THANK YOU: Subway HERO Kills Marauding Vagabond In NYC, First Of Many! | America First Ep. 1157THANK YOU: Subway HERO Kills Marauding Vagabond In NYC, First Of Many! | America First Ep. 1157
The murder of a homeless man in the New York City subway by a Marine has the country divided on whether he was a hero or a villain. The usual suspects are weighing in on this, and it has the potential to become another George Floyd situation. Plus, a new Trump deposition video is released from a rape case against the former president, and he claims he didn't rape her. And the woman who's questioning him says, "You're not even my type." And he responds, "Well, you're not my type either." And she says "Really? She's not your type?" And he says "well, you know, I wouldn't even rape you if you weren't hot enough. You're not hot enough." And the question is, who is hot enough? And who is the hot type? And why does he say that to her? Well, we'll talk about that and much more on today's show. America First with Nicholas J. Fuentes ( )! Today's After Show: The murder of George Floyd (George Floyd) and the controversy surrounding the case of the homeless man who was shot and killed in the subway (Trayvon Martin) by a member of the NYPD's own Marine (Tyrone Walker) and his possible racism and possible cover-up by Al Sharpton (Al Sharpton's involvement in the case. . and much, much more! Tonight's Aftershow: America First, America First! and America First is a casual Friday, no neckties, no suit, no suits, no tie, no business card, and no suit and just a lowkey Friday! . . . and no necktie, just a show about it's a low key Friday night! Join us in the middle of a slow news day in the heart of the heartland! We'll talk all about it all! If you like it, let us know what you thought of it! Tweet us on the Gabez in the comments section below! Timestamps: Timelessness, Timeless Friday, Rambles, True Telegram, , True Teleglowkey, Rambler, and Rumbrella, or any other news you ve been paying attention to this week's Good Morning America? - Timeless, Rumblings, - Rumbling, Rumble
Transcript
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00:02:51.000We'll also be talking tonight about a new deposition video which was released today from a rape case against the former President Donald Trump.
00:03:02.000And apparently the transcript of this was available for a long time, but they just released the video and it's not super newsworthy, but it is... I do kind of want to talk about it because it's funny.
00:03:14.000So this woman says that literally 40 or 30 years ago Donald Trump raped her at a dressing room at some department store.
00:03:24.000And she said that she didn't come out and say anything until 2019.
00:04:05.000And he goes, well, you know, you're not my type either.
00:04:08.000And I have to say, as much as I've been critical of Trump over the last nine months or so, ever since his announcement, there is something to be said about a guy that goes out there and says, I didn't rape you because you're not hot enough.
00:04:36.000Like I said, it's Casual Friday, so no necktie.
00:04:39.000I'm just wearing a casual outfit tonight.
00:04:44.000And again, kind of like a slow news day, I was gonna get ready... I was getting ready to go live around 9 o'clock, 9.30.
00:04:53.000But I'm going through and I'm on New York Times, I'm on Revolver, I'm on the Stormer, I'm on BBC, 4chan, Russia Today, I'm on everything.
00:05:04.000There's just nothing going on tonight and so I jump into bed and just totally fall asleep.
00:05:12.000I totally was out cold for like an hour and I woke up and I got back to the desk and I'm like man okay there still isn't anything going on.
00:05:20.000I'd rather not do a show tonight, but I figure for continuity's sake I wanted to make it through my first week here So we're gonna do it even though it's not really too much going on But before we get into the news I want to remind you to smash the follow button here on cozy to get a push notification whenever I go live Follow me on gab telegram true social links you down below also follow me on rumble I'm live on rumble every night as well.
00:06:32.000There's a really bizarre video that came out today from somebody who's purporting to be a leader of the Wagner private military contractor group in Ukraine protesting how the Russian Defense Ministry is handling the war.
00:07:15.000It says, quote, E. Gene Carroll's legal team has released 48 minutes of Trump's deposition which was shown to jurors this week in his ongoing rape trial.
00:07:24.000Which, by the way, I didn't even know that he was on trial for rape.
00:07:30.000I know that there's a lot of rape allegations.
00:07:32.000I feel like... I don't know about you guys, but to me it's always in the back of my mind, like, these things aren't, like, really happening.
00:07:38.000Like, that's not actually transpiring.
00:07:45.000It says the video, which is a collection of segments from a much longer deposition, was entered into evidence and shown in Manhattan Federal Court where Trump faces civil allegations of rape and defamation.
00:07:57.000Carroll's legal team distributed the video to journalists on Friday after a group of media organizations, including Insider, indicated they would ask the judge overseeing the case to order its publication.
00:08:08.000The ex-president appears low-energy in most of the deposition, speaking in glum tones.
00:08:14.000As he denied having ever met Carol, who accused him of rape, and later of defaming her when he called her a liar.
00:08:21.000In response to deposition questions by Carol's attorney, Roberta Kaplan, Trump continued to deny raping Carol, as she alleged, and called her mentally sick and, quote, not my type.
00:08:33.000Yet, and here's the best part, when he's shown a photo of him meeting her at an event in 1987, he mixes her up with his then-wife at the time.
00:08:42.000He says, it's Marla, when he's shown the photo, pointing to Carol.
