00:02:16.000We lost thousands and thousands and thousands of people banned.
00:02:21.000But the good news is they're all on Gab.
00:02:23.000So if you were caught up in the Groyper Holocaust, okay, if you were exterminated systematically by our Indian overlord on Twitter, get on Gab.
00:02:36.000Make a Gab account and get on there and follow me.
00:02:40.000And I put out a post, it's my pinned post.
00:02:44.000And I said, Reply to this post if you lost your Twitter account.
00:02:47.000And that way we can all find each other.
00:02:48.000Because that's the most difficult thing you forget who you were following.
00:02:52.000You know, you forget who you knew and where they were and what their handle was.
00:04:42.000And then my hair's all messed up because the reason I'm getting into that is because I took a really quick shower because I had to go and pick up my order.
00:05:07.000Anyway, so our other, besides that, our other big story is I want to talk about the New York City vaccine mandate, which has now been expanded to include five year olds.
00:05:17.000So now the Gateway to New York City vaccine pass is mandated for children starting at the age of five years old.
00:05:28.000So if you're a five year old and up in New York City, you will not be allowed into a bar, restaurant, Any public place, unless you're vaccinated.
00:05:49.000So I know a lot of people didn't believe me when all this started, and I said it's going to be a total vaccine passport system with a QR code, with a federal database, but that's where all this is heading.
00:06:01.000Every man, woman, and child, QR code, federal database.
00:06:04.000Having to use that to check in to every public place with their first dose and then with the boosters.
00:07:42.000Cheezer 6,000, Punished Cheese 9,000, and then Brand Flakes 5,000, and then there was I Love India 1,000, which was banned before I even got one follower.
00:08:53.000Gab is gab.com slash real nickjfuentes.
00:08:57.000So be sure to follow me there because that's the only way you can find my content.
00:09:01.000And of course, follow me here on cozy.tv.
00:09:04.000If you click the follow button, it'll give you an update whenever the show begins.
00:09:08.000So I know some people say, oh, well, sometimes you go live at 8 30, sometimes you go live at 9 30.
00:09:15.000You know, yeah, well, I'm dealing with a lot of things right now, okay?
00:09:18.000I mean, I hate to tell you that, but, you know, we're going through a lot as a people and as a movement and as an organization.
00:09:27.000So, you know, sometimes, you know, we have to move the show up a little bit.
00:09:33.000But the good news is nobody really can complain because if you click the follow button, you'll be notified right when the show starts.
00:09:40.000So you click the follow button, and if you have a Telegram account and if it's on your phone, You'll get a push notification and it'll go ding.
00:09:51.000It'll go ding and it'll tell you the show's live.
00:09:54.000You click on the link and then you watch the show.
00:09:55.000And yeah, because I know I was trying to, you know, I'm trying to be back on time, but it's like I get back to Chicago and it's like Odysseus getting back to Ithaca, you know, and it's like suitors have taken over the home and, you know, the island is in disarray and my wife doesn't recognize me.
00:10:17.000I've been on a journey for so long, and I come back and I got things to deal with.
00:10:21.000So, you know, I'm getting back into the swing of things.
00:10:24.000Tomorrow should be okay, but today there was some drama.
00:10:29.000So, make sure you're following me on Telegram in the event that these kinds of things unfold because we're the most oppressed movement, and I'm really the most oppressed individual in America.
00:10:38.000So, follow the channel so you get updated when it goes live.
00:10:41.000And I think that's all of our announcements.
00:13:13.000And now this is just a staple of Twitter.
00:13:15.000Every so many months, there's a bandwave and they'll take out.
00:13:20.000Alt accounts, they'll take out respawned accounts, they'll take out a big blue check or a big notable person with some others.
00:13:28.000Or what they'll do is they will lock accounts.
00:13:31.000If they see suspicious activity, they'll lock your account and make you verify with a phone number.
00:13:38.000So the follower numbers fluctuate all the time.
00:13:42.000And I remember when I was on Twitter officially, especially this year, there were many purges in the first half of the year after the Capitol, but nothing like this.
00:13:53.000They banned people that had been on Twitter for 10 years, people that have had accounts on there since 2012 or 2011.
00:14:02.000And they banned a lot of big guys who've hung on for a long time, too.
00:14:05.000Like I said, they banned Lefty Crypto, they banned Classical Theist, they banned, I'm trying to think of any other really big ones, but they banned all the usual suspects Beardsim, they banned me, they banned Jaden's new account.
00:14:36.000And, you know, I don't even know if I should say what her at was, but her content was getting a little bit dark.
00:14:43.000You know, towards the end, I'm like, you know, you could stop posting about, like, because she was posting some really black pilled stuff lately.
00:14:50.000I was like, I would see it, I had notifications on for her tweets.
00:14:54.000And she would tweet something really dark, and I'd text her and I'd be like, Hey, are you okay?
00:14:58.000Because, you know, it's 8 a.m., and you're tweeting about, you know, we're all going to die someday.
00:15:04.000And I'm like, Is everything going all right?
00:15:07.000And she was like, I'm just keeping it real, you know?
00:15:09.000And I'm like, Yeah, well, I mean, it's true.
00:15:12.000I'm not negating the tweet, but it's 8 a.m.
00:15:18.000So she really went through the whole thing, because at first she was like, you know, she was like another Groyper account, and she was tweeting kind of like relatable, funny stuff.
00:15:27.000And then she was a White Boy Summer account.
00:15:29.000She was posting a lot of white boy summer content.
00:15:32.000And, you know, the black pill's getting to everybody lately.
00:15:36.000You know, lately it was kind of, there was some stuff, you know, she's tweeting about music and some other things, but some of these tweets it was like, hey, you doing okay?
00:16:09.000He was one of, honest to God, he was one of my favorite accounts.
00:16:13.000And I was like a Stan, you know, because we would DM a little bit and I would get a little nervous because all his content is like old books and it's really high IQ stuff.
00:16:23.000And he would DM me and I'd be like, oh my gosh, like, don't mess up.
00:16:42.000But anyway, so it seems to me like the common denominator was everybody who got banned was engaging with my account, DMing me, replying to me, following me.
00:16:54.000I followed them, or they were in the space that I did.
00:16:57.000And honestly, I think that this whole purge happened because of the Twitter space that I did a couple of nights ago.
00:17:03.000You know, last night I talked about that Twitter space.
00:17:07.000And if you missed the show yesterday, on Sunday night, I joined a Twitter space, which, if you're not familiar with what that is, It's like Clubhouse.
