America First - Nicholas J. Fuentes - March 25, 2021


WHITE GENOCIDE - Oakland UBI for POC Only | America First Ep. 780


Episode Stats


Length

2 hours and 38 minutes

Words per minute

157.72

Word count

24,956

Sentence count

2,316


Summary

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

Transcript

Transcripts from "America First - Nicholas J. Fuentes" are sourced from the Knowledge Fight Interactive Search Tool. Explore them interactively here.
00:00:05.000 Good evening, everybody.
00:00:06.000 We're watching America First.
00:00:08.000 My name is Nicholas J. Fuentes.
00:00:09.000 We have a great show for you tonight.
00:00:12.000 Very excited to be back with you here tonight on Thursday.
00:00:16.000 We have a lot to talk about, lots to get into.
00:00:20.000 Featured story tonight is about Oakland in California.
00:00:26.000 I'm sure you've heard about it.
00:00:28.000 Maybe you've heard about it.
00:00:28.000 Maybe.
00:00:30.000 Maybe you haven't.
00:00:31.000 But they're introducing it, it's very in line with what we just talked about last night.
00:00:36.000 They're introducing a brand new program.
00:00:38.000 It's terrific.
00:00:40.000 $500 a month for low income residents.
00:00:44.000 But there's just one catch.
00:00:46.000 It's coming from the government.
00:00:47.000 $500 a month for low income residents from the government.
00:00:52.000 But there's a catch.
00:00:53.000 But there's one catch.
00:00:55.000 Take a wild guess what it is based on what we talked about yesterday.
00:01:00.000 Yesterday, we talked about Tammy Duckworth and Senator Hirono from Hawaii.
00:01:04.000 They said they will not vote for a Biden appointee.
00:01:09.000 In the administration, if they're white.
00:01:13.000 Very similar to our new welfare program in Oakland, California.
00:01:19.000 Low income residents can get $500 per month from the state unless they're white.
00:01:25.000 If you're white, you can't get any.
00:01:28.000 So we'll talk about that.
00:01:29.000 That'll be our featured story.
00:01:30.000 We'll also be talking tonight about the DHS and its war against Trump supporters.
00:01:35.000 We were supposed to talk about this yesterday, ran out of time.
00:01:40.000 Ran out of time because I went on such a long monologue about the remarks from the senators, which I just mentioned, that we didn't have time to cover both stories.
00:01:52.000 So I'll be covering DHS tonight.
00:01:55.000 I prefaced that yesterday.
00:01:57.000 Basically, DHS is all over you.
00:02:00.000 If you're a Trump supporter, if you're right wing, if you're involved in anything right wing, they are all over you.
00:02:07.000 They are monitoring your travel, they're considering putting you on a no fly list.
00:02:12.000 They're all over everything you've ever done because it's a domestic war on terrorism against the political enemies of the Biden administration.
00:02:23.000 That's what we're living through.
00:02:24.000 So, those will be our two big stories.
00:02:27.000 Lots to talk about.
00:02:28.000 Big news.
00:02:29.000 Big news tonight.
00:02:31.000 Before we get into that, we have some big news about the show.
00:02:35.000 Lots of things happening this weekend.
00:02:37.000 Lots of content.
00:02:39.000 I'm not even feeling good.
00:02:40.000 I feel like shit.
00:02:43.000 Okay.
00:02:44.000 And I don't like to get so crass right here in the beginning of the show, but I feel bad.
00:02:51.000 My seasonal allergies are acting up.
00:02:54.000 It's a nightmare.
00:02:55.000 My chest hurts.
00:02:56.000 I'm congested.
00:02:57.000 My head hurts.
00:02:59.000 My eyes are watering.
00:03:03.000 I feel like I don't know.
00:03:06.000 I feel horrible.
00:03:07.000 It's worse than COVID, it's worse than the mutant COVID gene therapy vaccine.
00:03:12.000 I feel like I'm dying.
00:03:15.000 But I'm here doing this show for you and for your amusement, for your sick entertainment.
00:03:22.000 I'm here, nose is running, mucus dripping down my throat, eyes are watering.
00:03:29.000 I'm dying.
00:03:31.000 And I'm here for you, and I do it for you.
00:03:34.000 So you ought to appreciate, you ought to appreciate, appreciate my sacrifice.
00:03:40.000 But we have some content coming for you this weekend tomorrow.
00:03:44.000 I announced this on Twitter today.
00:03:48.000 Tomorrow, I am debuting my brand new radio show on Telegram.
00:03:53.000 I've been talking about it all week, and in case you haven't heard, Telegram has a new feature on the app where you can stream a radio show in the public channel.
00:04:05.000 So I've got a public channel on Telegram.
00:04:08.000 I have like 35,000 followers on there, and they implemented this new feature last week where it allows me to stream audio to everybody in the room for free, and it's super straightforward, simple, intuitive, and very easy to use.
00:04:25.000 So, we'll be trying it out tomorrow for the first time.
00:04:27.000 I'm starting a weekly show.
00:04:30.000 It's a new show.
00:04:32.000 It's called Good Morning Groyper.
00:04:34.000 It's Friday at noon.
00:04:37.000 And that's the plan.
00:04:38.000 The plan is to do these every Friday at noon.
00:04:41.000 Good Morning Groyper.
00:04:42.000 It's going to be a telegram show on my telegram channel, a radio show, audio only live stream.
00:04:49.000 To answer some of your questions, which I know are going to come, yes, we'll be recording the episodes, we'll be streaming them on AmericaFirst.live.
00:04:58.000 And I'll be uploading those to NicholasJFuentes.com.
00:05:02.000 So if you miss it, you can subscribe to the website.
00:05:05.000 That's how I'm going to get you.
00:05:06.000 That's how I'm going to get you.
00:05:09.000 Ah, you missed the show?
00:05:10.000 You can watch it on my site, but you have to give me some Litecoin first.
00:05:15.000 But you have to give me some Litecoin first before you can listen.
00:05:18.000 So you can listen to it live for free on Telegram.
00:05:22.000 My Telegram is t.meslash nickjfuentes tomorrow at noon Central Time.
00:05:28.000 I think I'll also stream it on AmericaFirst.live.
00:05:33.000 But if you want to watch the recording, it's going to cost you.
00:05:36.000 It's going to cost you.
00:05:37.000 I'm going to put it behind the paywall, and then you have to give me Litecoin to listen to it because I own it and it's my show.
00:05:45.000 And nobody's going to be listening to it for free.
00:05:47.000 You want to listen to it for free?
00:05:49.000 It starts at noon tomorrow on my Telegram channel, and you can follow me there and listen to it.
00:05:55.000 If you miss it, it's going to cost you.
00:05:57.000 It's going to cost you some Litecoin.
00:05:59.000 You're going to have to fork it over.
00:06:01.000 Okay?
00:06:01.000 Just a little bit, just a little bit of Litecoin.
00:06:04.000 Nobody's going to be going bankrupt over this.
00:06:06.000 Just a little bit of Litecoin, and then you can listen to all the shows that you want.
00:06:11.000 Listen to it as many times as you want to your little Groyper heart's content.
00:06:15.000 So you watch it live.
00:06:16.000 Everybody's going to watch it live.
00:06:19.000 Noon tomorrow.
00:06:20.000 Good morning, Groyper.
00:06:21.000 I haven't, I don't even know what I'm going to talk about yet.
00:06:23.000 I don't even know what I'm going to talk about yet.
00:06:26.000 I'd like to have a guest.
00:06:27.000 I don't even know who the guest will be.
00:06:30.000 I told Assistant Groyper, I said, it's going to be fun.
00:06:34.000 It's going to be spontaneous.
00:06:36.000 There's no Plan.
00:06:37.000 We're really throwing caution to the wind.
00:06:39.000 It's a real roll of the dice, and we're all going to discover it together.
00:06:44.000 It's going to be sort of like a fun, casual thing.
00:06:50.000 So, who knows?
00:06:51.000 I don't even know what the show will be about, but it'll be tomorrow at noon on my Telegram channel, t.meslash nickjfuentes.
00:06:58.000 Please join us, be a part of the inaugural stream, or don't.
00:07:02.000 I think it's better that way if you don't go.
00:07:04.000 It's more exclusive.
00:07:06.000 I'm saying for most people, you know what?
00:07:07.000 Don't show up.
00:07:08.000 Let's keep it.
00:07:09.000 Let's keep it intimate.
00:07:10.000 Let's keep it very small.
00:07:14.000 No, everybody should come and listen to it.
00:07:17.000 But that's tomorrow.
00:07:18.000 Also, on Saturday, I'm going to be on the Politics Discord, the official Politics Discord, doing an AMA and ask me anything.
00:07:28.000 I think that's at 6 o'clock.
00:07:29.000 I've got to double check that.
00:07:31.000 It's on my Twitter if you need the details, if you need the time for that.
00:07:34.000 I'll be on the official Politics Discord on Saturday evening doing an AMA.
00:07:42.000 And that should be fun too.
00:07:43.000 So, lots of content coming this weekend.
00:07:45.000 We have Good Morning Groyper, first episode tomorrow at noon Central Time on Telegram.
00:07:51.000 And then we have the Discord AMA on Saturday night.
00:07:56.000 I think it's 6 p.m. Central Time.
00:07:59.000 But I even have to double check that.
00:08:01.000 Assistant Groyper booked that, and I was like, wait, that's this Saturday?
00:08:06.000 So, that's that.
00:08:09.000 Remember to follow me on gab at gab.comslash realneckjfuentes and subscribe to my email list down below.
00:08:17.000 With that out of the way, we're going to jump into the news here.
00:08:17.000 Okay.
00:08:21.000 I want to start with this story about DHS because I didn't get to cover it yesterday.
00:08:26.000 Yesterday I went off.
00:08:28.000 I went off.
00:08:29.000 It was one of the great shows, one of the great shows of America First.
00:08:33.000 I went off about white genocide, which is going on, perpetrated by Democrats like Tammy Duckworth and Hirono from Hawaii, Duckworth from Illinois and Hirono from Hawaii.
00:08:49.000 And I went off on that for so long, I lost track of time and I ran out of time on the show.
00:08:54.000 We had to go right into the Super Chats.
00:08:56.000 But tonight I want to go into this story from Politico yesterday about the DHS and some of the new scrutiny that's being applied against Trump supporters.
00:09:05.000 And, you know, I've been covering this now for a couple of months.
00:09:09.000 I've been involved in it, I've been a victim of it.
00:09:13.000 Ever since the Capitol riots, there has been talk from the Biden administration, from intelligence circles, from Democrats.
00:09:22.000 And even from leftists on social media and in regular media, they are talking seriously about a real war on terror in America.
00:09:34.000 And the war on terror is against Trump supporters.
00:09:37.000 And this is a very disturbing thing because, as we know, for the past 20 years, thanks to George W. Bush and Barack Obama and the deep state, we have built up this anti terrorism apparatus, which includes mass surveillance.
00:09:53.000 It includes extra constitutional authority for the federal government, the ability to detain people indefinitely without trial, the ability to kill Americans overseas, and a number of other things.
00:10:07.000 The Patriot Act.
00:10:08.000 There has been a legal surveillance and intelligence infrastructure that has been built up in order to combat Islamic terrorism.
00:10:19.000 That is nominally the threat, which served as the pretext to create all of these ungodly powers for the government.
00:10:27.000 Period of the past two decades, and what was designed to be directed outwardly against foreign entities, foreign states, or non state actors.
00:10:38.000 Now we're seeing all those tools and all of those new found jurisdictions and abilities are being directed inwardly against our own people, against Americans, specifically against Trump supporters.
00:10:53.000 And they are using the Capitol as well as other things to broadly define.
00:10:58.000 People that voted for Donald Trump, people that believe in conspiracy theories, people that are right wing, as potentially violent extremists or terrorists.
00:11:08.000 And with that premise in mind, they are now using the FBI, using the NSA, using DHS, and all these tools, weaponizing them to hunt down and target and cause problems for people that the Biden administration doesn't agree with.
00:11:24.000 And that's what this article is about.
00:11:26.000 There was a big story about it in Politico yesterday, specifically about the efforts of DHS.
00:11:33.000 The Department of Homeland Security.
