America First - Nicholas J. Fuentes - October 17, 2017


The Power of a Great Communicator | America First Ep. 33


Episode Stats


Length

1 hour and 4 minutes

Words per minute

170.45735

Word count

11,057

Sentence count

839


Summary

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

Transcript

Transcripts from "America First - Nicholas J. Fuentes" are sourced from the Knowledge Fight Interactive Search Tool. Explore them interactively here.
00:00:04.000 Good evening, everybody.
00:00:04.000 You are watching America First.
00:00:06.000 My name is Nicholas J. Fuentes, and we have a great show for you tonight.
00:00:10.000 Lots of things to talk about.
00:00:12.000 Not a lot of news today.
00:00:13.000 Not much going on in the world.
00:00:15.000 Not much going on in the country.
00:00:17.000 But nevertheless, lots of exciting topics to talk about.
00:00:22.000 Before we get into any of that, I got to tell you, I am happy to report.
00:00:28.000 Actually, I'm a little bit braggadocious in reporting this.
00:00:31.000 I got to show off a little bit.
00:00:33.000 But I went to the gym today.
00:00:35.000 I promised you last night, everybody was giving me grief.
00:00:39.000 Everybody's in the live chat telling me, Nick, Nick, you got to get in the gym.
00:00:43.000 Nick, when are you going to start lifting?
00:00:44.000 I went to the gym today.
00:00:46.000 All right.
00:00:46.000 I met my mom on her lunch hour at her gym, and she let me in on a visitor pass or whatever where she goes to work out or whatever.
00:00:55.000 And I went.
00:00:57.000 It was all right.
00:00:58.000 I'm not wild about working out, I'm not wild about the physical.
00:01:02.000 More of a mental guy, more of a mental case myself.
00:01:06.000 But I went to the gym.
00:01:08.000 I did chest and arms today.
00:01:10.000 I think we'll go again.
00:01:12.000 What's today?
00:01:13.000 Tuesday?
00:01:13.000 We'll go again on Thursday.
00:01:14.000 All right, how's that?
00:01:15.000 See, so promises made, promises kept.
00:01:18.000 If I can do it, you can do it.
00:01:19.000 But happy to report that.
00:01:21.000 I was like, I was telling my mom, I don't want to go today.
00:01:24.000 She's like, you have to.
00:01:25.000 You told everybody on the show you were going to.
00:01:29.000 I'm like, you're right.
00:01:30.000 You're right.
00:01:31.000 I got to go.
00:01:31.000 I got to do it.
00:01:32.000 I got to do it.
00:01:33.000 It's time for men to be men.
00:01:35.000 And so I went, and that was that.
00:01:39.000 So good time at the gym.
00:01:42.000 And unfortunately, though, I came home.
00:01:44.000 I took like a three hour nap.
00:01:45.000 I should have followed up.
00:01:47.000 After going to the gym with a protein shake, peanut butter sandwich, whatever.
00:01:52.000 But I was so tired, I just jumped right into bed for a nap for an hour.
00:01:56.000 But that was the gym, so there it is.
00:01:59.000 Other things I wanted to talk about this is just something I saw on Twitter today, which, or rather, this is something that I did not see on Twitter.
00:02:06.000 I have something I saw on Twitter to get to in a moment.
00:02:10.000 But I was thinking about this today.
00:02:11.000 I was going through this old speech by Oswald Mosley.
00:02:15.000 And if you guys know Oswald Mosley, He was the leader of the British Union of Fascists in the United Kingdom during World War II.
00:02:24.000 Now, disclaimer I'm not a fascist.
00:02:26.000 I'm not a Nazi before anybody gets their underwear in a bunch, all right?
00:02:32.000 But I did see this pop up in my YouTube recommendations.
00:02:36.000 It was a speech by Mosley.
00:02:37.000 He was on the David Frost program in the 1970s, and they were playing an old clip of one of his old speeches from back during the war.
00:02:46.000 And he was tearing up a little bit watching it.
00:02:48.000 And I'll read to you an excerpt from the speech.
00:02:50.000 And I'll tell you why this is important.
00:02:52.000 I'll tell you why this is so significant, why this piqued my curiosity a little bit here.
00:02:58.000 So, Oswald Mosley, in his speech, he says this In the lives of great nations comes the moment of decision, comes the moment of destiny.
00:03:08.000 And this great nation, again and again in the great hours of its fate, has swept aside convention, has swept aside the little men of talk and of delay, and have decided to follow men in movements who say we go forward to action.
00:03:21.000 Let who dare follow us in this hour.
00:03:24.000 That is the permanence of the mighty mood of Britain.
00:03:26.000 And I say that in the ranks of our black shirt legions march the mighty ghosts of England's past, and their strong arms around us and their voices echo down the ages, saying onwards.
00:03:37.000 And I listen to this, and I'm not doing the delivery any justice.
00:03:41.000 I'm not trying to because you watch this guy, how charismatic, what an incredible speaker he is.
00:03:47.000 Makes you wonder why you've never heard of him in the public school system before.
00:03:51.000 But you listen to these speeches.
00:03:53.000 One of the greatest public speakers, probably in recorded history, and I'm talking multimedia recorded history.
00:04:01.000 I don't care who you compare him to.
00:04:03.000 Winston Churchill, Ronald Reagan, Jack Kennedy, anybody.
00:04:07.000 You know, they talk about Barack Obama as a good orator, as a talented orator.
00:04:13.000 Oswald Mosley makes Barack Obama look like, I don't know, like John Huntsman or, I don't know, Nancy Pelosi.
00:04:20.000 Terrible in comparison.
00:04:22.000 But so I listened to the speech, and not only is the delivery just masterful, it makes you cry.
00:04:27.000 He's crying watching it, I'm sure, because he knows.
00:04:31.000 What was at stake and what was lost in this country, but anybody who's watching this today cries because of the beauty of it, of the delivery and also of the language.
00:04:40.000 And I listen to this speech and I hear these phrases where he talks about the moment of destiny, the moment of decision.
00:04:47.000 He talks about the mighty ghosts of England's past, their strong arms, their voices echoing down the ages.
00:04:54.000 And I think we really have lost the fervor, we really have lost the passion and the inspiration of the populist message.
00:05:02.000 Because if you listen to the populists, even not even the fascists in the 20th century, but even if you listen to the populists in America at the turn of the century, whether you're looking at Teddy Roosevelt, whether you're looking at the, the Cross of Gold speech,
00:05:17.000 whether you're looking at some of the more left-wing economic populists of the day, Father Coughlin and others, and then you compare them to the modern so-called populists, the modern far-right, the modern nationalists, and it's really lacking.
00:05:32.000 It's sorely lacking.
00:05:34.000 You hear some of these speeches from some of these rallies that we've been seeing, and it just doesn't get you going in the way that it used to.
00:05:42.000 And I think the key difference, this is going to sound like optics cucking, but allow me to explain myself, is the message used to be one of hope, and now it's one of bitterness.
00:05:53.000 And when I say that, I don't mean that we need to be cheery.
00:05:56.000 I don't mean, like the mainstream media said about Donald Trump during the election, that we need to avoid talking about how bad things are.
00:06:04.000 That's not what I'm talking about.
00:06:05.000 And I don't mean that we have to be Ronald Reagan, it's morning in America again.
00:06:09.000 I don't mean that at all.
00:06:11.000 But what our movement represents, what our people represent is greatness, is hope, is aspirational.
00:06:19.000 That our history is grand and exceptional, and our ancestors are strong and proud.
00:06:25.000 And to utilize our message to truly get the maximum utility, the strengths out of our movement, you need that bombast.
00:06:34.000 You need that rhetoric.
00:06:35.000 You need that delivery, which I think has been, as I said, Sorely lacking in our movement.
00:06:41.000 You hear some of these guys on our side give a speech, and it's brutal.
00:06:46.000 It's bitter.
00:06:47.000 It's resentful.
00:06:49.000 It's angry.
00:06:50.000 And I get it.
00:06:51.000 I understand where it comes from.
00:06:53.000 You watch this show enough to understand that I'm very bitter.
00:06:56.000 I'm very angry about the things that go on, the things that have gone on for the past 50 years.
00:07:02.000 But when we're trying to unite the country, when we're trying to unite generations and different groups, racial or otherwise, in the country, around a common message, You have to understand where our strengths lie.
00:07:15.000 And the strength of our appeal lies in this intuitive, instinctual, and something that is buried deep within many people, waiting to be revived this longing, this love for ancestors, for tradition, for nation.
00:07:29.000 And we have not been capturing that.
00:07:31.000 So when I hear this Oswald Mosley speech, or I hear other speeches by him or by other populists, other nationalists at the time, I think it really drives people.