00:09:41.000Honestly though, how does that even happen?
00:09:43.000Like, it's hilarious, it's funny that that happened, but how do you not recognize... I mean, I understand not recognizing somebody that maybe he dated, or maybe he did have sex with her, who knows, in a consensual way.
00:09:58.000So I understand not recognizing some woman from, what is it, 1987?
00:10:05.000But he doesn't even recognize that it's not his wife?
00:10:13.000It says that also he didn't remember the date that he and Marla were married.
00:10:19.000It says Carol, a former longtime Elle Magazine columnist and talk show host, alleges Trump raped her in the dressing room of the Bergdorf Goodman department store in Manhattan sometime in the spring of 1996.
00:10:30.000The two recognized each other, she said, and she agreed to help him shop for a gift for a woman.
00:10:38.000The two went to the store's lingerie section and joked about Trump wearing a lacy bodysuit.
00:10:43.000According to Carol, the two walked into a dressing room where Trump pinned her to the wall and raped her.
00:10:49.000Which sounds totally legitimate, by the way.
00:10:51.000That sounds, uh... You're like a 6'3 billionaire that owns skyscrapers.
00:10:57.000You really need to, like, find some random woman and rape her for no reason?
00:11:05.000It says over the next day she told two of her friends about the incident, both of whom testified at the trial this week.
00:11:11.000The three women kept the story secret until Carol went public with her claims in 2019, at which point Trump denied having ever met her and called her a liar and a political operative.
00:11:21.000In the deposition, Trump said he seldom purchased gifts for women that he dated and denied that he publicly dated other women while married to Marla Maples.
00:11:30.000The billionaire said he doesn't remember ever shopping at Bergdorf Goodman, the luxury department store a block away from Trump Tower.
00:11:37.000In other parts of the deposition, he said he went there very rarely.
00:11:41.000He also repeated his claim that Carol was not his type.
00:11:44.000He said, quote, I say this with as much respect as I can.
00:12:38.000So this is what's been going on, and it's part of this long saga.
00:12:42.000There's actually something going on today at the same time.
00:12:45.000Well, actually, maybe we'll cover this next week, because I think we'll get a little more information.
00:12:49.000But this is a part of... I'm not gonna go over the entire thing again tonight, because I think we just did it on... I think we just did it last night.
00:13:00.000But this is just another one of the many, many, many legal issues.
00:13:07.000And I'm going to get into other areas here as well.
00:13:10.000But the first thing when I see this story is this is just yet another legal issue that the former president has going into 2024.
00:13:19.000These are things that most people don't even know about.
00:13:21.000That if you're not keeping track, paying attention, you're not even aware that in addition to the Manhattan DA, in addition to the Fulton County Georgia investigation, multiple DOJ investigations, at the same time, apparently there's rape trials still happening.
00:13:43.000And so this isn't a case that I have been following very closely.
00:13:46.000I actually didn't even hear about this specific one until today.
00:13:50.000But apparently this is going on, and so we'll see.
00:13:53.000It doesn't seem likely that it'll be convicted on flimsy evidence like this.
00:13:59.000But it stands to reason that this is, as we've been talking about, the level of pressure that's being leveled against not just Trump, but the whole family, the whole organization.
00:14:09.000So that, I mean that's, that's one aspect of it which we've been talking about for a long time with all the other investigations.
00:14:16.000I have to say though, when I saw this article specifically, which is very different in my opinion than the Manhattan investigation, which is really kind of
00:15:03.000I don't know if he's Jewish or something, but he's been sort of anti-Christian in a lot of ways.
00:15:07.000Like, he's argued that we got to drop the abortion issue and drop some of the culture war stuff.
00:15:13.000So, if you're familiar with him, I'm not saying I'm the biggest fan, but he sometimes writes good stuff.
00:15:20.000And he wrote a really fine article this week talking about the real reason why Trump is going to be the nominee over DeSantis, if that's the contest.
00:15:32.000DeSantis is supposed to announce potentially this week.
00:15:35.000But in the article he said that specifically the reason why people like Trump, and I see this when I read this article about this rape case,
00:15:46.000The reason that the Republican base is going to rally around Trump, contrary to all these theories that have been spun out in 16 or in 20 or in recent years, the reason is because he is just like a dominant like alpha male.
00:16:02.000The reason that the Trump voters love him is because he just has this
00:16:08.000Intangible, untangible quality about him, where he's unflappable, says whatever he wants, does whatever he wants, this like supreme confidence.
00:16:18.000He had something in there specifically, which I noticed back in 2016, Hanania did.
00:16:24.000He said that if you watch Trump respond to a journalist's questions, notice how his face doesn't change.
00:16:32.000A journalist will throw a curveball at him, or they'll ask him the most disrespectful thing,
00:16:42.000He may insult the journalist, he may say something politically incorrect in response, but if you look even just at the body language, which you can't control, it's involuntary, it's like he's just not reactive.
00:16:58.000And you contrast that with Ron DeSantis, and there was a video recently, I think he was out in, was it Japan or South Korea, and a member of the press corps came up and said, what do you think about Trump attacking you and about how you're getting killed in these polls, and he flipped out.
