00:00:10.000Lots of things happening in the world today.
00:00:14.000And we're back on the show today, continuing our crusade to bring Papa John back to his rightful place as leader of the Papa Johns company.
00:01:46.000He's basically dead because he hasn't been on Twitter in a couple of weeks.
00:01:50.000So, you know, he basically doesn't exist anymore.
00:01:52.000But our old friend Saxon Meats, and that's a little joke, he's a friend of mine, he made some pretty cool memes for me, but they were a little bit over the line in terms of we're trying to play it a little bit tongue in cheek, but we can't go too far because we really do want to get John Schnatter.
00:02:55.000Now, he just got suspended on Twitter last night, which is a devastating blow to our little community that we have because I think everybody agrees he was one of the best, if not the best, posters of the year.
00:03:09.000You know, he came around, I'm not sure exactly when.
00:03:12.000I think the spring or the summer of this year, and he was probably the breakout star of right wing Twitter.
00:03:19.000You know, I understand he worked for Milo Yiannopoulos before on the college tour, and then he was working with him writing for Dangerous.com, which is Milo's new website.
00:03:40.000The Milo's of the world, they like to pretend.
00:03:43.000Like they're the edgiest, they're the most extreme, they're the most vicious trolls.
00:03:48.000And since people like me have come around and people like yourself, many people watching the show, they can't really make that work anymore because at once they claim to be the edgy trolls, you know, we're the most right wing.
00:04:01.000And then at the same time, they have to be kind of like, oh, no, no, no, no, you can't say that, you can't do this.
00:04:08.000And so since he got, I guess he quit that job or I don't know what happened.
00:04:12.000I think something happened with Milo's donors.
00:04:14.000And so since then, Mike Moss has been able to be on Twitter.
00:05:53.000The WWE, of which I was a big fan for a long time, but it's really just about what a miserable five years this has been.
00:06:01.000I don't know when, like, the current year era dawned when all this stuff started to get so crazy, but really it's just touching everything.
00:06:11.000And it's having pretty disastrous consequences, I think, for the social, for the society.
00:06:17.000Because you look in whether it's Star Wars, the superheroes, the video games, the WWE, it's on late night television, it's everywhere.
00:06:37.000We're talking about President Trump's plan to implement subsidies for our farmers in the meantime while we have this trade war going on with China.
00:06:46.000So it was announced today, and there's not very much information about this, not a whole lot of details, but the president announced a new program by the Department of Agriculture to subsidize soybeans and dairy production and pork.
00:07:00.000Production while the trade war goes on.
00:07:02.000So, for about a year, they'll be buying unsold produce.
00:07:06.000And so, we'll get into the trade war, what's going on there, and it should be a pretty fun episode.
00:09:00.000And then Justin Roiland, his buddy, his co worker on Rick and Morty, he got busted with a picture that he drew from a couple of years ago, not even like a decade ago, like a couple of years ago, where he drew Donald Trump and Donald Trump's 11 year old son.
00:09:17.000And the 11 year old son is depicted as naked, not wearing clothes.
00:10:14.000I try to keep it pretty PG because I know it's a family audience.
00:10:17.000People like to watch with their parents or their children.
00:10:20.000But honestly, for people that have watched what's gone on to.
00:10:25.000Our community, to our movement for the past two years, and we see people killing themselves because they're harassed over a tweet.
00:10:34.000We see people's entire lives destroyed because they belong to a certain organization and some shitlib journalist found out about it.
00:10:43.000So I read something like this from these celebrities where they're raking in the dough, they don't know what, they don't know any kinds of problems.
00:10:52.000They're making these horror stories, and like it's even comparable, the subject matter.
00:10:56.000You have a white teenager who goes to college and says things are going not good in the country.
00:11:03.000Unhirable, unemployable, expelled from school, shut down, all the rest.
00:11:08.000They harass him in the case of what was the name of the gentleman who went to Charlottesville?
00:11:12.000I can't even remember because you never hear about it.
00:11:41.000My friend Millennial Matt, who was doxxed after Charlottesville, they put his doxx on CNN for millions of people to see.
00:11:48.000There were credible threats against his life, against the lives of his family.
00:11:52.000He had to flee the country, went to Japan.
00:11:55.000And then you see this you see these people.
00:11:57.000And that's for saying that our country is going in the wrong direction.
00:12:01.000That's for saying things which are obviously true and political.