00:07:43.000 I think it really drives people.
00:07:44.000 Makes a difference in people's lives when they hear things like this, when they see things like this the delivery, the rallies, the symbols, the rhetoric about strength, about mighty ghosts of our past, and all of this and it really energizes them.
00:07:59.000 And many people, I think, see these things and they think they just don't make them like they used to.
00:08:04.000 It just isn't the same anymore.
00:08:06.000 We have to demand, I think, a better quality.
00:08:09.000 We have to demand and expect more from our people if this movement's going to get off the ground.
00:08:14.000 Because, you know, not for nothing.
00:08:16.000 But we're not going to get this movement off the ground like complaining about things.
00:08:22.000 Conservatives haven't conserved anything.
00:08:26.000 Join us.
00:08:27.000 Like, it's all this very, like, cult like rhetoric.
00:08:30.000 And it appeals to people.
00:08:32.000 That have already been sold on it.
00:08:33.000 It appeals to people that have already read the books, to people that are on the forums, that listen to the podcasts, but for people that are outside, and by the way, there is an enormous market for this.
00:08:45.000 You look at how Generation Z responds to some of these polls in terms of how conservative they are.
00:08:51.000 They're 10% less traditional than traditionalists.
00:08:55.000 I was watching some poll, I read some poll, and it gauged by generation what percentage of people said they were conservative on social issues like abortion.
00:09:06.000 Feminism, LGBT, and the traditionalists, it was 79%.
00:09:11.000 Millennials, I think it was 50 some percent.
00:09:15.000 Gen X and Millennials was 15%.
00:09:19.000 Generation Z was 69%.
00:09:22.000 So you go like 50% higher with this generation.
00:09:26.000 That's the market we need to be looking at.
00:09:28.000 The percentage of white America or Americans at large, which is something like 50%, who support a European heritage, remaining a majority white country.
00:09:40.000 We should be tapping into that market.
00:09:42.000 We should be rallying those troops.
00:09:43.000 That's our base, but we're not tapping into it.
00:09:46.000 So, just a thought on the rhetoric, just a thought on those optics.
00:09:50.000 I think there's a lot to be built upon.
00:09:53.000 I think there's a lot to be strengthened.
00:09:55.000 If we had a Mosley type figure, if we had rhetoric like that, if we had delivery like that, it would save the country, it would literally elevate this movement like we've never seen before.
00:10:07.000 Something so simple.
00:10:08.000 And a big part of that is the way that they have educated us in this.
00:10:12.000 Country, the people that we look up to for our speeches, they have not given us a single good role model, a single good example for this.
00:10:20.000 I don't think that's an accident, by the way.
00:10:22.000 You look at any of the presidents of the past 50 years, you have no great orators.
00:10:27.000 Lyndon Johnson, Richard Nixon, Gerald Ford, Jimmy Carter.
00:10:33.000 Reagan was good, but his speeches weren't stirring like Oswald Mosley's were.
00:10:38.000 Mr. Gorbachev, tear down this wall.
00:10:42.000 Wow!
00:10:43.000 You know, all these neoconservatives, they go on these little podcasts like for Hoover Institute and they do this little circle jerk talking about that line was so powerful.
00:10:53.000 You know, when I wrote that line back in 1980 of Peter Robinson, when I wrote that line back in 1980, it was so incredible.
00:11:00.000 And you compare that to Mosley talking about the Black Shirt Legion's march with the mighty ghost of England's past.
00:11:06.000 It doesn't even compare.
00:11:08.000 And that's your best example, is Ronald Reagan.
00:11:10.000 And then from there, it only gets worse.
00:11:12.000 Bush, Clinton, George W. Bush, Barack Obama, basically an Illuminati plant with this.
00:11:19.000 With his delivery, trying to program you into submission.
00:11:22.000 Donald Trump is okay, more stirring than the rest, but nothing that's comparable to anything that happened before.
00:11:28.000 So I don't think it's an accident that we have no good role models for how we speak.
00:11:33.000 You look at any young people, you look at any adults, and nobody knows how to talk anymore.
00:11:38.000 Nobody knows how to deliver anymore.
00:11:40.000 You listen to some of the inflections, and I encourage everybody to watch this speech or just this excerpt from Mosley's speech and what he does, how he says it.
00:11:51.000 Is so dynamic, it's so emotive, so powerful.
00:11:55.000 We don't hear emotive and those kinds of inflections anymore.
00:12:00.000 A good orator like Barack Obama, it's robotic.
00:12:04.000 It's, what do you call it, cookie cutter.
00:12:07.000 It's very by the books.
00:12:09.000 It's nothing that's really going to rile anybody up.
00:12:11.000 Nobody's going to overthrow the government because they hear a Barack Obama speech.
00:12:15.000 But you listen to this speech and how he strings these things together the flow, the rhythm, the inflection.
00:12:21.000 You haven't heard speeches like this in a long time.
00:12:24.000 So.
00:12:26.000 Anyway, just a thought.
00:12:27.000 Just a thought, a little random, but I watched that.
00:12:30.000 I was really stirred.
00:12:32.000 I was really driven.
00:12:33.000 And it's unfortunate that we don't have those kinds of leaders anymore.
00:12:37.000 We have to expect more.
00:12:39.000 But that's Mosley.
00:12:40.000 That was thought number one.
00:12:41.000 Before we get into the news, I want to talk about Raqqa today.
00:12:45.000 I want to talk about how U.S. backed Syrian forces have taken control of Raqqa, which is ISIS's or formerly the Islamic State's capital in Syria.
00:12:56.000 I want to talk about Anthony Scaramucci's infamous Holocaust poll.
00:13:01.000 And then if we have time, we'll talk about our good friend Jennifer Lawrence.
00:13:04.000 But before we get into those news stories, I got one more little kernel for you, one more little thought.
00:13:11.000 I saw this in a thread by this British shitlib, and we've engaged before on Twitter.
00:13:16.000 I blocked him because he's one of these mass report people.
00:13:19.000 So at first I banned him.
00:13:21.000 I called him, what did I call him?
00:13:23.000 I called him an estrogen soaked soy cube.
00:13:26.000 I had to delete that tweet because I want to be careful that I wasn't going to get banned.
00:13:30.000 You can see everybody from Millennial Matt, God bless and keep him, to who was the other one that got banned today?
00:13:39.000 DSA Hubris got banned.
00:13:41.000 I've got to be really careful that I don't get taken out by Twitter's rules of engagement or whatever.
00:13:47.000 So I'm on this guy's timeline, this shitlib, this British guy.
00:13:50.000 Somebody brought this to my attention.
00:13:52.000 And he was responding to a post by a friend of mine, Mark Collette.
00:13:57.000 You might have seen him.
00:13:57.000 He's on with.
00:13:59.000 Terry McCarthy or Tara McCarthy on the Friday live stream for her channel.
00:14:04.000 And he did a post basically comparing the great Christian cathedrals in Europe to African mud huts and basically saying there's no cultural equivalency between these two peoples, between these two geographies, between these two nations that you have in the 19th century incredible cathedrals, beautiful cathedrals, works of art that have not been surpassed since.
00:14:28.000 And then you look at the mud huts that we found in the heart of the dark.
00:14:32.000 Continent in the late 19th century, and it's like the Stone Age.
00:14:36.000 And so, this British liberal kind of a guy, this liberal progressive, responds to Mark Collette.
00:14:43.000 And I wanted to show you guys this image, all right?
00:14:45.000 And I'm going to pull it up here.
00:14:47.000 I'm going to pull it up using my hacker skills, and I'll show you the example in response to Mark Collette bringing up Christian cathedrals.
00:14:56.000 This British progressive, he says, No, no, no, no, you have it all wrong.
00:15:00.000 You don't have your history, sweetheart.
00:15:02.000 You know, I love how they're so.
00:15:03.000 Passive aggressive, they co opt like this urban black slang.
00:15:08.000 No, no, sweetheart, sorry, babe, but actually, Africa has this rich tradition.
00:15:13.000 And I'll show you the image that he brings up as an example to contrast and show Mark Collette that no, no, Africans actually are exceptional.
00:15:22.000 They are not, they don't just have mud huts.
00:15:25.000 And hold on, God damn, I don't think I can bring it up here.
00:15:31.000 Why can I not import this right now?
00:15:31.000 What's going on?
00:15:38.000 Is it because it's not in JPEG or what is that?
00:15:41.000 Hang on, let me go back in.
00:15:43.000 I'll save it and then we'll see if I got it.
00:15:47.000 But he brings up this image, and if I can't bring it up, you can just Google it by yourself, I guess.
00:15:53.000 Here.
