34:06.000 Oh, but we put a Sonnenrad on it.
01:34:08.000 It's funny now.
01:34:09.000 It's not funny. 1.00
01:34:10.000 Fuck you. 1.00
01:34:11.000 Go be horny somewhere else. 1.00
01:34:11.000 Fuck you. 1.00
01:34:14.000 I don't want to see that. 1.00
01:34:14.000 Okay, anyway. 1.00
01:34:16.000 But I'll give up.
01:34:17.000 I'll give up my TikTok, you know, for the team.
01:34:20.000 We'll give up the TikTok. 0.85
01:34:22.000 So, they could stop sexualizing these young children.
01:34:24.000 Because I do see it, that whap song by Cardi B. 0.99
01:34:31.000 It's disgusting.
01:34:33.000 But TikTok, the last thing I'll say about TikTok, it is so red pilled.
01:34:40.000 And I can't even say why it's red pilled, but it's so red pilled.
01:34:47.000 In some ways, it is so red pilled.
01:34:52.000 We just can't broach on this show for optical reasons. 0.99
01:34:56.000 Now, we could talk about Jewish media. 0.95
01:34:58.000 We could talk about race and IQ. 0.90
01:35:00.000 We could talk about how 9 11 was an inside job.
01:35:03.000 But there are some subjects we just can't broach on this show.
01:35:07.000 But TikTok is so red pilled.
01:35:10.000 Anyway, I'm going to move on.
01:35:14.000 Oh, I get such a kick out of that.
01:35:17.000 But it's red pilled.
01:35:19.000 Okay, but moving on.
01:35:21.000 Trilled in action.
01:35:23.000 Says it's like every few weeks or so we are playing around.
01:35:27.000 Guess who?
01:35:28.000 Guess who got shot now?
01:35:30.000 I think we all know.
01:35:31.000 Starts with an end.
01:35:32.000 Guess who got shot?
01:35:33.000 I think I know.
01:35:35.000 Is it Nick Fuentes?
01:35:36.000 No, kidding, kidding, kidding.
01:35:39.000 Jim, I'm not a Coomer.
01:35:40.000 Everybody's saying Coomer in chat.
01:35:42.000 We're not Cooming.
01:35:44.000 It's not a Coomer.
01:35:46.000 You're enjoying the aesthetics, okay?
01:35:51.000 It's, you know, whatever.
01:35:53.000 Whatever, you know.
01:35:55.000 Save our nation says Massa Blake be saying the truth. 1.00
01:35:59.000 We were chosen kings and shit. 0.99
01:36:02.000 Yeah, that's. 1.00
01:36:07.000 The truth.
01:36:08.000 Truth.
01:36:09.000 Truth.
01:36:11.000 I like when they say that.
01:36:12.000 It's very charming, very amusing.
01:36:14.000 Truth. 1.00
01:36:16.000 Lutheran says Hispanics in the Marines are obsessed with talking about race with themselves. 0.99
01:36:20.000 They know they belong in Mexico.
01:36:23.000 Can't relate. 0.91
01:36:24.000 I'm not a Marine.
01:36:27.000 So, I don't know about that.
01:36:30.000 But thanks.
01:36:30.000 Simon Skull says Patrick Little.
01:36:34.000 Oh, he says Patrick Little was right. 0.97
01:36:35.000 It's only a matter of time until BLM supporters start doing jaywalks LMAO.
01:36:40.000 Maybe he was onto something, right?
01:36:42.000 Maybe the Faustian, the quixotic, the quixotic, truly ambitions of Patrick Little.
01:36:50.000 Maybe we're seeing it come true, right?
01:36:53.000 Dupis says, no, don't tear down the Washington Monument.
01:36:56.000 No, not the huge obelisk in the middle of D.C.
01:36:59.000 It would have been something if during the RNC the Washington Monument blew up.
01:37:05.000 And then you would have seen a giant energy reading.
01:37:07.000 There would be like a huge storm over D.C. During the fireworks display, the Washington Monument goes down and like.
01:37:16.000 And then there's like this giant energy burst.
01:37:19.000 The city's liberated!
01:37:20.000 And then, you know, everybody's like, what?
01:37:23.000 Where am I?
01:37:23.000 What am I doing?
01:37:27.000 So, we can wish.
01:37:28.000 We can hope.
01:37:30.000 Spurts says, ever been traumatized by something you've seen on 4chan?
01:37:34.000 I inadvertently watched a horrendous GIF this morning that ruined my entire day.
01:37:38.000 Not really.
01:37:40.000 I mean, I've seen some things that have like stuck with me, but I can honestly say I've never seen anything that's like traumatized me so much I couldn't get over it.
01:37:50.000 You know what I mean?
01:37:52.000 Like, I remember, do you remember when that guy shot himself on R9K?
01:37:55.000 I saw that one.
01:37:56.000 That was pretty rough.
01:37:57.000 And then there was a whole thread about other graphic videos like that.
01:38:01.000 I watched like a dozen of those.
01:38:04.000 And I remember them because they were, I mean, they were pretty graphic, but I've never seen anything that was like, oh, it keeps me awake.
01:38:11.000 I see it to this day, you know?
01:38:14.000 So that was a rough one, though.
01:38:18.000 Boomer Doomer says, What is good with all the restrictions for visiting Antarctica?
01:38:22.000 There's something suspect going on.
01:38:24.000 I don't know what it is. 0.75
01:38:25.000 Pyramids, Agartha, UFOs, ancient aliens, Hitler.
01:38:31.000 I have no idea.
01:38:31.000 I have no idea what's going on there.
01:38:35.000 Let's see.
01:38:35.000 Dr. Zumer says, The COVID impact is so true.
01:38:39.000 Buddy of mine lost his job and on the $600 unemployment started buying drugs off the deep web.
01:38:44.000 He overdosed on oxycodone and was found blue in his room.
01:38:48.000 He was 19.
01:38:49.000 Well, F, that's horrible.
01:38:52.000 And that's exactly what happens.
01:38:53.000 That's exactly what happens.
01:38:55.000 That's what happens without the lockdown.
01:38:57.000 That's what happens without the lockdown when people just get that mind virus of social media and atomization, social isolation, atheism, all these neuroses and pathologies.
01:39:12.000 I mean, that's just in a nutshell.
01:39:15.000 What everybody's up against when you're a kid.
01:39:16.000 It's like, you know, people can't survive anymore.
01:39:21.000 Think about everybody you know.
01:39:22.000 How many people you know that are depressed, anxious, they've got bipolar, they've got a thing, you know?
01:39:28.000 And there's something to that, I think, in everybody.
01:39:31.000 It's the kind of society we've created.
01:39:33.000 There was a really good article that Sean Last actually posted.
01:39:37.000 Sean Last, he used to work with Alternative Hypothesis.
01:39:40.000 There's a really good article on his website about psychological anguish, psychological suffering.
01:39:46.000 And talking about how the liberal view of history is that somewhere around the Enlightenment, things just started getting exponentially better, and things will always get better, and things unquestioningly are better in every way.
01:40:01.000 And it's true that since the Enlightenment, technology has gotten better.
01:40:05.000 It's true that materially we're more wealthy or prosperous than before, but how do you define better?
01:40:12.000 You know, people like Steven Pinker and others will say, well, look at this index of global poverty, it's gone up, and look at this.
01:40:18.000 United Nations figure that says whatever.
01:40:21.000 Things are great.
01:40:23.000 But if you look at psychological suffering, you'll find that it's sort of inconsistent.
01:40:28.000 In other words, people's psychological health does not really correspond with these increases in productivity or increases in work saving devices.
01:40:43.000 Or what is that phrase I'm thinking of?
01:40:46.000 Labor saving devices.
01:40:48.000 It does not coincide entirely.
01:40:50.000 With these improvements in technology or prosperity, because you've seen that at different times you have more suicide or more depression, and it's, you know, technology and wealth is not everything, clearly.
01:41:03.000 There are some things that have obviously, the technology and these other forms of progress, it's been detrimental to our lives in other ways.
01:41:14.000 And it was already like that, and the lockdown just exacerbated it.
01:41:17.000 So it's very tragic.
01:41:19.000 But I'm sure there are a lot of cases like that.
01:41:22.000 People already can't handle it.
