00:02:19.000You know, I don't like to dwell on the same issue for a very long time, I don't like to harp on the same thing.
00:02:24.000But, of course, there is some new information about the speech, some new information, some new considerations.
00:02:31.000We'll be looking at reaction to the speech.
00:02:34.000From important political commentators from the polls, and we'll sort of get a feel for where the rest of the country was at because obviously last night I wasn't very happy.
00:02:46.000A lot of other people are not very happy.
00:02:49.000There was a small number of people, however, who disagreed very vehemently, vehemently, vehemently with my take on the speech last night.
00:03:00.000A lot of defenders out there, which I guess it always surprises me because when people disagree with me, I don't really like that because.
00:03:08.000I'm smart and I have the right opinions, and you should agree with me.
00:03:12.000But I was a little bit surprised at just the level of cope, I guess.
00:03:16.000I was surprised at the level of rationalization.
00:03:20.000And maybe I have that coming because, you know, for so many years I was very adamant about Trump can do no wrong.
00:03:39.000More critical voices, maybe that's their perspective because, you know, I watched the speech last night and, of course, I gave my take.
00:03:47.000Very upset about the lack of focus, lack of a call to action on immigration, and all of this done at the expense, rather, and all of this at the same time that you had other issues spotlighted, which are not our issues, which are not the president's issues.
00:04:03.000Things like criminal justice, things like AIDS and childhood cancer, just sort of random things, and that maybe exacerbated the bigger problem, which was.
00:04:13.000And I guess I was just surprised at how many people were willing to overlook that, sort of make excuses for it.
00:04:19.000And I don't mean to like re litigate the whole thing if that sounds like it's a loaded way to describe, you know, the other side of the aisle or the other side of the argument.
00:04:29.000But I was a little bit taken aback by that.
00:04:31.000But again, tonight we'll be looking a little bit more in detail at some of the things which were said, in particular, this comment about legal immigrants.
00:04:39.000You know, I didn't even really catch this totally.
00:04:41.000I mean, I heard it, I tweeted about it a little bit, but.
00:04:46.000A lot of people, I think Jacob Wohl was one of them, replied to my tweet about this comment where he said, We actually want more immigrants than ever coming into America, but they have to come legally.
00:04:57.000I said, Oh, great, you know, cringe and blue pill praise for legal immigrants.
00:05:01.000And I think it was Jacob Wohl who replied, Well, he sort of has to say this.
00:05:05.000And a lot of people said, Oh, that's just something he has to say to build support for building a wall to keep out illegals, which I understand that.
00:05:15.000There is a lot of evidence that this is an official policy change.
00:05:19.000Normally, I don't attribute some of the rhetoric that is used in negotiations to official policy change.
00:05:25.000For example, we saw in December, right before the government shutdown, there appeared to be a change in rhetoric.
00:05:31.000I said, Don't believe what you hear from CNN and the Washington Post.
00:05:35.000You know, all the evidence suggests we're going strong.
00:05:38.000Last year, in the wall negotiations in January, there was some rhetoric at that bipartisan sit down meeting in the White House with congressional Republicans and Democrats.
00:05:48.000The president said, I'll sign anything, even if it doesn't have money, even if it has $1.6 billion or $3.6 billion for border security, I'll sign anything.
00:05:57.000And last year, I said, Look, Again, rhetoric does not constitute official policy yet because rhetoric influences the negotiating process.
00:06:06.000So it has to be looked at in both ways.
00:06:08.000Even with Syria and Iran, I said the same thing.
00:06:11.000But, you know, he affirmed not once, but twice today in an interview no, no, this constitutes an official policy change.
00:06:19.000And it actually shouldn't come as a surprise because he's been talking about this.
00:06:22.000He's been seeding this idea for months, saying we need more H 1 and H 2B visa workers and we need.
00:08:37.000It's just surprising why you would say that.
00:08:39.000And then the third in command, the attorney general, he's embroiled in this horrible sex scandal, and he had some pretty choice words about his accuser.
00:08:47.000So we'll get into that, what that means for Virginia, just some pretty wild stuff.