00:15:54.000 Let me go back into my history because I just Googled it a moment ago.
00:15:58.000 But he brings up this example of a mosque in Mali.
00:16:01.000 He brings up this example of a mosque that was built in Western Africa.
00:16:06.000 And it's hysterical to me because not only is this an example of Muslims, not only is this an example of Muslim architecture and not at all African architecture, but it's such a bad example compared to anything that Europe has to offer.
00:16:22.000 And here, I can pull it up right now.
00:16:24.000 Here it is, okay?
00:16:26.000 So, this is the example.
00:16:28.000 This kills me, guys.
00:16:29.000 This kills me, all right?
00:16:33.000 So, we bring up these great cathedrals.
00:16:36.000 You look at the Notre Dame Cathedral in France.
00:16:38.000 You look at St. Basil's Cathedral in Russia.
00:16:42.000 You look at some of the great towers.
00:16:44.000 You look at the U.S. Capitol.
00:16:45.000 You look at the White House.
00:16:47.000 You look at all these great works of European architecture in Britain, in France, in Spain.
00:16:52.000 You look at Barcelona.
00:16:53.000 You look at Madrid.
00:16:54.000 You look at Rome.
00:16:55.000 You look at St. Peter's Basilica, Vatican City, and this dopey.
00:16:59.000 This dopey progressive liberal on Twitter, he's like, No, no, Africa's so smart.
00:17:06.000 Africa's got cool stuff too.
00:17:08.000 And he brings up this, this like, this sand palace, this mud palace.
00:17:13.000 Look at that.
00:17:14.000 Does that even come close?
00:17:16.000 This crude, like, sand fort.
00:17:19.000 Are you joking?
00:17:21.000 The most decorations you have here, you have like wooden pegs sticking out of it.
00:17:26.000 You have like, what the hell even is this?
00:17:29.000 And I'm thinking to myself, here's why this is important, okay?
00:17:32.000 This is.
00:17:32.000 On a serious note, we can laugh, we can make fun of these people.
00:17:36.000 On a serious note, this was one of my first major red pills in my life.
00:17:42.000 I heard about the white man's burden from colonialism.
00:17:46.000 I heard about the white man's burden about how the European colonists, when there was this age of, they called it the scramble for Africa, the age of colonialism in the late 19th century.
00:17:57.000 The Berlin Conference, led by Bismarck, I think it was in 1884, 1885, and they talked about how evil it was.
00:18:05.000 That people like Rudyard Kipling and some of the great colonists from Britain and France, they called it the white man's burden.
00:18:12.000 They thought that they had to go into Africa and civilize these people, that they were so racist, they saw the Africans as inferior, and they needed to lift them up and teach them.
00:18:22.000 And as I think I was a high schooler when I started to think about this stuff, I thought, well, let's think of it from their perspective.
00:18:30.000 You're a European colonist, it's the 19th century, and in Europe, you have had thousands of years of civilization, thousands of years.
00:18:39.000 Of Christ, thousands of years of great buildings, of great poetry, literature, art, music.
00:18:47.000 In the 19th century, you have flight in the United States, human flight.
00:18:52.000 You have the Industrial Revolution well underway.
00:18:54.000 You have things that people don't even consider as like inventions, but mass production, commerce, really sophisticated, advanced forms of government.
00:19:04.000 You have carriages, domestication of animals, all kinds of things, electricity.
00:19:08.000 You're a colonist, you penetrate the heart of Africa for the first time.
00:19:13.000 Since ever, really, because we had been around the coast of Africa forever, but it wasn't until the late 19th century that we got into the inner, the central Africa, the heart of darkness, as they call it.
00:19:26.000 And you pull up, you pull up with your electricity, with your trucks, your cars, your trains, everything that you've invented, and you come across a people, an entire continent of people that haven't invented the wheel, that haven't invented written language, that don't have a single two story building.
00:19:44.000 That don't have governments, that don't have nations, that don't wear clothes, guys, that don't wear clothes, that don't have irrigation, that don't.
00:19:54.000 I mean, we can go on and on and on.
00:19:56.000 And you think, was it so unreasonable?
00:19:59.000 Was it completely irrational that you were at the peak of your civilizational power?
00:20:04.000 The Europeans conquered the entire globe, dominion over the entire world, and they're progressing almost single handedly to the future.
00:20:13.000 And you come across people, That in the same amount of time have not progressed enough to build a two story building or to have something as simple as written language.
00:20:22.000 Is it unnatural for the assumption to be that there must be some kind of difference between the peoples?
00:20:29.000 That was the first red pill.
00:20:30.000 Because I think if you're a colonist and you come over here and you see this stark head and shoulders difference between peoples, you must think, well, obviously there's something going on here.
00:20:41.000 Obviously, there's more to this equation than, oh, well, my slave trade, my whatever.
00:20:49.000 My guns, germs, and steel, and the thinking of Jared Diamond.
00:20:53.000 There's something more to this.
00:20:54.000 That was the first red pill.
00:20:56.000 And then obviously, you look into some of the bell curves, you look into some other things, and then you realize there's a lot to that thought.
00:21:03.000 But I just thought it was a funny visual thing, kind of a perfect visual example of what we're talking about when we say that we are the party of common sense.
00:21:12.000 This is not extremism.
00:21:14.000 This is not radicalism.
00:21:15.000 This is not insane to suggest that the height of this civilization is this.
00:21:22.000 The height of African civilization is this.
00:21:24.000 And more importantly, I mean, this is also important about this.
00:21:29.000 This, which they hold up as their single example of African architecture, or they hold up examples in Ethiopia, this was built under, or this was built, I think, what was it?
00:21:39.000 He said it was built in 250 BC, but I think it was only the city that has been around since 250 BC.
00:21:46.000 This is a mosque.
00:21:48.000 And so if it was a mosque, that would obviously necessitate that this was built.
00:21:53.000 Well, after the 7th century, Islam didn't expand into the Maghreb until well after Muhammad died in 632.
00:22:00.000 So, not only is this not ancient times, this is relatively new compared to Christendom.
00:22:06.000 That's number one.
00:22:07.000 And number two, this is built by Muslims.
00:22:09.000 This is built with Muslim influence, with Muslim technology, with Muslim scholarship, with Muslim money, and everything else.
00:22:17.000 To compare a mosque to Christendom and say that it's African is silly because we know that.
00:22:23.000 All the Islamic culture came from the Middle East, and the Middle East was a civilization, an advanced civilization that existed for thousands and thousands of years.
00:22:33.000 The more prominent, the more telling example is when you compare Christendom and Europe to sub Saharan Africa, because you don't see anything like this in sub Saharan Africa.
00:22:43.000 You see this kind of stuff in West Africa, in North Africa, in Ethiopia, on the Horn of Africa, where you had Fertile Crescent civilizations or Nile Valley civilizations, or to an extent, European civilizations.
00:22:57.000 Times of the Roman Empire.
00:22:59.000 But the real comparison is anything south of the Sahara, which Mali is in the Sahara.
00:23:05.000 That's the real example.
00:23:06.000 And you can find nothing even close to this there.
00:23:09.000 It kind of tells you everything you need to know.
00:23:11.000 But anyway, that's my thought on that.
00:23:15.000 That's just another little thing before we get into it because there's not so much going on in the news.
00:23:20.000 And I'll get rid of our mosque there.
00:23:23.000 But so that was my thought.
00:23:24.000 One of my major red pills.
00:23:25.000 Now we got to talk about the news, folks.
00:23:27.000 We got to talk about what happened.
00:23:29.000 In Syria today.
00:23:30.000 And I saw this early in the morning.
00:23:32.000 It was announced by, I think it was announced first, excuse me, by the Iraqi Prime Minister, Maliki, I think is his name, Nouri al Maliki.
00:23:42.000 And he said that, er, yeah, it was Maliki.
00:23:45.000 He announced that American backed Syrian forces retook the Islamic State's Syrian capital of Raqqa this morning, which means that essentially ISIS as a proto state, ISIS as a Westphalian state in the tradition of any other European country, is finished, is defeated.
00:24:04.000 And I got a little flack for that, for saying this on Twitter, but for all intents and purposes, what was important about ISIS, which is the Islamic State in Iraq, In Syria, the territorial mission was the mission that this would be a state with a top down government structure, with a central government, with territorial acquisitions in multiple countries.
00:24:27.000 That was the project.
00:24:28.000 And it's basically in the name you have the Islamic State or the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria.
00:24:34.000 And what they sought out to do was to create a caliphate, which, you know, this is sort of basic boomer posting.
00:24:40.000 This is basically some Robert Spencer Fox News posting, but.
00:24:45.000 That was the vision of ISIS.
00:24:47.000 That was the project.