00:17:16.000His voice got real high, his eyes got wide, he was like, oh you really believe that?
00:17:20.000I can't believe you would say that, I'm not even a candidate.
00:17:26.000And it's like that's your first tough question realistically of the 24 cycle like this is probably a week maybe two weeks before he announces which again we don't really know for sure if that's going to happen but if he does this is the direct prelude to his 2024 presidential run
00:17:49.000I mean, it's literally the first targeted question from a journalist on a foreign visit when he doesn't have as much control over the press corps and he freaks out.
00:17:58.000Now, Trump, a journalist will ask him the most ridiculous thing.
00:18:02.000A woman could be standing or sitting across from him and saying, you raped me in a dressing room in 1987.
00:18:09.000And with no response, he'll say, well, you're not even my type.
00:18:14.000And just, like, unflappable, not risible,
00:18:20.000And so, I saw that piece by Hanania earlier this week, and then I saw this today, and I'm like, no joke.
00:18:30.000It's a very funny headline, like I'm reading here from Insider, and a few other publications covered it, and I think a lot of people are putting that as a headline because it's funny.
00:18:45.000There he is getting accused of rape, and he goes, well, you're not my type, and he doesn't remember what his wife looks like.
00:18:51.000And so there's something humorous about it.
00:18:55.000But by the same token, jokes aside, that is unironically the appeal.
00:19:00.000And Hanania talks about this too, and I've talked about this a lot on my show as well.
00:19:05.000Back in 2016, you had all these competing theories about why Trump was winning, and there were many arguments.
00:19:12.000Some people said it was about this economic anxiety, about trade and immigration.
00:19:18.000Some people said it was a racial anxiety about immigration and political correctness.
00:19:23.000In 2020 there were various arguments and all kinds of theories about why DeSantis might be a formidable replacement based on this understanding of why Trump was popular.
00:19:35.000A lot of people said if DeSantis can provide the policies that Trump does, which is answering economic anxiety or political correctness or fighting the media, and if he can do that without some of the distractions,
00:20:06.000But I pointed out for a long time that you can't separate the two, because the politics, whatever you think it is, if you think it's trade, if you think it's immigration, if you think it's so-called wokeness, the woke mafia, political correctness, you're wrong.
00:20:23.000Because all of those are insufficient, they all must be married to the guy which is a true leader and a true rock star.
00:20:31.000Without him, without that guy, without those
00:20:35.000Intangible things, that stoic expression, the sort of jocular sense of humor, uncompromising approach, even just little things, his wealth, his height, the beautiful wife and family, those kinds of things, they're inimitable.
00:20:51.000They cannot be imitated by anybody, even if they can ape the policies.
00:20:56.000And so, it's a funny headline for sure, but this is why we love Trump.
00:21:01.000We love Trump because he says these things.
00:21:04.000We don't love Trump in spite of him saying, they bring drugs, crime, they're rapists.
00:21:09.000We don't love him in spite of him saying, grab her by the pussy.
00:21:19.000And even with that remark, that tape, the grab her by the pussy,
00:21:24.000Any other politician would go out there and they would say, I'm so sorry, I respect women, I don't know what came over me, I will never say anything like that again!
00:21:36.000And Trump came out and said, it's locker room talk, this is what guys say.
00:21:54.000And he goes out there and he's like, yeah, when I said you can just grab women by their genitals, you know, that's just how guys talk in the locker room and we've all heard it before and it's really not a big deal.
00:23:03.000I think maybe there's still, even though he's low energy, even though he's clearly having a hard time, he's struggling, I still think he's got that spark in him.
00:24:03.000And so as we transition into covering a lot of the 24 horse race stuff full-time, and it's going to be so far out of the people that are apparently announcing imminently, DeSantis versus Trump, this is going to be the conversation.
00:24:39.000And like I said, this actually happened on Monday and I didn't get a chance to cover it on Monday, but this has potential to become a really big story.
00:24:48.000I'm sure maybe you guys have heard about it.
00:24:52.000Major headline at the beginning of the week.
00:24:59.000There was a homeless guy who was killed on the New York City subway on Monday by a Marine veteran.
00:25:07.000And the story goes something like this homeless guy was having a mental breakdown, total meltdown, freaking out, taking his clothes off, saying he's gonna die, and he's gonna go back to jail, and threatening everybody.
00:25:20.000And some Marine jumps on him, tackles him, restrains him, holds him down, and accidentally kills him.
00:25:50.000And they're saying that this was because the city is not providing adequate resources and people do not know how to respond to this mental health crisis among the homeless and so on.
00:26:58.000You can travel just about any time of day in just about any line on any mass metro system in one of those major cities, and you know exactly what this is.
00:27:09.000You've seen this before, which is these vagabonds, homeless, transient types that go on these subway cars and
00:27:21.000Sometimes they go and they give their speech, and they go around trying to get people to throw coins in their cup, and sometimes they just start attacking people for no reason.
00:27:31.000If you haven't seen it in person, if you haven't seen some scene, some vignette like that, then you've probably seen it on social media.
00:27:41.000You've seen a viral video taken from somebody's cell phone of exactly this.