00:17:18.000Twitter introduced this new Clubhouse like feature where they have, it's basically like an audio stream and people can create rooms where, and it's not video, it's audio only.
00:17:34.000You know, a couple of speakers can go in and talk to people and they can bring speakers in and out.
00:17:38.000It's sort of like the Telegram voice call feature, it's sort of like Discord if you don't know what Clubhouse is.
00:17:44.000So I did a Twitter space on Sunday with.
00:17:48.000I want to say it was like 10 or so people from Washington, D.C. All these think tank type people, a lot of political activists.
00:17:57.000And there were probably 800 listeners in there at one point, which made it the biggest space on all of Twitter at one point during the call.
00:18:05.000This was the biggest space that was happening anywhere on the site by viewership, which is sort of weird to think about because you'd think a platform as big as Twitter would have bigger streams, but apparently not.
00:18:53.000And then the next day, it seems like everybody that ever.
00:18:57.000DM'd me, everybody that followed me, everybody that replied to me or engaged with my account in other ways, everybody that was in the space then got banned.
00:19:06.000Like to me, that seems like the common denominator.
00:19:09.000And, you know, obviously we can't know that for sure because how they make these decisions is totally obscure, you know, and opaque.
00:19:21.000And the scary thing about this is I told you this was going to happen very presciently, maybe a week or two ago.
00:19:30.000When Jack Dorsey stepped down from Twitter and this new guy, this Indian guy stepped up, I told you, you know, you might not think it and it might not seem like it, but things are about to get much, much worse.
00:19:41.000And this is a case for all social media, but especially for Twitter, because Twitter was never the worst one.
00:19:51.000And, you know, so aside from just telling the story, and real quick, I just want to say, can we get an F in the chat for all the fallen accounts?
00:19:58.000You know, I think that'd be appropriate.
00:20:00.000For everybody to put an F in the chat.
00:20:02.000I'm just going to say F in the chat and a salute for all of our fallen soldiers.
00:20:08.000All of our fallen friends, all of our lost accounts.
00:20:12.000And I'll just say, you know, for all the posts, all the DMs, all the jokes, the videos, the memes that are now lost like tears in the rain.
00:21:24.000Because ever since the show started, and it's not like this was, I'm not telling you like I'm so smart, I predicted this, but I'm saying that I was one among many other people sounding the alarms about tech censorship.
00:21:38.000When the writing was on the wall after the Trump election, and even a little bit before then.
00:21:44.000And it's not like it was difficult to figure out this was happening.
00:21:48.000And everybody, to an extent, knew that it was coming, but maybe nobody really internalized it.
00:21:56.000Because I knew five years ago that this is what we would wake up to in 2021.
00:22:01.000I knew that if Trump didn't go in there with the FCC or the FTC or some other regulatory body, If they didn't do antitrust, if they didn't find a government solution, that this would be the outcome complete, total, pervasive censorship, and that no conservative would be able to access social media.
00:22:22.000And a lot of people, I think, thought that that would happen.
00:22:26.000Like I said, on some level, they believed that would happen, but they weren't really acting like it.
00:22:31.000And now that it's happening, it almost comes as a shock to some people.
00:22:38.000And it's like, yeah, yeah, our future as conservatives is not being able to access the, not just social media, but the most basic digital services.
00:23:46.000It's that digital life is becoming inseparable from real life.
00:23:52.000And digital life is becoming essential to getting along in the real life.
00:23:57.000It's not just inseparable, but it's essential.
00:24:01.000You can't really in the future expect to run a business or get along with the social life or meet friends or meet potential, you know, a husband or a wife.
00:24:16.000Forget about just posting inane, trivial things on Twitter.
00:24:21.000You know, what happens when you can't make a reservation for a hotel room or an Airbnb?
00:24:25.000What happens when you can't call an Uber or a Lyft?
00:24:28.000What happens when you can't check into an airline on your phone?
00:24:32.000This is the level of persecution that we're talking about.
00:24:36.000It's no longer as simple as the internet or social media once was 10 or 15 years ago, where it was sort of this amusement.
00:24:45.000This is now inseparable from everything else in our lives.
00:24:49.000And similarly, if the government were going around and telling people, like, hey, we're taking your cash register, you can't put cash in a cash register, people would say, what?
00:25:10.000If, based on what I say or what I believe, I can't operate a business in a tangible, physical, real world capacity, people would say, Well, that's a violation of my rights.
00:25:21.000How can we say we live in a free, constitutional society when this is happening?
00:25:26.000For some reason, there's this disconnect where people see it happening online, and collectively, it seems like almost everybody shrugs their shoulders, not just liberals who say, So what?
00:25:56.000But these, whatever you think of them, whatever you think of Silicon Valley and these companies and how they're governed, they are the ones that are the mediators and have a great degree of control over our daily life and our connectivity with all the people.
00:26:14.000And that goes for commerce, that goes for socializing, that goes for transportation, that goes for a lot of things.
00:26:21.000And things will increasingly become that way in the digital sphere.
00:26:24.000And so the point I'm trying to make is that nobody has taken this seriously enough.
00:26:30.000People then take it seriously five years ago when the warning was about overt political censorship on the social media platforms and strictly the effect that that would have on our ability to spread our ideas.
00:26:45.000But even to this day, people are not heeding the new warning, which is much more dire about the new threat, which is coming down the pike, which is already underway and far worse, which is what I'm describing now.
00:26:58.000Basically, the ghettoization of all conservatives and all dissenters, all dissidents from the digital world, which is going to be catastrophic.
00:27:07.000It's going to be financial, it's going to be commercial, it's going to be social, it's going to be transportation.
00:27:12.000It's going to affect all aspects of a person's life.
00:27:16.000And this is something that there's no legal recourse for.
00:27:18.000This is something where there's no arbitrage or arbitration recourse for.
00:27:38.000And this is going to be very disruptive and very inhibitive for the people that find themselves on the other side of censorship.
00:27:45.000And as far as I'm concerned, the people that are victims of it or will be victims of this maybe are not even aware.
00:27:52.000The extent to which they will be affected and how inconvenient that's going to be and how disruptive that's going to be.
00:27:58.000But what's more is the leadership doesn't seem to care at all.
00:28:02.000You know, this has been happening especially since January, and where's the leadership?
00:28:07.000From the Republican Party, from the so called conservative movement, from the private sector?
00:28:13.000Because I said earlier this year, if you were watching my show in January, I said the silver lining to the Capitol and all the persecution that came as a result is that maybe.