01:41:23.000 With the minimal amount of social contact and socialization that they have, then the social dislocation is bad enough.
01:41:32.000 And then it's compounded, I'm sure, extraordinarily by the financial pressures and the social distancing.
01:41:38.000 It's a recipe for disaster.
01:41:40.000 And that's a 19 year old who should be alive compared to a 100 year old with all kinds of pre existing conditions.
01:41:46.000 Not that they should be dead, but it's like, are we really going to give that person three more months?
01:41:54.000 And we're going to take away 80 years from young people?
01:41:57.000 I mean, that just doesn't make any sense.
01:42:00.000 Temple OS Missionary says Nick, I once super chatted about voting for Putin.
01:42:04.000 He is based, but the corruption that pervades Russia is as harmful to the middle class.
01:42:09.000 As race riots in the U.S., but nobody else that could democratically attain power is worth voting for.
01:42:15.000 I'm not a commie, but something like 1917 would solve a lot of the existing problems.
01:42:20.000 I wish both countries would bring back the space race. 1.00
01:42:22.000 This is just gay. 1.00
01:42:23.000 Well, I don't know enough about the middle class in Russia to speak on that, but I will say that you take a lot for granted over there. 1.00
01:42:32.000 To say you want something like 1917, do you know what you're talking about?
01:42:35.000 I mean, maybe you do if you live in Russia, but after 1917, you'd not only have a violent revolution, but then you've got Five years of civil war, and then you've got terror and famine, and you've got all these problems.
01:42:49.000 And that is the problem inherently with disorder.
01:42:51.000 That is why, as conservatives and right wingers, we are naturally against, almost necessarily against, most and all revolutions.
01:43:01.000 Because even a bad order is better than disorder.
01:43:07.000 Because what comes out of disorder is vastly worse.
01:43:11.000 No matter how bad the order that prevails in the country is, disorder will be worse.
01:43:17.000 Because it's unpredictable.
01:43:19.000 Look at France.
01:43:20.000 You know, was the 10 year revolutionary period really better than Louis XVI?
01:43:27.000 No.
01:43:29.000 Was the Soviets and the Russian Revolution better than the Tsar? 0.80
01:43:32.000 No. 0.76
01:43:33.000 How about Iran? 0.97
01:43:34.000 Is the Islamic regime better than what pre existed with the White Revolution in Iran? 0.93
01:43:43.000 No, it wasn't. 0.89
01:43:45.000 Only a few instances of regime change in the past hundreds of years, violent regime change.
01:43:52.000 Have really been super beneficial.
01:43:54.000 The American Revolution, in a lot of ways, was really kind of like a civil war, actually.
01:43:59.000 So, I mean, was the American Revolution really a revolution?
01:44:03.000 I guess that's another question, but I don't know if I go as far as to say, oh, Putin is so bad that you have to have this totally destabilizing event that could go in any direction.
01:44:13.000 So, Anand says, selfish, you know, Putin is the Leviathan.
01:44:18.000 Anand says, selfish boomers are going to watch their grandkids kill themselves so they can live three years longer. 0.92
01:44:23.000 Yeah, exactly. 0.91
01:44:24.000 That's exactly what we're talking about.
01:44:27.000 Hannibal Respector says, watching the media swing back and forth between pushing COVID regulations and supporting BLM protests shows just how much control they have over the public.
01:44:38.000 People watch these large leftist gatherings and completely forget about social distancing and masks, but then see a crowd on a beach and get angry that they're not obeying the rules.
01:44:47.000 Yeah, exactly. 0.99
01:44:48.000 Well, and how about that bitch in Chicago the other week? 1.00
01:44:52.000 She was yelling at us for not wearing masks. 1.00
01:44:54.000 Do you think if we were black people marching for BLM, she would say that?
01:44:58.000 Of course not. 0.98
01:44:59.000 So, yeah, I mean, people on the other side are legitimately like animals. 0.99
01:45:04.000 I mean, people say that about, oh, liberals are zombies, liberals are brainwashed. 0.98
01:45:09.000 But, I mean, is there any population that is more unthinking than that? 0.88
01:45:13.000 People that will believe two completely contradictory things at the same time and not even be aware of it?
01:45:21.000 None.
01:45:22.000 I just read that.
01:45:23.000 Polish American Groy versus the chat asked, I responded.
01:45:26.000 Nick versus Jaden matchup.
01:45:28.000 Facial hair, Nick.
01:45:30.000 Height, Jaden.
01:45:31.000 Having a great show tonight, Nick.
01:45:33.000 Epic donation reactions, Jaden.
01:45:36.000 Follows Polish American Groyper on Twitter.
01:45:38.000 Jaden.
01:45:40.000 The verdict Jaden edges out Nick with the clutch. 1.00
01:45:43.000 Polish American Groyper follow. 1.00
01:45:45.000 GG. 1.00
01:45:46.000 I don't know if I'd go so far as that.
01:45:49.000 It seems a little biased if that's the tiebreaker that he follows you on Twitter.
01:45:54.000 I would say that is actually because Jaden follows you on Twitter.
01:45:58.000 I think that's an L.
01:45:59.000 I think Jaden actually takes the L on that one for following you on Twitter.
01:46:05.000 So I guess that means I win.
01:46:06.000 I guess that means I win with the clutch not following. 0.75
01:46:09.000 Polish American Grow Upper on Twitter.
01:46:13.000 And is Jaden taller than me?
01:46:15.000 I think the jury is still out on that one.
01:46:17.000 I think he's wearing lifts in his shoes.
01:46:20.000 I think Jaden's actually like 5'6 or 5'7, maybe.
01:46:23.000 He's just wearing lifts.
01:46:25.000 I was looking at his shoes.
01:46:26.000 I'm like, that doesn't look right to me.
01:46:27.000 The proportions are all wrong.
01:46:29.000 He's got lifts in his shoes.
01:46:32.000 He's got 8 inch lifts in his shoes.
01:46:36.000 So I don't know if I buy that.
01:46:38.000 He got corrective surgery.
01:46:39.000 He was born.
01:46:40.000 Four feet tall.
01:46:41.000 His legs were extended.
01:46:43.000 They cut out the bone.
01:46:44.000 They put it in his legs.
01:46:47.000 They cut out his ribs.
01:46:48.000 They cut out three of his ribs.
01:46:50.000 They melted him down and attached him to his legs.
01:46:53.000 I've seen the papers.
01:46:54.000 I've seen the documents.
01:46:56.000 What was he doing last week?
01:46:57.000 Was he in Chicago or was he doing some kind of height surgery in Vietnam?
01:47:01.000 Who knows?
01:47:03.000 Facial hair, I think that counts for many points.
01:47:06.000 I mean, I had a really good mustache going.
01:47:10.000 I think regular hair, too.
01:47:11.000 I've got.
01:47:12.000 Thick, long, beautiful, curly Mediterranean hair.
01:47:16.000 Jaden has nice hair, but it's sort of like that finer Anglo hair.
01:47:21.000 I've got a tan Mediterranean complexion.
01:47:24.000 He's sort of that fair skin.
01:47:25.000 So I think as a Mediterranean, I'm just accumulating lots and lots of points.
01:47:32.000 I think he has brown eyes.
01:47:32.000 Green eyes.
01:47:34.000 So I don't know.
01:47:39.000 But anyway, so I think I win.
01:47:41.000 In other words, I think I win there.
01:47:44.000 Eugene McCarthy says, Nick, would you ever talk with this guy, Papa Gut?
01:47:48.000 He said he would be open to talking to you on immigration when I asked, and seems to be fairly reasonable.
01:47:53.000 He has 1.5 million on all his TikTok accounts and 40K and 50K on YouTube and Twitch.
01:48:01.000 I'll look into him.
01:48:01.000 Maybe.
01:48:03.000 What's his name?
01:48:05.000 Papa Gut?
01:48:07.000 Is that supposed to be like, is that supposed to be one of those like phonetic things?
01:48:18.000 Or, no, that's his name.
01:48:22.000 Well, it doesn't look like he gets a lot of engagement on YouTube.
01:48:27.000 Right?
01:48:28.000 He's got what?
01:48:30.000 2.5K views?
01:48:32.000 4K?
01:48:34.000 20K?
01:48:35.000 13K?
01:48:38.000 Maybe.
