00:00:43.000Our featured story is about the ballot audit in Arizona.
00:00:47.000The Department of Justice is going to intervene because they do not want the ballots to be independently audited in the state of Arizona.
00:00:57.000I'm talking, of course, about the ballots from the election, the presidential election in 2020, on November 3rd, 2020.
00:01:05.000So, our main story will be about that.
00:01:07.000The Department of Justice has taken an interest in what they're doing over there.
00:01:11.000I think it seems like they're trying to put a stop to it.
00:01:14.000And get this, they're alleging that now that they're conducting an independent audit of the ballots, the DOJ is alleging that that constitutes voter intimidation.
00:01:28.000They're doing an audit, auditing all the ballots from the November 3rd election, counting and recounting the ballots, and the Biden DOJ, the Department of Justice, alleges that this constitutes election fraud.
00:01:41.000Counting the ballots, auditing the ballots is voter intimidation, is.
00:01:53.000We'll also be talking tonight about California, which, according to the census, has lost people on net for the first time in over a century.
00:02:05.000Population of California has shrunk, according to the census, from 2020 to 2021, which is the first time that's happened in over a hundred years.
00:02:52.000Not only is it never happening, but nothing happens at all anymore.
00:02:56.000So I'm ready to just shut down the computer, turn off the camera, take down the green screen, and just pack it all up because there's nothing to talk about.
00:03:27.000I'm waiting for something good to happen, but nothing ever happened.
00:03:31.000So, anyway, before we get into the news, remember to check me out at NicholasJFuentes.com where we post the replays of this show and Good Morning Groyper.
00:03:42.000Today we had a great episode of Good Morning Groyper.
00:03:45.000No guest, but it was just me talking a little bit about the recent developments with Turning Point USA.
00:03:52.000And I took some calls, and I had one very unfriendly caller.
00:03:56.000If you caught the show today, it was very combative.
00:04:00.000So, if you missed the show today, and by the way, that's on Telegram every Friday at noon Central Time.
00:04:07.000It's live streamed from my Telegram channel, which is t.meslash nickjfuentes.
00:04:13.000If you missed the episode today or any other episode, you could go to nicholasjfuentes.com and subscribe there for 10 bucks a month, and you can watch the replays of that show in this show.
00:04:25.000But yeah, it was kind of an interesting episode this afternoon.
00:04:28.000It's the first week in a few weeks that I've just done the show solo.
00:04:39.000I talked a little bit about this debate that I'm supposed to be having with this girl from Turning Point USA, although it's looking like that's not going to happen because she hasn't replied to me yet.
00:04:49.000If you're watching the episode yesterday, if you're watching America First yesterday, you know what I'm talking about.
00:04:54.000So we talked a little bit about that, talked about, you know, maybe a potential reconciliation with some of these groups.
00:05:00.000It seems like maybe there's a warming of relations occurring, which would be maybe a good thing for everybody involved.
00:06:34.000I've been doing a lot of work, a lot of different phone calls and errands and, you know, like administrative type stuff and new projects and.
00:06:45.000Talking with a lawyer and talking with film people, and like it's been a long week.
00:07:17.000It's like we're just stretching and stretching and it's filler.
00:07:21.000I know, you don't want to hear me complain.
00:07:22.000Whenever I complain, people complain about me complaining.
00:07:26.000And I don't want to hear you complain, so you probably don't want to hear me complain.
00:07:30.000But anyway, so our first story is about California.
00:07:33.000It's about how a state is losing its population.
00:07:36.000And we covered this a little bit, I think, last week or two weeks ago.
00:07:41.000They are releasing some of the preliminary results of the 2020 census.
00:07:47.000And the results of the latest census are that California is going to lose a congressional seat.
00:07:55.000And that's because of the population decline.
00:07:57.000And this new report says actually that the population declined, and this is according to the California Finance Department, that the state has lost population not just over the past 10 years, but even in the last year.
00:08:10.000And they attribute that to all kinds of factors.
00:08:12.000And I'll read you this article from BBC, it talks a little bit about the report.
00:08:16.000It says California's population fell between 2020 and 2021, and the first yearly decline ever reported since officials began counting the figure.
00:08:25.000On Friday, the state's Finance Department said the population now stands at just below 39.5 million residents.
00:08:32.000A drop of 182,000 people, which keep in mind, this is on net.
00:08:39.000So you've, I'm sure, got lots of people that are moving into California, as always.
00:08:45.000People are coming to California to study at school.
00:08:48.000They're coming to California to work in the entertainment industry.
00:08:52.000They're coming to California for Silicon Valley and economic opportunities, right?
00:08:57.000So lots of people are coming to California internally from within the United States and externally from other countries.
00:09:05.000But you've got on net 182,000 less people, right?
00:09:10.000182,000 people more that are leaving than coming in, which is notable.
00:09:18.000The article says the reasons are varied, but involve the pause on migration due to the pandemic, say officials.
00:09:24.000It comes after the once in a decade U.S. Census recorded slowing state growth.
00:09:29.000The decline of 0.46% came between January 2020 and January 2021.
00:09:35.000The loss represents approximately twice the population of the city of Santa Barbara.
00:09:40.000Since joining the U.S. in 1850 amid a gold rush, California has become the most populous in the country.
00:09:47.000Officials say this is the first time the population has declined since 1900.
00:09:52.000The Golden State's growth began to slow after the end of the Cold War, and as U.S. defense spending declined for the last 30 years, more people have moved out of the state than in, according to demographers.
00:10:03.000The state also saw negative numbers of international migration last year.
00:10:07.000Such as new university students from abroad, which officials attributed to Trump administration policies.
00:10:13.000Friday's estimates used sources, including the number of new driver's licenses, tax forms, and school enrollments.
00:10:20.000Finance Department spokesman H.D. Palmer told the New York Times that changing migration policies and COVID 19 vaccinations would likely help boost the state's population.
00:10:30.000He said, When we do the same estimate this time next year, our demographers expect we'll have returned to a slightly positive growth rate for 2021, he said.
00:10:40.000And I read the article, and it's like with everything we've been talking about since the Biden inauguration or since January 6th.
00:10:50.000Do people really not know what's going on here?
00:10:52.000Do people really not know why people are leaving the cities?
00:10:54.000Do they really not know why people are leaving California?
00:10:57.000Why California's population is dwindling?
00:11:01.000And I said this last night too about liberals.
00:11:03.000They look at the country declining in just about every way, quality of life deteriorating in every measurable metric.
00:11:11.000And they throw their hands up and they say, Well, we don't, we have no idea what's going on.
00:11:15.000We could not possibly isolate one single variable or one single factor for what's causing all of this.
00:11:29.000Nobody knows why the population of California is shrinking.
00:11:32.000Nobody knows why people are leaving California and leaving New York and leaving Illinois and going to states like Florida and Texas, Tennessee and South Carolina.
00:11:45.000They say that the population is shrinking because of migration policies and because of the COVID pandemic.
00:11:54.000And I think that maybe has something to do with it, but I look at a state like California, and we use this example, I think, when we actually talked about the census results, the loss of the seat in the House of Representatives.
00:12:05.000California as a state has a lot going for it.
00:12:07.000I know lots of people, and I know that if you go on YouTube or if you go on TikTok or any major social media, it feels like everybody wants to be in California.
00:12:17.000Everybody wants to go to LA, wants to go and work in the entertainment industry, everybody wants to go and work in Silicon Valley.
00:12:25.000You know, those seem to be the two most desirable.
00:12:30.000Not just because the state is a nice place to live, but because if you're an engineer, if you're a developer, then Silicon Valley and San Francisco is the place to be.
00:12:39.000If you are an entertainer, if you're chasing the limelight, then LA is the place to be.
00:12:44.000And in either case, this is the most populous state.
00:12:47.000It's the gateway to the Pacific for the United States.
00:12:50.000So why would there be people leaving the state or more people leaving the state than coming into it?
00:12:56.000Why would the population be shrinking?
00:13:00.000These migration policies because of the pandemic?
00:13:02.000Well, it's not just the pandemic because the population has shrunk over the past 10 years and the population has shrunk over the last one year, too.
00:13:11.000So it's a long term trend and a short term trend.
00:13:14.000And can we really point to the pandemic or these minor adjustments to migration policy as to why the population is shrinking?
00:13:32.000Or is it because housing prices are through the roof in every major city in California?
00:13:37.000Or is it because the tax burden is the highest in the country?