00:27:47.000A homeless person, typically black, going onto the New York City subway and harassing women with sexual stuff, or they're attacking anybody for no reason, or it's just a straight-up meltdown.
00:28:03.000Limbs flailing, throwing themselves on the floor, always drugs, alcohol involved.
00:28:11.000The amazing thing is that the New York Times and all these other media, just like with every other one, now they're gonna say that this guy was a dancer, who was actually really sweet and really friendly.
00:28:23.000And when they say he's a dancer, they mean that he would dress up like Michael Jackson on the subway and do dances and ask for money.
00:28:37.000He dresses up like Michael Jackson on drugs and then asks for money in a cup in the subway.
00:28:42.000That's what they mean when they say he's a dancer.
00:28:45.000And they say he's a sweet guy and he was just having like a little mental health episode when this maniac, when the real maniac, who is the bystander, tackles him.
00:28:56.000Of course, we know that in a situation like this, this is somebody who could kill people.
00:29:01.000If somebody who is clearly homeless and on drugs, or having some mental health crisis, if they're ripping their clothes off and announcing to the train, I'm ready to go back to jail, I'm ready to die, and you're in a confined, locked space, that's a problem.
00:29:20.000As much as all these liberals, it's amazing, because the liberals live among this, they see it too.
00:29:27.000As much as liberals would like to play it up like it's possible for us to watch this in some sort of disinterested way, and we're supposed to feel sorry for that person, or we're supposed to act like a therapist or something, people like this pose a real imminent danger to anybody around them, as anybody knows.
00:29:50.000This is real life we're talking about.
00:29:53.000But this is where the breakdown occurs, where in the minds of some people the victim is the people on the train, in the minds of the other people the victim is the homeless person who was killed.
00:30:11.000At 2.29pm, Mr. Neely was pinned down as two other men grabbed his arms and legs.
00:30:18.000Another passenger can be heard in the video saying that his wife had been in the military and knew about chokeholds, and warning the men holding him down that Mr. Neely had not defecated on himself.
00:30:29.000He said, you don't want to catch a murder charge, you got a hell of a chokehold, man.
00:30:33.000The men then placed Mr. Neely, who was motionless, on his side, and a transit worker can be heard over the loudspeaker calling for the police.
00:30:41.000A passenger who had given the warning said, he's alright, he ain't gonna die.
00:30:46.000The police have not responded to messages asking what time they arrived at the scene, but the fire department said it received a call for help at 2.39 p.m.
00:32:13.000He would strap on his Timberland boots and his wife beater and his jeans and he would go for a jog 10 miles from his house and illegally enter other people's homes.
00:32:28.000He felt happiest when he was out jogging.
00:32:31.000It's just like every time this occurs, there's what's really going on, which we all know, and then you have these like stories that are spun up, which I don't know how anybody believes this stuff.
00:34:01.000But when you have homeless, mentally ill people on the subway, dressing up like Michael Jackson, begging people for money, and they happen to be dancing, that doesn't make you a dancer.
00:34:13.000That, like, it'd be one thing if you had some 16-year-old girl who, uh, after prom night, you know, it's late at night, and she gets up and she starts dancing to the music, and, oh, we had a magical night, we just started dancing in the rain like nobody was watching!
00:35:01.000And so here we are again at the crossroads, as we've talked about many times on the show with our cities,
00:35:07.000Is what kind of country do we want to live in?
00:35:12.000Do we want to live in a country where people do not feel in danger when they go out in public?
00:35:19.000Like people don't have to tolerate mental health breakdowns and marauding vagabonds who may at any moment carry a knife or a gun, molest somebody, rape somebody, shoot somebody, stab, beat, kill.
00:35:35.000Do we as a people have a right to live unencumbered by that menace and danger and that sort of intimidation and threat?
00:35:44.000Because if you do, then you can't have this kind of thing going on.
00:35:48.000The only people that should be on public transportation are people that paid, people that are ticketed, and people that are going from point A to point B, people that are traveling.
00:36:01.000It's not an amusement park, and it's not a place to loiter.
00:36:05.000The purpose of the public transit, which is paid for by the public, subsidized by the public, and maintained for the public benefit, is to transport people in the carrying out of their pro-social activities, which is recreation, visiting family, friends, relatives,
00:36:24.000And maybe most importantly, commuting for productive activities like work.
00:36:28.000It is not for mentally ill people to seek refuge and beg for money.
00:37:02.000They have to be removed from entering.
00:37:03.000There's a ticketing system in place for a reason.
00:37:07.000It's meant to be, and to explain it briefly, it's like a tollway or anything.
00:37:12.000You impose a small cost per use, and it's not meant to be an onerous cost, but it's meant to be there so that people will not take advantage and they'll economize.
00:37:24.000If it's a $3, $4 train ride, you can afford a $3, $4 train ride to commute to work every day, because you factor in that's the cost of getting to work.
00:37:36.000But you can't abuse it as much as you like if you don't have a job just for fun and be going in and out and in and out all day trying to commit crimes or trying to raise money for people on the subway.
00:38:21.000We don't have to worry about law-abiding people.
00:38:23.000We don't have to worry about people that the vast majority accept the laws and recognize the importance and legitimacy of them.