01:48:38.000 I don't know.
01:48:39.000 Maybe if he did it on TikTok.
01:48:40.000 Maybe if he posted a TikTok of it.
01:48:43.000 I love when people have a huge following on one platform and they invite me on another platform that they have no engagement on, right?
01:48:49.000 Do something with me on YouTube.
01:48:50.000 Checks YouTube.
01:48:51.000 Oh, 1,000 views.
01:48:53.000 Okay, yeah.
01:48:55.000 Oh, sure.
01:48:56.000 Now, let me help you.
01:48:58.000 You're doing me a favor, right?
01:49:01.000 We'll see.
01:49:01.000 So, I don't know.
01:49:03.000 Tooth Harvester says I heard that Fauci was also one of the people who spread the lie that AIDS was a public pandemic that put everyone at risk rather than a sickness among homosexual men that resulted from their practice of having thousands of unprotected sexual encounters. 0.70
01:49:17.000 Epic. 0.69
01:49:18.000 Yeah, Fauci, that doesn't surprise me at all.
01:49:20.000 I haven't heard that, but it wouldn't surprise me.
01:49:24.000 Robert says, Do you think that if there was no President Trump, there would be no coronavirus?
01:49:29.000 It seems like they pulled this out of the bag to derail him.
01:49:32.000 I don't know if there would be no virus, but I think it probably would have been similar to like swine flu.
01:49:37.000 You know, I think it would have been like swine flu because, in almost every aspect, it's like what made this such a big thing is the media.
01:49:46.000 The media made a big deal out of it.
01:49:47.000 It's not like people are dropping like flies around you dying from another plague.
01:49:52.000 The media told you it was a big deal, right?
01:49:57.000 I don't know anybody that died from coronavirus.
01:49:59.000 I know maybe somebody that had it or a few people that had it.
01:50:04.000 My family knows a few people that had it.
01:50:06.000 I don't know anybody that died from it.
01:50:09.000 We were supposed to believe this was like another plague, the worst pandemic ever.
01:50:12.000 Is there any evidence of that?
01:50:13.000 Do you know anybody?
01:50:15.000 And maybe you know one person or two people, but were people like dropping like flies all around you, catching it and dying?
01:50:20.000 No, that was never happening.
01:50:23.000 So it probably would have been like swine flu, which was the same.
01:50:26.000 I mean, I think my sister got swine flu at one point.
01:50:29.000 I knew people in my grade school that got swine flu.
01:50:31.000 Nobody died.
01:50:32.000 Same with like Ebola.
01:50:34.000 Ebola is a little different because of how it's transmitted, but still.
01:50:38.000 Modern Monarchist says, Hey Nick, was getting all your gear for streaming, including cameras and microphones, expensive?
01:50:43.000 Not at all.
01:50:45.000 I've been using the same Yeti microphone, Blue Yeti microphone, for years, and it cost $130.
01:50:54.000 The webcam, I don't use a webcam anymore.
01:50:57.000 Somebody donated a camera, but my old webcam, which I used for a long time, cost me $150.
01:51:06.000 The computer, the computer is probably the most expensive component, and that cost me.
01:51:13.000 I want to say $800, $900 with monitors, everything.
01:51:21.000 I built it myself, but you know, with monitors, case, everything factored in cost me probably about $800, $900.
01:51:30.000 I did then upgrade my graphics card, then I got like a $600 graphics card, which I think is unnecessary for streaming if you want to know the truth.
01:51:39.000 That was really more for gaming.
01:51:41.000 So you factor all that in, it's, you know, it's If you have a computer already, you can even do it on a laptop.
01:51:48.000 It's going to run you $300 to get a camera and microphone.
01:51:52.000 The boom arm is $130, I want to say.
01:51:58.000 So, yeah, it's not what you think.
01:52:00.000 People think that you've got to go all out on an elaborate setup. 1.00
01:52:04.000 I think that's really stupid. 0.98
01:52:06.000 You know, get the basics, and then if it takes off and it gets serious, then you invest more. 1.00
01:52:11.000 But it's so sad to me.
01:52:12.000 I see all these streamers on DLive or Twitch.
01:52:15.000 And they've got like five people watching, and they've got a $3,000 setup.
01:52:19.000 Top of the line PC, multiple monitors, top of the line graphics card.
01:52:24.000 They've got a $150 keyboard, $100 mouse.
01:52:29.000 They've got lights in their room.
01:52:31.000 They've got props.
01:52:32.000 They've got the whole deal.
01:52:36.000 And they've got five people watching.
01:52:37.000 Why would you do that?
01:52:38.000 Get the entry level mic, get the entry level camera.
01:52:42.000 In some sense, the production value helps, but really, to me, it's kind of like an add on.
01:52:50.000 So, no, it's very inexpensive.
01:52:53.000 A couple of things. 1.00
01:52:54.000 Says the wagee in the drive thru today was a flamboyant gay, and your voice took over my inner monologue saying, Don't get AIDS in my food. 1.00
01:53:02.000 Yeah, I couldn't imagine. 1.00
01:53:05.000 Thankfully, there's not a lot of that in my neck of the woods.
01:53:09.000 I've never really had to deal with that. 1.00
01:53:12.000 You know, because sometimes you go into like a Walgreens or something and there's like a tranny. 1.00
01:53:16.000 I remember that like distinctly in D.C. or something. 1.00
01:53:20.000 But I've never really had to deal with that.
01:53:22.000 I can't handle myself.
01:53:23.000 Well, I mean, I can.
01:53:24.000 I can go about my life, but it really is something that I'm not a fan of.
01:53:31.000 Freaking John says, It's very rude to refer to Paul Town as these people.
01:53:35.000 Billionaires are people, too.
01:53:37.000 Oh, yeah.
01:53:38.000 Well, Paul Town's our guy.
01:53:40.000 He's our billionaire, right?
01:53:42.000 Thick says, I think it's weird how the media always finds an old story to dig up, like this one, like Ahmaud Arbery.
01:53:48.000 I hate trying to discuss this with my friends.
01:53:52.000 White Fiat says, After Joe Rogan's 100 million Spotify deal, some of the controversial episodes, like Alex Jones, were deleted on there.
01:54:00.000 I assume this means no more risky episodes.
01:54:02.000 I know many think he's cringe.
01:54:04.000 But Joe was one of the first to red pill me, so it's sad to see him sell out like this.
01:54:08.000 Thanks for never selling out.
01:54:09.000 Well, thanks.
01:54:10.000 Nobody's offering me a $100 million contract, in fairness, but yeah, he did sell out.
01:54:19.000 And it's true.
01:54:19.000 You know, I got started watching Jordan Peterson, Milo, Gavin, a lot of these guys on Joe Rogan, so I get it.
01:54:28.000 Ben Shapiro, even.
01:54:30.000 And now you see what's happened.
01:54:32.000 They're all blue pilled, they're all cringe.
01:54:35.000 They've also had opportunities to sell out many times.
01:54:38.000 They offered me the trip to Israel.
01:54:40.000 I've had people approach me and say, Look, we can take you big time.
01:54:44.000 Just don't talk about Israel.
01:54:46.000 I've had people approach me, agents, literally, like agencies.
01:54:50.000 Because I've got great engagement.
01:54:52.000 I'm doing great with no marketing, no promotion.
01:54:56.000 Hey, we want to help you out.
01:54:58.000 Oh, hey, why don't you talk to me anymore? 1.00
01:55:00.000 Well, this Israel stuff isn't going to work. 1.00
01:55:03.000 Okay, well, it's not going to work.
01:55:04.000 I've had people approach me to do sponsorships, you name it, for anything.
01:55:10.000 Sponsorships for, I don't even remember.
01:55:14.000 There were a ton during like Groyper War.
01:55:16.000 I got one recently for like CBD oil or something.
01:55:21.000 I've never done a sponsorship, never done an ad.
01:55:24.000 The only way I make money on the show is through the subscriptions and through the super chats and the merch, obviously.
01:55:31.000 B and RP says Dan, Dan, Dan of the jungle, hi on PCP.
01:55:35.000 Okay, cringe.
01:55:38.000 No, no.
01:55:40.000 Why do you think that would be funny?
01:55:41.000 What are you, 50 years old?
01:55:46.000 Get out of here.