00:08:51.000Everybody's just off the goop in 2019.
00:09:24.000But before we do, we have a very, very special announcement.
00:09:29.000I forgot to say it last night because we had such a special episode.
00:09:33.000It was such a heated gamer moment talking about the State of the Union, our disappointment, profound disappointment about everything that happened last night, that we forgot that it was a very important milestone for the show.
00:09:46.000Yesterday was February 5th, which for the America First super fans, you know, this is the birthday of the show America First.
00:09:56.000America first turned two years old last night.
00:09:59.000If you go all the way back, the show actually started February 5th, 2017 on Right Side Broadcasting Network.
00:10:10.000And so, if we do any kind of celebration for that, I know we just did a big 300 episode special recently, so that's why usually it's a decision.
00:10:18.000I know last year I was debating whether we would celebrate the 200 episode milestone or the one year milestone.
00:10:26.000This year, we did 300 episodes in December as opposed to the two years.
00:10:30.000If we do have any sort of commemoration, which we might have some guests, we'll probably do it on Friday just because that seems like the party day, you know, sort of like what you do with every other holiday.
00:10:43.000But I just want to take the time the day after, closer in proximity to the actual day, that yes, it has been two years on the air.
00:12:04.000You know, there's all kinds of people that made it possible, but at the end of the day, I wouldn't be anywhere without my friend and mentor, Cassie Dillon.
00:12:44.000And now here we are, the show as it is today dual monitors, supercomputer, boom mic, good lighting, the America First desk, the new mug, graphics.
00:13:12.000But just thought I'd throw that out there a little happy birthday to the show, happy birthday for everybody that's been a part of it, and all the rest.
00:13:19.000But with that out of the way, we're going to get into the issues.
00:13:22.000Look, America first, as always, even on the holidays, we soldier on.
00:13:33.000But so we'll start off with the State of the Union.
00:13:36.000Like I said, I'm not going to rehash everything that I said last night.
00:13:40.000I know there was sort of a vocal minority of people that disagreed, a lot of people very upset about what I had to say, which, what I said last night, was.
00:13:50.000Admittedly, very strong, and it's in the heat of the moment.
00:13:54.000You know, you watch the State of the Union, it's almost, I think, two or three minutes, you know, full two or three minutes after the event that I go live with the full throated analysis and everything.
00:14:03.000So, you know, maybe I would have, you know, moderated the rhetoric a little bit, but I stand by everything that I said.
00:14:11.000I understand why people might have been upset or off put by it.
00:14:14.000You know, some people reaching out, oh, you're a black pillar now, all this other stuff.
00:14:20.000But look, it's very simply, it comes down to this.
00:15:17.000In a vacuum, I think this speech is acceptable, but the context is what makes it unacceptable.
00:15:23.000We just reopened the government, took a big loss.
00:15:26.000After the longest government shutdown in history, we cucked down the speech by delaying it for a week.
00:15:31.000We cucked by reopening the government.
00:15:33.000Now, I think it was a good thing that we reopened the government.
00:15:36.000That doesn't mean that it wasn't a loss.
00:15:37.000It was a good thing, but it was still a loss.
00:15:40.000Now, we looked at the State of the Union in the context of this political struggle between the reopening of the government and what we were all hoping would be a renewed effort, a renewed and regrouped initiative before the 15th to get the border wall either through Congress or through a state of emergency.
00:15:57.000And the State of the Union situated between these two.
00:16:00.000Dates was supposed to represent again this coming back, this call to action.
00:16:04.000And so, in light of that, we only had a very unsatisfactory five or so minutes on immigration.
00:16:11.000And again, just an insufficient call to action.
00:17:03.000The second point here, what differentiates that from other things where I said, oh, you're blackpilling, you're overly critical, whatever, is that this was all Trump.
00:17:11.000Trump, Stephen Miller, and two other speechwriters worked for weeks closely and personally on tailoring the speech for this event.
00:17:26.000Failures on foreign policy, I've blamed on the military industrial complex or the deep state or other actors.
00:17:32.000And I've always found a way to say, and I think accurately, I think factually, that there are other co equal actors in the situation, or as I said yesterday, asymmetrical even.
