America First - Nicholas J. Fuentes - July 06, 2020


The Democrat War on WHITES | America First Ep. 320


Episode Stats


Length

1 hour and 22 minutes

Words per minute

178.40387

Word count

14,754

Sentence count

1,162


Summary

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

Transcript

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00:00:08.000 Americanism, not globalism, will be our credo.
00:00:14.000 It's going to be only America first.
00:00:19.000 America first.
00:00:28.000 again.
00:02:09.000 Good evening, everybody.
00:02:10.000 We're watching America First.
00:02:12.000 My name is Nicholas J. Fuentes.
00:02:13.000 We have a great show for you tonight.
00:02:15.000 Very excited to be back with you for another powerful show.
00:02:19.000 We've got a lot to discuss tonight.
00:02:21.000 We'll be talking about the 2020 election.
00:02:24.000 It's been a while.
00:02:25.000 It has been a while since we've gotten into the electoral politics, specifically a presidential election.
00:02:33.000 It's going to be a big one this year.
00:02:35.000 We'll be looking at Kamala Harris, Howard Schultz, and Hillary Clinton.
00:02:40.000 And that should do it for us on the show.
00:02:44.000 We'll be doing a whiteboard also, which I know it's been a long time since we've done a whiteboard.
00:02:50.000 And you guys love the whiteboards.
00:02:51.000 I know everybody loves when we do that.
00:02:54.000 So we have a nice one.
00:02:55.000 It's all set up and ready to go.
00:02:57.000 And it should be a pretty fun show tonight, pretty packed full of the issues.
00:03:01.000 Got to tell you, though, the rough week, rough weather week continues here in Chicago.
00:03:08.000 I guess the president must have been watching my show last night because right after we finished streaming, The president went on Twitter and said it's going to be colder than Antarctica, basically in the Midwest on Wednesday tomorrow, which is where I'm at.
00:03:23.000 I guess it's going to be something like negative 45 degrees tomorrow.
00:03:27.000 Negative 45 degrees.
00:03:30.000 And it's funny because one of the big reasons I left Boston, you know, again, one of the many reasons I left Boston, aside from the left wing stuff and just college being stupid, was the weather, was the fact that it was like nine months of winter, something like nine months, probably like seven or eight months closer to that.
00:03:47.000 But.
00:03:48.000 It was the weather, it was the snow, the cold, the duration of the winter.
00:03:52.000 I remember when I left Boston in May 2018.
00:03:56.000 Was it 2018?
00:03:57.000 No, May 2017.
00:03:59.000 It was snowing.
00:04:00.000 There was snow on the ground in the middle of May in 2017.
00:04:04.000 I got back to Chicago.
00:04:05.000 It was like 60.
00:04:06.000 So I don't know.
00:04:07.000 I guess it followed me.
00:04:08.000 I guess it just came with me.
00:04:10.000 We're going to have to get out of here.
00:04:12.000 The taxes, the weather.
00:04:14.000 As I grew up, I'm having a very low threshold to tolerate.
00:04:19.000 Both of those things.
00:04:20.000 Just not really a fan.
00:04:21.000 Just not really a fan of state, local sales, internet tax.
00:04:27.000 They have a gaming tax.
00:04:29.000 And they've got negative 45 degrees in January.
00:04:33.000 The winter lasts forever now.
00:04:34.000 I don't know.
00:04:35.000 I don't think I could do it for much longer.
00:04:37.000 So we are looking forward to that tomorrow.
00:04:41.000 Probably just going to hang around the house, do a little gaming, do a little work and whatever.
00:04:46.000 But that's where I'm at.
00:04:47.000 That's where my mentality is today.
00:04:49.000 I was supposed to go somewhere today.
00:04:50.000 I just said, you know what?
00:04:51.000 I. Can't do it.
00:04:52.000 Can't do it.
00:04:53.000 It's negative 10 already.
00:04:56.000 I just don't really have the patience to go out, scrape my car off, and shovel the driveway just to get out.
00:05:03.000 And then I'm slipping and sliding all over the place because I got rear wheel drive.
00:05:07.000 I'm not doing it.
00:05:08.000 So, anyway, but that's just what's going on in Nick World.
00:05:13.000 That's what's going on in Chicago.
00:05:17.000 Every year it seems like it gets worse, right?
00:05:19.000 Maybe there's something to climate change.
00:05:20.000 Global warming, I think, probably.
00:05:22.000 Not happening, we would be welcoming the global warming.
00:05:26.000 They used to say that, oh, you won't even have winter in Chicago anymore.
00:05:29.000 Please, please just leave the car running in your driveway forever if that's the case.
00:05:35.000 But it seems to be the opposite.
00:05:37.000 It seems like they say it's going to be colder than Mount Everest tomorrow.
00:05:40.000 Mount Everest, colder than Antarctica.
00:05:43.000 So clearly it's not a warming that's happening.
00:05:47.000 Clearly it is quite the reverse.
00:05:48.000 But anyway, we've got a big show tonight.
00:05:51.000 We're talking about Kamala Harris.
00:05:53.000 She's really the focus of the show tonight.
00:05:56.000 She's obviously the antithesis of everything that we stand for.
00:05:59.000 She declared that she was running for the presidency this week at Howard University.
00:06:06.000 And I love whenever they talk about Howard University because it comes up quite often in the mainstream media discussions.
00:06:13.000 This is where a lot of politicians go.
00:06:15.000 I love when they say it's an historically black college.
00:06:19.000 I love that it's historically black because they can't just say, oh, it's a college for black people.
00:06:24.000 It's a black people college.
00:06:26.000 Everyone there is black.
00:06:27.000 You know, it's historically black.
00:06:29.000 Not only do I love that they have to say it that way, but I also love that it's allowed to be historically black.
00:06:36.000 Isn't that kind of cool?
00:06:38.000 How black people, as a people, They get to have something that is historically or otherwise their own.
00:06:47.000 It's belonging to them.
00:06:48.000 It's an historically black college, and it will remain that way.
00:06:52.000 That's okay.
00:06:53.000 They don't need any diversity at Howard.
00:06:56.000 That's fine.
00:06:57.000 Black, totally fine.
00:06:59.000 You know, I wish we could start saying America is an historically white country.
00:07:04.000 Wouldn't that be nice?
00:07:05.000 No, no, no, we don't want your immigrants.
00:07:08.000 We don't want any more Mexicans in here.
00:07:11.000 No, no, sorry, no more Indians from Central America, Africans.
00:07:16.000 Thank you, next.
00:07:17.000 Asians, get them out of here.
00:07:19.000 This is an historically white country.
00:07:21.000 Wouldn't that be nice?
00:07:22.000 Wouldn't that be nice if we could adopt the same approach?
00:07:24.000 This is an historically white country.
00:07:26.000 But anyway, I digress.
00:07:27.000 So she declared officially that she was running for president at Howard University on Martin Luther King Jr. Day, which we'll get into the significance of that.
00:07:37.000 And she had actually revealed that she was running for president, I think, on Stephen Colbert's show on CBS, right?
00:07:46.000 That's where he is.
00:07:48.000 She appeared as a guest on that show, I guess, last week or a couple of weeks ago.
00:07:51.000 And he asked her, You know, look, you've got a book, you're making the media rounds and everything.
00:07:56.000 Are you going to announce anything?
00:07:58.000 And she said, Well, yeah, I'm going to make a formal announcement later this weekend.
00:08:01.000 So she made the announcement, and we're going to go into a few different things.
00:08:04.000 We're going to go into her announcement speech, some of the things that were said.
00:08:08.000 We'll go into the location, the timing of it.
00:08:11.000 We'll talk about how this is going to affect the Democratic primary.
00:08:15.000 We'll talk about her proposal specifically for Medicare for All.
00:08:19.000 Some other things, and then we'll get on to two other people in the Democratic primary Hillary Clinton and Howard Schultz.
00:08:26.000 I'm honestly just so excited.
00:08:28.000 I love the presidential election year.
00:08:31.000 Isn't it so fun?
00:08:32.000 We get to look at all the different candidates and their speeches.
00:08:37.000 It makes my life so much easier because during an election, there's something happening every day.
00:08:43.000 There's like 20 people that are going to be running, just like it was in 2016, but on the other side, you've got speeches, you've got statements, you've got dynamics, polls.
00:08:52.000 It makes my job a lot easier.
00:08:53.000 More people want to watch because they're interested.
00:08:56.000 When it's the between years, oh, it's a content creator, it's hell.
00:09:01.000 It's hell because, you know, what are we going to talk about today?
00:09:03.000 Oh, you know, the president tweeted something.
00:09:05.000 So I got to tell you, you're in for a real treat the next year and a half until November 2020.
00:09:13.000 It's going to be fun and we're going to have the best coverage.
00:09:15.000 But so I think it is worth it to do a big show on Kamala Harris to kind of set the tone.
00:09:23.000 Aside from Elizabeth Warren, who we talked about a little bit, I think, when she announced a few weeks ago, I think it really is worth it.
00:09:29.000 Well, she announced an exploratory committee, so it wasn't official yet.
00:09:33.000 So Kamala Harris is probably one of the front runners, they say, as a major contender.
00:09:39.000 I think it's worth it to sort of explore her campaign, what she represents, and what she represents for the Democratic Party in particular.
00:09:47.000 So obviously, it is a statement for her to go out and do her speech on Martin Luther King Jr. Day and Howard University.
00:09:55.000 I think.
00:09:56.000 The best comparison between, or rather, the best comparison to sort of understand Kamala Harris, the best foil for her is Barack Obama.
00:10:05.000 A lot of people made the comparison watching her announcement speech.
00:10:09.000 I think Joy Reid said that when she watched Kamala Harris' announcement speech, she said that she heard tones of the Obamas, both Barack and Michelle, at times.
00:10:19.000 And of course, you have Kamala Harris, who is also mixed race.
00:10:23.000 She's like a half black sort of a character, just like Barack Obama, obviously liberal.
00:10:29.000 But the reason why Barack Obama is such a good foil for Kamala Harris, why it's good to sort of keep that in mind as we analyze.
00:10:36.000 What she said and the location, again, the timing and all that stuff, is that Barack Obama didn't become a far left, the kind of radical that we understand him to be now until later in his presidency when he announced that he was running, when he gave his convention speech in 2004, which put him on the map.
00:10:56.000 Even I think his first term, he did not govern like the president that we came to know between 2012 and 2016.
00:11:04.000 And I bring this point up a lot on the show because it's worth repeating.
00:11:07.000 You know, I'm a younger guy.
00:11:09.000 I have been watching politics probably since about 2012 in a very close way, and I feel like a lot of people who watch this show are similar.
00:11:18.000 They really only started to watch politics around 2012, right around that period between 12 and 16, when culturally things started to get very polarized, very contentious, very racialized in many ways.
00:11:32.000 We started to see things like Occupy Wall Street, Black Lives Matter, some of the more mass protests, things getting kind of crazy on the right and the left.
00:11:40.000 Campus culture wars.
00:11:42.000 So, because people's reference point in politics is 2012 and again that very contentious sort of political realignment that started around that time, they forget that Barack Obama started out in 2004 and 2008 as a very, very moderate guy.
00:12:01.000 You remember his speech at the 2004 Democratic National Convention, and he was, I believe, the keynote speaker, and he really knocked the socks off of everybody with his.
00:12:12.000 Big speech, and that's what propelled him to become the nominee in 2008 because nobody knew who he was before that.
00:12:18.000 If you listen to that speech, it was about how we're all the same, right and left, we're both Americans, black and white, we're all Americans, we can all just come together and love each other, and it'll be post racial.