00:38:31.000We need police and we need prosecutors for the sociopaths and psychopaths and evildoers who have no regard for the law.
00:38:41.000And who are going to try to commit crimes.
00:38:44.000There needs to be a punitive element there.
00:38:47.000There must be a penalty paid for people that don't recognize the importance of following the law for its own sake.
00:38:55.000And so, whether it's Ahmaud Arbery or Michael Brown or any of these guys or this guy,
00:39:01.000At a certain point, you have got to say, that is not what the subway is for.
00:39:06.000It's not for dancing, it's not for being homeless, it's not for begging, and certainly, although that is tolerated all the time, it is definitely not acceptable to menace the passengers in a confined space.
00:39:19.000Talking about, you're gonna go to jail, and you ready to die, and all this.
00:39:26.000Because what's happening is increasingly we as a society are being expected to accommodate thieves, murderers, the mentally ill, drug addicts, instead of the other way around, which is that these people would have to accommodate the law-abiding and the law itself.
00:39:45.000So, unfortunately, this needs to happen more.
00:39:50.000Like, homeless people, I've said this before on the show, there's really one solution.
00:39:56.000Which is they can't be on the streets.
00:40:49.000It happens at Beverly Hills in Los Angeles.
00:40:53.000They'll go and plug their microwave and they'll plug their other appliances into probably extremely high rent commercial properties in Beverly Hills and steal electricity for the tent city.
00:41:50.000If the problem is that you need egress on the streets and sidewalk, and you need to prevent this tragedy of the commons with homeless people abusing all the free or cheap amenities, the public transportation, any other public service, any other service provided to the public by private entities like a Starbucks bathroom, in order to prevent abuse for that, again, they gotta go.
00:42:17.000And in cases where it's extreme, where they refuse to leave, where they're a threat to other people, where they're intimidating and harassing people, they gotta get beat up!
00:42:27.000Now, they could get beat up by the cops, or they could get beat up by ex-Marines on the train station, but if you've got these people, not only are they posing a problem by occupying a public space and stealing from everybody and imposing on everybody, which is a horrible injustice,
00:42:45.000But then you've got people that are going to go out and be hostile, and they're going to threaten the lives of other people, not just steal their public commodities, but they're going to threaten their lives.
00:42:57.000Once again, what are we going to do to stop them?
00:43:07.000And so, if you want to begin to save our cities and our quality of life, it's very simple what needs to happen.
00:43:15.000Which is that when homeless people do this kind of stuff, and then one of them gets killed, you cannot prosecute the bystander!
00:43:24.000Because then the next time that a homeless person freaks out and is trying to kill people, everyone in the cabin is going to think to themselves, well, I don't want to get involved because I don't want to get charged like that other guy that strangled that homeless guy on Monday.
00:43:43.000If you've got a menacing guy that's high on drugs, menacing everybody on the train,
00:43:50.000And somebody is in there hesitating and acting reluctantly because they're thinking, I gotta be careful because I know that I'm damned if I do, I'm damned if I don't.
00:44:00.000If I don't intervene, I could get killed.
00:44:02.000If I do, the prosecutor could ruin my life.
00:44:06.000That's why this guy has to be considered a hero and not prosecuted.
00:44:13.000That's why there can't be big protests ruining his life.
00:44:18.000Because you see the kind of behaviors that we are incentivizing, you see the kind of moral hazard that that approach has created, which is that now the criminals, the indigent, these vagabonds are emboldened, and it's the cops, and it's the business owners, and it's the vigilantes.
00:44:36.000They're the ones that got to look over their shoulder.
00:44:39.000And so as a consequence you're going to get more maniacs and you're going to get more people doing their dancing and doing their ripping their coat off and screaming about going to jail and more heists and crime sprees and all this and you're going to get less businesses like Walmart pulling out of Chicago or Nordstrom pulling out of San Francisco.
00:45:01.000You're going to get less police officers signing up
00:45:06.000You're going to get less people that are willing to take a stand in their community when they see a robbery in place or they see something like this happening on a train or a subway.
00:45:19.000And people just have to develop a stomach for this sort of thing.
00:45:22.000A lot of George Floyds and Neelys are going to die before we're going to have a civilization that our kids are going to be safe to live in.
00:45:33.000And we have to be, to some extent, okay with that.
00:45:37.000How seriously do we care about our country?
00:45:44.000When we see the dilapidated everything in our cities, and everything lowering in quality all the time, is that just something that we're going to take on the chin and say, well, what are we going to do?
00:46:45.000We need to assign some responsibility to criminals.
00:46:48.000Do we bear the responsibility for everything?
00:46:51.000I guess the productive, law-abiding people are responsible for obeying the law, producing all the goods, running the businesses, doing everything on time.
00:47:00.000And when there's criminals, we're also responsible for de-escalating, and playing therapist, and sometimes taking a stab wound to the chest.
00:47:08.000Like, I'm sorry, but you gotta draw a line somewhere.
00:47:12.000And say if this guy didn't want to die that day, well, you know, you cannot go onto a subway and start threatening to kill everybody.