00:28:24.000The sitting president being banned from all these tech services would catalyze a response where a billionaire would take interest in this problem, or the GOP would, or state governments would.
00:28:38.000I thought, like, there's no way they could ban a very popular sitting president, the executive of our country, and there would be no blowback.
00:28:47.000Like, there would be nothing that would, nobody would try to solve that problem or try to fight that.
00:28:59.000I said that might be the silver lining they made a big mistake.
00:29:03.000You know, they thought they could bring down Trump, but in fact, they just activated the other side and finally made them care and finally motivated them to act.
00:29:14.000And what have we gotten in the past year?
00:29:16.000We got a lame anti tech censorship bill from Florida, which has not worked.
00:29:22.000And even if it did work, it wouldn't make a difference at all.
00:29:25.000We got Debtor, we got Parlor, two services that don't work.
00:29:30.000And we got a number of others that have now adopted their own terms of service.
00:29:35.000And now, potentially in the next year, we'll get a Trump social media like Truth Social.
00:29:40.000Parlor says they're announcing something big soon.
00:29:46.000But the point is here we are, a year after maybe the culmination of five years of this problem.
00:29:55.000It's been a year since that happened, and nobody's even talking about it anymore.
00:30:00.000You would think that that would have happened.
00:30:02.000And it would have been the scandal of a century, and people would have gone to work on this.
00:30:05.000Somebody, somewhere, would have some solution, and by now would have been fixed.
00:30:10.000Or at the minimum, that if it wasn't fixed by now, there'd still be advocacy and attention being paid, but it's like nobody cares.
00:30:16.000And it may not seem like a big problem now, but people need to really internalize the effects of this.
00:30:24.000Anybody that opposes the system is now dead in the water.
00:30:28.000As far as with the tools we have at our disposal right now and with where those tools are, You know, I guess you can't really say anything's impossible, but the limits that have been placed on us, which are so cumbersome and so difficult to overcome, it's like if you oppose the government, if you challenge the status quo in the system, you can't raise money anymore.
00:30:53.000You're debanked, Chase closed your account, and the credit card processors banned you, and PayPal and Stripe banned you.
00:30:59.000This happened to me, and this has happened to many other people too.
00:31:02.000It happened to Joe Biggs, it happened to Lauren Whitkey, it happened to Laura Loomer, it's happened to.
00:31:08.000Andrew Torba, they closed four of his business bank accounts.
00:31:12.000And if you want to run for office and you want to spread your message, you're not going to have access to social media.
00:31:17.000You're banned for Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, all that.
00:31:20.000And then, even just on a logistical level, if you want to book a room, if you want to travel, if you need to get somewhere for a fundraiser for this or that, me, like many other people, you find yourself with enhanced security screening at the airport, which is somewhat separate, but you also can't get Uber, Lyft.
00:31:39.000You know, I was with somebody over the past week.
00:31:42.000I was talking to somebody at Blaze TV and they said, Yeah, I'm banned from Lyft.
00:31:47.000And that was somebody who wasn't even that extreme.
00:31:49.000That was somebody that was more milquetoast.
00:31:56.000The scope of the services and the businesses that are banning people is always expanding.
00:32:02.000And the scope of which people, you know, the net, the net is getting bigger.
00:32:06.000Who is getting caught up in this is growing all the time.
00:32:09.000And so we're going to get to the point where in five years, who is going to be able to build the infrastructure, fundraise the money, have the freedom of movement, the ability to communicate to a massive audience in order to affect political change?
00:32:25.000And going into 2024, you know, like to give you a practical example, how is Donald Trump going to campaign four years from now when he doesn't have access to any social media or any online services and nobody will stream his rallies?
00:32:41.000What are you supposed to do at that point?
00:32:43.000You know, and don't get me wrong, Trump is very effective and he's smart and he's got name recognition and, you know, he's big enough to make waves on his own.
00:32:51.000But think about how inseparable we are from the digital world now.
00:32:56.000And how much more so we will be in four years.
00:32:58.000Think about how much worse the censorship will be in four years.
00:33:01.000And he's going to try and run a national political campaign, being the first guy on that level.
00:33:06.000It was a very unique situation, banned from everything.
00:33:10.000He is going to be at a significant, potentially something that cannot be overcome, disadvantage because of this.
00:33:17.000And so then the question becomes is dissent possible?
00:33:25.000Or is it the people that are running these services?
00:33:28.000These are companies with trillion dollar market caps.
00:33:31.000These are companies which govern a global conversation, which billions of people participate in, including most Americans.
00:33:38.000These are companies that control through the algorithm 90% of what information people see about the world around them and control most of the opinions they hear about those things.
00:34:15.000How will there be dissidents in the future as the world becomes more digital when it's these big tech oligarchs that are controlling the conversation?
00:34:24.000Nobody seems to be really interested in this question.
00:34:27.000At least nobody that could do anything about it.
00:34:29.000Because, I mean, we've built our own site here and we're trying.
00:34:34.000And even here, there's limits to how successful we can be.
00:34:40.000But what happens when some of the services we're using pull the plug?
00:34:44.000What happens when they make moves that we don't even know about yet, where somehow they're able to pull us offline?
00:34:50.000What happens when the telecom companies come after us?
00:34:53.000At some point, you're going to find a choke point you haven't discovered yet where it's one of these companies, it's one of these people that has control over whether you're able to run your service or not, run your platform or not.
00:35:07.000And that goes for, you know, on Twitter, it's like they decide whether you can have an account or not.
00:35:12.000And then you can work your way up the food chain.
00:35:14.000And Apple decides who can be on the App Store, and the banks decide who can have credit cards processed, and the domain registrars determine who gets to have a domain name, and Cloudflare and other companies decide who gets to have DDoS protection.
00:35:28.000And what happens, and Google decides who shows up in the search results.
00:35:33.000And what happens when, like, the telecom companies say, We're going to put up a firewall and ban access to certain sites, like they have in China or Iran or Russia?
00:35:59.000When everything's digital, when people get all their information from social media, how are we going to compete with a totally antithetical message to the status quo?
00:36:31.000If we make it to 2024, and if Trump runs and he wins, that's the, in my opinion, as far as politics goes, that is the only shot in hell that we have to turn anything around, really.
00:36:46.000Otherwise, it's a thousand years of darkness.
00:36:49.000Because it's like Trump is the only guy where there's a chance that he could do something.
00:36:53.000As opposed to DeSantis or Hawley or any of them.