00:13:40.000Maybe it's because of the homeless population, which is surging, and all the consequences of that, which is the revival of typhoid and typhus and black plague and polio because of drug abuse, hypodermic needles on the streets and sidewalks, in some cases, human excrement on the sidewalks.
00:13:59.000Maybe it's because of gang violence and drug crime.
00:14:04.000We all know why nobody wants to live in California anymore, and it's not for any reason other than the ones that I've just described.
00:14:12.000Quality of living is going down, and the quality of living is going down because of the kinds of people that live there and the kinds of things that the people who now live there vote for and the kinds of conditions that they create.
00:14:25.000I don't know how people don't understand this.
00:14:27.000You know, I think about my own city, Chicago, for example, and I would love to live here for a long time.
00:15:14.000And take a look at the states that are growing.
00:15:16.000Clearly, states like Florida, Texas, South Carolina, Tennessee, with populations that are growing, they don't seem to be affected by the so called pandemic or Trump era migration policies because their populations are going up.
00:15:32.000So, why is it that some states' populations are going up and some states' populations are going down?
00:15:37.000They attribute that to Trump admin policies.
00:15:40.000They attribute that to the once in a lifetime COVID pandemic.
00:15:44.000But clearly, that's not affecting every state, or it's not affecting every state equally because lots of states are not having these problems.
00:15:51.000And it doesn't have anything to do with the weather.
00:15:52.000It doesn't have anything to do with economic opportunity.
00:15:56.000In those ways, states like Texas and Florida are comparable to California.
00:16:01.000It's because the people in Texas and Florida, the people that are in South Carolina and Tennessee, are creating desirable conditions to live in.
00:16:10.000They are voting for politicians that are creating policies that are creating a desirable environment to live in.
00:16:19.000And what do you think is going to happen as the population of California shrinks?
00:16:22.000What do you think is going to happen as people move out?
00:16:24.000And I've said this before, and they move into Tennessee, they move into all these other white Republican states, they're going to destroy these states too.
00:16:31.000And ultimately, that is the catalyst for all of this population shuffling that's going around.
00:16:37.000When people talk about even migration from Mexico to the United States, or from, I should say, the Northern Triangle countries of El Salvador, Guatemala, and Honduras to the United States, why do you think people are moving on a global scale from their home countries to another place?
00:16:55.000Why do you think that within the United States, people are moving from their home state to another place?
00:17:01.000Why do you think people are moving from Africa, sub Saharan Africa, to Europe?
00:17:05.000Why are people moving from Syria to Turkey, and then from Turkey to Eastern Europe, and then from Eastern Europe to Western Europe?
00:17:13.000What's driving this demographic transition of the global south moving to the global north, and what's driving it within countries?
00:17:21.000Well, it is these demographic effects, it is the relative disparities in wealth and quality of life.
00:17:28.000And those disparities are created by the kinds of people that live there.
00:17:32.000And so, what's happening now, and it's a very apocalyptic thing, it's a terrifying thing, it's something that's almost irreversible and unstoppable.
00:17:41.000What's happening is that it's like diffusion.
00:17:44.000All the bad people are leaving the bad places, and all the bad people are moving to the good places and making those places bad.
00:17:54.000And this is just a constant process where, over time, over the course of the next century, All the good places will have been turned back, and there will be no more good people left.
00:18:06.000And the whole world will be filled with dysfunctional people living in dysfunctional places.
00:18:13.000And the only good places left will be the extremely high caste, high IQ, almost like a new biological caste of wealthy, international, connected, powerful, and the best and brightest of the world's specimens.
00:18:30.000And all the rest of us, all the rest of the world's billions, We'll have nowhere else to go.
00:18:39.000Everywhere will be like, excuse me, like Mexico.
00:18:42.000Everywhere will be like Syria or Libya or Nigeria.
00:18:47.000And the only place where you're going to get a quality of life like you have in Japan or like you have in France is if you have lots and lots and lots of money.
00:18:55.000And the only way you're going to be able to make lots and lots of money is if you know the right people.
00:19:15.000And the only hope that you have is that somehow, I don't know, you started OnlyFans, right?
00:19:20.000Your only hope is that in the future, when everybody is living in some kind of favela, everybody is living in the equivalent of a failed state, your only hope of mobility is that maybe you start an OnlyFans or you become some kind of a prostitute and you attract the attention of some disgusting boomer, you know, some disgusting sleazy old elite person.
00:19:43.000Who brings you on as like a sex slave?
00:19:46.000I think that's going to be the only form of social mobility in the future.
00:19:51.000Because increasingly, that's the only utility that somebody from the peasant class will have for the firm owners, for the rich, for the elites, is that.
00:20:02.000Because increasingly, they don't want our labor, or at least our labor is not valuable, our contributions from a creative or an intellectual point of view, they don't want that either.
00:20:14.000So we're just sort of going to be like entertainers, performers.
00:20:20.000Otherwise, you're going to be in the coal mines, you're going to be mining rare earth minerals for iPhones, and you're going to be mining copper and all the materials needed for robots and artificial intelligence, computer chips, things like that.
00:20:34.000That's the bleak future that I foresee.
00:20:36.000So, you know, the story about California, its population decreasing, people are going to chalk this up to sort of like administrative factors.
00:20:44.000Oh, you know, California's going down in population because, well, we stopped letting immigrants in.
00:20:49.000Well, maybe that was true for one year.
00:20:52.000But what made the population shrink over 10 years?
00:20:55.000Why is the population shrinking over 10 years when Silicon Valley is blowing up and LA is the entertainment capital of the world?
00:21:03.000Well, if you just take anecdotal evidence from high profile people that have moved from California, lots of celebrities, rich people, industries, businesses, it's because the state sucks.
00:21:39.000It's that this is a global race to the bottom for standard of living.
00:21:43.000It is a global race to the bottom for all the world's poor, like World War Z, basically, overwhelming and flooding the system.
00:21:53.000And reducing their new country to the standard of living of their dysfunctional home country or home settlement so that there's no reason to migrate anymore.
00:22:03.000Nobody's going to go from El Salvador to California anymore because, you know, California eventually won't be much better at all.
00:22:12.000And nobody will go from California to Florida eventually because Florida won't be much better than California.
00:24:02.000Wouldn't it be great if you could just freely associate with who you live by?
00:24:05.000I think that's the only solution you move to a place and you say, look, this is our place, this is our neighborhood, and we like it, and we want it to stay this way.
00:24:15.000So, we're going to veto who gets to come here and who doesn't.
00:24:19.000We're going to be able to veto who gets to live in this place and who doesn't.
00:24:23.000And that way, you prevent people from just invading like an invasive species and ruining the ecosystem, ruining everything about it.
00:24:33.000Because otherwise, like I said, you've just got this race to the bottom.
00:24:37.000Unless you can demonstrate to a given community, unless you can demonstrate to like a local government or something, I don't know how it would be governed.
00:24:46.000Unless you could demonstrate that you're not going to mess everything up, we should have the ability and the right to say, you can't come in here.
00:24:53.000I don't want to live in a neighborhood with Californians.
00:24:56.000I don't want all these people to move into my neighborhood.
00:26:38.000Tell me one good reason why people shouldn't want to live in Chicago other than that there are people that live there now that are messing it up for everybody.
00:26:53.000And it's not anything else, it's that the people have made it a living nightmare.
00:26:58.000And you tell me then, how are we going to prevent these people from going elsewhere and doing the exact same thing?
00:27:03.000How do we stop these people from making the whole world a living nightmare?
00:27:06.000That's like the most salient question of our time.
00:27:10.000What are we supposed to do with all these people?
00:27:11.000What are we supposed to do with these people who come from Africa into Europe, who come from the Middle East into Europe, come from South and Central America into the United States?
00:27:20.000Some people, I think, increasingly will be going from South Asia into East Asia.
00:27:26.000What are we supposed to do with all these people?
00:27:28.000And don't get me wrong, it's It's inequality on a global scale, but are we supposed to just not have any place that's nice?
00:28:00.000It was population transfers, mass migration that did that.
00:28:05.000It was the distribution of peoples across the world that did that.
00:28:08.000Are we supposed to live in a world where everything is like India, everything is like Africa, everything is like Mexico, and that's better?
00:28:20.000It seems like the only thing that that does is it's probably a lateral move for the people that are already poor and for the people that had a shot at making it, for the people that did have it, for the people that were rich.
00:28:33.000It's just, you know, obviously their standard of living is reduced.