00:11:35.000 And what DHS is talking about doing is putting Trump supporters on a no fly list, talking about, if they're not on a no fly list, monitoring all of their travel domestically and internationally, searching their bags at the airport, and even measures that go beyond that.
00:11:54.000 So I'll read to you this article.
00:11:56.000 It says The Department of Homeland Security is considering monitoring the travel of so called domestic extremists.
00:12:04.000 And expanding its use of the no fly list according to law enforcement sources.
00:12:10.000 The discussions are part of the Biden administration's strategy of treating domestic terror as a national security threat and not just a law enforcement problem.
00:12:20.000 And when they say national security, that means federal, that means feds.
00:12:25.000 When they say that terrorism is national security and not law enforcement, they mean they're taking it out of the hands of police, taking it out of the hands of nice local people.
00:12:37.000 And they're turning it over to the spooks and the dogs and the scum and the insects and the parasites in Washington, D.C.
00:12:46.000 It says they're also part of broader conversations in government about how to use tools developed for the global war on terror to combat domestic extremism, which is exactly what I just described.
00:12:58.000 Everything that they built up to fight ISIS and Al Qaeda and the Taliban, they're now going to use against you and your family and your parents and your grandparents.
00:13:08.000 It says the department could begin analyzing the travel patterns of suspected domestic extremists, monitor flights they book on short notice, and search their luggage for weapons, according to a senior law enforcement official.
00:13:22.000 There have also been discussions about putting suspected domestic violent extremists, a category that includes so called white supremacists, on the FBI's no fly list, said the official.
00:13:35.000 When suspected extremists travel internationally, officials may be more likely to question them before they pass through customs.
00:13:42.000 And to search their phones and laptops.
00:13:46.000 So, in a word, you have no civil liberties.
00:13:48.000 If you're right wing, they can interpret that broadly to mean domestic extremism, white supremacy, et cetera, et cetera.
00:13:57.000 And then they're going to use that as a justification to track the flights that you book, possibly prevent you from boarding an airplane.
00:14:05.000 When you get to the airport, they will search your phone, they will search your laptop, they will search your bag.
00:14:12.000 This is what it means now to be.
00:14:14.000 Right wing to be a political dissident in America.
00:14:18.000 A second law enforcement official told Politico that conversations about monitoring domestic extremists' travel have involved multiple federal agencies at the interagency level, including the FBI.
00:14:30.000 So it's not even just DHS, but it's others too.
00:14:33.000 On January 7th, Representative Benny Thompson, the chair of the House Committee on Homeland Security, called on the TSA and the FBI to use the no fly list to keep suspected perpetrators of the January 6th attack from boarding airplanes.
00:14:49.000 The week after January 6th, a top FBI official said the Bureau was actively looking at adding names of the Capitol attackers to the no fly list.
00:14:59.000 And the week before Inauguration Day, the head of the TSA said the agency was working to ensure that those who may pose a threat to our aviation sector undergo enhanced screening or are prevented from boarding an aircraft.
00:15:14.000 According to the officials who spoke to Politico, conversations about domestic extremism and the no fly list.
00:15:20.000 Are not just limited to people who attacked the Capitol on January 6th.
00:15:26.000 Which is an important thing to understand.
00:15:29.000 Let me repeat that.
00:15:30.000 According to these law enforcement officials who are giving all this very credible information, it's not limited to just the people that were at or involved in the Capitol attack on January 6th.
00:15:44.000 So they're talking about people that had nothing to do with it.
00:15:47.000 They're talking about putting just regular old Trump supporters or others on a no fly list, monitoring their activities, searching their bags, searching their phone and their laptop.
00:16:00.000 And this is a lot of what we've been seeing for the past few months.
00:16:04.000 Honestly, they had been talking about this from the beginning.
00:16:08.000 They had been talking about this from, I think, the day of, on January 6th, 2021.
00:16:14.000 They were talking about no fly list and insurrection and all of everything that that entails from a law enforcement point of view.
00:16:23.000 But now we're seeing it become a reality.
00:16:25.000 These are serious conversations that are not coming from just politicians and just regular Democrats.
00:16:32.000 It's coming from the FBI.
00:16:34.000 It's coming from DHS.
00:16:35.000 I'm sure they're talking about it at the TSA too.
00:16:39.000 And they're talking about taking people on the basis of their political opinions, maybe their voting patterns, their online activity, and imposing real restrictions on them, actually abridging their civil liberties.
00:16:53.000 And people just need to understand that this is how bad things are getting.
00:16:57.000 A lot of people have a general idea, I think, obviously, at this point, that if you're right wing, the system is against you.
00:17:05.000 But for most people, their concept of that is getting banned on Twitter, getting banned on Facebook.
00:17:13.000 Both leftists and right wing people alike, their conception of system oppression or system targeting and harassment of right wing people is very trivial.
00:17:27.000 It's very benign.
00:17:29.000 You know, oh, you get banned from Twitter.
00:17:30.000 Oh, there's the social media censorship.
00:17:33.000 As we've laid out with social media censorship in particular, it goes much further than just.
00:17:38.000 Getting kicked off of a major platform.
00:17:41.000 And in this conversation, it goes further than even getting kicked off of online services.
00:17:46.000 We're now talking about vital services.
00:17:48.000 We're talking about civil liberties.
00:17:50.000 Can't fly on a plane.
00:17:53.000 And if you can't fly on a plane, they're going to strip search you, they're going to take your stuff, they're going to search your bags, they're going to log it in a little book.
00:18:00.000 I mean, they're treating us like we're terrorists.
00:18:03.000 And think about it.
00:18:04.000 I was on a call with somebody earlier today.
00:18:07.000 I said, You almost have to think that it might even be easier on some level to actually be a criminal than it is to be a right wing person.
00:18:16.000 It's like they're treating us worse than terrorists.
00:18:19.000 Like something tells me based on, I don't know, the past seven days, the past week, it seems like it's easier to slip through the cracks as a mass shooter or like a pedophile or something actually heinous, something actually evil and law breaking than it is to be a right wing person.
00:18:39.000 Because we saw the other day, the shooter in Colorado was known to the FBI.
00:18:45.000 This Ahmad Alisa character who carried out the mass shooting in Boulder, Colorado on Monday, he was known to the FBI on Sunday.
00:18:54.000 He was on their radar.
00:18:56.000 And he walked into a grocery store with an assault rifle and killed 10 people.
00:19:02.000 And obviously the cops are called and he's apprehended, and he had no problem doing that.
00:19:06.000 But the FBI is working around the clock right now.
00:19:09.000 The scum and the dogs at the FBI and the DOJ.
00:19:12.000 They are currently, as we speak, working around the clock 24 7 in the largest criminal investigation in the history of the country, charging 350 people for what amounts to trespassing at the Capitol.
00:19:28.000 If you trespassed at the Capitol, you have 100 FBI agents assigned to you.
00:19:33.000 Statistically, I think they said there's, what was it, 1,000 DOJ lawyers and like 300 FBI agents.
00:19:40.000 So statistically, there's like one agent.
00:19:44.000 Per trespasser and three DOJ lawyers per trespasser.
00:19:49.000 But we couldn't get the FBI to look at a mass murderer.
00:19:54.000 The FBI couldn't be bothered to look into somebody who they knew his name on Sunday and on Monday he walked into a supermarket and killed 10 people.
00:20:03.000 I think the guy in Atlanta just wasn't even on their radar.
00:20:06.000 I guess he was an MKUltra experiment gone wrong.
00:20:08.000 Maybe he was on their radar.
00:20:09.000 He was like Jason Bourne.
00:20:11.000 But you understand.
00:20:13.000 What's more is it's hard.
00:20:15.000 It's hard not to see the parallel with what's happening at the southern border.
00:20:20.000 You know, not only is this a country where you've got mass shootings happening now, two in the last week, but also you've got, get this, this is a number I saw on Twitter today, over 100,000 people coming into the country under the Biden administration unrestricted, without being apprehended.
00:20:43.000 100,000 people during a pandemic, I should add, during a global pandemic, which That's why you have to keep your kids home from school, and that's why you can't go to work, and you have to wear your mask from the time you get to the host to the table at a restaurant.
00:21:01.000 But during a pandemic, and with everything else going on, you've got 100,000 people pouring across the border.
00:21:07.000 And they're putting them up in hotels, convention centers, tents, and cages, and every other facility you can imagine.
00:21:16.000 And they're scrambling to find resources for that while they've got three lawyers and an FBI agent for every single individual who.
00:21:25.000 Trespassed in a peaceful demonstration at the Capitol on January 6th.
00:21:30.000 I would also add that if you take a look at every major city in the United States, from Los Angeles to Chicago to Minneapolis to New York City, you have got a huge surge in crime.
00:21:45.000 In Chicago alone, people are terrified now to drive to the city because everybody's getting carjacked.
00:21:51.000 Carjackings are on track.
00:21:53.000 We're supposed to have 1,800 carjackings this year.
00:21:56.000 Based on how many there have been to date so far in 2021, 1,800 for the year.
00:22:02.000 Do the math on that.
00:22:03.000 What is that, five or six per day for an entire year?
00:22:09.000 Carjackings, murders, mass shootings, the borders totally open and uncontrolled.
00:22:16.000 And DHS and the FBI and the TSA are holding roundtables around the clock, interagency meetings talking about how they're going to track you for being a Trump supporter.
00:22:28.000 And they're going to track your online activity and they're going to search your bags and they're going to put you on a no fly list and they're going to search your phone and your laptop because you read the Daily Stormer on your phone, because you have a Gab account, right?
00:22:45.000 Because you follow Nick Fuentes on Twitter, because you voted for Donald Trump.
00:22:50.000 And I don't need to tell you what's going on here.
00:22:53.000 We understand what's going on.
00:22:55.000 They don't care.
00:22:56.000 You know, some Republicans might stop there and they might say, this is crazy.
00:22:59.000 There's real problems in this country, and liberals are focused on us.
00:23:04.000 Get a grip.
00:23:05.000 No, but you don't understand.
00:23:07.000 And that's exactly the point.
00:23:08.000 This is by design.
00:23:09.000 This is a very specific kind of a state that they're trying to create.
00:23:13.000 It's called anarcho tyranny.
00:23:15.000 We've talked about it on the show before.
00:23:17.000 It's a term popularized by Sam Francis.
00:23:22.000 And it sounds like a paradox, it sounds like an oxymoron.
00:23:25.000 How can something be both tyrannical and anarchic?
00:23:28.000 How can something be tyrannical, meaning dominated by an authoritarian government?
00:23:34.000 How can there be order or an excess of order?
00:23:37.000 But at the same time, be an anarchic or an anarchy component where there's not enough order, where people are roaming free, acting as though there is no government.
00:23:48.000 Well, you now understand exactly what that means.
00:23:51.000 You now understand exactly what it is like to be sandwiched, to be situated right in the middle of anarchy and tyranny.
00:23:59.000 Anarchy on the one side and tyranny on the other.
00:24:03.000 We are situated between these people pouring across the border and the black criminals jacking your car.
00:24:11.000 And mass shooters and MKUltra victims and pedophiles and so on.
00:24:16.000 On the one side, lawlessness.
00:24:19.000 And then on the other side, we are facing a tyrannical surveillance security police state.
00:24:26.000 On the other side, we have got the long arm of the law, of the panopticon surveillance state, constantly looking over you at everything that you do with a legal code which is impossible to understand.
00:24:41.000 Where they can create infractions and they don't even need to.
00:24:43.000 They could detain you indefinitely even if you did nothing wrong without a trial.
00:24:48.000 Take your stuff, go into your house, it doesn't matter.
00:24:52.000 This is where Trump supporters find ourselves in 2021, situated between anarchy and tyranny.
00:24:59.000 The laws do not apply to the criminals, they only apply to the law abiding people.
00:25:05.000 The criminals are out there with reckless abandon, people that don't work, that don't pay taxes, and don't own anything.
00:25:12.000 They are out there and the laws do not apply.
00:25:15.000 They can steal, they can shoot, they can take your car, they can go back and forth across the border.
00:25:21.000 They don't pay taxes, they do whatever they want.
00:25:24.000 And they terrorize us from one side.
00:25:26.000 And then we find that the government is getting increasingly tyrannical, increasingly more authoritarian and scary.
00:25:33.000 And they're looking at us alone, looking at the middle class, looking at white people, law abiding people, and finding every way to screw you financially, legally, in every way.