00:18:00.000And that's a summary of what I said last night for people that missed it or for people that, you know, were caught up in some of the other stuff.
00:18:06.000But there are some new details today, which I think only confirm what I said.
00:18:10.000The polling was pretty good on the speech.
00:18:27.000More specifically, 76% overall approve of the speech, and 72% of the overall audience agreed with what he said about immigration, which is very good because the polling numbers on border security have been disturbing and troublesome in the past couple of weeks.
00:18:42.000I don't totally trust the polling, but You know, it does demoralize you when you see that these numbers just aren't adding up in a lot of cases.
00:18:50.000I don't doubt that they're probably fudged, but you just don't like to see that.
00:18:55.000Now, a word on the polling, and this is from CBS, by the way.
00:18:58.000I think I said that already, but just in case I didn't.
00:19:01.000A word on the polling, you know, he got really good polling on the last State of the Union, and it didn't really offer up any additional political capital.
00:19:09.000A lot of people were saying, oh, well, look, the polling was so good.
00:19:13.000That means the speech was a success, and Nick's criticisms are unwarranted.
00:19:29.000You had a government shutdown in February, a government shutdown in January.
00:19:32.000I think it was February 7th that the government shut down a second time last year.
00:19:37.000And so, in spite of big, good approval for the State of the Union, it didn't change the political calculations in Congress, not at all.
00:19:45.000So, for all the people that are saying, oh, this is what a tremendous thing, what a wonderful thing, I agree, it's good.
00:19:50.000You're building goodwill with independence.
00:19:52.000You're building this reputation or maybe this temporary image as a unifier, as somebody who's willing to compromise and be bipartisan, and that's fine and well.
00:20:03.000You've appealed to independence, and maybe that will produce some short lived political capital.
00:20:10.000A lot of people who disagreed with me said, Well, Nick, what you don't understand is that he gave the speech as a tactical move to appear moderate, to appear centrist, to win back public support.
00:20:21.000Support after the government shutdown, and then he's going to make this big push for immigration in the next 10 days.
00:20:32.000And the polling suggests that if that was the case, then the first step is accomplished.
00:20:38.000You know, if that's the plan, if the plan is I'm going to build up the goodwill, I'm going to rally support from both sides and from the middle for a larger push before the next shutdown on the 15th, then he achieved that.
00:21:17.000But hey, if you were among the people who liked it, you're in great company here with Ben Shapiro and Charlie Kirk, who said it was the best State of the Union ever.
00:21:28.000They said, oh, he's this great unifier.
00:21:46.000Now, when you think of concepts like putting America first, and remember, at the beginning of the speech, he didn't just say America first in general, he said in particular in the realm of foreign policy.
00:21:59.000If you go back to the speech, he said this basically verbatim, and we want a foreign policy that puts Americans first.
00:22:07.000Now, when you think of foreign policy that puts Americans first, hmm.
00:22:12.000When you think of foreign policy that puts America first, the first name to me that comes to mind is Benjamin Shapiro.
00:22:18.000I immediately think of Benjamin Shapiro, the Daily Wire.
00:22:28.000He also talked about putting America first on trade, on the economy.
00:22:32.000When I think of putting Americans first on trade and the economy, I think of my friendly neighborhood, Turning Point USA leader, Charlie Kirk.
00:22:39.000I think of my great friend, my diaper wearing friend.
00:22:46.000So I look at those two reactions, and I know this is maybe a logical fallacy, but it does speak to the content of the message.
00:22:55.000If Charlie Kirk loves a speech, if Ben Shapiro loves a speech, if Lindsey Graham loves the speech, and he did, he went on Fox News to talk about how much he loved it, I think that kind of tells you something.
00:23:07.000Because, you know, his inaugural speech, people did not care for the inaugural speech.
00:23:11.000When he came in and he said, I'm going to deliver power back to you, the people, and He did the fist pump and he talked about American carnage and this other stuff.
00:23:21.000That was a lot less popular in the polls and among the conservative pundits.
00:23:26.000Darren Beatty, Ann Coulter, people like myself, true America First Patriots.