00:28:37.000So, on the whole, it seems like on net, you're reducing the overall quality of life, just strictly from a utilitarian point of view.
00:28:45.000So, that's the number one question of our time.
00:28:54.000I think it's called the fourth demographic transition, which is an unofficial scholastic term, or academic term, which describes this movement of the global south and the global poor up.
00:29:08.000The global movement of the global south upward north towards the United States, towards the white countries, honestly, and some selected East Asian countries, really anywhere where it's not a total dump.
00:29:23.000And what are we as the world supposed to do about that to prevent a total dystopia?
00:29:49.000I mean, that would make it a little bit more attractive.
00:29:51.000At least you'd be able to make some money.
00:29:54.000But that's not the primary reason people are leaving.
00:29:57.000People are willing to eat the cost of tax to live in a place that they love.
00:30:01.000People are willing to eat the cost of the tax, cost of doing business, to work at a job where they've got economic opportunity on a coastal city.
00:30:09.000People are willing to eat cost all day long as long as it's monetary.
00:30:13.000You know what people are not willing to do?
00:30:15.000Step over shit and hypodermic needles every day on their way to public transportation where they see people shooting up heroin on the subway.
00:31:38.000And if you subtract black and Hispanic populations, if you subtract them from the American crime data, we're one of the most crime free countries in the entire world.
00:31:49.000We're one of the countries with the fewest amount of gun crimes in the entire world, despite having 400 million guns.
00:31:55.000Add the black and Hispanic population, and it's a totally different story.
00:31:59.000Is that a policy problem or a people problem?
00:32:01.000Is that a government politician problem or is that a people problem?
00:32:05.000And then you tell me, how do we solve the problem?
00:32:08.000Do we solve the problem by changing the policy?
00:32:10.000Or do we solve the problem by managing the people?
00:32:13.000We're going to have to manage the people that are coming into and out of our country.
00:32:17.000We're going to have to manage the people that are coming into and out of the communities.
00:32:21.000And we're going to have to manage some of these communities.
00:32:23.000We're just going to have to step up, and where there is more need, where there are more problems, there's going to have to be more rules.
00:32:31.000There's going to have to be more enforcement because it's not right.
00:32:35.000We want to live in a great country and we can, but we're being prevented from living in a great country by.
00:32:41.000Other people whose freedoms and all of that have been abused to our detriment for far too long.
00:32:49.000So, I don't know if I necessarily have a problem with the social credit score, but we should just have a social credit score that penalizes you not for being a normal conservative, not for being a normal insane political commentator like me, but for being a gangbanger, but for being a criminal, for being dirty, for littering, for doing those kinds of things.
00:33:12.000Just a thought, you know, just an idea, just putting that out there.
00:33:14.000I'm not suggesting, hey, my new campaign is a social credit score.
00:33:18.000I'm just saying we have to rethink the nature of our problem here.
00:33:22.000Too many people like this article, they want to rush to blame everything other than what we all know to be true.
00:33:29.000California looks a lot like Mexico, and it's not because of the policies.
00:33:33.000It's not because of the Trump era migration policies.
00:33:36.000It's not because of the COVID pandemic, once in a lifetime lockdown.
00:33:40.000It's because the people that live in Mexico made Mexico that way.
00:33:44.000And the people that lived in Mexico moved to California and they made California the way that they made Mexico.
00:33:51.000And you know what they're going to do next?
00:33:52.000They're going to move to Florida and make Florida like California, like Mexico.
00:33:57.000And then they're going to move to Tennessee and make Tennessee like Florida, California, and Mexico.
00:39:37.000Yet the Department of Justice says that if we audit the results of the election, the results of the election which have already determined and seated the legislators, senators, and president, that audit may itself cause voter intimidation or fraud.
00:40:17.000It says, The U.S. Department of Justice expressed concern Wednesday about ballot security and potential voter intimidation arising from the Republican controlled Arizona Senate's unprecedented.
00:40:29.000Private recount of the 2020 presidential election results in Maricopa County.
00:40:35.000In a letter to GOP Senate President Karen Fan, the head of the Justice Department's Civil Rights Division, said the Senate's farming out of 2.1 million ballots from the state's most populous county to a contractor may run afoul of federal law requiring ballots to remain in the control of elections officials for 22 months.
00:40:57.000And Principal Deputy Assistant Attorney General Pamela Carlin said.
00:41:01.000Said that the Senate contractor's plans to directly contact voters could amount to illegal voter intimidation.
00:41:08.000So, the private contractor who is auditing the ballots, if they get in direct contact with the voters to say, hey, is this the vote that you cast?
00:41:18.000Is this ballot that we have attached to your name?
00:42:09.000Carlin wrote, quote, past experience with similar investigative efforts around the country has raised concerns that they can be directed at minority voters, which potentially can implicate the anti intimidation prohibitions of the Voting Rights Act.
00:42:24.000Such investigative efforts can have a significant intimidating effect on qualified voters that can deter them from seeking to vote in the future.
00:42:33.000Oh, so, you know, if they go and call you and make sure that you cast a ballot, that might potentially intimidate you into never voting again.
00:42:44.000Carlin wants Fan to lay out how the Senate and its contractors all ensure federal laws are followed.
00:42:49.000She pointed to news reports showing lack of security at the former basketball arena where the ballots are being recounted by hand.
00:42:56.000Fan said Senate attorneys were working on a response that she promised to share when it was completed.
00:43:02.000The DOJ letter came six days after voting rights groups asked federal officials to intervene or send monitors to the veterans.
00:43:12.000Memorial Coliseum in Phoenix at the state fairgrounds where the ballots are being recounted.
00:43:18.000The letter said, We are very concerned that the auditors are engaged in ongoing and imminent violations of federal voting and election laws, said the letter sent by the Brennan Center for Justice, the Leadership Conference, and Protect Democracy.
00:43:34.000So now all these NGOs, all these nonprofits, all these democracy makers, and the Justice Department and the federal government are now all very, very concerned about election integrity.
00:43:49.000From November 3rd until January 6th, 2021, they said that this was the safest, most secure election in history.
00:43:59.000And anybody that doubts the veracity of the mail in ballots or any of the ballots or the results of the election is a conspiracy theorist spreading misinformation, spreading claims that are unfounded and without evidence.
00:44:12.000That was their attitude towards anybody that asked a question about election integrity for the three intervening months between the election and the inauguration.
00:44:21.000From November 3rd to January 20th, 2021.
00:44:25.000Now that they're conducting an independent ballot audit with a private contractor in Arizona, in Maricopa County, looking at 2.1 million votes, well, now you've got three pro democracy NGOs writing a strongly worded letter to the DOJ claiming that there is voter intimidation and election fraud going on.
00:44:45.000And now the DOJ has finally taken an interest and they're pursuing all kinds of, you know, potentially civil rights actions, voting rights abuse actions.
00:44:56.000Because they claim that if people are conducting an audit of the ballots, well, then the voters that they reach out to may never want to vote again, which is kind of funny.
00:45:04.000Because you know what that reminds me of?
00:45:05.000That reminds me of a little bit what Michael Sherwin said on 60 Minutes.
00:45:11.000You know, Michael Sherwin, he is the lead investigator for the investigation into the Capitol riots on January 6th.
00:45:20.000Michael Sherwin went on 60 Minutes and said that he personally decided to charge e celebrities, internet personalities who were inside the Capitol to scare them.
00:45:29.000From never protesting in Washington, D.C. again, specifically during the inauguration of Joe Biden.
00:45:36.000So, Michael Sherwin, this is a DOJ guy, D.C. attorney, he goes on 60 Minutes and says, We are using federal prosecution to intimidate American citizens into not expressing their First Amendment rights.
00:45:54.000They're going to go through charging 500 people, the longest and most extensive investigation in the history of the D.O.J. With no problem.
00:46:03.000No concern from NGOs, civil rights groups, DOJ, anything like that.
00:46:08.000But this, they claim, is voter intimidation.
00:46:11.000They say that if the private contractor that's conducting the ballot audit calls up a voter to confirm that they cast a ballot and they cast a ballot for the candidate that was counted, that they may be intimidating that voter into never voting again.
00:46:28.000But telling 60 Minutes on national network television that you're going to be charging people with felonies and misdemeanors.
00:46:36.000And putting them in solitary confinement, sending U.S. Marshals to round them up and raid their homes to intimidate them into not protesting the presidential inauguration, which is our First Amendment right of assembly, that's just fine.