00:25:45.000 What are we supposed to do?
00:25:48.000 The system has to be completely dismantled.
00:25:51.000 This is why, you know, lately the show has taken on a little bit more of a radical turn or an unconventional turn.
00:25:59.000 A lot of Republicans believe in the military, they believe in the police, they believe in, you know, American exceptionalism on the world stage.
00:26:08.000 I don't anymore because you see what all of that means for us, in effect.
00:26:15.000 You see, the National Guard is deployed in our own capital.
00:26:19.000 Against us.
00:26:20.000 You see that the military is deployed in our own cities, not against Black Lives Matter, not against illegal immigrants, against you.
00:26:30.000 And the same goes for the police.
00:26:32.000 Are the police out there arresting the looters and the carjackers and the murderers, or are they out there arresting people that don't wear masks and arresting people that are pro Trump protesters?
00:26:46.000 They are the people that are propping up the tyranny side of anarcho tyranny.
00:26:52.000 The police, the National Guard, the military, the intelligence agencies.
00:26:57.000 I do not see myself as a part of America.
00:27:02.000 America, as we see it embodied by the American regime, which is sovereign over America.
00:27:08.000 I want America to fail against Russia and China.
00:27:12.000 I want to see the military and the police defunded at this point.
00:27:17.000 Because think about what the funding is doing.
00:27:19.000 Think about what American power projection means.
00:27:22.000 Maybe at one point, power projection for the American state meant projecting power against radical Muslims or against Chinese communists.
00:27:32.000 Now, American power is being projected inwardly against you in your home and against your family.
00:27:41.000 You know, all these capabilities, that $700 billion budget for the DOD, where do you think that's being spent now?
00:27:49.000 It's going to be spent to hurt you.
00:27:51.000 And the same goes for the police.
00:27:52.000 Defund the police.
00:27:54.000 Well, that's coming from blacks, that's coming from BLM, and from liberal activists.
00:28:00.000 But once again, who are the police being used against?
00:28:03.000 Are they being used against?
00:28:05.000 George Floyd's and Breonna Taylor's, or are they being used against Ashley Babbitt's and people that don't wear masks?
00:28:12.000 So, as far as conservatism is concerned, we have to adopt a posture which is against the system.
00:28:20.000 We can no longer rationalize, support, and abide by the system.
00:28:25.000 I'm not rooting for NATO.
00:28:26.000 I'm not rooting for the State Department.
00:28:28.000 I'm not rooting for the FBI or the military or the police.
00:28:33.000 I'm rooting for Russia.
00:28:34.000 I'm rooting for China.
00:28:36.000 I'm rooting for me.
00:28:37.000 I'm rooting for you.
00:28:38.000 I am rooting for patriots, for the people of America.
00:28:44.000 I am not rooting for the system.
00:28:47.000 And at the same time, we have to oppose the anarchy.
00:28:50.000 I think the only way that we're going to find a way out of this is if, of course, we make our way through the institutions and we make the system serve us.
00:29:00.000 Ultimately, what's going to be called for is sort of a parallel tyranny that is going to at once oppress the anarchic.
00:29:10.000 Component, you know, we're going to have to have this new sort of tyrannical force which is able to quell the anarchy that is happening on one side and also displace the tyranny that is happening on the other.
00:29:23.000 Able to purge and root out the corruption from the tyrannical state and also able to keep the anarchic criminal component in check, too.
00:29:32.000 That's what Donald Trump was supposed to represent, in a sense.
00:29:36.000 Donald Trump was supposed to bring law and order, and he was also meant to, you know, and this is the part that didn't happen so much.
00:29:44.000 He was also supposed to root out the corruption in D.C. and drain the swamp.
00:29:49.000 You can't have one without the other.
00:29:51.000 You need law and order, but you have to drain the swamp.
00:29:53.000 That has to be the sort of synthesis.
00:29:57.000 That's the only synthesis that's going to solve our problems.
00:30:01.000 Is law and order, yes, but drain the swamp.
00:30:04.000 We've got to take out the bad law enforcers who hate us, put good law enforcers in there, and then enforce the laws against not just the criminals, but the corrupt and everybody else too.
00:30:17.000 So that's the situation that we find ourselves in.
00:30:19.000 It's not a good place to be.
00:30:23.000 And you can now begin to see the limits, maybe, of mainstream conservatism this worship of the troops, worship of the police.
00:30:30.000 Don't get me wrong, there's a lot of good people in the police and a lot of conservatives, and the same goes for the military.
00:30:37.000 But we have to think about, in effect, who they're working for.
00:30:40.000 We have to think about, in effect, what their job is and what they're doing.
00:30:46.000 You know, in the FBI and DHS and TSA, they're having conversations over there about abridging your rights and abridging your civil liberties.
00:30:56.000 They see you as an enemy.
00:30:58.000 They see you basically as a latent terrorist, an enemy combatant.
00:31:03.000 And that's the premise that they're using to justify these things.
00:31:07.000 That's how they see you.
00:31:09.000 So the next time you think about, oh, saluting the flag and Uncle Sam and all this, understand they see you as the enemy.
00:31:16.000 They don't see you as a patron, they do not see you as a friend.
00:31:19.000 They're not out there defending you.
00:31:22.000 Increasingly, they're going to be here, out here in your streets, working directly against you at the behest of whom?
00:31:31.000 Joe Biden, Bill Gates, the billionaire class, the globalist oligarchy, they serve at their pleasure.
00:31:41.000 Military, police, intelligence community, the whole deal.
00:31:46.000 So when I see cops and BLM fighting in the streets, I don't know who to cheer for anymore.
00:31:51.000 I'm cheering for the Patriots.
00:31:53.000 I'm cheering for the Trump rioters.
00:31:57.000 I'm cheering for whoever is not them, right?
00:32:01.000 But that's what's going on.
00:32:03.000 Be very careful.
00:32:05.000 And this especially, I said this more so in January, back when this stuff really began to take off.
00:32:11.000 But I say it now more than ever.
00:32:13.000 You have got to be so careful.
00:32:15.000 You have got to be so careful because they are out there.
00:32:20.000 They are lurking, the feds.
00:32:22.000 They're out there.
00:32:22.000 They're watching what you do.
00:32:24.000 You probably know a few of them.
00:32:26.000 Maybe some of them are your friends.
00:32:28.000 You have to act as though they are.
00:32:31.000 You can't trust anybody.
00:32:32.000 You got to watch what you say.
00:32:34.000 You got to watch what you do.
00:32:35.000 And you got to watch about even what you appear to be doing or appear to be saying.
00:32:39.000 It's not enough to just not be criminal.
00:32:42.000 It's not enough to just not say bad things.
00:32:45.000 You have to actively keep up an appearance that you're not doing anything criminal and not saying anything bad while also not doing anything criminal and not saying anything bad.
00:32:56.000 Because they're out there and they are looking to throw the book at people.
00:32:59.000 They are looking to kill you.
00:33:00.000 They are looking to put you in a cage like an animal for the rest of your life.
00:33:05.000 And they can.
00:33:06.000 Thanks to Obama, thanks to Bush, thanks to the war on terror, they can do it.
00:33:11.000 They'll treat you like ISIS, they'll treat you like Osama bin Laden because you have the wrong political opinions.
00:33:17.000 And don't discount for a second that that's not completely true because that's how they're talking about us.
00:33:24.000 Domestic violent extremists.
00:33:26.000 Are we domestic violent extremists?
00:33:28.000 I've never committed an act of violence in my life.
00:33:31.000 I'm domestic.
00:33:32.000 I'm not extreme.
00:33:33.000 The only thing that's extreme about me is I'm eccentric.
00:33:36.000 I guess I have some extreme, you know, neuroses.
00:33:39.000 But, you know, besides that, my political views are things that the Democrats would have agreed with 15 years ago, 20 years ago.
00:33:48.000 There's nothing extreme or violent going on here, but that's what they're calling us like we're the Taliban.
00:33:53.000 And they will use every tool in their arsenal to defeat us, just like they're over there killing people in the Middle East.
00:34:00.000 So keep that in mind.
00:34:01.000 Very dark times.
00:34:03.000 I want to talk about our featured story in Oakland.
00:34:03.000 We're going to move on.
00:34:07.000 And this is very much.
00:34:10.000 Along the lines of what we talked about yesterday, which is white genocide, which is white genocide.
00:34:17.000 You know, it can't be said enough.
00:34:20.000 It's a genocide against whites.
00:34:23.000 And it's about time that people began to work that into their vernacular.
00:34:26.000 People need to start saying white.
00:34:29.000 People have to start saying it.
00:34:31.000 And it would be helpful, too, if they would call it a white genocide because that's what it is.
00:34:37.000 And I said this on Twitter today there's no other way to describe it.
00:34:41.000 There is no other.
00:34:42.000 Adequate way to describe what is going on, what is being perpetrated against white people, other than a genocide.
00:34:49.000 It is just descriptive.
00:34:50.000 It is precise.
00:34:52.000 It is plainly factual that that is what is being perpetrated against our people is a genocide.
00:34:58.000 And how can you call it anything other than that?
00:35:01.000 We went over the story yesterday, and this is along the same thinking.
00:35:09.000 Yesterday, two Democratic senators, both non white women, said that they would not vote for white appointees for the White House.
00:35:18.000 And because there is such a slim Democrat majority, it's Not even technically a majority at all.
00:35:25.000 These two votes effectively can act as a veto.
00:35:30.000 They are acting as a veto against any white appointee on the basis of their white skin, on the basis of their European ancestry.
00:35:38.000 They're being vetoed, you know, in a blanket way by these two senators.
00:35:44.000 And I talked about that's the kind of stuff that precedes a genocide.
00:35:48.000 I mean, what else do you need to see?
00:35:50.000 What more do you need to see other than senators?
00:35:53.000 The upper chamber of the legislature, okay?
00:35:56.000 It's one thing, you know, Congress is kind of a different story.
00:35:59.000 State government is local governments, even lower than that.
00:36:03.000 We are talking about the upper chamber of the legislature, statewide office.
00:36:08.000 There's only a hundred of them.
00:36:11.000 Two of them are saying, we will not vote for white people to govern America.
00:36:16.000 That's a big deal.
00:36:18.000 That's bigger than Stacey Abrams.
00:36:20.000 That's bigger than a BLM mayor.
00:36:22.000 That's bigger than some activist in some neighborhood in a liberal city, in a liberal state.
00:36:27.000 These are two sitting senators in the upper chamber of the legislature saying, we will not vote for white people to govern America.
00:36:37.000 And this is, of course, only the latest in a string of things, or was as of yesterday.
00:36:43.000 This comes after Evanston approved reparations.
00:36:46.000 Evanston is a city north of Chicago.
00:36:49.000 This is after the COVID stimulus bill, which appropriated money for black farmers and for no other kind of farmers.
00:36:58.000 And today, the new development is that in Oakland, in California, they have approved a new program to pay low income residents $500 per month from the government, and white people are not eligible to receive it because white people are too rich.
00:37:16.000 And by the way, in case people don't know how this works, let me explain very simply.
00:37:22.000 Black poor people, from a fiscal point of view, are a net negative on the state's coffers, meaning this.
00:37:30.000 They extract more from the government in services than they put in.
00:37:35.000 By definition, I mean, what there's, and I'm about to read the article, but by definition, they say we are giving the non white low income people free money.
00:37:45.000 Government's giving them free money because they're poor.
00:37:48.000 If you're getting free money, you're not paying anything in taxes.
00:37:52.000 You know, you may pay very little, most likely, you pay nothing at all.
00:37:56.000 Yet they're getting services, they're getting, you know, roads and police.
00:38:01.000 To say the least, they're probably also getting medical, they're probably also getting education, maybe housing, food stamps, etc.
00:38:08.000 So they put nothing in, yet they get a lot out.
00:38:11.000 They're also now getting cash out on top of that.
00:38:15.000 They say that white people are not eligible to take the cash out because they're too rich.
00:38:19.000 So that means that white people are putting the money in.
00:38:23.000 What this is called is a wealth transfer from one race to another.
00:38:28.000 If you're a white, rich or not, you pay.
00:38:32.000 If you're black, rich or not, You take.
00:38:35.000 We work.
00:38:37.000 We pay.
00:38:38.000 They take.
00:38:39.000 They eat.
00:38:41.000 Because they're black and we're white.