00:12:31.000 We can forget about the bad things that happened in the past, there's hope, there's change.
00:12:35.000 People forget all that rhetoric.
00:12:38.000 If you watch that speech, I think a lot of Mogapede type people would be on board with it.
00:12:42.000 And, you know, it's no coincidence that then.
00:12:45.000 A lot of 2008 Obama voters went over and voted for Trump, and that's what got Trump into office in places like Wisconsin, Michigan, Pennsylvania, because in a lot of ways, the civic nationalism that Trump promotes about everybody bleeds red, white, and blue and all that stuff was the same rhetoric that Barack Obama was using in 2004 and 2008.
00:13:05.000 And so I think it's very important to remember that the Democratic Party of 2008, even though you had a black president, even though you had a black guy who we saw coming, I think a lot of smart people saw from a mile away.
00:13:16.000 You look at who this guy hangs around with.
00:13:18.000 You look at who's in this guy's past, whether it be Saul Linsky or Jeremiah Wright or Louis Farrakhan or, you know, his job as a community organizer in Chicago.
00:13:26.000 He was a pot smoker, the, you know, the shady stuff about the birth certificate, the grades, all the rest.
00:13:33.000 You know, so for Republicans, we kind of saw that coming.
00:13:35.000 But the general consensus in the country, and at least in the Democratic Party, was this is a moderate guy.
00:13:41.000 So it's a very different party now that you've got Kamala Harris, who is also biracial, who is also black.
00:13:47.000 But she's also a woman.
00:13:49.000 And she declares her candidacy for the president at the historically black university, Howard, on Martin Luther King Jr. Day.
00:13:57.000 And she doesn't talk about everybody coming together and singing kumbaya and holding hands.
00:14:02.000 She says some things which are very controversial.
00:14:04.000 She takes some pretty left wing, pretty strong ideological stances on controversial issues.
00:14:11.000 You remember, again, Barack Obama, he won Iowa, he won Indiana, he won Ohio.
00:14:16.000 This is not somebody who is only capable of winning California and New York, at least not initially.
00:14:21.000 Kamala Harris, conversely, I'll read you just a few quotes from her announcement speech.
00:14:27.000 She says, We are raised, or rather, we were raised in a community where we were taught to see a world.
00:14:33.000 Beyond just ourselves, to be conscious and compassionate about the struggles of all people.
00:14:38.000 Now, at first glance, that's not totally ideological.
00:14:42.000 You may notice, though, that that does come into conflict with a certain epic political talk show hosted by a really handsome guy, really might cause some friction with the America First agenda, the idea of having compassion for the struggles of all people.
00:14:58.000 Again, you know, if you have sort of insight, you could see where that's going, but on its face, not totally controversial.
00:15:03.000 But then she goes on.
00:15:05.000 And she says, People in power are trying to convince us that the villain in our American story is each other.
00:15:11.000 But that is not our story.
00:15:13.000 Again, another interesting point.
00:15:15.000 Again, if you are somebody who pays attention to the rhetoric from the political left, you can see where obviously this kind of mentality goes one way.
00:15:26.000 Our enemy is not each other, it's the elites or whatever.
00:15:29.000 And they tend to employ this when we talk about immigrants, when we talk about thugs, when we talk about these different.
00:15:36.000 Classes of oppressed people.
00:15:38.000 The enemies of America are not, you know, these poor people coming across the border.
00:15:43.000 The real enemy, of course, is the racists.
00:15:45.000 Of course, is the white supremacists, the bigots, the haters, and so on.
00:15:49.000 And she really, I think, shows who she really is.
00:15:53.000 Because those lines, you could say, well, we can see the subtext with me, and it's not all the way there.
00:15:59.000 She closes it off by saying, Let's speak the truth that too many unarmed black men and women are killed in America, too many black and brown Americans are locked up.
00:16:10.000 From mass incarceration to cash bill to policing, our criminal justice needs drastic repair.
00:16:15.000 Let's speak that truth.
00:16:17.000 So here you see that this is a very ideological statement, a very racialized statement.
00:16:21.000 You wouldn't hear this in 2008 from a Democrat.
00:16:24.000 You wouldn't hear this, maybe you would hear it from some, but you wouldn't hear it from most in 2012.
00:16:29.000 This is a statement by somebody who's a very radical left-wing person who is obviously amping up rather than toning down racial rhetoric.
00:16:37.000 I don't know if anybody's even used the expression, Brown people in that context in a presidential announcement speech, or even a lot of other presidential speeches, the addition of brown people sort of gets to some of the themes which I'll be exploring a little bit later.
00:16:53.000 And then I think really what sends it all home, what really brings it all home, ties it all together, is what she tweeted today on Twitter.
00:17:01.000 And I did a little thread about this, but this is what our whiteboard is going to be about.
00:17:05.000 And I think this is going to illustrate why Kamala Harris is so radically different from.
00:17:11.000 The Democratic Party that we knew 10 years ago, why she represents, I think, a really big change in politics, I guess, on both sides.
00:17:18.000 Because even compared to Hillary Clinton, Hillary Clinton had a lot of left wing rhetoric, but again, relatively speaking, pretty moderate, pretty establishment, relatively centrist candidate.
00:17:29.000 So I'll read you the tweet and then I'll bring out the whiteboard and I'll show you what I mean by this.
00:17:34.000 She tweeted out today, Let's speak an uncomfortable but honest truth with one another.
00:17:39.000 And I love the framing of this.
00:17:42.000 Because it's pretty predictable what she's about to say.
00:17:45.000 So keep in mind that she thinks this is really uncomfortable.
00:17:48.000 It's uncomfortable, but it's really honest.
00:17:50.000 She says racism, sexism, anti Semitism, homophobia, and transphobia are real in this country.
00:17:59.000 They are age old forms of hate with new fuel.
00:18:03.000 And we need to speak that truth so we can deal with it.
00:18:07.000 I really love also this truth.
00:18:10.000 It's an uncomfortable but honest truth.
00:18:12.000 We have to speak that truth, just like in her campaign announcement speech.
00:18:17.000 Speak that truth.
00:18:18.000 What a stupid left wing thing to say.
00:18:20.000 I feel like that's probably something from NPR, maybe.
00:18:24.000 But she says that's really uncomfortable to say that racism is still alive.
00:18:27.000 Racism, sexism, all these different isms, the homophobia, the other stuff.
00:18:32.000 It's so real, and that's really makes us uncomfortable, but we have to deal with it.
00:18:37.000 Now, you may wonder what she means by deal with it.
00:18:40.000 I'll show you what she means by deal with it.
00:18:42.000 We have a little bit of a whiteboard here, and this bears a little bit of resemblance to, again, a brief Twitter thread that I did today in response to it, but it illustrates very clearly what she means by all these different words.
00:18:54.000 This might seem like we're going to have to change the lighting here because the whiteboard is messing with our white balance, making us a little shiny.
00:19:03.000 Making us a little shiny.
00:19:05.000 Isn't that interesting?
00:19:06.000 So let me just turn down the brightness a little bit, maybe.
00:19:11.000 I don't know, then it makes.
00:19:12.000 We'll have to find some kind of a balance here.
00:19:15.000 Maybe we'll do.
00:19:17.000 Bring down the white balance?
00:19:19.000 I guess that's fine.
00:19:20.000 I guess we'll just do it like that, maybe.
00:19:27.000 Yeah, we're going to have to change the background because the lighting is all goofed up.
00:19:33.000 All right, well, that's good enough.
00:19:35.000 So she says all these things, and this might sound familiar to a lot of people who watch this show because, you know, if you watch this show, you're based in Red Pilled.
00:19:44.000 You get it.
00:19:45.000 You get the bigger picture.
00:19:46.000 But I do still hear very often a lot of people that use this kind of language racism, sexism in particular.
00:19:54.000 We don't hear so much about homophobia and transphobia.
00:19:56.000 I think generally people recognize that that's relatively new, pretty much out there.
00:20:02.000 You know, you look at trans people, they're about 1% of the population.
00:20:06.000 You look at homosexuals, they're about 3% of the population.
00:20:09.000 So.
00:20:09.000 That's like a relatively new thing, but racism, sexism, anti Semitism, this is the language which has governed our political dialogue for probably the past 30 years with great effect and really started to impact things drastically in the last 10 to 15 years.
00:20:25.000 You know, particularly on the right, Republicans, conservatives, people who have identitarian type views, people are not ashamed of their history.
00:20:33.000 We're familiar with things like racism, sexism, anti Semitism, how they're levied against us to shut us up.
00:20:39.000 In spite of that, I still hear people using that kind of framework.
00:20:44.000 I still hear people using that kind of language on the right.
00:20:47.000 People will say, you know, I'm not a racist, but I'm not a sexist, but we don't hear so much.
00:20:54.000 Nobody really likes to even play around with that one.
00:20:59.000 You never hear, I'm not anti Semitic, but people just don't talk about it.
00:21:02.000 If you talk about those people, you know, you're already there.
00:21:06.000 You're already, even if you say Jews, too much of a hard, Exaggerated way, like you're already there.
00:21:12.000 So, really, it's racism and sexism.
00:21:14.000 I still hear people saying that, but I want to illustrate very clearly what these scare words mean.
00:21:20.000 I want to illustrate very clearly in a simplified way to show you once and for all why you should not be saying racist, you should not be saying sexist, you should not be saying anti Semite, you should not be saying homophobe or transphobe.
00:21:33.000 None of these words mean anything.
00:21:35.000 We've talked about that a lot on the show.
00:21:37.000 What do you mean by racist?
00:21:39.000 It's totally ambiguous.
00:21:40.000 Do you mean you discriminate against somebody?
00:21:42.000 Do you mean you're prejudiced against somebody?
00:21:44.000 Do you believe in racial differences?
00:21:46.000 Do you believe in negative stereotypes?
00:21:49.000 It could mean a host of different things.
00:21:51.000 It means something different to everybody.
00:21:53.000 It's also totally subjective.
00:21:55.000 It's subjective based on your race.
00:21:57.000 It's subjective based on your ideology.
00:22:00.000 It's subjective based on the given situation.
00:22:03.000 For example, if you see discrimination against white people in affirmative action, if you were to say that racism means discrimination against a particular race, by definition, then by that working definition, then affirmative action would be said to be racist because it discriminates against whites and Asians.
00:22:20.000 But affirmative action is never called racist, and that's because affirmative action benefits blacks and Hispanics.
00:22:26.000 So it seems more like whatever helps certain groups of people.
00:22:29.000 You know, that's not racist.
00:22:31.000 Whatever hurts certain groups of people, that is racist.
00:22:34.000 And so when you look at it that way, you find that these words really don't have any content in themselves outside of a political context, outside of a very particular ideological lens.
00:22:44.000 So again, a lot of people are familiar with these concepts, but I still hear that language even by people who are fed up with political correctness, fed up with this stuff, but they still think it holds water.
00:22:55.000 I'll illustrate to you what these words truly mean racism is about creating a dichotomy.
00:23:02.000 Between whites and non whites.
00:23:04.000 This in particular is one we talk about many times on the show.
00:23:08.000 The fact that if you talk about any kind of discrimination against whites, if you talk about anti white hatred, you have to specify either by saying it's reverse racism or it's anti white racism or something to that effect, reverse discrimination, things like that, that it's racial hatred directed against white people.
00:23:26.000 And that's because even though in the textbook dictionary definition of racism, it might say in a very general sense, Racism is prejudice or hatred against another race.