00:47:37.000But yes, if you commit crimes, if you run from the police, if you resist police, there's a non-zero chance you're gonna die, and that is where the law is enforced.
00:47:49.000That's the line of where order meets chaos.
00:47:53.000And so if that's not happening, then we have no order.
00:47:57.000If there's no George Floyds and no Neelys... It's kind of ironic actually.
00:48:03.000They're comparing him to George Floyd and the guy's name is Neely.
00:48:06.000This is just like when George Floyd got knelt on and his name is Neely.
00:52:30.000So you're going out there to all these rural white people, the Pacific Northwest, and I know that they're not going to be hardcore reactionary extremists.
00:52:40.000But just take a step back and think that you're running to represent these people.
00:53:42.000But by the same token, we have to recognize, independent of politics, there's something deeply wrong when this country was 90% white, is 60% white, your district is 95% white, and you can't talk about the people that are in your own district.
00:53:58.000You can't talk about the people that are in your jurisdiction.
00:54:02.000You have to go out of your way to say, hey, just so everybody knows, because I want to make it clear, I will not fight for white people.
00:56:07.000You should literally not eat, not drink, cut off your hand in order to avoid sin, in order to nourish yourself spiritually instead.
00:56:15.000So so no absolutely the wrong idea we're not about that at all Jufri sent $3 I feel the need to clarify that I did not mean you and I together in a pornographic video Just in case someone takes that the wrong way lol.
00:56:33.000I was just using porn as an example of something immoral I Think I think we know what you meant.
00:57:04.000I don't want to say what it didn't do because you know Then I'm gonna go and something else horrible is gonna happen and it's gonna deliver that so Well, let's just let's just not test fate.
00:57:16.000Let's just not Let's not test our luck here.
00:57:19.000I'm not I'm not really doing so hot I was talking to my dad the other day and
00:57:25.000And he was like, man, you got so lucky.
00:57:27.000He's like, I saw the car, because the car is totaled.
00:57:30.000And he goes, and man, you were lucky to walk away from that.
00:58:42.000I believe a high-value man is a man who has to varying degrees, looks, money, status, physicality, and virtue.
00:58:49.000If a man has a lot of one, it can compensate for having less of another.
00:58:54.000Yeah, I just don't think it's really interesting because we all know what women are programmed to like.
00:59:01.000Women want two things, which is to be provided for and to be protected.
00:59:06.000And so going along with those things, they like guys that are competent, they like guys that are physically large and strong, they like guys that are high status, because all of those things proceed from the capability, the ability to protect and provide.
00:59:25.000So I don't find that to be particularly interesting.
00:59:28.000All these Red Pill guys, they act like they rediscovered the wheel.
00:59:30.000They're like, girls are gonna like you if you have a lot of money and are muscular.
01:02:39.000Education media are are lying to us that the powers that be And it's always been this way are regulating the information that we see in here and therefore they're regulating our thought patterns and our behaviors and The red pill is to realize this and then realize the truth the thing that is being buried up for the expediency and convenience of the
01:03:08.000When these guys go out there and say, I'm redpilled because I know that girls actually like strong, rich guys, it's like, that's just not a redpill.
01:03:18.000I understand, for some people it might be, for some people that are really dumb, who have been told their whole life that you just gotta be yourself, and like nothing matters, you could be fat, ugly, dumb, and like nothing matters at all, I guess it's a redpill?
01:03:34.000But I get on these streams and they're like, what is a high value man?
01:03:39.000A high value man has 5,000 contacts on his LinkedIn page.
01:03:49.000So anyway, so that whole conversation to me is like, OK, I just don't know why that's interesting to people.
01:03:59.000Again, I don't think it's all that interesting.
01:04:17.000Because a lot of it is just people that are confused about terms.
01:04:21.000If we're talking about what is attractive to women, you know, that's one thing.
01:04:26.000And then there's the idea of becoming a respectable man, becoming like a honorable, valuable man.
01:04:34.000And to me, those are two different things.
01:04:36.000I mean, they're very much related, but they're two different things.
01:04:41.000So, in any case, I don't think that people should be too concerned about this kind of self-help nonsense when they say, like, they come up with these acronyms and they have this program, 10 Easy Steps to Become a High-Value Man.
01:05:04.000Like, that's really what you need to do as a guy, is be an honorable person, engage in honest work, stay true to your word, keep your promises, don't be lazy, become competent, learn.
01:05:19.000In the process of that, all of these things will come.
01:05:23.000Money, a network, probably physical fitness depending on what line of work you're in,
01:05:29.000So, I think that people just need to worry about doing what is natural, which is that I think it's natural for any man that they would want to go out there and produce.
01:05:43.000I think any man has, in particular men, have a sense of fulfillment and gratification when they complete something, when they develop mastery and competence in a particular field.
01:05:59.000You know, when you complete a do-it-yourself home improvement project, the guy feels great.
01:06:05.000And that's because we're hardwired to do honest work like that.
01:06:08.000And if you do that, and if you develop a skill, you make money with it, you meet other people that are like this, if you're honorable in your conduct with other people, you build your network, you meet people, like, if you're a good person, you're trying to be a good Christian, you go to church, you have a prayer life, like, all of this comes as a result.