00:38:45.000 That's the system.
00:38:46.000 That's how it works.
00:38:47.000 Now, you can obfuscate that by using all kinds of Marxist terminology, class terminology, and say it's about low income, and you could say it's universal basic income or whatever.
00:38:59.000 You can use all kinds of public policy terminology to obfuscate what's going on, but let's be very clear about it.
00:39:06.000 Nationally and locally, whites and Asians are the only groups that are a net positive fiscally.
00:39:14.000 They're the only groups that are putting more in.
00:39:18.000 Than they're taking out, that are paying more in than they're extracting in terms of value with the services they receive.
00:39:25.000 Blacks and Hispanics are the opposite.
00:39:27.000 So, this is the way that our country works.
00:39:29.000 If you're breaking it down along a racial demographic line, you've got whites and Asians putting money in, and where does their money come from?
00:39:38.000 It comes from work.
00:39:40.000 They work for their money, they pay money in.
00:39:44.000 So, we're working for the government, and then the government gives the money to blacks and Hispanics.
00:39:49.000 We're working for them.
00:39:51.000 We work.
00:39:53.000 For free, and they reap the benefits of that.
00:39:56.000 What is that called?
00:39:57.000 What is that called when somebody works for free and somebody else gets the benefit?
00:40:03.000 What do you call that?
00:40:05.000 You know, let's say, for example, you have a farm, okay?
00:40:10.000 Let's say you have a farm, and I go over there and I work and I work and I work, and you know, I get to have a little quarters, I get to have a little cabin or something, and I get to eat a little bit of the harvest, and I, you know, I get to, uh, Benefit from the protection of the manor, you know, of the person that owns the farm.
00:40:31.000 But for the most part, the fruits of my labor go towards a person that owns the farm.
00:40:37.000 You know, I mean, I'm describing slavery.
00:40:39.000 What I'm describing is the chattel slavery of blacks in America 150 years ago.
00:40:44.000 We're essentially now creating that because that's what taxes are to an extent, right?
00:40:50.000 I mean, you're working, you get paid for your work, and then you pay a lot of that money then to the government.
00:40:56.000 So it's almost like the The money went straight from your employer to the government, and you worked for free then.
00:41:02.000 You worked, and the value of that work was transferred to the government.
00:41:06.000 Money is the way that you're able to give value to work.
00:41:13.000 It's a unit of account, right?
00:41:15.000 And so that's being given to the government, and then the government gives that to somebody else.
00:41:19.000 It might as well go from your employer to the black people.
00:41:23.000 It might as well just go straight from the people that pay you.
00:41:26.000 It should never even touch your wallet.
00:41:28.000 You should just work, and then they should just pay black people for.
00:41:32.000 The work that you did.
00:41:33.000 That's what's going on.
00:41:35.000 That's slavery.
00:41:37.000 It's one thing when you work and you pay it to the government, and then the government uses that to pay for police, which protect you, and pay for roads, which you drive on, and pay for regulatory agencies, which do consumer protection and environmental protection and other things and increase your quality of life.
00:41:55.000 You know, they're working for you in a sense.
00:41:58.000 There's some reciprocity there.
00:42:00.000 You put something in, you get something out.
00:42:02.000 This is just straight up a transfer of wealth.
00:42:05.000 It is just straight up slavery.
00:42:07.000 We work and then they get paid.
00:42:09.000 So, this is the article about the program in Oakland.
00:42:12.000 If you don't believe me, I'm not making this up.
00:42:14.000 And listen to the article, listen to how it's phrased.
00:42:18.000 They don't even mention that whites are not eligible until a page into the article.
00:42:24.000 This is from CBS.
00:42:26.000 It says The mayor of Oakland, California, on Tuesday announced a privately funded program that will give low income families of color in the city $500 per month with no rules on how they can spend it.
00:42:39.000 The program is the latest experiment with a guaranteed income.
00:42:43.000 The idea that giving low income individuals a regular monthly stipend helps ease the stresses of poverty and results in better health and upward economic mobility.
00:42:53.000 The idea isn't new, but it's having a revival across the U.S. after some mayors launched smaller scale pilot programs across the country in a coordinated campaign to convince Congress to adopt a national guaranteed income program.
00:43:09.000 The Oakland Resilient Families Program.
00:43:13.000 Has so far raised $6.75 million from private donors, including Blue Meridian Partners, a national philanthropy group.
00:43:21.000 To be eligible, individuals must have at least one child under the age of 18 and an income that is at or below 50% of the area median income, about $59,000 per year for a family of three.
00:43:34.000 Half the spots are reserved for people who earn less than 138% of the federal poverty level, or about $30,000 per year for a family of three.
00:43:45.000 Participants will be randomly selected from a pool of applicants who meet the eligibility requirements.
00:43:51.000 Oakland's project is significant because it is one of the largest efforts in the U.S. so far, targeting up to 600 families.
00:44:00.000 And it is the first program to limit participation strictly to black, indigenous, and people of color communities.
00:44:08.000 The reason white households in Oakland, on average, make about three times as much annually as black households, according to the Oakland Equity Index.
00:44:18.000 It's also a nod to the legacy of the Black Panther Party, the political movement that was founded in Oakland in the 1960s.
00:44:26.000 So, this is historic.
00:44:28.000 This is amazing.
00:44:30.000 Not only is it the largest UBI program, but it's also one that is explicitly anti white.
00:44:36.000 And the reasoning for this is a little bit dicey, right?
00:44:39.000 It says that, well, the reason we don't give it to white people is because on average white people make more.
00:44:46.000 Okay, but what does that have to do with anything?
00:44:49.000 Isn't it for low income people?
00:44:51.000 Shouldn't it just then be for low income people?
00:44:54.000 What does white have to do with it?
00:44:56.000 If it's for low income people, then should it not be for white, black, and brown people that are low income?
00:45:04.000 I thought what's supposed to qualify you is that you meet a poverty threshold.
00:45:08.000 Are there not white people that meet the poverty threshold?
00:45:12.000 They say, well, on average, blacks have less income than whites.
00:45:16.000 Well, so what?
00:45:18.000 I mean, why does that matter at all?
00:45:20.000 I mean, we're talking about families in need.
00:45:22.000 What does a rich white person have to do with a poor white person?
00:45:26.000 You tell poor, low income white people that they don't get any because there are other people with the same skin color and with the same ancestry that make more money than black people on average?
00:45:37.000 I mean, what is that?
00:45:39.000 How does that make any sense at all?
00:45:40.000 It doesn't.
00:45:42.000 What this is about, as I said yesterday, is about creating a racial caste system.
00:45:50.000 It's a system where non white people are elevated by the system.
00:45:55.000 Inequality is enshrined into the law.
00:45:58.000 And people that are not white will get special benefits, special perks.
00:46:02.000 They will get money, special treatment, status, social status, and status conferred by the government.
00:46:11.000 And white people do not get all of those things.
00:46:14.000 White people actually get the opposite.
00:46:16.000 White people can foot the bill for it.
00:46:18.000 White people are lower status.
00:46:20.000 White people are browbeaten.
00:46:21.000 Their opportunities are taken away to accommodate for black people and other indigenous people of color, right?
00:46:31.000 And ultimately, this is the inevitable result of living in a multiracial country.
00:46:35.000 I've said this before.
00:46:36.000 You know, some people think that the answer to this is to simply negate this.
00:46:41.000 It's to say, well, this is wrong and you should not have this.
00:46:46.000 This is what a lot of Republicans and conservatives say.
00:46:51.000 Correctly, they will say this is racist.
00:46:55.000 They are discriminating against people on the basis of their race.
00:46:59.000 They're identifying people and qualifying people for this program based exclusively on their DNA.
00:47:07.000 And that's a textbook definition of racism.
00:47:09.000 Therefore, we should not have it.
00:47:11.000 We should do away with programs like this.
00:47:13.000 We should have programs that are not like this, programs that are color and race blind.
00:47:19.000 The problem with that thinking is that this is inevitable.
00:47:25.000 When you get multiple groups of people living in the same place, pulling from the same pool of resources, living under the same government, using the same facilities, access to the same public resources and public goods, This is what necessarily occurs.
00:47:45.000 Unless everybody is getting exactly the same thing, and unless everybody thinks they're getting exactly the same thing, these are the kinds of problems that inevitably arise in a society that has more than one group of people in large numbers.
00:48:04.000 What I mean by this is simple let's take a city like Chicago.
00:48:07.000 You've got almost equal parts whites, Hispanics, and blacks.
00:48:12.000 Now, it is imperative for whites, Hispanics, and blacks to get along together that whites, Hispanics, and blacks feel like they are all being treated fairly.
00:48:24.000 And fair is very subjective, but it is imperative for all these groups to live together that they feel like, you know, in order to not create resentment, that everybody is being treated more or less fairly.
00:48:35.000 Everybody is getting theirs.
00:48:38.000 Everybody is getting something, right?
00:48:41.000 So it's imperative for social stability and cohesion and order.
00:48:47.000 That the perception of these different groups, you know, maybe it's true in fact, maybe it's just perception, but it's incumbent that every one of these groups perceives that they're getting theirs, that they're getting their own.
00:49:02.000 If there is even a slight discrepancy, real or perceived, you are going to get racial resentment and conflict.
00:49:11.000 You know, for example, when you talk about schooling, black schools notoriously are bad, and white schools notoriously are good.
00:49:20.000 Now, You could get into the weeds about a conversation about funding and resources, but there are resources poured into all the schools.
00:49:30.000 Believe me, I've seen it firsthand.
00:49:33.000 The government pours money towards teachers and towards inner city, low income schools.
00:49:39.000 It happens all the time.
00:49:40.000 So, whether real or perceived, you have got inequalities arising from the human condition.
00:49:47.000 White schools are better, black schools are worse.
00:49:50.000 And black people then say, okay, well, our schools are worse.
00:49:53.000 This must be because.
00:49:55.000 You know, we're all living in the same city.
00:49:58.000 We're all under the same government, pulling from the same tax pool.
00:50:01.000 It's the same bureaucrats, the same administration.
00:50:03.000 Well, we're not being treated fairly.
00:50:05.000 There's this disparity.
00:50:06.000 There's this inequality.
00:50:08.000 Why is it occurring?
00:50:09.000 It's because we're not, we're getting the short end of the stick.
00:50:12.000 We're pulling the short stick here, and we're not getting enough.
00:50:17.000 So they then resent white people.
00:50:19.000 And then they're going to go and they're going to vote in a way that black people can get more.
00:50:25.000 What happens then?
00:50:26.000 Do Hispanics interpret this to mean that, okay, Okay, well, now all this attention is on the black schools and nobody's paying attention.
00:50:33.000 Do you see how quickly then conflict is generated, conflict is stirred up based on real or perceived inequities, inequities which are unavoidable?
00:50:44.000 That's the point.
00:50:46.000 You get groups of people together, and groups stick together, they're sticky.
00:50:52.000 Blacks, Hispanics, and whites, as much as some groups, some to a greater degree and some to a lesser degree, claim to be individualistic or claim to not care about race.
00:51:03.000 They all do on some level, and some are more vocal and open than other groups, as we know.
00:51:08.000 And some are, you know, they do care more about race than other groups.
00:51:12.000 But you're always going to have, as long as you have groups, you're going to have people within those groups that care about those groups.
00:51:18.000 As long as you have different groups, you are going to have inequality.
00:51:23.000 And as long as you have inequality, you are going to have racial resentment.
00:51:28.000 And as long as there is racial resentment among large groups of people living in the same place, Withdrawing the same resources from the same state in close proximity, you are going to get local racial conflict.
00:51:45.000 It's necessarily so.
00:51:47.000 It necessarily follows from what we know about human beings.
00:51:51.000 Human beings are tribal, human beings are unequal, and human beings are jealous.
00:51:57.000 And because of those things that we know to be in mankind's nature, we know that you cannot have large groups of very different people.
00:52:06.000 Living in close proximity, mixed together, using the same public goods, the same public resources, pulling from the same pool, and being represented and administered by the same government.
00:52:18.000 It doesn't work for this reason.
00:52:22.000 And we are doing this on a national level.
00:52:25.000 We're doing this in the big cities.
00:52:28.000 We're doing this in the states.
00:52:30.000 We're doing this in now rural and suburban communities.
00:52:34.000 We are doing it across the whole country.