00:23:37.000 We know that culturally, in the vernacular, we are conditioned to believe that racism is really only something that's perpetrated by white people against non white people.
00:23:46.000 It used to be simply white people against black people when the only substantial minority in the country was blacks.
00:23:53.000 That if you were a racist, it was a white person going against a black person.
00:23:56.000 And that's based on, again, the historical context that in this country, of course, black people were slaves and then there was Jim Crow and then all that other stuff.
00:24:05.000 But after they got full.
00:24:07.000 Legal equality after they got equality in politics and voting rights and everything else, after they got equality in the way of racial integration, things going beyond equality, affirmative action, welfare, government programs.
00:24:21.000 Well, they say that now the problem is racism.
00:24:24.000 These white people, they just won't leave us alone.
00:24:27.000 They're calling us the N word.
00:24:29.000 They're pushing us down.
00:24:30.000 It later got expanded then to include all non whites.
00:24:33.000 And so now, if you say anything nasty, stereotypical, whatever, even if it's positive, even if you say something that's positively negative, Stereotyping about a certain group that is non white, you're a racist.
00:24:45.000 And you'll never hear an Asian get called a racist.
00:24:47.000 You'll never hear a black guy get called a racist.
00:24:49.000 You'll never hear an Hispanic get called a racist because they are non white.
00:24:53.000 And so that spells out very clearly that racism really has a lot less to do with racial discrimination, racial prejudice, racial hatred within itself, and more about white people doing ill things to non white people.
00:25:06.000 Even if they're not cognizant of it, even if you don't individually do it, it's about this whole system.
00:25:11.000 Which victimizes non whites, and that's the fault of white people.
00:25:15.000 You look at sexism.
00:25:16.000 Again, sexism is something that's thrown around pretty frequently.
00:25:19.000 If you're to say we believe in differences between the sexes, if you're to believe that women have a particular role, which would make sense because they have obviously a very specific and particular and distinct biological role.
00:25:32.000 If you're to say that women should remain in the home and they're better suited to be caretakers and they have a caretaker's ethics because, you know, they're biologically designed.
00:25:42.000 To rear children within their womb for nine months?
00:25:46.000 Well, you're a sexist.
00:25:48.000 That's sexism.
00:25:49.000 We have to fight against that.
00:25:50.000 Normal people, at least with both of these and also anti Semitism, they'll say, okay, we can see where the left goes a little bit crazy and excessive, but these concepts are true in themselves.
00:26:02.000 You shouldn't be racist, you shouldn't be sexist, you shouldn't be anti Semitic.
00:26:05.000 But sexism, again, is another one where you'll never hear about sexism against men.
00:26:10.000 It's always men against women.
00:26:12.000 The proliferation of the term sexism is always within the vernacular, within the culture, used to describe the power dynamic, which has Patriarchal attitudes, male domination, oppressing and victimizing women.
00:26:26.000 It's always women that are sexist, or rather, vice versa.
00:26:29.000 It's always men that are sexist against women.
00:26:31.000 If you were to say that, you know, if a woman were to say that a man needs to be strong, a man should be physically strong, a man should be emotionally strong, a man should be able to provide for me, a man should really be able to sort of tell me what to do, a man should be able to stand up for himself and all the rest.
00:26:48.000 We get into some of those other themes in some more, you know, risque shows.
00:26:52.000 Well, that's never sexist.
00:26:53.000 That's just, you know, that's just.
00:26:55.000 What we are to expect.
00:26:57.000 It's only male against female.
00:26:59.000 Anti Semitism is another one.
00:27:01.000 It's always Gentile against Jew.
00:27:03.000 You will never hear about anti Christian.
00:27:05.000 You know, is that really a popular term that you can think of?
00:27:08.000 We talked about this a little bit on last night's show where Mike Cernovich tweeted out that, I don't know, Christians were responsible for pedophilia in large, and so we should basically just drop it.
00:27:18.000 Now, is there even a word, is there even a go to word that exists in the dictionary or that is mainstream or that if you said it, people would say, Yep, and pick up on it and recognize that for what it is that describes anti Christian religious bigotry?
00:27:33.000 It doesn't even exist.
00:27:33.000 Of course not.
00:27:34.000 You have to just say it's, well, it's anti Christian.
00:27:37.000 It's the negation of being pro Christian.
00:27:40.000 There's not even a word to describe it.
00:27:42.000 So it always is Gentile versus Jew, never Jew versus Gentile.
00:27:46.000 When you have comedians like Sarah Silverman, you have all kinds of other Jewish comedians or Jewish Hollywood people, and they make out Christians or Gentiles to be stupid, to be evil.
00:27:58.000 That Jesus Christ isn't real, and that's all just a bunch of silly fiction.
00:28:02.000 Creationism is the myth of rubes, the superstition of hillbillies and flyover country.
00:28:08.000 There's not even a word to describe that.
00:28:10.000 That's just par for the course.
00:28:11.000 Totally accepted.
00:28:13.000 So it's not really about being against anything in general.
00:28:15.000 It's just about this oppression, victimization of Jews by Gentiles.
00:28:19.000 Homophobia and transphobia are a little bit more particular than racism or sexism in general.
00:28:25.000 There's no word, again, to describe one against the other, one against the other, because all of these things are.
00:28:31.000 Traditional America.
00:28:32.000 Traditional America is white.
00:28:35.000 It is dominated by men.
00:28:37.000 It is dominated by Christians, Gentiles, but in particular Christians, naturally, naturally, as is naturally correct, by heterosexuals and by cisgenders.
00:28:47.000 That you even have to qualify that men who are men and women who are women.
00:28:51.000 That's why I put it in quotes because it's so ridiculous.
00:28:54.000 In short, what all these different words do, they don't describe things which are bad in themselves, they don't describe actions that are general.
00:29:02.000 Universally applicable, for example, discrimination on the basis of race, discrimination on the basis of sex, discrimination on the basis of religion, orientation, whatever the transphobia category is.
00:29:14.000 I don't even know, gender identity.
00:29:16.000 They don't describe any kind of discrimination that is bad in itself, that has, again, a universal definition.
00:29:23.000 They all describe a political and power struggle, a socio political struggle that is based on, again, these deviant alternative categories.
00:29:35.000 Against traditional America.
00:29:37.000 And so, really, you have three schools of thought on this.
00:29:39.000 This is called identity politics.
00:29:40.000 When you define somebody by race, sex, anti Semitism, homophobia, transphobia, these kinds of words are associated with so called identity politics, which gets a bad rap on the right.
00:29:51.000 I'm going to tell you sort of where this stands on the spectrum with regard to identity politics.
00:29:56.000 We're going to sort of systematize it here.
00:29:59.000 The left wing perspective about politics right now is they have a revolutionary vision of America.
00:30:06.000 When they use this language, which is loaded, which is totally contextual based on historical and social context, They are using this language to achieve a certain outcome in America.
00:30:17.000 They want America to be transformed in such a way that it's no longer white.
00:30:22.000 And that's where you understand why they throw around a term like racism.
00:30:25.000 Because they want to see white America as it exists to perish.
00:30:30.000 They want whites to be a minority in America.
00:30:32.000 They want non whites to be in the majority.
00:30:34.000 In fact, they want non whites to be ascendant.
00:30:37.000 They want them to be in government.
00:30:38.000 They want them to be in politics making the decisions.
00:30:41.000 They want non whites to have cultural hegemony.
00:30:43.000 And so when they use language like racism, it suits.
00:30:46.000 Their revolutionary goals, which is they want to revolt against, upset the traditional natural order, which is that America has always been white, that America is supposed to be white.
00:30:56.000 They're revolting against it, and so they use language like racism to stigmatize and vilify white people and say that really it's not just, well, which flavor do you like?
00:31:05.000 Which is good, which is bad?
00:31:06.000 You know, is it just naturally bad to discriminate?
00:31:09.000 They're saying there's also this component of injustice that the moral struggle is for non whites to overturn white rule.
00:31:16.000 That's what racism means.
00:31:18.000 With sexism, again, another revolutionary view of America.
00:31:21.000 They want radical equality between the sexes, something that has never existed in Western civilization.
00:31:29.000 You have never had total equality in a legal sense, in a cultural sense, in a social sense, in a political sense between the sexes.
00:31:37.000 It has never happened in Western history.
00:31:40.000 You've come close, you've gotten there in a few different societies, particularly in the last century, we've gotten there in the West, but they want radical revision of this.
00:31:50.000 They not only want male and females to be equal, they want a female dominated society.
00:31:55.000 They use things like the female is future.
00:31:58.000 It's our turn, that kind of language, to say that, again, we want to revolt against the male dominated system.
00:32:05.000 So we use language like sexism to vilify and stigmatize men so that we can paint this, again, as a struggle.
00:32:14.000 And one side is clearly moral and just, and one side is clearly immoral and unjust.
00:32:19.000 Females have been oppressed for far too long, even though females are the majority in the country.
00:32:24.000 Even though non whites will be the majority in the country, females have to rise up and resist, and that is just because they were oppressed before.
00:32:32.000 It's a revolutionary view of America.
00:32:34.000 The same is true with all these other categories.
00:32:36.000 Jews is largely just to help with this.
00:32:39.000 You know, you've got a lot of Jews in Hollywood, got a lot of Jews in money.
00:32:43.000 It's because they're really just better than us, I guess.
00:32:43.000 That's fine.
00:32:46.000 It's because they were chosen by God.
00:32:48.000 So they use language like anti Semitism to say, you're in on this too.
00:32:52.000 You're probably going to be leading the struggle in some sense against the Christian idea of America.
00:32:57.000 Jews have always been champions of liberalism, of internationalism, of diversity because they're a diaspora people, because they are eternally a minority in foreign lands.
00:33:07.000 Homophobia and transphobia.
00:33:09.000 You know, I don't really know why they incorporate these two.
00:33:12.000 It's actually kind of silly in a sense.
00:33:14.000 This is really ideological.
00:33:16.000 If they were, I think, ruthless pragmatists, in some sense they would sort of ignore this stuff because this is stuff that just repulses normal people of all races and sexes.
00:33:27.000 I guarantee.
00:33:28.000 That's going to become a sticking point in the future.
00:33:30.000 Because you look at any of the polling among, you know, you look at the traditional Hispanics that are coming in from Mexico, and they're all Catholic.
00:33:36.000 You think they're on board with if Jose comes home from school one day and says, Oh, I'm actually a chica now.
00:33:42.000 I don't think so.
00:33:43.000 I don't think so, right?
00:33:45.000 But they do this.
00:33:46.000 Again, it's all about, you know, you only understand why these all go together because they really don't.
00:33:52.000 You know, it really doesn't go together that all these disparate groups of people should be united in political goals because they all share different agendas, interests, priorities, and so on.
00:34:01.000 But it all makes sense.
00:34:03.000 Identity politics all make sense when you understand that the left has a revolutionary agenda to change America, to subvert the traditional order of the West, of European America, of the United States of America as it exists.
00:34:17.000 It's based on overturning the racial hegemony of whites, the gendered hegemony of men, the hegemony of Christians, you know, I guess in Christian society, imagine that, the hegemony of traditional sexual morality.
00:34:32.000 And so that's their side.
00:34:33.000 Our side, of course.
00:34:35.000 Is that we want to protect traditional America.
00:34:38.000 We see this language, and we say that we don't agree with the language, we don't agree that it's framed in a moral way, that racism is this evil thing.
00:34:46.000 You know, whites, this is a white country, and racism says it is a moral injustice that it's a white country.
00:34:53.000 We acknowledge that basically the descriptive claims that is the subtext behind these words, the descriptive claim that, well, racism can only be done by whites to non whites because whites are in power.
