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Transcript
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00:14:32.000Probably 2016 was the most important, but you know everybody's saying that and it is a big deal though.
00:14:38.000So we'll be talking about the Senate, we'll be talking about the House, we'll be talking about some of the odds, some of the indicators we could look at, but to me the scariest thing about tomorrow is that really none of the numbers even matter.
00:15:55.000Races uh for the dish for the different congressional races and if you want to check that out remember nicolasjfuentes.com membership and that's only for the premium people you guys are going to get kind of a softer version but we really went hardcore for the premium members and I know they enjoyed that but besides the election
00:16:37.000There's some kind of cigar-shaped asteroid that entered into the solar system.
00:16:42.000I don't know if anybody else saw this, but people are saying it could be an alien probe.
00:16:47.000People are saying it could be a light sail because of how it's moving and it doesn't...
00:16:53.000I don't know, all the math that they use to describe more common objects in space, it doesn't really apply to this thing.
00:17:02.000It's just kind of convenient that we're seeing satellite after satellite shut down, it goes out of power, it needs repairs, and yeah, the solar observatory a few months ago, and we're sending something to the sun, and we're doing the space force, and now you've got this asteroid that comes and goes on this very strange trajectory, so...
00:17:23.000On the one hand, we're worried about the midterms.
00:17:25.000On the other hand, is there something else coming?
00:17:27.000Is it gonna be... What do they call it?
00:18:18.000But very early this morning, they announced that America had put its sanctions on Iran.
00:18:25.000And this was the top story for like five minutes, and then it was back to the midterms.
00:18:29.000I don't know, is that by design that the media does that, or was there just legitimately nothing happening?
00:18:35.000Because to me normally that would be kind of a big story and Hassan Rouhani made a very aggressive statement and it's kind of a big deal.
00:18:43.000So are they pushing it under the rug to focus on the midterms to get people out to vote?
00:18:47.000And this is where, this is the last thing I'll say before I bring out the whiteboard here, this is where it's kind of strange where we have to look at what's going on and then we have to look at what the media is telling us about what's going on as two different entities
00:19:01.000Deserving of analysis in themselves because for example, we're going to talk about some of the polling here and a good example of this is this morning There was a poll that came out that said that the generic ballot lead held by the Democrats has shrunk to 3% So the generic ballot is they call up registered voters and they say, you know It's a generic ballot if you're gonna vote for the Republican or the Democrat in your congressional race because of course It's different for everybody
00:19:29.000In all the different districts, in all the different states, if you're talking about Senate-wide.
00:19:35.000And for months and months, the generic ballot, the Democrats have held the lead by 5, 7, 10.
00:19:40.000There was a poll by CNN this week that said they were up by 13, which is a lot higher than some of the others.
00:19:45.000But this morning, a poll came out and said Democrats are only leading by 3, which is within the margin of error.
00:19:50.000And with that kind of a poll, you have to take a step back and wonder.
00:19:54.000As with some of the other things going on in the news,
00:19:57.000Is this really gauging where the voters are?
00:20:01.000Or do the people that are making the polls have a vested interest in the outcome of the election?
00:20:06.000And they know that if they put out a poll that says, uh-oh, the race is tightening, Democrats are within the margin of error, Republicans are within striking distance,
00:20:16.000Then perhaps they know that this will, in a marginal way, increase voter turnout for the Democrats if it causes some kind of panic.
00:20:30.000Because in every case, and we've seen this over the last two years or three years, the media, the people that do the polls, the people that do the data, they have a vested interest in the outcome of the elections.
00:20:41.000And if that's the case, they know that what they put out there is going to impact
00:20:45.000You know, it's not like there's this independence between these two variables here.
00:20:51.000The amount of people voting and the perception of how many people are going to go out to vote.
00:20:55.000So, of course, none of these are really reliable if we want to, you know, get a good metric.
00:21:00.000So, with that said, we're going to bring out our board here.
00:21:04.000And even within just 24 hours, this has changed.
00:21:07.000And like I said, we went into much greater depth on this on yesterday's show.
00:21:34.000Some Jewish guy on Twitter was like, some lefty was like, the lighting's really bad, and he's doing a whiteboard.
00:21:43.000Like, it's endearing, it's fun, who cares?
