00:00:08.000Very excited to be back with you here tonight on Friday.
00:00:12.000We have a lot to talk about tonight, lots to get into.
00:00:16.000Big White Pill featured story is about a new plan which has been unveiled in the media for President Trump's 2024 bid, and it's about Schedule F, particularly Schedule F employees in the executive branch of government.
00:00:34.000And I think somebody asked me about this on my show on Wednesday.
00:00:37.000And if you've watched the show for a long time, this is something that I've talked about for months.
00:00:43.000I know I say that a lot, but in this case, it's true.
00:00:48.000And it shows you I know what's up, okay?
00:00:50.000I'm pretty vindicated on this kind of stuff.
00:00:53.000The new plan that President Trump has for 2024 is that once he wins the White House, if he wins the White House, he'll go in and fire every Schedule F. Employee in the federal government.
00:01:08.000And Schedule F workers are apolitical roles, mid level management in the bureaucracy.
00:01:16.000And typically, an incoming president will fire and then replace 4,000 people in government.
00:01:25.000And what the former president proposes to do is replace up to 50,000, 50,000 or more mid level bureaucrats in the federal bureaucracy.
00:01:38.000And if he did that, that would be completely transformative.
00:01:43.000And we've talked a lot on the show about that particular aspect of why Trump has to win in 2024.
00:01:50.000People, some people ask me, you know, why do you still support Trump?
00:01:55.000Why do you think it'll be any different?
00:01:57.000And it's because, well, the big problem in the first term was bad personnel, personnel's policy.
00:02:04.000And if you have bad personnel selected by Reince Priebus, Who was in charge of staffing the White House during the initial transition in 2016 and 2017?
00:02:15.000Well, you're going to have bad policy.
00:02:17.000And so I've actually known about this for some time.
00:02:19.000I've heard this from people that this is the plan, this is what they're going with in 2024 to flush out tens of thousands of workers and replace them, hopefully, with Trump loyalists, up to 50,000 of them.
00:02:33.000And if that were to be done, that would completely change the character.
00:02:39.000Of the federal bureaucracy in an extremely positive direction, obviously.
00:02:45.000We'll also be talking tonight about a new piece in the LA Times, which talks about it's pretty ironic how white American expats are rapidly taking over Mexico City.
00:02:59.000And so white Americans are taking vacations in Mexico, and a lot of them are moving to Mexico.
00:03:07.000And now, native brown skinned Spanish speaking Mexicans.
00:03:12.000Are starting to hate and resent the white foreigners that have immigrated to Mexico City.
00:03:20.000And they're making posters and they're attacking them in public.
00:03:25.000And that's what this piece is about is about how Mexicans are not happy about all this white American immigration coming into Mexico, which is pretty rich.
00:03:54.000I missed the show on Tuesday, I missed the show yesterday.
00:03:58.000But as I said on Wednesday, and I do apologize, but just so you understand where I'm coming from, as I said on Wednesday, I've been involved in this legal business for the past few days.
00:04:11.000It's been all day, every day, Tuesday through Thursday.
00:04:17.000And so it was all day Tuesday, and I got done very, very late, so I canceled the show.
00:04:23.000And I got done a little bit earlier Wednesday, so I did a show.
00:06:42.000So I'm just glad to be finished with it all.
00:06:46.000Still, I've been, by the way, I know that I really haven't kept you up to date on this, but still this weekend, I'm going to try and get to the Lauren Southern video final.
00:06:56.000I don't even think anybody even cares anymore.
00:07:46.000And the details are not all set in stone yet, but I'm going to be potentially doing another debate with Modern Day Debate on Monday, 8 o'clock, and it's going to be the same deal as the last debate.
00:07:59.000I'm going to do the debate, and then after that, I'm probably just going to do a normal show.
00:08:05.000So that's Monday, but 8 o'clock, so it's going to be earlier, 8 o'clock Central Time, and it's going to be another tag team debate, and one of the people that was on my team last time will be on my team again this time.
00:09:04.000So, like I said, I don't know if she's still going to show up because I just agreed to it the other day.
00:09:11.000I don't know if that's going to be, I don't know if all of that is going to work out the way we planned because I don't think there's any way she's going to come up against me.
00:10:27.000But immigration is obviously making everybody uncomfortable.
00:10:31.000It's changing the fabric of our country.
00:10:34.000Brown, Spanish speaking Hispanics from Mexico and the Northern Triangle, as well as lots of Asians, they're almost just as much now as the Hispanics.
00:10:45.000They're pouring into America and they're just messing everything up.
00:10:50.000They don't speak English, they have a low IQ.
00:10:53.000Well, the Hispanics do, the Asians have a higher IQ.
00:11:12.000But apparently, I've heard a little bit about this before.
00:11:16.000But there's this new article now about how the opposite is happening in Mexico that white American expats living in Mexico are starting to create problems for the brown locals.
00:11:29.000And now all the Mexicans hate the Americans.
00:11:33.000And so this is the article from LA Times.
00:11:37.000It says, Fernando Gorazapi was sitting with his friends in a cafe when he realized that once again they were outnumbered.
00:11:47.000Bustos, a 38 year old writer and university professor, said, We're the only brown people.
00:11:52.000We're the only people speaking Spanish except the waiters.
00:11:56.000Mexico has long been the top foreign travel destination for Americans.
00:12:01.000Its bountiful beaches and picturesque pueblos luring tens of millions of U.S. visitors annually.
00:12:07.000But in recent years, a growing number of tourists and remote workers.
00:12:11.000Have flooded the nation's capital and left a scent of new wave imperialism.
00:12:18.000The influx, which has accelerated since the onset of the COVID pandemic and is likely to continue as inflation rises, is transforming some of the city's most treasured neighborhoods into expat enclaves.
00:12:31.000In leafy, walkable quarters such as Roma, Condeza, Centro, and Juarez, rents are soaring as Americans and other foreigners snap up houses and landlords.
00:12:44.000Trade long term renters for travelers willing to pay more on Airbnb.
00:12:48.000Taquerias, corner stores, and fondas, which are small family run lunch spots, are being replaced by Pilates studios, co working spaces, and sleek cafes advertising oat milk, lattes, and avocado toast.