00:35:05.000 Well, we agree with the descriptive claim that America is a traditionally European country.
00:35:10.000 That's just factual.
00:35:11.000 We agree with the descriptive claim that Western civilization, European civilization, is male dominated.
00:35:17.000 We agree with the descriptive claim that America is a nation of Christians.
00:35:21.000 It's a Christian nation, not Judeo Christian, Christian.
00:35:24.000 We believe with the descriptive claim that, of course, as should be the case, society is dominated by people who are not deviants, either in their gender or their so called sexual orientation.
00:35:35.000 We believe the descriptive claims.
00:35:37.000 Of all of these grievances, basically, what we disagree with is the normative claims.
00:35:43.000 The normative claim that America is white, male, Christian, heterosexual, cisgender, and therefore, that is unjust, has to be overturned to fit an egalitarian agenda.
00:35:54.000 And that's because we don't believe in egalitarianism.
00:35:57.000 On the right, we believe in tradition.
00:35:59.000 Inside tradition, you have order, you have hierarchy, you have authority, which says that in a country that is white, well, it should remain white.
00:36:07.000 You know, this is the tradition of the country.
00:36:10.000 Whites settled the country.
00:36:12.000 Whites fought for the country.
00:36:13.000 This is based on principles of justice also.
00:36:15.000 Men, this is based on gendered hierarchy.
00:36:19.000 Look, it was decided by God that men were supposed to rule over the planet.
00:36:23.000 We don't make the rules, we just follow them.
00:36:26.000 So on with Christians and with all this other stuff about sexual morality.
00:36:30.000 So we understand again that basically these claims that they're making about this struggle, the descriptive claims are true.
00:36:36.000 The normative claims that it has to be overturned, it has to be reversed.
00:36:39.000 That such things constitute some evil known as racism, such things that men are dominating society constitutes an evil known as sexism, which must be corrected.
00:36:49.000 We reject those claims.
00:36:50.000 So, on the left side of the spectrum, they say there's this fundamental inequality, and we reject that.
00:36:56.000 We have to change that.
00:36:58.000 We say, yes, we accept there is a fundamental inequality, but it is not unjust, and we should not be trying to change it.
00:37:04.000 That's the right wing position.
00:37:07.000 What you have now in the right wing in America is the prolific.
00:37:12.000 Of this very pernicious idea somewhere in the middle, which is the idea that America is a creedal nation.
00:37:18.000 They reject all of this.
00:37:20.000 They reject inequality and they reject the descriptive claims that inequality exists.
00:37:25.000 They reject the normative claims, naturally, because if such inequality doesn't exist, why do you need to redress it?
00:37:33.000 So these are your people like Ben Shapiro.
00:37:35.000 These are your Charlie Kirks.
00:37:37.000 To some extent, this is your Donald Trump.
00:37:39.000 This is your Barack Obama who says, no, no, no, pish posh.
00:37:44.000 There's no conflict between whites and non whites.
00:37:47.000 What difference does race make?
00:37:49.000 We're all purple on the inside.
00:37:50.000 We're all pink on the inside, right?
00:37:52.000 You know, we all bleed red, white, and blue.
00:37:55.000 Male and female, hey, what difference does it make?
00:37:57.000 If women do good, that's great.
00:37:59.000 And if they don't, well, that's their own fault.
00:38:01.000 That's the free market.
00:38:03.000 Well, they do care about this one.
00:38:04.000 They do care about this one.
00:38:05.000 Don't want to get into that on this show.
00:38:07.000 But they do, for some reason, care about that one.
00:38:09.000 Homophobia, transphobia, ah, whoa, what difference does it make?
00:38:12.000 Do what you want to do.
00:38:13.000 It's a free country.
00:38:15.000 Mind your own business.
00:38:16.000 If you're gay, straight, hey, as long as you can do data entry at the widget company, I don't care if you shave your head, cut off your balls, it doesn't matter.
00:38:26.000 And this is.
00:38:27.000 Is the problem.
00:38:29.000 The left, we can fight the left because they're rejecting nature.
00:38:32.000 You know, the things that they are, I mean, of course, they're trying to unite this coalition of the ascendant, as we call it, against traditional America.
00:38:40.000 That's a political struggle.
00:38:41.000 But in the way of radical egalitarianism, everything has to be equal, everyone has to be on the same page, or that there has to be this dominion by others.
00:38:50.000 We can deal with that.
00:38:51.000 We can fight that.
00:38:51.000 We're, you know, I think we're stronger than them put together.
00:38:55.000 The people in the center are the real obstacle.
00:38:58.000 People that are telling.
00:38:59.000 Right wing people, white people, they're telling white people, hey, whitey, it doesn't matter that they're black, it doesn't matter that they're female, that they're Jewish, it doesn't matter that they're homosexuals or they're transgenders.
00:39:12.000 None of that matters.
00:39:13.000 We're all interchangeable.
00:39:15.000 Again, as long as we serve the market, that's what's okay.
00:39:17.000 And you could take a look at that in the way of ideology.
00:39:21.000 I prefer to look at it in the way of pragmatism.
00:39:23.000 Maybe you believe that.
00:39:24.000 Maybe you too are a radical egalitarian, which is a very left wing view.
00:39:29.000 You're really not right wing at all.
00:39:30.000 But, you know, maybe that's your view.
00:39:31.000 You say, well, everyone's equal.
00:39:33.000 What difference does it make?
00:39:34.000 I'm just some dumb idiot who rejects history and science and all the rest, that equality doesn't really exist empirically in any way.
00:39:41.000 It's just an ideological statement.
00:39:43.000 Maybe you believe all that dumb nonsense.
00:39:46.000 Strategically speaking, what people in the center do is they side with whites, men, Gentiles, heterosexuals, cisgenders, sometimes, when they interpret that that's in the service of this abstract national good in the American creed.
00:40:02.000 And they'll side with the other side when that fits the American creed.
00:40:05.000 Take Bill Crystal, for example.
00:40:07.000 Illegal immigrants are more American than white people.
00:40:10.000 You know, somebody like Bill Crystal, somebody like Bill Crystal, he'll take the side of whites sometimes, you know, when it fits the creedal agenda, and sometimes he'll take the side of non whites, immigrants, whatever, this coalition of the ascendant, again, when it fits the creed.
00:40:26.000 If they're coming over, they want to work hard, and they want to be liberal, and they want to be free, and they want to salute the flag and die in Iraq for Israel, well, then that's great too.
00:40:35.000 And it's not hard to understand why this way of thinking is flawed and problematic if you believe in traditional America.
00:40:41.000 We never lived in creedal America.
00:40:44.000 We have always lived in traditional America.
00:40:46.000 And so what happens is that when you only defend traditional America sometimes, traditional Americans sometimes, and sometimes you defend these guys, if this comes to be the entire right wing, the creedal view, if the left defends their guys 100% of the time, and the center only defends their guys 50% of the time, and they defend the enemy 50% of the time, Who wins in the struggle?
00:41:10.000 Of course, the left does.
00:41:11.000 So, if Ben Shapiro is going there and he's saying, We don't believe in identity politics, we believe in the American creed.
00:41:18.000 And so sometimes that means we'll side with the left, and sometimes we'll side with the right.
00:41:22.000 And the left just says, you know, we don't care about any of that.
00:41:25.000 We want non white people to be in power.
00:41:26.000 We want women to be in power.
00:41:27.000 We want Jewish people to be in power.
00:41:29.000 We want to subvert everything that is traditional and natural about this country.
00:41:34.000 Who's going to win in the end?
00:41:35.000 You know, if you take 100 different instances, 100 different actions, 100 different data points, and the left goes on their side all 100 times, and the center only goes the right way 50 times, well, it's a no brainer.
00:41:47.000 They get creamed, they get destroyed.
00:41:49.000 And so that's why the biggest obstacle.
00:41:52.000 To defeating this revolutionary agenda in America is the people in the middle who are telling our own people, people will be naturally predisposed to reject this revolutionary takeover attempt and telling them, oh, no, no, no, it's not about white and black.
00:42:06.000 It's about are you good for the market?
00:42:08.000 It's about do you have a job?
00:42:09.000 Are you out there sorting widgets on the assembly line?
00:42:12.000 And so everybody really has to get over into this camp.
00:42:15.000 You may believe in a creedal America, and I'll say this much in the way of the center.
00:42:19.000 You may believe in a creedal America.
00:42:21.000 You may believe that the best thing that America produced.
00:42:25.000 Was not landing on the moon.
00:42:27.000 It was not any of this other stuff.
00:42:28.000 It was the Bill of Rights.
00:42:29.000 It was the Constitution.
00:42:30.000 And it really is a testament to how great America is that anybody could come here and they could have political rights and everything else.
00:42:36.000 You may believe that.
00:42:37.000 That is only possible.
00:42:38.000 You only get creedal America if you have traditional America.
00:42:42.000 This does not exist by itself.
00:42:44.000 This is a prerequisite to this.
00:42:46.000 You don't get creedal America where everybody can do what they want, everybody's safe, and you have a market economy if you don't have a country of white people, if you don't have a country of Christians.
00:42:55.000 If you don't have a country that's more or less run by men, you don't get a creedal America if you did not get traditional America.
00:43:02.000 We're living, you'd also look at this in a chronological sense.
00:43:06.000 We had traditional America.
00:43:08.000 This produced a period where, because white people, out of their benevolence, because of Christians, again, out of their benevolence, were able to say that everybody's afforded equality, everybody's afforded a certain degree of welfare, whatever, we are able to live in a place that's pretty nice where we seem to be able to have our cake and eat it too.
00:43:27.000 That we cannot care about race and at the same time have a country that is in character, in its fruits, representative of a country made by white people.
00:43:35.000 But this is a transitional stage.
00:43:38.000 You don't get creedal America forever.
00:43:40.000 Sooner or later, the white people, the Christians, the men that built creedal America are going to die off.
00:43:47.000 They're going to become in the minority.
00:43:49.000 And when they're in the minority, they're not going to have the same power that they have.
00:43:53.000 And what you're going to get is revolutionary America.
00:43:55.000 You're going to get an America that is maintained, that is created in a designer's sense.
00:44:00.000 By all these different groups, and it's gonna suck, and it's gonna be terrible.
00:44:04.000 So, all these people in the middle who, during this period where we've never had it better, were saying, Oh, it's beneath us to care about race, it's beneath us to care about gender, or about whether you're Jewish or Gentile, that especially.
00:44:16.000 Who cares about that?
00:44:18.000 All these people are saying that now they're gonna wake up in 50, 70, 100 years, it might take 20 years, and they're gonna find that the country's totally corrupt, totally poor, it's not safe, everybody's unemployed.
00:44:31.000 You don't have communities.
00:44:32.000 You don't have school children that are happy and healthy and well adjusted and getting married and having children.
00:44:37.000 And they're going to say, What happened?
00:44:40.000 What happened to our precious political equality?
00:44:42.000 Now you have black people stealing white people's land as they do in South Africa.
00:44:47.000 Now you have beheadings and gang killings.
00:44:49.000 What happened to my precious creedal America?
00:44:52.000 You're going to have people, probably the same people, typing up little articles in National Review in 2050.
00:44:58.000 And they're going to say, You know, Fox News pundit Nick Fuentes is wrong.
00:45:02.000 We don't need government to fix gang beheadings on the daily and terrorist attacks and mass corruption.
00:45:09.000 What we need is people to just become more virtuous.
00:45:11.000 We just need individuals to step up because it's an individual society.
00:45:15.000 So, the same people in the center who they love everything about Credo America, they're going to throw it away.