00:12:05.000These people make jokes about pedophilia, which are not jokes.
00:12:09.000I hate to burst the bubble, hate to ruin the illusion for you, but.
00:12:13.000When these people post about pedophilia, they're not joking.
00:12:17.000This goes on every day in Hollywood, raping children.
00:12:20.000I mean, look what just happened with Demi Lovato.
00:12:22.000You think it's a coincidence that every child star who goes through Disney and Nickelodeon ends up on drugs or in a psych ward or suicided?
00:14:28.000The Ben Shapiros, and I don't know how really to classify it, but there's this certain class of people.
00:14:37.000And again, I can't really, it's hard to describe who I'm talking about.
00:14:41.000But there's this class of people who live in the big cities.
00:14:44.000Now, they describe themselves as conservatives, and they'll say to varying degrees that they see where we're coming from, or maybe they're totally out of touch.
00:14:52.000Maybe they're like David French, or maybe they're like people from National Review.
00:14:56.000But there's a certain class of people where they Purport to be conservative.
00:14:59.000They purport to understand why the left is ruining civilization, why it's a mental illness.
00:15:07.000I say that like it's actually a pathology, unironically.
00:15:12.000But at the same time, they have it that we, well, we have to approach the left with a very erudite set of principles, thoughtfully articulated, executed in a way with manners and class.
00:15:26.000You know, please, these people who say, oh, well, we can't go after the left.
00:15:31.000Like Ben Shapiro, for example, this week, who says, We're creating a bad culture, we're creating a bad climate, it's the outrage mob.
00:15:39.000They don't understand, and maybe they do understand, but they're on the other team.
00:15:45.000Like Sam Hyde said, these people want to see you raped, dead, your kids brainwashed, all the rest.
00:15:51.000So if it takes, we have to hunt these people down, stalk every tweet, every video, and go after them viciously.
00:15:58.000I'm glad we're finally figuring it out.
00:16:00.000And, you know, I don't always get along with Cernovich, who's been doing it this week, but he collects scalps.
00:16:05.000He goes after these people and he delivers.
00:16:08.000And I'm usually very defensive when Cernovich attacks me or if he goes after me, because I do see a lot of hypocrisy when they describe themselves as centrists or things like that.
00:16:25.000And once you get into the mindset that this is a war and it's a war for the things that we value the most, then it opens up a whole different avenue for possibilities, how we can go after the left.
00:19:00.000That's where they derived the entertainment value.
00:19:02.000But since about like 2005, it's just totally PG, even for the guy stuff.
00:19:07.000I mean, that's why I stopped watching it around five or six or seven years ago.
00:19:13.000But the point is to illustrate here is that this is, it's now everywhere.
00:19:17.000I mean, you really just can't escape it.
00:19:20.000And you wonder where all the animosity comes from, you wonder where all the resentment comes from.
00:19:25.000And you have to look no further than on an individual case by case basis.
00:19:30.000You know, there's obviously a tremendous anger in the country, and that's all the liberal media likes to report about this angry white male that propelled Donald Trump into office.
00:19:41.000It's the angry white male, which is why Breitbart and 4chan Poll, they don't even know what this kind of stuff is.
00:19:48.000But it's driving all these very ugly expressions in political life.
00:20:03.000That it's absolutely everywhere, all the time, permeates every aspect of our existence now.
00:20:10.000This is something I talked about on a Periscope with a good friend of mine the other day.
00:20:15.000And we were just going back and forth saying, Do you remember 10 years ago when you could watch a YouTube video, when you could watch a late night show, when you could watch the news, and they made an off color joke about race?
00:20:29.000Or you watched a YouTube video and it was, you know, top 10 racist jokes or something to that effect.
00:20:35.000And I feel like sometime in my lifetime, even, because I'm a young guy, there was a time when politics was politics and then everything else was everything else.
00:20:46.000And this is something I'm sure people can relate to.
00:20:49.000I'm sure you've heard a lot about, but really, everything is politicized.
00:20:54.000And then even the escape from the politics or from the grind or whatever is politicized.
00:21:01.000I mean, you imagine, okay, you turn on the nightly news.
00:21:03.000Well, okay, they have more of a bias than usual.
00:21:08.000Or you turn on, and I don't know, anything on television, a sitcom, a commercial, and you say, well, you could understand where that might be influenced, but it's the late night shows.