00:23:32.000That was a little bit more controversial.
00:23:33.000So, yeah, it might be a logical fallacy.
00:23:36.000That might constitute a complete and viable argument, but it does suggest perhaps the content of the message was not really on point.
00:23:44.000If the kinds of people that it resonates with are Ben Shapiro, who wants to put Israel first, and Charlie Kirk, who wants to put the GDP first.
00:25:08.000People who didn't like the speech, Ann Coulter, Scott Greer, me.
00:25:14.000I know Ann Coulter's been a little bit overly critical, but, you know, look, if there is anybody that there should have been an audience for, it should have been Ann Coulter, who represents the base.
00:25:23.000For a long time, I've been critical of Ann Coulter.
00:25:27.000I've also said, though, that she's necessary because, well, I don't always agree with her slamming the president and making fun of him and everything.
00:25:35.000It is obviously motivating him to act.
00:26:22.000I mean, the people that were excited about this were not our friends.
00:26:25.000The people who are disappointed with this are patriots.
00:26:28.000You know, they're America First people.
00:26:30.000Now, what shows that basically my concerns were valid last night, that were vindicated a little bit, is this throwaway remark he made, you know, again, which I didn't really catch totally at first.
00:26:40.000I didn't really think much of it, but that he really doubled down on, which is, of course, this comment about legal immigrants.
00:26:46.000He said in the speech last night after railing against illegals and saying we need a wall and so on, he said, I want immigrants to come into this country in the largest numbers ever, as long as they come in legally.
00:26:59.000I want immigrants to come into this country in the largest numbers ever.
00:27:02.000Now, at face value, does anybody agree with that sentiment?
00:27:06.000Do you agree with that sentiment that we want immigrants coming to this country in the largest numbers ever?
00:27:11.000Okay, maybe he meant that in a way that's tactical.
00:27:18.000Today, to say he was asked by a regional reporter if this statement constituted a change in policy, he replied to the question, If this was a change in official policy, he said, Yes, yes, it is a change in official policy.
00:27:34.000Because we need people in our country, because our unemployment numbers are so low, and we have massive numbers of companies coming back into our country, we've done really well with this and we need people.
00:27:44.000The reporter asked a second time, and he said specifically, he wanted to clarify in the most explicit terms.
00:28:22.000That is not what we elected the president to support.
00:28:25.000This is a 180 from what he promised during the campaign.
00:28:27.000And I've said throughout, as I've defended the president, my line has always been he has not wavered on his actual position, but the execution has been flawed.
00:28:38.000He still believes in non intervention.
00:28:41.000He still believes in the wall, but he's just not able to get it done, either because there's bad personnel or the judiciary thwarted him or the Congress is obstructing him or whatever.
00:28:49.000But I've always maintained that, you know, yes, He hasn't gotten it done, but the reason he hasn't gotten it done is because he believes in it.
00:28:56.000He just doesn't have the political capacity to get it through Congress or whatever, to survive the judiciary.
00:29:03.000This is clearly different because, you know, he hasn't really wavered so much on the wall.
00:29:08.000He's come down on the material of the wall, the length of the wall, and so on, but he still says we need a wall.
00:29:13.000And foreign policy, two years in, he still says we need to get out of the Middle East.
00:29:18.000You know, he's maneuvering a little bit, trying to negotiate that down, trying to find a middle ground between what the deep state will allow and what he can get there.
00:29:25.000But if you look at the rhetoric of the State of the Union at the Super Bowl interview, I mean, he's still very much a non-interventionist.
00:29:53.000We've had enough, generally speaking, with legal immigration.
00:29:56.000It was even last year that he proposed cutting legal immigration in half with killing chain migration, killing the diversity visa lottery system, and so on.
00:30:05.000And so you look at the campaign rhetoric, you look at even last year what he was trying to do, and then the sudden reversal of, no, actually, we need new workers, foreign workers coming in.
00:30:22.000Maybe you need workers to come in and fill factory roles and whatever.
00:30:26.000I find that dubious to begin with because, look, a lot of the manufacturing jobs are never coming back.