00:21:47.000So this is our map here, and like I said, I've been paying attention to the House races so much, I've been looking at them on an individual basis, but I believe there are about nine changes in the House races, and the only change to the Senate map, and just to go over briefly, we've got for the Senate, there are six, well there's 45 races that are likely Democrat or safe Democrat, so I believe the only one
00:22:50.000Was West Virginia, which actually really surprised me because when I was looking at this yesterday and I was making my predictions for my premium people, I said West Virginia was going to be a really tough one, but that one actually moved from Leans Democrat and Manchin, who, it's a red state, it's a state that Trump won by crazy margins, but Joe Manchin has been there for a while and they like him and he's kind of a blue dog Democrat if they even exist anymore.
00:23:15.000But in spite of all that, he's moved over to toss-up territory, which, you know, and I said this yesterday on my premium show, I said, look...
00:23:24.000If it comes down to Trump vs. Manchin, who are the people of West Virginia going to break for?
00:23:29.000Are they more loyal to their Senator, who's a Democrat, and he's one of two Democrats in West Virginia who hold statewide office, or are they more loyal to the President?
00:23:38.000The Governor came down to a rally the other year and converted.
00:23:42.000Will Joe Manchin have to do the same, or are they going to keep him around?
00:23:46.000I guess he's moved into toss-up territory now, and there are six
00:24:11.000That's like the bare minimum because of the way the vice president operates.
00:24:15.000The vice president acts as a tiebreaker.
00:24:17.000So if it is 50-50 and a vote comes down on a bill 50-50, Mike Pence will act as tiebreaker, break the tie, it's plus one Republicans.
00:24:26.000I mean that doesn't make it a majority but I mean you see why functionally it could work that way.
00:24:30.000But you notice that it's 51 seats for a majority, Republicans are at 50 without even batting an eye with Tennessee and Texas and of course those are gonna go.
00:25:23.000But generally speaking, I would say that out of the Senate, we're probably going to see, and this is like my most conservative estimate, is anywhere between 53 and 55 seats for Republicans.
00:25:35.000I think anything below 53 is probably out of the question.
00:25:39.000If I were going to highball it, if we got really, really good turnout, I'd say we could get up to 60.
00:25:49.000And again, that's if we had exceptional, remarkable, like 2016 surprises in terms of turnout, people that are hidden Trump, people that are unlikely Trump in the sense that, you know, they're voters that
00:26:02.000Aren't really counted in the polls normally, or if they are, then they don't say they're voting for Republican.
00:26:07.000Barring something like that, we're probably going to be in the range of 53 to 55.
00:26:12.000I'd say more comfortably 53 or 54 seats, which is good.
00:26:16.000We're picking up seats, and you gotta understand the math was very favorable for Republicans this time around.
00:26:22.000The way they have it with the Senate is that it's staggered, and so this time around, only a third of the Senate, and that's how it is in every two years, a third of the Senate,
00:26:55.000If you look at the betting markets, if you look at Predicted, if you look at Maxim Lunn and Jon Stossel, they have the Senate, I think at like 85% it's gonna be us.
00:27:08.000I don't want to get too confident, but honestly, if it comes down to Tennessee, Texas, and one of these seven for even just a majority, we're gonna do well.
00:27:17.000And the impact of the Senate, I guess this show will be more about
00:28:23.000Now, I recognize that Democrats weren't mobilizing very strongly in the Midwest, but that said, we have to take all the data with a grain of salt for like a million reasons.
00:28:34.000But to get into the consequences of the Senate, which to me is more important, you know, I can make my prediction.
00:28:40.000It's really not worth that much because it's going to depend on who votes.
00:28:46.000But the consequences one way or the other, what's good about the Senate is that the Senate is actually, I don't, you know, it strikes me as kind of surprising how much, how little people know about how the process works.
00:28:58.000So I'll kind of explain it from the ground up here.
00:29:01.000The Senate is the upper chamber of the American Congress.
00:29:04.000We have a bicameral system, which means the House is the lower chamber, the Senate is the upper chamber, in the same way that in Britain you have the House of Commons and the House of Lords, or in Russia you have this, in Mexico you have this.
00:30:06.000For example is responsible for all confirmations.
00:30:09.000This is why Trump has been able to jam through as many judge appointments not just in the Supreme Court but also in the federal judiciary as he has because we have control of the Senate right now and the the cloture procedural snag doesn't apply to the to the nominations because of a change that was made by Harry Reid a few years ago and
00:30:30.000And so if we keep the Senate, and if that sounds like crazy talk, it doesn't really matter.