00:13:03.000And English, well, it's everywhere, ringing out at supermarkets, natural wine bars, and fitness classes in the park.
00:13:16.000All the nice places are being replaced by taquerias and freaking Mexicans peddling their junk.
00:13:24.000They've turned the sidewalks and the streets into a flea market, and it's Spanish everywhere you go.
00:13:29.000They don't even know how to say the numbers.
00:13:33.000If you go to, for example, in Chicago, if you go to the Mexican neighborhoods in Chicago, like Little Village and Pilsen, and I've done this, it's not uncommon.
00:13:42.000You go to a Mexican restaurant, and they won't be able to tell you when they ring you up at the register.
00:13:49.000The amount that you owe, they'll just turn the cash register around and point to the numbers because they don't know how to say the numbers in English.
00:14:15.000And so you go to a Mexican restaurant, and if it's counter service, you go and you pay.
00:14:21.000And they'll ring you up and it'll show the total.
00:14:24.000And normally they'll say, okay, your total will be, you know, $9.95.
00:14:28.000Well, they don't know how to say that.
00:14:29.000So they'll just turn it around and point to it and say, okay, you pay, you know, or whatever.
00:14:34.000So anyway, so it's like a mirror image across the Rio Grande.
00:14:40.000Like they're turning America into Mexico and we're turning Mexico into America or something like that.
00:14:47.000So the article goes on and says, quote, at Lardo, a Mediterranean restaurant where on any given night, Three quarters of the tables are filled with foreigners.
00:14:56.000A Mexican man in a well cut suit recently took a seat at the bar, gazed at the English language menu before him, and sighed as he handed it back.
00:15:43.000The sentiment echoed the hundreds of responses that poured in after a young American posted this seemingly innocuous tweet Do yourself a favor and remote work in Mexico City.
00:15:56.000One of the kinder replies said, Please don't.
00:15:59.000The city is becoming more and more expensive every day, in part because of people like you.
00:16:04.000And you don't even realize or care about it.
00:16:08.000And so the article goes on and talks a lot about this, but basically, you get the gist of it.
00:16:13.000It says the State Department says there are 1.6 million U.S. citizens living in Mexico, although it doesn't know how many are based in the capital specifically.
00:16:22.000Mexican census data tracks only foreigners who have applied for residency, and most remote workers don't.
00:16:29.000But the anecdotal evidence is compelling.
00:16:31.000In the first four months of the year, 1.2 million foreigners arrived at Mexico City's airport.
00:16:38.000Alexandra DeMo, who runs the relocation company Welcome Home Mexico, said she gets 50 calls a week from people contemplating a move.
00:16:47.000She said, We're just seeing Americans flooding in.
00:16:50.000It's people who maybe have their own business or maybe they're thinking of starting some consulting or freelance work.
00:16:56.000They don't even know how long they're going to stay.
00:16:58.000They're completely picking up their entire lives and just moving down here.
00:17:08.000Imagine your country is being flooded with transients.
00:17:12.000Who are citizens of another country and don't apply for residency and just show up, pack up their lives, bring it over, and they cross in between and they don't know how long they're going to stay, maybe temporarily, maybe indefinitely.
00:18:51.000Why would you pack up in El Salvador and move to Little Village in Chicago in America when Little Village is just like Mexico or El Salvador?
00:19:25.000But the kind of country they're living in is really not that much different where they're recreating it in America.
00:19:30.000And then, not only that, but then the same thing is happening in reverse.
00:19:33.000Americans are packing up to move to Mexico, and what do they wind up doing?
00:19:37.000Well, they're really just packing up America and then bringing it across the border into Mexico.
00:19:42.000And again, the weather might be better, and the food might be more authentic, and the culture is more vibrant, or whatever.
00:19:51.000But they're doing the same thing to Mexico that they're doing to Montana.
00:19:55.000Or to Idaho, or they're Californiaizing Mexico now.
00:20:00.000And so California is becoming like Mexico, and Mexico City is becoming like California.
00:20:06.000And in both cases, so not only is it sort of this pointless charade, but that notwithstanding, at the same time, it's also having this effect of displacing the locals.
00:20:17.000The Mexicans move to America, and it creates this nativist reaction.
00:20:22.000We don't like the Spanish language being spoken in the schools and in the government buildings.
00:20:30.000The kind of Mexican culture that prevails now in majority Hispanic cities, there's a white nativist response as a result of the economic and cultural displacement.
00:20:42.000And surprising nobody, Mexicans don't like it when it happens to them.
00:20:48.000And so it just goes to show globalization is kind of pointless.
00:20:53.000Also, it's a losing proposition for everybody.
00:20:58.000Certainly, the people that are moving are experiencing the benefits, but the people that are moving are in the minority.
00:21:03.000The 1 million plus foreign nationals living in Mexico far outweigh the number of natives living in Mexico.
00:21:13.000And the foreign nationals living in America are outnumbered by orders of magnitude by Native Americans, native born Americans.
00:21:25.000And so, this entire globalist project of international trade, international travel, is something that is benefiting the few at the expense of the many.
00:21:35.000It's benefiting a very, very small minority of very wealthy Westerners and the sort of upper crust of developed countries in Asia, Europe, and America that are creating these resort towns in third world countries.
00:21:52.000And it's benefiting a very, very tiny minority of travelers in third world countries that are migrating to Western countries at the expense of the people living there, too.
00:22:13.000Not only that, and so that's in the first place.
00:22:16.000Secondly, what this tells us is that when you have a nativist reaction anywhere, it just goes to show there's actually nothing wrong with that.
00:22:26.000Because notice how, would the LA Times ever cover in the same way white nativist response to Mexicans in America in the way that this article covers?
00:22:38.000Mexican nativist response to white Americans in Mexico would never happen.
00:22:45.000They're reporting about in this article Mexicans telling white people, you're a fucking plague, we hate you, leave.
00:22:54.000And does the LA Times say that they're Nazis, they're racist, that's horrible, we're doxing them, we're ruining their lives?
00:23:04.000It's saying, yeah, and that's perfectly justified.