00:45:21.000 They're going to trash it because it was built by these people, and they're selling these people out.
00:45:25.000 And then we're all going to lose.
00:45:27.000 So, this is in essence now what our political paradigm looks like.
00:45:33.000 You've got revolutionary America on the left, represented by Kamala Harris, somebody who is explicitly calling for a race war.
00:45:40.000 It's what it is.
00:45:40.000 It's what it is.
00:45:42.000 When she says, and I'll read you the tweet again, she writes, let's speak in uncomfortable terms.
00:45:47.000 But honest truth with one another.
00:45:50.000 Racism, sexism, anti Semitism, homophobia, transphobia are real in this country.
00:45:54.000 They are age old forms of hate with new fuel, and we need to speak that truth so we can deal with it.
00:46:01.000 So we can deal with it.
00:46:02.000 What do you think that means?
00:46:03.000 What she is saying in that whole sentence is there is a struggle.
00:46:09.000 This struggle, when she says all these things are real, she's saying struggle between whites and non whites is real.
00:46:15.000 Struggle between men and women.
00:46:17.000 Gentile and Jew, heterosexual and homosexual, cisgender and transsexual, is real.
00:46:22.000 These groups are oppressing these groups.
00:46:25.000 It is happening.
00:46:26.000 It is wrong.
00:46:27.000 It is unjust.
00:46:28.000 We're going to do something about it.
00:46:29.000 What do you think they mean by we're going to do something about it?
00:46:32.000 We are going to subvert the traditional and natural order that gave us the country we have in favor of all these different groups.
00:46:39.000 These groups are going to participate in a hostile takeover of the country.
00:46:43.000 They are challenging traditional America.
00:46:46.000 What are they going to do about it?
00:46:47.000 They're going to take over.
00:46:49.000 And that's what the Democratic Party represents now when she says something like that.
00:46:53.000 Kamala Harris, who's now a frontrunner.
00:46:55.000 And there are some other candidates in there who are a little bit more focused on the economic aspect or whatever.
00:47:00.000 But that Kamala Harris goes out to Howard University on Martin Luther King Jr., and she basically declares holy war against white Christian America.
00:47:07.000 All these different groups are, you know, all these different categories here on the left describe every single founding father, every single president, except for one who is illegitimate, every single framer of the Constitution, every signatory of the Declaration of Independence.
00:47:22.000 You know, just about everybody notable in America, everybody who forged America as we know it was all these groups.
00:47:27.000 She's declaring war on them.
00:47:29.000 That's a Democratic Party.
00:47:30.000 Now, the right has two options here.
00:47:33.000 We can embrace being a dumb neoliberal Republican, and we can say everybody's interchangeable.
00:47:39.000 Race doesn't matter.
00:47:40.000 We don't need to defend the people that built traditional America.
00:47:43.000 We just need to defend the creed of traditional America because that will persist even if the people who made it die off.
00:47:50.000 That's got to go.
00:47:51.000 Donald Trump represented something in between, somewhat.
00:47:54.000 The rhetoric.
00:47:55.000 Was in line with traditional America.
00:47:57.000 It was implicit, there was subtext.
00:48:00.000 Make America great again.
00:48:01.000 What do you think that means, folks?
00:48:02.000 What do you think that means deep down?
00:48:04.000 A lot of Democrats cynically said it said, make America white again.
00:48:09.000 They weren't totally wrong.
00:48:10.000 Make America great again means that America was a great country at some undetermined point in the past and needs to be made that way again.
00:48:19.000 Well, he doesn't have to specify when in the past if he probably means before 1990.
00:48:25.000 And of course, I'm sure that's what he means.
00:48:27.000 I'm sure he's now referring to 1995 as the point when America was great.
00:48:31.000 Because even then, he was talking about we were getting ripped off on trade and we were doing all these unnecessary foreign wars.
00:48:36.000 He's saying we have to return to traditional America.
00:48:40.000 America used to be great, and now it isn't because of these people making it worse.
00:48:45.000 These people who have tried to take over.
00:48:48.000 The problem is that deep down, even though there's a lot of subtext about this make America great again, America first, all this other stuff, we're saying Merry Christmas again.
00:48:56.000 What do you think that means?
00:48:58.000 The guy's still a boomer.
00:48:59.000 He still does believe in creedal America.
00:49:02.000 Although, I don't believe his approach is necessarily wrong.
00:49:05.000 We just need people who are able to couch their rhetoric in a way that is nice.
00:49:09.000 We need people who are believers in traditional America, who have subtext implicitly are defending traditional America, but sound like this.
00:49:18.000 And the reason you got to sound like this is because this doesn't get you kicked off YouTube.
00:49:22.000 This doesn't get you kicked off of Twitter.
00:49:24.000 This doesn't get you kicked out of CPEC.
00:49:26.000 This doesn't get you kicked out of politics.
00:49:28.000 This doesn't alienate people on here who might want to come over.
00:49:33.000 So we have to clean these people out.
00:49:35.000 We have to purge these people who are true believers.
00:49:37.000 But we also have to sound like them while also alluding to the fact that deep down we are this way.
00:49:43.000 So, that's really the political paradigm.
00:49:45.000 That's what 2020 is going to be about.
00:49:46.000 That's what it's going to be about in the next century in this country.
00:49:50.000 So, I hope you enjoyed that whiteboard.
00:49:51.000 I know the lighting is a little bit goofy, it's a little bit shiny.
00:49:55.000 I don't know why that is.
00:49:58.000 But anyway, we're going to move on.
00:50:00.000 I guess we've got to do Stream Labs and Super Chats.
00:50:01.000 I was going to talk about Hillary Clinton and Howard Schultz, but we are fresh out of time.
00:50:07.000 So, I guess we'll have to just dive right into our Stream Labs and Super Chats.
00:50:11.000 So, let me just change our.
00:50:14.000 Our camera settings here, and then we'll get right into that.
00:50:17.000 Whoops.
00:50:21.000 All right, there we go.
00:50:22.000 That's a little bit better.
00:50:23.000 Okay, so we'll start with our Streamlabs and we'll take a look at our Super Chats.
00:50:27.000 But that is, in essence, what's going on.
00:50:29.000 People ask me a lot, like, what's your ideology?
00:50:31.000 Or I had somebody who emailed me a couple, like a month ago or something, from my old high school, somebody I didn't know.
00:50:37.000 And he was like, oh, Nick, I went to high school with you.
00:50:39.000 I was a year younger than you.
00:50:41.000 I love what you're doing.
00:50:42.000 I want to talk to you.
00:50:43.000 I'm a constitutionalist.
00:50:45.000 I'm a strong conservative.
00:50:46.000 And I'm thinking, oh, boy.
00:50:47.000 Probably one of these Credo people.
00:50:50.000 But we're not the same.
00:50:51.000 You know, I have people, oh, you're pretty conservative.
00:50:53.000 I'm conservative too.
00:50:54.000 Yeah, but not quite the same.
00:50:56.000 You think the big problem is like transgender bathrooms and, you know, whatever, gun rights.
00:51:03.000 Sorry.
00:51:03.000 But there's kind of a hostile takeover happening in the country.
00:51:06.000 Everything else is ancillary.
00:51:08.000 Okay, so our Super Chats is kind of taking a while to load.
00:51:11.000 So I guess we'll take a look at our Super Chats in the meantime.
00:51:14.000 And Cynical says, Nick, what are your thoughts on Jonathan Bowden?
00:51:17.000 I don't really know anything about him, so I don't really have any thoughts.
00:51:21.000 Acid Rainforest says she can't cook, she won't clean, she ain't finna have your baby.
00:51:27.000 She's telling about let's smoke and chill.
00:51:29.000 Bruh, sound like you got a boyfriend.
00:51:32.000 So true, so true, right?
00:51:34.000 Well, and that's the funny thing about women.
00:51:36.000 Women are so smart.
00:51:37.000 They're like, oh, don't sexually objectify me.
00:51:41.000 You think all I am is something to be used for sex.
00:51:44.000 And then they don't do anything else except for sex, right?
00:51:48.000 Then they don't do the cooking, the cleaning.
00:51:50.000 So, what really are you good for except for that?
00:51:54.000 You know, make the case.
00:51:56.000 Stop sexually objectifying me.
00:51:58.000 Yeah, okay, well, maybe you could have said that 50 years ago.
00:52:01.000 Because look, I'm also a homemaker and a caretaker and a cook and all the rest.
00:52:07.000 Well, now you just kind of sit around and complain and bitch and moan and all the other stuff.
00:52:13.000 So, which isn't right?
00:52:15.000 So true.
00:52:15.000 But it seems to me like, if anything, the catboys are picking up the slack.
00:52:19.000 Everybody's talking about how catboys are picking up the slack.
00:52:23.000 They cook.
00:52:24.000 They're your assistant.
00:52:24.000 They clean.
00:52:25.000 They, you know.
00:52:27.000 So, I don't know.
00:52:28.000 A viable alternative?
00:52:30.000 We'll have to see.
00:52:31.000 We'll have to run some tests.
00:52:34.000 F and Watt says, My humps, my humps.
00:52:36.000 Okay, that's a little bit inappropriate.
00:52:39.000 KH says, Nick, what do you think of Thulean aristocracy?
00:52:43.000 Nick, can you recommend a book to me?
00:52:46.000 Nick, why is the Pope not based in Redfield?
00:52:49.000 Nick, I live near Chicago.
00:52:50.000 Can I come and get a coffee with you?
00:52:52.000 Nick, so true.
00:52:53.000 This is somebody who understands my.
00:52:55.000 Plight, my struggle.
00:52:56.000 I always appreciate when the super chatters understand what's happening, you know, what's happening on my mental, what's happening behind the scenes there.
00:53:07.000 Because that is what we get all day long.
00:53:09.000 People, Nick, I always get, I have severe headaches, and also, like, I grind my teeth because I clench my jaw all the time.
00:53:19.000 Nick, why are you clenching your jaw all the time?
00:53:22.000 Nick, why are you clenching your jaw all the time?
00:53:25.000 Nick, why, blah, blah, blah.
00:53:26.000 Hmm, you know, maybe it's these people.
00:53:27.000 Maybe it's these people who come in every day.
00:53:30.000 LOL, Pope isn't facing red pill.
00:53:33.000 Nick, can I get coffee with you?
00:53:34.000 Yeah, so, you get it.
00:53:36.000 Garrett Dalton says, is priest celibacy.
00:53:39.000 Requirement scriptural.
00:53:40.000 I've been wanting to become ortho or Catholic, but homosexual priesthood frightens me.
00:53:45.000 Not shitting on Catholics.
00:53:47.000 Yeah, the pink mafia is very real in the Catholic Church and very unfortunate.
00:53:53.000 But I believe it is scriptural that you don't have priests that are getting married.
00:53:59.000 I'm pretty sure.
00:53:59.000 I'm not positive.
00:54:01.000 Don't quote me on that.
00:54:02.000 But you also have Orthodox, I believe, who believe in divorce.
00:54:06.000 So that's problematic also for Orthodox.
00:54:10.000 I don't think that's.
00:54:12.000 The one thing that you should sort of commit yourself to.
00:54:15.000 I mean, if the decision is between Rome and Constantinople and your decision is based on, well, isn't it really truly scriptural that priests don't get married?
00:54:23.000 I'm not totally sure one way or the other, but I think there's some substantive issues beyond that that are a little bit more important.
00:54:30.000 Axton Hale says, Nick, who do you think is going to self destruct the most beautifully in this election?
00:54:35.000 I don't know.