00:30:35.000If we keep the Senate, we're going to be able to charge through and fill up the judiciary.
00:30:40.000There's any Supreme Court nominee in the future.
00:30:43.000It's going to be much easier this time around with Gorsuch and much more so with Kavanaugh.
00:30:47.000It was a real struggle because we had a majority of 51.
00:30:51.000So that means if we don't have, if we lose two Republicans, and that's very likely with all the cucks that are in there, we're kind of dead in the water.
00:30:59.000If we have a majority of 53, 54, it's much more comfortable.
00:31:13.000If you think back to some of the key decisions that have been made in the past couple of years by the administration, it's come down to the judiciary.
00:31:21.000The travel ban was an executive order.
00:31:24.000Trump said, you know, according to my authority, given to me by the Immigration and Nationality Act,
00:31:29.000I'm gonna ban people for this temporary time from six or seven different countries, and it got shut down by a federal judge once, it got shut down by a federal judge twice, it got shut down by a federal judge a third time, and that time they challenged it and they worked their way all the way up to the Supreme Court, and because we had control of the court, it was allowed to
00:32:09.000Let's say, as a hypothetical, an executive order comes down and it says, we're going to turn away all these caravanners because, you know, they're not really seeking asylum.
00:32:18.000If they wanted asylum, they would have applied for it in Mexico.
00:32:21.000And so, under the law, we have a reasonable, we can reasonably say, they're not going to be eligible for asylum and we shouldn't have to process them because they're trying to game the system.
00:32:57.000That's kind of an extreme example, because that'll go all the way to the top.
00:32:59.000That's a little bit more dubious, particularly on immigration.
00:33:03.000But with all these other judgeships that are being appointed, you're going to see American law evolve over the next 30 years in favor of the right wing.
00:33:13.000And that's in favor of, I mean, just all kinds of different things, whether that's gun rights, free speech, voter ID, unions.
00:33:21.000I mean, there's all kinds of areas that are impacted by that.
00:33:26.000The House is admittedly much more tenuous, but if we don't lose it, or rather, if we lose the House, it's not the end of the world.
00:33:33.000The Senate is a good thing to have if we strengthen our majority there, we're going to get a lot of positions in the judiciary, we're going to shape federal law, and that's a very enduring legacy.
00:33:42.000People are not talking about that so much, but that's a huge thing.
00:34:14.000You understand that Trump has conducted his strategy with campaigning, with policy, with all kinds of different things, optimally, such that we have remained competitive in the House in a way that I don't think would have been possible if we had a different President.
00:34:47.000Poorly in the congressional elections, both in the Senate and in the House, but particularly in the House.
00:34:53.000The polls have never been favorable, and generic ballot in, you know, state-by-state, or rather district-by-district polling, it's never been that good, but we've remained afloat, I think largely because Trump has been very strategic.
00:35:05.000He's been hitting the campaign trail very hard since 2017.
00:35:09.000He's been out there making the case, not just in key swing states for the Senate, but in key districts for the congressional races.
00:35:17.000He's been hitting everybody really hard with policy in terms of, you see, the new NAFTA deal which was made, you see...
00:35:24.000What's being done with immigration that that's been pushed in the spotlight with the Kavanaugh situation.
00:36:08.000Some of the polls in the past week are not looking so hot, like I said earlier.
00:36:11.000There was a 3% poll that came out today, a poll that showed they were only up by 3%.
00:36:15.000There was a poll today from Rasmussen which said Republicans were up 1%.
00:36:20.000But, to me, the most important factoid that I heard throughout the election
00:36:25.000was from a place called the Brennan Center of Justice.
00:36:29.000I don't know how many people heard about this.
00:36:30.000This was kind of off the radar, but in March, the Brennan Center of Justice released their report, and they said that they analyzed all the data for the midterms in the past so many years, and they said that for Democrats to overcome the gerrymandering advantage that Republicans have, they would need 11% minimum in order to break that Republican wall.
00:36:53.000So in other words, in 2010, when the census was done, when Republicans swept the House for the first time, in 2008, Barack Obama won the presidency, the House, and the Senate.
00:37:08.000But in 2010, you had the census happen.
00:37:11.000At the same time, you had Republicans sweep
00:37:13.000And they won the House, they won state legislatures, governorships all across the country because people didn't like Obama.
00:37:19.000It was the same effect that happened with this president.
