00:02:12.000Now, I thought that he had a problem with James Alsup and not so much me.
00:02:16.000I've heard him say things about me before, but I'm watching this and he's saying things like, I don't believe in the First Amendment, like I want an ethnostate, all kinds of stuff, which, you know, whether or not it's true is sort of beside the point.
00:02:28.000I don't understand why he keeps coming after me.
00:02:32.000I don't know why I live rent free in Ali Akbar's head that every morning, just about every week for a couple of weeks now, I wake up to some new thing where he's talking trash on me.
00:02:44.000And so I tweeted at him and I said, you know, look, if you have a problem with me, if you have a problem with me and James Alsop, who we're just doing our thing, you know, it's not like we go after Ali.
00:02:55.000It's not like anybody's really even concerned with what he's doing.
00:03:00.000You have Cernovich, you have Lucian, you have Milo, you have people that are movers and shakers, and then you have like this weird felon with weird physiognomy who sort of latched onto them.
00:03:15.000He sort of glommed on to this larger movement, and so he's basically irrelevant.
00:03:20.000He doesn't even have a verification, which kind of tells you something.
00:03:23.000Not to say like verification's the end-all be-all, but if you're a political operative, if you're a mainstream right-wing pundit, at the very least you should have that.
00:03:34.000I mean, I'm not mainstream, I'm far-right, I'm not that well-known, and I have a verification, so what does it tell you?
00:03:40.000Anyway, so I tweeted at him and I said, you know, look, if you have beef, if you have a problem with what I'm saying, if you think I'm wrong, He's talking on his periscope like he's an expert, and we're just a couple of kids, me and James.
00:03:53.000He says, I'm not going to take political advice from someone that's 21 years old, 19, close enough.
00:03:59.000But he's making it out like he's studied these issues.
00:04:02.000Like, I imagine this image of Ali that he thinks of himself as a political philosopher.
00:04:08.000He's poring over texts, old texts in libraries, scanning for details, sitting late at night, smoking a pipe, and pontificating, you know, thinking about politics.
00:04:20.000And so I tweeted Look, if you want to sit down and have a conversation, if you have a problem with what you're doing, come on our podcast.
00:04:45.000If he would just have the balls, if he would just have the conviction and the courage to just appear, not even in person, but just to like Skype in or whatever, you know, go on Google Hangouts and join us for a discussion, we would be happy to have him.
00:05:00.000And we would say, you know, look, you believe.
00:05:02.000That the alt right shouldn't have free speech, but you want to defend the free speech of degenerates and communists and subversive elements in the country.
00:06:02.000It's not even like they don't have an argument.
00:06:04.000Maybe he has an argument, maybe he doesn't, but it means that he couldn't even come up with something funny.
00:06:09.000Like he's afraid of the bants that would come his way if he tweeted at me publicly and I responded to it.
00:06:16.000Because I'm sure he just doesn't have that skill.
00:06:19.000I don't think he's very witty, I don't think he's very quick.
00:06:23.000But so I respond and I say, you know, it's just kind of disappointing that you have all these pundits who are in it for the money.
00:06:30.000It's so clear they're in it for the money, they're in it for the opportunity, they're in it for the fame or the connections or whatever else.
00:06:38.000And despite that, they just don't engage anymore.
00:06:42.000I was just disappointed beyond anything else.
00:06:45.000It would be one thing if he came back with an insult.
00:06:48.000It'd be one thing if he came on the show.
00:06:50.000It'd be one thing if he replied with a substantive argument, even if he called me like a Nazi or something.
00:06:56.000But to do this very quiet, conciliatory approach where he's like, actually, you know what?
00:07:27.000I hesitate to call it that because we don't want to demean the commentary that I do on this show, which many times can be intellectual and is supported by facts and history and can be educational and informative.
00:07:40.000I don't mean to degrade what we do on this show.
00:07:42.000I don't mean to degrade what people in the movement do.
00:07:44.000But to a certain extent, When you're in politics, there is a theatrical element to it, and we all sort of recognize that we're a part of history.
00:07:52.000We're on the stage of history, we're on a stage before observers.
00:07:56.000And to a certain extent, I've always felt that we do things that are interesting.
00:08:50.000I think that's, or vaporware, rather, that Ali Akbar, Ali the felon, is sort of the vaporware of politics.