00:36:56.000Trump is the only one where there's a chance, not a guarantee, but there's a non zero chance that he might do something dramatic to turn this country around.
00:37:05.000He's the only one who has a chance like that that can win, that's viable to run for an office where he'd be able to make a change like that.
00:37:16.000And after 2024, if that doesn't happen, I think that the power that is held by our enemies will be so consolidated and so secure and so pervasive that.
00:37:27.000You know, nothing like Trump will be possible again.
00:37:30.000And so at that point, we've got to go back to the drawing board and totally figure out something else because the game has just changed.
00:37:38.000This level of censorship that we're on, which you can see now, it's like one day there's going to come a day when you just can't access Twitter if you're banned from it.
00:37:48.000We're outside, outside looking in with all of it.
00:37:52.000You know, one day they're going to close all the loopholes, they're going to ban everybody, and that's going to be it.
00:37:59.000And so, in some sense, we've arrived there.
00:38:01.000And that is something that's like lethal.
00:38:03.000So, unless somebody gets in there in 22 or 24, you know, I'm talking about this is the last cycle where it really matters.
00:38:12.000I think if we can't turn it around off the fumes of a free society, off the fumes of a civil society in 24, and just barely drag ourselves across the finish line with a guy in a position who just might be able to do something dramatic enough.
00:38:30.000I don't think that there's anything else that can be done.
00:38:32.000I think it's really all or nothing based on this.
00:38:37.000And if you disagree, I feel like you just are not looking at the gravity of what we're talking about here because some people see it and they don't really see the big picture.
00:38:47.000They see Groyper's getting banned and they say, so what?
00:38:49.000But what we're really talking about is a monopoly on information.
00:38:53.000That's what it is, that's what it's always been about a monopoly on information.
00:38:57.000You control the information, you control the people, you control the people, you control the government, you control the government, you control the society.
00:39:07.000If we can't get our, if we can't report what's really going on, if we can't tell people our side of the story, if we can't give our take on it, if we can't win over the hearts and minds of people, and get them, if we don't have access to mass media, then I don't know how it happens.
00:39:26.000And people talk about, well, what if we go back to the old way of doing things?
00:39:30.000It's like, I just don't think that's viable.
00:39:32.000I think that most people are in the matrix, most people are in the digital world.
00:39:37.000And the people that are pushed out will not be missed because everybody else is so engaged and they're so enveloped in it.
00:39:45.000The idea that the one or half percent of people that are going to be affected by this, they alone will not be able to overcome it.
00:39:53.000And I don't think they'll be able to convince enough people to break away of their own volition and give it up to make a difference either.
00:40:19.000And people, I don't think, are prepared for that.
00:40:22.000And people have not fully realized because this is going to be, this coming presidential election will be the first time with total censorship.
00:40:29.000We had it partially before, after the Capitol, they sealed the deal.
00:40:32.000And we're going to see what this disadvantage looks like and how crippling it is.
00:40:57.000Very, it's, I was being a little funny earlier.
00:40:59.000It's sad to see our old accounts go, but, you know, people that thought that they were just going to be unaffected were, you know, they were lying to themselves.
00:41:08.000And the people hanging on now, you know, I know that we should, and don't get me wrong, you should use social media and you should get as much out of it.
00:41:17.000You should use it for as long as you can, but.
00:41:22.000We've got to be thinking about this problem as though it's already been completed, you know, as though this transformation is already finished because it's getting there.
00:41:30.000I want to move on and I want to talk about the vaccine mandate.
00:41:35.000And then we'll get on to our super chats.
00:41:37.000So, our feature stories about the New York City Gateway to New York vaccine passport, which is now being expanded.
00:41:45.000And, you know, we haven't really talked about the vaccine passport in a while.
00:41:49.000I know yesterday we talked about it, so ridiculous.
00:41:52.000Yesterday, the United Kingdom put out a report and said that all these people are dying from heart attacks because they're so stressed out about the pandemic, which is about as laughable as you can imagine.
00:42:25.000You know, they're saying that people are so upset that all these changes are happening that they're dropping dead of, like, who believes that?
00:42:33.000They're just dropping dead of a heart attack.
00:42:35.000Like, people fight in wars and don't die of heart attacks.
00:42:38.000You know, people go to Iraq and they sleep in a tent in the desert and get artillery blasted all around them for days and nights, and they don't die of a heart attack in that situation.
00:42:48.000But you're telling me that, like, some 30 year old woman who works in an office and has been, like, working from home on Zoom for the past year, drinking wine and, like, in her pajama pants?
00:42:58.000You're telling me that she's dropping dead from a heart attack because she just can't take it, because she's just bouncing off the walls and she's just so anxious?
00:43:20.000But they're going to come up with an excuse.
00:43:22.000So we covered that yesterday, strictly about the inevitable consequences of the vaccine.
00:43:30.000But the new story is how these vaccine mandates are coming down much harder.
00:43:34.000So, as you know, they've been talking for the past couple of weeks now about this new variant.
00:43:39.000You know, we had COVID 1, then we had the Delta variant from India, which was more transmissible, but I think it was about the same death rate.
00:43:47.000Now, keep in mind, they came up with the Delta variant to explain why people who are vaccinated were getting sick.
00:43:54.000They're always sort of retconning these things.
00:43:56.000You know, people start dying of heart attacks and they say, oh, well, they have this stress disorder.
00:44:02.000People who are vaccinated start getting.
00:44:04.000COVID by the millions, and they have to come up with an explanation of why, if a vaccine is perfectly safe and effective, and they're encouraging everybody to get it, why they're getting sick anyway.
00:44:15.000So they say, Oh, well, the disease changed.
00:44:18.000You know, the vaccine works, the disease changed.
00:44:21.000So they said, There's this Delta variant, and everybody said, Oh, the Delta variant.
00:44:43.000Why are there new variants coming out?
00:44:45.000Why are there, you know, why are there new versions of the virus coming out which are thwarting the very effective efforts of doctors, scientists, and liberals?
00:44:55.000Well, it's because these damned unvaccinated people are catching COVID and it's mutating inside of them and being released back, and that's killing everybody.
00:45:08.000Now they have the Omicron variant coming out.
00:45:12.000And, um, You know, we'll see what the end game is with this.
00:45:15.000I think this is probably meant to maybe make people get booster shots, or maybe again, this is supposed to explain why people that are getting booster shots are getting sick.
00:45:26.000You know, Delta comes out right around the time of the vaccine, and it's like, oh boy, vaccinated people are getting sick.