00:24:48.000 Whereas you had Al Qaeda on the Arabian Peninsula, whereas you had even Boko Haram, a militant Islamic group in Nigeria, or you had Al Shabaab in Somalia, the project of ISIS was that they wanted a transcontinental territorial Islamic state, which is very different than just a regular terrorist militant organization.
00:25:11.000 Every other group that I just mentioned could be classified as an insurgency, as a militant terror group, as some kind of political insurgency.
00:25:20.000 But what ISIS sought to do was to create a state revolving around Salafi jihadist Islam.
00:25:27.000 So it was very important today that their final capital was taken.
00:25:31.000 We saw earlier in the summer that their capital in Iraq, which was Mosul, was recovered by the Iraqi government.
00:25:37.000 And today their Syrian capital of Raqqa was overtaken.
00:25:41.000 Now, this is important to point out, although it was a big victory, although we technically defeated ISIS as a proto state, we defeated ISIS as a territorial state.
00:25:51.000 And we saw some gains against them in the Philippines as well.
00:25:55.000 ISIS will persist as a terror cell, as a militant terror group.
00:26:00.000 They still have territory, but it was a major defeat for them that they lost their capitals.
00:26:04.000 That means they lose their legitimacy, they lose their prestige, and one of the major things that they had going for them, in contrast to the other terror organizations, was that they had a massive amount of revenue from oil.
00:26:18.000 They had land where they could build chemical weapons, where they could build weapons, where they could have jurisdiction over people.
00:26:24.000 They had A lot of human trafficking was going on there, and that gave them some legitimacy.
00:26:30.000 And in addition to that, they were winning battles against Western backed governments or First World backed governments, I suppose, where they were winning wars against the Russian backed government in Damascus.
00:26:41.000 They were winning wars against, or battles rather, against the American backed government in Baghdad.
00:26:47.000 And that was the source of their prestige.
00:26:49.000 That's why you saw so many people come out from the West and from other countries to join them and people to be inspired by them and commit lone wolf terror attacks.
00:26:58.000 Now that they don't have the territory, now that they don't have the caliphate, which in Islam gives you a lot of legitimacy, now they're just regular, any old terror group.
00:27:09.000 And people talk about this war of ideas.
00:27:11.000 It's a major blow for them on that front as well.
00:27:15.000 Because you understand that the Quran dictates basically that if there is no caliphate, everybody's going to hell.
00:27:21.000 That's kind of how it works, where they say that if there is no territorial Islamic empire headed by a successor to Muhammad, if there's no Islamic empire that's expanding, and I don't know if this is boomer posting or not, but they say that if there is no caliphate like this in the tradition of the Umayyads, of the Abbasids, of the Ottoman Turks, then there is no heaven, there is no paradise for these people.
00:27:47.000 So that's why ISIS was able to gain so much legitimacy.
00:27:52.000 On the simple fact that they declared that they were a caliphate, that they were a successor to Muhammad, they were able immediately to gain the attention of billions, not billions, about a billion and a half Muslims in the world.
00:28:04.000 That is something that is core and very important to the doctrine of Islam.
00:28:09.000 But so that's ISIS.
00:28:11.000 It's a major win for the Trump presidency.
00:28:13.000 And of course, that's why you're not hearing about it anywhere in the mainstream media.
00:28:17.000 You go on BBC, you go on even Fox News, and they're not talking about this.
00:28:22.000 They're not talking about the fact that in nine months, With President Trump's guidance in the Middle East.
00:28:29.000 And people might say that actually it was the Kurds who defeated ISIS, or it was Hezbollah, or it was Iran, or it was Assad, or Putin.
00:28:38.000 Without President Trump stopping and halting in its tracks the horrible policies of Barack Obama and John McCain to actively hinder the efforts of these actors to defeat ISIS, without President Trump putting his military advisors in the right place, conducting the American foreign policy the way he has, you wouldn't have had ISIS defeated in such a short amount of time.
00:29:00.000 Remember, these were U.S.-backed forces that defeated ISIS in both of their capitals, not just Iraq, but Syria as well.
00:29:08.000 So it was President Trump's leadership in the first nine months which won him this battle.
00:29:12.000 Now, could you imagine if it was Barack Obama who defeated ISIS?
00:29:15.000 It'd be on every, it'd be the headline in every major paper, every major television network, every major news media network.
00:29:23.000 Barack Obama defeats ISIS.
00:29:25.000 He'd get on television triumphantly.
00:29:28.000 ISIS is defeated.
00:29:29.000 You know, he'd be talking about that all day long like he was about getting Osama bin Laden.
00:29:35.000 But President Trump doesn't.
00:29:36.000 We don't hear about it.
00:29:37.000 So I think it's big.
00:29:38.000 I think it's going to be really big for him.
00:29:41.000 That was one of his major promises.
00:29:43.000 Promises made, promises kept.
00:29:45.000 He did it.
00:29:46.000 In spite of Israel and others' best attempts, we defeated ISIS.
00:29:50.000 We put him down.
00:29:52.000 And this joins a long list of accomplishments that we have already.
00:29:56.000 People say that this administration is a failure.
00:29:59.000 Like I saw an article the other day, I think it was in The Hill, where they said President Trump is at risk of becoming a failed president.
00:30:06.000 And I think.
00:30:08.000 He doesn't get any credit for the things he's already done, and I listed some of those on my Twitter today.
00:30:13.000 He appointed Neil Gorsuch to the Supreme Court.
00:30:16.000 He killed the TPP, TTIP, and TISA trade agreements.
00:30:20.000 He killed the Paris Climate Accords.
00:30:23.000 He's defeated ISIS.
00:30:24.000 He did a healthcare executive order this week that defunded Obamacare subsidies.
00:30:29.000 Obamacare is basically being destroyed with the power of his pen.
00:30:33.000 You've had massive deregulation, and as a result, the GDP growth for the year is approaching 3%.
00:30:40.000 That's a number we haven't seen in, like, Nine years.
00:30:44.000 What else do we have?
00:30:45.000 We have border wall prototypes already have been constructed in San Diego, California.
00:30:51.000 And he's won something like $15 billion in funding from the Congress in recent months.
00:30:57.000 You have DACA, which has been terminated.
00:31:00.000 Deportations and arrests, in particular, are at record numbers.
00:31:04.000 Record numbers of people are being turned away at the border.
00:31:07.000 This is a wildly successful administration already.
00:31:11.000 Nobody sits down and looks at it point by point.
00:31:14.000 Just how insanely successful this guy has been.
00:31:17.000 It's been nine months.
00:31:18.000 He's got four years, and we've already destroyed all the bad trade deals.
00:31:23.000 NAFTA's in the process of being renegotiated, in before people say that's still around.
00:31:29.000 Our foreign policy so far has been pretty sound.
00:31:32.000 You know, obviously, I don't want to speak too soon, but we haven't gotten involved in any major land wars like we were at risk with Barack Obama.
00:31:41.000 Economy's doing well.
00:31:43.000 Economy's on the road to recovery.
00:31:44.000 Electorally, the GOP is working towards its strongest position ever if Bannon is able to win this civil war.
00:31:53.000 We're in a really good position with this guy.
00:31:55.000 So I know it's easy for people to say no wall progress, no miles of the wall built, but you got to look at the bigger picture.
00:32:02.000 There's a lot that has been going on.
00:32:04.000 And like I said, it's only been nine months.
00:32:06.000 But so that is ISIS.
00:32:09.000 That is Raqqa.
00:32:11.000 Nice little development there.
00:32:12.000 It's nice to see that we're finally making some gains, making some progress because it felt like that was going on forever, right, with ISIS.
00:32:20.000 I remember I was in high school when they first came on the scene and like.
00:32:25.000 2013.
00:32:27.000 Yeah, so I was a sophomore.
00:32:29.000 Maybe I was a freshman in high school, depending on what time of year it was.
00:32:32.000 I think it was.
00:32:34.000 Yeah, I don't know.
00:32:35.000 Not important.
00:32:35.000 But anyway, 2013, when they first came on the scene, I remember people were talking to me about it because I was like a political guy.
00:32:41.000 They were talking about ISIS.
00:32:43.000 I didn't know who ISIS was.
00:32:44.000 I was like, oh, yeah, I definitely know what you're talking about.
00:32:47.000 And I went home and Googled, like, what is ISIS?
00:32:49.000 Oh, it's the Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant.
00:32:53.000 And then I remember I didn't know what the Levant was.
00:32:55.000 Good times.
00:32:56.000 But, um,.
00:32:58.000 I remember when they first came on the scene, it just felt like our morale was horrible because every week it was someone getting their head chopped off, someone getting drowned in a cage, someone getting set on fire, executed with an AA gun, terror attacks like every month.