00:37:22.000You know, he gets in, the next midterm he doesn't do so well.
00:37:25.000And because of what we did in 2010, we were able to gerrymander all the districts and give the GOP a very, very strong structural advantage, which, even if the Democrats do really, really well,
00:37:38.000You know, the polling today said 3 or Republicans have 1.
00:37:42.000But let's say they get the average, let's say they get 7.5.
00:37:46.000Some reports are saying that's still not going to cut it.
00:37:49.000They're going to need up to 11, and that's the minimum in order to be competitive, in order to flip 24 seats and gain control of the House.
00:37:57.000Some people have made similar predictions based on the gerrymandering and said it could be as low as 7, as high as 11.
00:38:03.000Some say it could be as low as 11, as high as 16.
00:38:06.000But in any case, we know that even if the Democrats have a strong polling advantage,
00:38:51.000Blacks, Hispanics, and Millennials in really big numbers?
00:38:55.000Like, all this math is just wrong, you know?
00:38:58.000I mean, with the House, they're going to take tons of toss-ups, and the high end is going to be something like 40 seats are going to flip, and they're going to get a pretty modest majority in the House.
00:39:08.000And in the Senate, forget about everything Leans Democrat, forget about half of the toss-ups, and we have a slight majority, you know, modest gains in the Senate.
00:39:17.000By the same token, if they don't do so hot, and despite all their best efforts, the Millennials don't show up, and Blacks don't show up, and Hispanics don't show up, or, if they do show up, they vote about 50-50, you know, or they vote not as close to the Democrats as the Democrats would like, well then, we're still in play here.
00:39:35.000But it's 100% dependent on what the turnout's going to be.
00:39:38.000We have no idea what that's going to look like.
00:39:41.000The outcome that will happen if we lose the House, and I'm going by what's most likely.
00:40:08.000We win the House and the Senate, Trump is able to jam through immigration, he's able to get through, probably, infrastructure, he's able to get through USMCA, I mean, we're unstoppable.
00:40:22.000Not only does it have a public policy effect in the sense that we're going to get everything that we want, hopefully, you know, barring the Republican establishment impeding us too much, but I think we've done just about enough for the Koch brothers that we'll be able to get the things that we actually care about.
00:40:38.000We'll probably get a tax cut, we'll get border security, we'll get
00:41:22.000She used to be competitive in North Dakota.
00:41:24.000North Dakota used to be leaning Democrat.
00:41:26.000But because of what's going on with Kavanaugh, what's going on with the caravan, I mean, just in the last six months, what's going on?
00:41:33.000How far the perception of Democrats has shifted from, you know, well, they're not totally crazy to, okay, this is the party of Nancy Pelosi and Maxine Waters and so on.
00:41:43.000She went from Leans Democrat to likely Republican.
00:43:06.000The establishment will blame the progressives, the progressives will blame the establishment.
00:43:10.000This is what happened to a small extent after 2016, after you saw in the DNC chairman election between Perez and who was the one in Minnesota.
00:43:34.000I literally, we're going to be at the point where it could be martial law, honestly, because what I describe happening to Republicans every day with censorship is going to happen to Democrats.
00:43:45.000In the sense that, you know, when we get kicked off Twitter and Facebook and we're seemingly going against all odds, like Trump's our last hope and if he goes, who else is left?
00:43:57.000The fear is that eventually we'll get to a point where we don't believe we can make change within the system.
00:44:03.000That within the electoral system, within the legitimate American political system, we can't reform, we can't make change, and so we'll look outside the system.
00:44:15.000And so, what I've been talking about with Republicans all day long, and I think that's happening, and you see that happening, is happening with Democrats now.
00:44:23.000If they lose the House, they'll start to say, wow, like, we just can't win.
00:44:28.000They're going to get increasingly desperate, increasingly nervous.
00:45:46.000Like I said, we'll still have the Senate, and I've talked about this earlier in the month, or rather in October, that it might not be the end of the world for 2020.
00:45:58.000There's a way we could spin that, and we'll go into what we could do if the Democrats take the House.
00:46:05.000But what's going to happen immediately
00:46:09.000The Democrats have been doing this goofy thing where they're, like, trying to distance themselves from themselves.
00:46:16.000For example, for Democrats to win, like, if you remember in the Pennsylvania special election, I think it was in District 18, it was Rick Saccone versus Conor Lamb.