00:45:32.000Omicron kind of conveniently comes around, oh, I don't know, about six months, you know, nine months after the vaccine comes out, maybe about six months after most people got vaccinated, right?
00:45:47.000That's about after the fact that like half the population was vaccinated.
00:45:50.000So it's like, oh, that's sort of convenient.
00:45:53.000Just as the efficacy of the first vaccine expires, now there's a new variant as everyone's getting boosted up and renewing their immunity, right?
00:46:05.000Renewing their very effective immunity with the booster shot.
00:46:08.000Now there's another variant which is just catching everybody off guard.
00:46:29.000There's a bill going to the parliament where they're going to start fining people and jailing people who don't get vaccinated.
00:46:36.000And the development in America is that in New York City, they're going to now make children get the vaccine and get a vaccine passport to go anywhere in public.
00:46:46.000So this is the story it says, Kids will soon get carted in New York City restaurants and movies.
00:46:53.000For proof that they've been vaccinated against the coronavirus, according to Mayor Bill de Blasio.
00:46:58.000He said during a press briefing from City Hall, Vaccination works and vaccine mandates work.
00:47:06.000De Blasio said he was taking the very bold, aggressive action in response to the lockdown in Germany and in other restrictions returning across the globe amid the new Omicron variant, even though the city's only seen seven cases of it and the overall COVID infection and hospitalization rate here are among the lowest in the nation.
00:47:26.000Children ages 5 to 11 must show proof of one vaccination dose to eat out, see a show, go to a movie theater, visit a fitness facility, or attend indoor entertainment venues by December 14th.
00:47:38.000Kids over the age of 12 must have two doses by December 27th unless they receive the one shot Johnson Johnson vaccine.
00:47:50.000So if you're five and you walk down the street to McDonald's, I don't know what five year old is walking around New York City unattended, but let's just say it happens.
00:47:59.000If you're five and you try and go see a movie, or maybe you're a little, I don't know, five year olds are not going to the movie by themselves.
00:48:06.000But, you know, let's say you're an eight year old or nine year old, whatever.
00:48:10.000You're barely in middle school or whatever, and you want to go to the show with your friends.
00:50:48.000And what does this have anything to do with the Omicron variant?
00:50:52.000There's seven cases in New York City of this.
00:50:55.000But now every five year old, every man, woman, and child has to be doubly vaccinated to participate in society, even though hospitalization down, cases are down, and the so called new variant, which they say is not even as severe as all the other ones.
00:51:18.000And there's only seven cases of it in New York City.
00:51:21.000But now they're taking a so called bold, aggressive maneuver to jam genetic material into the bloodstream and the cells of five year olds because of it.
00:53:00.000No, I'll not vaccinate my child who can't even get sick.
00:53:03.000And I'll not accept that I'm going to get fired from my job for not getting vaccinated against a disease.
00:53:08.000It doesn't even kill anybody, really, as long as you're healthy, and which everybody's getting anyway, even if they are vaccinated.
00:53:13.000At what point are people going to say enough is enough?
00:53:16.000Because I'll tell you, like I said all year, this will not stop on its own.
00:53:23.000I've been saying this since it started, and I said this weeks ago.
00:53:26.000Everybody thinks that this is just going to grind to a halt like when they think it should.
00:53:32.000They think, like, well, you know, when it gets really bad or if it gets really bad, then I'll say something.
00:53:39.000But they're in somewhere in there, there's no real conviction that it will get there.
00:53:45.000Because if it did, you know, they probably would be worried less about waking up when it's that bad and more about the fact that we're rapidly hurtling towards that day all the time, right?
00:53:56.000In other words, people may sit there and say, like, well, when it gets really bad, then I'll start to worry.
00:54:01.000But if they were really worried about getting all that bad, they'd be worried about it now.
00:54:06.000They don't really believe it'll ever get that bad.
00:54:09.000They might think it might, they might speculate it might, they might say that they think it might, but that's not really a practical, urgent consideration.
00:54:18.000It's more just like something over there.
00:54:21.000In the meantime, they're willing to put up with it, they're willing to go along to get along, just get it over with, just do it.
00:54:46.000You know, I'm Joe Schmo, and I think what's unreasonable is a QR code federal mandate system where they're going to check your phone at the door to see if you're vaccinated and check that barcode with the federal database.
00:54:59.000And if you're not vaccinated, you can't go in, and everything's going to be like that.
00:55:02.000And if I'm Joe Schmo, I think, like, yeah, it probably won't get that bad because that would be unreasonable.
00:55:09.000And I don't think the government will go that far.
00:55:12.000And it's like nobody should assume this is the point.
00:55:16.000Nobody should assume that there's anything the government won't do.
00:55:20.000Nobody should presume that it's not going to get that bad.
00:55:25.000Nobody should assume that it's just going to peter out and we could look at Australia and Austria and not worry about it because we would see it coming and when it started to get bad, then we would intercept it.
00:55:39.000Because we felt a year ago about the things that are happening now.
00:55:47.000The way that we feel now about the things that will happen a year from now.
00:55:52.000In other words, you know, people think that they're going to see it coming and then they'll do something when it's apparent that things are going to get unacceptably bad.
00:56:04.000Things are unacceptably bad according to that very standard from where we were a year ago.
00:56:10.000The point is, is like what we assume and think is reasonable is changing all the time and subject and influenced by.
00:56:17.000How the government is incrementally implementing this all the while.
00:56:23.000So, as they're changing things, and it's that proverbial, you know, the frog in the boiling water, as they're changing things, people get acclimated.
00:56:31.000And what people presume is unreasonable goes further and further and further.
00:56:37.000Because what we're doing today is reasonable compared to what we did yesterday.
00:56:43.000And what we did yesterday is reasonable compared to what we did the day before.
00:56:47.000But what we're doing today is not reasonable compared to where we were a year and a half ago.
00:56:53.000And nobody said anything a year and a half ago when it was masks and when it was this first lockdown.
00:57:50.000And we're going to wake up December 7, 2022.
00:57:53.000And if nobody does anything, it is going to be catastrophically worse than it is today.
00:57:58.000And all you have to do is just have some sense of the future.
00:58:04.000It really comes down to something like planning for the future and having a sense that the future is coming and we need to be thinking about it and preparing for it as opposed to just like this blase, like, well, it's not so bad.
00:58:45.000Where we're being vaccinated like cattle, right?
00:58:49.000And we are being crushed under the heel of a Leviathan hybrid between the private sector and the government, between big tech and the federal bureaucracy and the intel community and the media.