00:09:00.000And this whole new right, corporate right movement is the vaporware of politics, where it promises this big movement, it promises big reform, it promises free speech week, Steve Bannon, Ann Coulter.
00:09:12.000It's going to be three days, and no one's going to stop us.
00:09:49.000And so I hope that as me and James grow, as we launch our media venture, which we're doing the website now, we bought the domain, we have emails, we're getting a guy to design the website, we're designing merch right now, we're brainstorming all kinds of merch.
00:10:08.000I'm not going to roll it all out right now.
00:10:10.000I'm not going to tell you everything that it's about right now, not the launch, but things are in the works.
00:10:15.000And we are going to give you things that are interesting and fun and entertaining.
00:10:20.000And there will be showmanship, there will be passion, there will be conviction, there will be spectacle.
00:10:26.000I mean, that's what I think I really loved about Donald Trump the spectacle of it all.
00:10:32.000And you saw in one of his interviews, I forget who it was.
00:10:36.000That conducted this interview is in the 90s.
00:10:39.000And he said that he's always been chasing big deals, glamorous deals.
00:10:44.000And I have always loved that about Donald Trump.
00:10:46.000And the same way I think we have to have that sort of thinking for our country and for our movement, it has to be big, it has to be exciting.
00:10:55.000And of course, that's not to downplay the intellectual stuff, which is important.
00:10:59.000I mean, believe me, to get to the point where I am in terms of what I can talk about, what I know about, how I argue, it's not all exciting.
00:11:08.000I mean, this is all backed up by me reading for a long time.
00:11:11.000For me, sitting in the dark alone at like 3 a.m., reading obscure books and watching videos and reading blogs and podcasts and getting in fights with people on Twitter.
00:11:23.000So, believe me, I'm not trying to denigrate.
00:11:28.000But I am saying that I think, as someone who does content, as someone that does media, it should be our obligation to make it interesting, to make it exciting.
00:11:38.000And it's a shame that these people don't want that.
00:11:40.000It's a shame that these people, because.
00:11:42.000They want to secure their brand, or I don't even know this sort of corporate mindset that they can't be involved with us.
00:11:51.000They can't have this cross pollination with us, lest we taint, lest we tarnish the brand.
00:11:58.000Lest we tarnish their brand of, you know, Ali Inc.
00:12:02.000They won't have his name on it because he's kind of a background character, but, you know, whatever.
00:12:16.000One of the funniest guys I've ever seen these days, because you see all these cut comedians and they're not funny.
00:12:23.000And then you got like Sam Hyde and no one else.
00:12:25.000Gavin McGinnis for a long time was pretty funny, goofy kind of, but he was really funny.
00:12:29.000And now, like, he wants to start a political movement and he's making weird graphs that don't make sense and he's excluding the alt right from the Proud Boys because we're too edgy.
00:12:41.000And then you got people like Milo, who it was fun.
00:12:44.000He talked about Jews controlling the media.
00:13:10.000So, first off, we have our huge victory with Roy Moore.
00:13:16.000Now, this was big, this was really something.
00:13:19.000That I don't think people quite understand the significance of it yet.
00:13:22.000Maybe they do, because there was a lot of talk of the significance of it leading up to the results.
00:13:27.000But we found out last night after the election was finished, after the results were tallied, that Roy Moore ended up winning by almost 10% in the special election for the Alabama Senate seat.
00:13:40.000Now, again, he will have to face off against a general election opponent in November of 2018.
00:13:46.000So it's not Roy Moore as much as I would like to see Roy Moore anti sodomite.
00:13:52.000You know, he brings guns to political rallies.
00:13:54.000There's no alcohol or swearing allowed there.
00:13:57.000As much as I would love to see that roll up to Washington, D.C. and start yelling at people, unfortunately, this was just the primary.
00:14:05.000So he will have to face off against a former federal prosecutor.
00:14:09.000I forget the man's name, but a Democrat in the general election in November.
00:14:15.000But what this tells you is something very important about the Republican electorate, the Republican base, and Donald Trump's strategy for his entire presidency.
00:14:26.000Because what this in effect said was that the base does not go with Trump.
00:14:32.000Because if you recall, and this was pretty, I mean, this is not like secret stuff, this is pretty well known stuff.