00:21:19.000It's even in like the fantasy movies where it shouldn't be.
00:21:22.000You know, Star Wars, could you go back to 2005 and the loosest way you could tie it to politics was, oh, well, Star Wars 3 was a loose political analogy for the Iraq War.
00:21:33.000And you could say, oh, well, that's a stretch, but it's still a great story.
00:21:37.000Now it's the movies, it's television, it's the late night, it's video games.
00:21:53.000I watched it, and that was kind of the point it was cheesy and absurd.
00:21:58.000And now, even here, we have to make it about a political statement.
00:22:01.000Even here, it has to be well, we're empowering women.
00:22:05.000And I'm going to predict, and this will be, I think, a pretty good way to measure objectively how correct.
00:22:14.000These opinions are, how correct these observations are.
00:22:17.000I'm going to predict that this pay per view, which is in October, will be the lowest grossing, the least well attended in about 10 years.
00:22:26.000I would go on record as making that prediction because, and here's why I bring it up it's not just because it's something that was a big part of my childhood, it's really not even news related.
00:22:37.000But the point is simply to illustrate nobody wants this.
00:22:41.000This is a product that is being created by a billion dollar entertainment company that nobody wants, nobody asked for.
00:22:49.000They will not make them money, but they're doing it anyway.
00:22:52.000And this is, you know, at once it's a point about the ubiquity of this, but at the same time, it's to illustrate what are the motivations of this?
00:22:59.000Where does this kind of thing originate?
00:23:31.000I mean, that's how it's been for the past 20 years is, oh, well, we don't really like it or we don't agree with it, but that's just how it is now.
00:23:40.000But then you really start to think about it for a moment.
00:23:42.000This is how everybody feels, by the way, outside of a very, very tiny minority of ideologues who don't even consume this form of entertainment.
00:23:53.000You know, you think all the feminists.
00:24:07.000So it's a very, very tiny amount of people who are celebrating this or who even think it's a good thing.
00:24:12.000The vast majority of the population, the NFL even, another great example, understand that the direction that we're going in culturally as a country is the wrong way.
00:24:22.000And they know that in these companies, the marketing firms, the research firms.
00:24:29.000And you have to wonder if the task of the WWE, of the Disney Corporation, of the NFL, of the ad agency is to make money, is to get people to spend their money, to do things that are not controversial, not political, because you get political and you turn off half the population.
00:24:47.000If they're doing that, they're profit making enterprises and they're putting things out in spite of the fact that it's going to cost them money, and that's what they set out to do.
00:24:56.000You have to wonder what kinds of forces are at work, what kind of nefarious forces and trends.
00:25:04.000If it's not public demand, if it's not profit, if it's not what could it possibly be?
00:25:10.000And it boils down to the fact that you look at who is in charge in the businesses and the media and the government, the marketing, the ad agencies, all these places.
00:25:19.000And this is what it is it's personnel.
00:25:22.000We talk a lot about this with the Trump administration.
00:25:25.000People might say Trump is doing great, the policies are great, but why don't we see it totally carried out?
00:25:31.000Well, it's because if you get down to the people enforcing these things, If you get down to the people that are writing the memos and that are putting these things into effect and answering the phones, the personnel, these people are not on board with it.
00:25:43.000We talk about that with the White House.
00:25:45.000I think the same can be said across the corporate world and particularly in entertainment and in media.
00:25:52.000The fact of the matter is that just about at every level, vertically and horizontally, the personnel in these organizations is a very particular type of person.
00:26:02.000You talk about academia and people say, oh, well, it's so important that we get free speech on college campuses.
00:26:35.000But every person that they staff in these major corporations, Fortune 500 corporations, the most influential media and entertainment companies, These people came from a university.
00:26:48.000If you want to compete for a professional job, you want to get some kind of a job where you could afford your bills and have a financially comfortable standard of living, you have to go to university.
00:27:05.000That's why you're seeing all these things.
00:27:07.000Because everybody who runs, you look at Apple, you look at Disney, you look at any one of these companies.
00:27:13.000And they're fully stacked with a bunch of like loser NPCs, unthinking sheep who go through college and they're told by their professor, Oh, and well, this is how you do Microsoft Excel, this is how you do Microsoft Word, and also Western civilization is a cancer on the world, and the world was built by colonialism on the back of colored bodies.
00:27:38.000You know, that's what we're getting in all these enterprises.