01:55:47.000 Get out of town.
01:55:48.000 That's terrible.
01:55:50.000 Teacup says, I got a black guy on my job site and he's nice enough, but your boy's still nervous around him.
01:55:56.000 Never relax.
01:55:57.000 Yeah, you can never relax anywhere, but specifically in certain scenarios. 1.00
01:56:02.000 Really Good Comics says, not to sound racist, but most of these black people, wild beast criminals, should be kept in a concrete cellar forever and only fed raw grain. 1.00
01:56:14.000 Just saying. 1.00
01:56:15.000 Doesn't sound racist to me. 0.52
01:56:16.000 Sounds true.
01:56:18.000 But thanks for the super chat.
01:56:19.000 Based Groypers says, My best friend has an awful GF. 0.98
01:56:23.000 She asked about how a few 19 year old girls want to date me.
01:56:27.000 I asked if that was a problem. 1.00
01:56:29.000 Her and her other late 20s friend were seething about how gross it is. 1.00
01:56:32.000 LOL.
01:56:33.000 So this guy's red pilled.
01:56:35.000 This guy's red pilled.
01:56:38.000 Yeah, come on.
01:56:39.000 It's one of those things that, you know, it's just so obvious.
01:56:42.000 Like so many other things in the world, you just observe.
01:56:45.000 If you're just a student of life, you just figure these things out, right?
01:56:50.000 19 year old girl. 0.88
01:56:52.000 Ew, ew, I'm late 20s, ew, that's gross. 1.00
01:56:55.000 I only want to date single moms who hit the wall and had sex with 25 hot guys and now they want your money, right? 1.00
01:57:04.000 That's the only way to be. 1.00
01:57:07.000 17 year old girl, ew, wash your mouth out with soap, that's disgusting. 1.00
01:57:13.000 17 year old girls are not attractive, they are not hot. 1.00
01:57:18.000 The wall, remember, the wall is 30. 1.00
01:57:21.000 They hit the wall 30.
01:57:23.000 Right up until then, it's nothing but up.
01:57:25.000 It's nothing but up.
01:57:26.000 They're just increasing slowly but steadily.
01:57:29.000 And it's after 30 that they start losing value.
01:57:32.000 Some might say 18.
01:57:36.000 And that's totally true. 1.00
01:57:37.000 That is totally true.
01:57:39.000 That is totally true.
01:57:41.000 Yeah, we all, everyone knows that.
01:57:42.000 Everyone knows that.
01:57:45.000 The law tells me what makes sense.
01:57:48.000 The law is the instructor of what makes sense to me in that area.
01:57:55.000 But it's so true. 1.00
01:57:56.000 And of course, it's always like roasty women that have a problem with it. 1.00
01:58:00.000 That whole age of consent thing. 1.00
01:58:02.000 Is a giant scam for old, dried up feminist women. 1.00
01:58:07.000 I swear, I swear it. 1.00
01:58:09.000 Now, I'm not saying anything unreasonable.
01:58:11.000 I'm not saying anything unreasonable, but this idea that it should be like criminalized or looked down upon if somebody who's like, you know, late 20s is going out with somebody who's 19.
01:58:23.000 Oh, that's so scandalous. 0.87
01:58:25.000 Of course, some pig who's 29 years old is going to say that that's a problem, right? 1.00
01:58:30.000 Of course, some single mom or something. 1.00
01:58:33.000 Who's 30 is gonna think that's so disgusting, right? 1.00
01:58:37.000 Of course, that's how it goes, and it makes sense. 0.99
01:58:42.000 So, but never forget that all women are pedophiles, okay? 0.97
01:58:45.000 I mean, you've heard different takes gays being pedophiles, other groups being pedophiles, Weinstein, Epstein. 1.00
01:58:52.000 But how about all these female teachers having sex with their male students? 0.99
01:58:56.000 When that happens, it's like everybody's giving them a thumbs up, they're cheering. 0.99
01:59:01.000 You see these like 17, 16 year old stud guys in high school banging their girl teachers.
01:59:08.000 And everybody's like, hey, great job, sport, and all.
01:59:10.000 That's funny.
01:59:11.000 No one even talks about that epidemic of quote unquote pedophilia going on.
01:59:18.000 Anyway, I've got a lot of opinions on that.
01:59:22.000 It's not exactly optical, but I'm just saying.
01:59:25.000 Look, I'm just saying.
01:59:26.000 Nobody talks about that.
01:59:29.000 I'm just saying.
01:59:30.000 Nobody talks about that.
01:59:32.000 How many girl teachers have you seen in the mugshot? 1.00
01:59:36.000 You know, these hot girl teachers are like 27. 1.00
01:59:40.000 And they're like sexting their 14, 15 year old students.
01:59:45.000 But, you know, based Groyper, based Groyper, who's like total Chad Rich, he's like maybe gonna make a play for somebody who's of age. 0.95
01:59:45.000 It's ridiculous. 0.95
01:59:56.000 And the piggy, you know, roasties are gonna say that's disgusting. 1.00
02:00:00.000 Why don't you grow up? 1.00
02:00:01.000 Why don't you shut up, you know? 1.00
02:00:03.000 So I hear you, buddy. 0.99
02:00:05.000 I'm with you on that one.
02:00:06.000 Red pill take, TikTok pilled, red pilled.
02:00:09.000 You know, it's like everybody was asking me, what do you think about Dixie D'Amelio? 0.85
02:00:12.000 And I look her up and I'm like, she's hot.
02:00:14.000 Everyone's like, she's 15!
02:00:16.000 She's 15!
02:00:17.000 I'm like, oh no, I was kidding.
02:00:19.000 Never mind.
02:00:20.000 Give me a break.
02:00:23.000 Teacup says, WTF, that's all joke, though.
02:00:26.000 That's all joke. 0.97
02:00:28.000 Teacup says, WTF, did he just say? 0.88
02:00:32.000 I don't know what you're talking about. 1.00
02:00:37.000 Look, Dixie Demelio, hot. 0.99
02:00:39.000 Okay, I'm just gonna say it. 0.78
02:00:41.000 Just saying.
02:00:43.000 Okay, sue me.
02:00:44.000 Call me whatever you want. 1.00
02:00:45.000 She's hot. 1.00
02:00:48.000 And you have to work your way backward from that. 1.00
02:00:50.000 You know, some people, that's their approach.
02:00:52.000 Some people, they like, they'll discover something and they're like, wait a minute, but I'm not supposed to think that.
02:00:58.000 I will not think that anymore.
02:01:00.000 And I'm red pilled because I work my way backwards.
02:01:03.000 I'm like, well, I know that this is true.
02:01:07.000 Let's work our way backward and let's see if we can justify, you know, the standards for thought and language.
02:01:13.000 I'm like, let's start from this axiomatic truth that Dixie D'Amelio is hot.
02:01:19.000 Well, let's reverse engineer this, right?
02:01:24.000 But some people don't think they're like, Dixie D'Amelio is hot. 0.96
02:01:26.000 Wait, she's 15.
02:01:28.000 She cannot be hot. 0.52
02:01:30.000 So, there's a lesson in that.
02:01:32.000 There's a lesson in that, unironically.
02:01:34.000 Anyway.
02:01:37.000 Anyway.
02:01:39.000 Yeah, NPCs are going to seethe over that take, but, you know, it's true.
02:01:44.000 Based Grummios says, Hey, Nick, I was reminiscing about the first TikTok war today.
02:01:48.000 Thousands of us jumping stream to stream after each one was getting banned was so much fun.
02:01:54.000 Highly organized and high energy.
02:01:55.000 Round two?
02:01:56.000 No, you can't do repeats.
02:01:58.000 Everybody always, you know, they think something's fun and they're like, again, again, again.
02:02:03.000 Because they're babies, you know?
02:02:05.000 Let's do that again.
02:02:06.000 You can't, it's the magic happens.
02:02:07.000 It's fun.
02:02:08.000 It happens.
02:02:09.000 But to try and reenact it, it's never a good idea, I don't think.
02:02:13.000 Maybe I would do another TikTok stream, but it wouldn't be the same, you know?
02:02:18.000 Okay, because that was a moment in history.
02:02:20.000 That was a thing at the time.
02:02:24.000 So I don't believe in that.