00:14:38.000President Trump went and made a huge rally in support of Luther Strange, who was the establishment candidate, who was a friend of Mitch McConnell, who is the Republican GOP nightmare that has failed on Obamacare three times, that we've hated for eight years essentially, just as much as Obama, if not more.
00:14:59.000And so Donald Trump came out to Huntsville, Alabama, and he did a big rally for Luther, for Big Luther, Luther Strange, and he talked about how great he was.
00:15:08.000It wasn't quite the same Donald Trump.
00:15:09.000If you listen to the speech, it wasn't the same energy, it wasn't the same freewheeling, fun Trump that we know.
00:15:15.000He was off tempo, he was sort of awkward.
00:15:19.000And so he put his endorsement in Luther Strange.
00:15:22.000There was no question as to the president's allegiances.
00:15:25.000And yet, Deep Red Alabama, which loved Donald Trump, which went for Trump like crazy, they loved the guy.
00:15:32.000Far right conservatives on immigration, on culture, on everything else, they rejected Donald Trump.
00:15:49.000And this tells you that it's something that's really good for the primaries in 2018.
00:15:56.000It tells you that Donald Trump does not dictate the course of the Republican Party.
00:16:02.000And believe it or not, that's a good thing.
00:16:04.000Because you'll have the establishment, you'll have Mitch McConnell, you'll have Paul Ryan, you'll have all the establishment guys.
00:16:10.000And they'll be expecting Donald Trump to toe the party line.
00:16:13.000They'll be expecting Donald Trump to go out into these battlefield states where Steve Bannon is waging war against incumbents in the Senate and the House.
00:16:23.000Donald Trump can go out there and he can throw his lot in with Mitch McConnell and Jeff Flake and every one of these establishment clowns.
00:16:30.000And what yesterday's election showed us was that doesn't matter.
00:16:34.000It does not matter one lick what Donald Trump says because Roy Moore won by 10%.
00:17:11.000But what this does in effect, whether or not it was intentional or not, it just demonstrates to the establishment and it also demonstrates to the electorate that we don't have to go where Trump overtly says we should.
00:17:24.000We can still support the Trump agenda, which is huge.
00:17:28.000That is how you achieve immortality, that is how you achieve something longer lasting than yourself.
00:17:34.000If we have isolated or we have boiled out the Trump agenda from Donald Trump revolutionaries that want a wall, That want the GOP to burn, that want the Democrats the hell out of the country.
00:17:46.000So that's a good thing for everybody involved.
00:17:50.000And so, what this will do in the primary challenges, excuse me, is it will tell first and foremost the GOP establishment that no seats are secure.
00:18:50.000I think a lot of people guessed this that there was a deal going on, that there was something else going on there, that we can still be for the Trump agenda, but be against the Trump endorsement.
00:18:59.000Number two, it tells the people that this is completely viable, that we can primary somebody that has a huge endorsement by the sitting president.
00:19:15.000Actually, that's a bad example because that wasn't.
00:19:18.000We didn't have a sitting Republican president.
00:19:21.000But you saw that with Luther Strange, that the sitting president, widely popular, Republicans love this guy.
00:19:27.000I mean, he's like, many people saw him as like a religious figure almost.
00:19:31.000I'm not saying that, but many people, it was close to that, the way they saw Donald Trump, that he was almost, because it was miraculous that he won.
00:19:39.000He came down from D.C. to the small town of Huntsville, Alabama, to give his first major endorsement of his presidency, resounding endorsement, a rally just for Luther Strange.
00:19:52.000There was the Trump logo and the Strange logo, or the Luther logo.
00:19:59.000And despite that mega endorsement, despite all the money that the Republican establishment poured into Luther Strange, He was defeated resoundingly, even though you had major leaks out of the Roy Moore campaign where there was some video that came out that said that he said homosexuality should be illegal.
00:20:45.000So this will show the Paul Nealon crowd, this will show the Kentucky crowd, the Arizona crowd, the Nevada crowd, the Missouri crowd, all over the country, that you can have a far right candidate with not a lot of money, with no institutional support, and he can still come out on top, even if the incumbent has the backing of Mitch McConnell and Donald Trump.
00:21:07.000So, a very big victory, very big victory.
00:21:11.000This will have far reaching consequences in the primaries.