00:52:37.000 We are inviting people in.
00:52:39.000 They are sharing our schools.
00:52:41.000 They're sharing our places of business.
00:52:43.000 They are sharing city blocks and subdevelopments and neighborhoods.
00:52:49.000 And because there are unequal outcomes, because there are clashes in values and perceptions and expectations and identity, racial resentment is being bred.
00:53:02.000 And resentment breeds conflict.
00:53:05.000 We're creating just a giant powder keg.
00:53:08.000 Why is this a good idea?
00:53:10.000 Why are we doing this?
00:53:12.000 We're inflicting this on ourselves and why?
00:53:15.000 What's more, we're inflicting this on ourselves and we act as though it's necessary.
00:53:21.000 We act as though it's a.
00:53:23.000 We presuppose that we need this, that we need these people here, that we need diversity, exactly the thing I'm describing, that we need to make ourselves uncomfortable, that we need racial conflict, that we need to bring clashing people and force ourselves to try to get along.
00:53:44.000 We presuppose that there's something noble about undertaking this risky experiment in social engineering.
00:53:55.000 We have to.
00:53:56.000 We have to be better.
00:53:57.000 We have to force ourselves to be with people that are not like us to prove what?
00:54:02.000 To who?
00:54:03.000 Why?
00:54:05.000 And what if it doesn't work?
00:54:06.000 We're going to get into a race war?
00:54:09.000 Is that worth it?
00:54:11.000 Worth what?
00:54:13.000 So we could say to ourselves that we rose above tribalism?
00:54:19.000 And then what?
00:54:20.000 We get a gold medal if we succeed?
00:54:22.000 Then what?
00:54:23.000 We get a society where everybody gets along and it's like the same, but people look different.
00:54:29.000 That's the big prize at the end.
00:54:31.000 If you somehow don't have a race war after you've completely transformed the country, yeah, that's a great idea.
00:54:37.000 So there's no upside, but there's an extremely high risk of catastrophic, civilization destroying, racial and ethnic conflict.
00:54:47.000 Yeah, sign me up.
00:54:48.000 Yeah, sign me up.
00:54:50.000 Prove to me why that's not a good idea.
00:54:52.000 You know, sell me on why that's not a good idea.
00:54:54.000 This is ridiculous.
00:54:56.000 And this is where conservatives don't go far enough.
00:54:59.000 They accept the premise that we can live in a society where we just simply aren't racist.
00:55:06.000 Because the conservative response to reparations and to these exclusionary government benefit programs and the response to anti white hatred and grievance politics is to simply turn it off.
00:55:20.000 That's what conservatives say.
00:55:22.000 That's their answer.
00:55:23.000 Democrats are racist and that's bad and they should stop.
00:55:27.000 Okay, but they won't and they're not going to.
00:55:32.000 They never will, and maybe it's impossible for that to even happen.
00:55:36.000 Maybe actually it is impossible.
00:55:39.000 Have you ever considered that?
00:55:41.000 For large groups of people to be smashed together, sharing the same stuff with wildly different ideologies, and they're unequal, therefore getting unequal outcomes?
00:55:51.000 Do you think it's even possible to create that kind of a situation and not breed resentment and then therefore get conflict?
00:56:00.000 Because I don't think you can.
00:56:03.000 So, what's the solution?
00:56:04.000 The solution is not to sit there and try to be the real liberal, the real not racist.
00:56:11.000 The solution is to say, this isn't working.
00:56:15.000 Let's mitigate this.
00:56:19.000 If diversity creates conflict, if diversity creates resentment, if it is unavoidable to move towards a ranked racial caste system when you've got.
00:56:34.000 A diverse range of races in a particular polity, then let's mitigate the factors that are causing the problems.
00:56:42.000 Let's mitigate the diversity.
00:56:44.000 And some people say, well, what does that mean?
00:56:46.000 You're going to kill all black people?
00:56:48.000 What?
00:56:49.000 Nobody is saying anything close to that.
00:56:51.000 We're saying maybe let's just stop bringing in a fucking million people per year.
00:56:56.000 And sorry for the language, but seriously, people say, so what's your solution?
00:57:00.000 Ethnic cleansing?
00:57:01.000 Another Holocaust?
00:57:03.000 How about if you're getting conflict from diversity?
00:57:08.000 Let's stop furthering diversity by putting a pause on the millions of people coming here contributing to diversity every year.
00:57:17.000 That's maybe the first thing that we could do, which is the most obvious, and we could work with what we have.
00:57:22.000 That's for openers.
00:57:23.000 How about that?
00:57:25.000 How about that for a start?
00:57:26.000 But a lot of people don't even want to entertain that.
00:57:28.000 Then you get into the immigration conversation it's, oh, well, who cares what race they are?
00:57:32.000 Well, you know, it kind of matters where they come from and what their core values are and what their race is.
00:57:38.000 When they come here and they come here with their handout and they want benefits that are exclusionary and come at the expense of whites.
00:57:46.000 I mean, you know, maybe that's a reason why.
00:57:48.000 Maybe it's because you bring these people in and you get California.
00:57:51.000 You bring these people in and then you get New York City and Chicago.
00:57:55.000 And those places aren't working.
00:57:57.000 So, anyway.
00:58:01.000 So that's Oakland.
00:58:03.000 This stuff is fundamental.
00:58:05.000 It's fundamental that we understand race, we understand exactly what we're dealing with here.
00:58:11.000 Okay?
00:58:12.000 Because I'm not going to give you the same old line, which a lot of people say they'll pull out these things.
00:58:16.000 I hear this all the time.
00:58:18.000 Because we see stuff like this every day.
00:58:22.000 Universities will tell students if there's too many white people in this room, that's racist.
00:58:27.000 So we need to segregate people, right?
00:58:30.000 This is what universities will say.
00:58:32.000 Universities are talking about black only graduation, black only facilities.
00:58:37.000 And, you know, there are many cases like this, and, you know, like reparations, and then with this government benefit program.
00:58:44.000 And conservatives look at that and they say, well, isn't that like Jim Crow?
00:58:48.000 Isn't that racism?
00:58:51.000 Well, yeah, I mean, it's similar.
00:58:54.000 It is similar to Jim Crow.
00:58:55.000 It is segregation and it is racism.
00:58:58.000 It is racial prejudice.
00:59:01.000 You know, and then conservatives say something like, okay, and that proves that we're not racist.
00:59:06.000 That proves that we're not prejudiced.
00:59:09.000 We're individualists because racism is a form of collectivism.
00:59:13.000 We're the real individualists.
00:59:14.000 We're the real ones that don't see race.
00:59:17.000 But how far is that going to get you in a world where everybody else does see race?
00:59:22.000 How far does that attitude, you know, morally righteous or not, How far does that attitude get you and your family to survive in this country where everyone around you who hates you does believe in race and does believe in your race and does believe in their race and is working for their race against yours?
00:59:40.000 What does that do for you?
00:59:43.000 So we've got to go back to first principles.
00:59:46.000 We've got to peel back the layers and get back to the first principles here.
00:59:50.000 Why are we in this situation?
00:59:51.000 How did we end up here?
00:59:54.000 This didn't used to be this way.
00:59:55.000 This country was 90% white and 10% black.
00:59:59.000 And now it's 60% white and 40% everything else.
01:00:02.000 And in a couple of decades, it's going to be 50% white and 50% everything else.
01:00:08.000 And by the end of the century, it could be 30 or 25% white, and the vast majority will be everything else.
01:00:16.000 So we're getting to this point because of immigration.
01:00:19.000 And we are getting these anti white policies because we are getting racial vengeance politics against whites.
01:00:29.000 It is animated by race.
01:00:31.000 It is inspired by race.
01:00:33.000 It is the people of color, which means white is not a color, according to them.
01:00:38.000 It is the non white people, the people of color, the black, yellow, red, and brown people, right?
01:00:45.000 It's Asians, Indians, blacks, and Hispanics.
01:00:49.000 That's what that means.
01:00:50.000 It's them against us.
01:00:51.000 That's how they're telling it.
01:00:53.000 So they're pouring in through immigration.
01:00:56.000 They're outnumbering us, and they're pursuing a racial vendetta against white Americans.
01:01:01.000 And so the question that has to be asked, of course, firstly, is how do we stop this?
01:01:06.000 But number two, we have to go even a little bit deeper than that.
01:01:11.000 Is this avoidable in a multiracial society?
01:01:15.000 Because some people say, well, how are we going to stop this?
01:01:18.000 We need to convince them to stop being mean to us.
01:01:21.000 I take it a step further.
01:01:22.000 I don't think we can convince the races to stop presenting each other.
01:01:25.000 I think you get lots of races in one place.
01:01:29.000 Like I said, there's competition.
01:01:32.000 Not a friendly competition.
01:01:33.000 There is a competition.
01:01:34.000 There's a political struggle, a social struggle, an economic struggle between teams, between groups.
01:01:42.000 And it undermines the very fabric, the seams that bind a nation together.
01:01:48.000 When I say fabric and seams, it's a very carefully chosen simile, very carefully chosen metaphor.
01:01:56.000 What binds the country together is that you're on one team and you bring all these other groups into the country and they see themselves as distinct and separate teams.
01:02:05.000 And undermines the very foundation of why you have a coherent unit, a coherent polity at all.
01:02:13.000 If Chicago is just this tripartite, you know, turf war between blacks, Hispanics, and whites, do you not then have three different cities?
01:02:23.000 Do you not have three different flags and three different communities and three different nations, broadly speaking?
01:02:29.000 It undermines the very foundation of why you have a country or a city or a state all together.
01:02:36.000 That's how we have to be thinking about these things.
01:02:38.000 And some conservatives say that we could just ignore that.
01:02:42.000 I mean, they're like liberal now on race.
01:02:44.000 No, we could get all these people together and just learn to ignore those things, learn to ignore our differences, learn to drop our identities and give them up.
01:02:44.000 They think that.
01:02:54.000 I mean, maybe some people can.
01:02:56.000 Clearly, people are not doing that.
01:02:59.000 But it goes back to those fundamental first principles about race.
01:03:05.000 They think that we could go beyond that, they think that we could paper it over with working class solidarity.
01:03:10.000 How do you forge a nation?
01:03:12.000 How do you forge a nation out of, you know, Empire of 300 million people that is majority minority will unite them based on class.
01:03:21.000 You unite them based on culture.
01:03:24.000 Sorry, but it turns out clearly that blacks being unemployed and Hispanics working these illegal type jobs and whites working, I don't know, middle class jobs, it turns out that you can't go around to these three different groups and say, hey, you're all more poor than Bill Gates, so we have so much in common.
01:03:46.000 So, we have like a nation going here.
01:03:48.000 Now it's almost like we're all on a team, right?
01:03:50.000 It's almost like we're kind of on a team.
01:03:52.000 I mean, you're totally poor.
01:03:55.000 You just use food stamps and steal cars and things.
01:03:58.000 And, like, you know, you're half on the public dole, half you like do odd jobs and mow lawns and things.
01:04:04.000 And, like, you went to high school and your parents were rich and now you live in their basement.
01:04:08.000 Huh.
01:04:09.000 Well, you know, hmm, I think I see this real team coming together.
01:04:12.000 None of us are billionaires.
01:04:14.000 So, we are going to fuck up the rich.
01:04:17.000 That's going to be the basis of America.
01:04:20.000 We all don't like taxes.
01:04:21.000 We all don't like the rich.
01:04:23.000 Hey, guys, it's almost like we're a country.
01:04:25.000 We're sort of like a suicide squad.
01:04:28.000 No, that's not good enough.
01:04:30.000 You can't create a country out of hating the rich.
01:04:32.000 You can't create a country out of hating the elites.
01:04:35.000 You can't create a country about all being vaguely more poor than the people that own everything.
01:04:41.000 It doesn't work that way.
01:04:43.000 You need more.
01:04:44.000 You need the people to get along.
01:04:46.000 You need the people to talk to each other, talk in a similar way, like maybe using the same language.
01:04:52.000 Try that.
01:04:54.000 You need people to celebrate the same holidays, believe in the same God, maybe not kill each other, not hate each other, not think that one group is responsible for enslaving all the other group's ancestors.
01:05:06.000 You know, those are kind of the foundations on a real nation, on a real civilization that ought to remain together.
01:05:15.000 And, you know, there's a lot of folks out there, I said it yesterday Tucker, Steve Bannon, others, they reject this.