02:02:26.000 Okay, Borger Department says, have you seen Glenn Lowry and John Mayer?
02:02:30.000 Warders show on Belogginheads TV on YouTube. 0.77
02:02:34.000 There are two black professors who talk honestly about race and clearly diagnose that black folks are simply not meeting social standards.
02:02:42.000 They're super smart and worth a watch.
02:02:44.000 Great show, by the way.
02:02:46.000 Well, thanks.
02:02:47.000 No, I've never heard of them.
02:02:50.000 But maybe I'll check that out.
02:02:53.000 Based, I just read that.
02:02:54.000 Kevin Brose says the Washington Post just published an op ed titled Autopsies Can Uphold White Supremacy. 0.69
02:03:01.000 Forensic pathology that's inconvenient for black criminals could soon become a social construct. 1.00
02:03:06.000 These people are evil. 1.00
02:03:07.000 Well, yeah, and they do that with everything.
02:03:09.000 They do that already in Europe with the crime statistics.
02:03:12.000 They don't even publish the race of the criminals in certain countries because there's an obvious disproportionate representation with migrants and Arabs and blacks, and of course. 0.98
02:03:24.000 So it's only a matter of time before they just start taking away things that blacks are not excelling in or that don't paint a good picture, a pretty picture of blacks. 0.92
02:03:33.000 Standardized testing, literacy tests, et cetera, et cetera, math. 0.89
02:03:39.000 You know, instead of trying to raise these populations to a level which is, you know, acceptable or whatever, they want to lower the standard, which is, you know, that's how it always goes.
02:03:51.000 Wooza says Jaden said you, Jake, and Beardson all teamed up against him and that he is actually the best Mario Party player.
02:03:58.000 And that Jaden got the star for best minigame player, so he's the best at minigames and not Beardson.
02:04:03.000 Well, I would say to Jaden that we didn't all gang up on him.
02:04:07.000 He had the most stars.
02:04:09.000 He had the most stars, and we took them.
02:04:13.000 And that's how it works.
02:04:14.000 That's how the game is played.
02:04:16.000 We didn't all gang up on him.
02:04:18.000 He had the stars.
02:04:19.000 We took the stars.
02:04:20.000 Is that ganging up?
02:04:22.000 I think that's just called playing the game.
02:04:24.000 Jaden is the first one to cry bloody murder.
02:04:26.000 He cries foul over every little mechanic in the game.
02:04:29.000 Well, that's not fair.
02:04:30.000 You cheated.
02:04:31.000 Whatever.
02:04:32.000 For a gamer, the movement, there's a lot of excuses.
02:04:36.000 Just win.
02:04:37.000 I just win.
02:04:38.000 I just win.
02:04:39.000 I just won two out of the three games that I played.
02:04:42.000 I was no complaining.
02:04:43.000 It was no, oh, people are ganging up on me.
02:04:44.000 I just win.
02:04:45.000 Jaden's always with the excuses.
02:04:48.000 A real gamer says, I will do better next time.
02:04:51.000 A real gamer is the first one to show up to the internet cafe in the morning and the last to leave.
02:04:57.000 That's what a real gamer does.
02:04:59.000 They don't make excuses and say, oh, well, you were cheating.
02:05:03.000 Well, that was cheap.
02:05:05.000 Everyone doesn't like me.
02:05:06.000 Everyone's ganging up on me.
02:05:07.000 He's got this victim complex, the eternal Jaden.
02:05:10.000 Jaden cries out in pain as he strikes you.
02:05:13.000 Always and every time.
02:05:15.000 Cries out in pain as he strikes you down.
02:05:20.000 But that's okay.
02:05:21.000 He's a pretty good player.
02:05:21.000 He's pretty good.
02:05:22.000 You know, he's the best.
02:05:24.000 I will say he's pretty good.
02:05:27.000 Kawa says, or Kawa pronounced Kawa with a big super chat.
02:05:32.000 Thank you so much.
02:05:33.000 Big shout out.
02:05:34.000 Salute while rocking back and forth.
02:05:36.000 Big shout out.
02:05:37.000 JK, I got a nice paycheck for a recent writing project.
02:05:42.000 Paying tribute to the CEO of the movement.
02:05:44.000 Thanks for all you do.
02:05:45.000 Well, thank you so much, buddy.
02:05:46.000 It's Sasha, right?
02:05:47.000 It's Sasha.
02:05:49.000 Somebody corrected me once.
02:05:51.000 With a big super chat.
02:05:52.000 Thank you so much.
02:05:53.000 Big shout out.
02:05:57.000 We call it doing the Jaden.
02:06:01.000 But thanks, buddy.
02:06:02.000 Black Knight says if you're not with Groyper, then you're my enemy.
02:06:07.000 If you're not with Groyper, then you're my enemy.
02:06:12.000 Only a Groyper deals in absolutes.
02:06:15.000 I will do what I must.
02:06:17.000 You will try me to Lance videos.
02:06:23.000 If you're not with Groyper, then you're my enemy.
02:06:29.000 I'm becoming more powerful.
02:06:31.000 Than any conning shell ever dreamed of, and I'm doing it for you.
02:06:37.000 And I'm saying that to Kathy Zhu, and I'm doing it for you.
02:06:44.000 Obi-Wan was right. 0.81
02:06:45.000 Lance was right.
02:06:46.000 You've changed.
02:06:48.000 Okay, anyway.
02:06:50.000 Kevin Brose says: if the military scales their presence to areas where demographics and crime is highest, could Trump finesse a long-term occupation of black neighborhoods?
02:07:00.000 They could claim racism, but the data prove those areas as drug and human trafficking hotspots.
02:07:05.000 Is that too abrasive for Trump's second term?
02:07:08.000 It might be abrasive politically, but honestly, what does he have to lose?
02:07:13.000 You know, I think that if he restored law and order in those cities, it is difficult to say whether or not that would help him in those neighborhoods.
02:07:23.000 Because the thing is, if that just quietly was happening, I don't think it would win him a ton of support with whites in the sense that, like, I think that the only reason the riots might help Trump is because white people will vote for him to put down the riots.
02:07:38.000 I think if riots are not happening, nobody's going to vote for Trump for preventing riots.
02:07:43.000 Do you know what I mean?
02:07:44.000 Like, if it's out of sight, out of mind, people are not even thinking about it.
02:07:47.000 You can't run on, like, look, riots aren't happening.
02:07:51.000 You know what I mean? 0.65
02:07:52.000 And so the question would be if he deployed troops to those neighborhoods, would blacks gratefully vote for Trump for restoring order?
02:08:00.000 I don't know if that would be the case. 0.54
02:08:02.000 So, insofar as he's putting down the riots, there'd be a political benefit, but some kind of like long term structural change.
02:08:11.000 I don't know if that would have huge electoral gains.
02:08:14.000 Because, I mean, Republicans delivered the Civil Rights Act.
02:08:17.000 Republicans delivered the Voting Rights Act. 0.98
02:08:20.000 Did blacks gratefully vote for Republicans for that? 0.59
02:08:23.000 Not really.
02:08:24.000 The answer is no.
02:08:29.000 Modernity says, What instrument did you play in band?
02:08:31.000 I played the euphonium.
02:08:33.000 Eugene McCarthy says, Heroism is nothing if not fighting in the face of impossible odds.
02:08:38.000 Very true.
02:08:39.000 Devin says, What do you think about Pelosi becoming president if there is no presidential election results by December?
02:08:46.000 Well, I think the way it actually works is that there is just an election that's held in the House of Representatives.
02:08:54.000 Like a substitute election?
02:08:54.000 What do they call that?
02:08:56.000 So I actually don't think that's how that works.
02:08:58.000 I think the House of Representatives then decides who becomes the president.
02:09:03.000 But I'm pretty sure that's how the Constitution works.
02:09:06.000 Yo, yo, Chicken Strabasket King with a huge super chat, a huge super chat.
02:09:13.000 Big shout out.
02:09:14.000 I appreciate it, man.
02:09:16.000 Send me an email so I can send you a proper thank you note.
02:09:18.000 This guy's going crazy. 1.00
02:09:20.000 This guy is like the Sheldon Adelson of America First, but he's not Jewish, as far as I know.
02:09:27.000 He could be Iranian, who knows?
