America First - Nicholas J. Fuentes - October 06, 2017


Stop Having Premarital Sex | America First Ep. 26


Episode Stats


Length

1 hour and 45 minutes

Words per minute

178.05

Word count

18,784

Sentence count

1,526

Harmful content

Misogyny

54

sentences flagged

Toxicity

135

sentences flagged

Hate speech

180

sentences flagged


Summary

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

On this episode of America First, host Nicholas J. Fuentes ( ) and host Alex Blumberg ( ) answer all of your questions and talk about the birth control ruling from the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) and the Iran situation. They also discuss President Trump's position on abortion and some of the other controversial topics in the news.

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.
00:00:05.000 You are watching America First.
00:00:06.000 My name is Nicholas J. Fuentes, and we have a great Casual Friday episode for you tonight.
00:00:12.000 As always, on Casual Friday, we dropped the necktie and we are taking all of your questions tonight because it's Friday.
00:00:19.000 We had a pretty intense week, pretty black pilled week.
00:00:22.000 A lot of things going on, a lot of pressure, a lot of misery in the world.
00:00:28.000 So, Friday, we like to just hang loose, man.
00:00:31.000 We like to just chill out.
00:00:33.000 So, we have a pretty comfortable episode.
00:00:34.000 Remember, on Fridays, we start taking your questions early at about At about 7 30 if you're on Central Time, 8 30 if you're on Eastern Time.
00:00:44.000 So I'll be checking those on Twitter, hashtag AmericaFQ, remember?
00:00:48.000 And then once I finally answer all those, because there's a lot of them on Twitter, then I will move over into the live chat and we'll just hang out.
00:00:55.000 But so before we get into questions, and we might even get to questions a little bit early because I know there are a lot of them on Twitter and not much going on in the news today.
00:01:04.000 So, you know, not really anything big.
00:01:07.000 A lot of things President Trump's been saying in the usual.
00:01:11.000 Back and forth.
00:01:12.000 It never gets old, guys.
00:01:13.000 Never gets old when it's mainstream media reports about so and so might have said this, he might have said that.
00:01:18.000 Oh, Rex Tillerson said this.
00:01:20.000 Maybe Trump's going to do this with Iran.
00:01:22.000 Oh, my God.
00:01:24.000 It just beats me down.
00:01:25.000 It wears me down, the vapidness of the news.
00:01:28.000 But that's all right.
00:01:30.000 Before we get into our only major story, which is the birth control situation, we're going to be patrolling thoughts.
00:01:36.000 We are going to be patrolling foddery pretty hard on that topic.
00:01:40.000 Before we get into that, I want to give a big shout out, big thank you.
00:01:45.000 Hang on, I forgot the name actually.
00:01:46.000 I forgot to write it down before the show, so let me pull that up real quick.
00:01:51.000 But I had somebody who donated to me on PayPal.
00:01:56.000 They donated to me on PayPal in order for me to buy a book, and then they want me to give, I don't know, some kind of a review about it.
00:02:04.000 They want me to give some kind of, I don't know, like my thoughts about it, or maybe just to enrich my experience.
00:02:10.000 I'm thinking I might do that on the show.
00:02:11.000 People have been asking for sort of like a book review.
00:02:15.000 Type segment where I, you know, I read a book or whatever book I've been reading, I present it, give a little blurb, and recommend or whatever.
00:02:24.000 But my buddy Logan Friday, he donated money for me to buy this book in particular.
00:02:29.000 And I said you can do this on PayPal.
00:02:31.000 You can leave a little comment if you want me to buy a particular book.
00:02:35.000 And I encourage this because I always feel guilty when I purchase books with my own money because I have student loan debt I got to pay off.
00:02:43.000 I got to feed myself.
00:02:45.000 I should be paying for a gym membership at this point.
00:02:47.000 So it's always good when people earmark it for me.
00:02:49.000 So it's like, you know, Hands are tied.
00:02:51.000 I got to do it.
00:02:52.000 But so my buddy Logan Friday donated money for me to buy this book, Before Church and State, a study of social order in the sacramental kingdom of Louis the Ninth.
00:03:03.000 And so I'll be reading this one and I'll be giving it a review.
00:03:07.000 I don't know how long it'll take me.
00:03:08.000 I've got a couple of books queued up right now that I need to read.
00:03:12.000 So as soon as I get it done, I will pass along a review.
00:03:15.000 But if you want to see me read a book, if you have a recommendation, that's how you do it.
00:03:19.000 NicholasJFuentes.com.
00:03:21.000 You can find the donation part or you can find my PayPal.
00:03:24.000 Or, I think it's just paypal.meslash nickjfuentes.
00:03:27.000 You can donate.
00:03:28.000 The link is down below in the live chat.
00:03:30.000 But enough shilling for the shekels, enough shilling for books.
00:03:34.000 We have things to talk about.
00:03:35.000 We have a big news story, and then we jump into the questions.
00:03:39.000 So, today it came out that President Trump's Department of Health and Human Services is repealing an Obama administration rule which forced employers to provide birth control in their health care coverage.
00:03:53.000 And so, although under Obamacare there was a There was a religious exemption.
00:03:58.000 If you didn't want to provide birth control because it went against your religious convictions, remember that was the big Hobby Lobby case, you could exempt yourself from that rule.
00:04:07.000 President Trump's HHS department just ruled today that actually we can expand that exemption, and basically anybody who doesn't want to provide birth control cannot do so.
00:04:18.000 And this is a major win because we know, as Pat Buchanan has said before, that the condom and the pill are the hammer and sickle of the cultural revolution.
00:04:27.000 This is what has been driving.
00:04:30.000 So much of the social, political, and cultural ills of the 21st century United States and of the West.
00:04:39.000 It's birth control.
00:04:40.000 It's condoms. 0.99
00:04:40.000 It is promiscuous, hedonistic sex. 0.99
00:04:43.000 And if you watched James Alsop's America First Overdrive last night, he was patrolling some thoughts, and certainly that's fun.
00:04:52.000 The greatest part, I think the greatest takeaway from the thought patrol, if we would get serious about it, is this actual policy, is this actual part of our culture now. 0.99
00:05:02.000 Where it's encouraged, it's acceptable, mainstream to be having premarital sex.
00:05:09.000 And to be having not just premarital sex, but with multiple partners in excess of one or two or three.
00:05:16.000 I read a study just before I went on that the average person, the average person in the United States has something like seven or six sexual partners in their lifetime.
00:05:25.000 Seven or six sexual partners.
00:05:28.000 And we understand that this is facilitated by birth control.
00:05:32.000 If you weren't able to pop a pill, if you didn't have a condom, That made it so that there were no physical, there were no direct and discernible repercussions for having premarital or promiscuous sex, you wouldn't have an average of seven sexual partners in a lifetime.
00:05:49.000 It would be one or two, three at the most, you know, if that was a pretty dark society when we're striving for an average of three.
00:05:58.000 But for people that don't understand the significance of that, the condom and the pill, birth control, create this effect of moral hazard.
00:06:06.000 Whereas, In the 1940s, before you had birth control, if you were going to have sex, you were taking a pretty big risk that this was about to destroy your whole life, destroy your reputation, maybe cost a lot of money, maybe force you into some kind of shotgun marriage with someone maybe you don't even like or somebody that you don't want to spend 20 or 30 years with rearing children.
00:06:29.000 There were consequences before for having children, and there was a reason for that because sex, sexual relationships, having a sexual partner, that is a big commitment.
00:06:37.000 That is a big thing.
00:06:39.000 To that, is a big proposition that many people don't see it that way anymore because it's so ubiquitous in the culture.
00:06:45.000 People see it as, you know, when you lose your virginity, it's like, I don't know, it's like eating Taco Bell for the first time.
00:06:52.000 It's just some trivial, you know, nothing.
00:06:54.000 It just doesn't matter.
00:06:56.000 And now that we have that moral hazard, now that there are no consequences for it, it's celebrated.
00:07:02.000 And we've taken out, I think, the sanctity of the matter, we've taken out the significance of the matter where sex is now just recreation, purely recreational.
00:07:12.000 And we see all day long the propaganda and the news media and the magazines and television and movies to not have children.
00:07:20.000 That sex should be exclusively recreational.
00:07:23.000 Whereas before, birth control was well, you know, you prevent accidents or maybe you have it on the side recreationally.
00:07:30.000 Now it's almost exclusively for recreation.
00:07:32.000 It's something that you do at a party, it's something that you do when you get drunk, it's something that you do socially.
00:07:39.000 And maybe you sound old school, maybe that sounds ancient. 0.98
00:07:43.000 Raining on the parade, raining on the big sex palooza, the big sex party everybody wants to have. 0.98
00:07:51.000 But that's a big driver of a lot of the problems in the West, is all the sex we're having. 0.99
00:07:55.000 It's really destroying and crippling women emotionally. 1.00
00:07:58.000 It's destroying marriages. 0.83
00:08:00.000 And the takeaway is that when you destroy marriages, you destroy children.
00:08:03.000 And when you destroy children, you destroy the society.
00:08:07.000 You know, we have a divorce rate of 50%.
00:08:10.000 You're looking at 50% of children who grow up in a broken home, 50% of children who end up pretty broken, dysfunctional, emotionally stunted people who don't know how to become grownups, who don't know how to have functional marriages of their own.
00:08:24.000 And you can see that it's a ripple effect throughout time, throughout the entire civilization.
00:08:30.000 Typically, you don't see a recovery from that.
00:08:32.000 And certainly, the United States and Western Europe is no exception in the history of the world.
00:08:37.000 When we look at the decadent societies of Rome or of Greece in ancient times, this is not something we've never seen before.
00:08:46.000 And so, I was looking at the numbers.
00:08:47.000 You know, again, people might say this is, ooh, this is old school. 0.97
00:08:51.000 I don't like the sound of that because people like to have sex.
00:08:54.000 People don't like when you say that there's consequences, when you say that actually there is something significant to it.
00:09:00.000 People don't like to hear that because they like to enjoy themselves.
00:09:03.000 You know, who can blame them, right?
00:09:06.000 But when you actually break down the numbers, when you crunch the numbers and you get away from what television has to say about it and what music has to say about it, and you see, and I saw one study that examined marriages.
00:09:18.000 They took a sample size of 2,000 marriages and looked at how many of them ended in divorce within five years.
00:09:26.000 And they found that partners or marriages that, for people that had zero sexual partners when they got married, for people that were virgins when they got married, After five years, they had a 5% chance of divorce.
00:09:39.000 So that's pretty good.
00:09:40.000 If you don't want to get divorced, if you don't want your marriage to collapse after such a short time as five years, if you want your children to have a stable mother and father in a committed relationship for longer than five years, you've got a 95% chance that it'll work out if you are both virgins when you get married. 0.66
00:09:58.000 They found that if one of the partners had one sexual partner before they got married, that number jumped to 21%.
00:10:06.000 So, you go from 5% when they're virgins to a fifth, 20% of ending in divorce after five years.
00:10:14.000 With just one sexual partner, people might think, you know, one or two is acceptable.
00:10:20.000 People might think we're talking about excess, we're talking about decadence, we're talking about more than five or 10 sexual partners.
00:10:27.000 But actually, if you go from virgin to one sexual partner before marriage, that number jumps to 20% of marriages ending in divorce after only five years.
00:10:37.000 After two sexual partners, that number jumps to 30%.
00:10:42.000 So you have a two thirds chance of your marriage succeeding after just five years if you have more than just two sexual partners before you get married.
00:10:50.000 I looked at another study which looked at these numbers for 10 years, for a 10 year period of marriage, and it found that the numbers were actually more drastic.
00:10:58.000 It was more pronounced the difference between virgins and everyone else.
00:11:03.000 If the partners were virgins, and this study was actually about the woman, if the woman was a virgin at the time she was married, there was actually only A 20% chance of divorce after 10 years.
00:11:15.000 So 10 years, a little bit more challenging.
00:11:17.000 That's a longer time.
00:11:19.000 Only a 20% chance, you know, admittedly, that's not a great number.
00:11:22.000 That's not a wildly, you know, like we shouldn't be cheering about that number.
00:11:26.000 There are other contributing factors that are making this number go up, which are no penalty divorce, which is a culture that encourages people to divorce if you're not having fun anymore, if it becomes challenging.
00:11:38.000 But still, that's a relatively low number for a 10 year marriage.
00:11:42.000 So, you have a 20% chance after 10 years with a virgin wife. 0.58
00:11:46.000 If your wife has one sexual partner before she gets married, before she enters into your relationship, after 10 years, the chances of divorce go up to 47%. 0.57
00:11:59.000 So, if you marry your wife and she's not a virgin, flip a coin.
00:12:04.000 And if it's heads, your marriage will succeed after 10 years.
00:12:07.000 If it's tails, it won't.
00:12:08.000 That's the chance you're taking.
00:12:10.000 That's what we're talking about with birth control and other forms of contraception, it's a matter of flipping a coin.
00:12:16.000 And in a decade, those are your chances of whether or not your children will be brought up in a stable home with a committed mother and father.
00:12:24.000 If you have two partners, get ready for this, folks.
00:12:27.000 If you have two partners, the number goes up to 57%.
00:12:31.000 So actually, you're more likely than not to have your marriage end in divorce after 10 years if your wife had more than two sexual partners, or rather just two sexual partners before she gets married.
00:12:43.000 That's serious stuff.
00:12:45.000 And maybe you know people that have been children of divorce.
00:12:49.000 Very difficult for them.
00:12:50.000 Lots of issues for them emotional, psychological, social, sexual, developmental.
00:12:56.000 Not a pretty picture.
00:12:58.000 And you look at even the numbers for the black community, where it's absolutely devastating when the numbers are like 73% of children born out of wedlock.