00:23:06.000And you know, here's a nicer thing that they said.
00:23:09.000And actually, it's just so terrible what's happening to them.
00:23:14.000It goes without saying the LA Times, which is a liberal publication, would never write in such a neutral, friendly way about white people, about like the Ku Klux Klan, or even for that matter, forget even about that, about somebody like Donald Trump, who says, we're going to build the wall.
00:23:32.000Donald Trump got chased out of Los Angeles when he did a rally there in 2015 or 16 for saying the inverse of what the Mexicans are saying to the white people.
00:23:42.000And by the way, That's not even the only conversation about nativism that's happening.
00:23:47.000Yeah, white people don't like foreign born immigrants in America in some cases, and Mexicans don't like foreign born immigrants or foreign residents in Mexico.
00:24:02.000You've also got something happening domestically, too, where you've got people from California in the same way they're moving to Mexico City.
00:24:10.000People from California are also colonizing places in America, and it's not even racial.
00:24:18.000People from Los Angeles or New York City moving to Montana.
00:24:23.000And the same things they're describing in Mexico City about rents being driven up by people that rent out Airbnbs and local culture being transformed by yuppies, by foreign yuppies.
00:24:35.000That same phenomenon is happening within America, within the same sort of white American ethnic group, where white liberals from California, white affluent Californians, are moving to places in Montana or Idaho or Colorado.
00:24:52.000And they're displacing white Americans there.
00:24:56.000They're displacing their culture, driving up the rents, changing the local economy.
00:25:01.000And there's a white nativist response to that too in those states.
00:25:06.000And all of this is to say, this tells us something about how globalism is universally bad.
00:25:17.000What we're told about the nativist response to globalism in the expression of somebody like Donald Trump.
00:25:24.000Or expressed by white people is that it is indicative of racism and prejudice and bigotry and hatred and things like that, that it is motivated, in other words, by evil.
00:25:39.000It is bad faith and it is motivated by malice and prejudice and other ugly things.
00:25:47.000But what this article tells us and what these other instances of displacement show us is that.
00:25:55.000The negative reaction to globalism has nothing to do with prejudice and it has nothing to do with hatred or bigotry, or even for that matter, it's not even particular to white people.
00:26:06.000And it's not particular to Hispanics coming here.
00:26:10.000This is a global phenomenon that's affecting everybody.
00:26:15.000The globalization of trade, the globalization of economy, the globalization of government, and the globalization of populations is something that affects everybody.
00:26:32.000And it's honestly, it sometimes has a racial dimension, but it does not necessarily have a racial dimension.
00:26:42.000The thing that I think maybe, and I sort of hate to say this, but the thing that characterizes globalization universally as opposed to race is actually class.
00:26:56.000And, you know, typically I go on the show and say that class is.
00:27:01.000Is not the best explainer for what happens in the world.
00:27:05.000If anything, race is deeper, heritage is deeper, religion is deeper.
00:27:10.000But as far as globalization is concerned, it really is a class phenomenon because where white Americans and Hispanics are concerned in America and Mexico, you could say that it's not racial because it's Mexicans in America and it's Americans in Mexico.
00:27:30.000And the same thing is true about Californians moving to Montana or Californians moving to Colorado.
00:27:37.000Generally speaking, they're two white populations, or for that matter, people in Washington, D.C., moving to the northern Virginia suburbs, or people from New York moving to Nashville or Florida.
00:27:52.000What characterizes it, maybe more than anything, is that it's an elite phenomenon.
00:27:56.000Even when Mexicans move to America, the Mexicans are poor.
00:28:01.000The Mexicans are low IQ, they're uneducated, they don't own anything, they're illiterate often.
00:28:07.000The illegal Hispanic immigrants to America are poor, but the real beneficiaries of the mass immigration of Hispanics to America is the firms that hire them.
00:28:21.000And it's not just the firms generally, it's the people that own the firms in particular.
00:28:28.000So, in other words, it really is kind of a class problem.
00:28:32.000It's the people that own capital, it's the capitalist class that own the companies that have the wealth.
00:28:41.000They're the ones that are driving up the rents by buying vacation properties in Montana.
00:28:47.000They're the ones that are remotely working on their consultant firm in Mexico City.
00:28:53.000You know, middle class white people aren't doing that.
00:28:57.000It is people that have capital, it is people that have wealth that are moving to Mexico indefinitely to set up shop and go to Pilates and get their latte.
00:29:37.000Well, it's not the people that are being displaced at the lowest levels, it's not the blacks.
00:29:43.000That are being displaced by the illegal immigrants that take their jobs.
00:29:46.000It's not middle management that gets paid the same wage.
00:29:50.000It's the people that own those companies that make the profits.
00:29:54.000It's the owners that make the profit, and the profit comes from the cheap labor.
00:29:59.000So you could say the capitalists are driving the immigration from the third world to the first world because they profit from cheap labor.
00:30:08.000It's the capitalists that are offshoring the manufacturing to third world countries because.
00:30:13.000They're profiting again from the cheap labor.
00:30:16.000They're the ones driving the high skilled labor from foreign countries, and they're the ones because they're the ones that are getting those people here on a work visa.
00:30:27.000And then what they do with their profits in LA and San Francisco and New York City and in the richest zip codes, they take all that money that they have from the cheap labor that they've brought here or outsourced, and then they go and buy a vacation home in Montana and drive up the rents and displace the locals there.
00:30:46.000And so globalization is truly, you could say, an economic phenomenon which benefits the capitalist class at the expense of the workers.
00:30:57.000And to understand this, you have to understand what the lives of the rich and the workers look like.
00:31:05.000Middle class and working class people can't follow the jobs to China.
00:31:10.000Middle class and working class people that live paycheck to paycheck and don't have wealth, don't have a very high net worth, don't have a lot of flexibility with their job, those people are basically grounded.
00:31:26.000And they don't have a lot of disposable income.
00:31:30.000And certainly, they don't have the kind of wealth to be moving frequently or moving to foreign countries.
00:31:37.000And they certainly don't have the kind of money to speculate, and they don't have the kind of money to buy additional land or additional properties.
00:31:44.000And so, really, globalization is the luxury of the very rich.