00:21:14.000And you almost have to think it might have almost been intentional that Donald Trump backed Luther Strange because you're going to see that in the primaries, people are really pissed off.
00:21:27.000And I don't think you can say that's an accident that he got his base fired up on DACA, on health care, on the football stuff, because he mobilized his base for this election.
00:21:38.000Before he endorsed Luther Strange, He mobilized his base.
00:21:42.000Before any of the Alabama stuff even came up, he was saying, you know, DACA's actually good.
00:21:47.000DACA's great, and we can put it into law.
00:21:49.000He got everybody fired up against the establishment, against DACA, got them fired up for the Trump agenda separate from Donald Trump.
00:21:59.000And then Donald Trump endorsed Luther Strange.
00:22:02.000And the people who were fired up, they fled to Roy Moore.
00:22:06.000You almost have to wonder if that was intentional.
00:22:09.000And then on top of that, if Donald Trump is pushing this DACA like establishment message, And it is seen as though we cannot be helped by Donald Trump, that he's compromised or he's turning his back or whatever you want to think about the DACA situation.
00:22:26.000This will further mobilize people for the primaries because he's sort of taking down the establishment with him because he's not up for re election in 2018.
00:22:36.000If he goes up on stage or he goes on Twitter, he goes and does a weekly address and he cucks, basically, as he has been doing for a while, where he talks about the see through wall.
00:22:48.000Where he talks about how DACA is actually good and on and on.
00:22:52.000And he sort of cucks, or he makes the appearance that he's cucking.
00:22:57.000It goes to show the people that the entire establishment, the entire Republican Party, even Trump, they're all throw all the bastards out.
00:24:02.000That's why I don't think it can be a coincidence because you see that the effect of this would be inevitably that he will come back with a strong far right Republican Congress.
00:24:13.000It may only be two seats that get traded in the Senate.
00:24:17.000But when you're looking at a majority of 53, or rather 52, it's a 52 seat majority for Republicans in the Senate, it takes three senators.
00:25:04.000If you replace two establishment people.
00:25:07.000So, when people think it's so outlandish or crazy that he's playing the four year game as opposed to the week by week game, I don't think that's crazy at all.
00:25:17.000He becomes a part of the establishment for the first two years, comes back in November 2018 with a far right Senate, a far right House, stronger majorities in both, or majorities in both.
00:25:30.000For the remaining two years of his presidency, he gets a rubber stamp institution in the Congress.
00:25:36.000That is nothing to sneeze at, and I think that might be the play here.
00:26:22.000And you sit and you think, while everybody's watching the federal game, while everybody's watching the legislative game, and they're thinking, what's going on with the legislature?
00:26:32.000Is he going to pass wide, wide sweeping overhaul reform?
00:26:38.000Well, Trump is focusing on very small issues to individual states where you know what?
00:27:07.000Well, if Jeff Flake is against Joe Arpaio, Joe Arpaio is wildly successful, Trump pardons Joe Arpaio, Joe Arpaio either runs or endorses Kelly Ward, guess who wins Arizona?
00:27:52.000The same is true in every other state.
00:27:54.000I really believe that is the game he's playing.
00:27:56.000And you might think that's a crazy thing to talk about, but it's actually remarkably.
00:28:01.000Parallel and similar to his dealings with real estate.
00:28:06.000Because if you've read the art of the deal, most of the deals that he's put together for Trump Tower, for Trump Park, for his Atlantic City casinos, it's literally assembling plots of land.
00:28:16.000It's trying to get this plot of land and this plot of land and this one so you can have the decent size for a tall building.
00:28:23.000And then you need the air rights and you need all sorts of other things, materials, etc.
00:28:28.000That's the kind of thinking you need to put up a building.
00:28:31.000That's the same type of thinking that is employed.
00:28:34.000When you're putting together a majority in the Senate and the House.
00:28:36.000He's not thinking in this linear way like Barack Obama, where it's like, okay, we need a Democrat majority to get Obamacare passed.
00:28:44.000He's thinking, how can I remake the party?
00:28:47.000How can I get a majority that is sustainable that will pass the things I want?
00:28:51.000How can I get a primary challenger in Wisconsin to be viable?
00:28:56.000How can I get a primary challenger in Arizona to become viable?