00:13:06.000 It's no wonder that we're producing men and women that are exponentially worse off in just about every measurement that you can make, whether it's economic, whether it's social, in terms of happiness, in terms of really anything.
00:13:21.000 Why we're so worse off as a civilization, even though materially and collectively we may be better, why our people are miserable and devoid of meaning and purpose and happiness in their lives when you're seeing these astronomical numbers of homes and marriages and families that are broken before they even get started after five or ten years in many of these cases.
00:13:42.000 And then you hear a number like seven sexual partners on average.
00:13:45.000 I saw one study that said that on average in the United States, or not on average, but 20% of women in the United States have more than 10 sexual partners in their lives.
00:13:55.000 Or before they get married.
00:13:56.000 That's not okay.
00:13:57.000 That's not going to lead to a healthy society.
00:14:00.000 And you know, you can call it whatever you want.
00:14:03.000 People really wigged out on me on Twitter because I tweeted some of these studies, because I merely summarized the fact that if you go from marrying a virgin to marrying someone who had one sexual partner, your chances of your marriage ending in divorce go up 30% after 10 years. 0.95
00:14:19.000 People are responding like, oh my God, you can't handle strong women. 0.99
00:14:24.000 Oh my gosh, you're crazy. 0.99
00:14:25.000 You're from the 1940s. 0.98
00:14:27.000 All I did was summarize the results of the study.
00:14:30.000 If people want to take these chances, if people think this is progress, if people think this is the good direction to go in, if this is a positive development for our country, for our children, I mean, really, not to sound trite, not to sound like a liberal here or some bleeding heart, but really, think of the children.
00:14:47.000 If not, if you don't care if your marriage ends in divorce after 10 years, if you don't care if when you're 65 or 70 you don't have a life partner to support you, you're lonely, You live alone because you didn't want to put up with somebody through your 40s because it got a little bit difficult for whatever reason.
00:15:07.000 Fine.
00:15:08.000 But really, you have to think of the children.
00:15:10.000 You have to think of the future generation of children who are growing up in a home where they have to split their weekends and their weeks between mommy and daddy, where they have to have two Christmases, where they have to have this contentious relationship between the two most important people in their lives, where they have other unstable elements.
00:15:27.000 And certainly, that's not the only thing we're talking about.
00:15:30.000 There's other unstable elements.
00:15:32.000 That are introduced when you have a divorce or a messy divorce.
00:15:36.000 I mean, what kind of people the mother or father will be bringing into their homes after a very ugly and contentious divorce.
00:15:43.000 Not always the best situation for children to be in.
00:15:46.000 And then, of course, there's the issue of them going to school and them having roots, them having one community.
00:15:52.000 You really have to think of these implications.
00:15:54.000 And it really gets to the heart of the matter, which is we have a civilization, we have a country where there's no sacrifice anymore, where it's all about me, it's all about instant gratification.
00:16:06.000 It's all about, well, I want to have sex.
00:16:08.000 I want to have what I want. 0.94
00:16:10.000 I want to do it this way.
00:16:12.000 I want to explore.
00:16:13.000 I want to go to college.
00:16:14.000 I want to have a job.
00:16:15.000 I want to be a professional. 1.00
00:16:18.000 I mean, that's at the root of feminism. 0.98
00:16:20.000 That is at the root of our new males that we talk so much about, our bug men that we talk so much about, is a pathological selfishness, a nihilistic solipsism, that the only thing that matters in the entire world is our own individual wants.
00:16:37.000 And desires, and in many cases, the most carnal, the most hedonistic desires and impulses.
00:16:44.000 And so, people, you know, I always come back to this on the show when we talk about these more civilizational things, these more holistic analyses of our country, we can talk about immigration.
00:16:55.000 People are so fixated on immigration, on the ethnostate, on the racialism.
00:17:00.000 The racialism is not enough, it's not sufficient.
00:17:04.000 Why we are being destroyed, why we are being invaded, and nobody cares.
00:17:09.000 It's not because people aren't reading Sam Francis.
00:17:12.000 It's not because people aren't reading Pat Buchanan and Jared Taylor.
00:17:15.000 It's because something went very wrong in the soul of our people a long time ago.
00:17:19.000 And I say this a lot, but I really want to drive that point home.
00:17:22.000 Because I bring up Christianity, I bring up some of these alternative measures like an economic bill, tax reform that can incentivize bigger families, that can incentivize a more cohesive and strong social foundation for the country. 0.66
00:17:37.000 And people tell me I'm cucking.
00:17:39.000 People tell me, well, that's not ethnostate.
00:17:41.000 That's not. white identity, so we don't want to hear about it.
00:17:44.000 We don't want to talk about it. 0.87
00:17:46.000 But the focus on the racialism, if you focus on only a racial solution, only a racial discourse, a racial rhetoric, it just won't be sufficient because everything that we're seeing that has induced all this, this racial consciousness was never about race in the first place.
00:18:00.000 It was about, it was about ontology.
00:18:02.000 It was about existentialism.
00:18:05.000 It was about what choices individual families, individual men and women are making and why they're making them.
00:18:13.000 Right?
00:18:13.000 I mean, that's at the end of the day, those are the conclusions we're talking about.
00:18:17.000 Hart Seller, the 1965 Immigration Act, which has been a complete disaster, which has opened up the floodgates to third world immigration. 1.00
00:18:26.000 I really doubt that that would have passed. 1.00
00:18:28.000 I really doubt that that would have ever been an issue if you had strong families, if you had strong men and women who were educated and focused on politics at hand.
00:18:39.000 Because if we can trace back the roots to these problems, which are immigration bills or corruption or infiltration of our government, If you had a civic mentality, if you had a more selfless, if you had a stronger social cohesion, you can avoid all of these pitfalls that we're experiencing, that we're seeing.
00:18:39.000 Right?
00:18:59.000 The takeover of our media, the takeover of our government.
00:19:03.000 If you looked at the social cohesion of our nation when it was first founded in the late 18th century and even through the 19th century, when you had people that were self reliant, people that were independent, people that were truly sovereign and cared about taking care of their community, you didn't have these problems.
00:19:19.000 And that's not a coincidence. 0.99
00:19:21.000 So, with these thoughts, with these degenerate women, it's time to close the legs. 1.00
00:19:26.000 It's time to get off the birth control. 1.00
00:19:28.000 And that's causing a lot of other things, too.
00:19:30.000 We don't know what's in the birth control. 0.93
00:19:31.000 We don't know what kind of wacky effects that's having on women. 0.83
00:19:35.000 But time to stop the birth control, put away the condoms, go back to ice cream dates, movie dates, none of this sex stuff. 0.90
00:19:43.000 Turn off the television, turn off the music, focus on what matters.
00:19:48.000 Start a family. 0.88
00:19:49.000 Don't be a degenerate. 0.72
00:19:50.000 It's never enough. 0.60
00:19:52.000 It's never enough. 0.75
00:19:53.000 And all day long, and here's another thing all day long on media, they talk about the glory of sex, they talk about what a carnal pleasure that sex is.
00:20:04.000 And that is not sufficient to fill the void in people's lives.
00:20:07.000 You want to know why people are more degenerate now?
00:20:10.000 You want to know why people are more extreme? 0.76
00:20:12.000 Why people are more sick and perverse these days?
00:20:15.000 Why people in Hollywood are getting caught, it seems like every other day, for abusing children? 0.83
00:20:20.000 Why elementary school teachers are being caught every other day for abusing children?
00:20:25.000 You want to know why that is?
00:20:26.000 Because the carnal, the physical, the impulse, the hedonistic, it never satisfies the void.
00:20:32.000 It will never give meaning to your life.
00:20:34.000 And all day long on television and on the movies and in the music, They talk about how sex is the answer, that pleasure is the answer.
00:20:42.000 Make money. 0.93
00:20:43.000 Find a prettier wife. 0.80
00:20:46.000 Buy nicer things. 0.96
00:20:47.000 Buy a bigger house.
00:20:48.000 Eat better food.
00:20:49.000 Eat this new hipster restaurant hamburger.
00:20:51.000 Eat this new or drink this new flavor of Coke or Pepsi.
00:20:56.000 And it never does it for people.
00:20:57.000 That is why we are racing and accelerating towards what we don't know.
00:21:02.000 But it has to keep increasing.
00:21:03.000 The tempo keeps increasing until naturally it's going to hit its climax and everything is going to collapse, everything will fall apart.
00:21:11.000 But that will never fill the void, the God sized void in the heart of Western man.
00:21:16.000 It just won't.
00:21:17.000 And so you'd be surprised.
00:21:19.000 That's why women who have not had the sexual promiscuity before they're married, they're not interested in it after they get married because they have a loving husband who cares about them, who fulfills their emotional and fiscal needs to be provided for.
00:21:35.000 And they have a responsibility.
00:21:37.000 They have their children to look after.
00:21:39.000 They don't have time for all of that.
00:21:41.000 And it doesn't even provide the benefit that it would because they have.
00:21:44.000 They have beautiful children, and that provides meaning in their lives.
00:21:47.000 They don't need to seek it out in the club, trying to find people who care for them for a night.
00:21:52.000 And the same is true with men.
00:21:54.000 The same is true with men.
00:21:55.000 There's the two extremes with men.
00:21:57.000 There is the nihilistic, like Rouge V, who's like, you know what? 1.00
00:22:01.000 Women are disposable. 1.00
00:22:03.000 We should just use them and discard them and be pickup artists. 1.00
00:22:06.000 And then on the other end of the extreme, you have MGTOW.
00:22:09.000 You have men going their own way.
00:22:11.000 And either side is unfulfilled because they've placed their entire.
00:22:15.000 The entire value of their lives on the carnal, on the impulsive, the physical.
00:22:20.000 And if they met in the middle and found a committed relationship with a wife who was not a degenerate, with a wife who cared for their children, who was at home, who was not out at work flirting with coworkers and colleagues and everything else in high heels and skirts, they were at home in the kitchen doing the laundry, raising the kids.
00:22:39.000 Everybody'd be happy.
00:22:40.000 Everybody'd be happy.
00:22:41.000 Everything would work out the way it's supposed to.
00:22:43.000 That's how it's supposed to work.
00:22:44.000 Those are the rules. 1.00
00:22:46.000 You know, look, we didn't make the rules, ladies. 0.92
00:22:49.000 We didn't make the rules, little lady, but we got to play by them if we want to win the game. 1.00
00:22:53.000 So that's the birth control issue.
00:22:56.000 That's the only major story I saw.
00:22:57.000 Everything else is pretty lame.
00:23:02.000 You know, it's a lot of hearsay about Iran, a lot of hearsay about the State Department, but that was the big thing I saw.
00:23:09.000 And it just really frustrates me because you don't hear the other side on this issue.
00:23:15.000 It's whether it's Republicans or it's Democrats.
00:23:18.000 Conservative or liberal, it's this message of anything goes be a libertine, be a degenerate, be a hedonist.
00:23:26.000 And people don't know the damage that they're doing.
00:23:28.000 It's really a tragedy.
00:23:29.000 It's really a sad thing.
00:23:31.000 Where you look at these feminists and these degenerate men in college and even the grownups, the millennials, the man children, or the social justice warriors.
00:23:42.000 And I don't even hate them anymore. 0.86
00:23:44.000 I don't even get mad at them anymore.
00:23:46.000 I feel pain for them because you understand that these are people who are suffering.
00:23:51.000 These are people who are broken, who will never have a meaningful or satisfying or fulfilling existence.
00:23:59.000 And that's sad.
00:24:00.000 That's a tragedy.
00:24:02.000 Right? 0.98
00:24:03.000 And that's where religion comes in.
00:24:04.000 That's where these other aspects, these other components come in that are not explicitly political or explicitly racial.
00:24:10.000 You know, it's not Odin's Aryan army, it's not the nuke waffin, but these things are the most important.
00:24:18.000 But that's that.
00:24:20.000 I know that's a bit of a black pill, a bit of a rant there, but we're going to jump into our questions here on Twitter.
00:24:26.000 And let's see what we have.
00:24:27.000 We are jammed up, but we're going to get through all of them tonight.
00:24:30.000 We'll answer all your questions.
00:24:33.000 And I left off last night.
00:24:34.000 Remember, it's hashtag AmericaFQ on Twitter.
00:24:37.000 And let me see real quick before I do that if we have any super chat cues.
00:24:42.000 So we got one from Carl Schenkable on super chat.
00:24:46.000 No rush, eugenic birth control sterilization programs to counteract this genic effect of welfare.
00:24:53.000 Now, later, and never.
00:24:54.000 Also, happy birthday, Frank Z.
00:24:56.000 Well, Frank, thank you, but it's not my birthday.
00:24:58.000 Thank you for the donation on eugenic birth control and sterilization.
00:25:02.000 I think it's immoral.
00:25:03.000 I think.
00:25:04.000 And it's also not going to solve the problem because we need to get our birth rate up to a healthy place.
00:25:11.000 And it's unfortunate that the racialists have conceded that we necessarily have to have a low birth rate.
00:25:17.000 If you have a low birth rate, and if you have a birth rate that's below replacement rate, your civilization is failing.
00:25:24.000 If you have a society where people don't want to bring new people into it, where people don't want to have healthy, happy, beautiful children, there's something that has gone wrong in your society.
00:25:35.000 And that's not something that can be solved by some. 1.00
00:25:38.000 Infanticide campaign of minorities. 1.00
00:25:40.000 I am wholeheartedly against that.
00:25:42.000 I think that is lazy and it's an atrocity that people suggest that.
00:25:47.000 I understand the logic.
00:25:48.000 If you believe that, and I said this before, this is what I said at the Leadership Institute that got me into some hot water that Emily Faulkner took out of context. 0.82
00:25:59.000 I said, if you take the premise, if you presuppose this premise that if whites are a minority, there will be an existential threat to the existence of their people, then you would see. 0.62
00:26:11.000 Our current demographic issue as a cold war, as a cold demographic war and a fight for the survival of your people. 0.71