00:31:49.000And that's ultimately what this story tells us.
00:31:52.000You could go beyond, you know, because you could read the story and you could say, wow, that's ironic.
00:31:58.000So, is it racist when the Mexicans say it?
00:32:04.000And you could say that and be satisfied.
00:32:06.000But what it really tells us, you know, let's just look at it from both perspectives and let's think about other ways in which people are being displaced.
00:32:14.000And then you kind of understand the fundamental problem here.
00:32:18.000And the fundamental problem is not Mexicans versus whites, the problem is really globalization.
00:32:28.000And it's really the disruption of nations.
00:32:33.000It's a disruption of local people, peoples in their lands with their cultures that are being disrupted currently by the sheer existence of super large amounts of capital, new emerging technology, and sort of like a robust international system of travel and trade.
00:32:54.000And so all of these emerging phenomena over the past 30 years are completely disrupting the ways of lives of billions of people.
00:33:03.000That's the story in every way you can imagine.
00:33:11.000And the people that are benefiting are the capitalists from Asia, from Europe, from America.
00:33:18.000And the people that are losing are the working class people the working class people in Montana, in Texas, in Florida, the people in Mexico, for that matter, the people in Mexico City.
00:33:32.000Now, that doesn't mean that there's not a racial dimension to it in particular instances, because there clearly is.
00:33:38.000One of the reasons why the displacement is so acute is because they're people of a different race.
00:33:44.000You could say certainly that it is more disruptive to have homeless Mexicans setting up a tent city in the town square than it is to have rich yuppies who they're going to drive rents up and then they're going to gentrify the area.
00:34:02.000I mean, they're both bad, but you could say that one is certainly more alien, and you could say it's a more intense situation.
00:34:10.000It's a more thorough displacement than the former.
00:34:12.000So it's not to say that race and religion are not a part of the character of globalization, but it is to say that what's driving it is really its capital.
00:34:22.000And nations are going to have to learn how to cope with this.
00:34:28.000That is fundamentally what the war in Ukraine is about.
00:34:32.000In some sense, that is what the West's confrontation with Russia is about.
00:34:36.000That is what the West's confrontation with China is about.
00:34:39.000That's what the fraying relationship between Turkey and the West is about.
00:34:44.000That is why populists are being elected all over the world.
00:34:48.000Like Lopez Obrador in Mexico or Bolsonaro in Brazil.
00:34:52.000That's why Erdogan enjoys popularity in Turkey, Putin in Russia.
00:34:58.000You could say certainly that Islamism is popular in the Middle East for the same reason.
00:35:04.000Now, ISIS was created by the CIA, but you could say that the sort of Wahhabi ISIS brand of Islamism is attractive to Middle Easterners as a reaction against Western conquest.
00:35:20.000Being welcomed back in Afghanistan is a reaction to Western intervention, to globalization.
00:35:29.000Now, it's not perfectly comparable, but it's a very similar phenomenon.
00:35:35.000And so, this is kind of like the thing of our century.
00:35:40.000This is the story of this century how technology and this international system is disrupting and destroying all the countries of the world.
00:35:51.000And so basically, every country is becoming the same.
00:35:55.000Every country is developing into something that is multiracial with a homogeneous culture where there's a very strict bifurcation between a sort of rich, cosmopolitan capital city, commercial port city, where you've got luxury hotels and luxury resorts and luxury services, and then the rest of the country is poor, no language, no race.
00:36:25.000And it seems like that is the kind of situation that's emerging all over the world.
00:36:32.000So, even in Mexico, even in the inverse.
00:37:07.000And honestly, I think that is maybe the most popular position right now.
00:37:12.000I think that Trump is still considered the presumptive frontrunner if he runs in 2024.
00:37:20.000I think he's still considered the leader of the party.
00:37:23.000And that shows in his record that his endorsements, for example, in this cycle, are still a very coveted commodity and they still seem to influence.
00:37:33.000Primary races and sometimes general races too.
00:37:37.000Even after January 6th, even after he was banned from Twitter, and after everything that's gone on, he lost the presidency.
00:37:46.000Nevertheless, some people are very critical of Trump.
00:37:49.000People like Mike Cernovich, Ann Coulter, and some people who watch my show have said, you know, why do you support Trump?
00:37:57.000He didn't do so good the first time, and he's said this, and he's done that.
00:38:02.000And what I've said over the past few months to reassure people.
00:38:06.000I know people that are going to be in the next administration.
00:38:11.000And what I've heard, and this was going to be true about the second term if he secured the presidency in 2020, is that the plan is to fire everybody in the deep state.
00:38:24.000That when he gets into office next, and it should have been in the last election, but in 2024 too, the goal will be to replace as many people in the bureaucracy as possible and to completely flush out the deep state bureaucrats and replace them with.
00:38:43.000And so I've said that that's really what we're playing for.
00:38:45.000What we're really playing for in 2024 is not even so much, hey, give Trump another chance.
00:38:51.000It's more like Trump is going to bring people in that will fire everybody in the bureaucracy and essentially destroy and scatter the deep state.
00:39:01.000And that's going to fundamentally change the government.
00:39:04.000And I've had it on good authority that that's the plan.
00:39:07.000And so there was a big article this week.
00:39:09.000It was actually reported across the news media.
00:39:12.000I saw it in Axios, I saw it in The Independent, in a few other places.
00:39:54.000It says, Donald Trump has plans to purge the so called deep state beyond what any president has done before if he runs for and wins the presidency in 2024.
00:40:06.000And as many as 50,000 government workers could find themselves on the chopping block.
00:40:11.000The former president, if elected again, would move in with a plan being drawn up now to drain the swamp and cut tens of thousands of civil servants from what are typically apolitical roles.
00:40:23.000He would clean house of mid level staffers at the Pentagon, Justice Department, State Department, and beyond, and bring in thoroughly vetted candidates who were found to be more closely aligned with his America First agenda.
00:40:39.000After interviews with over a dozen Trump world insiders, the outlet's investigation found that Trump is planning to use an executive order called Schedule F, which he issued in October 2020 and Biden later rescinded.