00:46:53.000We all know it's ridiculous, but it also rings a bell.
00:46:55.000It sounds like kind of exactly what they do to us, but they say it's voter intimidation.
00:47:00.000Now, what does this sound like to you exactly?
00:47:03.000Are these the actions of a totally innocent, Department of Justice?
00:47:08.000Are these the actions of a totally innocent democracy making industry?
00:47:12.000Because after the events of the Capitol on January 6th, they came right out and said, I remember I covered this on the show.
00:47:20.000It was in all of the major MSM publications.
00:47:23.000They came out and said, We conspired with billionaires, we conspired with think tanks, Democrats, even some Republicans and the media to prevent Trump from overturning the results of the election.
00:47:39.000This was a major piece, I think, from the Washington Post that came out in the aftermath of the inauguration.
00:47:46.000Saying basically there was this massive conspiracy to prevent Trump supporters from forcing a recount, forcing potentially state legislatures to claw back their electors.
00:48:40.000You know, because I've encountered a lot of liberals since the election in media and elsewhere who say, you know, there's just no evidence that the election was stolen.
00:48:57.000Number one, there is, but why would all of these state legislatures, why would all of these voting machine companies, why would all these institutions that conducted and facilitated the election, why would they fear an investigation?
00:49:12.000If 80% of the 75 million people that voted for Donald Trump think that the election was rigged, what would be so hard?
00:49:28.000If you're so confident that this was the safest, most secure election ever, and anyone who says otherwise is a conspiracy theorist, misinformation, spreading harmful, dangerous misinformation, why not open up the machines?
00:49:48.000Do whatever you need to do to prove the fraud.
00:49:51.000Why would they not do that if they're so concerned about the credibility and legitimacy of the democracy and of the democratic institutions?
00:50:31.000We know that purely based on the Forensic data analysis.
00:50:36.000If you look at the votes that were counted, when they were counted, and for which candidates, you come up with statistical impossibilities.
00:50:43.000Could not exist if there was not ballot fraud.
00:50:46.000You would have people dumping ballots into the system, uploading ballots into the system, and have 90% of them going for Joe Biden.
00:51:05.000You don't get 90, 99, 100% of the votes of a large heap of votes getting uploaded into the system, going for one candidate, unless you just printed them, right?
00:51:17.000Unless you forged or fabricated them in some way and then uploaded them all at once, which is what you got.
00:51:24.000You got votes uploaded at irregular intervals.
00:51:26.000You had voter turnout rates that were impossible.
00:52:32.000But now that the election's been settled for four months, now the DOJ thinks that voter intimidation and election fraud would occur about an election that's past due, about an election that already occurred.
00:52:43.000Why is the DOJ suddenly taking an interest in election integrity after the fact?
00:52:48.000Why are these NGOs, Protect Democracy, Leadership Conference, and Center for Justice, why the sudden interest in election fraud when we're conducting an independent audit of the ballots in Arizona?
00:53:00.000The truth does not fear an investigation.
00:53:03.000The truth does not fear transparency, but they do.
00:53:14.000If the DOJ is going to throw themselves in front of this, And blockade and audit of the ballots, literally prevent people from calling up a voter.
00:53:23.000The independent contractors are going to get the ballots from Maricopa County, from Phoenix, where 2.1 million ballots were cast, and they're going to call voters and say, hey, did you cast a ballot?
00:53:36.000So, you know, what do you think that's going to produce?
00:53:41.000What we're accusing the left of is because they had this unprecedented mail in ballots and ballot solicitations, in other words, they would send out ballots.
00:53:51.000As opposed to people going in and casting a ballot, they would send a ballot to your mailbox and then have you just drop it off somewhere.
00:53:59.000You know how voting is supposed to occur is you go, I go to a polling place.
00:54:24.000That I went and cast the vote of my own volition.
00:54:27.000And if every vote was cast like that, we would honestly have no problems.
00:54:31.000What happens now, because of the pandemic, is that the government sends a ballot to all the voters.
00:54:38.000And a ballot is put into a mailbox by the government or given to a mail carrier.
00:54:43.000It's dropped off to a voter's mailbox.
00:54:47.000Then the ballot is returned in a box and the government counts it.
00:54:53.000What could go wrong between the ballot going to the mailbox of a person's house and the ballot winding up in a ballot drop off center or a mailbox that then the government handles?
00:55:05.000What could go wrong in the intervening time once the chain of custody is lost, once the mail carrier hands the ballot or puts it in the mailbox?
00:55:15.000What could possibly go wrong between that handoff and then that ballot winding up being counted somewhere?
00:55:22.000Where at no point is a voter matched with a ballot, is a signature matched?
00:55:29.000On a driver's license matched with a signature on a ballot, a face matched with an ID, a physical person in real life matched with their vote that they cast, what could possibly go wrong in the interim?
00:55:40.000And then, why would the DOJ prevent an independent contractor from calling a voter up and saying, hey, remember that ballot that you got sent and then you cast?
00:56:22.000And when that starts to happen, that is going to undermine the entire thing because people are going to see wait a second, all these ballots that came into a Democrat controlled city in a Republican state.
00:56:36.000The number one county in the state, number one most votes in the county for the state, we've got a large percentage of ballots that were not cast by the voters that they were assigned to, were not cast for the candidate that the voter voted for, were cast by people that are dead or don't live in the state.
00:56:57.000And if that changes to any significant extent the margin of victory of Joe Biden or any other candidate, what do you think that does for every other state where there were questions about ballot fraud?
00:57:09.000What do you think happens the minute that that occurs in Wisconsin, Michigan, Pennsylvania, Georgia, Nevada?
00:57:17.000Every other state starts to do their own independent ballot audit, like we suggested throughout Stop the Steal.
00:57:24.000That was our rallying call from November to January.
00:57:31.000Get a private contractor and audit the signatures, the duplicates, the addresses, the names.
00:57:37.000Audit every single ballot and make sure that.
00:57:41.000You know, there wasn't widespread mail in ballot fraud, that there wasn't a massive voter harvesting operation with the mail in ballots.
00:57:49.000What do you think happens if they find evidence of massive fraud in a major Democratic city in a Republican state that changed the margin of victory to a significant extent in the presidential election?
00:58:01.000All the other states will conduct the same investigation and they'll find the same thing.
00:58:05.000And what does that do to the country then?
00:58:07.000What does that do to the country if it is proven independently that there was massive systemic voter fraud?
00:58:15.000In six states and change the outcome of a presidential election.
00:58:21.000What would that do to the country if it was proven beyond a shadow of a doubt that we have an illegitimate president who is in the White House right now, in control of the nuclear arsenal, in control of the U.S. military, commander in chief, gives a joint address to the session of Congress and so on, conducting diplomacy?
00:58:40.000Donald Trump impeached, potentially indicted, and it was all based on a conspiracy.
00:58:46.000By major corporations, by the two political parties, the mainstream media, and the democracy making NGOs.
00:58:54.000What would that do to the country if that happened?
00:58:57.000That's why the DOJ is getting involved.
00:58:59.000That's why this is not going to be allowed to go forward.
00:59:02.000Because if it does, I mean, things are really going to go crazy.
00:59:06.000I mean, what are you going to do if that happens?
00:59:08.000What are you going to do if that happens?
00:59:10.000If they come out on the news and say, it's all a lie, the whole thing's a fucking lie, and we know it now, we have the proof.
00:59:16.000The whole system's built on a lie, the whole system's illegitimate.
00:59:20.000Every power structure just conspired against the American people to pick the president.
01:00:09.000And I'm not advocating for a revolution.
01:00:10.000I'm saying, what do you think happens when this comes out that we don't live in a free country anymore?
01:00:17.000In America, you know, I know I'm not naive or anything.
01:00:21.000There's not really a lot of freedom anywhere in the whole world.
01:00:23.000But what do you think happens in America when that whole house of cards, that whole facade, This social contract, these base assumptions about our government and our system, what happens when the whole rug is pulled out from under?
01:00:34.000Everybody in power, everybody that wields the guns, total mayhem, total chaos.
01:00:40.000So I think that they're going to start killing people to stop this from happening if they can't intimidate them, if they can't obstruct it with legal means.
01:00:49.000Because there was ballot fraud in the election.
01:00:52.000And that's why we were out there in the street because people like me and Alex Jones and Ali and Michelle and everybody that was involved in that, Vince and Steve and Jake and Jaden and Scott, And the whole crew, Beardson even, he was out there as well.