00:26:18.000 I said, if you take this presupposition, if you take this premise as legitimate, then I would say that the morality of sterilization and of birth control, or rather of birth control, I think it changes.
00:26:33.000 I don't know if it makes it necessarily just or moral, but I think if you take the premise that you're fighting for your survival and every one of theirs necessarily.
00:26:44.000 Increases the threat to yours, then it changes the moral calculation.
00:26:48.000 I personally think it's a reprehensible solution.
00:26:51.000 I understand where it comes from, but I think it's immoral.
00:26:56.000 And I think on top of that, the answer is not get down their birth rate.
00:26:59.000 The answer is get up our birth rate.
00:27:02.000 If we're so great, if we want to make a civilization that works, let's make it worth bringing children into it, right?
00:27:08.000 I mean, that's the answer.
00:27:10.000 So we'll jump over into Twitter now on hashtag AmericaFQ.
00:27:15.000 We got Heisenberg.
00:27:16.000 Why do you hate Protestants?
00:27:18.000 I don't hate Protestants.
00:27:19.000 I just think Protestantism in the modern times has eroded the doctrine of Christ, eroded the Bible, eroded what it means to be a Christian.
00:27:32.000 And here's the problem with Protestantism.
00:27:34.000 Here's the problem with Martin Luther.
00:27:36.000 Was the Catholic Church corrupt at the time of Martin Luther?
00:27:40.000 Yes, admittedly, yes.
00:27:42.000 And there was need for reform.
00:27:43.000 That is a wholly different proposition than saying that we will take the Bible alone.
00:27:50.000 Protestantism is built on the Bible alone interpretation, which says that basically we don't need the church, we don't need a clergy, we don't need a pope to determine and have authority over what is true in the Bible or how we're supposed to interpret it.
00:27:50.000 That is what.
00:28:06.000 That's obviously a very silly thing. 0.99
00:28:08.000 That's obviously pretty ridiculous. 0.95
00:28:10.000 And not to get too theological, but Jesus Christ founded the church for this reason, so that the church would exercise authority over the word of Jesus Christ. 0.78
00:28:19.000 And there are things that are in the Bible.
00:28:21.000 Or rather, there are things that are not in the Bible that have an objective answer, and that answer is provided by the church, by an ecclesiastical authority.
00:28:31.000 So you need that.
00:28:32.000 I think Protestantism made sense at the time, perhaps, maybe a reformist movement made sense at the time institutionally. 0.68
00:28:41.000 But to completely jump the shark and say we can have the Bible alone be the doctrine of Christianity, I think it's silly.
00:28:48.000 I don't think it's really well thought out.
00:28:50.000 So I just don't hate Protestants.
00:28:52.000 I just think that. 0.87
00:28:53.000 Once you say that we can take the Bible for whatever interpretation we want, it kind of degrades the divine truth of what we set out to accomplish there with that religion.
00:29:04.000 John Miller, pumpkin is too small.
00:29:08.000 Well, I told you from the start we were going to get a little pumpkin.
00:29:11.000 If we got a big pumpkin, that would be silly.
00:29:13.000 I got the screen here, can't do it.
00:29:16.000 We may carve a big one up on Halloween, though, if we have a special. 0.55
00:29:20.000 Anon Spooky, since you are a Christian, what are your opinions on the current Pope?
00:29:25.000 He's a controversial guy. 0.79
00:29:26.000 This Pope is a heretic, okay?
00:29:28.000 This Pope is not, he is a Marxist.
00:29:31.000 He's committed heresies.
00:29:33.000 He goes against doctrine.
00:29:35.000 I mean, this guy is not, I don't know how he got in there.
00:29:38.000 It all goes back to Vatican II, which, if you've read this pretty controversial bishop, I think his name was Williamson, he was a British guy.
00:29:49.000 He said that Vatican II was arranged by the Freemasons, and it was a Freemason infiltration. 0.91
00:29:55.000 I tend to believe that. 0.50
00:29:56.000 Because you look at most of the popes since Vatican II and some of the reforms that have been made, and you ask yourself whether that has enhanced the Word of God or done the opposite, I think you would err on the side of the latter.
00:30:09.000 So I don't like this Pope.
00:30:12.000 I think Pope Francis is a Marxist.
00:30:15.000 I think he's too political.
00:30:16.000 I think he goes against doctrine pretty regularly.
00:30:19.000 And I don't know how he got in there besides some kind of conspiracy. 0.81
00:30:22.000 Because these are not, you know, when Catholics are sending their people, they're not sending their best. 0.77
00:30:28.000 The Forgotten Man. 0.90
00:30:30.000 Nick, would you agree that this movement that is being built will fail if it is not based on pre Vatican II Catholicism?
00:30:40.000 You know, I don't know if it has to be like, I would say that yes, probably, because without that soul of the movement, without that core of the movement that answers fundamental questions, not going to work, not going to motivate people.
00:30:55.000 And take somebody like Paul Town, for example.
00:30:58.000 You know, I look at Paul Town on Twitter, who's a smart guy.
00:31:02.000 He knows what's going on in the country.
00:31:04.000 He's fighting for the cause.
00:31:06.000 But I don't think he's like, I don't think our agenda, I don't think our platform gives him a reason to enlist.
00:31:13.000 I don't think it gives him a reason to get out of bed every morning and better himself and everything else.
00:31:19.000 I think there are a lot of people in this new generation where they know what's going on.
00:31:23.000 They know the problem.
00:31:24.000 They know the task at hand, but they are nihilistic.
00:31:29.000 They are blackpilled, you know, to be colloquial about it.
00:31:33.000 And unless we have some kind of doctrine, unless we have answers for what can give them fulfillment, what can satisfy these existential longings, our people will not win.
00:31:44.000 Look at our enemies.
00:31:45.000 Look at what our enemies are doing, whether they're the institutional ones.
00:31:48.000 Or the invaders. 1.00
00:31:49.000 Look at Muslims, for example. 1.00
00:31:52.000 Everything that they're doing, the terrorism, the nation building in Iran or in Saudi Arabia that is strengthening their nations, when they come over here and they have seven children in our countries and it's difficult and they're on welfare or whatever and they're in a foreign land, who are they doing it for? 1.00
00:32:09.000 What are they doing it for? 1.00
00:32:11.000 Are they doing it for pan Arabism?
00:32:14.000 Are they doing it for the Arab people? 0.98
00:32:16.000 Or are they doing it for Allah? 0.79
00:32:17.000 Are they doing it because this book commands them to?
00:32:20.000 And it answers Allah.
00:32:21.000 All their questions, and you know, they build their mosques and they do their prayers, and it keeps them solid, it keeps them together.
00:32:28.000 I mean, that is, I don't understand how people don't see that.
00:32:31.000 Like, everybody that's winning has doctrine, everybody that's winning has a religion, everybody that's winning has some 2,000 year old book that's keeping them together and guiding them.
00:32:42.000 And we're like, yeah, no, we don't need that.
00:32:44.000 I think it raises a lot of questions about the intentions and the motives of the people that are going against Christianity and going against.
00:32:52.000 That is a unifying factor.
00:32:54.000 What else are we going to rally behind?
00:32:57.000 Race?
00:32:57.000 I don't think it's sufficient because then you get into questions of, well, who's white?
00:33:01.000 And then there's ethnic divisions and all the rest. 0.97
00:33:05.000 So I think you need that.
00:33:06.000 I think you need those fundamental questions about existence answered for you to have any kind of movement that motivates people to act.
00:33:15.000 Hollow Man.
00:33:17.000 Opinion on firebombing abortion clinics and self defense.
00:33:21.000 No, no, I don't think that's good because.
00:33:24.000 Then you give the government an excuse to, I mean, not like they're not already doing this, but you give them further justification to go after us, right?
00:33:32.000 I mean, Antifa did themselves a huge disservice by being, I guess, anarchists, by being violent, by bringing weapons and masks and causing property damage and hurting people because now the government has to look at them.
00:33:47.000 Now the media has to look at them, and even their own democratic leaders have to disavow them.
00:33:52.000 So if we started committing acts of violence, that would give.
00:33:55.000 The federal government basically a blank check to hunt us down and exterminate us like we were the real terrorists.
00:34:02.000 So, generally, I'm against that.
00:34:03.000 I think that kind of thing does more harm than good.
00:34:06.000 Is that a Rolex?
00:34:07.000 No, it is not a Rolex. 0.76
00:34:09.000 And I'm against this idea young people, they cop like a fancy watch and they think like they're a big shot.
00:34:16.000 I'm against that. 0.98
00:34:18.000 You need to look like the amount of money that you have.
00:34:20.000 Anything else is like a very particular kind of showboating that we see in a very particular group of people.
00:34:28.000 It's like that movie.
00:34:29.000 You ever see that movie, White Men Can't Jump, with Woody Harrelson and Wesley Snipes? 0.70
00:34:36.000 And, like, the moral of the story was Woody Harrelson tells Wesley Snipes, Woody Harrelson's white, Wesley Snipes is black.
00:34:43.000 Woody Harrelson says that Wesley Snipes doesn't care if he's good at basketball, he just wants to look good. 0.52
00:34:49.000 He doesn't care about winning, he just wants to look good doing it.
00:34:52.000 And Wesley Snipes says to Woody Harrelson, Well, you don't care about looking good, you just care about winning.
00:34:56.000 And that's sort of the Rolex mindset. 0.98
00:34:59.000 When you see some of these 20 somethings, the trust Fun kids rocking the Rolexes and the boat shoes and the chubbies and all that.
00:35:06.000 I just think, you know, you didn't earn that.
00:35:08.000 You didn't build anything.
00:35:10.000 You didn't make that money. 0.96
00:35:12.000 And so I think it is kind of ridiculous. 0.98
00:35:15.000 It's silly. 1.00
00:35:16.000 And you look dumb. 1.00
00:35:20.000 And so we have Greiper Keck's army. 1.00
00:35:24.000 I hope she runs. 0.62
00:35:25.000 She has so much baggage, extremely pro illegal immigration and anti gun, a real winner.
00:35:31.000 I don't know who you're referring to because it looks like that tweet got deleted.
00:35:34.000 I'm opening the new tab here.
00:35:35.000 Yeah, that tweet got deleted.
00:35:37.000 So I don't know who you're talking about.
00:35:39.000 Sean Hoy, JC asks if you had the chance to ask Ben Shapiro three questions in a debate for him to answer.
00:35:45.000 What would they be?
00:35:47.000 You know, I don't even know if I would ask him questions.
00:35:49.000 I don't even know if I would, because I know all the answers to all the questions.
00:35:52.000 I know what he would say to all my questions.
00:35:55.000 Probably the only question that matters, and there are a couple that I can't really say on the show that would get me in trouble, that would maybe get me locked up if I were in certain European countries.
00:36:05.000 But the most important question I would ask is why is it that you support ethno nationalism for Israel?
00:36:11.000 And you think white nationalism is illegitimate?
00:36:13.000 Explain to me why you see that.
00:36:15.000 And he would answer one of two things.
00:36:17.000 If he were being honest, he would say that we are the chosen people, and therefore God has set aside Israel for us, and we have an exclusive right to a homeland, and you don't.
00:36:27.000 And it doesn't matter if you go away because we're better than you.
00:36:30.000 That's the honest answer.
00:36:32.000 The lie, you know, sort of the cop out, is that he would say, oh, well, because, you know, Jews are uniquely in danger because the Holocaust happened.
00:36:41.000 And then my second and third question would probably.
00:36:44.000 Probably be something about that.
00:36:46.000 And I don't know.
00:36:47.000 I don't really want to go there on this show.
00:36:50.000 But I guess the second question would be then if that's your justification for your homeland, for this pretty stark double standard between your people and mine, well, then why is it illegal?
00:37:02.000 Why is it illegal then to question the validity of that excuse?
00:37:05.000 And then I don't know what he would say to that one because he's a free speech guy.
00:37:09.000 So I guess I would say, why don't you support free speech for that issue?
00:37:12.000 And then the third question would depend on his answer for that one.
00:37:15.000 I don't know if he, maybe his answer would be something like, well, You know, if we were able to question that, if we could say that that's not real or it didn't happen, then I don't know, more bad things could happen.
00:37:28.000 And then I guess the third question would be well, isn't that an issue for white people?
00:37:31.000 Those would probably be my series of consecutive questions that would rip Ben Shapiro apart there.
00:37:38.000 Senator Means, can the alt right look at past and contemporary right wing leaders and their downfalls in public opinion and avoid the same fate?
00:37:46.000 Yes, and I encourage them to.
00:37:48.000 Look at, you know, the BuzzFeed article with Milo yesterday.
00:37:51.000 That is going to be a resource for me and James Alsop because it illustrated everything that happened, the entire rise of Milo, the rise and fall of Milo, and that can give us a pretty good insight into what to do, what not to do.
00:38:04.000 So we're going to use that as like the gospel.
00:38:06.000 And certainly you can look at Milo Yiannopoulos, you can look at Donald Trump, you can look at Ben Shapiro, you can look at even if you want to go way back to Pat Buchanan, to Barry Goldwater, to Ronald Reagan, Gerald Ford, to you could go back to Teddy Roosevelt.
00:38:21.000 If you want to look at a European example, you could look at Benito Mussolini.
00:38:26.000 Oswald Mosley, and of course, Big H, Big H.
00:38:30.000 But of course, we'd never want to look at that example because it's evil and wrong.
00:38:35.000 And just invoking his name makes me sad and miserable.
00:38:39.000 John Barron, at least wear a spooky hat on Halloween if you're not going to wear a costume.
00:38:44.000 I don't know what I'll do.
00:38:45.000 Maybe, maybe, I don't know.
00:38:46.000 I don't know what you mean by spooky hat.
00:38:46.000 We'll see.
00:38:49.000 I'll have some kind of spooky accessory, okay?
00:38:52.000 Maybe I'll go to the Halloween store.
00:38:53.000 I'll get a tie with like jack o' lanterns on it or skeletons.
00:38:57.000 Maybe we'll do that.
00:39:00.000 Book.
00:39:01.000 If you were a conservative member of the Roman elite 2,000 years ago, would you have seen Christianity as a subversive menace?
00:39:09.000 I don't know.
00:39:10.000 That's kind of a weird question.
00:39:12.000 Probably. 0.76
00:39:13.000 Assuming that people look in their self interest, if I were a member of the Roman elite, I would see Christianity as incredibly destabilizing and causing a lot of civil unrest, causing allegiance away from the state. 0.83
00:39:26.000 So if I were a Roman elite at the time, maybe. 0.83