02:09:29.000 He could be, you know, the Russian, maybe he's NASA. 1.00
02:09:32.000 Somebody, okay, I'm going to tell everybody that ass mad woman super chatter. 0.92
02:09:40.000 You know, when I say they're all the same, that super chatter sent me an email last night saying, you know, you were really flippant about my super chat about the Federal Reserve. 0.98
02:09:49.000 If you don't start making your whole show about the Federal Reserve, I'm going to tell everybody that ass mad woman super chatter. 0.93
02:09:54.000 I know you're controlled opposition. 0.99
02:09:55.000 So maybe this is the Federal Reserve coming in with the money, right?
02:09:58.000 This is the Federal Reserve coming in with my, you didn't talk about the Federal Reserve.
02:10:02.000 Here's your award, goy, right?
02:10:05.000 That's that woman who, you know, for a long time I'm like, oh, she's great.
02:10:05.000 No joke.
02:10:09.000 You know, she's married.
02:10:10.000 She's traditional. 1.00
02:10:11.000 And then she sends me this nasty email last night.
02:10:14.000 You think you know somebody.
02:10:16.000 You know, you don't talk about the Fed. 1.00
02:10:18.000 You're either ignorant. 1.00
02:10:20.000 Here's a streamer who actually knows what he's talking about. 1.00
02:10:23.000 If you don't talk about the Fed, I'll know whether you're controlled or not.
02:10:26.000 Can you believe this?
02:10:27.000 This is somebody that, you know, all day long, oh, I love your show.
02:10:31.000 You're the best.
02:10:32.000 Oh, you're great.
02:10:33.000 This and that.
02:10:33.000 And then you say one thing they don't like, and it's maybe she's on her period or something.
02:10:38.000 That's how that goes, though. 0.98
02:10:40.000 People don't understand the fuck the fans mentality, and then that's where it comes from. 0.96
02:10:44.000 But anyway, that's the Federal Reserve money coming in. 0.98
02:10:47.000 That's the Federal Reserve truck pulling in with the wads of cash.
02:10:51.000 Well, hey, thank you so much, man.
02:10:53.000 I really do appreciate it.
02:10:55.000 Huge, huge super chat.
02:10:57.000 07s.
02:10:58.000 But we'll borrow that from Jaden.
02:11:00.000 07s in chat for Chicken Strip Basket King, the funder.
02:11:04.000 He says, Congrats on 40,000 followers.
02:11:06.000 Looking forward to see what you're working on now.
02:11:09.000 By the way, 2016 Trump's McDonald's order was two Big Macs, two filet of fish sandwiches, and a chocolate milkshake.
02:11:16.000 What a G. Speaking of G's, G's in the chat for Nick, the king of Groypers.
02:11:21.000 God bless.
02:11:22.000 Well, thank you so much, man.
02:11:23.000 I really do appreciate it.
02:11:24.000 Very generous.
02:11:25.000 And I got to get your email so I can send you a thank you note.
02:11:28.000 It's proper.
02:11:30.000 But I got to try the Trump order.
02:11:32.000 I don't know if I could do it.
02:11:34.000 That's too much food.
02:11:35.000 He's a big man.
02:11:36.000 He's like, what, 260 pounds, 6'3?
02:11:41.000 I'm nowhere near that as far as weight goes.
02:11:45.000 As far as height goes, everyone knows I'm 6' inches taller, but as far as weight goes, I don't know if I could put all that away.
02:11:52.000 I hear, though, that he takes the middle bun out.
02:11:56.000 Correct me if I'm wrong, but I heard that he takes the middle bun and the Big Mac out so it's less.
02:12:01.000 It's less carbs.
02:12:02.000 It's less filling.
02:12:03.000 So, two Big Macs without the middle bun, it's really more like a McDouble, right?
02:12:10.000 Like a quarter pounder, maybe.
02:12:11.000 I don't know if the patties are bigger than a McDouble on a Big Mac.
02:12:16.000 But that's more reasonable.
02:12:17.000 But two Big Macs, no middle bun, and then two filet of fish on top of that.
02:12:22.000 The milkshake is really, you could do a milkshake with anything, but it's like four sandwiches.
02:12:27.000 That's a lot of bread.
02:12:29.000 So, yeah, but he's a giant, man.
02:12:32.000 He is.
02:12:32.000 He is literally a giant in every sense of the word.
02:12:35.000 But thanks for that, buddy. 1.00
02:12:37.000 Based Cowboy says, You know, the bitches in North Korea are ugly when Kim Jong-un simp over Sarah Sanders, did he? 1.00
02:12:44.000 I didn't see anything about that. 1.00
02:12:46.000 Oh, oh, that thing did come out, right?
02:12:50.000 Where Kim Jong-un had a crush on her and Trump said, You might have to take one for the team to Sarah Sanders.
02:12:58.000 That was pretty funny.
02:13:00.000 Simon Skola says, Nibba's be like, Look at this based Goyette. 0.86
02:13:03.000 Her OnlyFans is only $5.
02:13:05.000 Yeah, cringe. 1.00
02:13:07.000 Don't do that.
02:13:08.000 No simping.
02:13:10.000 Feels like a wheel.
02:13:11.000 Says the shutdown of barbershops has only made them buzz life years off the population.
02:13:18.000 That's really good. 1.00
02:13:20.000 Polish American Groyper says, Hey, Nick, all I'm saying is that all people that are following Groyper underscore Polish on Twitter aren't gay. 1.00
02:13:29.000 Not to imply anything, but nah, JK, you straight, even though these nibbies on your dick. 1.00
02:13:35.000 Shaking my head. 1.00
02:13:36.000 I play it.
02:13:37.000 Catch you on the flippity flip, gangsta.
02:13:39.000 Okay, thank you for that. 0.55
02:13:41.000 Thank you for that, Polish American Groyper.
02:13:44.000 We love Polish.
02:13:45.000 I didn't know you were on Twitter.
02:13:46.000 I'll give you the follow.
02:13:47.000 He's a part of the show.
02:13:49.000 You know, we've had these characters come in and out of the show over the years.
02:13:53.000 Joe the Boomer, of course, you know, used to be a character on the show.
02:13:57.000 We don't do the Collins anymore, so he's not really around as much, but he's still doing the Daily Brap.
02:14:02.000 He's still doing his thing.
02:14:05.000 And who else?
02:14:06.000 Who else used to be a big player?
02:14:09.000 A background, a side character on the show.
02:14:13.000 Trying to remember some of the more.
02:14:14.000 Beardson used to do the Collins from time to time.
02:14:18.000 Based Fed.
02:14:20.000 Trying to think who else.
02:14:23.000 Bob, I think, made it in a few times.
02:14:25.000 There are a lot of good ones.
02:14:27.000 Polish American Gleipner, I think, official cast of the show. 1.00
02:14:31.000 Temple OS Missionary says you make a good point about knowing what to expect with another Red Revolution. 0.89
02:14:36.000 Many people are indeed better off with rootless oligarchs in the administration. 0.98
02:14:40.000 There's no chance of something like putting the first man into space.
02:14:44.000 It's a shame. 0.72
02:14:48.000 Who do you think was in charge in the Soviet Union?
02:14:52.000 You know, this idea that the people in power are not going to be.
02:14:56.000 Self interested, blood sucking.
02:14:58.000 I don't think Putin is, you know, maybe the oligarchs are rootless, but I think Putin loves Russia.
02:15:06.000 I mean, who manufactured the Russian Revolution? 0.93
02:15:08.000 It was all internationalists, it was largely a lot of Jewish people. 0.84
02:15:13.000 Stalin was from Georgia, you know.
02:15:15.000 Georgia was on the periphery of the Russian Empire, and he was running Russia from what, 1924 until 1953?
02:15:24.000 And Khrushchev, correct me if I'm wrong, but I. Believe he was from Ukraine.
02:15:30.000 He was either from Ukraine.
02:15:31.000 I know he died in Ukraine.
02:15:32.000 I don't know if he was from Ukraine.
02:15:35.000 Nikita Khrushchev died on September 11th, 1971, in Ukraine.
02:15:41.000 How do I know that?
02:15:42.000 I'm a genius.
02:15:43.000 I just am.
02:15:45.000 So, yeah, I mean, Stalin is from Georgia.