00:29:00.000So that in 2018, they can be elected, and then I can get what I want.
00:29:40.000You don't have to be Bill Mitchell to understand that it's not going to reveal itself every day, every week, especially now when the mainstream media is slandering him all the time.
00:29:51.000If it doesn't happen, I will be with you.
00:29:54.000If the wall doesn't go up, I still won't be saying like he's good.
00:29:58.000If the wall doesn't go up and this doesn't happen like I'm saying it will, I will be off the Trump train.
00:30:20.000There's a big difference between those two camps.
00:30:23.000So that's where I sit right now, is in the latter camp, where I say, you know, it's not so simple as people make it out.
00:30:30.000And somebody like I always bring up before on the show, I've been right about everything.
00:30:35.000You know, I don't mean to whip it out.
00:30:36.000I don't mean to whip out my balls and say, look how big they are, but they are.
00:30:40.000But to say, when everyone said, That a ground war in Syria was imminent.
00:30:46.000When everyone said, Mike Cernovich, Jack Posobick, everyone said that 150,000 ground troops would invade Syria on June 1st because of the missile strike in Homs, Syria, I said, no, that's not what's going to happen.
00:31:38.000The same is true with his presidency for these four years.
00:31:41.000And we don't know if he'll have eight.
00:31:42.000We don't know if he'll even be going for eight.
00:31:45.000I think that's a pretty strong assumption that he'll run another time.
00:31:50.000But if he wants to go down in history for his legacy, which I think he does, which I think anyone has a pretty strong incentive to do that.
00:32:54.000But now he's targeting individual seats in Arizona, in Wisconsin, in West Virginia, in Indiana, in Missouri.
00:33:01.000And you think it was any coincidence he let Steve Bannon out?
00:33:04.000Do you think Steve Bannon could conduct a guerrilla media campaign against the establishment from within the West Wing?
00:33:10.000Do you think he could be as powerful in the West Wing, being a strategic advisor for Donald Trump?
00:33:14.000Or do you think he made the strategy, gave it to Donald Trump, and said, okay, you've got it from here.
00:33:19.000I'll go on the outside and finish the job?
00:33:24.000I think if Donald Trump were going to fire Steve Bannon, he would have done it months ago when everyone was calling Steve Bannon President Bannon.
00:34:53.000I get so many smug people who are wrong about everything in my mentions and in my DMs when I postulate theories like this, saying, like, you're an idiot.
00:35:09.000Sorry to get a little hostile on my fans or on my followers, but I really despise this sort of strain on the alt right or the fringe right or whatever, where there's this addiction to the black pill.
00:35:28.000There's like this melodramatic addiction to the black pill.
00:35:32.000Oh, Donald Trump, we were foiled again.
00:35:48.000I never trusted them for a moment, Nicholas.
00:35:51.000Nicholas, you were white pilled, but I always knew me and my infinite years and my infinite wisdom, which is grown old, like a fine wine, like a fine whiskey.
00:36:02.000I always, you thought I was for Donald Trump, you thought I bought into it, but deep down I was radical.
00:36:51.000100 retweets, uh, oh, Donald Trump is, he was wrong all along and he was establishing a puppet.
00:36:57.000500 retweets, oh, oh, oh, I better retweet more stuff.
00:37:01.000You know, I mean, that's how it happens.
00:37:03.000You know, you see all these people who normally don't get a lot of traffic, who don't get a lot of engagement, who say the same old stuff all day long.
00:37:13.000And then when Trump appears to go against the grain, Then they find a way to cash in.
00:37:55.000Somebody has to be the smart guy and smack the alt right or the fringe right or all these black pillars and say, call me whatever you want.
00:39:29.000I mean, you look at, like, you go to, like, Nigeria, and there's crime and rape and corruption, and there's, like, just garbage all over the streets.
00:50:48.000Poor, corrupt, there's just garbage everywhere.
00:50:51.000Like, you know, like we were saying, it's just funny how, like, they can't even pick up garbage off the streets.
00:50:56.000And people have this idea, like, at some point in 1990, we figured out it has nothing to do with Africans, it has nothing to do with the people that live there.
00:51:09.000It was all just a big, like, misunderstanding, right?
00:51:19.000Was at what point did we have a consensus or reach a consensus that Africa is uniquely the worst place to live?