00:39:30.000 If I were inclined to believe, and again, you have to look at the time, you have to look at the time.
00:39:35.000 That this happened.
00:39:36.000 If I were inclined to believe that Jesus Christ did rise on the third day from the dead, then probably not.
00:39:42.000 I would probably convert.
00:39:43.000 But again, probably people in the Roman government, the Roman elites, probably didn't believe that story. 0.72
00:39:49.000 Kind of a silly hypothetical.
00:39:51.000 I don't know what you're getting at there.
00:39:53.000 Nelos Book, did you see Spartacus by Kubrick and Kirk Douglas?
00:39:56.000 I did not.
00:39:57.000 Do you side with the Romans or the rebels?
00:40:00.000 Well, I didn't see it, so I couldn't tell you.
00:40:03.000 Nelos Book, did you see Silence by Scorsese?
00:40:06.000 Cruel as they are. 0.96
00:40:07.000 Are Japanese elites conserving the order against foreign menace? 0.99
00:40:11.000 I did not see that movie. 0.82
00:40:14.000 So I can't answer that question either.
00:40:17.000 Milo's book.
00:40:18.000 Have you read John Lukacs?
00:40:19.000 No, I've not read John Lukacs.
00:40:22.000 Lukacs?
00:40:22.000 Is that a misspelling?
00:40:24.000 I don't know.
00:40:25.000 Silence was a new movie.
00:40:27.000 I don't know.
00:40:27.000 I saw the trailer for that one, and then I don't know.
00:40:30.000 I never heard anything more about it.
00:40:34.000 Do you have a QT Trad GF?
00:40:37.000 Asks Comrade Khan.
00:40:38.000 I do not.
00:40:39.000 I do not.
00:40:40.000 And.
00:40:42.000 You know, once I get in a stable fiscal position, once I get in a stable financial position where I can support myself, then I can probably look into that.
00:40:50.000 But right now, it's focus, focus, focus on the business, on the revolution.
00:40:55.000 You know, so many people.
00:40:56.000 I don't know why it gets back to the fundamental point of my first story, which is this obsession with sex, this obsession with relationships and everything else.
00:41:08.000 Most men, what they should do is not even worry about it.
00:41:12.000 I mean, maybe you date casually on and off in your 20s.
00:41:14.000 But you shouldn't even really look seriously about it until late 20s, early 30s when you've made your money, when you can support yourself, when you can support that kind of lifestyle.
00:41:23.000 Most people, I cannot understand.
00:41:26.000 I see people who are drowning in college debt.
00:41:29.000 They're working like a retail job, they will never be able to pay off their debt.
00:41:33.000 They don't know what job they're going to get.
00:41:35.000 And they're buying their girlfriend dinner every Friday.
00:41:37.000 And they're taking them to expensive movies.
00:41:39.000 It costs you $20 for two tickets.
00:41:41.000 That's if it's not 3D or IMAX.
00:41:43.000 If it is, that's $30 for just the tickets.
00:41:46.000 You want to buy popcorn and a drink, that's another $25.
00:41:50.000 You're spending $55 bi weekly on dates plus dinner plus gifts and everything else.
00:41:56.000 It's crazy.
00:41:58.000 It's crazy.
00:42:02.000 Like, look at the finances, people.
00:42:04.000 Look at the finances.
00:42:05.000 Do you really want to bring on a quarter of a million dollars in debt and you don't even know what you want to do with your life?
00:42:11.000 And then on top of that, you're going to be frivolous with your money, spending it on alcohol and women?
00:42:16.000 I mean, it's just.
00:42:19.000 Like, I've basically blacklisted myself because of the things I've said from.
00:42:23.000 From most kinds of employment.
00:42:25.000 So I'm not going to worry about supporting anyone else, supporting a woman or a family until I can feed my own mouth, you know?
00:42:34.000 So no, no QT tragedy for me right now, no.
00:42:39.000 Frank Kahn Society, since the deep state really rules, should we have elections for the FBI, CIA, Fed, and CEOs of.
00:42:46.000 Okay, no, no, no.
00:42:48.000 What is this like social democracy or this democratic socialism that you're talking about?
00:42:54.000 Elections for the FBI.
00:42:56.000 Democracy is the problem, you know? 0.99
00:43:01.000 Well, if the technocratic bureaucracy is in control, why don't we just democratize the technocratic bureaucracy so the mega rich can choose those two? 0.89
00:43:11.000 No, that is silly. 0.94
00:43:13.000 Democracy is horrible. 1.00
00:43:15.000 Democracy is a cancer. 0.99
00:43:17.000 And the founders knew that.
00:43:18.000 That's why they didn't establish a democracy.
00:43:20.000 We've only been a democracy for less than 100 years since the 17th Amendment and since the Electoral College got changed into what it is today.
00:43:30.000 So, no, democratization is not the answer.
00:43:33.000 You know, you think people are able to vote for their congressmen and their senators.
00:43:37.000 Now they're supposed to vote for FBI and CIA?
00:43:39.000 Oh, no.
00:43:40.000 That is where merit is supposed to reign. 1.00
00:43:43.000 We just need a strong executive.
00:43:44.000 That's the difference.
00:43:45.000 We need a strong executive who can beat the hell out of the legislature, beat the hell out of the deep state.
00:43:51.000 That's why, you know, that's a big reason why I went from small government conservative to basically ambivalent about the size of government because they want us to believe that the scariest thing in a free society.
00:44:04.000 Is a strong man, a strong man, a tyrant.
00:44:07.000 That is not the scariest thing.
00:44:10.000 Not by a long shot.
00:44:10.000 Not at all.
00:44:12.000 They are afraid of a strong man.
00:44:14.000 They are afraid of a tyrant.
00:44:16.000 Because a tyrant who executes the will of the people is the biggest threat to a technocracy that oppresses the people and sacrifices them to their corporate interests.
00:44:28.000 One ruler, one leader who executes the will of the people would be a bulwark against a corrupt, Congress, against a corrupt bureaucracy, against a creeping technocracy controlled by the rich, by the transnational elites.
00:44:43.000 They are afraid of a strongman.
00:44:44.000 We have nothing to fear about a strongman.
00:44:46.000 The strongman is supported by the people.
00:44:50.000 And his enemies are the, are the oligarchs, are the aristocrats.
00:44:54.000 I mean, look at Vladimir Putin, for example.
00:44:57.000 I would much rather live under someone like Vladimir Putin than somebody like Hillary Clinton, right?
00:45:02.000 Because Vladimir Putin, all the oligarchs, all the moneyed interests are subservient to him.
00:45:08.000 When he got into power in 1999, he was put in place as the prime minister in 1999 so that he would win the presidential election in 2000.
00:45:19.000 He went in there and he busted up all the oligarchs.
00:45:21.000 He said, No, no, no, you work for the state.
00:45:23.000 The state will be commanded by the people through Vladimir Putin.
00:45:28.000 And so I would much rather have a leader who's executing the will of the people or, you know, at the very worst, maybe doing things that are in his interest than have a systemic and institutional force operating against us until the end of time, which is what we have now.
00:45:44.000 So, no, no democracy, no elections for the CEOs of Fortune 500 companies.
00:45:52.000 Anonymous USA, who killed Tupac?
00:45:55.000 Oh, I don't know.
00:45:57.000 I don't know.
00:45:57.000 I never liked Tupac very much, to be honest.
00:46:00.000 Anonymous USA, what's your opinion on Mormons and Mormonism? 0.99
00:46:04.000 It's weird, silly. 0.93
00:46:06.000 I don't really know that much about it. 0.82
00:46:08.000 I know it's like some guy just decided he got a new Bible, right, in America, and then the new Israel would be in Utah.
00:46:17.000 I don't know. 0.97
00:46:17.000 I think it's kind of hokey, but better than being an atheist, I suppose. 0.97
00:46:23.000 Anonymous.
00:46:24.000 And you know, Fulton Sheen said this about religion.
00:46:27.000 He said that every religion is partially true.
00:46:30.000 Every religion is to some degree true.
00:46:33.000 He said you have to think of the truth as sort of like a circle.
00:46:38.000 And he said maybe Hinduism is 15 degrees truthful, and maybe Islam is 45 degrees true, and maybe Judaism is 180 degrees true. 0.69
00:46:50.000 He said, but Christianity is. 0.92
00:46:51.000 Is the full truth. 0.94
00:46:52.000 And every religion is a shade of it. 0.75
00:46:54.000 Every religion approaches it.
00:46:55.000 There are parts of it that are truthful, but you'll never get there. 0.75
00:46:59.000 You'll never get there unless you are a Catholic.
00:47:02.000 But so, with Mormonism, I would say that it's probably just one of those things where it's a shade of truth. 0.87
00:47:09.000 And it's better than being an atheist, it's probably better than some of these Eastern religions, but certainly I think it's a little hokey. 1.00
00:47:16.000 Are Muslims trad? 1.00
00:47:18.000 No, Muslims are degenerates. 1.00
00:47:20.000 Anonymous, why are you opposed to women engaging in combat? 1.00
00:47:24.000 Well, that's kind of. 1.00
00:47:26.000 It's pretty axiomatic. 0.97
00:47:28.000 You know, why do I think women, the bearers of life, people that give life to human beings like God, should not be getting blown up by IEDs, should not end up with shrapnel through their brains in the desert fighting Arabs? 0.97
00:47:41.000 Gee, I don't know. 0.99
00:47:42.000 Tough one.
00:47:42.000 That's a really tough, tough thing to answer.
00:47:45.000 Women are sacred.
00:47:47.000 When we and James say we respect women, we respect women.
00:47:50.000 We really do.
00:47:51.000 We respect that they have a divine responsibility in the same way that a man does. 1.00
00:47:55.000 But women are a little bit more elevated because they give birth. 1.00
00:48:00.000 They give life. 0.99
00:48:01.000 I mean, that is, you think of the miracle of what it is to be a woman.
00:48:04.000 I mean, we look at pregnancies and children now as a burden.
00:48:07.000 We look at them as a clump of cells.
00:48:10.000 I mean, good God, that's how they describe children these days a clump of cells.
00:48:15.000 How much of a more sick and depraved society can you get to when you refer to human life as a clump of cells?
00:48:22.000 It's like a cancer tumor. 0.95
00:48:23.000 I mean, my God.
00:48:24.000 But they give birth to human life if you, through love, through affection, The mere act of expressing in a very physical and spiritual way your love for a woman, which is sex, they give birth, they give life to a human person.
00:48:41.000 I mean, that is a miraculous and sacred thing.
00:48:44.000 And as such, they should be elevated to a similarly sacred responsibility, which is to take care of the children, to take care of the home, and to not be subject to the ugly and horrible externalities of man, which is war, which is tyranny, politics.
00:49:02.000 Wage slavery, work, and all of that. 0.70
00:49:05.000 Women should be kept away from that so that they can remain pure, so that they can remain mothers. 1.00
00:49:11.000 You know, I mean, you think of what it means to give life. 1.00
00:49:13.000 That is what God did, right?
00:49:16.000 They are in the most holy and sacred way givers of life, just like whoever put us here.
00:49:23.000 And all these liberals want to put them in a warehouse, or they want to put them in the desert, or they want to put them in harm's way in some way, shape, or form.
00:49:31.000 It's axiomatic. 1.00
00:49:34.000 Why are women allowed to walk around in bikinis? 1.00
00:49:36.000 They shouldn't be. 1.00
00:49:38.000 Should SSRIs be treated like a controlled substance such as narcotics?
00:49:43.000 Don't know what an SSRI is. 0.86
00:49:45.000 Why are we allies with Saudi Arabia?
00:49:48.000 Oh, wow, this is a lot of questions from Anonymous.
00:49:50.000 Why are we allies with Saudi Arabia?
00:49:52.000 It goes back to the 1940s with John D. Rockefeller.
00:49:57.000 And the U.S. government made a deal with Saudi Arabia.
00:50:00.000 It was a tacit deal, sort of a handshake deal, where in exchange for them providing us oil, A steady supply of oil from the Persian Gulf, we would in turn give them a security guarantee.
00:50:12.000 So, if you're asking why we support Saudi Arabia in the present day, it is a continuation of that fundamental agreement, which is we get oil in exchange for a security guarantee.
00:50:23.000 They also are a military ally.
00:50:25.000 They are a Sunni bulwark against Iran, which during the Cold War became a proxy of the Soviet Union.
00:50:32.000 They are allies with Israel, which is a rarity in the Arab world. 0.67
00:50:36.000 They have this weird Symbiotic relationship with Israel. 0.93
00:50:40.000 Many, many, many reasons. 0.65
00:50:41.000 Energy, economic, geostrategic, certainly Israel lobby influenced, but that is the gist of it why we support Saudi Arabia.
00:50:51.000 You can read, there's a great book by Karen House called On Saudi Arabia or something like that, and that's a good one.
00:50:59.000 She writes for the Huffington Post, but it's a pretty good book.
00:51:02.000 Anonymous USA Should we promote legally requiring able bodied men to own guns to subvert the gun control debate?
00:51:10.000 No, I don't really like the legal mandates on things, you know.
00:51:14.000 If we're going to say it's unconstitutional for the government to force people to buy health care, it'd be unconstitutional for men to buy firearms.
00:51:22.000 And additionally, look at crime statistics.
00:51:24.000 Do we want a certain 14% of the population to be required to have firearms?
00:51:28.000 You know, is that a good idea? 1.00
00:51:29.000 If we're going to become a Muslim, Hispanic, black country, do we want high crime populations, which in many cases there's evidence that crime is genetic, that crime has a color? 1.00
00:51:41.000 Excuse me, are we going to give firearms to those people? 1.00
00:51:44.000 And what firearms are we going to give them?
00:51:46.000 Semi automatic rifles?
00:51:47.000 We're going to give them handguns?
00:51:48.000 Who's going to pay for it?
00:51:49.000 I mean, there's a lot of questions.
00:51:51.000 I don't think so.
00:51:52.000 I think it's pretty good that the people that have guns right now, people that are interested in having them, have them.
00:51:58.000 So, no, I'm not for that.
00:52:00.000 If we had a homogenous society, I would say yes.
00:52:02.000 If we had a homogenous, responsible, educated citizenry, I would say yes.
00:52:07.000 But we don't have that.
00:52:08.000 We have a lot of dummies and a lot of problematic, let's say, people in the country.
00:52:14.000 Anonymous USA, should eating pork be a requirement for citizenship? 0.94
00:52:18.000 That's some really edgy boomer posting.
00:52:20.000 But no, no, I don't. 0.98
00:52:22.000 All this exclusionary stuff, it's kind of silly.
00:52:24.000 I mean, if you want to say eating pork should be a requirement, just say what you mean. 1.00
00:52:29.000 Ban Muslims, right? 1.00
00:52:31.000 I mean, ban other people that don't eat pork, whatever. 1.00
00:52:34.000 But to beat around the bush in sort of this cheeky kind of like, eat pork, just say what you mean.
00:52:39.000 I mean, to try and beat around the bush like that, you have to strike at the core of the issue, which is they can't come here.
00:52:48.000 Why do the rootless internationalist cosmopolitan elite fear most?
00:52:52.000 They fear white identity, they fear white identity.
00:52:55.000 Nationalism.
00:52:56.000 You know, look at World War II.
00:52:58.000 That's all I'll say.
00:52:59.000 Look at World War II very carefully. 0.56
00:53:03.000 Understand why you're not allowed to advocate for white nationalism.