00:33:13.000 And there was no progress, there was no discernible gains being made.
00:33:17.000 Bashar al Assad was on the ropes.
00:33:19.000 The Iraqi government was basically collapsed.
00:33:22.000 They were spreading into Libya, they were spreading into Afghanistan, the Philippines, Nigeria.
00:33:28.000 And for a long time, for four years, there was no progress made.
00:33:32.000 And finally, under President Trump, we saw some serious gains, both with Mosul and Raqqa.
00:33:37.000 So, good job, my dude.
00:33:39.000 Good job, Mr. President.
00:33:42.000 But so that's Raqqa.
00:33:42.000 Awesome work.
00:33:45.000 The other thing I wanted to talk about, and we'll get into questions in about 10 minutes here, but there is one thing I wanted to get to.
00:33:51.000 I saw today on Twitter, this caught me off guard a little bit.
00:33:56.000 I didn't really know what to make of this, but Anthony Scaramucci's.
00:33:59.000 Media company posted a poll this morning.
00:34:02.000 I didn't know if it was real, I didn't know if it was fake, but they posted a poll this morning essentially asking how many Jews died during the Holocaust.
00:34:11.000 And they gave four options in this poll.
00:34:13.000 It was like less than 1 million, 3 million, 4 million, more than 5 million.
00:34:20.000 And everybody's freaking out about this in the replies.
00:34:23.000 Everybody's like, dude, this is a bad idea.
00:34:26.000 Dude, shut it down.
00:34:27.000 You're humiliating yourself, blah, blah, blah.
00:34:30.000 And at first, I had no idea what to make of this.
00:34:32.000 I'm thinking, is this the real?
00:34:33.000 Scaramucci?
00:34:34.000 Is this the real deal or is this some kind of a troll?
00:34:37.000 Turns out this was his actual media company.
00:34:39.000 This was directly related to Anthony Scaramucci that they posted a poll asking how many people died in the Holocaust.
00:34:46.000 And it's just hilarious to me how you can ask a simple question about an historical event.
00:34:55.000 And in the words of the person who posted the poll, they said they wanted to test people's historical knowledge or demonstrate people's historical ignorance by saying, You know, you don't know how many people died in the Holocaust or whatever.
00:35:08.000 But it's just so striking to me that you ask a simple question like this and people interpret it as hate.
00:35:16.000 And that's universally what it was interpreted as.
00:35:19.000 Jake Tapper from CNN, Fox News, Breitbart, everybody that wrote an article about this was saying this was Holocaust denial.
00:35:29.000 This was anti Semitism of the highest order.
00:35:31.000 This was humiliating.
00:35:32.000 This was horrible.
00:35:33.000 He's ruining his career.
00:35:36.000 And I think, would it be hateful to ask how many Russians died during World War II?
00:35:42.000 Would it be hateful to ask, I don't know, just as a hypothetical, how many Ukrainians died?
00:35:48.000 Deliberately at the hands of Joseph Stalin in the collectivization crisis of the 1930s?
00:35:55.000 Would it be racist to ask how many Chinese were starved by Mao Zedong?
00:36:03.000 Why is that wrong?
00:36:04.000 Why is that wrong to ask how many people died?
00:36:07.000 Why is that universally condemned by everybody on Twitter as some kind of a crime that he asked how many people died in an historical event?
00:36:16.000 He didn't say, he didn't even say that less than six million died.
00:36:16.000 That's all he asked.
00:36:20.000 He didn't even say that.
00:36:21.000 He said, how many?
00:36:23.000 And people were, what do you call it?
00:36:28.000 People were prompted to respond with their answer.
00:36:31.000 What do you think?
00:36:33.000 And somehow that's anti Semitic.
00:36:34.000 Somehow that's hateful.
00:36:35.000 It's actually against the law in something like 20 countries in Europe to deny the Holocaust, to deny an historical event.
00:36:43.000 Are there any other laws like this?
00:36:45.000 I mean, if I posted a poll on my Twitter and asked how many people died during the Armenian genocide, would anybody get upset by that?
00:36:53.000 Cenk Uyghur from the Young Turks is a known Armenian genocide denier.
00:36:58.000 He denies that the Turks had anything to do with that.
00:37:01.000 It wasn't a genocide, whatever.
00:37:03.000 And he runs one of the biggest alternative media, left wing alternative media, YouTube channels in the world.
00:37:10.000 Where's the boycott?
00:37:11.000 Where's the hate?
00:37:12.000 Where's the universal condemnation?
00:37:14.000 He said Politicon.
00:37:16.000 How come Stephen Irving, that's his name, right?
00:37:20.000 Irving, how come he doesn't get invited to these things?
00:37:22.000 I think he's dead, but how come he didn't before?
00:37:25.000 Or maybe he's still alive.
00:37:26.000 I'm not totally sure on him.
00:37:28.000 Or some of these other guys.
00:37:29.000 How come Kevin McDonald is invited on, right?
00:37:32.000 Very, very interesting.
00:37:34.000 And then coincidentally, same day, this is the same day, Ursula Haverbeck, who we've talked about before, she was that quote unquote Nazi grandma who got sentenced to 11 months in prison in October of 2015 for denying the Holocaust.
00:37:49.000 She got sentenced to jail again today, six months in prison for denying the Holocaust, which.
00:37:58.000 Does nobody see anything wrong with this?
00:38:00.000 Does nobody see any weird double standard going on here?
00:38:04.000 Does nobody see anything like this is the only thing that you're not allowed to talk about?
00:38:08.000 This is the only thing that it is literally illegal to question in more than 20 countries in Europe?
00:38:15.000 Nobody sees anything weird about that?
00:38:17.000 They file it under racial incitement or incitement to racial hatred to say that this historical event didn't happen the way people said it did.
00:38:28.000 30 million Ukrainians didn't die under Joseph Stalin.
00:38:32.000 Is that illegal?
00:38:33.000 Is that inciting racial hatred against Ukrainians?
00:38:36.000 They're a minority in this country.
00:38:38.000 If I say that however many people didn't die in the Armenian genocide didn't actually die or in the manner that people say they did, is that an incitement to racial hatred?
00:38:49.000 It's not under German law.
00:38:50.000 It's not under French law.
00:38:52.000 It's not under British law.
00:38:53.000 It's not under Canadian law.
00:38:56.000 But with one particular event, It is.
00:38:59.000 And notice, you know, we're not getting into the substance.
00:39:02.000 I'm not going to weigh in on this issue because it's literally illegal in many countries, and you get blacklisted if you have an alternative view on it.
00:39:11.000 But just think about the laws.
00:39:12.000 Just think about the cover up that's going on here.
00:39:15.000 Why?
00:39:16.000 You know, if this is something not for nothing, I don't deny the Holocaust.
00:39:22.000 Of course it happened.
00:39:23.000 Of course it was real.
00:39:24.000 Of course six million died.
00:39:27.000 However, you have Holocaust museums and memorials in like every state in the country, you have Holocaust memorials and museums in like every country in the world.
00:39:38.000 Every public high school, every public middle school, every public elementary school, every college.
00:39:44.000 All they teach is the same narrative about it.
00:39:47.000 Nobody's allowed to teach anything different.
00:39:49.000 And from the time, literally like you're in kindergarten, they show you horrible, horrible images, like obscene, almost like borderline offensive images of the brutality that these people faced to young children.
00:40:05.000 They're not allowed into an R rated movie, but from the time they're in kindergarten, in public schools are being shown these horrible atrocities and these films about it.
00:40:13.000 And every year there's a big film about it, and every year there's a big book about it, and everybody in middle school has to.
00:40:18.000 Has to read about it, whether it's Ellie Wiesel, who's a liar, by the way, who made up his story, or they have to read Anne Frank's diary, they have to read Number the Stars or whatever.
00:40:30.000 And then there's laws on top of all that.
00:40:32.000 You can't question it.
00:40:34.000 Nobody on television questions it.
00:40:35.000 It's illegal to question it.
00:40:38.000 It really just puzzles me.
00:40:41.000 If this is something that is like as plain as day, if this is something as indisputable as the fact that, I don't know, 9 11 happened, or as indisputable as the fact that.
00:40:52.000 That the sun will come up tomorrow or gravity exists.
00:40:56.000 Why do you need memorials, museums, every 10 square feet?
00:41:01.000 How come you need every high school, every institution of learning in every state in the country at every level to be teaching the narrative?
00:41:07.000 How come in 20 countries it's illegal to question it?
00:41:10.000 You have to ask yourself why.
00:41:10.000 Why?
00:41:12.000 We're not getting into the specifics, we're not taking the bait on it, but you have to ask yourself why.