01:00:01.000They're going to keep coming with their aggressive, bold, humanitarian bullshit until we're all in farms, until we're all in cages, we're all in gas chambers, we're all in hell.
01:00:52.000Because, you know, whenever that day comes when people say, you know what, I'm going to do the right thing, it's so bad, you know, getting canceled or getting fired could not be worse.
01:01:01.000The question is, when that, you know, inflection point happens, will it be too late?
01:01:06.000Will we even be able to turn things around even if we wanted to?
01:01:08.000Or will we just have to allow them to keep exacting a higher and higher cost and not be able to change it?
01:02:41.000I mean, people need to brace yourself, but people really need to grapple with the severity of these problems and not lie to themselves, not delude themselves, not tell them these sort of nice bedtime stories about whatever.
01:02:58.000We have to keep the morale up and we have to retain hope.
01:03:02.000Hope is essential, but we also have to have a lay of the land and have some sober recognition of just how bad things have gotten.
01:03:09.000And I don't think we are able to turn things around unless we do that.
01:03:13.000And ironically, that's part of the solution.
01:03:15.000Part of the solution is recognizing the problem and recognizing the extent of the problem.
01:03:32.000Like I said the other day, it's like getting out of a hot shower in a freezing cold bathroom.
01:03:36.000Like it sucks, you know, and it's like it's abrasive.
01:03:43.000But without despairing, without dwelling, without.
01:03:48.000Being overwhelmed by the nature of it, we've got to sort of fasten our seatbelts, hold on to our diapers, steal ourselves, and face it, face the problem.
01:03:59.000And then we can begin to imagine what is necessary.
01:04:03.000Then we can begin to do the things that are necessary to turn it around.
01:04:06.000But what's essential to turning it around is that we know the problems and we know just how bad it is.
01:04:12.000Because a lot of why we're here is because people weren't willing to do that.
01:05:25.000Of what we're saying, and I believe in the morality of what we're doing and the ethics of what we're doing.
01:05:30.000In other words, in terms of materially everything that we have, I think we have a good shot.
01:05:35.000But at the same time, the world is a complicated place.
01:05:39.000And when you look at what's going on, you can't divorce it from a higher realm.
01:05:43.000You can't divorce these horrible things that are happening in the state of things and the suffering that we feel from the meaning of it all and from sort of what underlines the whole experience.
01:05:55.000And we have to look at it in the context of that.
01:05:59.000This whole thing is pushing us to the brink in every way, in terms of pushing us to the brink and making us question fundamental things about who we are and what we're doing here and reality.
01:06:12.000And honestly, that's where we're going to sort of contextualize what's going on.
01:06:16.000That's where we're going to find the answers.
01:06:17.000That's where we're going to find maybe the idea.
01:06:21.000That's where we're going to find the strength to set things straight.
01:10:09.000And so I just started taking this steroid to help it.
01:10:12.000Not like a bodybuilding, not like a performance enhancing drug, but I started taking this oral steroid, which is supposed to reduce the inflammation and clear me out.
01:10:25.000So, hopefully, in like a week, I'll have a new voice.
01:10:29.000Because, you know, my voice is a little bit more nasally than it used to be because all the time my nose is closed, you know?
01:13:31.000You know, for all that everybody criticizes me and, you know, people question my motives or they question my values or, you know, if I am who I say I am or whatever, it's like, you know, they just don't realize the sacrifices I've made to do this.
01:13:51.000And I don't say that to be like, wow, I'm the best ever, but I just mean like, You know, yeah, he was.
01:14:52.000You know, like, oh, I'd be very different.
01:14:57.000So, or I could have been in Con Inc., I could have been on Daily Wire and being a Zionist and, you know, could have been part of the problem.
01:15:35.000Because, you know, right wing people are always like, They're always starting from this defensive position of, like, well, I'm not who you think I am.
01:15:43.000I'm actually good according to your moral standard.
01:19:51.000I don't know what it is about SpongeBob, but it's so, like, as a cultural artifact, it's just, it's so relatable.
01:20:05.000I don't know why, but like that's Zoomer culture.
01:20:08.000If people want to know what Zoomer culture is, it really is SpongeBob.
01:20:13.000Anime Ritus says, I've been doing some digging into my ancestry lately, and the more I learn about my ancestors and contributions to the 13 colonies and their great legacy, the more I appreciate all you do by giving white identity a voice.
01:20:26.000I'm sure my ancestors are smiling upon the work America First is doing.
01:22:15.000So when you express your appreciation, just know it does mean a lot to me because, as you said, it is difficult and it is lonely, but it's the right thing to do.
01:26:46.000And I would be, hey, Candace, if you're watching this, you know, I would be.
01:26:49.000Very respectful, and I would be, you know, I wouldn't let you down, but I don't think that's going to happen anytime soon because, you know, Shapiro runs that operation and they hate me.
01:26:59.000You know, Shapiro hates me and Jeremy Boring hates me, so there's no way that would ever happen, I don't think.
01:27:11.000Says, saw you in Dallas walking out and about, and I wanted to get a picture from you, but I didn't want to make you uncomfortable since I'm a morbidly obese, cross eyed black man.
01:27:33.000I just say if you're fat and ugly, don't be in the shot when we do a rally, because that's killer.
01:27:41.000But I always take pictures of people no matter who they are, if they just want one for themselves.
01:27:45.000I'm just saying, like, be a little considerate of the optics sometimes.
01:27:49.000You know, like, we did that speech in Springfield, and that fat girl literally stood next to the podium, and it's like, What are you doing here, lady?
01:28:16.000And, but if, but when she came up to me afterwards and asked for a picture, I was like, yeah, of course, of course.
01:28:22.000And I'm not going to be mean to her, but it's like, it's just about the presentation.
01:28:26.000So, you know, if you're not presentable, you shouldn't be in the presentation.
01:28:31.000Like, this is not, I'm not trying to be mean about it.
01:28:33.000What it is, but yeah, so if you see me, yeah, come up and you know, I have no problem taking a picture of people, but I don't know if that's even a real story.
01:28:45.000It's funny to think that I'm walking around in Dallas and people are like, there he is, but then they don't say anything.
01:29:21.000Florida man says, Hey, Nick, keep up the great work.
01:29:24.000My first super chat, but I've been a follower since the Groyper War.
01:29:28.000I used to be a Shapiro, Crowder, and Peterson guy, but you won me over because what you talk about actually reflects what's happening in our country.