01:01:05.000That's why everybody was out there hitting the streets.
01:01:09.000That's why I spent tens of thousands of dollars traveling to different state capitals.
01:01:13.000I wasn't doing that as a vanity project, I wasn't doing that because I was on tour or something.
01:01:19.000I was doing that because we wanted to do everything in our power, straining my ability as a human being to make the state legislatures pick their own electors because we saw this.
01:05:00.000You know, that's the most that they could come up with these days is like, think about the fact that, like, you know, you get like, you talk too much and you get like, I don't even know what you would call that.
01:07:54.000Well, you know, with my veteran experience in politics, my veteran sort of lifelong experience doing electoral politics, I'd have to say that it's definitely better to run in a Republican district if you're a Republican and run in a conservative state if you're a conservative than running in a liberal Democratic area as a conservative Republican.
01:10:41.000I've been censored from every platform from YouTube, DLive, Twitch, everything from Instagram, Facebook, Clubhouse, TikTok, Reddit, Discord, you name it.
01:11:50.000It's still a good sign, but it's like, geez, I mean, we're getting killed by this stuff.
01:11:54.000So, I mean, we're surviving and we're really thriving in a way, but we would be doing so much better if it was just a fair playing field, which it's not.
01:12:02.000So, big thank you to Alex Jones for letting us on his platform.
01:12:32.000Wurzel Root is in the politically provoked debate.
01:12:36.000Like right now, as of sending the Super Chat, it was supposed to be three right wingers versus three lefties, but one of the right wing guys left and the other one is a Lulbert.
01:12:45.000Wurzel is soloing against Destiny and Hunter Faglone, another feminine looking lefty.
01:13:58.000So I'll just say, I'll just call him C.
01:14:00.000It says, the other day you said you're willing to die for the movement, but you're too scared to share your honest opinion on the Holocaust.
01:14:32.000And anyway, one's got nothing to do with the other.
01:14:34.000You know, the idea that if you're not willing to do a certain thing from a tactical point of view or a strategic point of view, which is anything, not just talking about a subject which is controversial, but anything for that matter, the idea that if you're not willing to engage in a particular way, that that's cowardice, right?
01:14:53.000That, well, you're saying that you're willing to give your life, but you're afraid, you're too scared to do X, Y, and Z, is a total non sequitur.
01:15:03.000You know, the point is that I'm doing what I do with the knowing, you know, with the knowledge that if I achieve what I set out to achieve, I very well could be killed for it.
01:15:15.000And I push on in spite of that fact, knowing that fact.
01:15:18.000That's a completely different story from somebody that's willing to self immolate, self destruct, do something that is self destructive, go out there and do something that is reckless, needlessly foolish, I should say.
01:15:33.000And I've said this before on the show.
01:15:42.000The bravest person isn't always necessarily the one that's running into cannon fodder, the one that's running into cannon fire, being cannon fodder.
01:15:51.000The bravest one isn't necessarily the one who is the most emotional, the most passionate, the most eager, the most hasty.
01:16:00.000What is required right now is moral courage to do what's right, but what's also required is to be smart, to be pragmatic, to be strategic.
01:16:08.000What's required is patience and prudence.
01:16:12.000And I don't actually understand what the argument is against this.
01:16:14.000What's the argument in favor of not being prudent?
01:16:17.000What's the argument in favor of not being strategic?
01:16:20.000Is the argument that being strategic is cowardly?
01:16:35.000You're scared of crossing the street into oncoming traffic, really?
01:16:40.000In order to get where you need to go, you have to understand how to get there.
01:16:46.000So, and I would counter and say, for all these people that are, you know, so much more courageous or whatever, where are they?
01:16:53.000You know, where are all the people that are attaching their real name, allegedly?
01:16:57.000I mean, you come in here with not your real name to talk about this.
01:16:59.000You know, if you're, if you're, if I have this deficit of courage, if you've got it figured out clearly and you're the more courageous one, where's your name?
01:17:14.000So it's always, and I noticed this early on.
01:17:17.000I will not be goaded into doing things that are foolish.
01:17:20.000I'll not be goaded into doing things that are detrimental to achieving our goals.
01:17:26.000I noticed this early on with the alt right.
01:17:28.000It would always happen that you would have these anonymous actors on the internet who would always demand and bait that you do more and more extreme things, go farther.
01:17:40.000If you don't say things that are extreme and vulgar and offensive, then you're a cock.
01:17:46.000And that was very prominent years ago.
01:17:47.000I remember when I first got started doing my show and the alt right was prominent.
01:18:12.000And I was one of the only people that was resisting that bait, resisting that temptation, and drawing a hard line and saying, look, this is what I believe, this is my goal.
01:18:25.000And I think that is why, that's one of the many reasons why I am more successful than any other dissident right person in pushing my ideas.
01:18:32.000I think that's why I'm one of the most successful people in the dissident right in terms of surviving and existing.
01:18:38.000Because this is, you know, look, and the reason I'm addressing this is because it's a valid question.
01:18:44.000You know, I get critiques all the time and I invite them on the show.
01:18:47.000I say, hey, if you've got a critique, let's hear it.
01:18:50.000And, you know, it's okay if people are going to be nasty about it.
01:19:01.000I can understand why people might ask that, but I think that calling everything that is this purity spiral effect, unless you're willing to do a specific thing, take a certain action, then therefore you're a coward, even if it's detrimental to the goals you're trying to achieve.
01:19:41.000I'm going to accuse you of not being a true believer, not being a sincere actor, being controlled opposition, whatever.
01:19:48.000Doing something detrimental, who ultimately does that serve?
01:19:52.000If you've got people that are successful, like myself, most successful doing this, everybody that asks these questions refuse to acknowledge my success.
01:20:00.000I'm the most successful at this, I've gone further than anybody.
01:20:05.000And then they come in and they say, well, unless you stop being successful, unless you start being a detriment to yourself, well, you're a coward.
01:20:30.000Life is a little bit more complicated than this sort of blaze of glory idea, this idea that we're all going to go out of the blaze of glory.
01:20:37.000People have got this idealistic streak.
01:20:39.000I think that's just a juvenile thing where they say, well, if we just do what we feel, if we just do what we feel at the moment, I'm angry, so I'm going to express my anger.
01:20:51.000I know something and I'm going to express it without any consideration for tone, body language, any consideration for rhetoric, how it's perceived.
01:21:00.000I'm just going to do what I think I feel.
01:21:02.000I'm going to do what I think is right.
01:21:07.000You know, unfortunately, that's not how the world works.
01:21:10.000And if you want to get ahead in the world, you have to realize that we don't make the rules yet.
01:21:14.000And what's more is that just because you want something to be so, or you think that it's so, it doesn't make it so.
01:21:20.000In order to achieve our goals, we're going to have to make a lot of headway.
01:21:25.000We're going to have to win hearts and minds.
01:21:26.000We're going to have to build alliances.
01:21:28.000We'll have to be creative, come up with innovative solutions because we've got powerful forces against us that are using heavy handed tactics to suppress our message.
01:21:37.000And so it's a very difficult thing, it's a very difficult prospect.
01:21:42.000And it requires a lot of thought and care.
01:21:44.000The idea that we're going to solve difficult problems with foolishness.
01:21:49.000We've got a difficult problem, an intelligent and powerful enemy, and our method of combating that is to be emotional.
01:21:57.000Our method of combating that is to be emotional, to jump into things, to be hasty, to not be careful, not be prudent.
01:22:03.000I mean, who is actually advising that that's a good approach?
01:22:06.000Who actually is out there saying that that's the case?
01:22:09.000I want to know who they are because I wonder what the intention is.
01:22:12.000Who has been out there for the past three years saying that optics is a bad idea?
01:22:16.000Saying that it doesn't matter how you look, it doesn't matter how you sound, it doesn't matter how you're perceived, it doesn't matter your presentation, it doesn't matter your strategy or tactics.
01:22:25.000We should be hasty, we should just say what we feel, we should be impulsive, we should be reckless and foolish.
01:22:33.000I want to know who's saying that because I wonder what the intention is.
01:22:36.000There are a lot of people I think that are well meaning that do that, and maybe they're young and maybe they're just not that smart.
01:22:43.000And I also think there are people, I honestly think there are people out there that are pushing it because they know exactly what they're doing.
01:22:53.000So that's my response to that question.
01:22:54.000And I've been very open and honest about my views about that.