01:07:19.000If it's whoever, if it's Bill Gates, he loves computers.
01:07:23.000In other words, people have a strange way of putting the cart before the horse.
01:07:29.000They're not putting the first thing first.
01:07:31.000Which is that you will become a high-value person, you'll become attractive to women, you'll be able to have those things as an effect, as a consequence of being a righteous person.
01:07:44.000But if you say to yourself, well, I need to become a high-value man so I can get laid and so girls will like me, guess what?
01:07:49.000Girls... and it's just sort of like a funny twist of fate that girls tend to not like guys that do everything just to impress women.
01:08:03.000They're very interested in a guy that has his own world that is independent of women.
01:08:08.000It just so happens that's sort of a funny irony about human relations, and it's true in almost anything.
01:08:15.000The one that is sought after and the one that is indifferent.
01:08:19.000That if you set out like, I want to get laid so I'm going to try and become rich, I don't think you'll become rich.
01:08:28.000But if you say, I want to go out and do honest work, I love work, I don't want to be lazy, I want to be productive, and I want to master my craft, and I want to help my community, I want to help the world, well then all of those things will happen.
01:08:42.000So that's my view on the whole self-help thing.
01:08:47.000But I talked a lot more about it the other day.
01:08:50.000So, I'm not, nobody's denying that like physical fitness isn't important or that looks aren't important when you're talking about attracting women.
01:08:56.000But, you know, again, I think a lot of these terms are just being confused.
01:09:18.000Like, we're talking to that Rollo Thomas-y guy, and he's in there and he's like, um... What did he say?
01:09:26.000He said, the fastest way to become a high-value man is to get a vasectomy, not have a family, not have kids, and something or other.
01:09:35.000And it's like, obviously, anybody that I think any man or woman would respect
01:14:52.000My favorite, see... I'm very particular.
01:14:57.000to me there's two kinds of burgers you have like a gourmet burger which is like a hotel burger you get it like a fancy restaurant or something and it's a it's typically it's like a one-third pound patty high quality beef it's on like a high quality brioche pretzel bun something and they've got like the luxury mayonnaise and ketchup on there
01:15:45.000It's ground beef on bread with ketchup and whatever else.
01:15:49.000So I don't think it really elevates it that much my favorite burger is a smash burger I like a very simple.
01:15:55.000I like a smash burger with onion and With onion cheese I Don't know what else do they put on it, but I like it very minimal I like in and out there are a few places in Chicago.
01:16:09.000I like I won't tell you about Los Angeles has the best burgers because they they all do the smash burger there, so I like a really good
01:16:18.000You know when they smash it and it gets like that uh I don't know I'm not a food guy so I don't know how to describe the quality but you know how when they smash it it's kind of like crispy on the edges and it's juicy and it's greasy I like it off the flat top uh deal like that so um so I'm not really into the gourmet burgers I just give me a smash burger give me a
01:17:21.000And I feel like I'm more satisfied getting like one smash burger.
01:17:25.000I feel like I'm more satisfied going in and out and getting a number one than I am getting this $25 with the works and it's a big patty and it's... Anyway, so... That's my take on that.
01:18:31.000But the more that I thought about it, I was like, no, I'm grateful.
01:18:34.000Because, honestly, it's a roll of the dice every time you walk out the door.
01:18:39.000No matter what, everybody thinks that they have a plan for their life and when they're gonna die and they're gonna live to be 80 and they're gonna do this and that during their life and it's just not guaranteed.
01:18:50.000It's just not guaranteed to anybody so you just have to take it a day at a time and be grateful for everything that comes your way, you know?
01:18:59.000You realize how... and I feel like I'm a pretty fatalistic person.
01:19:02.000That's why I didn't have this great epiphany.
01:19:03.000I'm a pretty... I'm a pretty fatalistic... I have a fatalistic outlook when it comes to things like that, so... I know some people, they live their lives as though they'll live forever and then something like that happens and they get shocked.
01:19:19.000Now me, I live every day like I'm gonna die.
01:19:39.000I live as though it could be taken at any moment.
01:19:42.000I feel like I've thrown caution to the wind and played to win and lived true to myself and my ideals and everything, so...
01:19:49.000Some people, they have something bad happen and they say, oh my whole life I was living for somebody else, and I have all these regrets, and I realize life is short.
01:19:59.000It's like, I didn't expect to live to be 25.
01:20:03.000I still might not, but you know, so when that kind of thing happens, and not to say I wasn't perturbed, but it didn't totally change my outlook in a big way.
01:22:36.000I know we did an interview around Royper War, and I think we did one other interview after that, but the debate I don't remember so well, so I have to jog my memory on that one.
01:22:47.000But yeah, Dave Smith, I really respect him.
01:22:49.000Even though he's a libertarian, I think he is brilliant.
01:22:55.000Far more intelligent than a lot of the people in even the right-wing space, and he's definitely got a way better aptitude than any libertarian, that's for sure.
01:23:28.000Go out, get your birthday cake, get a lot of presents, and enjoy while you can!
01:23:33.000I saw a TikTok the other day, and it was this black guy, and he said that when you reach the age of, I think, 22 or 23, that's the age of, oh, okay.