00:53:06.000 What does that debate always degenerate back to?
00:53:08.000 What does it always devolve back into?
00:53:11.000 When you talk about white nationalism, no one will debate the merits of white nationalism because it sounds like a certain thing that happened a long time ago.
00:53:19.000 And look into that.
00:53:20.000 Look into that and tell me a little bit about that, right?
00:53:24.000 I mean, I think.
00:53:25.000 I don't want to get too much into that.
00:53:27.000 I don't want to get too explicit.
00:53:28.000 I think people can kind of get a gist of where I stand, but that is what they fear most.
00:53:34.000 That is why certain things you're not allowed to talk about, certain things you're not allowed to hear in school, certain things have no alternative viewpoint that is permissible, that there is no positive light, there is no.
00:53:45.000 I mean, look into it for me.
00:53:48.000 I hate October.
00:53:49.000 Would you be in favor of repealing the National Firearms Act?
00:53:54.000 I don't know what the National Firearms Act is, I don't know what it says.
00:53:59.000 Are anti com just tools of the rootless elite or is this inevitable?
00:54:06.000 I don't know.
00:54:07.000 I don't think so. 0.99
00:54:08.000 I think all this talk of feds and stuff is paranoid and dumb. 0.97
00:54:11.000 These questions are kind of lame, guys. 0.96
00:54:13.000 Quality over quantity, Anonymous USA.
00:54:16.000 These questions are pretty, like, I don't know.
00:54:19.000 It seems like this is either a really young person or a really old person getting, like, giddy and trying to make, like, inside jokes.
00:54:28.000 Make better questions, please.
00:54:30.000 I'm going to neg the audience.
00:54:32.000 I love to neg my audience.
00:54:33.000 Love to neg you guys, but this, like, have you seen this movie from 50 years ago?
00:54:39.000 What about this little inside joke?
00:54:41.000 Please, quality over quantity.
00:54:43.000 Maybe stick to one or two questions that are really well thought out.
00:54:49.000 I got people asking me questions.
00:54:49.000 I'm such an ingrate.
00:54:51.000 I got people watching the show, and here I am being ungrateful about it.
00:54:54.000 But, you know, worth considering, all right?
00:54:57.000 Nothing against you personally.
00:54:59.000 Doesn't mean you're not pretty.
00:55:00.000 Doesn't mean you're not cool.
00:55:01.000 But quality over quantity.
00:55:04.000 Is veganism slash vegetarianism just for soy boys? 0.88
00:55:07.000 Yep. 0.99
00:55:09.000 Yes, it is.
00:55:10.000 What do you think about vaping? 1.00
00:55:11.000 It's dumb. 1.00
00:55:12.000 Vaping is dumb. 1.00
00:55:14.000 All this, why? 1.00
00:55:15.000 Like, why do you need that?
00:55:18.000 Why do you want to vape?
00:55:20.000 Right?
00:55:21.000 And also, it kind of scares me.
00:55:23.000 I read something about vaping that it's like it fills your lungs, and there's weird things that go on with that.
00:55:28.000 I don't know exactly the science of it, but I don't know.
00:55:32.000 I think it's kind of.
00:55:34.000 And also, look at the people that vape.
00:55:36.000 Look at kind of the weird, like, bug men who vape, who are, you know, that weird congressman from California who vapes.
00:55:42.000 Nobody that's really like cool vapes.
00:55:44.000 Nobody that I respect vapes.
00:55:47.000 James Cordes.
00:55:48.000 A thought watches your show and is red pilled.
00:55:51.000 What does her road to redemption look like?
00:55:53.000 Is redemption even possible?
00:55:55.000 Nearly impossible.
00:55:57.000 Once you become a thought, it's almost impossible to turn back the clock on that one.
00:56:03.000 Very few people are even able to make it out.
00:56:06.000 I'm not going to sugarcoat that one.
00:56:07.000 I'm not going to pretend like there's this path to salvation.
00:56:10.000 There's a six step program that you can undertake where you go from degenerate thought.
00:56:15.000 To trad, it doesn't happen.
00:56:16.000 I mean, that's the whole point. 0.98
00:56:18.000 That's why trad women are so valuable because they are so rare, because it takes so much discipline and skill, and that should be valued. 0.99
00:56:25.000 So, for thoughts, it's just stop doing harm. 1.00
00:56:28.000 I mean, that's what the road to recovery looks like.
00:56:30.000 You'll never recover what you had before, you'll never recover that ever again.
00:56:36.000 But you can stop going in the wrong direction, and I encourage everyone to stop going in the wrong direction.
00:56:42.000 But once you cross that threshold, once you make that mistake, that's why it is such a sin, that is why it is such a tragedy.
00:56:48.000 That women are being led into this because the perversion of a child, the theft of their purity, of their innocence, that is a serious offense.
00:57:01.000 That is something that cannot be given back.
00:57:04.000 And that is something that is done without their consent, without their agency, because they're still young, because they're still children, and they were influenced by people with bad intentions.
00:57:14.000 So that's why it's such a crime.
00:57:15.000 That is why it is so heinous and evil that we have a society that encourages this to happen.
00:57:20.000 Because that is something that they will never get back through no fault of their own.
00:57:24.000 In some cases, you have to say, you have to take responsibility for continuing to be a degenerate.
00:57:29.000 But on the other hand, you have to recognize that, you know, at a certain point, people don't have agency when they're children and they have this taken away from them by sinister influences.
00:57:42.000 It's a difficult question.
00:57:43.000 And especially when we talk about women and their agency as a general question, you wonder how much responsibility they play.
00:57:49.000 That's why we have to look at it pretty objectively from a pretty third person way of.
00:57:54.000 We have this problem.
00:57:55.000 We have these people, and they're behaving very badly.
00:57:59.000 And what are we supposed to do about it?
00:58:01.000 I would say first, do no harm.
00:58:04.000 You know, get off Tinder, for God's sakes.
00:58:07.000 Stop going to bars.
00:58:08.000 Stop going to clubs. 1.00
00:58:11.000 Wear long skirts. 1.00
00:58:14.000 You know, that kind of thing. 0.99
00:58:15.000 Start dating men who are responsible. 0.88
00:58:19.000 Start dating men who look like you.
00:58:21.000 You know, that's where we can start with these thoughts.
00:58:23.000 That's what you can do.
00:58:25.000 Anonymous USA, should I join the NRA?
00:58:28.000 Sure.
00:58:29.000 Jeez, what?
00:58:30.000 Should I join the NRA?
00:58:31.000 I don't know, man.
00:58:32.000 I don't know you.
00:58:34.000 I don't know.
00:58:34.000 Is there a membership fee?
00:58:35.000 I don't know.
00:58:36.000 Is that in your budget?
00:58:37.000 I don't know.
00:58:38.000 These are decisions.
00:58:39.000 These are choices.
00:58:40.000 You're asking me on my.
00:58:41.000 Imagine if you have like a call in show.
00:58:43.000 You're on like Mark Levin or something.
00:58:46.000 You're like, hey, Mark, should I get a banana smoothie or should I get a strawberry smoothie?
00:58:52.000 Come on, guys.
00:58:53.000 Come on, Anonymous.
00:58:54.000 I don't know who's dropping all these questions.
00:58:55.000 Who's spamming the hashtag?
00:58:58.000 But this is some pretty low energy stuff, guys.
00:59:03.000 Somebody is not 250 IQ here.
00:59:05.000 Is Halloween degenerate?
00:59:07.000 I see nothing of value in this so called holiday.
00:59:10.000 Of course, there is value in Halloween.
00:59:12.000 Halloween is something that goes back to Europe.
00:59:15.000 Halloween is a tradition of our people.
00:59:18.000 They don't celebrate Halloween anywhere else.
00:59:20.000 Why are you assaulting white identity, man? 0.97
00:59:24.000 Certainly, it's devolved into this kind of slutty party day, this thought day where people can just dress up in the skimpiest thing they can wear and get laid. 0.84
00:59:35.000 But that doesn't mean that we have to allow that to be stolen from us, that we can accept this laying down.
00:59:41.000 No, I think we have to rescue Halloween.
00:59:44.000 Make it what it is before.
00:59:45.000 It's a very traditional thing.
00:59:46.000 Holidays are really a special thing for us.
00:59:49.000 You know, and every holiday, no matter how much it's been modernized to some extent, there are these rituals that connect us as a country, that connect us as a people.
00:59:58.000 You know, people might say that painting Easter eggs isn't trad.
01:00:01.000 But you know what?
01:00:02.000 That is a ritual that you do with your children.
01:00:04.000 You know, you don't do it if you're like 50 and unmarried and no kids.
01:00:07.000 That's a tradition that you do with your children.
01:00:09.000 It's a ritual you do with your children.
01:00:11.000 When it's spring, when it's April, you go to the Sunday Easter Mass, you enjoy the things you gave up during Lent.
01:00:17.000 And you paint the Easter eggs, and that's a fun little thing.
01:00:19.000 And you get to bring out the dye kit, and you paint them, and wow, it's a special thing that you can share with your children.
01:00:26.000 And every year you do it, and that's something that they remember.
01:00:29.000 That's something that you don't do every day.
01:00:30.000 It gives spice to their lives.
01:00:32.000 And during Halloween, you carve a pumpkin, you know, and you get to dress up in a costume, and you get to go trick or treating.
01:00:38.000 And isn't that fun?
01:00:39.000 And then you know what?
01:00:40.000 When they grow up and their parents, then they do it with their children.
01:00:43.000 And that is what we're talking about.
01:00:46.000 That's the essence of what we're talking about in traditionalism.
01:00:49.000 Is rituals, is a connection between posterity and between your ancestors.
01:00:55.000 These are the things which connect us to the past and the present and to horizontally the people today because you could go across the street and they're doing the same thing.
01:01:05.000 And you could go down to your neighbor's house two blocks down and they're painting Easter eggs and they're trick or treating and everything else.
01:01:11.000 These are the things that create community.
01:01:13.000 You know, I'll tell you one thing they're not trick or treating in the south side of Chicago, they're not trick or treating in Harlem, New York.
01:01:20.000 I don't know if that's been gentrified yet, but they're not trick or treating in Detroit because it's dangerous because there's no community.
01:01:27.000 People aren't putting up decorations because they don't care.
01:01:30.000 So, no, Halloween is definitely something of value.
01:01:34.000 Don't be as subversive.
01:01:37.000 Punished dog right.
01:01:38.000 What system of government do you think is ideal?
01:01:40.000 Our constitution, it varies from country to country, but our government was best suited to our people. 0.99
01:01:46.000 The problem is we have people here that are not our people, but for every country, it's different. 1.00
01:01:52.000 Obviously. 1.00
01:01:53.000 And you can read about this in the social contract by Rousseau.
01:01:57.000 I don't agree with everything in that, like the popular sovereignty or the democracy.
01:02:03.000 He has a real penchant to encourage democracy.
01:02:06.000 But in Rousseau's social contract, he talks about government, the scale and the scope of it and the structure of it.
01:02:13.000 And he makes a really good point about how different peoples with different temperaments and different states and different sizes require different structures of government.
01:02:22.000 He said that for big, Big empires, big countries.
01:02:26.000 You need probably a monarchy, and you need it to be like that.
01:02:32.000 You need it to be a strong central government.
01:02:34.000 He said, with small countries, with European countries in particular, you can have a republic.
01:02:39.000 You can have a more direct democracy.
01:02:41.000 And with medium, you have an aristocracy.
01:02:43.000 He said, though, with Africa or with the other peoples of the world, it might look different. 1.00
01:02:48.000 And I certainly think that's true. 0.82
01:02:51.000 Elwood Holgrun, the left always mocks the 1950s.
01:02:55.000 Some things have gotten better since then, but it was overall a time of order, family, and peace.
01:02:59.000 That's true. 0.93
01:03:00.000 And that they criticized the 50s, it's sort of silly.
01:03:03.000 I can think of but a few areas where things are better than in the 1950s.
01:03:08.000 You know, they say, oh, you're so like 1950s.
01:03:11.000 You're so, oh, you're like an old time.
01:03:12.000 You're like a 70 year old.
01:03:14.000 Yeah, like a time that actually made sense, that actually worked.
01:03:17.000 And certainly, oh, but oh, you know, Jim Crow was there.
01:03:20.000 Wah, wah, wah. 0.99
01:03:21.000 It was so like, shut up. 0.99
01:03:24.000 That's obviously not what we're talking about. 0.96
01:03:26.000 We're talking about a country that made sense.
01:03:29.000 And yeah, of course you had injustices.
01:03:31.000 You have injustice everywhere all the time.
01:03:34.000 But do we want to have injustices and have a country that's dysfunctional or a country with injustices that's functional?
01:03:40.000 That's the question.
01:03:42.000 Why can't we be like Switzerland?
01:03:44.000 They are neutral, hate wars, reject the EU, and generally care about their own country the most.
01:03:50.000 Homogenous, small, educated, rich.
01:03:53.000 That's the answer to that. 0.52
01:03:54.000 That's why we can't be like Switzerland.
01:03:56.000 Switzerland is this big.
01:03:58.000 They're all the same.
01:04:00.000 They're all educated.
01:04:00.000 They're all wealthy, and they all care.
01:04:03.000 So you see that in the more homogenous and small countries, the better off they are, typically.
01:04:10.000 I mean, look no further than the.
01:04:12.000 Economic Freedom Index, the Press Freedom Index, all these measures of happiness and everything else.
01:04:17.000 What countries do they usually list?
01:04:19.000 It's city states.
01:04:20.000 Hong Kong, Singapore, New Zealand, Switzerland, Norway, Sweden.
01:04:25.000 It's countries that are, by and large, one city or a pretty small population, homogenous, wealthy, educated.
01:04:32.000 That's what we should seek to be, or at least emulate that, I guess, with our cities, maybe. 0.97
01:04:39.000 Is race mixing 50% degenerate or 100% degenerate? 1.00
01:04:43.000 Oh, it's 100% degenerate. 1.00
01:04:46.000 U.S. nationalist, what are some of the best things I can do as a young woman, 15, to serve our nation and our people?
01:04:52.000 Whoa, 15, and you're watching this show.
01:04:54.000 Holy smokes.
01:04:55.000 I would say, I don't know, the show's a little bit explicit.
01:04:58.000 If I had known I had youngsters watching this show, I would watch my mouth more carefully.
01:05:03.000 But I would say that for the young ladies, the best thing that they can do is start. 0.97
01:05:08.000 I don't know.
01:05:09.000 I'm not a young lady.
01:05:09.000 I don't know.
01:05:11.000 So it's tough to say.
01:05:12.000 I would say for the young ladies, the best thing that they can do is just.
01:05:16.000 Stay focused.
01:05:17.000 Don't worry about all the nonsense with the high school parties.
01:05:21.000 I would say don't drink.
01:05:22.000 Don't smoke.
01:05:23.000 Don't smoke cigarettes.
01:05:24.000 Don't smoke pot.
01:05:25.000 Don't do drugs.
01:05:26.000 Don't drink coffee.
01:05:28.000 Don't get on the birth control and any of that.