00:27:41.000And so I think it's no wonder, it's no wonder where it comes from, but we have to identify where it comes from.
00:27:46.000And that's why it's so important when we look at these kinds of things, we look at things that make us upset, when we look at things that make us resentful, and really think where does this originate?
00:27:57.000What is the genesis of this cultural decline?
00:28:00.000What is driving this sick machine forward?
00:28:24.000But the popular vote goes Clinton, but the media goes Clinton, the newspaper goes Clinton, and barely we got by by the skin of our teeth with the electoral vote.
00:28:35.000The masses of the country are on one side, and then a very, very tiny but vocal and powerful minority goes the other way.
00:28:43.000And guess which way the country ends up going?
00:28:48.000So that's why you should not watch WWE Evolution coming October 28th.
00:29:45.000I mean, that's really how they break your back.
00:29:47.000That's how they demoralize you because it's not sufficient that they, you know, it would be one thing if we were in like Russia, it would be one thing if we were in China and it was like if you speak out against the government, they'll arrest you.
00:29:59.000At least in that scenario, I would be like, fine, I won't criticize the government.
00:30:04.000But you've still got a beautiful family.
00:30:07.000And they're encouraging you to have a family.
00:30:10.000And, you know, you've still got a great environment.
00:30:13.000You get to go to the park or you're on a farm.
00:30:16.000Even if you're poor, you're on a farm.
00:30:17.000You're free from technology, from industrial society.
00:30:21.000And all you have to do is not criticize the government.
00:30:27.000The kind of tyranny is much worse, in my opinion.
00:30:31.000Because it's not sufficient that they.
00:30:33.000If that they say, don't criticize the government or we'll break your back, don't criticize the status quo or else we'll come after you.
00:30:40.000What they effectively do is they buy your childhood home and take a shit in the middle of the living room.
00:30:45.000I mean, that's effectively what they do.
00:30:47.000They take all the things that you enjoyed, they take all the things that you care about, any possible escape from the brainwashing, and they completely pervert and destroy it.
00:30:59.000And that's why it makes it a very difficult thing.
00:31:01.000I mean, for some people, it's movies, for some people, it's music, for a lot of people, it's the gamer thing.
00:31:07.000Gamergate is what kicked a lot of this off because men, white men in particular, who liked the video games, that was their last resort.
00:31:15.000That was their last refuge where they could get away from the constant Chinese water torture, feminism, and Black Lives Matter.
00:31:24.000And, you know, these are only the most superficial and popular expressions of it.
00:31:28.000And it reached them, and they said, you know what, we had enough.
00:31:32.000And so, in that way, it's a much more brutal form of tyranny.
00:32:40.000We have to talk about some serious business now.
00:32:42.000I mean, the culture is serious as well, but I do want to cover this real quick.
00:32:46.000We've probably got about 10 minutes before I take your Streamlabs and Super Chats the trade war.
00:32:52.000So we go from the WWE Divas only events, but now it's the very serious deficit in the current accounts, which China is experiencing in the first quarter of 2018.
00:33:43.000And now President Trump is talking about $200 billion in additional tariffs, which China would not even be able to compete with that because they don't import $200 billion worth of American goods.
00:33:55.000But President Trump is talking about putting together a list of $200 billion worth of goods from China.
00:34:02.000And then additionally, looking at a duty on foreign made cars, which is about a $300 billion industry.
00:34:11.000So that's about $300 billion in commerce.
00:34:14.000That we're looking at there for a total of $500 billion.
00:34:18.000So the trade war is ramping up, really, no end in sight.
00:34:21.000They're talking about new rounds of negotiations.
00:34:24.000But of course, the big problem is this that bluster is fun when he goes on Twitter and says it's easy and we're going to throw down $500 billion in tariffs.
00:34:36.000But the big problem we're now having is that China's tariffs are really starting to hurt.
00:34:40.000Our tariffs are starting to hurt ourselves because China's targeting soybean farmers, they're targeting agriculture.
00:34:47.000And so farmers are really getting hit.
00:34:49.000Very hard by the trade barriers, by the tariffs.
00:34:52.000We do a lot of our business, of course, overseas.
00:34:55.000And so, President Trump, in an attempt to counter that, at least in the short term, either the duration of the trade war or until the election, because we've got a very important election coming up where states like North Dakota, where soybeans are a big industry, there's going to be a battleground election to kind of mitigate the damage in the meantime.