00:46:41.000So, there's been this weird thing where for Democrats to win in some of these competitive districts or states, they have to pretend like, I'm not really a Democrat.
00:47:35.000They'll have the power to open up investigations and interrogate people, basically.
00:47:40.000Under oath and this is gonna pose a big problem for the administration because if they make wrong moves It's very precarious, you know Democrats are gonna do their due diligence and try to do everything to indict Republicans and in the administration the GOP is gonna have to work their tails off to make sure that that doesn't end in disaster So that means that with all these investigations are gonna be launched
00:48:03.000They're going to have to prepare papers are going to have to coach witnesses I mean they're gonna have to do crazy things in order to ensure they're gonna have to do a lot of work in order to ensure that all these investigations are benign and what that's gonna do is just slow down
00:48:19.000The White House, it's going to slow down all the departments.
00:48:21.000So all the great and vigorous action that you're seeing on immigration enforcement, on deregulation, all this other stuff, it's just going to grind to a halt.
00:48:30.000Because people will just be overburdened with the work of trying not to get indicted by these nutjobs in this witch hunt that's going to take place if they take over the House.
00:48:38.000Beyond that, we're not going to be able to pass anything.
00:48:44.000Hard to imagine we'll even be able to pass an appropriations bill.
00:48:47.000You know, you thought they were holding us hostage when we had a majority in both chambers, and we couldn't break the cloture rule in order to use our majority in the Senate.
00:50:07.000They passed Obamacare without a single Republican vote, and then, when they had to go in and fix Obamacare because it was broken, what had happened in the meantime?
00:50:16.000My mom says that a lot to make fun of.
00:50:19.000Certain people, so I say that sometimes.
00:50:21.000What happened in the meantime was that Ted Kennedy died, and they had to fill his seat.
00:50:26.000I think a Republican ended up filling his seat, or they didn't fill it in time, so they didn't have a majority in the Senate.
00:50:32.000So instead they had to go back retroactively and pass a separate Reconciliation Act.
00:50:36.000Point being, they had to jump through all these hoops just to make sure that, like, they didn't have to make any compromises when they totally overhauled the entire healthcare system.
00:50:47.000And it's like so they they try and say oh well they did that to Barack Obama there's no equivalency there at all because Trump really has worked with the Democrats to an extent but there's not going to be any reciprocity there Democrats are going to shut down the administration now the silver lining here is that
00:51:04.000If we pack the judiciary, Trump's going to be able to run the government through executive orders.
00:51:09.000You know, the administration's going to be hampered, but I think we will, to an extent, be able to get things through with executive orders.
00:51:15.000We fill the judiciary, they're going to go all the way up, and they should be affirmed by the Supreme Court or whoever it ends up being.
00:51:24.000So, to me, I mean, that's the only silver lining.
00:51:27.000It's going to be pretty rough if they win the House, but I think with executive orders, we'll be able to do a little bit and the judiciary is going to help us a lot.
00:51:35.000Ultimately, though, with 2020, I think it could go.
00:52:37.000And so to me, it's sort of like, take Kavanaugh, and then that's every day.
00:52:42.000Take what happened to the Kavanaugh hearings, and that's every day if they control the House.
00:52:46.000You're able to galvanize the Republican base, you're able to push midterms to the right, or rather, midterms, independents, moderates to the right, because every day
00:52:55.000You can go and stump, as Trump's been doing since 2017, you can go on the campaign trail for 2020 and say, look at what these people are doing.
00:54:45.000Remember, you have to go out and vote, no matter where you are, what you're doing, if you like your guy, if you don't like your guy, you gotta vote Republican.
00:54:52.000Because if we win the House, it's a good thing.
00:54:54.000Now, some people are gonna criticize and say, oh, well, well, well.
00:54:57.000I saw some retard on the timeline who was like, oh, you think Republicans are just gonna, like, fix everything?
00:55:11.000It's not going to be ideal, and I'm being a little hyperbolic when I say it's going to be Trump Imperium, but one is clearly better than the other.
00:55:19.000If we win the House, we get a border wall.
00:55:52.000But I'm gonna do my duty, you know, and I met Bruce Rauner actually, and I didn't like him, and he made Illinois a sanctuary state, and he did some things with abortion that were not great, but I'm gonna suck it up, I'm gonna vote Republican, because that's what you do.
00:56:05.000And I'm gonna vote for Dan Lipinski, and I'm gonna vote for all these other people.