00:41:18.000 The truth fears no investigation.
00:41:21.000 You know, all this science stuff, all this climate change stuff.
00:41:25.000 As much as people would like it to be illegal, people still teach the alternative.
00:41:29.000 As much as people would like to say certain things are indisputable, like the fact that the earth is round, people are allowed to dispute it all day long.
00:41:38.000 But yet they say if it was legal for people to question this event, it would happen again.
00:41:45.000 So if it was legal to say the earth was flat, do you think the earth would be flat?
00:41:49.000 Do you think we would, oh, we'll make the earth flat?
00:41:51.000 And I don't know what consequences would result as a.
00:41:56.000 Would happen as a result of that if people were allowed to deny the Holodomor, the Holodomor in Ukraine.
00:42:02.000 Do you think that would happen again?
00:42:04.000 Why isn't it illegal to question that one, right?
00:42:06.000 Weird, weird stuff.
00:42:08.000 A lot of weird things going on.
00:42:11.000 So, weird stuff, weird stuff.
00:42:14.000 But I'm sure there's nothing to it.
00:42:17.000 I'm sure it's fine.
00:42:19.000 Of course it's fine.
00:42:20.000 Of course it's fine, guys.
00:42:22.000 Don't look into the matter.
00:42:23.000 Listen, listen, we talked about it, and I, look, I went way over the line.
00:42:28.000 All right, I apologize.
00:42:29.000 I should have never.
00:42:30.000 I should have never told you guys to ask questions about why there's this blatant double standard with the laws.
00:42:35.000 I should have never challenged you to think about this.
00:42:38.000 My deepest, sincerest apologies.
00:42:40.000 And, you know, actually, I will instruct you guys not to read books about this stuff.
00:42:45.000 Don't look up any of these alternative theories, okay?
00:42:48.000 Don't look it up.
00:42:49.000 You're not doing yourselves any favors, all right?
00:42:53.000 Don't look up Irving.
00:42:55.000 Don't look up any of these things.
00:42:56.000 Don't look up what people have to say on the matter, all right?
00:43:00.000 You're inciting racial hatred.
00:43:00.000 Stop.
00:43:02.000 Don't do it.
00:43:03.000 Why would you even do it?
00:43:03.000 Don't do it.
00:43:05.000 What do you hate?
00:43:06.000 What do you hate, minorities?
00:43:07.000 Why would you look something up?
00:43:10.000 Makes me so sick.
00:43:11.000 Makes me so sick when I realize how many haters are out there trying to ask questions about historical events.
00:43:17.000 Why are you asking so many questions, huh?
00:43:19.000 Why are you asking so many questions about why things are illegal?
00:43:22.000 Can't you just accept that you can't question certain things?
00:43:26.000 People these days are so racist.
00:43:28.000 But that is the poll by our good friend, the Mooch.
00:43:32.000 I don't know.
00:43:33.000 Is he based?
00:43:34.000 I don't know.
00:43:34.000 We'll see.
00:43:36.000 But it's looking like it's about time.
00:43:39.000 We're at about 7 45.
00:43:41.000 Here.
00:43:41.000 And was there some kind of a glitch?
00:43:43.000 Because I see a lot of people dropped off after a while.
00:43:47.000 Is my stream health okay?
00:43:49.000 But what do you call it?
00:43:50.000 We're going to move into our questions here on our Super Chat.
00:43:55.000 And what do we got?
00:43:57.000 We got Alec Doberton.
00:44:00.000 Will we ever see her locked up?
00:44:02.000 And I assume you're referring to Hillary Clinton there.
00:44:05.000 I don't know.
00:44:05.000 It's tough to say.
00:44:07.000 I don't think so.
00:44:08.000 Only because she's just got too much clout.
00:44:10.000 She's got too much.
00:44:12.000 Power.
00:44:14.000 I'd like to say that she does get locked up.
00:44:16.000 I'd like to say that maybe she gets put behind bars in Trump's second term, but I don't know.
00:44:22.000 It's tough because for that to happen, you would have to have a real coup in the establishment.
00:44:28.000 You would have to have real institutional power transferred from this neoliberal elite, from this New World Order, to Trump and his populist people, his coalition.
00:44:40.000 So until that happens, I don't see Hillary Clinton getting put behind bars.
00:44:45.000 That said, though, that's really kind of, I don't know, it's sort of putting the cart before the horse.
00:44:52.000 Like, sure, we put Hillary Clinton in jail, but what difference does it make if the Congress is still full of people like Hillary Clinton?
00:44:59.000 If all the intelligence community and the Defense Department and the bureaucracy and the politicians and the party apparatuses are still full of people like Hillary Clinton?
00:45:09.000 Really wouldn't matter if she was in jail or not.
00:45:11.000 I think that'd be a token, an important symbol, but nonetheless a symbol.
00:45:16.000 So I think you've got to focus on the electoral stuff.
00:45:19.000 Maybe we could get her behind bars later.
00:45:23.000 Iridima Bill, nice, nice.
00:45:26.000 He says, Are you more motivated to save your country or your religion?
00:45:31.000 Please don't cuck and say both.
00:45:33.000 Your Trump show last night was one of your best.
00:45:35.000 Well, thank you.
00:45:37.000 It's difficult to say because I don't necessarily think the two are mutually exclusive.
00:45:42.000 You know, why do people want to rank these things?
00:45:44.000 Religion is the truth, and nation is part of the truth.
00:45:48.000 Nation is part of what is just and what is right and what is consistent.
00:45:53.000 With cosmic truth, but obviously, I think religion surpasses it in a way because, on a moral level, what we understand religion to be is like ontological truths about our existence, right?
00:46:06.000 So, it's not so much about saving your religion as though it's mine, as though it's like needs to be rescued.
00:46:14.000 Guys, Christianity doesn't like need rescue, like Jesus Christ doesn't need rescuing.
00:46:19.000 What's going to happen is going to happen, but it's about do we want to reimpose the truth?
00:46:25.000 Do we want to impose?
00:46:26.000 Reimpose a moral order.
00:46:28.000 God is basically, I think, ambivalent as to what we do.
00:46:31.000 I mean, he'll still be there whether we believe in him or not.
00:46:35.000 But it's about if we want what's best for our country, if we want to save our nation, it's sort of indispensable that we bring back these divine, cosmic, moral truths about our people.
00:46:47.000 So I don't, the two are not mutually, it's not like you have nation and religion.
00:46:52.000 That is a neoliberal, modernist fiction.
00:46:55.000 It is absolute nonsense.
00:46:57.000 And when people in the alt right criticize me about, I know they come at me from this really edgy skeptic angle.
00:47:04.000 Whoa, you're an atheist?
00:47:05.000 Bro, I've never heard that one before.
00:47:07.000 Don't you're gonna make my head explode with all your edgy denials of divinity?
00:47:14.000 It's insane to me because these people haven't done their homework, they haven't read the Bible, they haven't read Thomas Aquinas, they haven't read these things.
00:47:22.000 These things are important.
00:47:23.000 You cannot just, I don't understand how people can flat out reject these traditionalists, flat out reject the religion of their ancestors, the religion of their people, of the continent, of the great things they've accomplished, of great leaders without even having investigated it.
00:47:41.000 For a moment, without even having read the seminal text or philosophical texts on the matter.
00:47:47.000 It's only your immortal soul that we're talking about, right?
00:47:50.000 It's only like, is there an.
00:47:53.000 I know these are not big questions like immigration, but kind of important, right?
00:47:59.000 Unreal.
00:48:00.000 People, oh, well, Christianity is cucked.
00:48:03.000 Jesus was Jewish.
00:48:05.000 Yeah, you're a retard.
00:48:07.000 You don't know what you're talking about.
00:48:09.000 So that kind of thing kills me.
00:48:11.000 I'm not talking about you, Irredema Bill.
00:48:13.000 I'm talking about.
00:48:14.000 People who criticize me about religion, but when people ask me, are you more motivated to save one or the other?
00:48:20.000 It's not mutually exclusive.
00:48:22.000 In order to save your country, you must necessarily save religion.
00:48:26.000 How else are you going to do it?
00:48:28.000 How else are you going to motivate people to repopulate the country?
00:48:31.000 If not, how else are you going to motivate people to fight?
00:48:35.000 Not going to happen.
00:48:36.000 Not going to happen.
00:48:37.000 These dummies, and that's why I get really concerned about infiltration, about people leading us down the wrong path.
00:48:45.000 Traditionalists, nationalists tell us all day long to discard our flag, our national anthem, our history, our founding fathers, the religion of our ancestors.
00:48:58.000 Hmm, not quite right there.
00:49:00.000 What do they want us to unite around?
00:49:02.000 Some kind of Indo Aryan identity?