01:22:58.000It's a sensitive subject, as everybody knows.
01:23:02.000But I've given my honest opinion on that more times, more times than I can count, actually.
01:23:06.000So anyway, Smarty says, My parents are right wing, but watch these crazy.
01:23:13.000So yeah, it's kind of interesting because I said the other day, didn't I?
01:23:16.000I said the other day, I said, Oh, You know, everybody criticizes me, but they don't ever say it on my show.
01:24:22.000People may not be in love with the answer.
01:24:24.000You know, you're never going to win over everybody.
01:24:26.000But this is a movement where we're strategic.
01:24:29.000If you don't like that, then you can go and join the failed movements.
01:24:32.000And I'm not saying that to be glib, I'm not saying that to be.
01:24:37.000I'm saying this is a successful movement.
01:24:40.000We just hosted a conference where we had a sitting congressman attend and say America First is inevitable and give a speech, and it was a great thing.
01:24:48.000We are achieving inroads with mainstream people.
01:24:50.000We are achieving inroads with mainstream audiences.
01:24:53.000We are building a formidable coalition to push our priorities, to push our worldview.
01:24:59.000It's having a significant effect, and you could see that.
01:25:01.000You can see that the conversation is shifting.
01:25:05.000If you don't want to be a part of that, If you don't like that, if you think that we're holding back, if you think that if we're compromised in some way, then I'm honestly telling you, and again, I don't say this to be glib, then go and join all the failed, ghettoized movements that are not doing any of those things.
01:25:22.000Because you could say, oh, well, your approach is cowardly.
01:25:38.000So, if you don't like what we're doing over here, if the success has not won you over, if the success doesn't speak for itself, and you want to be a loser, you want to lose, you like failure, you want to be a beautiful loser, like Sam Francis said, you want to be somebody that loses but did so with principle, and you got the sort of short term, immediate gratification of doing something hasty and emotional, then go join the people that have been doing that for years.
01:26:07.000Go and do that with the people that have been spinning their wheels for years.
01:26:11.000Getting nowhere and not making a difference because I'm not interested in that.
01:26:59.000And if I wasn't interested in making a difference, there'd honestly be no reason to do it.
01:27:03.000I could sit back, do my show, say outrageous things, and get paid lots of money and do that until the day that I die and be a threat to nobody and have no chance of changing anything.
01:28:28.000When they look at these costumed Nazis as an example, they look at these guys as clowns, they look at them as You know, people that are low status, people that don't have their stuff together, people that are foolish, and like, you know, what I've strived to do with America First is to level up and take this to a level where we could say this is a respectable operation.
01:28:50.000This streaming platform looks good and it works, right?
01:28:54.000The streaming platform that my developers built, I hold it to a high standard.
01:29:00.000I could have shit out something, I could have taken a lot of shortcuts in my entire approach with this show from day one.
01:29:08.000But we're trying to level up our operation, and it's a difficult process because we have a lot of obstacles.
01:29:14.000But that's what I've sought out to do create a serious movement.
01:29:18.000And then, you know, I don't want people to say, oh, well, you make jokes sometimes.
01:29:22.000When I say serious, I mean competent, I mean a force to be reckoned with.
01:29:25.000I want to build political infrastructure that stands a chance of making a difference.
01:29:29.000It isn't a laughing stock like so much of what on the right is.
01:29:33.000And I talked to a good friend of mine not too long ago, and he said, you know, so many of people on the right are like true Goyim.
01:29:40.000And, um, I know that might offend some people, but I said, honestly, that's true, and that should motivate us, you know, because you know the phrase goyim, and people refer to, some people refer to, well, Jewish people refer to the rest as goy, which means like animal, which means no agency, which means like not smart, can't get it together.
01:30:21.000And it's like you have to hold your head in shame.
01:30:23.000That's why we call them Wiggers, because it's like, oh my gosh, it's like I'm embarrassed.
01:30:29.000It's like how some of our, I know we talk about like black crime, for example.
01:30:34.000I know there's a lot of people in America that are black that look at the black community and they shake their head and they go, oh my, come on, can't we get it together?
01:31:37.000We're the most successful people at changing the conversation, and people come at it with the snark from their cesspool of ignorance.
01:31:45.000Smarty says, My parents are right wing, but watch these cringe British boomers, Simon Parks and Charlie Ward, that think Hillary has been executed and others prosecuted at Gitmo.
01:31:55.000They also think Trump is the shadow president and is going to be welcomed by the military riding a horse to the White House.
01:32:02.000I know their hearts are right, but it's like hell hearing their ridiculous views.
01:32:14.000I mean, I could believe some pretty outlandish conspiracy theories, but like, I don't know how the QAnon people believe this.
01:32:21.000Ultimately, I guess that's because I know a lot of people who worked in the White House.
01:32:25.000And so I know about how incompetent the operation was there.
01:32:29.000So the thought that there's like this master plan or even any kind of a plan, even like a plan at all, is just like a joke.
01:32:36.000Because if you know the first thing about the inside baseball in the White House during the Trump admin, not only was there not 4D chess, there wasn't even chess.
01:33:58.000So many of these old people get sucked up into these weird, like, It's very sad.
01:34:03.000I think when people are not religious, they have a tendency, or maybe if they're lonely.
01:34:07.000I don't know what it is, but for whatever reason, there's this phenomenon.
01:34:10.000I think of largely people that are seeking something and then they get swept up in craziness.
01:34:16.000They get swept up in multi level marketing, they get swept up in a cult, they get swept up in a weird political thing.
01:34:24.000And this is right and left, by the way.
01:34:26.000Not just people that believe the craziest QAnon stuff, but even people on the left.
01:34:31.000You know, these BLM people and whatever, and all those trends, it shows that there's a real sort of deficit in our souls, I think, because people are grasping at straws.
01:37:37.000And it's easier to be like that when things are going well.
01:37:40.000When things are going well, it's easy to wake up every day and work really hard because you're seeing progress and you're seeing good results.
01:37:48.000It's when things are not like that that it's difficult.
01:37:52.000I would say it really helps to be organized.
01:37:54.000That's what I find to be the best because if you're like me, I have a tendency to get disorganized, my organization degenerates over time.
01:38:05.000And the more disorganized I am, the harder it is to be productive because even the thought of beginning something is daunting because it's like I think about the mess and it gives me anxiety.
01:38:17.000I think about this big pile of papers sitting over there and like I just can't, I don't even want to look at it.
01:38:23.000And like it's like magnetic, I'm like magnetically repelled from it because I see this big stack of papers and it's a giant mess and I'm just like, I like just, I'm so averse to it.
01:38:38.000So, you know, the more organized you are, the easier it is because you know where things are, you know where to find them, you know the procedure, you know the process.
01:38:46.000And that makes it, I think, a lot easier than if you're not organized.
01:38:54.000And I would also say to just another big thing is realizing that you take it a day at a time.
01:38:59.000I think a lot of it is people have trouble beginning to work.
01:39:02.000Once I start working, I am like a machine.
01:39:05.000When I start working, I can work without eating, I can work without sleeping, without going to the bathroom.
01:39:11.000I can work for hours and hours and hours without taking any kind of breaks.
01:39:15.000That's a big reason why I am the way I am, is because I'm obsessive.
01:39:20.000And if I sink my teeth into something, once I get this momentum going, I can't be stopped.
01:39:27.000But that's just the trick getting going, setting aside the distractions, focusing, and getting into it.
01:39:37.000And it's always more difficult to start up a task, to sort of wind a task up, get set up, do whatever it is.
01:39:44.000Get yourself into it, figure out a system, right?
01:39:46.000It always requires more effort to jump in, to begin, than it is to keep going.
01:39:53.000And so if you isolate it to that, if you realize that the problem is not working so much as it is, well, what can I do to motivate myself to begin working?
01:40:03.000Well, then it becomes a much more solvable problem.
01:40:06.000Why do I have a tendency to not begin work?
01:40:08.000Well, it's because you've got distractions, it's because you're disorganized and it's daunting.
01:40:14.000Maybe you're intimidated by the scale of the task.
01:40:17.000You know, if you've got a lot of work to do, then you say, Oh, well, even thinking about it, it's such a big project.
01:40:24.000And then you figure out how to solve those problems and make it easier.
01:40:34.000Set aside the distractions, realize that you're being distracted, realize you're not being productive, and, you know, mitigate distraction.
01:40:42.000And then I would say, break apart the tasks into manageable parts.