02:15:47.000 I don't know exactly where Khrushchev was from, and that's most of the Soviet Union right there.
02:15:57.000 So, it's like Animal Farm.
02:15:58.000 It's just like Animal Farm. 0.99
02:15:59.000 You're You replace the Tsar, you get the Russians. 0.93
02:16:01.000 You replace the Soviets.
02:16:02.000 You replace the Soviets, you get Putin.
02:16:04.000 You replace Putin, who do you get?
02:16:06.000 More of the same.
02:16:08.000 Temple OS.
02:16:09.000 I actually just read that one.
02:16:10.000 Doi.
02:16:12.000 Groyper Gamer says, My buddy won't vote for Trump now because of what Dave Smith has been saying.
02:16:17.000 I saw you did a debate with him, but not on your site because of bad quality audio.
02:16:21.000 Would you be interested in doing another debate to help Red Pill his audience before the election?
02:16:26.000 I never debated with him.
02:16:27.000 He interviewed me once during Groyper Wars, and he interviewed me once recently.
02:16:33.000 And I can't find the first interview anywhere, so it's not on the site.
02:16:36.000 Not because of the audio quality, because I just can't find it anywhere.
02:16:39.000 But, yeah, that's cringe.
02:16:41.000 I would debate him on that for sure.
02:16:45.000 Temple OS.
02:16:46.000 Oh, he just did a repeat. 1.00
02:16:48.000 Temple OS says, all the super hot girls in my high school look like they fell off a fucking train the moment they entered college. 1.00
02:16:54.000 Yeah, well, with a lot of these girls, it's not even just age, it's just their lifestyle. 1.00
02:17:00.000 A lot of these girls, they get into college and they start drinking beers and alcohol. 1.00
02:17:04.000 They drink like little pigs, little piggies. 1.00
02:17:07.000 You know, Steve Franzen doing the pig nose, piggy e girls, and heave ho. 1.00
02:17:14.000 That's what they do. 0.99
02:17:15.000 They drink. 1.00
02:17:15.000 They eat like shit. 1.00
02:17:17.000 And I've seen it in my own, like my friend group from high school, they all abandoned me. 1.00
02:17:21.000 And I look at pictures and they brought this one girl into the friend group who's just disgusting.
02:17:27.000 And I'm like, really?
02:17:27.000 This is who you're hanging out with now?
02:17:30.000 This slob? 1.00
02:17:31.000 And you see it all over the place. 1.00
02:17:33.000 They're all becoming little piggies, little piggy slobs. 0.98
02:17:36.000 It's gross. 0.99
02:17:37.000 Say what you will about me.
02:17:38.000 I'm not, you know, Larry the lobster or anything, but I'm not fat.
02:17:42.000 I take care of myself.
02:17:44.000 I'm a good body weight.
02:17:45.000 And for all that I talk about fast food, I really do have a relatively moderate diet.
02:17:51.000 I'll have fast food occasionally, but generally I eat a healthy breakfast.
02:17:56.000 I eat a healthy lunch.
02:17:57.000 My mom makes dinner, you know, so mostly healthy stuff.
02:18:02.000 I'll have a little bit of ice cream every now and again and, you know, the fast food, probably more than your average person, but I take care of myself.
02:18:09.000 The big thing is the pop and the alcohol.
02:18:13.000 It's always the drinks, it's the sugar, the high fructose corn syrup, and it is the alcohol.
02:18:18.000 Honestly, with McDonald's, It is bad for you in some ways, but it is not bad for you in other ways.
02:18:25.000 I think the real killer is not if you have a Big Mac, which is what?
02:18:29.000 It's meat, it's bread, and yeah, there's like trans fats, and the way it's prepared is unhealthy, but I think there's a big difference between you get a McDouble and fries and a glass of water versus you drink a big gulp every day and you drink a lot on the weekends and you eat a lot of like candy or things like that, you know?
02:18:49.000 So I think as long as you're eating just things from like the main food groups, you're all right, and you're not running a.
02:18:55.000 Calorie surplus, you should be fine, right?
02:18:58.000 So, but maybe I'm wrong.
02:19:01.000 I know there's a lot of people that are telling me, like, no, you have to eat raw meat.
02:19:05.000 No, no, no.
02:19:06.000 You have to grow it from a garden.
02:19:07.000 You have to get it local.
02:19:08.000 It has to be local.
02:19:10.000 It has to be local.
02:19:11.000 Excuse me, can I get local eggs?
02:19:13.000 Can I get local beef? 1.00
02:19:15.000 Shove local up your ass, dude. 1.00
02:19:17.000 It's all the same. 1.00
02:19:18.000 You think it makes a difference?
02:19:20.000 I mean, maybe it does, but at the end of the day, it's all meat, poultry, eggs, dairy, right?
02:19:26.000 Go to your local.
02:19:27.000 Get something local. 1.00
02:19:30.000 Faggot. 1.00
02:19:31.000 I hate that so much. 1.00
02:19:32.000 I see that on Twitter all the time. 1.00
02:19:33.000 All these faggots on Twitter, they're like, no, no, no, get something local. 1.00
02:19:37.000 Go somewhere local. 1.00
02:19:38.000 Support local jobs. 1.00
02:19:40.000 Blow it out your ass. 1.00
02:19:41.000 Who do you think is working these local jobs? 1.00
02:19:43.000 They say it on an economic point of view, like help local businesses.
02:19:46.000 Who do you think is running the local businesses? 1.00
02:19:48.000 Mexicans. 1.00
02:19:49.000 Mexicans are in the kitchen, Mexicans are the busboys. 1.00
02:19:53.000 Don't eat at McDonald's. 0.99
02:19:54.000 Support your local place. 1.00
02:19:56.000 The people at the local burger place are shit talking me on Facebook. 0.99
02:19:59.000 They're going to spit at my food. 0.99
02:20:00.000 And more than that, You want to get local ingredients. 1.00
02:20:05.000 Blow it out your ass. 1.00
02:20:07.000 That kind of stuff just makes me mad. 1.00
02:20:11.000 Everybody wants, no, you have to live your life my way.
02:20:14.000 You have to live your life my way.
02:20:16.000 Not good enough, right?
02:20:18.000 It's always some self righteous whatever.
02:20:23.000 Their lifestyle imperialism.
02:20:26.000 No, no, no.
02:20:27.000 Cold shower, local meat, eggs in your thing, whatever.
02:20:31.000 And you wake up at 4 a.m., go for a run, jump up and down. 0.96
02:20:35.000 How about shut up? 1.00
02:20:37.000 How about shut up? 1.00
02:20:38.000 Shut up! 1.00
02:20:39.000 How about I'm gonna get a Big Mac, I'm taking a hot shower, and I'm waking up at noon, and I'm gonna watch Chicago PD on Amazon Prime, and you worry about yourself, all right? 1.00
02:20:51.000 Keep it to yourself.
02:20:54.000 Anyway, I'm breaking free, I'm breaking free your lifestyle imperialism on me.
02:21:06.000 So.
02:21:08.000 Anyway, anyway, anyway, let's see.
02:21:12.000 Racist Incels says, Have you seriously not seen the Kantbot video yet? 0.99
02:21:16.000 What are you, some kind of loser? 0.99
02:21:18.000 What Kantbot video? 1.00
02:21:19.000 Which one? 0.89
02:21:20.000 Elected Groyper says, Looking to red pill friends?
02:21:22.000 Have them check out Atlantic City for the full effect. 0.99
02:21:25.000 Stay at Bally's.
02:21:27.000 Chaos, it smells, and you lose all your money.
02:21:29.000 Can't wait to be back to the Burbs and our kids tomorrow.
02:21:33.000 Oh, you had like a bad experience.
02:21:34.000 Now you're red pilled.
02:21:36.000 I lost my money at the casino.
02:21:38.000 I'm totally red pilled.
02:21:39.000 Well, don't gamble.
02:21:41.000 And pranks to some of these things.
02:21:43.000 People ask you to check out some made up.
02:21:45.000 Check out Bloopy Doop on the Fliggoo Bliggoo report.
02:21:54.000 That's funny. 1.00
02:21:55.000 That makes me laugh because it's true.
02:22:00.000 WD40 Glock says, Thanks for another great show.
02:22:03.000 Hey, thank you, man.