00:49:05.000 They want us to go back to paganism?
00:49:07.000 They want us to go back to what?
00:49:11.000 To Savitri Devi for the esoteric Hitlerites?
00:49:15.000 Come on, guys.
00:49:17.000 You know, that guy from Red Ice, what's his name?
00:49:22.000 Reinhard Wolf was getting all at my throat.
00:49:25.000 He'd sty, totally unfollowed me on Twitter.
00:49:28.000 Oh my God, so dramatic, such a drama queen.
00:49:31.000 He got all up in my business because I was defending religion.
00:49:34.000 It's like, dude, what is the damn alternative?
00:49:39.000 So dumb, so dumb.
00:49:42.000 And not for nothing, but I was reading, I was rereading.
00:49:46.000 Chapter from Decline of the West by Spengler the other night, and he makes a very good point that ancient Greece, ancient Rome is not of the same character as Western Europe.
00:49:57.000 Even the alt right authors, even the alt right texts, the alt right literature like Spengler, even they admit that Western Europe, Western Christendom is more European than this paganism that existed in the Mediterranean 3,000 years ago.
00:50:14.000 Even Spengler, Bismarck say the Europea.
00:50:18.000 Europe is a geographic expression, not an identity, not any coherent system or anything like that.
00:50:26.000 So, kind of silly.
00:50:27.000 Kind of a lot of silly stuff there.
00:50:30.000 Howard Morton with the $1.
00:50:32.000 Thank you, my man, Howard Morton.
00:50:34.000 Kevin Gomez is Nick wearing dress pants under the table.
00:50:38.000 The thought just occurred to me that he might not, and I can't stop wondering.
00:50:41.000 You'll never know.
00:50:42.000 You'll never know, Kevin.
00:50:43.000 That's the beauty of it.
00:50:45.000 I don't have to be wearing pants.
00:50:48.000 You don't have to know.
00:50:49.000 Frankly, you'll never know.
00:50:50.000 I'll never tell you.
00:50:52.000 Right?
00:50:53.000 I mean, why would I wear pants if it's more comfortable to not?
00:50:56.000 But then again, it would be kind of silly if I wasn't wearing pants right now.
00:50:59.000 I'd be kind of silly if I was wearing shorts or anything like that.
00:51:02.000 But you just don't know.
00:51:04.000 I would strike you as the kind of person that would wear dress pants regardless, right?
00:51:08.000 I would strike you as the person who would put up the whole get up and everything else, right?
00:51:14.000 Or would I?
00:51:15.000 I don't know.
00:51:16.000 I'll never tell.
00:51:18.000 Peter Starzamachik, what's your take on Kurdistan becoming their own country?
00:51:24.000 Israel seems to be in favor of this move.
00:51:27.000 Almost everything that Israel's in favor of, I'm against basically.
00:51:30.000 Israel's in favor of a Kurdistan because it will destabilize completely the Middle East.
00:51:37.000 You understand that there are portions of Kurdistan, major populations of Kurds in Turkey, in Syria, in Iraq, in Iran, all countries that Israel wants to see destabilized, brought down a notch, etc., etc.
00:51:53.000 And it's looking to be that way.
00:51:54.000 It's looking like conflict is on the horizon.
00:51:59.000 As Iraq, I think they marched through the streets of Kirkuk today, which was a major Kurdish city taken by them from.
00:52:08.000 Are taken over by them from ISIS, and the Iraqi federal troops marched down the streets with the Iraqi flag, raised it up over the towns to say, No, no, this is still Iraq.
00:52:18.000 And of course, the Kurds had their independence referendum a couple of weeks ago.
00:52:22.000 So it's looking like we're gearing up for a conflict there.
00:52:26.000 Of course, Israel likes it because it destabilizes their neighbors, destabilizes countries in their outer periphery.
00:52:33.000 And so it is in the United States' interest to oppose a Kurdistan.
00:52:37.000 We want order, we want stability.
00:52:39.000 That's our objective.
00:52:41.000 So, no good.
00:52:43.000 No good.
00:52:43.000 We don't want it.
00:52:46.000 Makka Alpha Ka says, Nick, I personally believe 7 million Jews died, and I have yet to be called a liar.
00:52:54.000 I think 8 million died, okay?
00:52:56.000 I think the numbers are underreported because of anti Semites, because of systematic, systemic anti Semitism in the press.
00:53:06.000 You know, people might say that Jewish people, that there's Jewish people that run the New York Times.
00:53:12.000 People might say, like, and this is lies, guys.
00:53:15.000 People might say that Jewish people run NBC or CNN, but actually, okay, actually, I watched a Prager U video, and actually, it's Jew hating anti Israel leftists who run the mainstream media.
00:53:28.000 And the reason that they underreport numbers like that is because they're anti Semites, okay?
00:53:33.000 It's probably like 10 million, all right?
00:53:35.000 Geez, I'm so sick of all these anti Semites.
00:53:38.000 It makes me want to kill myself, all these anti Semites.
00:53:43.000 I'm joking.
00:53:43.000 I'm joking.
00:53:44.000 Remember, I am in perfect mental health.
00:53:46.000 Not depressed.
00:53:47.000 I'm a good driver.
00:53:48.000 Okay.
00:53:49.000 I have no heart conditions.
00:53:51.000 I'm all right.
00:53:51.000 That was a joke.
00:53:52.000 I don't do drugs.
00:53:54.000 I don't bathe with electronic appliances.
00:53:57.000 Nobody wants to kill me.
00:53:58.000 So if you see me dead, you know, suicided with three gunshot wounds to the back of the head, look into it.
00:54:07.000 Goebbels wagging finger.
00:54:09.000 I like it when you yell at us.
00:54:10.000 Keep it up.
00:54:11.000 I like to yell at you.
00:54:13.000 I like to yell at you.
00:54:14.000 How many times have you screamed this week?
00:54:16.000 That's what I want to ask.
00:54:18.000 If you don't, at a certain point in your day, just drop everything and yell and scream, maybe you don't do that because you're at work or whatever, but if you don't do that, I don't think you're really in the nationalist right.
00:54:31.000 I can't tell you how many times I just scream, like a blood curdling yell because I'll be doing something on the computer.
00:54:40.000 Like I'm on this Mac, perfect example.
00:54:43.000 I'm on this Mac, okay?
00:54:44.000 I'm downloading my Bitcoin wallet, right?
00:54:48.000 And I download the application from.
00:54:50.000 I forget what the website was, but I try and open it and it tells me you cannot open this application because it is from an unidentified internet developer.
00:55:00.000 So I'm like, what the hell?
00:55:02.000 So I click on it again.
00:55:02.000 It tells me you can't open this.
00:55:04.000 So I'm like, are you joking?
00:55:05.000 I just can't open this application.
00:55:07.000 So I go into my system preferences, go over, bing, bing, bong, into security, privacy.
00:55:14.000 I scroll down and it tells me, like, okay, you can temporarily unlock this feature, whatever, so that you can open this program.
00:55:24.000 So I click temporarily allow the Bitcoin wallet program to open.
00:55:29.000 And I click on the Bitcoin program and it says, unidentified developer can't open.
00:55:33.000 I'm like, what?
00:55:33.000 I just clicked.
00:55:34.000 Allow.
00:55:35.000 So I'm clicking allow, clicking, it's not letting me.
00:55:37.000 I mean, these are the kind of things that make you lose your mind because it's not enough.
00:55:42.000 It's not enough that you got a thousand things on your mind.
00:55:45.000 It's not enough that, like, the modern world is sick and perverted and depraved, and you got all this sick stuff going on, and you got all these liars going around, and all your friends and family are cucked and brainwashed, but then you got to deal with stuff like this.
00:56:00.000 Cost you $1,000 for a machine like this, and you can't download a simple application.
00:56:05.000 So you got to yell, folks.
00:56:07.000 You gotta yell.
00:56:09.000 I got people, it makes me lose my mind sometimes.
00:56:13.000 You will never know.
00:56:14.000 Sometimes I'm on my phone, I'm just trying to browse Twitter, and I got people DMing me message after message.
00:56:20.000 I got people texting me, people sending me Snapchats, people messaging me on Facebook.
00:56:25.000 I got unread emails.
00:56:27.000 It's too much.
00:56:28.000 It's too much.
00:56:29.000 If I don't respond, take the hint, reel it in a little bit.
00:56:33.000 You know, I'm like the other day, I'm on Twitter, and I'm just trying to browse my timeline, or I was watching a video, I was watching this Mosley thing.
00:56:40.000 I'm just trying to watch my speech and I see a message.
00:56:43.000 Blah, Message, you know, Nick, blah, blah, blah.