00:40:54.000The order would reclassify tens of thousands of civil servants who were deemed to have some influence over policy as Schedule F employees, which would strip them of their employment protections.
00:41:07.000New presidents typically replace around 4,000 political appointees to align agencies with their new agenda, but below them are a mass of federal workers who have strong employment protections and typically continue in their role from one administration to the next.
00:41:23.000And this is a really important concept.
00:41:26.000This is a really important concept to understand.
00:41:30.000And let me explain it this way because I have a lot of friends that worked in the Trump administration.
00:41:35.000And one of the most brilliant ones that I knew, this is how he explained it to me.
00:41:40.000This is how the federal bureaucracy works.
00:41:43.000So the president is elected, and the president, of course, appoints people to lead a transition team.
00:41:52.000And those people lead the transition from one administration to the next.
00:41:57.000Now, most people that work in the federal government stay on, no matter who is the president.
00:42:05.000And they call it the deep state because it's deeper than politics.
00:42:10.000Politics is elections, and elections refresh a certain number of appointees and elected officials every two, four, six, or eight years.
00:42:21.000And so there are people you could say that are shallow, like the presidency and like the cabinet.
00:42:29.000The cabinet members and the agency heads and the deputies and the people below the deputies, and those people are flushed out every year or every cycle.
00:42:39.000The Secretary of State has changed with every administration, at least, sometimes within an administration.
00:43:47.000It is the executive branch of government which is tasked with interpreting those laws, importantly, and enforcing them.
00:43:55.000So you've got the president at the top, the people that run the departments and agencies, and then beneath them are all the people that on a day to day basis are interpreting the law and enforcing the law.
00:44:08.000And you could say that that, in a sense, makes them policymakers because they're given the laws and then they've got to apply them.
00:44:16.000And they have wide discretion in how they choose to interpret the law.
00:44:21.000And that interpretation is what you would call policy.
00:44:26.000So, in other words, this army of tens or hundreds of thousands of workers that are deeper than elections, deeper than politics, that are not replaced from administration to administration and election to election, people that are nameless, faceless, unaccountable, that work in the same jobs their entire lives.
00:44:48.000Those are the people that are really creating the policy.
00:44:52.000Those are the people that, by way of our constitutional way of government, by way of interpreting and enforcing the laws in their discretionary way, they're the real policymakers.
00:45:03.000So that tells us that our entire government is run by bureaucrats.
00:45:07.000That's what we say when we say we have a managerial society.
00:45:10.000This is how the private sector works to some extent.
00:45:13.000This is how the public sector works managers and bureaucrats, middle and low level bureaucrats, Are really the ones that are making the policy because on a day to day basis, they are the ones interpreting and enforcing the laws in many different cases.
00:45:31.000And so, anyway, back to what I was saying earlier this is how a friend of mine described it to me in the Trump administration.
00:45:39.000How policy is made is that it's really about agreement.
00:45:43.000And so, Congress will pass laws, they give it to the executive branch, and at the lowest level, at the lowest level, Bureaucrats will take the laws and interpret them.
00:45:55.000If there is disagreement between the lowest level managers, it will be passed up to their superior.
00:46:03.000If there's disagreement between their superiors, it will be passed up to the next level.
00:46:10.000But it starts at the bottom and goes to the top.
00:46:13.000And so the decisions that go all the way up to the top are really the issues where there is disagreement that goes all the way up the ladder, ultimately to the level of the deputies and then to the level of the cabinet members.
00:46:26.000And so the president of the United States is really only making decisions on the broadest and the biggest and the most contentious issues.
00:46:37.000Almost everything else, then, is a consequence of how that works.
00:46:40.000And this is how it was explained to me by somebody that worked in the administration.
00:46:44.000As a consequence of this, obviously, most things are decided before those issues go all the way up.
00:46:54.000Most of these policies are being made then by the lowest or middle level policymakers.
00:47:02.000And only when the president decides to take the initiative.
00:47:07.000And instructs a cabinet member, and the cabinet member takes the initiative, or the department or agency head takes the initiative.
00:47:15.000Does policy actually flow from the top to the bottom?
00:47:19.000Only in rare cases, because the president and the cabinet members only have so much energy, and the cabinet members all have their own agenda.
00:47:27.000And so, only when the president and the cabinet member take initiative and push very strongly and are energetic, are they able to initiate top down policy.
00:47:38.000Everything else is decided at the middle and the lower level.
00:47:41.000That is why something like this is so transformative.
00:47:44.000When we talk about the deep state and drain the swamp, that's what's really going on here.
00:47:50.000If you change 50,000 of these people that have been in DC forever, they've all got the same ideology.
00:48:19.000Politics is one big incestuous club like that.
00:48:23.000And so, if you're able to break that cycle, if you're able to subtract a significant percentage or fraction of those people and replace them, you're talking about a clean break within the deep state.
00:48:37.000And you're talking about a real refresh and a real restart in policy at the lowest levels.
00:48:44.000And so, why did things not fundamentally change under Trump?
00:49:21.000Legal immigration was cut 92% in 2020.
00:49:25.000And so, where there was an initiative, you know, some of the big things got done, but I think everybody agrees it wasn't a revolution.
00:49:31.000Trump did not revolutionize the way the country is, he did not make America great again.
00:49:37.000And that's because, you know, one guy can only do so much.
00:49:41.000And one guy with a half dozen loyalists leading departments can only do so much.
00:49:47.000But if you bring in the manpower, if you bring in the army, the officer corps in the Pentagon, in the State Department, you're changing foreign policy.
00:49:56.000If you bring an army of bureaucrats in the DOT and the Department of Agriculture, you're changing policy.
00:50:02.000If you bring in all those people into the Commerce Department or Treasury Department and into those other agencies and into the intelligence agencies, you're changing policy.
00:51:13.000And that's what we're playing for ultimately in 2024 flushing the deep state and replacing it with solid people.
00:51:21.000That's how you're going to get a real revolution in policy.
00:51:24.000And that all has to do with how the government really works.
00:51:27.000Anyway, I didn't even finish reading the article.
00:51:29.000So that's how, and I kind of just did the whole thing, but that's how it works.