02:22:04.000 Thanks for the genie.
02:22:05.000 WD40 Glock, big shout out.
02:22:08.000 I appreciate it.
02:22:09.000 07's in chat.
02:22:13.000 L Ron says, Is that really more what you're used to, WD40 Glock?
02:22:17.000 I think it's more your speed.
02:22:18.000 That's what you've come to expect.
02:22:21.000 Elron says, I heard the catechism says 14.
02:22:24.000 I'm an integralist now.
02:22:26.000 Hey, that's what the catechism says.
02:22:28.000 I'm Catholic.
02:22:29.000 That's just the way it goes, right?
02:22:31.000 Black Knight says, Mom says, I got to go to bed.
02:22:34.000 Ah, well, good night.
02:22:36.000 Cointel Pepe says, To all my nibbas whose lives won't change one bit, the no simp September.
02:22:44.000 Okay, thank you for that.
02:22:45.000 Oh, it's because you're not simping.
02:22:47.000 Yeah, right on.
02:22:49.000 Imagine having to refrain from simping.
02:22:51.000 No simp September.
02:22:52.000 You should just not be doing it ever.
02:22:55.000 Like this one guy, Turning Point Gamora, named Nixonist, at Nixonist on Twitter.
02:23:00.000 Get it together, man.
02:23:01.000 Get it together.
02:23:02.000 Nobody wants to see you whining and complaining on Twitter. 0.96
02:23:05.000 No girl will love me. 1.00
02:23:06.000 Girls are evil. 1.00
02:23:07.000 All this stuff. 1.00
02:23:09.000 Be a man. 0.56
02:23:09.000 I don't want to see that on my timeline. 0.56
02:23:12.000 I don't want to see that on my timeline, okay?
02:23:14.000 Will you grow a pair?
02:23:15.000 Will you be a man already? 1.00
02:23:17.000 You think women want to see that?
02:23:18.000 You think women are watching your little temper tantrum on Twitter?
02:23:22.000 You think they're watching that spectacle you've created, and you think they're thinking, oh, oh, wow, what a winner.
02:23:29.000 And the other thing, I want a connection.
02:23:33.000 I want a connection.
02:23:34.000 Girls, I just want love. 0.97
02:23:36.000 No, dude, you're horny. 0.95
02:23:38.000 I just want a connection.
02:23:39.000 I want love.
02:23:40.000 Is that so much?
02:23:41.000 Oh, save it.
02:23:43.000 Save it.
02:23:44.000 Horny, right?
02:23:45.000 And as if, as if that's ever what it's about.
02:23:49.000 Just grow up.
02:23:49.000 This is the way of the world.
02:23:52.000 Come on, man.
02:23:53.000 It's so disappointing when I see that kind of stuff.
02:23:56.000 It's really do be your own griper.
02:23:58.000 So I don't want to see any more of that.
02:23:59.000 We already bullied DJ Audit the Fed.
02:24:01.000 He blacked out his Avi, you know, and I don't even know if he's still on Twitter anymore after that.
02:24:07.000 It's got to stop.
02:24:08.000 Enough.
02:24:08.000 Enough.
02:24:09.000 Women are looking at that and they don't want to be anywhere near that mess, okay? 1.00
02:24:14.000 Trust me on that. 1.00
02:24:17.000 I want a real connection. 1.00
02:24:18.000 Oh, shut up. 0.99
02:24:20.000 I'm so sick of hearing that kind of stuff. 0.99
02:24:22.000 Anyway, so I'm, yeah. 0.91
02:24:23.000 So if you see that guy, tell him I said to shut up.
02:24:26.000 Please, for his own good. 0.73
02:24:28.000 For his own good.
02:24:29.000 He posts good content.
02:24:30.000 He posts good content, but it's a little bit of tough love.
02:24:33.000 It's a little bit of tough love.
02:24:35.000 Okay, kid?
02:24:36.000 Okay, son?
02:24:37.000 Listen here, son.
02:24:38.000 I got many years on you.
02:24:40.000 I don't know.
02:24:41.000 Maybe he's younger than me.
02:24:42.000 Maybe not.
02:24:42.000 I have no idea.
02:24:43.000 But listen up, son. 1.00
02:24:44.000 Shut up. 1.00
02:24:45.000 Shut up. 1.00
02:24:46.000 Stop posting that online. 1.00
02:24:48.000 Nobody wants to see that, least of all women, but especially least of all me.
02:24:53.000 Okay.
02:24:54.000 Bob Sakamano says, especially fun show tonight.
02:24:57.000 Nicholas, you have done well.
02:24:59.000 Welcome to the fold.
02:25:00.000 Oh, thank you.
02:25:01.000 Ben says, Nick, eat the Trump order.
02:25:03.000 You have to eat good.
02:25:04.000 Maybe I'll do it on stream one time.
02:25:06.000 I'll probably make myself sick, but it'll be funny.
02:25:09.000 Kroib check says, Hi, Bob.
02:25:12.000 Rick Savage says, If you could legalize one crime, which crime and why rape?
02:25:17.000 Okay, disavow. 0.98
02:25:18.000 That's disgusting.
02:25:20.000 Disagree. 0.56
02:25:21.000 If I could legalize one crime, I don't know, probably speeding.
02:25:28.000 That's the only law that I want to break at any given time speeding.
02:25:33.000 I want to drive fast.
02:25:34.000 I want to, because in some streets, the speed limit's like 25, and you can very reasonably go 40.
02:25:40.000 It'll be like a major thoroughfare.
02:25:42.000 And for whatever reason, you've got the residential speed limit.
02:25:44.000 Let me go 40.
02:25:45.000 Let me go 40.
02:25:46.000 Let me go 45.
02:25:48.000 Let me blow a stop sign if there's nobody around.
02:25:52.000 I often find myself at 2 a.m. in the ghetto.
02:25:56.000 Well, I'm not often in the ghetto, but just generally, sometimes in the ghetto.
02:26:00.000 But just generally at a stoplight at 2 a.m., there's no one around, and I'm waiting there for like five minutes.
02:26:04.000 Why?
02:26:05.000 Let me just treat it like a stop sign after midnight, you know?
02:26:09.000 So there should be a sign like that, or they should make it blinking or something after a certain time.
02:26:14.000 We can have that.
02:26:15.000 We can have nice things like that. 0.99
02:26:17.000 So, I think that's, you know, it's dumb.
02:26:21.000 Okay, that's our last super chat. 0.92
02:26:24.000 Wow, that's going to do it for me tonight.
02:26:26.000 That's our show.
02:26:27.000 So, remember to follow this channel.
02:26:29.000 Remember to subscribe to my website.
02:26:30.000 Go to NicholasJFuentes.com.
02:26:33.000 It's only five bucks a month, and you get access to every episode of the show ever, plus most of the content I've ever done.
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02:26:48.000 So be sure to check it out.
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02:26:52.000 Remember, we're on the air Monday through Friday, 7 p.m. Central, 8 p.m. Eastern Standard Time.
02:26:57.000 I'm Nicholas J. Fuentes.
02:26:58.000 As always, thanks for watching.
02:27:00.000 Thanks to our super chatters in particular.
02:27:02.000 A huge, huge, huge shout out and thank you, a special thank you to Chicken Strip Basket King, who is a king.
02:27:11.000 I love the Chicken Strips.
02:27:12.000 I love the king.
02:27:13.000 We love it.
02:27:14.000 So big shout out to him.
02:27:15.000 But thanks to all of our top super chatters.
02:27:17.000 Thanks to Chicken Strip.
02:27:18.000 Thanks to Bobby Gray.
02:27:20.000 Temple OS, Polish American Groyper, really good comics, Hannibal Respector.
02:27:24.000 Big thanks to our top super chatters.
02:27:26.000 Thanks to everybody that super chats.
02:27:28.000 Thanks to everybody that is a subscriber on the site.
02:27:31.000 Thanks to everybody that watches the show.
02:27:33.000 We love you, and I'll see you tomorrow.
02:27:35.000 Until then, have a great rest of your evening.
02:27:39.000 Americanism, not globalism, will be our credo.
02:27:45.000 It's going to be only America first.
02:27:50.000 America first. 0.99
02:27:55.000 The American people will come first once again.
02:28:06.000 With respect