00:30:31.000And a lot of people are just permanently out of luck if they were working on the assembly line or whatever.
00:30:36.000So the idea that there's just this overabundance of Foxconn-like plants or auto plants that are coming in that need the workers, I don't think that's true.
00:30:44.000I think he's largely referring to agriculture.
00:30:47.000And with regard to agriculture, there's two schools of thought on this.
00:30:50.000Either you bring in cheap foreign labor because you need the workers because unemployment is so low.
00:30:57.000Conversely, maybe you allow the equilibrium price for labor to rise.
00:31:02.000If the supply is low but the demand is high, either you increase The supply of labor, keeping the price the same, or maybe the price just has to rise.
00:31:13.000Maybe wages simply have to increase so that you can get more workers.
00:31:17.000There's two ways you get more workers.
00:31:19.000Either you just import more so you can get profits as high as possible, wages as low as possible, and that satisfies the donors, or you can let wages rise and you can hire American people.
00:31:30.000You know, they say, oh, well, Americans just won't do those jobs.
00:31:37.000Are being offered to illegals or legal immigrants.
00:31:40.000And the reason for that is because legal immigrants and illegal immigrants are coming from third world countries and they're getting benefits.
00:31:47.000You look at your average American, they're not willing to go work for minimum wage and back breaking labor and agriculture and not make a living off of it and actually have to subsist on welfare and Medicaid and all sorts of other things.
00:32:51.000I mean, in the past, I've been willing to say, okay, I understand why he's saying that or whatever, but, you know, especially when we still don't have the wall, that we're saying this kind of stuff, I think it's not good.
00:33:03.000I think that's something that, again, we should basically reject.
00:33:06.000I don't think we should be making excuses for that or rationalizing that.
00:33:10.000I understand the alternative arguments, but I don't really care about those considerations.
00:33:15.000The rhetoric should not be that we need more illegal immigrants.
00:33:28.000They say that by the end of the century, they want to have 400 million people in the country, and almost all the population growth will come from new immigrants.
00:34:11.000That on Monday, when he holds this MAGA rally in Texas, he'll come out and say all the things we wanted him to say during the State of the Union.
00:34:20.000And so all the people who said, oh, it was bipartisan tonight and tomorrow it's back to the fight.
00:34:25.000You know, maybe if that's true on Monday, then I'll be less concerned.
00:34:29.000Maybe on Monday I'll say, okay, we overreacted on the State of the Union.
00:34:33.000It seems to me that there is still initiative, there still is an effort by the president to get serious about immigration.
00:34:43.000But again, as it stands right now, looking at the speech, looking at the rhetoric in the speech, again, as just the speech, we're not saying, oh, burn your MAGA hat.
00:35:12.000Some new information on some of the remarks that were made.
00:35:15.000You know, it was bad enough we had criminal justice and all the other stuff, but then we find out, oh no, actually, it seems he is changing his official policy on legal immigration.
00:35:24.000And again, like I said, he has telegraphed that for a long time.
00:36:33.000And it was very shocking and immoral and wrong that he basically raped her.
00:36:38.000And if that wasn't bad enough, then it came out today that in a closed door meeting with his staff, he said about his accuser, fuck that bitch.
00:36:46.000So pardon my language, but that's what he said.
00:36:49.000This doctor, this doctor accuses him of raping her at the DNC.
00:36:54.000And he says, hey, yo, have that bitch, you know, in this glowstorm meeting.
00:36:59.000Very epic, very based in Red Pill, very funny.
00:37:02.000And, you know, look, I'll extend the same consideration to him that I did to Kavanaugh.
00:37:08.000Me as a personal, private individual internally, you know, this is my real, unironic self.
00:37:14.000I'll say, hey, look, you know, he has got the benefit of the doubt.
00:37:20.000He is guilty until proven innocent, just like anybody else.
00:37:23.000Now, that said, he should be destroyed politically for this.
00:37:27.000Everybody, you know, people like Joe Walsh out on Twitter saying, are we really going to destroy people's lives over things that happen?
00:37:35.00020 years ago, about all these Virginia Democrat crooks?