01:29:35.000We need honesty in these times, and you bring it.
01:29:45.000That's always my most proud when people say, like, I used to watch Ben Shapiro and like those types, and now I watch you because it's like those are the people we need.
01:29:54.000We need to convert those people because I feel like their soul is with us.
01:29:58.000Like, what they really want, what they don't know, but what they really want is us.
01:30:05.000And they're getting like some of what they want from them, but they're not getting all of what they really want.
01:30:58.000On a personal level, I feel similarly.
01:31:01.000Unfortunately, on a professional level, it's tough because in politics, everybody knows everybody, and there's so many of these different webs of this one knows this one, and this one knows.
01:31:13.000It's so interconnected that it's really hard.
01:31:16.000To say, you know, you can't like that guy because that guy doesn't like me.
01:31:20.000It's like, because there's so much of that.
01:31:23.000And like I said, everybody knows everybody.
01:31:26.000And there's so many of these entangling sort of things.
01:31:29.000And that's what I realized is, you know, on the one hand, I like what we have going because people are so diehard and passionate.
01:31:40.000And on the other hand, I wonder, you know, if we're kind of backing ourselves into a corner in some ways because, It is going to have to be a Big Ten.
01:31:50.000It is going to have to be a coalition.
01:32:20.000It means it's very delicate, it's very precarious, and it's very contingent in the sense that, you know, One card leans on another card, and then another card leans on another.
01:32:33.000And all these cards are leaning on each other, and then cards are put on top of those cards.
01:32:39.000So, everything is kind of dependent on other things, and things affect other things in ways that you don't even realize because one person knows this person, and one person runs this thing.
01:34:08.000Sometimes you need people that are just kind of arm's length, but they want to help you, or there's an interest that overlaps, and that's just how politics is.
01:34:16.000So I know what you're saying, but Groypers have got to get away from that a little bit.
01:34:20.000I don't mean to say that you should stop believing wholeheartedly that we're the ones that have the right message, but we have to be a little bit more diplomatic.
01:34:27.000And, you know, that's why I always say trust the plan.
01:34:30.000It's like you've got to kind of take my lead on these things and trust.
01:34:34.000I'm not going to go to Turning Point and accept a billion dollars to like shill for Israel.
01:34:40.000You know, if I say somebody's cool or something, it's like I'm doing it for a reason.
01:34:45.000If I'm allied with somebody or whatever, that's where the trust comes in because this is a precarious thing.
01:34:51.000I can't tell everybody everything that I'm doing, I can't tell everybody every connection, why I'm doing this or that, because this is a public forum and our enemies are watching it very closely.
01:35:02.000And if our enemies knew all our plans, they could anticipate them and thwart them.
01:35:07.000So that's where there's a little bit of trust that comes in that on some level, you got to have faith in me and you got to say, well, you know what?
01:35:28.000I see that as, you know, that's like if you're on a ship and you trust the captain and you're in the trenches and you trust your general or you're in a business and you trust your boss.
01:35:45.000If people could just pick and choose, and it was sort of democratic in that sense, oh, I'm going to take what I like and what I don't like, I don't want.
01:35:53.000And if I don't really like what's going on, I'll just leave.
01:36:49.000I know everybody's amped up and it's like, you know, we've got a real culture here, which is good, but we just have to avoid the excesses of it.
01:36:56.000That's all because we've got to be pragmatic.
01:36:59.000Because we're really about to hit the big leagues next year.
01:37:07.000So, because we want our message to be big, we want lots of people in this, we want new people to come in this, we want new thinkers, and new political people, and new followers.
01:37:18.000You know, we want new blood in this thing, fresh blood.
01:37:22.000And so, in some sense, we have to be open, you know, a little more open.
01:37:27.000So, but I know what you're talking about, and I feel the same way, but that's just reality.
01:37:32.000Chicken Rye with a big super chat says, Hey, bro, hey, man.
01:45:05.000And I thought it was very uncharacteristic of her because, you know, I thought Kathy Zhu was like this unaffected, like professional, whatever.
01:45:14.000And then she was crying after the debate.
01:45:17.000And I didn't simp, and I didn't white knight.
01:45:54.000So, for anybody that's ever accused me of being a simp, anybody that's ever accused me of being a white knight, I saw Kathy's You Cry, and I didn't even say anything.
01:52:18.000I'm going to try to save this country.
01:52:21.000And if I don't, it's because they murdered me.
01:52:26.000But people are going to have to look after their own self interest.
01:52:28.000As far as homesteading goes, I don't really know enough about that.
01:52:32.000I haven't done it, I haven't tried it.
01:52:34.000But I think that people don't really know what they're in for sometimes because a lot of people go out away from the cities or away from where they are and they don't like it.
01:52:46.000You know, they're like, well, IG, here I am out somewhere else and I don't know anybody here.
01:52:51.000And it's foreign to me, and I don't really have the skills, or I'm, you know, it's a learning curve.
01:52:56.000So I would just be careful about this, you know, green, the grass is greener on the other side, because there are people that go out there and then regret it, because they're like, you know, I don't know anyone here.
01:53:06.000This is like, so for some people, I think it's a little bit of a LARP, but you have to make, I don't know your situation.
01:53:12.000You have to make a decision based on what's best for you.
01:53:14.000I think what's better is to move into a state that is more conservative.
01:53:19.000I think that if you're really concerned about where you live specifically, I think you should move to, A city or a suburb or a place where you know people and where it's a little bit more conservative.
01:53:35.000Because, you know, I know a lot of people that have moved around and they're like a fish out of water.
01:53:40.000You know, they go to these different places and you know what?
01:53:42.000They have the same problems, it turns out, and sometimes amplified, you know, because they'll go to a new town and they don't know one person.
01:53:50.000And it's like, well, what do you do with your time?
01:55:02.000You know, think about what you have to be worried about your job security, the schools for your kids, safety, your neighborhood, those kinds of things.
01:55:10.000And think about, you know, where you could build a better life.
01:55:40.000Because, like, perfect example, like, I met a friend of mine who I knew from, well, I don't want to get too specific, but I met a friend of mine who I knew in DC over the weekend, and he was telling me that he knows a lot of people that did this leave the cities thing, leave the cities and doing their own thing.
01:55:59.000And he says that, uh, You know, now all those people are totally lonely and they're calling the people that didn't leave the cities all day and, like, hey, how's it going?
01:56:10.000And he was telling me, you know, like, if you go and move out to Wyoming and you flee the cities and you're calling me all day to chit chat, it's like you're probably not going to make it.