00:56:10.000Okay, well Dan Lipinski is a Democrat and maybe if you're in my district, you're not gonna vote for Art Jones That's what you're not gonna do.
00:56:17.000Okay, that's the one exception I'll make but for everybody else you got to go out and vote Republican, but that's our analysis here I'm gonna go in and fix the brightness here and we'll start looking at our stream labs and super chats.
00:56:48.000I don't really want to make a prediction because...
00:56:51.000It's so there's so many variables here and it like the numbers are all bogus just like it was last year I will say though the betting markets it's the same and I know because I put 300 bucks on Trump in the 2016 election and it was 33 it was 33 throughout the whole thing and it went up like 36 down to like 29 but it was right in that range was about 31 32 33 percent or 33 cents a share whatever it was
00:57:18.000And then the same night that it happened, it just went the other direction.
00:57:23.000I remember, I was at BU, I was in my friend's apartment, we didn't even have a TV, and we were watching just on somebody's laptop the New York Times.
00:57:33.000The needle started out, 95% Hillary, and over the course of the night it just went the other way.
00:57:38.000And that's not to say, you know, that's sort of a
00:57:41.000fallacious syllogism to say oh well because the odds changed radically one election the odds will change radically in another election all odds will change radically you know that's not what I'm saying but it is to say that that's possible clearly the polling is not accurate it's not the end-all be-all we'd like to think everybody's learned but probably not so but we'll take a look now at our stream labs and super chats we'll see what people are saying here
01:00:01.000I think that's just totally inadequate to explain away the universe.
01:00:05.000And then once you go from materialism, you say, well, there's gotta be God, and then if there's God, you gotta divine the nature of God, or divinate the nature of God, and then which world religion is representative of that, and that's how you get, I think, to Catholicism, is recognizing then the nature of man.
01:00:21.000If certain things are true about man, well then, of course,
01:00:26.000I mean, if human, and I don't know if I'm explaining this well, but, you know, let's see if we can define a truth about humankind.
01:00:34.000Let's see if we can figure out what are some primordial characteristics of mankind.
01:00:39.000Well, you know, we need to have some form of religion, we need to have some form of authority, hierarchy, tradition, all these things.
01:00:45.000And I look at these things and I say, well, if religion were true, if we had a creator, well, if one of the religions were true, it would have all of these truths in mind.
01:00:53.000And I look at the Bible and I say, look at how much of that is true in there.
01:00:57.000I don't think it's a coincidence that everything in there basically holds water today, all that wisdom.
01:01:02.000And there's the Jordan Peterson way of looking at it, that the Bible is not, you know, talking about a real God in a philosophically realist sense, but that God is the transmitted wisdom over generations.
01:01:15.000It's what Jung might call the collective unconscious or whatever.
01:02:27.000Freshman year of college, for Christmas, my parents got my sister a dog.
01:02:31.000And the program was this, when we graduate from high school, no it wasn't high school, but the program was this basically, like, after we train the dog, over the summer, then the dog will go with my sister to college and it'll live there.
01:04:07.000You know, it's, it's great when you wake up and you think, am I just, is this just the indefinite sickness, which is my allergies or is this allergies plus?
01:06:17.000At the time, the Republican coalition, and I've said this many times before, per Darren Beattie, among others, I believe also Sam Francis talked about this, or maybe it was somebody else who I was listening to recently, but the Republican coalition in the 80s was the foreign policy hawks, the cold warriors, it was the free market people, and it was the religious right, the social conservatives.
01:06:41.000When you look, these are not all equal conservative movements.
01:06:43.000Reagan was the leader of that coalition, but we have to really think about what conservative means, evaluate all of them separately.
01:07:03.000And paleoconservatism eventually, you know, really, really reached its high watermark in the 80s and 90s with Sam Francis, Pat Buchanan, Jared Taylor, these kinds of people.
01:09:01.000Do you accept that man has a nature that has fallen and cannot be improved?
01:09:05.000That society can progress in technological ways and in material ways, but ultimately it's not infinite and it comes at a tremendous social cost?
01:09:13.000To me, Reagan didn't understand any of that.
01:11:09.000Hopefully I'll get that to you this week.
01:11:11.000I've just got, like, so many things on my plate right now, but I think we'll be able to finalize a design, hopefully by the end of the week.
01:11:19.000I don't know, it's going to be kind of hectic tomorrow, so maybe by the beginning of next week we'll have a design finalized and everything, but what a hassle that was, you know?