00:54:36.000 That's a good question.
00:54:36.000 That's tough to say.
00:54:39.000 It depends.
00:54:40.000 I mean, we don't even know who's going to run.
00:54:41.000 Are we going to get Beto O'Rourke?
00:54:43.000 Are we going to get.
00:54:45.000 Bernie Sanders, even.
00:54:46.000 Is he going to run?
00:54:47.000 He may not.
00:54:48.000 He probably will, but will he?
00:54:50.000 Will Hillary Clinton run for president?
00:54:52.000 It's tough to say.
00:54:53.000 I don't know.
00:54:55.000 So it's a little early to say.
00:54:56.000 Out of the declared candidates Kamala, Elizabeth Warren, Gillibrand, Tulsi Gabbard, the one who will self destruct most spectacularly.
00:55:05.000 I don't know.
00:55:06.000 It's pretty tough to say.
00:55:07.000 Kamala is pretty solid.
00:55:09.000 Elizabeth Warren is pretty solid also.
00:55:11.000 Gillibrand, I don't think she's even a contender.
00:55:14.000 Tulsi Gabbard isn't a contender, but she's pretty tough.
00:55:16.000 So, I think out of the declared candidates, I don't think any of them will be a spectacular self destruction in the way that some of the Republicans were.
00:55:23.000 So, I think it's a little early to tell.
00:55:26.000 Eddie Cade says Joe Arpeo debunked Obama's birth certificate.
00:55:29.000 Yeah, I don't believe that he was born in this country.
00:55:32.000 And that's why I say he's illegitimate, not a legitimate president.
00:55:35.000 We've never had a black president.
00:55:36.000 So, Interdimensional Harmony of Knickers says I bought KH3.
00:55:42.000 Was the dialogue always this cringe?
00:55:44.000 Also, Hades is portrayed as Jewish.
00:55:46.000 Oh, that's weird.
00:55:47.000 Oy Vey.
00:55:48.000 Says, Demon Lord Hades, villains are Jewish.
00:55:51.000 Based in Red Pilled?
00:55:52.000 Well, I disavow all of that.
00:55:54.000 All the Jewish people I know are truly wonderful and chosen by God.
00:55:57.000 And that's really, they're just superior.
00:56:00.000 But Kingdom Hearts 3, I never played Kingdom Hearts, so I can't really comment on all the particulars of that.
00:56:06.000 But based in Red Pilled?
00:56:08.000 Perhaps.
00:56:09.000 OMG says, Hey, Nick, wanted to get your take on religious refugee resettlement programs where churches are helping, quote, refugees sign up for welfare and government aid.
00:56:18.000 Obviously, I disavow.
00:56:20.000 I don't know, you know, what take you want besides that.
00:56:23.000 I'm against refugee resettlement.
00:56:26.000 We've taken enough refugees, and there's no reason for us to take any refugees at all.
00:56:30.000 I mean, what humanitarian crisis is happening in the world where they don't have a country that is more able and closer in proximity to take them than America?
00:56:41.000 You look at these so called humanitarian disasters in South and Central America, why don't they go to a country that works, that's like right across the border?
00:56:49.000 Go to Mexico if you've got such a big problem.
00:56:51.000 They speak Spanish there.
00:56:53.000 You got a big problem, go to Argentina, go to Chile, go to Peru.
00:56:58.000 If you're in the Middle East, why do Syrians have to come to America?
00:57:02.000 Go to Turkey, go to Jordan, go to any number of these.
00:57:05.000 Go to Saudi Arabia before we take one refugee, right?
00:57:09.000 Or Africans.
00:57:09.000 I guess Africans don't have anywhere to go because for some reason every African country is a total disaster.
00:57:15.000 That's really so weird.
00:57:17.000 I guess it just must be maybe they're just not educated, right?
00:57:20.000 I guess it's education.
00:57:22.000 You're like, you know, so why is it that every African country, even if it's not in Africa, is a shithole and a disaster?
00:57:22.000 I love that.
00:57:29.000 Oh, well, they just don't have good education infrastructure.
00:57:34.000 Why do you think that is?
00:57:35.000 Well, they're a poor country and poor people tend to be not smart.
00:57:40.000 Think about that for about 10 seconds and I think you'll understand my worldview a little better, right?
00:57:45.000 No more refugees.
00:57:45.000 So I'm against it.
00:57:47.000 Joshua Larson says, I went through Waterbury, Connecticut today.
00:57:52.000 There was one church surrounded by Paul Ryan's Utopia, a vast third world neoliberal hellscape.
00:57:58.000 And I thought, well, hey, at least we're not racist like in the 50s.
00:58:02.000 Well, honestly, that's what all.
00:58:04.000 All the people usually say is, oh, make America great again.
00:58:08.000 So, um, when do you want to go back?
00:58:11.000 Like the 1950s when they had racism?
00:58:14.000 It's like, uh, yeah.
00:58:16.000 I don't know.
00:58:17.000 You tell me.
00:58:18.000 Are we better off living here now where there's no racism, but there's like child drag queens and rampant pedophilia and just degeneracy everywhere?
00:58:28.000 People aren't having babies, poverty.
00:58:30.000 Or do you want to go back to the 1950s where everything was, you know, kind of nice?
00:58:34.000 Everything was pretty good, right?
00:58:36.000 I don't know.
00:58:37.000 I mean, obviously, racism is such a terrible evil that any society that has it is worse than any other society, no matter what ills are going on.
00:58:46.000 But it's worth considering.
00:58:47.000 It's worth considering why the 50s were good.
00:58:49.000 It's worth considering why America was good then and not now.
00:58:53.000 You know, I love the boomers, too.
00:58:55.000 Boomers are so wonderful.
00:58:56.000 They're always regaling us with stories of their childhood.
00:59:00.000 I remember when I was a kid, I'd be in the house playing GameCube like a baller, okay?
00:59:05.000 And my parents would be like, oh, stop playing video games.
00:59:08.000 You've got to go outside, get some.
00:59:09.000 Fresh year, play with some other kids, you know?
00:59:12.000 And I'd say, well, what are you talking about?
00:59:14.000 What do you want me to do?
00:59:15.000 Oh, just go ride your bike down the street, whatever.
00:59:18.000 Literally, like it's the 1960s.
00:59:19.000 Like, I'm going to ride my bike down the street, and everybody else is going to be out playing ball, just like they were in 1975, and nobody's coming home until it's dark outside.
00:59:29.000 First of all, everybody's parents are helicopter parents.
00:59:32.000 So the only time you get together is when it's arranged, when there's a play date, and everything else.
00:59:36.000 But aside from all that, I love when the boomers talk about, oh, we had it so good.
00:59:41.000 We had such a great childhood.
00:59:43.000 We would go to the corner store and blah, blah, blah.
00:59:46.000 And they don't even stop to think why their childhood was so amazing.
00:59:50.000 Why do you think it was that you look back on your childhood so fondly?
00:59:55.000 Your youth and all the memories that you had.
00:59:57.000 Maybe it was because your parents were a little bit more responsible than you were.
01:00:02.000 Maybe it's because your parents didn't wait until they were old to get married and they had tons of kids and all the other stuff.
01:00:09.000 It really makes you think.
01:00:11.000 Boomers, they robbed us of our childhood and then.
01:00:15.000 But our childhood was so amazing.
01:00:17.000 Wow, that's really special.
01:00:18.000 That's really special, boomers.
01:00:20.000 Douchebag says Hey, Nick, you and Patrick Casey are doing a great job.
01:00:25.000 Great optics, being productive, unlike the alt right, which only complains online.
01:00:30.000 Thank you.
01:00:31.000 So true.
01:00:31.000 What's your take on the GOP stripping James Alsup of a fair election?
01:00:36.000 I think it is not surprising.
01:00:39.000 I don't think that's surprising, but it's, I don't know.
01:00:43.000 I mean, obviously, that's just symptomatic of.
01:00:47.000 What's going on in the GOP that they reject any form of explicit identity politics or anything like that.
01:00:52.000 But it doesn't really come as a surprise to me or anybody else.
01:00:56.000 The thing is, though, I know a lot of people said, like, oh, that just goes to show.
01:00:59.000 Electoral politics is finished.
01:01:01.000 Yeah, well, no.
01:01:03.000 James Alsop's a political dissident.
01:01:03.000 Hello.
01:01:05.000 He's a YouTuber with, what is it, a quarter of a million subscribers?
01:01:09.000 Yeah, he went in there as somebody who went to the Tiki Torch rally and couldn't get into the Republican Party.
01:01:16.000 If anything, it proves the reverse.
01:01:17.000 If anything, it proves that being openly affiliated with bad optics means that you're not going to be able to influence the change you want to influence.
01:01:25.000 The point is that we need people who are well adjusted, look good, sound right, who get in there, and then they.
01:01:30.000 Change that so that in 20 or 30 years, the people who are running the party are going to allow somebody like James Alsop in because they believe all the things that James Alsop does.
01:01:39.000 That's the goal.
01:01:39.000 That's the strategy, right?
01:01:41.000 So that's my thoughts on that.
01:01:43.000 Cloudstar says, I can't wait till I'm put into a pod and milked.
01:01:47.000 Well, I'm not going to say for what, but that's basically where we're at, right?
01:01:52.000 I mean, what is the domicile now?
01:01:57.000 Everything's delivered to your home, and you're just supposed to sit there.
01:02:01.000 In VR with your headphones, your wagey muzzle, so you can make phone calls and not disturb everybody.
01:02:07.000 Literally in a cage, in a high rise, in a city.
01:02:10.000 I mean, that's what they want.
01:02:12.000 So, not far off.
01:02:14.000 Comic Yoonlist says, That's right.
01:02:18.000 So true.
01:02:19.000 Collective says, That's right.
01:02:22.000 They're responding to the black one.
01:02:26.000 I love when people spell out phonetically the Ebonics, the Talmbaut, and all the other stuff.
01:02:31.000 So true.
01:02:33.000 Hymen and Protector says, fantastic show tonight.
01:02:35.000 Keep up the good work.
01:02:36.000 Thank you, bro.
01:02:37.000 Glory says, to answer the chaste priest question, a New Testament book by Paul says it's better for all men to be chaste.
01:02:44.000 Marriage is for those who can't resist their urges.
01:02:47.000 Hello, yikes department.
01:02:49.000 I don't know if that works out.
01:02:51.000 I guess that they mean for priests or they just mean generally.
01:02:55.000 JP says, 2020, the year of red pilling or we're aft.
01:02:59.000 Nah, dude.
01:03:00.000 I mean, we'll carry on the fight.
01:03:02.000 We're never out.
01:03:03.000 Unless we give up.
01:03:05.000 Hallie Ride says, I heard Kamala Harris' husband starts every day with a fresh bagel and tall glass of seltzer.
01:03:10.000 Yeah, so true.
01:03:11.000 That's the other thing about Kamala Harris, this dumb bitch talking about slavery.
01:03:15.000 This dumb bitch talking about slavery.
01:03:17.000 What are you talking about?
01:03:18.000 Your parents were immigrants.
01:03:20.000 Kamala Harris, her parents were a Jamaican immigrant and an Indian immigrant, and they both came here in like the last 50 years.
01:03:28.000 So she's coming around talking about, oh, slave ships and Native Americans.
01:03:32.000 What are you talking about?
01:03:34.000 What are you talking about?
01:03:36.000 Dummy.
01:03:37.000 You grew up in one of the most liberal cities, in one of the most liberal states in America, after the civil rights era.
01:03:45.000 So, what are you complaining about?
01:03:48.000 And she lived in Canada, I'm pretty sure, for a short time in her childhood.