00:37:44.000This is the same administration responsible for the infanticide bill.
00:37:48.000So, people, oh, we're going to take the moral high ground.
00:37:51.000And I know you tried to destroy Brett Kavanaugh's life and accuse him of horrible, heinous things based on no evidence for political gain so you could keep aborting babies.
00:37:59.000Funny how it always comes back to aborting babies.
00:38:02.000But, you know, we're going to be the bigger person.
00:38:05.000And we're going to let it go when it's Governor Northam and all these other people, Fairfax and the Attorney General, because, you know, we're just really good people.
00:38:14.000We'll let them continue killing babies in this political warfare.
00:38:17.000You know, they're going to come for our throat.
00:38:48.000He should have his life destroyed, because that's the game we're playing, and all options have to be on the table with these people.
00:38:54.000So, that's the lieutenant governor, which was very funny.
00:38:59.000And then the attorney general, in the same day that this happens, the attorney general Mark Herring posted a lengthy statement admitting that he also wore blackface at a college party in the 1980s when he was at the University of Virginia.
00:39:11.000So, I just don't really understand what is going on.
00:39:19.000The infanticide comments, the blackface thing was out of his control, but then he goes to the press conference and people are like, hey, can you still do the moonwalk?
00:39:26.000And he was about to do the moonwalk at this press conference where he's apologizing for being in a KKK robe or wearing blackface.
00:40:13.000I don't know what's going on in Virginia, but.
00:40:15.000What's actually very cool is that if they all step down, the fourth in command, if you're following the chain of succession there, would be the Speaker of the House of Delegates in Virginia, whose name is Kirk Cox, who is a Republican.
00:40:29.000So it just might happen that if all three people, you know, the governor steps down, lieutenant governor gets in, he steps down, the attorney general gets in, he steps down, we'd have a Republican governor in Virginia.
00:41:04.000But, you know, it also speaks to how retarded politics has become that, you know, look, boomers, Gen Xers, like they live through what we call capital H history in the sense that since the end of history, all of this stuff is a big no no.
00:41:19.000You know, you put on blackface, you make a racial joke, you call someone a fag, you do something like that, you're a little bit handsy with a woman.
00:41:46.000Now we have to live by the United Nations standards for not being a racist asshole, the Reddit standard of not being a racist, sexist asshole.
00:41:55.000And so it's funny because now you're seeing all these boomers and Gen Xers who.
00:41:59.000Yeah, they grew up in the 60s or the 70s or the 80s or the 90s when it was okay, when people were normal, and everybody sort of saw things for what they were, which is, yeah, maybe it's a funny joke.
00:43:05.000Yearbook pictures are sort of snapshots of many things which have been forgotten, many things which there are no record of, where there's no written record, no photographic record, because you didn't have smartphones, you didn't have desktop, you didn't have laptop, you didn't have ubiquitous cameras and social media and everything.
00:43:22.000What happens when this generation starts running for office, when this generation starts having opposition research done on them, and they find their old Google Plus account from when they were in middle school?
00:43:34.000What happens when they find those old Facebook posts where they're posting truth is and, you know, some of those other motivational poster memes.
00:43:44.000You're already seeing it with some of these football players where they go back and they find, or baseball players or whatever, and they find an old Twitter post from when they were 15 or 16 and they said, oh, you're a faggot, lol, you're an N word, lol.
00:43:57.000And they, you know, they get their career destroyed.
00:48:36.000How about we just start with making it work, you know, before we?
00:48:39.000Who are we doing all these fancy upgrades?
00:48:42.000Kevin McComber says Ann Coulter has more balls than Trump.
00:48:45.000That's just simply not true because Donald Trump is the president.
00:48:49.000So, anytime people talk about pundits versus people who actually have done things, I always have to side on the people that have done things.
00:49:01.000But the people say, oh, she's better than Trump.
00:49:04.000It's like, let's have a little perspective.
00:49:06.000Smoke Salmon says, Sup, Nick, I wrote a story for my school paper about the polarization taking place in the country and was wondering how you see this division playing out.