01:41:08.000But I have to be on my phone because I'm always texting, always calling, always got to be engaged on social media.
01:41:14.000I wish I could go cold turkey and just abandon it for a month and get like a flip phone, but because of the nature of what I do, I literally can't do that.
01:41:23.000So it's very difficult for me to control my time on my phone, but I'll spend hours on my phone.
01:41:29.000I don't know about you, but just opening apps and refreshing them and closing them and opening another one.
01:41:33.000I go on Twitter, check, I check three or four things, close that, go to Snapchat, close that, go to Discord, close that, go to Telegram, close that, go to, and then start the process all over again.
01:41:44.000And what helps me is to step back and say, wait a second, there's nothing going on here.
01:41:53.000You know, like I'm not going to get another dopamine hit.
01:41:56.000I'm going to put this down and do something else.
01:41:59.000But you've really got to walk yourself through that because.
01:42:01.000You get on autopilot, you get into this habit of picking up and putting down, opening and closing apps, and you're like not even conscious.
01:42:09.000So it's kind of a tricky thing where you almost got to remind yourself, you got to give yourself a kick and say, Hey, you're not getting any more dopamine right now.
01:42:17.000You've read all the notifications, there's nothing else to see here.
01:42:19.000What are you going to watch every notification as it comes in?
01:42:22.000Put the phone down, do something else.
01:42:25.000So, anyway, those are some of my life hacks.
01:43:31.000Based theist says, hey, Nick, the other day my friend and I ordered a two family meal at Popeyes for the two of us as we play Battlefront 2005.
01:43:40.000Started playing, went upstairs to feast just to find that my mom had cut it all up into a chicken salad sandwich.
01:45:30.000If I came downstairs and I just went out and got something, or I put something in the oven or whatever, and I'm so excited, I'm so hungry, and I just spilled it all over, I mean, I would just like collapse on the ground and cry and like kill myself.
01:46:00.000If I went out deliberately and made a plan like that and got it in my head, like, I'm going to have my friend over and play Battlefront and I'm going to have a Popeyes dinner.
01:46:09.000We're going to have a great, cozy night.
01:46:26.000Ally and conservative activist Lauren Witzke recently ran unsuccessfully against Democratic Senator Chris Coons in the 2020 U.S. Senate race for the state of Delaware.
01:46:36.000In your own words, can you tell us what you think of Coons?
01:46:42.000Justin K. G. says, Do you ever think about taking small breaks during your show and have wholesome clips of yourself playing during the intermission?
01:46:49.000You're a beast at doing monologues nonstop every day for hours.
01:46:53.000It would probably help the strain on your voice.
01:46:55.000Yeah, you know, it's funny you say that.
01:47:05.000And once that's completed, we're going to be making some adjustments to the show at some point in the next 30 to 40 days or something.
01:47:14.000And when that's completed, we're going to be changing the show in that way.
01:47:19.000That's exactly what I had in mind, actually, is doing small breaks, doing segments, doing an intro, maybe doing an A block, a B block, and then the super chats.
01:47:30.000And in the interim, have clips or something.
01:47:35.000But I'll get more detailed about my plans for that when I'm ready for it, you know, when it arrives.
01:47:41.000But that'll happen hopefully before the end of this month, actually.
01:48:17.000It's just like, you know, the kid that did the pacer and went, and he was the last one running.
01:48:22.000You remember that when you were in grade school and you would do the pacer fitness test and you'd have the one kid and he would just be running.
01:48:30.000Everybody would be finished on the sidelines and he'd be going, beep, beep, he's the only one running.
01:55:51.000Chaos in America says if you could have $20 million but had an insatiable and relentless urge to pee for the rest of your life, would you take the money?
01:56:32.000Hercules says Protestants say Catholics blaspheme for asking Mary to intercede for us in our prayers, and then they ask their regular sinful friends and neighbors to pray for them.
02:00:29.000Sir Henry says, Red pill us on who owns the dealer processing extended warranty company, anyone else, and they'd all be locked up for FDCPA violations.
02:02:09.000Anyway, Gaddafi's to Chicago is a mixed bag.
02:02:13.000I've been in Pilsen for three years and never had any issue until last week.
02:02:17.000Someone cut, stole my catalytic converter.
02:02:20.000Flip side, I wore an old Reagan Bush 84 sweater and jewel today, and four boomers and three younger people stopped me to talk about being based and missing Trump.
02:05:41.000Grink says, Watching your old destiny immigration debate, he extrapolated the John Q. Adams quote saying, Shedding European skin to mean non white immigrants.
02:05:49.000How can non Europeans shed their European skin?
02:06:02.000He was like, because I made the argument that the 1965 Immigration Act had these consequences that people were not in favor of, you know, that the 1965 Immigration Act over time has transformed the landscape of the country.
02:06:17.000And if people could vote for that change on a referendum, they wouldn't vote for it.
02:06:21.000So essentially, it was like undemocratic.
02:06:23.000And his argument, it's this gay system rationalization that liberals do.
02:06:29.000Well, they voted for representatives and representatives passed the law.
02:06:32.000So if representatives passed the law, Then that means that, you know, necessarily it follows that people democratically chose that.
02:06:42.000Because part, and it wasn't even my full argument, but part of my argument was what's so horrible about the demographic change is that it happened in a way that was against the will of the people.
02:06:51.000The people did not want the country to be transformed and become this multi ethnic boarding house, in the words of Teddy Roosevelt.
02:07:00.000This was done in a way that was sneaky, and they didn't really tell people the consequences of it.
02:07:07.000And his counter argument in the second debate was to say, oh, well, I found this poll that says that people supported the bill in like 1965 or whatever.
02:07:18.000And the counter was like, okay, well, you know, they explicitly lied about the contents of the bill.
02:07:23.000Because what they said in the 65 bill, what they said about it, Ted Kennedy, the principal sponsor of it, said, this will not change the demographics of the country.
02:07:33.000This will not make America less white.
02:08:49.000But that's how these people approach these things they start from the presumption that race is not real, diversity works, equality is good and can be forced, democracy is essential, democracy is good, et cetera, et cetera.
02:09:03.000And then they work backwards and rationalize.
02:09:05.000I want these outcomes, I want these things to be true, and I'm going to rationalize them.
02:09:09.000And that's why their arguments are flimsy.
02:09:11.000Yeah, you can argue anything, you can make an argument in favor of anything.
02:09:15.000But some arguments are stronger than others.
02:09:18.000And arguments are weak on the side of all this crap because they're not really looking for the truth.
02:09:24.000They're not looking to sort of explain the world.
02:09:27.000They're looking to justify their ideology, justify their preconceived worldview.
02:09:37.000And that is a perfect example of that.
02:11:12.000And like even further from the city, the neighborhood where my parents grew up, neighborhoods where my parents lived when they got older, it's all the same story.
02:15:18.000It's like, well, it's kind of relevant, actually.
02:15:21.000Cyrus says a mother in upstate New York is being threatened by courts to have her biracial daughter taken away for having a Confederate flag rock.
02:15:29.000I guess that's her fault for having a biracial child.
02:15:34.000Alex says if you succeed in fundraising in defense of one single person who has unjustly suffered for January 6th, it might be a great morale boost for many.
02:17:25.000And that is what constituted the fraud the ballots were mailed out to people in nursing homes and other facilities.
02:17:32.000They were put in mailboxes, held at the post office, and anywhere where they did not get to the recipient, anywhere where the chain of custody was broken in some way, either outbound or inbound, that's where it was intercepted, filled out, and sent in.
02:17:52.000And the reason that they kept extending the deadline for mail in ballots is because they wanted to have enough time to fabricate the ballots to overcome Trump's lead at the Election Day polling places.
02:18:04.000That's why they put it out there and they talked about Red Mirage.
02:18:08.000They said Biden's leading with mail ins.
02:18:11.000Trump is going to win the Election Day vote by a lot and he'll look like he's winning.
02:18:15.000And then they'll count the mail in ballots and then they'll find out that Biden won after all.
02:18:19.000Well, the reason they extended the deadline illegally in like four or five different states is because.
02:18:25.000They wanted to wait and see all the votes that are counted on election day and then determine how many votes they needed to create.
02:18:32.000That's why they stopped counting the votes for like days in Georgia and Pennsylvania, in lots of these different states.
02:18:39.000They literally would not adjust the vote count for days.
02:18:43.000I think Georgia took like a week before they found all the votes.