00:51:28.000And by the way, it has absolutely nothing to do with actual Africans who have built those broken systems forever.
00:51:38.000And if you argue with that, if you think that even a little bit of African failure can be attributed to African people, you are a bad person.
00:51:58.000Like, you look at Africa, when we pull up in 1880, I've said this before on my show, I said it during the Destiny debate, not a single two story building.
00:52:08.000Like, this concept of, like, go up the stairs?
00:54:54.000But because you have people in academia, in media, in government, in finance, who are actively working to destroy us, that is the craziest proposition in the world that white countries remain white, right?
00:58:04.000Isn't that weird that in the World Trade Center, all the people that own the building, all the People that were involved with that building?
00:58:29.000Your parents had to jump out of a hundred story building because they were catching on fire because a plane flew into their building, or I don't know, there was a megaton bomb in there.
00:58:40.000Yeah, whatever, though, but we need Muslims so they can provide good food, so they can provide falafel that is authentic.
00:59:18.000Spoiler alert there is no example of anything which could be called a mechanical device having ever been credited to Africans prior to their encountering white people.
00:59:27.000I mean, like, nobody sees anything weird with that.
00:59:31.000Nobody is struck, like, gee, that's kind of weird that for 3,000 years there have been no mechanical inventions out of one group of people.
00:59:42.000The Mayans had a calendar that predicted sun cycles.
01:00:39.000People at once hit me for being a mystic and then at the same time hit me for being like thinking modernism is the greatest achievement of humanity.
01:06:22.000Mark PNW has posted a meme, a boomer meme, and he says, I'm an asshole, the kind that holds a door for old people, still says, sir and ma'am, and keeps the crayon drawings my kids give me.
01:06:34.000I don't filter anything but my coffee.
01:06:37.000And I don't have patience for lazy or selfish people.
01:06:40.000I love my country and shooting bad guys in the face for it.
01:08:06.000I mean, in terms of size, that's not even a hit on his height, but just if we're talking about a physical confrontation, we have to look at the stats here.
01:08:30.000I think because he probably was made fun of for his height before, and he has been, he probably has some kind of an energy built up inside of him that he could whip it out if necessary.
01:08:42.000He could really bring the pain, I think, if called upon to do so, especially against a defenseless opponent like Will.
01:08:50.000I put my money on destiny for that one.
01:08:54.000Catholic nationalist is giving blacks their own nation in the South the negotiated separation you were talking about.
01:09:00.000It has to be some kind of a separation because, you know, look, I may sound like a liberal when I say this if you're like an idiot.
01:09:09.000If you're a dumb person, I might sound like a liberal.
01:09:13.000Like a Fox News dichotomy where liberal bad, Democrat bad, Republican good, you know, and this weird like caveman dichotomy.
01:09:22.000But if you look at blacks, Blacks have every right to be pissed off.
01:09:27.000Blacks have every right to hate this country.
01:09:30.000I wouldn't blame blacks for hating this country.
01:09:33.000It's because the country was literally founded by people that owned their ancestors, people that owned their fathers and degraded them in the worst ways and then lynched them.
01:09:45.000And it was okay, it was Democrats, whatever.
01:09:49.000And I get that only 1% were slave owners and yada, yada, yada.
01:09:55.000But we talk about how important heritage is on this show.
01:09:57.000We talk about how important tradition is on this show, how important ancestry is, how important lineage is.
01:10:04.000And it's not a trivial thing for a black person that, like, they're going all the way back 500 years.
01:10:11.000It's people that were owned and beaten and whipped and worked and all of that.
01:10:17.000And I think very few are not the descendants of slaves, right?
01:10:20.000I mean, there are very few that weren't, like, brought over here after that, I'm pretty sure, or that weren't living under terrible conditions.
01:10:29.000So, I have to say, you sort of understand where they're coming from on that, where the only reason you have a sizable black population in America is because they were brought here and then enslaved.
01:10:48.000Because for blacks to be satisfied, you have to get rid of all the stuff from people that owned people like them.
01:10:55.000And think of it if you're a white person, if you're a proud German, or you're a proud Swede, or you're a proud, I don't know, whatever white person, You wouldn't want to live in a country where, like, your ancestors were slaves, right?