00:51:34.000But the article goes on it says the Trump official who came up with the Schedule F order said it could have.
00:51:40.000Apply to as many as 50,000 of the sum 2 million federal workers.
00:51:45.000Other Trump allies say the figure will not be nearly that high because firing a smaller segment of anti Trump bad apples would be enough to trigger behavior change.
00:51:54.000Doing so could strip mid level government staffers of any sense of job stability and set a new precedent, forcing future new presidents to seek out and install their own loyalists throughout the bureaucracy.
00:52:06.000That's assuming that there would be any future presidents and there wouldn't be a dictator for life, but the more the better.
00:52:15.000As long as the goal is to shoot high, and here's what you really have to do.
00:52:19.000You don't, in a sense, you don't really need to go in there and have 50,000 names.
00:52:23.000What you need to do is bring in people at every level to control personnel.
00:52:29.000And so you can bring in a guy to the DOT, and he can bring in a guy beneath him, and that guy can bring in a guy beneath him, and that guy can bring in, you know, a dozen people to fill up.
00:52:39.000And so all these people are going to fill up their offices with people they know and people that are better.
00:52:45.000And so, in a sense, As long as the overriding ambition is cleaning house and sort of concentrating on these nodes and replacing the bad apples, replacing the influential people, bringing in people that are going to hire other people, that's what needs to be done.
00:53:05.000And if you can do that successfully to a large extent, you're going to get revolutionary government.
00:53:11.000You're going to get a complete revolutionary overhaul in the way government works.
00:53:16.000Because look at the Trump administration.
00:53:38.000So if you bring in people that believe in Trump's message and believe in America first, well, then you're going to get a different kind of government.
00:53:46.000You're going to get a different policy on every level.
00:57:19.000If you and I together become influential and successful and very skilled, we're going to become a very formidable team that will be able to change the world.
00:57:30.000Some people think, how are we ever going to do this, that, or the other?
00:57:37.000If every person that saw these problems became as rich and powerful and skilled and competent and smart as possible, you know, you got an army of geniuses.
00:57:56.000I mean, if you go out and become a rich and powerful guy and, you know, everybody else in your generation doesn't meet you halfway, well, at least you still get to be, you know, a successful person.
00:58:09.000But that's really what we got to be playing for is everybody's got to become, it's your obligation.
00:58:14.000We're in a war, so we're all soldiers.
00:58:16.000And if you're a soldier, you got to train for the battle.
00:58:21.000Everybody's got to be fighting their own battle to become, everybody's fighting on their own battlefield, in a sense, fighting for territory, fighting for equipment, fighting for training, drilling, those kinds of things, you know?
00:58:36.000That's how you have to think about it.
00:58:46.000And we've got to link the teams together and build networks.
00:58:49.000And we've got to raise money for the army.
00:58:51.000And we've got to become smart and tactically minded and fit, physically fit too.
00:58:57.000And if we can raise up an army of genius, fit, white guys, it doesn't matter what the percentage of white people in America is because we will control the world.
00:59:08.000You know, like that's how you have to think about it.
00:59:10.000People are always saying, oh, well, the country's going to be minority white.
01:00:29.000And so, if we can raise up 10, 50, 100,000 genius, fit, powerful people, yeah, those people can run the government and shape the country the way they want it to be.
01:00:45.000And that is a fraction of a percent of the entire population.
01:00:48.000So, you know, people say, oh, we're going to lose Texas.
01:00:50.000Oh, we're going to be half the population 70%, 60%, 50%.
01:00:57.00010, 50, 100,000 people run the country.
01:01:02.00010, 50, 100,000 people run the country.
01:01:05.000They make most of the decisions that affect everyone else.
01:01:09.000So it doesn't matter what the 300 million, 50, 70, 60% of 300 million, what matters is the composition of that very small minority that is making the decisions.
01:01:19.000Our goal is to get in control of those specific institutions that run the country, and that's a smaller number of people.
01:01:27.000So, you have to think in terms of what the victory conditions are and where the bunkers are, where the fortresses are, where the castles are, where the officers and the kings and the princes are.
01:01:39.000And we've got to take over the fortresses.
01:02:36.000Rapist bad hombres taken from the border and dropped off at Lollapalooza.
01:02:41.000Yeah, I literally saw that the other day.
01:02:43.000I was driving around downtown yesterday and I saw they're setting up for Lollapalooza and there's literally just like bums hanging out all around it.
01:03:32.000I think it's they have someone looking for me, and when they see me follow the same people every time and tweet from the same location and so on, I think they.
01:03:47.000I think they look for the account with the liminal space header and they look for the account with like the purple tinted Avi and they look for the account that gets the same 1,000 followers in 12 hours and follows the same 60 people.
01:04:07.000I think they're looking for that pattern.
01:05:16.000I will get literally the biggest spaces.
01:05:19.000People are on Twitter under their real names, which they promote, and they're on there for years, and they're allowed to accumulate followers over a long period of time, and they're doing spaces constantly, and they can't get 50 people in a space.
01:05:31.000I come on there one day, and I get thousands of unique viewers, and I get hundreds of people watching concurrently, which is bigger than your average space, bigger than most people can pull.
01:05:42.000I think Martin Shkreli came on a space after being in jail for six years.
01:08:40.000They don't even see, you know, where we bought advertising on every television, every billboard.
01:08:46.000If you're a good man, get out of the city so God could destroy it.
01:08:49.000And some homeless bum who doesn't have an internet connection is just sleeping under a bridge, being a good man, preventing the city from being destroyed by a nuclear bomb, being destroyed by fire from heaven.
01:11:16.000But no, I don't try to red pill on my.
01:11:18.000Well, I mean, I'll sort of, I try to sort of broach certain things with him, but he just, I just don't think he really is interested in politics at all.
01:11:29.000Because I try to, because I'm a very suggestive person.
01:11:34.000I'll like suggest things in a very subtle way, and I try to slip something in there sometimes and just kind of be like, you know, so here's the thing like this and this, and I broach it very delicately.
01:11:46.000He just seems sort of like, He's just sort of not really, it just doesn't matter to him, it seems.
01:11:54.000And I think that's how average people are.