00:49:21.000It's tough to say because we're in uncharted waters here.
00:49:24.000The reason being is because you have the internet, you have technology, you have all these improvements in communication and travel, all these disparate races, ethnicities, political types of people coming into close contact, and there's great friction because of this.
00:49:41.000So you've had social dissatisfaction or social unrest before, you've had cleavages in a country before, you've had cleft countries before, empires before, but never have you had this kind of.
00:49:53.000Velocity of polarization, of change, of disagreement, and all the rest that has exacerbated the problem.
00:50:01.000So, in that, and then also in light of, on the flip side, never before have you had a state as powerful as the modern American state, which is to say surveillance and police and military and all these other tactics and the asymmetrical advantage of the state over the people.
00:50:17.000And so, all of that combined, you say that on the one hand, maybe it is building towards increased political violence or.
00:50:24.000A worsening situation, but on the other side, you say that the state is better than ever equipped to handle that.
00:50:29.000So I don't think it's building to some sort of climactic conflict, if that's the question.
00:50:34.000I know a lot of people think it's time for the race war, it's time for a civil war in the streets because, you know, Antifa was marching in Seattle.
00:50:45.000By and large, Americans are not extreme or partisan or uncomfortable enough to engage in conflict, and that's what you need for a civil war.
00:50:53.000The only people that are looking to have conflict are people that are.
00:50:56.000Basically, social outcasts, fringe political actors, you know, lonely, sad people.
00:51:01.000So, when you see them fighting in the streets, this is by no means representative of the general population.
00:51:06.000If anything, normal people see that violence and it makes them hate the side that's doing it because they don't want violence.
00:51:12.000Because most people are relatively comfortable, even though some people live in poverty, it's all relative, of course.
00:51:56.000You know, David Duke, what a disaster.
00:51:58.000And it just goes to show, you know, David Duke is like, I support Tulsi Gabbard.
00:52:01.000And I guess that's a good thing because now he's ruining a Democrat as opposed to a Republican.
00:52:05.000But even Tulsi Gabbard was like, yeah, keep your support, you, you know, racist, you white nationalist, which is epic on two fronts because it's Wignat's being blown out because they love Tulsi Gabbard and they're going to vote for her.
00:52:18.000And she explicitly called them like, you know, garbage.
00:52:21.000And then on the other hand, it shows that, yeah, your support actually harms the people that you support.
00:52:26.000So it's a double whammy, which I think is cool.
00:52:29.000James Russell says, Don't worry, Nick, instead of the wall, you'll get a military intervention in Venezuela.
00:52:34.000Thanks to Trump's neocons, it will bring more immigrants.
00:52:38.000Tulsi Gabbard said something retarded like this the other day.
00:52:41.000She's like, The reason we have mass immigration is because we destroyed Central and South America.
00:52:46.000That's the most retarded thing I've ever heard.
00:52:49.000You can maybe make the case about that with Syria, with Europe, and even then it's dubious because so many of the immigrants pouring into Europe are not coming from Syria.
00:53:54.000In other words, in no other place is the disparity with a contiguous country greater than that between the United States and Mexico.
00:54:02.000You look at all the countries of Europe, what do they border?
00:54:05.000The Atlantic Ocean, the Mediterranean Sea, the North Sea, the English Channel.
00:54:09.000You know, the closest thing you have to a third world country that any European nation borders is Turkey or some of the Balkan countries or Russia.
00:54:18.000And compared to Mexico, those are advanced, those are developed countries compared to Mexico.
00:54:23.000When you look at the violence, the drug cartels, the lawlessness that happens.
00:54:42.000Either the conditions in Mexico will get so good that people won't want to come to America, or the conditions in America will get so bad that it's the same as Mexico.
00:54:50.000But that's what's causing immigration, not that we went in and destroyed whatever.
00:54:55.000And so, yeah, if we do things in Venezuela, maybe it'll get refugees.
01:00:11.000It's easy for some black guy or some Mexican to come over in the last two generations and say, we hate white America, America's white supremacy.
01:00:21.000Because those people were here way before you.