01:11:07.000And worked in the fields and not taught how to read.
01:11:11.000Like, you wouldn't, you would have a problem with that if the shoe were on the other foot.
01:11:16.000Imagine if China came in here and invaded and enslaved all of us and then we got freed like 50 years later and we're supposed to just be like, oh, Chinese people are really great.
01:11:27.000I mean, we would be pissed and rightfully so.
01:11:30.000The solution then is not to destroy our country and say we're going to get rid of everyone who's offensive.
01:11:35.000To blacks, because everyone's going to be offensive to blacks.
01:11:38.000Francis Scott Key, George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, Christopher Columbus, and on and on.
01:11:47.000The answer is either you're okay with that, you're okay with the country as it is, or you're not.
01:11:53.000And if you're not, you have to go somewhere else.
01:11:56.000And that doesn't mean like we holocaust them, we ship them somewhere else, but it means, I don't know what it means, but it cannot exist the way it is.
01:12:06.000And people say, oh, well, that would be inhumane or that would be difficult, that would never happen.
01:12:11.000The alternative is a perpetual race war forever.
01:12:16.000Perpetual race riots, perpetual racism, perpetual discrimination and fighting and bad blood between blacks and whites and real suffering.
01:12:26.000And one day, one side will win and there will be atrocities because we will have gone past the point where we can make a sober decision about what should be done.
01:12:36.000Have race relations gotten better or worse since desegregation happened?
01:12:42.000That's a question everyone needs to ask themselves.
01:12:45.000Tell me one year in which race relations got better since the Civil Rights Act or the Voting Rights Act or since affirmative action or since Barack Obama got elected.
01:13:58.000Or, that's not fair to say all black people hate America, but they take in the knee and they protest and they want to see the statues come down.
01:14:12.000I'm not saying, like, blacks hate America, like, and oh, aren't they bad Americans?
01:14:17.000I'm saying they were brought here as property.
01:14:20.000They have every right to not be pleased with the fact. that Robert E. Lee is a monument.
01:14:24.000Like, we know blacks fought on the Confederate side of the Civil War and the states' rights issue that they fought over was slavery and all of that.
01:14:33.000But I think they have a legitimate grievance to an extent.
01:14:37.000The answer is not to destroy our country.
01:14:39.000The answer is to have some kind of negotiated separation.
01:14:43.000You can stay, you know, if you're fine with that and you can still be here and we will try to integrate you because we did bring you here.
01:14:52.000But if not, You know, you're going to have to figure things out.
01:14:56.000You're going to have to, you know, make it work.
01:14:59.000And I don't know, maybe we take all the money that we give them for affirmative action and for entitlements and everything else and we redirect that to some kind of groundwork for a new country or for a new region or for something else.
01:15:13.000But this idea that we're going to pursue this failed experiment forever, even though there's no record of success, like, why would we do that?
01:16:50.000And if you want to come here and be an American, or rather, if you're in here and you're grandfathered in by the grace of our good nature, fine.
01:17:52.000And that's why it's sort of useless to reject that label because you're going to get called white supremacist and they're going to project that onto you anyway.
01:18:03.000But we really don't not like these people.
01:21:25.000And if everybody stood up and finally put their foot down and said to hell with these people that are running everything, it wouldn't be a problem.
01:21:52.000You know why they can't embrace alt right, because the alt right actually says things that are controversial and edgy and things that matter.
01:21:59.000And the alt right, the new right, wants to sell books.
01:24:00.000I mean, if you're looking for a model to explain conservatism and politics, it is quite literally pushing something uphill because gravity is pulling you back down, and that gravity is the force of change.
01:24:12.000So you're pushing it and you're trying so hard to keep moving it up, but inevitably, the way things work is it'll always come back down.
01:24:20.000So we have to have a new movement that is not fighting gravity, that is working with gravity.
01:24:26.000That is working with the forces of change, giving people something new.
01:28:34.000You can follow me on Twitter at Nick J. Fuentes, Periscope at Nick J. Fuentes, Facebook.com slash Nick J. Fuentes.
01:28:41.000And of course, you can find all my content at Nicholas J. Fuentes.com.
01:28:45.000You can find Nationalist Review, you can find my PayPal, you can find my shows, my writing, and everything else on Nicholas J. Fuentes.com.
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