01:11:28.000Like, I had to redesign the logo, which I had a really solid guy do it, and he was very helpful and very good.
01:13:22.000I would have loved to go out outside the funeral and do the Fortnite dance, you know, or something like that.
01:13:27.000I would love to have gone to CPAC and go to the Lone Conservative booth and do the Fortnite dance on the table, but somebody's gonna have to teach me!
01:14:49.000So, I don't know if you're joking or not, but that kind of negativity, it's just, uh, it really rubs me the wrong way.
01:14:55.000You know, you're going to insult my logo, which I worked my butt off to get that done, to get the graphics done, and, you know, like I blew you off.
01:15:21.000I don't really bet on predicted anymore, only because like...
01:15:35.000Unless the odds are, unless you're buying a share for $0.20 or for $0.15, to me it's just not great margins because of how much they take out from it.
01:15:45.000I remember I won, what did I win in the, I think I won like $1,000 or $700 in the election and they took a ton off the top.
01:15:55.000So to me it's like you spend tons of money to make a small margin and then you get a bunch cut off.
01:17:34.000You know, voters don't care about that.
01:17:37.000If it's going to hurt your campaign, don't talk about it.
01:17:39.000This is the same goofy stuff that got Paul Nealon in trouble, Pat Little, these psychopaths, these nutjobs, who are making us look unserious.
01:18:13.000I saw a clip from it, and it was funny because Tucker Carlson just really went hard on anti-industrial, anti-intervention, and I could see that smarmy, what did I call him the other day?
01:18:25.000The other day I called Ben Shapiro a smarmy little homo, and somebody in the comments was like, actually Ben Shapiro was married, he is not a homosexual.
01:18:45.000I'll have to watch that, because I really did see that Ben Shapiro is getting triggered by facts that didn't care about his feelings, and we'll have to catch that.
01:18:54.000One of these days, I'm gonna engage with Ben Shapiro, and it's gonna be over.
01:20:04.000Jared Holt, are you going to do an article about that one?
01:20:07.000You know, it's funny, Jared Holt, he only does articles about the nasty stuff.
01:20:10.000He'll do an article when I say something that's like, oh, it's a little bit controversial.
01:20:15.000But, you know, when I have black people on my show, and I have Jews on my show, and I have women on my show, and
01:20:21.000I get countless live chats, super chat like that, where people say, you know, I'm from another country, or I'm a minority, or whatever, and I love your show.
01:24:21.000That's just a glitch that some people have.
01:24:23.000Again, I don't know if it's... It's something going on with the website where it's like if you go to the payment gateway and it's interrupted in the middle of it, then it, like, creates an account.
01:24:34.000I don't... Look, I'm not a computer guy.
01:24:47.000I post a lot of stuff that sometimes upsets the Muslims, but glad to hear it Glad to hear it.
01:24:53.000See it's a real multicultural show everybody Understands that what I'm saying is totally based on logic and not based on hate McDouble says
01:25:03.000Why did you turn your camera off when Cantwell came on the sweat on Friday, big guy?
01:25:08.000Maybe you want to use your imagination for that one.
01:25:11.000Maybe you want to put on our thinking caps, maybe.
01:26:43.000The other day he tweeted out, he was like, because I said I wanted him on my show the other week, and some like fat retard Jew on Twitter was like, oh, he was like live tweeting the show, and he added Jared Holt, he's like, oh, at Jared Holt, Nick Fuentes wants you to come on the show.
01:27:00.000And Jared Holt's like, um, I'm not, lol, I'm not going to do that.
01:27:03.000I'm more of a observer, not a participant.
01:27:06.000I think to myself, you know, that's a very convenient way of looking at things when your job is to ruin other people's livelihood.
01:27:12.000Do you think it's really your choice, you know?
01:27:15.000Do you think that, you know, let's say hypothetically you ruin somebody's livelihood.
01:27:18.000Do you think that you're still an observer and not a participant?
01:27:22.000Sorry to say, you become a participant.
01:27:24.000So, when he's playing with fire, he really has to hope that everybody he writes about lands on their feet.
01:29:45.000This is America First, I'm Nicholas J. Fuentes, and thank you guys for watching the show.
01:29:51.000Thanks to our Streamlabbers, Superchatters, everybody who's supporting us premium members, and we'll see you tomorrow for the big election.
01:29:59.000Until then, have a great rest of your evening.