00:56:47.000 It's like, I'm not responding, dude.
00:56:50.000 Sheesh.
00:56:51.000 This one guy, this one guy's messaging me on Twitter.
00:56:56.000 And it's just block text, block text, huge message, huge message.
00:57:03.000 And it's like weeks on end.
00:57:04.000 It's like every other day I get a massive message from this guy.
00:57:08.000 What normal person does this?
00:57:11.000 If I send somebody a message that says, hey, and they don't respond immediately, I'm like, oh, I look so desperate.
00:57:18.000 I will never text anyone first ever again if I say, hey.
00:57:23.000 If I send somebody a message and they respond with a one word answer or whatever, I'm like, fine, I just won't respond.
00:57:30.000 I don't understand how people can send you a novel and you don't respond for days, and they're like, okay, I bet he just needs more.
00:57:37.000 I bet he just wants more of this.
00:57:39.000 It makes you want to scream, it makes you want to ram your head through the wall.
00:57:44.000 And then other things going on.
00:57:45.000 But so, yeah, I'm with you.
00:57:47.000 I'm with you.
00:57:47.000 I like to yell at you.
00:57:48.000 I like to yell in general.
00:57:52.000 Neon Hill says the temple of iron calls you.
00:57:57.000 All right, yeah.
00:57:59.000 All this stuff about lifting, all this stuff about the gym, like, I understand the necessity of it, but this cult of, like, the iron, the gym, it's too much for me.
00:58:09.000 It's a little overwhelming, a little bit LARPy.
00:58:13.000 Like, I get it.
00:58:14.000 I understand the necessity of getting big, of being physically fit.
00:58:17.000 I'm not negating that.
00:58:18.000 But this, like, temple of iron kind of thing.
00:58:21.000 I get the irony of it, maybe, but a little over the top for old Nick.
00:58:28.000 J.W., thank you for dog whistling as a flat earth for one of us.
00:58:33.000 Yeah, that is the takeaway, righto.
00:58:37.000 Nick, do you know that most Christian traditions have pagan roots?
00:58:40.000 The Christmas tree, Santa Claus, every herd of Krampus?
00:58:43.000 Yeah, no, we all have heard this argument before.
00:58:46.000 We all have heard this argument of.
00:58:49.000 Christmas is actually based on the pagan holiday of Saturnalia, or Easter is actually, they were all reconstructed to coincide with the pagan holidays in the Roman Empire.
00:58:59.000 And therefore, Christianity is actually pagan.
00:59:02.000 Yeah, okay.
00:59:04.000 But paganism, you know this.
00:59:06.000 You know this.
00:59:06.000 Whether or not you co opt the rituals, which are temporal, which are material, whether or not you co opt the rituals, the calendar, et cetera, et cetera, et cetera, does not dispute the fact that polytheism, that paganism and the virtues, or rather lack thereof, promoted by that system of beliefs, is totally different, completely incompatible with Christianity.
00:59:31.000 Christianity is not about.
00:59:34.000 Christianity is not about Easter.
00:59:36.000 Christianity is about the birth of Christ, the resurrection of Christ.
00:59:40.000 That's what it's about.
00:59:41.000 It's about what's in the Bible.
00:59:42.000 It's not about, you know, I love a checkmate Christian.
00:59:45.000 Actually, Christmas was a pagan holiday that was reworked.
00:59:50.000 Gotcha.
00:59:51.000 Like, no, it doesn't work like that.
00:59:53.000 And, you know, if you don't believe me, if you think that's crazy, go down the street and why don't you celebrate a pagan holiday with your neighbor?
01:00:00.000 Talk to your parents about celebrating the actual pagan holiday this Christmas.
01:00:05.000 See what they have to say about that.
01:00:06.000 See if they relate to that, right?
01:00:08.000 Wacky stuff.
01:00:09.000 Don't mean to neg you, but it's like these skeptic atheist arguments.
01:00:13.000 They're so cringe to me as somebody that, you know, we're not talking about like cucked evangelical, like Joel Osteen stuff.
01:00:21.000 We're not talking about that.
01:00:22.000 We're talking about ancient Christianity.
01:00:25.000 We're talking about Thomas Aquinas.
01:00:27.000 We're talking about things that many people have never heard before because they don't hear about it unless they receive a Catholic education.
01:00:36.000 Kevin Gomez.
01:00:38.000 Blood curdling.
01:00:39.000 Nick is a tech boomer.
01:00:40.000 It's true.
01:00:41.000 I can't do the technology.
01:00:43.000 I don't have the patience for it.
01:00:45.000 The tedium, you got to go in and it's too much for me.
01:00:49.000 You know, I remember when I was a youth, when I was a young man, I was in this class.
01:00:56.000 They had all these like gifted programs when I was in elementary school, which I resented that term.
01:01:01.000 It means you're smart, it means you're high IQ.
01:01:04.000 The gifted is like a euphemism to make it seem like.
01:01:08.000 You're not smart.
01:01:10.000 You're just in this other category over here.
01:01:12.000 No, no, smart kids.
01:01:14.000 But so they had all these gifted programs for people that did well on their map tests or whatever.
01:01:20.000 And so there was one of these at the local community college.
01:01:24.000 And it was a class that was like how to program computer games.
01:01:28.000 And it was on this program called Game Maker.
01:01:31.000 I don't know if people use that or not.
01:01:32.000 I don't know if that's before your time, Generation Z.
01:01:36.000 But I just remember going insane because when I actually looked at how to Program things like a game or whatever, and how you actually have to put in like every single thing and all this code and commands.
01:01:49.000 It's too much.
01:01:50.000 It's overwhelming.
01:01:51.000 I don't like that.
01:01:51.000 I'm not that kind of a guy.
01:01:54.000 Tech Boomer confirmed.
01:01:57.000 Mac Alpha, how do you feel about giving California to African Americans as reparations?
01:02:02.000 I don't know about California, maybe Georgia, but I certainly do support it.
01:02:07.000 I certainly do support giving them their own territory.
01:02:10.000 I think it'd be better for both.
01:02:12.000 And certainly, Louis Farrakhan and some of the black nationalists have talked about this.
01:02:18.000 Why are we trying to make this work?
01:02:20.000 It hasn't worked every year since the civil rights era began, every year since integration began.
01:02:29.000 Race relations have gotten worse and people have been worst off.
01:02:33.000 So I think this is one of the few solutions that, while people might not like it, might not be politically correct, I think it's one of the few solutions that is realistic and sober.
01:02:45.000 So, I, you know, we wouldn't be thrilled to give away land, but you got to do what you got to do, you know?
01:02:50.000 It's after eight.
01:02:53.000 Oh, whoops.
01:02:54.000 And mom's breaking in.
01:02:55.000 She's telling me it's after eight o'clock.
01:02:57.000 We got to go.
01:02:58.000 I'll take one more question and then we got to go because it's time for overdrive.
01:03:02.000 But we got Jay here.
01:03:03.000 Christian burned all the science books of the pagan Romans.
01:03:06.000 Christians are anti science, which is why Europeans have rejected it.
01:03:10.000 Okay, so this is a modernist fag.
01:03:12.000 I think you got to look at the Irish monks and how they preserved the scholarship of the Europeans.
01:03:18.000 That is a lot of nonsense.
01:03:20.000 Christianity is not anti science.
01:03:22.000 Copernicus, Newton were high powered Christians, gave their life to Christ.
01:03:29.000 I mean, you're wrong at that.
01:03:30.000 The facts are against you.
01:03:31.000 But we don't have time to get into that.
01:03:33.000 Yeah, that's James.
01:03:34.000 He's asking me to start the show, but we'll have to call it a night.
01:03:38.000 That's the show.
01:03:39.000 Remember, you can follow us down below on Twitter, at Nick J. Fuentes.
01:03:42.000 You can find everything, all the information there.
01:03:45.000 We're on the air Monday through Friday, 7 p.m. Central, 8 p.m. Eastern Time.
01:03:49.000 I'm Nicholas J. Fuentes.
01:03:50.000 This was America First.
01:03:51.000 We got to go.
01:03:52.000 It's time for Overdrive with James Alsop.
01:03:55.000 Sorry, James.
01:03:55.000 Sorry, Matt.
01:03:56.000 Lost track of the time, but we'll give it to you now.
01:03:59.000 So we'll catch you again tomorrow.
01:04:01.000 Have a great rest of your evening.
01:04:02.000 Thanks for watching, and catch us on Overdrive in a moment.
01:04:06.000 Americanism, not globalism, will be our credo.
01:04:13.000 It's going to be only America first.
01:04:18.000 America first.
01:04:22.000 The American people will come first once again.
01:04:46.000 It's going to be only America first.
01:04:49.000 America first.