01:11:56.000I think average people are just kind of like, whatever.
01:12:44.000I'd be willing to debate any of them, honestly.
01:12:46.000I'd be willing to sit down with any of them Nick Martin, Christian Piccolini, Michael Hayden, any of those guys.
01:12:55.000And I don't know how productive that would be, but you know, here's the thing.
01:13:01.000They're just fundamentally wrong about us and objectively.
01:13:07.000Maybe it's naive of me to think that we could achieve understanding, but I do think that would be interesting.
01:13:15.000Because I've been able to sit down with Destiny, and he kind of gets me now.
01:13:18.000He doesn't agree with me, but I think Destiny does get me.
01:13:21.000And even a lot of his followers do, too.
01:13:23.000You know, I went into a Discord call with some of his followers, it was so funny.
01:13:29.000After the season finale of the Obi-Wan show, I went into Destiny's Discord server, or one of the servers that his fans are in, and they were all in there talking about the show, and I jumped in the call.
01:13:42.000And it was a black guy, and it was a male, the female, transsexual, and some other guy, and some other girl.
01:14:03.000And then we just started talking about politics.
01:14:07.000And keep in mind, these are all fans of Destiny, and you got a black guy in there, and you got a tranny in there, and you got a few other people in there.
01:14:15.000And I'm talking to them, and I'm like, look, because they're like, well, aren't you homophobic?
01:14:23.000And I said, look, I said, I believe in God.
01:14:27.000I said, if you believe in God, then you believe in God.
01:14:30.000You know, that there's rules and there's morality, our morality comes from God.
01:14:34.000You know, I explained the whole thing to them.
01:14:36.000And I said, the difference is, you know, you don't believe in God.
01:14:42.000And so you don't think there's any rules.
01:14:44.000And our morality is fundamentally different.
01:14:46.000You think that as long as it doesn't hurt people and your view is about comfort or, you know, utility and happiness as a function of utility or the reverse and things like that.
01:15:17.000And we went into these things, and they're like, yeah, okay, I get it.
01:15:22.000And I haven't talked to left wing people in a long time, but ever since me and Destiny started talking, and he's kind of said, look, I don't think you're a Nazi anymore.
01:15:32.000I just think you're a Christian, et cetera, et cetera.
01:15:36.000And so, even though we still disagree, we're able to banter and we're able to talk about the disagreements.
01:15:43.000And to me, that's actually very interesting to have a dialogue again that's civil and a little bit deeper than, like, hey, we both hate woke PC, but something deeper that's like, well, why do we disagree?
01:15:54.000Because I actually am interested in that.
01:15:56.000I am interested in why do people disagree?
01:15:58.000Why are people out there that don't see these things?
01:16:22.000And you get a guy like Nick Martin, who's one of these journalists, and he's on Twitter scratching his head saying, Nick is a hardcore racist, but he idolizes Kanye West.
01:17:16.000I do this show because it's funny, because it's fun, and I want to know the truth.
01:17:20.000And so, if there's people out there that think I'm evil or disagree with me, well, you know, I can kind of, I think I know why they think that, but that's why I want the confrontation.
01:17:31.000I don't want people to be able to go and hide over there and be wrong privately.
01:17:35.000You need to be wrong in front of me so I can say, no, you're fucking wrong.
01:19:58.000All these right wing goofballs coming out to obfuscate a rising Christian nationalism by trying to muddy its definition only help the enemy.
01:21:34.000You know, like what I hated about the sequel trilogy more than anything else is that it was completely incoherent.
01:21:41.000It was just sort of like, okay, this happens, now this happens, now this happens, and oh, what if he said this?
01:21:46.000And the whole thing is just kind of like there's nothing deeper there.
01:21:49.000It's just like an action movie, it's just a throwaway action movie with.
01:21:53.000Like a lot of people throwing out things they thought would look good or sound good or sound cool or look meaningful, but there wasn't any deeper meaning.
01:22:03.000And the prequels, and I've talked about this on stream before, the way that they connect, the way that they parallel the original trilogy, the themes, the motifs, the things that are said to kind of rhyme throughout the show, how they develop, the political stuff, like, There's so much there.
01:22:26.000And that's what I really love about it.
01:22:27.000There's so much that it takes a lot for it to really sink in.
01:23:32.000That's what I hated also about the sequels, there's no world building.
01:23:36.000In the prequels, you're really, and this is what makes Star Wars great, it feels like you're just kind of, you really are being taken into another world.
01:23:44.000And you're being transported into another world because it doesn't feel like you're on a, like you're on the It's a Small World Disney World ride where you're kind of like on a track and things are there to be shown to you and you're sort of like self consciously being put in a world.
01:24:03.000And things that aren't really given context, and things that aren't really explained, and things that are completely alien and mysterious.
01:24:11.000And it really does feel like a completely alien world.
01:24:15.000So there's the world building, you know, it's not just a sci fi movie because you've got this like religion.
01:24:21.000You've got this ancient religion, this Jedi and Sith thing, and that's superimposed on a political thing, you know, a republic and separatists.
01:26:05.000You ever play Sudoku, and you'll be completing the puzzle, and then you'll get to a point where you figure out a number, and then it's like a domino falls, and it's so satisfying.
01:26:22.000Is this number, then that is this number, then that is this number, and then you kind of, it's a very slow, difficult thing, and then it all kind of just falls.
01:26:35.000And that's how Revenge of the Sith feels it's like the former two movies and the succeeding three movies are all kind of like everything kind of plays out in this big transition.
01:26:48.000And so it's like one thing after another, the dominoes fall.
01:26:52.000And, uh, And you get Darth Vader, and you get Luke and Leia, and you get them on Tatooine and on Alderan, and you get C3PO and R2D2 on the ship, and it sets up Yoda and Dagobah, and it sets up Obi Wan becoming Ben Kenobi, and it sets up the Empire being completed, and Palpatine becoming Darth Sidious, and it completes all these things,
01:27:20.000and it finishes the first two, it sets up the next three.
01:27:25.000So, I think that's why it's so enjoyable.
01:27:57.000I don't think I've ever said that religion has much to do with it.