01:03:53.000 What a dummy.
01:03:54.000 And she's not even, like, she became a senator in 2016.
01:03:57.000 You were a senator for two years.
01:04:00.000 Now you're going to run for president.
01:04:01.000 What did you even do?
01:04:04.000 Cyrus says every African country is run by Democrats.
01:04:08.000 Of what it must be.
01:04:09.000 That's what it must be.
01:04:10.000 You know, look, Haiti is a disaster.
01:04:12.000 It's a total just dump.
01:04:14.000 It's poor.
01:04:15.000 There's pollution everywhere.
01:04:17.000 There's violence.
01:04:18.000 There's corruption.
01:04:19.000 And the same can be said about every sub Saharan African country without a single exception.
01:04:26.000 It can be said about every major black neighborhood in America.
01:04:32.000 But it's because they're Democrats, because of bad policy.
01:04:35.000 It's not because of anything different.
01:04:37.000 Racial differences couldn't possibly be real unless they benefit blacks, right?
01:04:42.000 You know, when people talk about stereotypes about black people being more athletic or better endowed, oh, then racial differences are legitimate and actually funny because white people are bitches.
01:04:53.000 Yeah.
01:04:54.000 Black people used to be kings, and black people are.
01:04:57.000 They've got magic melon, and they're beautiful, and they're special.
01:05:00.000 And actually, maybe they're better than we are from the beginning.
01:05:03.000 You know, then racial differences are fine.
01:05:05.000 You know, but racial differences in the other direction that might suggest why there's this strong correlation, nah, no way.
01:05:13.000 No, it can't be.
01:05:15.000 It has to be something else.
01:05:16.000 It has to be.
01:05:18.000 There's no way it could be any other way.
01:05:19.000 It has to be education or colonialism or they just.
01:05:25.000 Oh, it was guns or germs or steel.
01:05:27.000 It was something like that.
01:05:29.000 No, no, dummy.
01:05:30.000 Of course not.
01:05:31.000 Of course not.
01:05:33.000 It couldn't possibly be racial differences.
01:05:36.000 Racial differences make me uncomfortable.
01:05:38.000 My kindergarten teacher said that we're all equal, everyone.
01:05:42.000 Group differences are not real.
01:05:43.000 It must be true.
01:05:45.000 That's the stupidest thing in the world to me, how people seriously believe that.
01:05:49.000 I've talked to friends and family, and they just cannot.
01:05:52.000 The conditioning is so strong.
01:05:54.000 People, it is like an imperative.
01:05:57.000 That there is just got to be another reason.
01:05:59.000 They cannot accept.
01:06:01.000 In spite of all historical, scientific, sociological evidence to the contrary, they insist it couldn't possibly be genetic differences.
01:06:10.000 And the reason they insist that is because, you know, there's all this conditioning in the one way, but also there's this whole list of objections that they have that it could be evil or it could lead to terrible things or race isn't even real or whatever.
01:06:23.000 But it is like imperative for them that that is not true.
01:06:26.000 And that's why there's just mountains of scholarship that is dedicated to explaining away obvious.
01:06:31.000 Differences, obvious inequalities, and explaining away racial differences as the answer.
01:06:35.000 They say, oh, well, it's language or it's debt overhang, it's the geography of Africa, it's poor education.
01:06:44.000 I think it's a lot more simple than that.
01:06:46.000 You know, it takes a very big brain to come up with all these reasons for why that's the case, but that's probably why we're never going to solve it because people want to ignore the reality.
01:06:58.000 Simon Skolis says Tariq got banned for trying to stop Kamala.
01:07:01.000 Did he really?
01:07:03.000 Did he get banned from Twitter?
01:07:08.000 No, I don't think so.
01:07:09.000 He didn't get banned.
01:07:10.000 What are you talking about?
01:07:12.000 Tariq did not get banned.
01:07:14.000 Gloria says, Paul calls for men's chastity because women lead us away from God.
01:07:18.000 Marriage isn't bad, it's good.
01:07:19.000 We are torn between the material world and God.
01:07:21.000 So true.
01:07:22.000 Women do lead us away from God, finally.
01:07:26.000 Rise Up Europa says, Nick, women must be included in the movement.
01:07:29.000 Oh, here we go.
01:07:31.000 The Reich won, and 50% of the vote was from women.
01:07:34.000 Regime change must include women.
01:07:36.000 What a What a retard.
01:07:38.000 Coming in the chat talking about the Reich.
01:07:41.000 The Reich.
01:07:41.000 That really worked out anyway, right?
01:07:44.000 First of all, I'm not on board with Natsok LARPers.
01:07:48.000 And I'm not even saying that because I don't want to get kicked off YouTube.
01:07:52.000 I'm unironically not.
01:07:53.000 It's because National Socialism is gay.
01:07:57.000 You know, they were all homosexuals in there.
01:07:59.000 Kind of a lot like the alt right, also, by the way.
01:08:01.000 So I say gay is like stupid, but also it happened to be that, too.
01:08:05.000 Materialist, revolutionary, liberal.
01:08:08.000 So.
01:08:09.000 No, no, thank you.
01:08:10.000 But then on top of that, ultimately, did that end up good for Europeans?
01:08:10.000 We don't want that.
01:08:15.000 Did that end up well for Europeans?
01:08:18.000 Starting a world war that killed how many Europeans?
01:08:21.000 Was that really a wonderful thing that happened in our history?
01:08:25.000 Women must be included in the movement.
01:08:26.000 Shut up, you stupid bitch.
01:08:29.000 Yeah, you're out of the movement, dude.
01:08:30.000 We don't need women in the movement.
01:08:32.000 We need women to give us babies.
01:08:34.000 Let the men worry about the movement.
01:08:37.000 We need women in the movement.
01:08:39.000 Shut up.
01:08:40.000 Shut up, dude.
01:08:41.000 Have you not been paying attention?
01:08:43.000 How about Voice of Europe?
01:08:44.000 How did that work out?
01:08:45.000 Peter Sweden finding a woman in the movement.
01:08:48.000 How did that work out for Peter Sweden?
01:08:49.000 She turned out to be a fad.
01:08:51.000 How did that work out for Spectre of the Right Stuff?
01:08:54.000 He was a podcaster.
01:08:55.000 He wanted to bring a woman into the movement, his girlfriend.
01:08:58.000 And then she doxed him to the SPLC.
01:09:00.000 How about Terry McCarthy, another woman in the movement?
01:09:03.000 And then she goes on stream and says, Oi, oi, bruv.
01:09:07.000 Oh, I'm actually a fourth generation Holocaust survivor and I'm not even white.
01:09:12.000 Okay, yeah.
01:09:12.000 Women in the movement.
01:09:13.000 Give me a break.
01:09:15.000 He was half Irish.
01:09:16.000 Come on.
01:09:17.000 Come on.
01:09:18.000 What are we going to learn?
01:09:19.000 No e girls.
01:09:21.000 Okay.
01:09:22.000 Syed Ahmed says, the feel when the percentage difference.
01:09:27.000 Wow, that was.
01:09:29.000 All right.
01:09:30.000 All right.
01:09:30.000 Calm down.
01:09:31.000 Calm down.
01:09:32.000 It's Wednesday.
01:09:33.000 It's Tuesday.
01:09:34.000 Still early in the week.
01:09:37.000 We got to cool off a little bit.
01:09:39.000 It's getting a little heated in here.
01:09:41.000 I don't know.
01:09:42.000 Bryce, did you fill up the mug with go off juice again?
01:09:46.000 It's water.
01:09:47.000 We don't need any more.
01:09:48.000 Just water.
01:09:49.000 All right.
01:09:50.000 Sheesh.
01:09:51.000 Anyway, moving on.
01:09:52.000 You know, women.
01:09:52.000 Moving on.
01:09:53.000 Hey, look, we respect women.
01:09:55.000 I love women.
01:09:56.000 I cherish women.
01:09:58.000 I'm going to marry a woman one day and she's going to bear children for me.
01:10:02.000 And that's a wonderful thing.
01:10:04.000 I know women who are so good.
01:10:06.000 You know, my grandma, most based in a red pilled woman ever in history.
01:10:10.000 My mom, epic.
01:10:12.000 She makes me dinner.
01:10:13.000 She's just epic, okay?
01:10:15.000 My sister, based in, well, she's not based in a red pill, but epic person, all right?
01:10:20.000 I love women.
01:10:21.000 Don't get me wrong.
01:10:22.000 However, the leadership of the movement has just got to be male.
01:10:27.000 Now, they can be in Included in some capacity.
01:10:29.000 But for talking about the leadership, with few exceptions, it's got to be men.
01:10:34.000 And we've talked about this at length.
01:10:35.000 It's just a different dynamic when they come into the equation.
01:10:38.000 They do crazy things.
01:10:39.000 Like, you know, if you have some personal issue with them, like was the case with Spectre, they're going to ruin your life.
01:10:46.000 That doesn't really work.
01:10:48.000 Or they're going to come into the movement and they're going to divide people.
01:10:50.000 Some people are going to try to impress the women or vie for their attention, and some people are going to say, no, it's about the cause.
01:10:57.000 We don't need any lumping proletariat coming in with this right.
01:11:01.000 Talk and women and all this other stuff, please.
01:11:05.000 This is a no women in the movement zone.
01:11:07.000 If you want women in the movement, join the alt right, all right?
01:11:11.000 Join Megan Bobonick, another stunning example of women in the movement.
01:11:15.000 You can join those guys.
01:11:17.000 This is a male only space, finally, right?
01:11:21.000 So, sheesh.
01:11:22.000 Anyway, Ahmed says the feel when the percentage difference between black American and West African IQ is roughly equal to the percentage white ancestry in blacks.
01:11:31.000 Isn't that interesting?
01:11:33.000 Very interesting.
01:11:34.000 And, you know, average IQ anyway, I guess, is interesting, too.
01:11:38.000 Oliver says fascism slash Natsok is still egalitarian, dysgenic.
01:11:43.000 No, I don't believe that's true.
01:11:45.000 National socialism is not egalitarian, I don't believe.
01:11:49.000 So that's not true.
01:11:51.000 Fascism, I think, can be, but it's generally not.
01:11:55.000 Simon Skolas says, I said he finna be banned, Manika, learn to read.
01:12:00.000 So, okay, I didn't.
01:12:01.000 Did you say that?
01:12:03.000 Oh, yeah, Gunna.
01:12:04.000 Yeah, you're right.
01:12:04.000 No, you're right.
01:12:06.000 Tyler Durden says, Thanks for going off, King.
01:12:08.000 I can't help it.
01:12:09.000 I sometimes, you know, somebody the other day, Nick, can you go off on women?
01:12:12.000 Well, you know, sometimes it doesn't take much to push me over the edge, I guess, right?
01:12:18.000 But I don't really do it on command.
01:12:20.000 Really Good Comics says, My retard cat knocked my America first mug off the counter.
01:12:25.000 Luckily, it didn't break.
01:12:27.000 Must be made out of some pretty strong stuff.
01:12:29.000 To make sure this doesn't happen again, I'm going to leave the cat outside tomorrow and then I get 20 degree weather.
01:12:35.000 Whoa, don't do that.
01:12:37.000 Don't do that to our feline friends.
01:12:39.000 Remember, feline creatures and humans, in some cases, are our allies, our closest allies, in many cases.
01:12:47.000 But yeah, you're right.
01:12:48.000 It is some good stuff, very strong material.
01:12:51.000 LaMonkey says, Hey, Nick, have you read this book called 12 Rules for Life?