01:00:23.000You had nothing to do with the Civil War, the struggles, and the triumphs of the Industrial Revolution or World War II or whatever.
01:00:29.000You know, my ancestors came here probably about 115 years ago, around about that.
01:00:35.000And, you know, my ancestors fought in World War II and they fought in Vietnam and many of them were in the military and, you know, they built the city of Chicago in many cases.
01:00:45.000And so, you know, obviously I don't go all the way back to the Mayflower and all that, but I have tremendous respect for the people that do.
01:00:52.000I think they absolutely are more American than me.
01:00:54.000I'm not going to say, oh, well, I am an immigrant and that makes me.
01:01:20.000They earn their money, and then they send it to their other people, so they spend it in the African economy or the Mexican economy or whatever.
01:01:26.000How much money is like $25 billion a year in remittances that are sent from America to Mexico?
01:02:25.000I've talked about this a lot, a lot on the show.
01:02:29.000Boomers just have no idea what's coming, it is not within their realm of experience to sort of grapple with this idea of a multiracial, non white America.
01:02:41.000Every boomer grew up in a time when racism against black people was tolerated.
01:02:45.000I said this at American Renaissance last year, and Sam Dixon, you know, sort of saunters up to the podium and says, Actually, that's not true.
01:02:53.000There was never discrimination against black people in America.
01:02:55.000There was never prejudice against black people.
01:02:57.000There was never Jim Crow, because in the South, we were just segregated.
01:03:01.000Yeah, well, you may not know this, Sam Dixon, but my parents grew up in the city, and they can attest, and, you know, many people in my family can attest that racial conflict was very much a real thing.
01:03:13.000Racial discrimination and prejudice was very much a real thing.
01:03:33.000That it's a white country, it's built for white people, it's by white people, white people set the tone, it's white standards.
01:03:40.000It's like I've said before, it's like a fish swimming in water.
01:03:43.000It was so ubiquitous, it was so much the standard that they were completely unaware of it.
01:03:48.000You know, they talk a lot about the black family.
01:03:51.000A lot of them talk about the black family and they say it was a problem of welfare.
01:03:55.000That blacks were good family people, Christians, oh, and then this pernicious welfare Great Society program came in and created perverse incentives and ruined the family.
01:04:03.000Well, yeah, that's true to an extent, but also you look at the rate at which children are born out of wedlock in the black family, it started to rise in the 50s, not the 60s.
01:04:14.000Great Society was 67, but it started to rise in the 1950s.
01:04:18.000Well, it seems to me that that more coincides with the Civil Rights Era and the rejection of white social norms.
01:04:24.000were taken for granted as white social norms and not the introduction of welfare.
01:04:39.000They want nothing to do with that explaining away the problem with minorities and their plight in America.
01:04:45.000But it's very real, and it shows that they cannot grapple with the fact that America won't be the way it was in the 60s or 70s or 80s because it's totally foreign to them.
01:04:55.000You know, and in many cases, they're wealthy and they live in all white communities.
01:04:57.000They live in a bubble where they don't see that.
01:04:59.000They don't work in the city, they don't work in these areas.
01:05:02.000So, the idea of a child, a white child, going to school and being outnumbered by blacks and Indians and Asians and Chinese and all these other people, oh, well, you know, they just simply can't conceive of that.
01:05:16.000But to red pill them, I guess I would just really hit on the boomer things about, oh, they're not assimilating, sort of the things that Trump does.
01:05:38.000You know, and it's funny because, like, Will Chamberlain is a dream to actual anti Semites because he's a Jewish person who is totally a shill for Jewish interests.
01:06:39.000I think that has to be talked about and addressed.
01:06:41.000So when Will Chamberlain comes out and says, yeah, um, Basically, I have no good reason for America supporting Israel, but we should support Israel.
01:06:49.000And you hide the fact that you're half Jewish.
01:10:12.000And as a member, you will get one additional episode of the show every single week, six days a week, as opposed to five for premium members.
01:10:20.000You get the Sunday show, which is one of our best shows.
01:10:24.000Everybody attests that when it comes out, man, it is really a good show, right?
01:10:29.000When it is finally released, man, it's a good one.