01:05:30.000 I would say stay away from the boys.
01:05:33.000 Maybe you go on a date, but make sure he has good intentions.
01:05:37.000 None of this partying thing.
01:05:40.000 Don't date some kind of predator or anything like that.
01:05:43.000 I would say that if you're 15, you don't got to be worrying about anything like that.
01:05:48.000 And that's all.
01:05:49.000 Anybody seems to be worried about.
01:05:50.000 I was only 15, what, four years ago?
01:05:52.000 So that's all anybody was worried about when I was in high school.
01:05:55.000 So keep your head on straight.
01:05:58.000 I don't know.
01:05:58.000 Start looking at what you want to do.
01:06:00.000 I mean, do you want to be a professional?
01:06:02.000 Do you want to go to school?
01:06:03.000 Start really thinking about that.
01:06:05.000 I think people like the idea of it, and then they end up like that and they go against it.
01:06:09.000 You know, for example, look at someone you know who is a mother who's like 50 or 60, and then look at somebody who's not a mother who's 50 or 60, and not somebody that's on television, because not many people make it to be on television.
01:06:22.000 Look at somebody you know who's like 50 or 60, unmarried or no kids, and then decide what you want for your life.
01:06:27.000 Because so often I see these young ladies and they idolize movie stars and actresses and pop stars, and they think that that's what being unmarried and having no kids looks like.
01:06:37.000 And actually, it doesn't.
01:06:38.000 You know, it looks like long hours at the office and then getting home and being alone and being sad.
01:06:46.000 So I would say that if you're 15, evaluate your life, evaluate if you want to go to college or if you want to pursue a more traditional route.
01:06:53.000 I would certainly advocate for the traditional route.
01:06:57.000 Hunter Rizika, should pedophiles get the noose?
01:07:01.000 The death penalty, I'm generally against the death penalty, but obviously, it should be locked up. 0.93
01:07:06.000 The problem with the death penalty is the false convictions.
01:07:09.000 That's what scares the hell out of me you give the state a blank check to kill people, and what happens if they frame you for that?
01:07:18.000 What happens if they frame you for some kind of a crime?
01:07:22.000 What if that got expanded to cyber crimes?
01:07:25.000 What if that got expanded to other things? 0.95
01:07:27.000 You look at right wing content online, and then they get to kill you.
01:07:30.000 That's the thing that I'm afraid of. 0.69
01:07:33.000 Certainly, I think they should go to jail forever.
01:07:35.000 But I don't know if it's a question of, you know, we should reintroduce the death penalty.
01:07:40.000 I think in a revolutionary government, it's a little bit different.
01:07:43.000 But in our government, it would be quite difficult to keep that from turning back around and hitting us.
01:07:50.000 American nationalist, how seriously do you take Alex Jones?
01:07:53.000 What's the deal with him?
01:07:54.000 I like him.
01:07:55.000 He gets a little bit out there sometimes.
01:07:58.000 But I generally like him.
01:07:59.000 I think he's an entertainer.
01:08:00.000 You know, he does a three hour radio program every day.
01:08:03.000 And as such, it's entertainment.
01:08:06.000 You know, when you do three hours of radio independently and you want people to stay listening to what's going on in the news, you have to spice it up.
01:08:14.000 You have to add some showmanship.
01:08:16.000 You have to add, stretch the truth a little bit.
01:08:18.000 And people get mad at him for stretching the truth.
01:08:21.000 What does the news media do all day long?
01:08:23.000 What does NBC and BBC and everyone else do all day long but stretch the truth?
01:08:28.000 He does it in an entertaining and comical way.
01:08:30.000 I almost think that's better.
01:08:31.000 It's easier to sort out what's BS and what's real.
01:08:34.000 So I like Alex Jones.
01:08:35.000 He's a smart guy.
01:08:37.000 Jay 22.
01:08:39.000 After dinner and work, I don't watch TV.
01:08:42.000 I watch America First with Nick J. Fuentes right on, as you should, as everybody should.
01:08:46.000 I think your show is increasing my IQ.
01:08:49.000 Studying for a CPA and my lowest test score is 96.
01:08:52.000 Hey, there you go.
01:08:53.000 Watch America First increases your IQ.
01:08:56.000 But I mean, really, if you're watching things and you're reading things that are making you think and they're increasing your vocabulary, not for nothing, I don't know if it increases your intelligence, but certainly I think it makes you.
01:09:08.000 I don't know.
01:09:09.000 Maybe it makes you more sharp, makes you more quick.
01:09:11.000 Compare and contrast somebody who watches three hours of sitcoms every night to somebody who reads three hours every night.
01:09:18.000 I guarantee you'll see a difference in the way you talk to that person and their problem solving ability.
01:09:24.000 If you read, you get a bigger vocabulary.
01:09:26.000 It's just that easy.
01:09:27.000 And verbal IQ, which is the secondary component to IQ, is a lot of vocabulary and all of that.
01:09:36.000 So maybe it does increase your IQ.
01:09:38.000 I don't know.
01:09:39.000 But, yeah, certainly I think turning off the vapid nonsense, the clown world propaganda, and turning on something educational.
01:09:47.000 That may sound like the kid who didn't have cable you grew up with. 0.81
01:09:47.000 That may sound lame. 0.81
01:09:50.000 But guess what?
01:09:50.000 He's smart.
01:09:51.000 He knows about things.
01:09:53.000 You know, he didn't grow up watching the Johnny Carson show, and he can't reminisce about, you know, oh, and every week I get to watch Johnny Carson.
01:10:00.000 The 60s were so cool, or the 70s were so cool.
01:10:00.000 Oh, my God.
01:10:03.000 But you know what?
01:10:05.000 They know what's going on.
01:10:06.000 They're not some geriatric boomer.
01:10:08.000 So you got to read up, you got to watch the big brain show.
01:10:13.000 DM me rare loomers. 0.99
01:10:15.000 Ever just want to literally kill lefties? 0.99
01:10:17.000 I pray for a violent civil war daily where true men can snatch power again. 0.98
01:10:21.000 No, Think about that for more than five seconds. 0.98
01:10:26.000 A violent civil war, who's going to fight in it?
01:10:28.000 Is your dad going to fight in it?
01:10:29.000 Is your brother going to fight in it?
01:10:31.000 Is your cousin going to fight in it?
01:10:32.000 Your uncle?
01:10:34.000 I think of every man I know in my life, and I'm the only one who would take up arms if there was a civil war between Antifa and the alt right.
01:10:46.000 Maybe I know two or three people.
01:10:49.000 Not going to happen.
01:10:50.000 Then you have to factor in the government and the police.
01:10:53.000 Who has the monopoly on force in the country?
01:10:55.000 Who are they going to side with?
01:10:56.000 Who are the generals going to side with?
01:10:59.000 Who's the Pentagon, the National Security Council, going to side with?
01:11:03.000 The right wing rebels or with the paused establishment?
01:11:07.000 Not going to happen.
01:11:08.000 It's a fantasy. 0.96
01:11:10.000 Anybody who pushes that James Mason siege narrative, it's silly.
01:11:15.000 I'm almost suspicious of the motive there. 0.99
01:11:17.000 It's going to get us all killed.
01:11:20.000 Which Evola book should I read first?
01:11:22.000 Any of them stand out as the most enlightening?
01:11:24.000 Well, the magnum opus is Revolt Against the Modern World.
01:11:30.000 It's It's the most comprehensive.
01:11:31.000 It's the longest.
01:11:32.000 It lays out the traditionalist philosophy, I think, in the best way out of many philosophers.
01:11:40.000 I don't know.
01:11:40.000 I don't think it really matters so much which one you read first.
01:11:42.000 It doesn't really impact my understanding of any of them, depending on.
01:11:47.000 I mean, I would recommend the top three would be Revolt Against the Modern World, Ride the Tiger, Men Among the Ruins, but really, I don't think it matters.
01:11:55.000 I would say probably start with one of the shorter ones, like Men Among the Ruins.
01:12:00.000 Ride the Tiger is shorter.
01:12:02.000 I think it's significantly shorter than.
01:12:05.000 Revolt against the modern world.
01:12:06.000 So maybe I'd start with that one just so you could get a taste, a feel for his style, for his philosophy before you tackle the big stuff, the big one.
01:12:16.000 But I don't know, up to you.
01:12:18.000 We think the pumpkin should be shifted camera left above the NJF.com for a better aesthetic.
01:12:23.000 Do you think so?
01:12:24.000 The problem is if I put it over there, there's a weird reflection effect where it takes the color out of it, like right here.
01:12:34.000 I don't know, like watch.
01:12:34.000 If I put it over here, let me check if it's doing it.
01:12:39.000 On my OBS here.
01:12:41.000 Yeah, see, if I put it here, see how it has this going on?
01:12:44.000 I don't know what that's all about.
01:12:46.000 So, got to keep it over here to prevent that weird thing from happening.
01:12:57.000 Anonymous, the top 16 results for most reviewed books on Amazon are all 50 Shades of Grey, which has 4 out of 5 stars.
01:13:04.000 Yeah, the SM, the BDSM stuff, is sick.
01:13:10.000 It's very disturbing to me because.
01:13:12.000 Part of civilization, part of being sophisticated, part of high culture is that you take away the primitivist aspects of life, that you don't boil it down to this very disgusting, very anarchic and carnal view of sexuality.
01:13:30.000 I don't understand how you could.
01:13:34.000 I just don't understand it. 0.59
01:13:35.000 And you understand why people do enjoy that, why people get a kick out of that, because for old ladies who are not sexually satisfied, they read something like that and they're like, whoa, that's interesting. 0.88
01:13:46.000 That's on the husband. 0.87
01:13:47.000 The husband is not providing for the woman. 0.96
01:13:50.000 You know, when you have all these people, it's just basically taken for granted that you start to decay when you're 30. 0.99
01:13:56.000 You just let yourself go, you become this disgusting animal. 0.99
01:13:59.000 No wonder women are looking for some cool, like, millionaire with, like, facial hair and a ripped chest to come and sweep them off their feet if their husband is turning into Jim Belushi. 1.00
01:14:09.000 You know, of course, all the moms are going to want to buy that book. 0.89
01:14:14.000 But, yeah, I think the BDSM stuff, I don't know that much.
01:14:20.000 You know, about the history of all that and if that's normal.
01:14:23.000 I don't know.
01:14:24.000 I don't know about that stuff so much.
01:14:26.000 A little bit too pure, a little bit too bit of a pure boy to know much about that.
01:14:31.000 But my first instinct when I heard about that book and when it was sweeping the nation was just kind of sad, just kind of sad. 0.98
01:14:38.000 Like you're supposed to love somebody and then you're beating the shit out of them on the bed. 0.97
01:14:43.000 How is that? 0.99
01:14:43.000 Like, what? 0.99
01:14:45.000 How is that good?
01:14:47.000 How is that romantic?
01:14:48.000 I don't know.
01:14:49.000 I don't know.
01:14:50.000 Maybe you're looking at me like, wait till you're older.
01:14:54.000 I don't know.
01:14:54.000 But I think it's pretty degenerate.
01:14:58.000 Super Goy Prime, Nick carves the pumpkin or I disavow.
01:15:01.000 We'll carve the pumpkin on Halloween, maybe.
01:15:03.000 Maybe if we do a Halloween special, we'll carve it up.
01:15:07.000 Senator Memes, can we ditch the nebulous terms such as the Jews, globalists, and deep state, name the enemy specific groups and uproot them?
01:15:18.000 No, the problem is the nebulous terms help us, right?
01:15:21.000 I mean, being nebulous, being formless, it keeps them from being able to target us with a gotcha quotation or anything like that.
01:15:29.000 So it's very strategic why we do that.
01:15:33.000 That's pretty good.
01:15:33.000 But I like that meme.
01:15:35.000 I hate October.
01:15:36.000 Thoughts on the Jeffersonian concept of a natural aristocracy?
01:15:40.000 I think it's just failed.
01:15:42.000 Unfortunately, I think it's just failed.
01:15:44.000 And it's failed for a very particular reason. 0.61
01:15:46.000 There used to be an aristocracy in this country, an Anglo aristocracy in this country for a long time.
01:15:53.000 And that started to get eroded about 70 years ago, 70 or 80 years ago, by a certain other aristocracy that infiltrated and.
01:16:03.000 Made it all rootless, internationalist.
01:16:05.000 So I don't know.
01:16:07.000 It's tough to say.
01:16:08.000 I think it worked well for a long time.
01:16:10.000 Now I think it might need some kind of institutional protection because certainly it has eroded since the founding of the country.
01:16:16.000 But then again, everybody in the founding said that this is the natural state of government.
01:16:21.000 That's the natural course for a nation is to degenerate.
01:16:26.000 So I don't know if that's the fault of natural aristocracy or just the course of time.
01:16:30.000 Probably the second there.
01:16:34.000 Jerry Rogers.
01:16:35.000 You can give a man a fish and he will eat for a day.
01:16:37.000 Give him a pair of fishnet nylons and someone will ask him out to dinner.
01:16:41.000 Yeah, that's the trap question, right?
01:16:43.000 Gubbler Chechenova. 1.00
01:16:46.000 Oh, how do we still have.
01:16:48.000 Oh, my God, guys, we still have 40 questions.
01:16:52.000 We've been doing this for an hour and we still have 40 questions.
01:16:58.000 Oh, my God.
01:17:00.000 And I'm almost out of water.
01:17:03.000 Well, I'll go into the live chat.
01:17:03.000 Sheesh.
01:17:05.000 I'm going to have to take some of these later.
01:17:07.000 40 questions.
01:17:08.000 This is crazy.
01:17:09.000 I'll have to, over the weekend, I'll have to pick and choose the best ones.
01:17:13.000 I guess we're at that point now because it used to be there weren't that many questions, so I could just answer everyone that came up, but you asked 36 questions tonight, plus all these other ones that I still had to take care of.
01:17:26.000 Holy smokes.
01:17:29.000 Yeah, we'll have to pick and choose some kind of a lineup for Monday because I'm not doing 40 questions, folks.
01:17:34.000 That's not good entertainment.
01:17:36.000 We promised we'd go into the live chat.
01:17:38.000 So, I'll go over to the Super Chat right now.
01:17:40.000 Everything else we'll sort out and we'll take on Monday from the Twitter.
01:17:44.000 But for the Super Chat, we have to answer our Super Chat questions.
01:17:48.000 These are our primo.
01:17:49.000 These are our best.
01:17:51.000 Well, here, it goes like this People that donate to my PayPal, they're up here.
01:17:55.000 These are my best goys.
01:17:57.000 PayPal and Patreon, these guys are my number one goyem.
01:18:01.000 They're my number one crew.
01:18:03.000 They're their two live crew.
01:18:05.000 We love them.
01:18:06.000 Then we have our Super Chat people.
01:18:08.000 We love our Super Chat people.
01:18:09.000 Good people.
01:18:10.000 They ask questions.
01:18:11.000 It's close, very close.
01:18:11.000 They're great.
01:18:13.000 But Super Chat money goes to the biz.
01:18:15.000 So, you know, they're there.
01:18:17.000 They're our primo, they're our aristocracy, our premium customers.
01:18:21.000 Question askers, probably after them, and then our viewers, which are still good.
01:18:26.000 250 IQ viewers are there, and everyone else is just kind of.