01:12:55.000 Also, have you heard of this guy named Jordan Peterson?
01:12:57.000 He seems pretty based.
01:12:59.000 Also, Nick, have you heard of this thing called NoFap?
01:13:01.000 Basically, don't touch your pee pee.
01:13:04.000 I don't even, what is even the purpose?
01:13:05.000 What is even the purpose?
01:13:06.000 Is this making fun of somebody?
01:13:10.000 I don't understand.
01:13:11.000 Bubba Gump says, Is Donald Trump a Rothschild puppet?
01:13:15.000 What's your opinion on Masonic influence?
01:13:18.000 And then he says something which is totally inappropriate.
01:13:23.000 I don't really believe in the Rothschild stuff.
01:13:25.000 I mean, it's there, but it's part of something bigger, clearly.
01:13:28.000 And same with the Masonic stuff.
01:13:31.000 It's all code for basically the same thing.
01:13:34.000 Secret societies are real, and they all kind of work together.
01:13:37.000 But it's really just, I guess, certain things we discuss on the show encapsulate a large part of that, and that's really my belief.
01:13:46.000 Based once is what's good, brother?
01:13:48.000 Oh, nothing much.
01:13:49.000 Just getting geared up and ready for my favorite month of the year.
01:13:52.000 Director Groyper says, Do you think the CIA will fall apart because this is run now by women?
01:13:57.000 No, because the CIA is actually very feminine in the sense that it's vindictive, brutal, ruthless, totally non human in its calculating and vicious ways.
01:14:07.000 So, in that way, I think they'll do a bang up job at the CIA.
01:14:10.000 Maybe it should have always been run by women.
01:14:12.000 You know, you talk about what the CIA does, which is sow division in a society, spy on people, you know, that kind of thing.
01:14:22.000 I think women are actually especially talented, torture people.
01:14:25.000 Hmm.
01:14:26.000 You know, now that I think about it, maybe we found the outside of the home what the rest of the women can do.
01:14:31.000 Eddie Cade says women have a care based morality based on feelings because they're more emotional than men.
01:14:37.000 Men have a justice based morality based on logic because we're smarter than women.
01:14:41.000 If that makes me a sexist, fine.
01:14:43.000 I'm a sexist.
01:14:44.000 Sorry, not sorry, sweetheart.
01:14:45.000 All true.
01:14:46.000 All true.
01:14:47.000 And it's based on biological reality.
01:14:49.000 You know, people pretend like that's just arbitrary.
01:14:54.000 The gender identity movement there.
01:14:56.000 Their line, their go to line of reasoning, or their rhetoric, I guess, is it doesn't matter what's between your legs.
01:15:02.000 You'll hear this a lot from transgender people.
01:15:04.000 It doesn't matter what's between your legs.
01:15:07.000 Well, of course, how could it matter?
01:15:08.000 It bears a little bit of resemblance with skin color, also.
01:15:11.000 It doesn't matter what's between your legs.
01:15:13.000 It doesn't matter your skin color.
01:15:14.000 All this stuff is just arbitrary.
01:15:16.000 It's all just material.
01:15:17.000 We're all the same.
01:15:19.000 But of course, it matters what's between your legs.
01:15:21.000 It's not just a matter of, well, is it an inny or an outy?
01:15:25.000 I guess that's a crude way to say it, but you know what I mean.
01:15:27.000 It's a matter of what role you play in reproduction.
01:15:30.000 And then, what your evolutionary design is sociobiologically, right?
01:15:36.000 So, if you're supposed to grow the baby in your womb and one is supposed to defend and protect, this breeds out certain impulses, right?
01:15:47.000 Or certain tendencies, states of mind, you might say advantages, disadvantages in different fields.
01:15:54.000 So, people that believe in gender differences, you have to understand it's so fundamental.
01:15:59.000 So, to say that women shouldn't be in the workforce or shouldn't be.
01:16:02.000 Governing is not a stretch at all.
01:16:04.000 Because you're right, it is care versus justice based morality.
01:16:07.000 Men are capable of impersonal decisions.
01:16:10.000 They're capable when they look at ethical decisions broadly, governance decisions, they are able, and this is why all philosophers are men, this is why all political theorists are men, they're able to look at things from a third person perspective impersonally as God might.
01:16:28.000 They're able to put themselves in that position and say, well, what is just in a universal, general sense?
01:16:34.000 Women are not capable of this.
01:16:35.000 They are, they do, as you say, have a care based morality.
01:16:39.000 Because they are tasked with biologically having a child, raising a child, and all the rest, all of their decisions or thoughts about ethics or about governance are based on relationships, are based on particular relationships between individuals.
01:16:57.000 They're not based on abstracting out general principles, they're based on real, tangible relationships that come with it, obviously, emotional baggage that you have to feel and everything else.
01:17:07.000 So that's why they, in particular, are not suited.
01:17:10.000 To make those kinds of big decisions.
01:17:12.000 The fundamental role of government in a big way is to rule justly.
01:17:16.000 If you can't do that, you have no place there.
01:17:19.000 And women are almost biologically at a disadvantage when it comes to making those kinds of decisions.
01:17:25.000 Young Lone says Were your friends in high school leftist or apolitical?
01:17:29.000 Did they care when you were libertarian or just when you started kvetching about certain things?
01:17:34.000 They were generally apolitical.
01:17:37.000 I guess some of them were left leaning, but generally apolitical.
01:17:40.000 And only a few of them really started caring when I sort of chose the path that I did.
01:17:45.000 But the problem with apolitical people is that they don't like to hear about politics.
01:17:50.000 So the anatomy of how this works, and this is why I recommend you don't bring up politics, it's not worth it, is that I would go and hang out with these people, and the two or three left wing people would start causing trouble.
01:18:02.000 They would provoke me the passive aggressive remarks about what I do or what I believe.
01:18:07.000 This inevitably provokes conflict.
01:18:09.000 And then the problem is the majority of people who are apolitical, they just say, oh, we want nothing to do with this right wing guy who's bringing all this.
01:18:15.000 Political talk and trouble and conflict.
01:18:18.000 And that's how that works.
01:18:21.000 But it's just sort of funny because all my friends in high school were pot smokers.
01:18:26.000 And pot smokers have got to be just the most hypocritical or dishonest people in the world where their whole personality is, oh, it's chill, bro.
01:18:37.000 Oh, yeah, bro, that's chill.
01:18:39.000 Oh, everything's just chill.
01:18:40.000 Who cares about anything?
01:18:41.000 You know, we're just chill.
01:18:43.000 Oh, yeah, that's just totally relaxed and chill and everything.
01:18:47.000 And then you come around these people and you're like, oh, yeah, well, I just, I don't really smoke.
01:18:52.000 I think it's degenerate.
01:18:53.000 I don't really engage in that stuff.
01:18:55.000 I'm just trying to be a traditional, upstanding member of society.
01:18:58.000 And suddenly, very not chill.
01:19:00.000 Suddenly, very not chill any longer.
01:19:02.000 You know, I had a lot of friends who were like that.
01:19:04.000 Their whole personality was smoking weed and being a really chill dude.
01:19:08.000 And then you come around, you don't even have to talk about politics, but they just are aware that you are a certain way.
01:19:13.000 And suddenly, very not chill.
01:19:15.000 Suddenly, they've got a big problem with the fact that, you know, you want to live your life not like a loser degenerate.
01:19:21.000 So, anyway, that's beside the point, I guess.
01:19:27.000 George Martin says, What are some movies or media with good optics that you would recommend?
01:19:32.000 Thanks for the great show.
01:19:33.000 What are you talking about?
01:19:34.000 Movies or media with good optics?
01:19:37.000 What do you mean a movie with good optics?
01:19:39.000 What does that even mean?
01:19:40.000 Like a documentary?
01:19:44.000 What an unfortunate question.
01:19:46.000 Media with good optics, I guess it'd be me.
01:19:48.000 I'm really one of the only people.
01:19:50.000 I guess Jake Lloyd, Faith Goldie is pretty good, Stefan Molyneux is very good, but.
01:19:54.000 In terms of movies, I don't know what you mean by that.
01:19:57.000 By Cyclops says, Good show tonight.
01:19:59.000 I'm curious, do you know about George Patton?
01:20:02.000 Some of what he said in 1945 laid certain things bare, then he died in a mysterious accident.
01:20:07.000 Well, thanks.
01:20:08.000 Yeah, I do know about George Patton.
01:20:10.000 And yeah, he was pretty red pilled about what was going on in Europe, what was going on in America.
01:20:15.000 And then he did die mysteriously.
01:20:16.000 Very convenient, right?
01:20:18.000 Alex says, What do you make of Howard Schultz?
01:20:20.000 Think he will run?
01:20:21.000 What impact will he have?
01:20:22.000 Well, I'll probably talk substantially about that tomorrow on the show because I was planning on doing it tonight.
01:20:28.000 But.
01:20:29.000 I mean, he'll.
01:20:31.000 I don't know if he'll run or not.
01:20:32.000 It's sort of up in the air.
01:20:34.000 I think he will ultimately run, and his impact is he'll just act as a spoiler for the Democrats.
01:20:39.000 The Trump people will vote Trump.
01:20:41.000 Very few in between will vote Howard Schultz, but who Schultz is going to take away from is the Democrat.
01:20:46.000 You know, he won't take away big votes from Republicans.
01:20:48.000 Schultz is a liberal.
01:20:50.000 He gives big money to Clinton, he gives money to all the big Democrats.
01:20:53.000 The guy's a liberal.
01:20:53.000 He's a more middle of the road liberal, but a liberal nonetheless.
01:20:57.000 So if it came down to Trump versus a mainstream liberal versus some far left or establishment Democrat, he's going to split the left wing vote, and he'll give us.
01:21:05.000 He'll give us President Trump 2.0, so I hope he runs.
01:21:09.000 Let's see, we've got a few more here.
01:21:13.000 Rise Up Europa says, he's got another one.
01:21:16.000 He says, I'm not promoting the Reich, but they changed their regime through promoting family values.
01:21:20.000 Women stayed home caring for kids.
01:21:21.000 The men fought.
01:21:22.000 If you beat women down, they now have the freedom to walk.
01:21:26.000 So, yeah, I just reject this whole idea of bringing up Nazi Germany.
01:21:31.000 Number one, bad optics.
01:21:32.000 Number two, dumb example because it's not 1930s continental Europe, particularly not.
01:21:38.000 I love when people say, oh, it's just like we're going to change the country through street fights or something.
01:21:43.000 It's not Germany, okay?
01:21:45.000 We're not five years away from regime change in America because we didn't just suffer two back to back World War losses and punitive payments that were being made to Western countries, and there wasn't all the.
01:21:59.000 You know the background to that.
01:22:01.000 So there's a lot more going on there than meets the eye.
01:22:04.000 And anyway, I don't understand how you say women have to be in the movement, but at the same time, women have to be at home raising the kids.
01:22:09.000 It doesn't make any sense, big guy.
01:22:11.000 And you just sound low IQ.
01:22:14.000 Michael says, Can you explain how the tradcon fight isn't already lost?
01:22:17.000 Everything is pointing in favor of libtards.
01:22:19.000 Give me hope.
01:22:20.000 No, just watch the show.
01:22:21.000 I do it every night.
01:22:22.000 Tan Staffel says, Leadership is male according to the Bible.
01:22:25.000 David Pawson has an excellent series on this.
01:22:28.000 I'll check that out.
01:22:29.000 Well, and it's not just biblical, but it's also capital T traditional.
01:22:34.000 All or most traditional societies, I should say not all, but according to Evel, at least, the races or civilizations.