02:18:53.000Bashar al Assad says if it was definitively proven that the 2020 election was rigged, Republicans would go, imagine if the roles were reversed, and then go on with their day.
02:21:57.000More homeless, they're more feral, there's more insufferable shitlibs.
02:22:01.000It's the worst kind of like Luciferian people, even on our own side.
02:22:06.000I don't even like the people on our own side that are there.
02:22:09.000I've got friends that are there that I like, but I'll mingle with people that I'm not as friendly with that are on our side, and they're like evil.
02:22:17.000I mean, they're straight up evil, and I get like a weird, bad energy.
02:22:21.000When they come around, it's like a David Lynch movie.
02:23:14.000You know, I liked that song for a little while, and then I looked up the lyrics, and the lyrics are so stupid that I can't listen to it anymore.
02:23:24.000Safe and sound by capital cities and glad you came by the wanted, kind of like the same genre.
02:23:30.000And I used to like glad you came, but then I read the lyrics, and the lyrics are like this the lyrics in, I think it's the bridge, is that what it's called?
02:23:40.000I don't know the musical terminology, but the way that the lyrics work is that in one section of the song, the last word of a line will be the first word of the next line, and then the last word of that line will be the first word of the following line.
02:23:57.000So the lyrics are, turn the lights out now.
02:24:06.000And that to me is like the dumbest thing I have ever heard in my entire life.
02:24:12.000And you know that they just, when they were writing that song, you know that when they were writing that song, they thought to themselves, like, this is a great idea.
02:25:59.000The music video was red pilling to me when I was in like middle school because I remember watching the music video and being like, what the what?
02:26:51.000And then in the 2010s, you got sort of this new kind of clique in the middle and high schools of these like wallflowers, perks of being a wallflower in glee.
02:27:03.000And it was specifically like a queer thing, not always, but often.
02:27:07.000And it was people that were like quirky and like sort of had this like rustic hipster aesthetic and, you know, that kind of thing.
02:27:17.000So that was like just coming around when I was a kid.
02:32:22.000Well, that's why we are always necessary because people can say whatever they want, but we are the ones holding the line.
02:32:28.000We are the right wing flank of the whole thing.
02:32:31.000We're the only ones telling the truth.
02:32:33.000And I had this conversation with my mom today.
02:32:35.000She was telling me, she's like, you know, you got to soften your language.
02:32:40.000You got a lot of attention on you right now.
02:32:42.000You got to be careful about what you say.
02:32:43.000She's always giving me a hard time about this.
02:32:46.000And I told her, I said, look, I said, there are many, many people that get into politics.
02:32:54.000With more right wing views than they want to let on.
02:32:58.000And over time, they dilute their views and they soften their views to accommodate expectations from donors, employers, from their fans, from their audience, their bosses.
02:33:12.000I said, and that describes everybody that's in the right wing.
02:33:16.000We don't need any more people that have done that.
02:33:18.000That is the story of everybody or almost everybody in the right wing.
02:33:23.000People that are more right wing than they let on, or they're grifters, but I'm talking specifically about people that are well meaning, get into it with the best intentions.
02:33:31.000They're more right wing or more out there.
02:33:34.000They don't say what they really think.
02:33:36.000They constantly dilute, and over a period of time and over a series of sort of interconnecting allegiances and linkages, based on all the competing expectations of the people that they have to impress or appease or accommodate, their message becomes totally hollow and totally ineffective.
02:33:57.000And I said to my mom, I said, if I do that, then nobody's telling the truth.
02:34:02.000If we do that, then nobody's saying the full truth.
02:34:05.000Nobody's saying exactly what's out there.
02:34:08.000I said, so we need to say the real thing.
02:34:11.000I mean, we can soften the language in the sense maybe be less vulgar, be less provocative, but we have to say what we mean because if we don't, nobody else is going to do that.
02:34:24.000And if we're not doing it, then nobody will be doing it.
02:34:26.000And somebody needs to be telling the truth.
02:34:28.000You've got lefties out there saying what they believe, you've got lefties out there dragging the country to the left at an accelerating pace.
02:36:32.000We are going to draw a hard line and we're going to demand that right wing representatives are going to be held accountable to a right wing standard.
02:37:16.000If they're going to say the right things, then you know what happens?
02:37:18.000If they say the right things and they're sincere in what they believe, then all that remains is personal resentment, which we can reconcile.
02:37:25.000Now, if they're not sincere, then we've still got a problem, and we've still got to hold them accountable.
02:37:30.000But that's sort of the evolving perception of these mainstream groups.
02:37:35.000Gaddafi says, so true, there are a lot of retards here who are based because they viscerally understand something's wrong, but really need to turn off the game and read for an hour or two every day.
02:39:46.000Because if I start drinking, then there's a chance that I'm going to drink more than I should or like it or grow a dependency on it or whatever.
02:40:08.000And it's like, we all know, okay, you probably want to get drunk and you've got to be honest with yourself, basically, about your own limitations.
02:40:35.000And so I'm honest with myself and saying that's not the only reason, but alluding to your question, I say, yeah, I'm not even going to engage.
02:40:44.000I mean, why would I even go down that road?
02:40:46.000And a lot of people are all too willing to start down that road.
02:40:48.000They're all too willing to take the first step.
02:40:52.000And the second step is easier than the first step, and so on.
02:40:57.000I think that's a big part of it for a lot of people is to just tell yourself, I'm not going to do this, and I'm just going to eliminate the temptation.
02:41:04.000And you don't even take the first step.
02:41:08.000And, you know, the good thing is we are sinners, so we have reconciliation, we have forgiveness of sins.
02:43:55.000And there was a lot of that in my family.
02:43:56.000I could tell you so many horror stories.
02:43:58.000Thankfully, my parents weren't like that.
02:44:01.000But my parents grew up and they had a very, their upbringing was very abnormal.
02:44:07.000You know, my parents both grew up in somewhat dysfunctional homes with dysfunctional families.
02:44:13.000And so this is why I love my parents so much.
02:44:16.000They, it's almost like a miracle, they grew up in a very dysfunctional, like broken home environment.
02:44:23.000And they, when they had me and my sister, they were striving to create a normal environment and to sort of insulate us from that and to give us an upbringing that was.
02:44:33.000Normal and not dysfunctional, and all of that.
02:48:22.000And that was exactly my argument is be that as it may that one poll showed people supported it, the whole point is that it was passed under false pretenses.
02:48:31.000In no way does that negate the fact that it was passed under false pretenses, not telling people the consequences of the bill.
02:50:05.000Yeah, so I think that there is something to this idea that maybe they don't need to, not even in their stated interest at this point, to just throw everybody in jail right away.
02:50:15.000But it will get to that point because the rhetoric that they put out there feeds the mob.
02:51:37.000Modern Monarch is, some people want you dead.
02:51:40.000That's why you Can't even have a public relationship, even if you wanted to.
02:51:43.000Well, yeah, there's a lot of limitations there as well.
02:51:47.000But also, it's not even my primary objective right now.
02:51:52.000I mean, I'm not somebody that's going out there to have a relationship for the sake of a relationship, for the sake of sex.
02:52:01.000I'll get in a relationship when I'm ready to get married and have kids.
02:52:04.000And I'm not in a position like that just yet.
02:52:06.000I'm not in a position where, I mean, look, if the federal government indicts me for like grand conspiracy or something, That's really not a great position to raise a family.
02:52:15.000So, you know, I'd like to get more established and in a stable position when that becomes tenable.
02:52:20.000And, you know, what's more is right now it's such an aggressive sort of upstart operation.
02:52:26.000I just don't have the time or the energy for that.
02:52:28.000I barely have the time and the energy for all the responsibilities I have now.
02:52:32.000So people are always throwing that at me.
02:52:36.000Like, there is a distinction between somebody's role in the movement who is trying to lead the charge and everyone else or most other people.
02:52:46.000You know, I don't have the same sort of liberty.
02:52:51.000I don't have the same maneuverability.
02:52:54.000I don't have the same situation as everybody else, which I explained.
02:54:40.000I don't know what you're talking about.
02:54:44.000Ethelred says it's so sad to watch a music video from just 10 years ago and it's full of so much more life and culture, even though it's still degenerate compared to prior decades.
02:55:56.000Modern Monarchist says With where you are as a leader, women would just want money and feed on your attention, which would drain your infinite amounts of power levels like the emotional vampires they tend to be.
02:56:06.000Yeah, yeah, there's a likelihood that that could happen too.