00:35:15.000President Trump has announced a new program with the Department of Agriculture where they are going to subsidize to the tune of $12 billion American farmers, and that'll come in the form of buying unsold.
00:35:29.000Product, and then they're going to take that and I guess distribute it to the homeless or something.
00:35:33.000I kind of had to laugh at that for a moment.
00:35:35.000I was like, you know, what are they supposed to do?
00:35:37.000Because the point of the subsidy is they've got $12 billion, and this is actually a Depression era program that they're using.
00:35:45.000President Trump doesn't have to go through Congress to appropriate these funds because it's something left over from the Great Depression where they're able to get it from existing funds.
00:35:55.000And so they're able to use that as emergency relief to give to farmers.
00:35:59.000And they buy the nuts and the seeds and the grain and all that.
00:36:03.000And then I guess they just give it to homeless shelters and relief, like welfare offices and things like that.
00:36:11.000I don't really know exactly, but I mean, that's effectively what they do with it, which I think is kind of goofy.
00:36:17.000But hey, I mean, what are you going to do with the food?
00:36:39.000This is something we were going to talk about yesterday, but one big white pill about the trade war where I think a lot of people are getting a little bit skittish because it's hurting.
00:36:47.000And we knew it was going to hurt, but when it does, it's a little bit different.
00:36:51.000One big white pill that we found out is that in the first quarter of 2018, the first quarter of this year, we found that China recorded a deficit in their current account, which a lot of people don't know what that is, but that's actually a very big deal.
00:37:06.000The current account deals with goods and services that a nation trades with other nations.
00:37:11.000In the services category for China's current account, they are now importing more than they're exporting, which is unheard of.
00:37:18.000You know, you think of China, and what do we know China for?
00:37:27.000They're the world's biggest exporter, or they're the second biggest exporter, I believe, depending on the industry.
00:37:33.000So they're one of the world's biggest exporters.
00:37:35.000And for the first time since 2001, when this data began to be recorded, When they entered the World Trade Organization, they have now recorded a deficit, meaning they're importing more in services than they're exporting, which is huge.
00:37:49.000And a lot of this has to do with just the way that the Chinese economy is being restructured.
00:37:54.000But either way, President Trump is really taking advantage of that, really exploiting that with the trade war.
00:37:59.000So I think that's one sign that it's going very well.
00:38:01.000Hopefully, we're able to win that because at this point, free trade is just I mean, you look at the fact that we can't even, China won't even be able to reciprocate.
00:38:13.000In terms of the tariffs we levy on them because the trade imbalance is so great.
00:38:17.000When you look at it that way, it is a no brainer that this has to happen at this point.
00:38:22.000It's a no brainer that we have to take them down to some degree because you talk about a $300 billion deficit.
00:38:30.000I mean, that's the difference between the trade that we're doing with them and vice versa.
00:38:36.000And this is something I talk about a lot, but it's probably the stupidest and the most easily debunked myth about trade that persists in Washington.
00:38:44.000For some reason, just about every congressman.
00:41:13.000We get attacked by some foreign country.
00:41:15.000It's not plausible now, but in 50 years, when there are several other superpowers and America turns into a low IQ, like slightly more Anglo version of Brazil, who knows what could happen?
00:41:27.000What happens when you're not able to produce your own steel?
00:41:30.000What happens when you're not able to produce your own aluminum?
00:41:33.000You're not able to build airplanes, tanks, guns, ships, all the requisite components.
00:41:40.000So, at the very, very least, and I like to stress that that's probably the most obvious, but it's also the most vital that people are telling us, yeah, you don't need the industries, you don't need the resources able to fight a war.
00:41:53.000I mean, you know, these people are charlatans, you know, they're bought and paid for.
00:41:57.000So, it's a good thing that President Trump is reshaping the Republican.
00:42:02.000I think that's the big white pill out of all of it is that the orthodoxy is still set against it, but the people are with Trump.
00:42:10.000And if we get the right candidates ahead, if we get the right leadership, and there's, I think, a concerted effort to hold people accountable, I think the orthodoxy on free trade in particular can change.
00:42:20.000But the difficulty comes from the fact that there is such an enormous lobby in favor of free trade because there's so much money generated by free trade.
00:42:29.000You know, if people are profiting off of it, those are going to be the richest people, and they're going to have.