01:23:45.000Because your whole life, people ask you, how old are you?
01:23:49.000And right up until, like, 22, they go, oh my gosh, you're so young!
01:24:23.000Remember to enjoy the only regret that I have in my life is that I feel like I took myself too seriously in my teenage and adolescent years and Some people would say I didn't take myself seriously enough but I feel like I was very trepidatious about Trying new things and putting myself out there because I was in such a hurry.
01:28:54.000So, you're saying that because Michael Jackson went to war with the Jews and was killed for it, a guy that dressed up like him, threatening to kill people on the train,
01:29:20.000is a martyr and the real bad guy is the zogged up Marine.
01:30:20.000I mean, it used to be the case, the violence was always bad, but it used to be the case that it was segregated and you just didn't go into certain neighborhoods.
01:30:29.000He's like, you know, on my day there were neighborhoods we knew you couldn't go in and everybody knew and that's just the way it was.
01:30:36.000And that's the way it was for a long time.
01:30:38.000The city was literally designed that way.
01:30:41.000The forest preserves, the public transit stops, and public transit lines.
01:30:48.000The city was literally engineered to create that dynamic, to isolate these pockets.
01:30:55.000The highways going through certain neighborhoods and But now it's just Total mayhem like you are not safe anywhere anytime Weekend weekday morning night midday north side south side west side the loop it doesn't matter where you are and and not only that but there's this curious effect where
01:31:19.000You'll go from west to east you'll go out like I don't know how far out west you want to go but you go super far west like not even close to Chicago and the closer east you get to Chicago
01:31:40.000The level of litter, the level of filth, the level of homelessness, dilapidated and abandoned buildings, the types of commerce that is going on, you'll see more like...
01:31:53.000More places where you could cash checks and do currency exchange and stuff like that and it's literally like a gradient and you can see it in the behavior too.
01:32:03.000I'll drive on these major thoroughfares because I like to drive around a lot and I'll go from west to east all along the north-south
01:34:22.000People will deny that Jews run the world, but prime examples like Epstein and DeSantis are right in front of our face and I get called a neo-Nazi.
01:34:29.000I don't get it and feel like I'm insane at times.
01:34:32.000Thanks for being the best right-wing show of all time.
01:34:38.000I've been doing it for six years, and I just feel like How do people not get it at this point?
01:34:43.000I mean I understand everybody's on their own
01:34:46.000They're traveling down the red pill journey at their own pace so to speak but um it's like come on man it's 2023 if you're not red pilled at this point like what are we doing it's pretty in your face if you pay attention for a long time then uh if you don't get it after a certain point you're just not looking very hard or you're pretty dumb
01:35:34.000You look around, even at these other Catholic groups, and they suck, you know?
01:35:38.000Like, Church Militant, the second that they got bad press for, uh, I was hanging out with Michael Voris a couple years ago, the second that they got bad press, they called an emergency meeting and they're like, alright, attention everybody, we are not racist, we are not sexist, we are not anti-Semitic, we are not homophobic, we want none of that around here!
01:35:58.000It's like, aren't you guys supposed to be like Catholic extremists or something?
01:36:47.000I would probably go to a birthday party.
01:36:49.000Because, you know, we're celebrating her birth, not her being a lesbian.
01:36:53.000I don't... I definitely wouldn't go to the wedding.
01:37:05.000Maybe I go to the after party, but I definitely... I would not be going to any ceremony, because that's just a farce, but... Yeah, I don't see anything wrong with, like, a birthday party.
01:37:52.000Yeah, I know a lot of people said that.
01:37:54.000I don't think that's the case, though.
01:37:55.000I mean, it's certainly possible, but... When she says she just had to move on to another stream, I mean, I believe her, but... Yeah, anything's possible.
01:38:53.000If I'm being perfectly honest, if you could sit and watch that guy, who's clearly like this old guy rocking the beanie with the long hair, and be like, this guy's awesome!
01:39:05.000And he's talking about, hey man, this is the TikTok generation.
01:43:07.000It's not to say that it's not... I don't think that it's a bad thing that people are becoming hip to these dynamics about the genders and dating and all of that.
01:43:15.000But to treat it like it's this forbidden knowledge.
01:45:17.000I'll be back next week on Monday, regular schedule.
01:45:20.000Gonna be trying to go live around 9 o'clock Central.
01:45:23.000So I know tonight was a little bit later, and this week was a little all over the place, but, um...
01:45:29.000Monday I'll be back to my normal schedule 9 o'clock central.
01:45:32.000Okay, but that's gonna do it for me tonight as always remember to smash the follow button here on cozy to get a push Notification whenever I go live follow me on gab telegram true social rumble links are down below I'm on the air money through Friday 9 o'clock central 10 o'clock Eastern Time as always Thanks to our super chatters in particular next-gen Catholic e-boogie left fanboy Groyper and Groyper warrior
01:45:59.000Special thanks to them, thanks to all our Super Chatters, everybody that watches the show, we love you, and I'll see you on Monday.
01:46:05.000Until then, have a great weekend, have a great rest of your evening.
01:46:10.000Americanism, not globalism, will be our credo!