01:18:30.000 But yes, we got to take care of our Super Chat people here.
01:18:34.000 Charles Elmsworth, I'm struggling to address coincidences without devolving into cartoonishness.
01:18:40.000 Perhaps by celebrating good ones, what's the middle ground?
01:18:45.000 I think it's pretty, you know, the thing is, when you talk about the coincidences, you just have to be tactful for how you bring it up.
01:18:54.000 Have to be tactful, have to be factual, have to be implicit about it, like I do, like I am, you know, because it is easy to get cartoonish, and that's what they want.
01:19:03.000 They want you to be screaming and going ape about some crazy conspiracy theory.
01:19:08.000 It kills them when you have somebody that says, What about this?
01:19:11.000 What about that?
01:19:12.000 Why is it, you know, 2%, but yet they're, you know, a larger percentage somewhere else, a larger percentage in academia, a larger percentage in media, a larger percentage in finance?
01:19:21.000 Why is that?
01:19:22.000 Is that because of hard work and determination, or is that something else?
01:19:25.000 I mean, that's.
01:19:27.000 That is where you get tactful.
01:19:28.000 That is where you get implicit.
01:19:29.000 That's how you do it.
01:19:32.000 Here we go.
01:19:33.000 Great show.
01:19:34.000 Also, that was a B day shout out for my friend Frank, who I turned on to your show.
01:19:38.000 You deserve it.
01:19:38.000 Have more shekels.
01:19:39.000 Give generously, Goys.
01:19:41.000 Well, thank you, my man.
01:19:42.000 And yeah, happy birthday to Frank.
01:19:43.000 We love our buddy Frank.
01:19:46.000 Thank you for the donation.
01:19:47.000 Thank you for the kind words.
01:19:49.000 Eternal Greek, what do you think of Golden Dawn in Greece?
01:19:52.000 I like him.
01:19:53.000 I like him.
01:19:54.000 Anybody that's far right and nationalist, I like in Europe.
01:19:56.000 Anybody that's not Brussels, anybody that hates Miracle, I'm on their team.
01:20:00.000 I know they have some pretty shady connections going on, but again, if you're asking me if I would like the far left neoliberal technocracy, the managerial state, or a far right nationalist will of the people organization, I'm going to go at the right every time.
01:20:16.000 Spoiler alert please stop with the Twitter cues.
01:20:18.000 I know, it's so boring.
01:20:19.000 We may have to just switch it up and just do the live chat from now on. 0.98
01:20:22.000 That used to be how we did it, but people are asking pretty dumb questions.
01:20:26.000 So it's more fun in the live chat, I guess, more exciting.
01:20:29.000 We'll have to do it that way. 0.97
01:20:32.000 Spoiler alert, pretty sure that since Vatican II, the official position of the Catholic Church is that Jews do not need to believe in Jesus Christ in order to go to heaven. 0.87
01:20:40.000 Clearly, heresy. 1.00
01:20:41.000 Exactly right. 0.99
01:20:42.000 I mean, how silly. 0.94
01:20:44.000 So, those are our super chat. 0.60
01:20:45.000 Thank you, spoiler alert, for the donations.
01:20:47.000 We love you.
01:20:49.000 And now we'll jump into the live chat.
01:20:51.000 I will discuss with our regular viewers who are not providing shekels.
01:20:55.000 It's okay.
01:20:56.000 It's okay.
01:20:57.000 But now we get to mix it up with the live chat.
01:21:01.000 And here we go.
01:21:03.000 Saxon Runes, are you Catholic, Nick?
01:21:05.000 I am.
01:21:05.000 I am Roman Catholic.
01:21:09.000 Remove your headphones.
01:21:11.000 It's probably talking to somebody in the live chat there.
01:21:14.000 Nick, would Micro Ben cuck out KD to Benny, or is she way too old for Benny? 0.58
01:21:19.000 She's probably too old, and also not a twink like Benny likes him, right?
01:21:27.000 Whoa, come to the dark side. 1.00
01:21:28.000 Would you bang Cassie Dillon if you were a degenerate? 1.00
01:21:30.000 No. 1.00
01:21:32.000 Sorry, but I don't know.
01:21:34.000 If you've ever seen me in person, I think you would understand that Cassie Dillon, Nick Fuentes, we've got a little disparity there.
01:21:42.000 In terms of looks.
01:21:44.000 So, no, probably not.
01:21:45.000 Not really my type.
01:21:47.000 I don't want to get into it.
01:21:48.000 I'm not a degenerate, so I don't want to make a comment on why that is the case.
01:21:52.000 Certainly, there are some factors that lead me to that decision. 1.00
01:21:58.000 Why are Muslims degenerate? 1.00
01:22:00.000 Because they inbreed. 1.00
01:22:01.000 They're one of the most inbred people in the world in the Middle East. 1.00
01:22:04.000 That's why they're degenerate. 1.00
01:22:06.000 And they beat their wives. 1.00
01:22:07.000 That's degenerate. 0.97
01:22:09.000 You guys complete me. 0.96
01:22:10.000 Hell yeah, my man.
01:22:12.000 We love you.
01:22:13.000 Nicholas, is your PayPal on your Twitter page of YouTube?
01:22:16.000 It's on the description right below the video.
01:22:19.000 There's a link there.
01:22:23.000 Thoughts on Jonathan Bowden?
01:22:25.000 Don't know him.
01:22:28.000 Yeah, I'm going to censor the Twitter questions, definitely.
01:22:28.000 You should censor.
01:22:31.000 We need more trolls in here.
01:22:32.000 The problem is there's no conflict.
01:22:34.000 Conflict is what sells, conflict is what is exciting.
01:22:37.000 It's entertaining, it's funny.
01:22:38.000 I've got to get James, because James was doing the Thought Patrol.
01:22:41.000 That was a fun segment.
01:22:42.000 I've got to get him to show me how to do the Twitter on the screen like he did.
01:22:47.000 Maybe he's got someone producing for him, so that's why it was cleaner.
01:22:50.000 But.
01:22:52.000 I got to be able to do that so I could go through my notifications and BTFO some people.
01:22:56.000 Because, you know, obviously the haters don't watch my show.
01:22:59.000 I got to go out and search them out.
01:23:03.000 Nick, will you please buy a gourd?
01:23:05.000 No, no, we did the pumpkin.
01:23:07.000 Pumpkin is enough.
01:23:08.000 Do you plan to go back to college?
01:23:10.000 If so, I really don't want to go to college.
01:23:10.000 Where?
01:23:14.000 College is dumb to me. 1.00
01:23:15.000 College is silly. 1.00
01:23:16.000 You know, you pay a lot of money, and it's all that stuff going on there. 0.97
01:23:22.000 Not my thing.
01:23:23.000 Not my thing.
01:23:23.000 I don't like going to class.
01:23:24.000 I didn't go to class when I was in college, when I was paying for it.
01:23:27.000 I slept in most of the days because I'd be up all night reading or watching Jordan Peterson or someone else on YouTube or on 4chan, watching Webums.
01:23:42.000 Not worth it.
01:23:43.000 And then the funny thing is, I would never go to class.
01:23:43.000 Not worth it.
01:23:45.000 I would come to class for the exams and I'd pass all the exams.
01:23:48.000 I went into African politics, I went into that class a handful of times.
01:23:53.000 I got like 100% on every test.
01:23:55.000 I got 100% on the map test, 100% on the final, 100% on the essay.
01:24:04.000 My essay was about Libya.
01:24:05.000 Pretty good essay.
01:24:08.000 I wrote it in one day.
01:24:09.000 It's like a term paper, and I wrote it in one day.
01:24:12.000 I got like a 95 or something on it. 0.85
01:24:14.000 So it's kind of silly.
01:24:16.000 Could we start a weekly book review?
01:24:18.000 You recommend a book, spend 10 minutes a week on it.
01:24:22.000 I don't read as much as I'd like to anymore because I'm doing this show and I got other things going on.
01:24:22.000 I don't know.
01:24:28.000 That's the only issue.
01:24:29.000 I'd love to start the weekly book club, but then I'd have to read every day.
01:24:32.000 I'd have to read like 30 pages every day because, you know, you figure you got seven days to read a book, you have a 200 page book.
01:24:40.000 What would that be?
01:24:41.000 If we could do that math really quickly, like 29 pages a day?
01:24:45.000 I guess that's not a crazy task.
01:24:49.000 We'll think about it.
01:24:49.000 Maybe.
01:24:52.000 What's the best implicitly white pre multicultural U.S. flag? 0.86
01:24:56.000 I like there's a Confederate flag that's blue and it just has a star in the middle. 0.78
01:25:00.000 Looks kind of like the Somalian flag, but darker.
01:25:03.000 That's pretty implicit.
01:25:07.000 Thoughts on rebranding cultural Marxism to racial Marxism?
01:25:11.000 Eh, kind of, I don't know about that.
01:25:14.000 I think referring to anything as Marxism is a little 2015 little tea party for my tastes.
01:25:21.000 Globalism, I think, is better.
01:25:23.000 It's not ideological. 0.93
01:25:26.000 When will you breed a white woman's nick? 1.00
01:25:28.000 When I get married and I can support a family, that's when.
01:25:34.000 Nick, you need to read Scouting on Two Continents by Major Burnham.
01:25:38.000 I'll check that out.
01:25:39.000 Nick, are you going to U of Alabama?
01:25:41.000 No.
01:25:42.000 Nope.
01:25:43.000 Nicholas, how can we keep control of the Rust Belt? 0.99
01:25:46.000 Got to keep appealing to the white working class. 0.88
01:25:48.000 Destroy the trade agreements and appeal to people that are blue collar, white, disenfranchised. 0.92
01:25:56.000 That's how you do it.
01:25:57.000 Mitt Romney didn't do that.
01:26:00.000 In high school, I aced every test but failed several classes because I would read books or sleep in class and didn't do homeworks assignments.
01:26:07.000 Yeah, I was not great in high school.
01:26:10.000 High school was not fun for me because I just shirked all the responsibilities for high school.
01:26:15.000 They'd be like, I would show up to high school.
01:26:18.000 My senior year got really, really bad because I got kind of like black pilled around February of my senior year.
01:26:24.000 Personal things going on, and high school was also a burden to finish. 0.94
01:26:28.000 And so, February, I was black pilled as hell.
01:26:30.000 I was like, I don't want to do this. 0.96
01:26:32.000 We have to read like poetry that is anti white in literature class. 0.97
01:26:36.000 We had to do all this other dumb stuff. 0.58
01:26:39.000 And so, I would show up like from the beginning to the end of the second semester of senior year.
01:26:43.000 I'd just fall asleep in the first three classes of the day.
01:26:46.000 I'd go into what was the first class?
01:26:48.000 First class was.
01:26:50.000 International business economics, going to that class.
01:26:54.000 Whoops, spilling my water here.
01:26:56.000 I'd come in, just plop the head down, and take a nap.
01:26:59.000 Bell would ring.
01:26:59.000 I'd get up, go to the next class, which was microeconomics.
01:27:03.000 That one I did not do so hot in.
01:27:05.000 That's a difficult subject.
01:27:06.000 But I'd come in, put my head down, and sleep.
01:27:08.000 I'd wake up before the bell would ring, have my bag of chips, have my yogurt, and then go to English, fall asleep for that whole class.
01:27:17.000 And then I'd come home from school, take a nap.
01:27:21.000 So that was high school for me.
01:27:23.000 Didn't do any of the homework.
01:27:24.000 I mean, it was just kind of a disaster.
01:27:26.000 It was a constant, like, keeping spinning plates, you know, that whole deal.
01:27:31.000 It was like that because I was basically picking and choosing which homework assignments I had to do to avoid flunking out completely.
01:27:39.000 Not a pretty picture.
01:27:40.000 People are always like, Nick, you weren't a good student in high school.
01:27:43.000 You know, you don't have to be smart to be a good student.
01:27:48.000 A book I recommend everyone read is Culture of Critique, especially Chapter 5 on the topic of the Frankfurt School.
01:27:54.000 Yeah, that's a good one. 0.84
01:27:55.000 Check that out.
01:27:58.000 Don't give up.
01:27:59.000 I'm a junior.
01:27:59.000 We are almost through.
01:28:01.000 No, I mean, I'm not in high school anymore.
01:28:04.000 Or in college, you mean?
01:28:06.000 Yeah, no, I can't do it.
01:28:07.000 Can't do it, man.
01:28:08.000 I'm really leaning towards dropping out because it's like you have to think about it.
01:28:13.000 Everyone's like, no, you have to go to college.
01:28:14.000 You have to do it.
01:28:17.000 Nobody is ready at this age to take on a quarter of a million dollars in debt or $100,000 or $200,000 in debt.
01:28:24.000 That's a big decision, and nobody's thinking through it.
01:28:27.000 And unless you're going to a really good college, if I were to get it at some community college online, it's not going to matter anyway.
01:28:32.000 It just won't matter.
01:28:33.000 So I'm really fixing to drop out.
01:28:36.000 I think it's a big waste of time. 1.00
01:28:37.000 I think it's stupid. 0.99
01:28:38.000 I think it doesn't mean anything anymore. 1.00
01:28:40.000 You even go to Boston University, which is supposed to be a good school, and every person in my class was an idiot except for me and like a few others. 0.95
01:28:48.000 And the professors were no good, and the resources were no good. 0.97
01:28:51.000 The library was terrible, but the gym was really nice.
01:28:54.000 College is just such a waste, in my opinion.
01:28:59.000 Maybe I'll go to a trade school.
01:29:00.000 That'll be my plan B. I'll learn how to weld.
01:29:05.000 Nick, what do you say to girls who said you have a huge BBC? 0.83
01:29:11.000 I would say the whole concept of that is pretty anti white. 0.78
01:29:17.000 No comment. 0.93
01:29:19.000 I'm going to college.
01:29:20.000 My GPA is all right, about a 93 or a 94.
01:29:23.000 Bro, do you know how GPA works, man?
01:29:28.000 Dropout stream, all 40 questions.
01:29:30.000 Yeah, don't like the.
01:29:32.000 Don't like the college.
01:29:33.000 Oh, okay.
01:29:33.000 Sorry, Nick.
01:29:34.000 You were talking to somebody else.
01:29:37.000 Yeah, right.
01:29:37.000 Unless you're going to be a lawyer or a doctor, it doesn't make any sense, or an engineer or somebody who needs it.
01:29:42.000 But if you're going to be a political scientist, you know, whatever the hell that is, you could just go to the library for a year and you're done.
01:29:50.000 My assistant swamped with $200,000. 0.99
01:29:52.000 She earns over $100,000 in her first year, though.
01:29:56.000 Yeah, but that's not.
01:29:57.000 I mean, she earns over $100,000 in her first year.
01:30:00.000 Oh, yeah, okay.
01:30:01.000 But what are her expenses, right?
01:30:03.000 I mean, you have to imagine that $200,000 is your principal.
01:30:06.000 It's not like you make $100,000 a year, so you pay off your college debt in two years.
01:30:11.000 She'll probably still be paying that off for 20 or 25 years. 0.85
01:30:15.000 $200,000. 0.57
01:30:17.000 That is like owning a high end home, depending on where you live.
01:30:22.000 So, don't need it, in my opinion.
01:30:26.000 Rank the following three best to work or best to worst. 1.00
01:30:30.000 Cucked, Bugman White, Hotep Black, Alt Jew, if you had to choose. 1.00
01:30:34.000 Geez. 1.00
01:30:37.000 That's a tough question.
01:30:38.000 I mean, what's the.
01:30:41.000 How are we evaluating this?
01:30:43.000 What's the benchmark?
01:30:44.000 Best to worst in what category?
01:30:47.000 Hard to evaluate when I don't know what for.
01:30:50.000 Nick, why don't you trade cryptocurrency?
01:30:52.000 I don't know anything about it.
01:30:53.000 I don't want to spend money on something I don't know anything about.
01:30:56.000 Do you remember your GPA from high school?
01:30:59.000 It was like 3.2.
01:31:00.000 It's like 3.2 unweighted.
01:31:04.000 And then my weighted GPA was like 4.6.
01:31:08.000 My college GPA, I'd rather not say.
01:31:13.000 Have you read Moldbug?
01:31:14.000 I have.
01:31:15.000 I think he's good, but overrated generally.