00:42:34.000The most disposable resources to spend on lobbying for their own interest.
00:42:38.000It's just, and then, you know, that's why the system doesn't really work.
00:42:41.000So I've been dying to get somebody on to debate free trade because the trade war has been on and off.
00:42:46.000It's been almost as, I think we've talked about it almost as much as North Korea, but I can't find anybody.
00:42:52.000I literally cannot find anybody to defend free trade, not a single person.
00:42:57.000And I've reached out to people, I've DM'd people, and people will put up, oh, my friend who has 50 followers will debate you.
00:43:20.000To describe themselves as voluntarists as opposed to anarcho capitalists, but I'll be debating him on the Chadcast with my good buddy, what's his name?
00:43:59.000You know, people are saying, I love the left wing crowd that says, well, the right wing opposes welfare, and subsidies to farmers is welfare.
00:44:09.000There's a big difference between subsidizing a farmer and subsidizing some of these people that we are subsidizing with welfare.
00:44:17.000If you've ever been to a welfare office, you know, and I've never been to one, but I hear some pretty dark stories.
00:44:25.000And this is, like I said, this is a lot of hearsay, but not a lot of English speaking going on, not a lot of clean cut, good physiognomy people.
00:44:34.000You know, you're not going to see a lot of those characters in the welfare office.
00:44:36.000So people like to say, oh, well, it's corporate welfare for the farmers is so much the same as welfare for all these low IQ drags, parasites on society.
00:44:53.000In Chicago, they're creating a new identification card.
00:44:57.000Where you can be an illegal, and not only could you get welfare with that identification card, they don't even ask, by the way.
00:45:03.000For welfare, they don't even ask if you're a citizen anymore, like they used to.
00:45:06.000But anyway, now they have their own identification card in the city of Chicago where you can use that for welfare, you can use that for the CTA, you could use that, you know, swipe it for any public service.
00:45:18.000Wow, this show is just turning into a screed.
00:45:20.000It's just turning into, we're just all over the place, right?
00:45:23.000But one of those days, one of the days when that's what happens.
00:46:08.000Can people relate to my righteous indignation?
00:46:12.000Jeff says My friend's father is trying to start a business, but the trade war with China means he can no longer afford the equipment from China and the U.S. doesn't make what he needs.
00:46:22.000Is the trade war with China worth the cost if it hurts small businesses?
00:46:26.000Absolutely, because you have to remember trade war is in the short term.
00:46:31.000And what we know about just about every trend in our society is that we've prioritized.
00:46:37.000Immediate short term gratification over long term wise choices.
00:46:45.000And so, for decades and decades and decades, whether it's government spending, whether it's trade, I mean, you name it, particularly with economics, what we have is the government just kicks the can down the road.
00:46:58.000They say, well, this will be pretty costly for a year or two.
00:47:15.000This feeding frenzy of cheap credit and cheap consumer goods and debt.
00:47:21.000I mean, we're sitting on probably a $250 trillion debt bomb if you add up all the debt in the world, private and public.
00:47:31.000This binge of cheap, easy debt, credit, money, and all the rest.
00:47:35.000The longer we delay correction on these issues, the worse it gets.
00:47:40.000So it would be one thing if our trade deficit were tapering off or there was some kind of natural restructuring, but that's not going to happen.
00:48:07.000It's very difficult for a lot of people, but it has to happen.
00:48:11.000There's a very similar example to this in the 1980s.
00:48:15.000We had Paul Volcker come in as the chairman of the Federal Reserve right when Reagan got into office.
00:48:20.000And what Paul Volcker did, this was the This was the strictest monetary policy, I think, in American history.
00:48:28.000Well, the Federal Reserve didn't start until like 1913 anyway, but even still, it was one of the strictest, most restrictionist monetary policies.
00:48:35.000And what Volcker did was he imposed discipline on the Federal Reserve.
00:48:39.000Whereas for decades past, in order to finance a massive welfare state and a massive military industrial complex, whereas the Federal Reserve was just printing money, not unlike they do today, by the way, they were just printing money.
00:50:09.000I think what we need to do with conservatism is the same thing that the libertarians did with liberalism, in the sense that the libertarians got together around like 2014, 2015, and they said, you know what?
00:50:23.000Liberal actually means that you're for private property and freedom and all that goofy stuff.