01:28:01.000I don't think that religion has a ton to do with it.
01:28:08.000You know, because I think Milo asked me this when I was on his show years ago, and E. Michael Jones has said this, and I disagree with him on this.
01:28:16.000It seems like race is the factor, not religion, because you're right.
01:28:21.000And look at Asian countries Asian countries are not Christian and they're rich.
01:28:27.000And the poorest countries in the world.
01:28:30.000It's not Christianity which unites them.
01:28:47.000I know Italy's not as Catholic as it once was, but historically, that was also true.
01:28:52.000And the Protestant countries are almost Protestant because they contain the things that make them rich.
01:28:59.000I think that Northern European countries are rich for the same reason that they're Protestant.
01:29:04.000And they're Protestant because they're individualistic, and well, that's the primary thing.
01:29:12.000I think that's why they're liberal, and I think that's why they're.
01:29:15.000And they also happen to have high IQs, although I think it's more to do with their, with other factors besides IQ, because, you know, Asians are high IQ and they're not individualistic, but they're also successful.
01:29:27.000But they developed the kind of individualistic, liberal culture, which cultivated commercialism and pride in their work and industriousness and things like that.
01:29:42.000So I think it's a little bit more complicated than you're making it out to be, but I think that.
01:29:46.000The same kind of cultural traits that made them Protestant are the things that made them liberal, are the things that made them capitalists and commercial, and those are the things that made them rich.
01:30:23.000Point being, it has a lot more to do with IQ, I think, and culture that makes a country rich.
01:30:31.000And IQ and culture are reasons why, or rather, I think maybe predominantly culture is the reason why countries adopt a particular religion.
01:30:42.000Because if you're trying to parse wealth and IQ and religion, I think you're going to find a lot more of a trend line with IQ and wealth than you are with religion and wealth.
01:30:54.000Because if you're going to say that Russia is a Christian nation and Italy is a Christian nation, and even to the extent that Northern European countries are Christian, they're not comparable to African countries, which are Christian.
01:35:19.000China was almost consistently more technologically advanced and more wealthy than the West for thousands of years.
01:35:27.000And in the Middle Ages, in the time of the Renaissance and afterward, shortly afterward, in the 14th, 15th, and 16th century, the Chinese had the capability to build large seafaring ships and they had navigation technology and they could have sailed to the New World.
01:35:49.000And they could have sailed south and east, and they could have been the ones to colonize all of the world.
01:35:55.000They really had that technology, and their technology was more advanced than ours, and population bigger and wealthier too.
01:36:04.000And for a long time, it was sort of neck and neck, but the Chinese were, throughout history for thousands of years at various times, more advanced.
01:36:26.000And the question, but particularly with China, why didn't they?
01:36:29.000Why didn't they sail out to the New World?
01:36:32.000And that's because Asians are fundamentally different than Europeans.
01:36:36.000And although they're both advanced, high civilizations, refined, advanced, sophisticated, high civilizations with high IQs, and both ancient, although Asia more ancient, what separates the Asians from the Europeans is they do not have the Faustian spirit of.
01:37:08.000They want to go beyond the atmosphere.
01:37:12.000They want to sail and find new worlds and new lands and new riches.
01:37:16.000And they want to invent new things and they want to go beyond.
01:37:20.000That's what Spengler says characterizes medieval European civilization, which is different than Magian Middle Eastern civilization and the Fertile Crescent, is Faust.
01:37:33.000The Faustian spirit, European spirit of going beyond.
01:37:37.000And he said this is characterized in the cathedrals, which reach into the heavens.
01:39:07.000We're the civilization, we're the middle of the world, we're the center of the universe.
01:39:12.000We are the civilization that the heavens created, and so we're always going to have the best civilization.
01:39:19.000And so, you know, why is this relevant?
01:39:23.000American fears of Chinese domination and hegemony come from a false assumption that the Chinese are like us, because that's what Europeans did, and that's what Americans did.
01:39:55.000And so that's why this idea that there's an inevitable conflict brewing between Americans and the Chinese, the same logic that applied to the British and the Germans as hegemons, or the French and the British as hegemons, or the Americans and the Russians, doesn't apply to the Americans and the Chinese because the Chinese are not Europeans.
01:40:19.000I don't think the Chinese want world domination.
01:40:21.000I don't think the Chinese want to colonize America.
01:40:27.000They want to be wealthy, they want to be the center of the world, but I don't think they have that same conquering spirit.
01:40:36.000So, for that reason, they're not the threat that neocons suggest that they are.
01:40:44.000That's the fundamental misunderstanding.
01:40:46.000Now, then again, it is human nature to be greedy and Power hungry, and so who knows if China will be more like that now.
01:40:57.000But historically, that's why they didn't benefit from the previous five centuries of European domination that was afforded to them by colonialism and exploration.
01:45:06.000Now, they'll want a new one that isn't mean like me, or doesn't say the N word like me, or doesn't name the Jews like me, or doesn't, you know.
01:45:15.000They all want a Nick Fuentes that they like.
01:45:17.000They all want the Nick Fuentes that they can control, and the Nick Fuentes they can like.
01:45:22.000But the reason why they love Nick Fuentes is because he cannot be controlled.
01:50:40.000I just compared Kai to Johnny Sack because after Ralphie's 40 pounds mole joke about Johnny's wife, he had this irrational rage every time Ralphie was brought up LaMau BTW because Trey won.
01:56:04.000The prequels have awesome vehicles and ships the Republic gunships with open sides, the Elonibu starfighters, the big spherical core ships.
01:56:44.000Whereas in the prequels, you get the Battle of Naboo, the Battle over Naboo, you get the Battle of Geonosis, you get the Battle over Geonosis.
01:56:55.000In Star Wars 3, the Battle of Utapa, you get the Battle of Kashyyyk, you get the Battle of Mygiddo, you get the Battle over Coruscant, Felicia.
02:02:57.000Bus underscore in underscore boots sent $5.
02:03:01.000So I've known this nigga Playboy underscore Cardi in chat since middle school, and this nigga still mad cuz I fucked his bitch in high school.
02:03:07.000Like chill nigga, she never really loved you.