01:56:59.000God of conquest says, For all the Groypers who were banned yesterday, remember that our Lord said, Blessed are they who are persecuted for the sake of righteousness, for theirs is The kingdom of heaven.
01:57:16.000You know, when things get bad and the going gets tough, you read the Bible and you realize this is not a religion that says, like, hey, if you pray enough, you're going to have an easy life.
02:00:36.000I'm not just saying that because they like me and they watch my show.
02:00:40.000But, like, you know, we had a caller on the show last week and he was like, Hi, I'm 15 and I'm in a crypto and I've got a job and I'm doing this and that.
02:00:49.000And I'm like, Wow, you know, very impressive.
02:00:51.000And I go out to New York and we got all these young guys.
02:03:09.000Something really bad happened to me, or I forget what it was, but.
02:03:13.000A really close friend of mine who is one of the smartest people I know, one of the smartest people I've ever met, he used to work in the admin.
02:03:22.000He won't talk to me anymore because he's like extremely paranoid.
02:03:26.000Also, one of the most paranoid people I've ever met.
02:03:28.000Like, no risk tolerance at all for this stuff.
02:03:32.000And he told me one day, he's like, what did he say?
02:03:40.000Because I think, like, I got banned on YouTube, is what it was.
02:03:50.000He goes, You don't know what's going to happen.
02:03:52.000He's like, Maybe the guy that was supposed to give you your third strike is going to get in a car accident on his way to work and die.
02:03:59.000He goes, Just pray, trust in God, keep doing what you're doing, and maybe you'll get lucky, in other words.
02:04:06.000And that's so true because that's really what real faith is having faith no matter the outcome and having faith even when things aren't going well, and just trusting that.
02:04:17.000Even if it's in the last second, you know, even if it's a buzzer beater, that it's all going to go according to God's plan, you know?
02:04:29.000He didn't mean literally like, maybe that guy's going to get in a car accident.
02:04:33.000He meant to say like, you've got to put your absolute faith and not focus too much on the outcomes, but fully give yourself, fully sort of resign yourself, not to fate, but to God's will, that his will will be done.
02:04:52.000And that's sort of just, sometimes you just got to say, okay, okay, God, what are you trying to tell me, you know?
02:05:02.000So that's, I'm a little bit fatalistic.
02:05:04.000I guess that's maybe that's the wrong word, but that's, in some sense, I don't want to say I'm like disassociated or disconnected, but some people are so, I don't want to say passionate, but some people really get messed up with this stuff.
02:05:22.000You know, when things bad or good happen, it really sends them.
02:05:25.000And I don't know, I've never really felt so much like that because, on some level, I'm just sort of like, what will happen will happen.
02:05:33.000I do my part, I could fight the fight, but my reason and my faculties are limited.
02:05:40.000And, you know, what I could do is limited.
02:05:43.000And it's not to say that I'm not ambitious, it's not to say that I don't do everything I can, but on some level, you got to say, it's not up to me, you know?
02:06:04.000Like the sleep schedule being messed up, not being able to breathe, like it does give me an edge because if things got too easy, I probably wouldn't be the same way.
02:06:15.000If things ever got to the point where I was just kind of coasting and comfortable, I would probably not be who I am.
02:06:20.000So, because my whole life has kind of been, it's been a lot of issues.
02:06:25.000So, um, That's definitely made me the way I am.
02:07:41.000As he's talking about putting out the contents of Hunter Biden's laptop, which is actually a very noble thing because I think he got the contents of it.
02:07:48.000I haven't been following that too closely, but aside from him, I don't know anybody else who's putting that out there.
02:07:55.000Groyper Maker, and by the way, that guy's a real patriot, real deal.
02:08:50.000Clearly, it was going to happen eventually, but how coincidental it happened right after you held your largest space on Sunday and about five minutes after you started last night's show.
02:09:19.000You know, in five years, five, six years in the new Trump administration, you know, one of you guys is going to encounter somebody else in the elevator and you'll be like, hey, glow gloiper.
02:09:30.000And then like hit the nuclear launch button and like nuke a certain country.
02:09:37.000You're going to say, you're going to be two undercover Groypers in the Pentagon or I'm like a nuclear sub and they're going to look over and go, glow gloiper, turn the keys.
02:09:50.000Nuclear missile burst through the waves of the Mediterranean, of the Eastern Mediterranean.
02:12:06.000Groyper Maker says, That woman on Elijah's show wants you to change your opinion every time a new wave of immigrants flood in so you could try to win them over.
02:12:27.000Justin says I'm noticing conservatives are all on board with putting Mitch McConnell majority leader and McCarthy speaker, and feels like MAGA reset back to the same old, same old.
02:13:33.000I don't know what the last thing you sent is, but yeah, there's no size restriction because if it doesn't fit in the box, they just hang on to it and then I just have to go to the counter and they give it to me.
02:15:57.000Like I talk extemporaneously every night for five years.
02:16:01.000So there's like a muscle memory to it.
02:16:05.000Like if I played basketball, I would look like a retard because I. Haven't played basketball in like eight years or whatever.
02:16:11.000I haven't done anything athletic since high school.
02:16:14.000And like, so if I played basketball once in a while and then I was in like an NBA game in front of thousands of people, I'd probably totally mess up because I'd be nervous because it's like I don't do it.
02:16:25.000But when you do something so much, so many hours, you kind of just fall back on muscle memory.
02:16:31.000And so even if there's nerves, even if you're like unsure, you kind of just like safely fall back on, What's familiar, what you do all the time.
02:16:41.000So, that's a, the practice is a big part of it.
02:16:44.000And as far as fear goes, I mean, I just prepare, you know?
02:16:50.000So, like in New York, I was concerned that there might be a threat, but I just always prepare.
02:16:56.000Like, I have security, I have people surrounding me, I know cops are going to be there.
02:17:01.000I don't go into situations that are dangerous.
02:18:09.000I would rather push it all the way and get killed than, like, push it some of the way and then they say, like, we're gonna hurt you or we're gonna do this and be like, oh, Okay.
02:21:56.000Chad Champions is not going to lie, was about to change my opinion of reparations when she was yelling something about an Asian girl yelling and crying.
02:24:51.000I can't imagine not doing this either.
02:24:54.000Smiley the Fed says, the Wooza Smiley collab was extra special because the last time the three of us were in a room was DC in 19 when Trump said he loves Wooza's hair.
02:25:03.000Still can't believe I met the God Emperor.