00:51:20.000If you know what conservatism means in the tradition of Russell Kirk, in the tradition of Haman, in the tradition of De Maistre, in the tradition of Edmund Burke, Alexander Hamilton, among others.
00:51:32.000I mean, depending how far you want to go, whether it's borderline fascist reactionary, or maybe you just go back a couple hundred years, classical traditionalist conservatism.
00:51:43.000But conservative as a concept cannot be applied.
00:51:48.000To this neoliberal, neoconservative ideology of both parties that has been applied in the last 20 years.
00:51:56.000What we've seen over the last 20 years is the most disruptive, anti traditional, anti family, anti natal, anti nation ideology in world history.
00:52:20.000All my viewers, all my listeners, people who follow me on Twitter, check out the American Conservative magazine.
00:52:26.000It's the only, people ask me, where do you get your news?
00:52:29.000Where do you get your ideas, opinions?
00:52:31.000You know, I mean, where do you read opinion?
00:52:33.000And I read a lot of the American Conservatives, the only thing that I read regularly.
00:52:39.000And they are, I think, introducing some kind of a renaissance for that kind of what they described as new conservatism back in the days of Russell Kirk, among others, after World War II.
00:52:50.000And so that's a great site that's doing that.
00:52:52.000But we've got to rehabilitate that term because we understand instinctively, intuitively, what conservatism means.
00:52:58.000It means pro family, it means being cautious about the civilizational transformations that are happening.
00:53:08.000I mean, conservatism, if you describe something as conservative or liberal absent the political connotations, we get an idea of what the real definitions of what those words mean.
00:53:18.000And so I would absolutely describe myself as a conservative, but only in the context of.
00:53:23.000Classical traditionalist conservatism, not like this GOP establishment Ben Shapiro type stuff.
00:53:57.000Maybe we should look into his business partner, Benny Politsek, the Hasidic Jew from Brooklyn, New York, who was looking up things online such as how to buy a baby, who was looking up molest porn.
00:54:10.000He misspelled molest because he is not ethnically white.
00:56:22.000I kind of want to get into the habit of pronouncing it Iran.
00:56:25.000And because I hate when all these cosmopolitans expect us to adopt, like, the latest correct pronunciation, like they call it Pakistan or Iran, Islam.
00:56:39.000You know, it's like it's Islam, it's Iran, Iraq, Pakistan.
00:56:45.000I don't care if it's the wrong pronunciation.
00:58:01.000So it's tough to say because there's a couple of narratives here.
00:58:04.000One narrative says, well, we haven't been prosecuting these people because they're incompetent or they don't have the will to do it or I don't know, they've turned on us, which is the most ridiculous of the arguments or it's unfeasible.
00:58:19.000That's probably the most accurate reading of it, if that's your interpretation, is that.
00:58:23.000It's very difficult to try and eliminate the whole FBI.
00:58:28.000Not eliminate, but I mean, you know what I mean.
00:58:30.000To have a criminal investigation into the whole FBI that's unprecedented.
01:00:27.000You know, like Rainbow Six, for example, you're supposed to believe that the people that are conducting these highly sophisticated raids are women.
01:00:35.000You think a woman's going to blow up somebody's living room with a bazooka for a Drug bust or something, it's not going to happen.
01:00:41.000You think they're going to be setting up all these complicated traps and things to catch?
01:02:59.000Are you not acquainted with all of human history when alcohol and sex go hand in hand?
01:03:05.000I'm not like that should be acceptable.
01:03:06.000You know, I don't drink, but with the standards today, the over reporting of it, probably not the best idea, at least with rape.
01:03:15.000For pedophiles, absolutely, death penalty, quick trial.
01:03:18.000But with rapists, it's like, I don't know.
01:03:21.000I don't know so much about that one because, you know, they talk about marital rape.
01:03:26.000I don't really so much believe in marital rape.
01:03:28.000Now, look, now look, that's not to say I don't believe in it.
01:03:32.000I don't mean that totally, but here's what I mean by this.
01:03:35.000When people say, oh, there's marital rape, look, conventionally, the argument was, well, that technically doesn't count because a marriage is a contract.
01:03:46.000And it says that in exchange for the man providing for the woman and for the family, well, you have to have certain, there's a reason that there's monogamy there.
01:03:58.000And so that's where it gets into a little bit of a gray area.
01:04:02.000Now, if there's coercion involved, that's wrong.