01:31:18.000 I think it's kind of pretentious.
01:31:20.000 But good.
01:31:21.000 But he's good.
01:31:23.000 Take electronics courses.
01:31:26.000 That is just so not my aptitude.
01:31:27.000 The computer stuff.
01:31:29.000 I have broken three separate laptops because I've wigged out about electronics.
01:31:34.000 The first one.
01:31:35.000 What happened to the first one?
01:31:36.000 The first one, I smashed it like this.
01:31:38.000 The second one, I think I knocked it off the table and it broke.
01:31:43.000 And the third one, I punched the screen really hard.
01:31:47.000 Maybe there were four.
01:31:48.000 No, no, it was three.
01:31:50.000 Yeah, the first one I hit it, the second one I threw it, and the third one I smashed the screen.
01:31:54.000 So I don't know if electronics is really my strong suit there. 1.00
01:31:59.000 It's that volatile Italian temper. 1.00
01:32:01.000 It runs in the family, very volatile family, very angry, bad tempered family. 1.00
01:32:06.000 I have to work on that.
01:32:09.000 What's your advice for creating local grassroots organizations, or is that not important?
01:32:13.000 No, it is very important.
01:32:15.000 And my advice is just do it.
01:32:18.000 You know, just start to, it starts with one at a time.
01:32:21.000 Find like one friend.
01:32:22.000 By going to church or going to a PTA meeting or a local fraternal organization or a local, you know, I don't know.
01:32:31.000 There are ways to do it, but you got to just get involved.
01:32:34.000 Find something, find a few friends, and then find a few more friends.
01:32:37.000 Start getting together for a poker night or a dinner party, you know, or you have a pig roast, something like that.
01:32:46.000 And it's as simple as that.
01:32:48.000 You don't have to start with a grand design.
01:32:50.000 You don't need money.
01:32:50.000 You don't need like a name.
01:32:52.000 You don't need to get like a 20 person quota.
01:32:54.000 Just start simple.
01:32:55.000 Make one friend.
01:32:57.000 Going to one community event, and then you know, it goes from there.
01:33:02.000 Nick is beaten on those PCs, that's right.
01:33:06.000 Oh, Nick, at my school, our GPA is out of 100.
01:33:09.000 Okay, uh, ultra Calvinist hypothesis by Moldbug.
01:33:14.000 Um, I don't know, I don't, I haven't read too much Moldbug, so I don't really know much about that.
01:33:19.000 I read his like primer, his like introduction, and I wasn't overly impressed, so I was like, man, uh, you know, it's just kind of, it was really just came off as pretentious.
01:33:28.000 I hate that so much, you know.
01:33:31.000 There's a way to say you know more than somebody without being pretentious about it.
01:33:35.000 And it starts out like, I'm about to blow your mind.
01:33:37.000 I'm about to red pill you with something, and there's no going. 0.99
01:33:40.000 Like, dummy. 0.99
01:33:41.000 I know. 0.94
01:33:43.000 I've read books.
01:33:45.000 I know the gist of what you're saying, okay?
01:33:47.000 This is not going to knock my socks off.
01:33:50.000 And moreover, most of the writings that I was reading were written in like 2008.
01:33:55.000 And so it was full of like 2008 meme language, like owned and pwned and stuff like that.
01:34:02.000 So it was just cringe.
01:34:04.000 Cringe as hell.
01:34:08.000 Nick, top three non American leaders today or all time?
01:34:15.000 Today, I would say Assad, Putin, Duterte. 0.79
01:34:18.000 Historical?
01:34:20.000 I don't want to say my number one, but Mosley.
01:34:24.000 Well, no, because he didn't really achieve prominence.
01:34:26.000 I would say maybe Caesar, Napoleon, Bismarck.
01:34:30.000 Those are probably my top three.
01:34:32.000 He is jacked. 0.98
01:34:33.000 It's true.
01:34:36.000 I love all these people.
01:34:37.000 Get big, son.
01:34:38.000 Whoa.
01:34:39.000 Tough. 0.86
01:34:41.000 Why don't you go to the gym and get jacked?
01:34:43.000 Because I'm starting a business.
01:34:46.000 Because I'm starting a business.
01:34:49.000 I do a show every day and I'm trying to read and everything else.
01:34:54.000 I'm trying to fit it in.
01:34:56.000 I'm looking at gyms right now, looking at meal plans and things, but this is not a priority.
01:35:02.000 I'm trying to support myself right now.
01:35:06.000 And people are saying this to me like, it's just kind of.
01:35:13.000 Annoying, kind of obnoxious.
01:35:15.000 Nick, is joining the local Freemasons considered being part of a community?
01:35:19.000 No, do not join the Freemasons. 0.91
01:35:21.000 The Masons are bad news. 1.00
01:35:24.000 This shit is so gay. 1.00
01:35:26.000 Whoa, nice one, bro. 1.00
01:35:28.000 I remember when I was in middle school.
01:35:30.000 Nick, I said I ranked those three.
01:35:32.000 I meant in terms of efficacy for the movement and just generally how much you like them. 0.88
01:35:36.000 I would say probably Black Hotep, White Bugman, Alt Jew would be my ranking. 0.91
01:35:42.000 Could I interest you in a free holiday to Israel? 1.00
01:35:45.000 No, I don't have any reason to go there.
01:35:49.000 Nick, I want to be your chief memetic propagandist.
01:35:52.000 Well, you've certainly proven your worth.
01:35:53.000 A lot of good memes come out of Senator memes, so I guess you're hired.
01:35:58.000 Napoleon, what exactly did he do that was good for the European future?
01:36:03.000 He acted like the modern day EU.
01:36:05.000 No, you're wrong.
01:36:06.000 Read a book, man.
01:36:07.000 Come on.
01:36:08.000 Conquering the European continent is not the same as rootless.
01:36:14.000 Like banking slavery of governments and depriving them of sovereignty.
01:36:18.000 Going and imposing law codes and roads and things like that.
01:36:23.000 That is not like the European Union, not at all.
01:36:29.000 Big brain is better than big muscle, there.
01:36:31.000 Yep, there it is.
01:36:32.000 It's true.
01:36:34.000 Is the Freemason conspiracy true?
01:36:36.000 Yes.
01:36:36.000 Read what Hilaire Belloc had to say about that.
01:36:40.000 Nick, are you aware that God does not exist?
01:36:43.000 Whoa.
01:36:43.000 Hey, I tip my fedora to you, sir.
01:36:46.000 I would say you have to read a Aquinas, before you say something like that.
01:36:50.000 Thoughts on Father Coughlin?
01:36:51.000 I love Father Coughlin.
01:36:53.000 Very cool guy.
01:36:54.000 I really like him.
01:36:57.000 Give your best Goebbels impersonation or Goebbels impersonation.
01:37:01.000 No, I don't speak German, so I can't. 0.66
01:37:05.000 He just has to swing that finger. 0.99
01:37:07.000 I do enjoy that.
01:37:10.000 That is fun for me.
01:37:12.000 Pretty edgy. 0.95
01:37:15.000 Napoleon emancipated the Jews, Nick. 0.72
01:37:17.000 And that is the soul. 0.53
01:37:19.000 That is the soul.
01:37:21.000 By which we evaluate world leaders, correct? 1.00
01:37:23.000 Maybe if you're a retard. 1.00
01:37:25.000 Wasn't George Washington a Freemason? 0.99
01:37:27.000 Yes, a troubling amount of the signers of the Declaration of Independence were Freemasons.
01:37:32.000 Very worrying. 0.64
01:37:34.000 Read Napoleon the Great.
01:37:36.000 He was against everything you and I stand for, just saying.
01:37:40.000 I don't think so.
01:37:40.000 I just appreciate when I'm talking about leaders, I'm not talking about in terms of the men, I'm talking about in terms of their personal achievement, whether despite their values.
01:37:53.000 You have to appreciate the character of the people.
01:37:56.000 That's what I'm referring to when I say Napoleon and Bismarck and Caesar and some of these other greats.
01:38:02.000 I'm not referring to their movement.
01:38:03.000 Like Oswald Mosley would probably align better with my views.
01:38:08.000 But is Oswald Mosley more admirable than Bismarck or Caesar or Napoleon?
01:38:14.000 I think you have to admire, to a certain extent, success, the accomplishment.
01:38:18.000 And Mosley was a tremendously courageous, hardworking, brave, smart guy, and a great orator.
01:38:24.000 But was he able to get his job done?
01:38:27.000 Not quite.
01:38:30.000 What keeps you so busy?
01:38:31.000 Work, man.
01:38:33.000 Have you read G.K. Chesterton?
01:38:35.000 Yes.
01:38:37.000 Nicholas, you interested in finance and the markets?
01:38:39.000 Nope, not really.
01:38:41.000 I've always tried to get into it, but it just doesn't hold my interest.
01:38:45.000 The best part of Nick's show is Nick dragging his audience.
01:38:47.000 Yeah, I like to drag the audience.
01:38:50.000 Because, you know, when people create content, everybody likes to criticize and they like to quip and do their thing, so I like to slap them around a little bit.
01:38:58.000 They enjoy it. 1.00
01:39:00.000 Who is the most insufferable black athlete? 1.00
01:39:02.000 I'd tell you if I knew any black athletes, if I knew any athletes at all. 1.00
01:39:07.000 Nick, if you get jacked, you can get a hot Aryan woman and make babies. 1.00
01:39:10.000 Yeah, right, because women are definitely going for jacked people and not people that are rich, right? 1.00
01:39:17.000 Yeah, keep telling yourself that. 0.98
01:39:19.000 Believe me, I'm trying to get jacked. 0.99
01:39:21.000 I would like to get jacked.
01:39:22.000 It's not my first priority, but if you think that women are looking primarily at muscle and not at money, I think you're deluding yourself. 1.00
01:39:34.000 Favorite thought to patrol?
01:39:36.000 I don't really have a favorite.
01:39:37.000 It's fun to patrol any thought, right?
01:39:41.000 Do you know the book The Psychology of the Masses?
01:39:43.000 No.
01:39:45.000 Have you heard of the book All the King's Men by Robert Penn Warren?
01:39:48.000 If it was the book that that movie was based on, then yes, because I saw that movie All the King's Men.
01:39:53.000 That's a good one.
01:39:56.000 Is there such a thing as Honorary White? 1.00
01:39:58.000 Can you be a Jew, heir a black person, and still support trag culture? 1.00
01:40:01.000 I suppose. 1.00
01:40:03.000 Just not something you'd like to encourage.
01:40:11.000 Yep.
01:40:11.000 Comfy time.
01:40:13.000 Charles or Steve Chatterson is better than GK Chesterton.
01:40:17.000 I tend to agree with that.
01:40:21.000 Can you come and speak in Connecticut?
01:40:23.000 Yeah, if somebody invites me, somebody from Yale or whatever invites me, but I haven't gotten any emails, folks.
01:40:28.000 Haven't gotten any DMs.
01:40:31.000 Nick, you are a handsome, smart teen, probably driving girls crazy.
01:40:35.000 Thank you.
01:40:38.000 What else?
01:40:39.000 I think we'll go for a couple more minutes.
01:40:41.000 Yeah, it's.
01:40:42.000 8 45, so I think we'll call it a night in about five minutes.
01:40:45.000 I'm getting fatigued.
01:40:50.000 It's getting boring.
01:40:52.000 So we'll call it a night soon.
01:40:57.000 Nick, do I get the okay approval of putting your words in some Fash Wave music?
01:41:01.000 I love Fash Wave music.
01:41:01.000 Yes, you do.
01:41:03.000 Put the words in, my man.
01:41:04.000 Have you read Dylan Roof's manifesto?
01:41:06.000 No, I have not.
01:41:10.000 A lot of the manifestos are just poorly written.
01:41:12.000 I think outside of Ted Kaczynski's.
01:41:14.000 Not really worth reading.
01:41:15.000 Like Elliot Rogers, a meme.
01:41:18.000 His manifesto is terrible. 1.00
01:41:19.000 It's like so dumb. 1.00
01:41:22.000 He just whines about not having a girlfriend. 1.00
01:41:24.000 It's so dramatic and it's so egotistical. 0.88
01:41:29.000 He's such a whiny, like, you know, he's a child and wham, wham, wham.
01:41:33.000 You know, Ted Kaczynski's manifesto, I think, was one of the only ones. 0.52
01:41:36.000 You know, maybe there's some others.
01:41:38.000 California, you know, I don't know. 0.67
01:41:43.000 Is Malcolm X better than MLK, even though MLK was Christian? 0.66
01:41:49.000 I don't know.
01:41:50.000 I mean, again, what's the context?
01:41:51.000 Better for whom?
01:41:52.000 Better in what way?
01:41:58.000 I think Martin Luther King Jr., you know, this guy was a plagiarist. 0.95
01:42:02.000 This guy was a philanderer. 0.70
01:42:04.000 This guy was a Marxist. 0.94
01:42:06.000 And he's paraded around.
01:42:07.000 So that's why I'm tempted to say Malcolm X, because at least Malcolm X was basically honest, I think.
01:42:17.000 Yeah, true.
01:42:21.000 Supreme gentleman.
01:42:22.000 Nick, could you tip your fedora once more?
01:42:24.000 And I already tipped the fedora once.
01:42:27.000 Nick is getting tired and running low on water.
01:42:29.000 That's right, folks.
01:42:31.000 Nick, how does a degenerate atheist get red pilled on God?
01:42:34.000 You got to read Aquinas.
01:42:36.000 You got to read Aquinas.
01:42:37.000 Or you go to church.
01:42:38.000 I don't know.
01:42:38.000 It's tough.
01:42:39.000 I haven't red pilled any atheists on God because there's such an anti God culture in school and media and everything else.
01:42:45.000 It's tough to turn that clock back and get people on the right page.
01:42:49.000 But if you read Aquinas, there's no reason.
01:42:52.000 Why?
01:42:52.000 I mean, he proves that God has to be real.
01:42:54.000 I mean, how do you get much better than that?
01:42:58.000 And we'll take one more cue and then we'll be done here.
01:43:02.000 Diversity is our strength, Nick. 0.99
01:43:04.000 If non whites push trad culture, it might become mainstream faster. 1.00
01:43:08.000 I don't think so because non whites are pushing a religious and pro birth culture, obviously. 0.99
01:43:14.000 The Muslims are doing it.
01:43:15.000 You know, it's religion, it is having lots of babies, having a big family, having allegiance to your people. 1.00
01:43:22.000 It's not the same as ours, it's degenerate compared to our civilized standards. 0.54
01:43:26.000 But they will not see a crossover appeal.
01:43:28.000 But that's everything.
01:43:29.000 We'll check on our Super Chat queues one more time, see if we didn't miss anything.
01:43:35.000 We do not.
01:43:36.000 But so those are all of our questions.
01:43:37.000 We'll answer your America FQ questions on Monday.
01:43:42.000 I think the new system is I'll have to sift out and find the best ones and answer those, like Bill O'Reilly or Sean Hannity, because it's just overwhelming.
01:43:50.000 40 questions, you've got to be kidding me.
01:43:52.000 And that was after an hour of questions.
01:43:54.000 So that's the show.
01:43:55.000 Any other questions, comments, and things?
01:43:57.000 Remember, Hashtag America FQ on Twitter.
01:44:00.000 Hashtag America FQ on Twitter.
01:44:02.000 You can follow me on Twitter at Nick J. Fuentes.
01:44:04.000 Follow me on Facebook.com slash Nick J. Fuentes.
01:44:07.000 Periscope Nick J. Fuentes.
01:44:09.000 And you can find all my content at NicholasJFuentes.com.
01:44:12.000 Remember, starting next week, you can find America First Overdrive on this channel.
01:44:16.000 America First Overdrive every Tuesday and Thursday, coming to this channel next week, and that is 8 p.m. Central Standard Time.
01:44:24.000 I'm Nicholas J. Fuentes.
01:44:26.000 We're on the air every Monday through Friday at 7 p.m. Central, 8 p.m. Eastern.
01:44:30.000 I'm Nicholas J. Fuentes.
01:44:31.000 This was America First.
01:44:32.000 Thank you guys so much for watching.
01:44:34.000 We will see you all on Monday.
01:44:35.000 Have a great weekend, and enjoy.
01:44:38.000 Enjoy the weekend.
01:44:39.000 We'll see you later.
01:44:44.000 Americanism, not globalism, will be our credo.
01:44:50.000 It's going to be only America first.
01:44:55.000 America first. 0.99
01:45:00.000 The American people will come first once again. 1.00
01:45:24.000 It's going to be only America first. 0.99
01:45:27.000 America first. 0.98