01:05:22.000 And it's ridiculous.
01:05:24.000 Nobody will call them on it because they think it's politically expedient.
01:05:27.000 What I mean by this is, they think that this is the only way that it can work.
01:05:31.000 Desperately trying to ad hoc, hodgepodge, create some kind of political coalition, countries rapidly disintegrating.
01:05:40.000 Uh, uh, uh, how are we going to keep Republicans winning elections?
01:05:44.000 I know.
01:05:45.000 Let's pretend that blacks are middle class.
01:05:47.000 Let's pretend that blacks are working class.
01:05:49.000 We kind of have to work to be working class, I think, so that's not going to work, right?
01:05:53.000 But they say, uh, uh, uh, how do we hold together this rapidly disintegrating empire to shore up the GOP?
01:05:59.000 I know.
01:06:00.000 Working class populism.
01:06:02.000 No, that's not going to work.
01:06:05.000 That's not going to work.
01:06:07.000 That's not viable.
01:06:09.000 And people can see through it.
01:06:10.000 It didn't work in 2020.
01:06:12.000 Nobody believes in that.
01:06:16.000 That is a naive political theory.
01:06:19.000 That is something that only a consultant could possibly believe.
01:06:24.000 And that kind of populist, economic, nationalist stuff clearly is not going to save white America.
01:06:32.000 It's not going to save America.
01:06:33.000 It's not going to hold this country together.
01:06:35.000 I can tell you that much because these people have nothing in common.
01:06:39.000 They resent each other, and you're not going to be able to paper over that with the fact that we're all poor.
01:06:45.000 It won't work.
01:06:48.000 And that is what I see as one of the major cleavages, one of the major sort of fault lines in this emerging populist nationalist movement.
01:06:57.000 Is some people, you know, whether again they think it's just politically expedient or they're naive, they want to pretend that we could just all be working class people, all be, you know, all read JD Vance's book and, you know, whatever.
01:07:15.000 And so it's almost like a sick thing.
01:07:17.000 We used to say years ago, That mainstream conservatives thought that they could assimilate all these Hondurans and Guatemalans by getting them to read the Heritage Foundation.
01:07:27.000 Ah, that's not very smart.
01:07:29.000 That's not very smart, Heritage Foundation.
01:07:32.000 You can't turn Guatemalans into apple pie Americans by reading Hillsdale's Constitution pamphlet, but you know what you can do?
01:07:40.000 You can turn them into the multiracial working class populist movement by getting them to read JD Vance's book.
01:07:48.000 We just got to go into the south side of Chicago and get them listening to the war room with Steve Bannon.
01:07:54.000 That's what'll do it.
01:07:56.000 We need to go to the Hispanics, not bring the message of Ayn Rand.
01:08:00.000 That's never going to work.
01:08:02.000 We need to bring them Ryan Gerdusky's book, They're Not Listening.
01:08:06.000 We need to go to these Latinos and say, Hello, my fellow Latinos, you have to read The American Mind.
01:08:15.000 You have to read They're Not Listening by Ryan Gerdusky about Brexit and Donald Trump's election.
01:08:22.000 We have so much in common.
01:08:24.000 You should be more like Americans.
01:08:27.000 No, I'm sorry.
01:08:28.000 I don't believe that will work.
01:08:30.000 I don't believe that will work.
01:08:32.000 And, you know, the first step in fixing the country is we've got to acknowledge what's going to work and what's not going to work.
01:08:40.000 We have to really understand the gravity of our problems here.
01:08:44.000 We have to know the problems.
01:08:46.000 The problem is in human nature.
01:08:49.000 It's not an accident that we ended up here.
01:08:51.000 The problem is in human nature.
01:08:53.000 You know, some people think if only the billionaires weren't turning us against each other, if only we could rise above.
01:09:00.000 This artificial racial tension.
01:09:03.000 If only we could rise above our constructed and illusory racial identities.
01:09:08.000 No, I'm sorry, race is real.
01:09:11.000 And we can't do that.
01:09:13.000 The problem is in our nature.
01:09:14.000 We are tribalistic, we are unequal, and we are jealous.
01:09:19.000 And that's always going to be there.
01:09:21.000 And we've got to accommodate for that.
01:09:23.000 We've got to think very carefully about that.
01:09:26.000 And we've got to accommodate that when we think about how do we govern.
01:09:30.000 This 330 million person empire that is rapidly falling apart at the seams.
01:09:36.000 We've got to think very seriously about those things.
01:09:40.000 People think, oh, well, if we could just overcome our tribal nature, our jealous nature, and our inequality that is intrinsic in groups, well, then we could all be multiracial working class populists.
01:09:52.000 Okay, but we can't do that.
01:09:55.000 So, what are you going to do now?
01:09:58.000 Because people are different, the groups exist, they are unequal.
01:10:04.000 And then this is why it's never going to work.
01:10:07.000 This is why it's never going to work the way that people say it is.
01:10:11.000 This is why you're always going to get reparations for some and identity politics in one way, and then this Mexican gets in charge and he's, you know, now we're going to do the Mexican policies.
01:10:22.000 This is why you're always going to have this tit for tat racial political thing until eventually the different races realize hey, wait a second, you know, why do I have to live under the black administration?
01:10:35.000 And the whites go, why do I have to live under this administration?
01:10:39.000 In other words, why are we putting up with this?
01:10:41.000 Let's just do our own thing.
01:10:43.000 Let's just do our own thing and not live under the yoke, not live under the rule of another group that we're competing against.
01:10:52.000 It's called balkanization.
01:10:55.000 Okay, but I think you understand the point.
01:10:57.000 I'm just sort of rambling now, but I've been trying to illustrate over the past two nights, these two shows, we see these things happening.
01:11:06.000 They're happening with increasing frequency.
01:11:09.000 You know, these anti white policies, this POC type stuff, the advent of BLM.
01:11:15.000 It's getting more racialized.
01:11:17.000 It's in more significant ways.
01:11:20.000 It's not benign anymore.
01:11:21.000 It's more malicious.
01:11:22.000 It affects you more personally and more directly.
01:11:25.000 And we've got to set the record straight from the perspective of this burgeoning populist nationalist movement from the ruins of the Trump administration.
01:11:36.000 We have got to set it straight.
01:11:39.000 So, anyway.
01:11:42.000 So, let's jump into our super chats.
01:11:44.000 I think you guys get it.
01:11:46.000 We'll dive into our super chats and we'll see what you guys are saying about all of this.
01:11:55.000 Because I'm trying to lay it out, trying to lay it out in a way that a lot of people can't.
01:12:01.000 A lot of people you think are based, but they just don't get it.
01:12:04.000 They just don't get this stuff.
01:12:06.000 They're based because they say, oh, 1350.
01:12:10.000 But then they think that the only thing preventing multiracial harmony is everybody's just not nice enough.
01:12:16.000 Sorry, but that's not the issue.
01:12:20.000 So, people got to get real.
01:12:23.000 It comes down to those fundamental things.
01:12:26.000 It comes down to the fundamental, which is the groups are real and they're not equal.
01:12:30.000 That's the fundamental assumption, the fundamental belief that differentiates us from the others.
01:12:39.000 The other people, the people that are not like us ideologically, they fundamentally believe that the groups are constructed and they believe that the groups are equal.
01:12:52.000 That's the kernel, that's the seed, that's the nucleus of their view on why we can take a more liberal approach.
01:13:02.000 Because at the core, they believe the groups are not as real as we think they are.
01:13:08.000 They think they're socially constructed, they think they're skin deep, they think race is skin color.
01:13:13.000 They don't believe the groups are real, and they don't believe that the groups are unequal.
01:13:19.000 And proceeding from that, they believe that the only thing preventing us from getting along.
01:13:23.000 Is like we just haven't tried the right thing yet.
01:13:27.000 Oh, we're being propagandized into disliking each other.
01:13:32.000 It's about sort of this residual effect from history and past misdeeds.
01:13:40.000 What we need is an enlightening to realize that we're all the same, we're not unequal, and we're not all that different.
01:13:51.000 But that's wrong because we know scientifically.
01:13:54.000 And we know historically that the groups are real.
01:13:57.000 They are genetically real.
01:13:59.000 It's not just skin color, it's genetics.
01:14:01.000 We are genetically different.
01:14:04.000 The groups are different and they're unequal, obviously.
01:14:07.000 If there's difference, there's inequality.
01:14:09.000 How could you have difference but equality?
01:14:11.000 It would make no sense.
01:14:12.000 There's difference, there's inequality, and when there's inequality between people, there's inequalities and outcomes.
01:14:19.000 And when there's inequalities and outcomes, there's resentment.
01:14:22.000 And when there's resentment, there's conflict.
01:14:24.000 So if you have people living in the same place, you have conflict.
01:14:27.000 That's a natural state.
01:14:29.000 It's not an accident.
01:14:30.000 It's not because bad people are causing it.
01:14:32.000 That's the natural, and what would be.
01:14:36.000 What would be exceptional, what would be the outstanding cases if they were getting along?
01:14:40.000 That would be the sort of, that would be the effect of people thinking a certain way or, you know, certain enlightened people or a good policy or something.
01:14:50.000 That would be the exception.
01:14:52.000 But like gravity, the sort of necessary consequence of group differences and the reality of groups is that there will be conflict.
01:15:04.000 And so if you recognize that that's sort of the, The natural state of a multiracial society, what do you do to mitigate the conflict?
01:15:11.000 What do you do to mitigate that?
01:15:13.000 That's the chief question.
01:15:15.000 Not, you know, please be nice to us.
01:15:17.000 Not, we have more in common than you think, because we don't.
01:15:20.000 We don't have that much in common, actually.
01:15:22.000 What do we have in common with them?
01:15:25.000 What do we have in common with them?
01:15:28.000 Okay, but let's move on.
01:15:29.000 Let's move on and let's read the super chats.
01:15:32.000 Let's see what you guys have to say.
01:15:35.000 It's important stuff.
01:15:36.000 It's important stuff.
01:15:40.000 And what's important is to follow it all the way through to its logical conclusion.
01:15:44.000 Got to follow it all the way through.
01:15:46.000 A lot of people like to entertain some of these little bits and pieces of it.
01:15:50.000 They take what they like, like a buffet.
01:15:54.000 But it's not consistent.
01:15:56.000 There's not sort of like a starting point and an ending point, there's not this logical progression.
01:16:00.000 I've got this logical progression, right?
01:16:03.000 I just demonstrated it.
01:16:06.000 Groups are real, they're different.
01:16:09.000 Unequal outcomes, resentment, conflict.
01:16:11.000 It's all there.
01:16:12.000 Boom, boom, boom, boom.
01:16:14.000 Right?
01:16:15.000 And they're like, okay, well, everyone's equal, I think, and race is like skin color, but black people can commit more crime, but that's like culture, and it's all over the place.
01:16:30.000 They say some base things, but their foundational belief is liberal.
01:16:35.000 Okay, okay, okay.
01:16:36.000 Let's read the super chats.
01:16:38.000 You get it.
01:16:39.000 You understand.
01:16:40.000 I've explained it to death.
01:16:41.000 Let's see.
01:16:43.000 We have got for our first super chat, Senor Cardgage Groyper says, Can you explain the distinction between Jewish people who appear to have white skin and white people as a racial and cultural body?
01:16:58.000 Saw some very cringe takes in reply to your tweet today about genocide and think people need to know the basics.
01:17:03.000 God bless you.
01:17:04.000 Well, thanks.
01:17:06.000 Well, we say white.
01:17:08.000 Of course, white, you know, that's really just a placeholder for European.
01:17:14.000 When people say white, they're talking about European.
01:17:17.000 What is the white man?
01:17:19.000 You know, when Europeans roll up to North America and they say, oh, that's the white man, they're talking about Europeans.
01:17:27.000 And you compare Europeans to Africans, and this is where you get black and white, right?
01:17:32.000 So we talk about white, we don't mean people whose skin color happens to be white for various reasons.
01:17:38.000 You know, people point out that what if there's an albino African?
01:17:42.000 An albino African has white colored skin.
01:17:44.000 Is that white?
01:17:45.000 No.
01:17:46.000 Why?
01:17:47.000 Well, he's African.
01:17:49.000 And there's more to being black, therefore, than just having black skin.
01:17:53.000 It's that the Africans have the black skin and the Europeans have the white skin.
01:17:58.000 And in the case of Jewish people, you know, obviously Jewish people are a diaspora people, and a lot of them have European DNA because Jewish people left the Middle East and they came to Europe and, you know, they settled all across Europe and all across the world.
01:18:16.000 And you've got a lot of European Jews that are partly European and partly Jewish, and they've got European features, but, you know, their ethnic identity is Jewish and, you know, also their religious identity is Jewish.
01:18:30.000 And it's sort of a unique case because obviously Jewish people have a sharp contrast with Christians.
01:18:37.000 And so, following the Jewish diaspora and Europe becomes Christian, Jewish people are sort of naturally opposed, or Judaism is naturally opposed to Christianity because Jews don't believe that Christ is the Messiah.
01:18:52.000 Christians believe that Jews reject their Messiah, right?
01:18:55.000 There's this natural tension.
01:18:57.000 And the Jewish identity is inextricably linked between ethnicity and religion.
01:19:03.000 Jews, as a result, are cast out in European civilization.
01:19:08.000 They're put in the Pale of Settlement.
01:19:10.000 You know, they're segregated.
01:19:12.000 They have their own courts.
01:19:13.000 They have their own communities.
01:19:15.000 They have their own language.
01:19:16.000 They have their own deal.
01:19:17.000 They're sort of separate.
01:19:18.000 And so when we talk about Europeans, we're talking about, you know, or we talk about whites, we're talking about Europeans.
01:19:25.000 Jewish people are sort of transplanted from the Middle East and put in this very sort of specific circumstance in Europe where.
01:19:34.000 They're not really European because they never really integrated into European society.
01:19:38.000 For 2,000 years, they've been in Europe and they retained their both ethnic and religious Jewish identity.
01:19:45.000 Not Christian, not their host ethnicity.
01:19:50.000 They didn't become Polish, they didn't become Spanish, they became Polish Jews, or Spanish Jews.
01:19:59.000 So that's why it's not really fair to call them white.
01:20:02.000 They may have a pale complexion, but that does not.
01:20:07.000 That's not really what that means.
01:20:08.000 And people basically get that, I think, for the most part.
01:20:12.000 So they're a unique example.
01:20:18.000 Statics says mass immigration is the capitalist class hastily attacking the symptom of population decline, not the root cause, which is the mass proliferation of plastic and plastic exposure in developed Western nations.
01:20:34.000 Mass immigration is the class attacking population decline.
01:20:40.000 So you're saying that.
01:20:41.000 Plastics are lowering the fertility rate.
01:20:46.000 Lowering fertility rate decreases the population.
01:20:49.000 Decreasing population limits the ability of firms to sell their products.
01:20:55.000 So firms bring in the immigrants.
01:20:56.000 You're saying it all goes back to the plastics.
01:20:59.000 Yeah, I would say there's some truth to that in terms of very plain cause and effect.
01:21:07.000 I guess that's true to an extent.
01:21:11.000 Fat, Florida, Paleo.
01:21:12.000 But I don't believe that if we reverse the plastic, that like.
01:21:15.000 Okay, now all these anti white forces would subside.
01:21:18.000 I don't know if I go that far.
01:21:20.000 I think there's also something to be said about wealth disparity, political trends.
01:21:25.000 It's a little reductive to, I mean, that's an interesting way to think about it the way that plastic plays a part in the fertility rate decline, and then that fertility rate decline having major geopolitical implications.
01:21:37.000 But of course, there are many factors that go into that too.
01:21:43.000 Fat Florida Paleo cons is Beardson when he finds out he is half Scott.
01:21:47.000 Good evening, everyone.
01:21:48.000 You're watching Scotland.
01:21:49.000 First, my name is Beards and Beardley.
01:21:50.000 We have a great show for you tonight.
01:21:55.000 I guess that's what he would say when he discovers that.
01:21:55.000 Yeah, I guess.
01:21:59.000 That one doesn't really make a lot of sense to me, but okay.
01:21:59.000 I don't know.
01:22:02.000 I think I see what you did there.
01:22:04.000 Black Laser says Nick, be warned.
01:22:06.000 The owner of the Discord politics server named Doobie runs a honeypot where he admitted in a stream with Destiny and Fat Gay Retard.
01:22:14.000 He sends info to feds constantly and got a couple of people arrested.
01:22:18.000 He is a leftist who runs gay ops and hates you.
01:22:21.000 Yeah, I know.
01:22:21.000 I saw that stream.
01:22:23.000 And people said that to me, and it's like, What is he going to report me to the FBI for?
01:22:28.000 Doing an interview on a Discord server?
01:22:30.000 I mean, people have been reporting me to the FBI for years.
01:22:35.000 I don't do anything wrong.
01:22:36.000 I don't commit crimes.
01:22:37.000 So, you can report me to the FBI all you want.
01:22:40.000 The FBI can investigate it.
01:22:42.000 But he got people arrested for what?
01:22:45.000 Talking on a Discord server?
01:22:47.000 Do you guys, I mean, do people even think before they say these things?
01:22:50.000 He got people arrested for what?
01:22:54.000 Right?
01:22:54.000 I mean, people have been.
01:22:56.000 Take a look at my.
01:22:58.000 Search up my name after the Capitol riot.
01:23:02.000 How many people tagged me, tagged the FBI and me on Twitter after the Capitol riot, saying I was in the building and saying, oh, this Bitcoin thing and blah, blah, blah.
01:23:13.000 You know, and here I am unarrested.
01:23:14.000 Oh, he's going to send a report in.
01:23:16.000 I could call the police and say, hey, this guy's bothering me.
01:23:19.000 I mean, okay, we'll arrest him right away.
01:23:22.000 That's not, I don't think that's actually how law enforcement works.
01:23:26.000 Well, it works like that to an extent.
01:23:30.000 So, so I don't.
01:23:32.000 I don't know if that makes a lot of sense.
01:23:35.000 British Chad says, Nick, yesterday you asked what Anglos have compared to the Italians.
01:23:40.000 It's quite an easy answer, actually.
01:23:42.000 We created America, which is why your ancestors left their country to move to America because Italy was unbearable.
01:23:48.000 Also, we got Mosley.
01:23:50.000 Mosley failed.
01:23:52.000 Why would you brag about Mosley?
01:23:53.000 Italy had Mussolini.
01:23:55.000 Mussolini actually became the dictator, and it didn't work out, actually, but he got farther than Mosley.
01:24:03.000 What did Mosley do?
01:24:04.000 Give some speeches and ultimately get defeated?
01:24:07.000 And Anglos only were able to make America because of the Romans, you know?
01:24:11.000 So that's like saying, oh, Led Zeppelin went harder than the Beatles.
01:24:15.000 It's like, okay, well, Led Zeppelin wouldn't exist without the Beatles.
01:24:18.000 So that's very cute.
01:24:20.000 Very cute.
01:24:21.000 Patting you on the head.
01:24:22.000 Patting you on your little tiny British head.
01:24:25.000 Oi, hello, mate.
01:24:26.000 Yeah, here, go eat some beans, little guy.
01:24:29.000 You're welcome for creating your country.
01:24:31.000 British Chad says, it's funny how retard journalists call you a white supremacist when you're an Afro Latino whose dad is half Mexican with Irish ancestry.
01:24:40.000 At least half Mexican and half Irish.
01:24:42.000 Your grandma's Italian, and we all know that the Irish, Mexicans, and Italians are not white.
01:24:46.000 Makes no sense.
01:24:52.000 Oh, I see what you did there.
01:24:53.000 The premise of the joke is that Italians and Irish aren't white.
01:24:59.000 Oh, I see what you did there.
01:25:00.000 What a novel concept.
01:25:01.000 Very funny.
01:25:02.000 Very funny comedy premise.
01:25:05.000 Very funny.
01:25:07.000 You know, that's a good one.
01:25:08.000 I haven't heard that one before.
01:25:10.000 I see what you did there.
01:25:12.000 Very clever.
01:25:13.000 You win the internet for today, sir.
01:25:15.000 Simon Skola says, if you were forced to get a tattoo, what would you get?
01:25:20.000 Well, I would never get a tattoo.
01:25:22.000 Embarrassing, humiliating.
01:25:25.000 I don't even like to write on myself.
01:25:27.000 I hate even having write on myself.
01:25:30.000 Some people write on their hand or something.
01:25:33.000 I hate that.
01:25:34.000 So the idea of getting something permanently tattooed, yeah, no.
01:25:39.000 If I had to get something tattooed, I don't know.
01:25:43.000 A cross, maybe.
01:25:45.000 Although I think that's kind of dumb to tell you the truth.
01:25:48.000 Maybe my name.
01:25:50.000 I don't know.
01:25:51.000 I think tattoos are so stupid.
01:25:54.000 I mean, you look at like the human form, and you know, you get one body, you get one life.
01:25:59.000 When you get resurrected, if you go to heaven, you get like sort of perfectly restored to your most perfectible state.
01:26:06.000 And it's like you're going to like draw on yourself, you're going to scribble.
01:26:08.000 What could you possibly scribble on yourself that would make it worth it?
01:26:12.000 I'm going to write my name.
01:26:14.000 I'm going to write a little poem because I like this poem.
01:26:17.000 I'm going to write this little cool thing that I like.
01:26:20.000 You're the product of, you know, God's creation.
01:26:23.000 God created you in his image.
01:26:24.000 And you're like, I'm going to draw a little heart on me, I'm going to draw a little heart on my ankle.
01:26:29.000 Could you die?
01:26:29.000 Yeah, die.
01:26:30.000 Could you just, you know, why don't you just die?
01:26:32.000 I mean, obviously, you don't care about anything.
01:26:34.000 Obviously, nothing is sacred and you don't care about anything.
01:26:38.000 Why don't you just die or something, right?
01:26:40.000 I mean, who cares about anything?
01:26:41.000 Why don't you just throw yourself off a dock?
01:26:43.000 Why don't you just throw yourself into a train or something?
01:26:45.000 Who cares, right?
01:26:47.000 Who cares if my body's in a million pieces?
01:26:49.000 Let's draw on it.
01:26:50.000 Yeah, let's punch your holes in it.
01:26:52.000 Yeah, let's just cut my hands and arms and my legs off, right?
01:26:56.000 I mean, who even cares?
01:26:58.000 So.
01:26:59.000 That's the way that I see it.
01:27:00.000 It's just totally disrespecting your body.
01:27:02.000 It's totally disrespecting your integrity.
01:27:06.000 God created you.
01:27:07.000 God created you in His image.
01:27:09.000 He gave you reason, He gave you a mind and a will and the power to make decisions, and free will and rationality and creativity.
01:27:19.000 And you're like, I'm going to draw a dick on my hand.
01:27:23.000 That's vulgar.
01:27:24.000 I'm going to draw a circle on my wrist.
01:27:26.000 Why?
01:27:27.000 Why would you scribble on yourself?
01:27:29.000 Why would you put graffiti?
01:27:32.000 Why would you vandalize yourself?
01:27:35.000 I don't get it.
01:27:36.000 I don't get it.
01:27:37.000 That'd be like going into your house and spray painting.
01:27:43.000 Piss was here.
01:27:46.000 Big Chungus was here in this basement.
01:27:49.000 Why would you do that?
01:27:50.000 It's your house.
01:27:51.000 Why would you vandalize your own house?
01:27:53.000 Don't you want your house to look nice?
01:27:54.000 Don't you want your body to look nice?
01:27:57.000 So.
01:28:00.000 Because I would never get a tattoo.
01:28:02.000 I think they're all stupid.
01:28:06.000 You know, if you want to display a cross, wear a necklace.
01:28:09.000 Wear a nice cross necklace.
01:28:11.000 Wear a scapular, right?
01:28:15.000 Hold the cross in your hand.
01:28:17.000 I don't know.
01:28:18.000 But it's not, you really should wear a cross necklace.
01:28:22.000 Not hard, not difficult.
01:28:23.000 Wear a cross necklace.
01:28:26.000 You don't really need any more options than that.
01:28:27.000 That's a fine option, and one is enough.
01:28:30.000 No, I want to draw one on my back.
01:28:33.000 Wear one on your neck.
01:28:35.000 Okay, anyway, you get it.
01:28:36.000 It's just, it's goofy.
01:28:39.000 Yeet Peterson says now, it's been 25 years since his last live stream, and nobody has seen heads or tails of him.
01:28:46.000 But folks say if you look in the mirror and say, Hot dog man, hot dog man, hot dog man, the spirit of Jake Lloyd will appear behind you, a gravy pouring out of his eyes, and you'll never be seen again.
01:29:01.000 I'm going to forward you an email, forward you a chain email.
01:29:05.000 The legend of Jacob Lloyd.
01:29:10.000 He was a young streamer once.
01:29:13.000 And he was a professional hot dog eater.
01:29:15.000 And one time he ate so many hot dogs, he choked to death.
01:29:19.000 And if you don't forward this to 10 of your contacts by midnight tonight, he'll appear in your bedroom and he'll kill you with the hot dog.
01:29:29.000 I don't know.
01:29:30.000 Yeah, no, that's true.
01:29:31.000 Don't do it.
01:29:33.000 I heard a story.
01:29:34.000 One of the neighborhood kids did that.
01:29:36.000 We never heard from him again.
01:29:37.000 Parents moved.
01:29:38.000 Parents killed themselves.
01:29:39.000 And.
01:29:41.000 Then the house burned down mysteriously.
01:29:43.000 Nobody ever got to the bottom of it.
01:29:46.000 Happened in grade school.
01:29:48.000 Happened in grade school years ago.
01:29:51.000 I knew a little guy.
01:29:52.000 He went in the mirror.
01:29:53.000 He did the hot dog man challenge.
01:29:55.000 Very real.
01:29:55.000 Don't mess with that stuff.
01:29:58.000 They'll keep you up at night.
01:29:58.000 Jake Lloyd.
01:30:00.000 Gravy pouring out of his eyes, coming out of his wherever.
01:30:06.000 He had gravy coming out of his eyes, coming out of his wherever.
01:30:13.000 Anyway, I don't know where he's been.
01:30:15.000 He's gone missing.
01:30:16.000 He's gone missing.
01:30:17.000 Have you seen this man?
01:30:19.000 Have you seen this man?
01:30:22.000 I was pouring myself a bowl of cereal today, and I saw in the milk carton a big ad for the friend I once knew, Jacob Lloyd.
01:30:33.000 Have you seen me?
01:30:35.000 Nope.
01:30:38.000 Not except for my nightmares.
01:30:40.000 Not except for my nightmares.
01:30:43.000 Okay, where was I?
01:30:45.000 Lost my place here.
01:30:48.000 Matt Listor says, Hey, Nick, take my money.
01:30:51.000 Okay, thanks.
01:30:52.000 Half Civilized says, Thank you for your service.
01:30:54.000 Thanks.
01:30:55.000 K Hunters is really amusing seeing how much older people I know cling to frauds like Gnome, Crenshaw, Kirk, etc., despite showing them all the dirt on them.
01:31:07.000 Hope that hay fever, whatever it is, subsides for you soon.
01:31:10.000 Yeah, me too, because I'm dying, dude.
01:31:13.000 Yeah, boomers are very stuck in their ways.
01:31:15.000 You really can't, it's like impossible.
01:31:20.000 You can get them going, you could get in a good conversation with them, they're kind of getting it, and then you talk to them the next day, and they say the same stuff they were saying the day before.
01:31:31.000 Like you never talk to them.
01:31:33.000 You know, it's like you can push them around, manipulate them, right?
01:31:40.000 I mean, you get them leaning, whatever, and the next day they're back in the same position they were before.
01:31:45.000 Impossible.
01:31:48.000 Let's see.
01:31:49.000 Pragmatic Culture says, was on Odyssey and saw Richard Spencer responding to AFPAC 2.
01:31:55.000 He claimed you were somehow just funneling energy into the Republican machine, and then everything you said could have been said at CPAC.
01:32:02.000 Is this just a smear or does he actually believe it?
01:32:04.000 Well, I mean, you could ask him.
01:32:07.000 I think there's a lot of seething resentment.
01:32:09.000 Speaking of resentment going on there, probably colors his opinions.
01:32:13.000 What if you tried to start a political movement, but Nick Fuentes said, optics.
01:32:22.000 But a 19 year old college dropout said, no.
01:32:27.000 What if you were a 40 year old, you know, Columbia educated political dissident, but a.
01:32:36.000 19 year old college dropout said, no, but a 19 year old college dropout said, I think I'll lead the movement, actually.
01:32:45.000 I think I will, I think I'll take the reins here.
01:32:49.000 I got it.
01:32:49.000 Don't worry about it.
01:32:51.000 Don't worry about it.
01:32:51.000 Retire early.
01:32:55.000 So, yeah, I think that's probably part of it.
01:33:00.000 Epic Guy says, Do you like Billy Joel?
01:33:02.000 All his music is great, but We Didn't Start the Fire is overrated.
01:33:05.000 Yeah, I agree with that.
01:33:07.000 I like Billy Joel.
01:33:09.000 I grew up with Billy Joel.
01:33:10.000 And We Didn't Start the Fire is overrated.
01:33:13.000 It's a stupid song.
01:33:14.000 It's a stupid song.
01:33:16.000 We Didn't Start the Fire.
01:33:18.000 What are the lyrics?
01:33:19.000 What are the lyrics?
01:33:20.000 It's a list?
01:33:21.000 It's a list of world events?
01:33:23.000 I mean, maybe this can pass before YouTube exists.
01:33:27.000 Maybe this can pass before BuzzFeed exists.
01:33:31.000 This is what boomers had in the 1980s before they had those crappy iMovie edits listing top.
01:33:40.000 15 world events and like Comic Sans.
01:33:43.000 It's sort of like that floating text.
01:33:45.000 You know, all those like mid 2000s YouTube videos had the same intros and format.
01:33:51.000 Maybe before you had that, you had to make a hit record listing world events.
01:33:55.000 But what's even the point of this song?
01:34:00.000 I don't know.
01:34:01.000 It's a dumb song.
01:34:02.000 Who's singing that?
01:34:03.000 Who's out there singing like Buddy Holly, Cuban Missile Crisis, Nikita Khrushchev?
01:34:09.000 Yeah, that's a real hit.
01:34:11.000 That's a real hit.
01:34:13.000 That's a real toe tapper.
01:34:15.000 I know I get in my car and I turn on the song that lists world events Buddy Holly, Doris Day, Red China.
01:34:22.000 Oh, yeah.
01:34:23.000 It's my favorite.
01:34:24.000 Wait, wait, my favorite part's coming up.
01:34:26.000 My favorite part's coming up.
01:34:30.000 Thalidomide.
01:34:35.000 So dumb.
01:34:36.000 How did boomers fall for this kind of stuff?
01:34:38.000 Their entertainment, I mean, look, it probably made sense more in the time, but I look back on the old boomer entertainment.
01:34:46.000 It's like, how did you guys think this was good?
01:34:49.000 How did you think this was good?
01:34:50.000 This is bad.
01:34:52.000 But they didn't know any better.
01:34:53.000 They had, I don't know, books or something.
01:34:56.000 They had books and phonographs, and then.
01:34:59.000 I guess comparing that to like Batman in the 90s, comparing that to Jack Nicholson's Joker, I guess, you know, it's pretty cool by comparison.
01:35:11.000 But you grew up with all the good stuff, and it's like, yeah, none of this makes sense anymore.
01:35:18.000 You know, these Mel Brooks movies actually aren't very funny.
01:35:23.000 It's actually not very funny.
01:35:25.000 All these classic movies.
01:35:27.000 Don't even get me started.
01:35:28.000 Boomers!
01:35:29.000 And they're comedy movies, man.
01:35:31.000 Boomer's conception of comedy is like the old, ye olde film from the 70s that they all saw a million times.
01:35:42.000 And they do a line from a stupid slapstick character from some ancient movie from 50 years ago.
01:35:50.000 I don't know why that bothers me so much, but it just does.
01:35:53.000 I guess it's because, as far as media goes, it's so much more inefficient.
01:36:01.000 I don't know if that makes sense.
01:36:05.000 But somebody in chat says he got hit in the head with two coconuts.
01:36:10.000 Yeah, exactly.
01:36:11.000 That's like a boomer's idea of comedy.
01:36:13.000 That guy got hit in the head with a coconut.
01:36:19.000 You know, Zoomer comedy, we really have like everything at our disposal.
01:36:24.000 We're like artificial intelligence, we're like, we're almost like a cyborg because we have all media, all media artifacts at our disposal to use.
01:36:35.000 So, we could pull video game soundtracks and McDonald's toys, and we could pull like every advertisement and memes and a drawing that somebody made anonymously on a forum.
01:36:49.000 We could pull every piece of media.
01:36:51.000 We're like iRobot supercomputer.
01:36:53.000 We could pull anything and put it in any combination to communicate a message to get the job done.
01:36:59.000 And boomers, they're like, what if we put Donald Trump's head on.
01:37:06.000 This guy from Blazing Saddles.
01:37:09.000 What if we took Anderson Cooper's face and we put him on the character from Spaceballs, that funny movie I saw when I was 14?
01:37:19.000 And it's like, yeah, that's just, that's so limited.
01:37:23.000 That's such a narrow sort of a thing, such a narrow range of options.
01:37:31.000 Not a lot to work with there, you know?
01:37:34.000 So, we're just sort of light years ahead.
01:37:37.000 As far as comedy goes, us Zoomers are.
01:37:40.000 Infinitely farther ahead.
01:37:42.000 We take, what's that new song?
01:37:45.000 We take American Boy by Kanye West and a little kid YouTube video on Fortnite, ironically reappropriated.
01:37:54.000 It's in TikToks then.
01:37:56.000 Like, do you understand the layers there, the layers of sort of cultural artifacts, the depth, the complexity?
01:38:06.000 And this provides for a very satisfying experience, you know.
01:38:12.000 There's lots of layers.
01:38:13.000 A lot of the stuff you just can't explain to, you could never just explain this to a boomer.
01:38:18.000 And then, like I said, boomers are like, what if we took John Travolta dancing and we edited somebody's head on it and it looked like they're dancing kind of funny?
01:38:30.000 Doesn't this look silly?
01:38:32.000 Hey, look at this.
01:38:36.000 So, yeah, I detest, detest the boomer culture, the prehistoric ancient boomer culture.
01:38:46.000 I don't like it.
01:38:48.000 I don't care for it.
01:38:49.000 You know, like I was thinking the other day, oh my gosh, I can't even believe I'm going to tell this story.
01:38:53.000 But, you know, I was like the coincidence when you're like a really young kid, at least before the internet, if you were funny, you were funny because your parents were funny.
01:39:06.000 And your parents were funny because they watched movies.
01:39:08.000 Do you understand what I'm saying?
01:39:10.000 Like when I was a kid, when I was a very early Zoomer back in the 2000s and I was going to grade school, you know, I feel like when you're a really young kid, You get your sense of humor from your parents, and you're funny because of your parents.
01:39:25.000 You're funny because you pick up on funny expressions and things that your parents say that a child could not know, would not know.
01:39:34.000 I'll give you an example.
01:39:36.000 Like when I ran for student council president when I was in seventh grade, I gave a speech, and the speech had like a lot of just like boomer references.
01:39:47.000 Like I remember I gave a speech for student council president in seventh grade.
01:39:53.000 I used to write in the paper in fifth and sixth grade.
01:39:57.000 And a lot of people enjoyed my writing or enjoyed my speech because it had all these like boomer sort of winks and nods that came from my mom.
01:40:06.000 Because my mom would help me write this stuff.
01:40:09.000 My mom would make suggestions about this stuff.
01:40:11.000 My dad would make suggestions.
01:40:13.000 And, you know, where was that humor coming from ultimately?
01:40:17.000 It was coming from my parents.
01:40:19.000 And my parents' humor was coming from Seinfeld.
01:40:21.000 It was coming from, like I said, old sitcoms, old movies.
01:40:26.000 I think that's almost why I resented because then I got older and I was like, wait a second, I was just like a mouthpiece for lame, lame, like boomer comedy.
01:40:38.000 So I was like, yeah, this simply won't do.
01:40:40.000 We got to go.
01:40:41.000 We got to push the boundaries.
01:40:42.000 We got to go further than that.
01:40:44.000 We got to go further than just a callback to some song from the 70s, some callback to some sitcom from the 90s.
01:40:54.000 You know, I love my parents, love them to death.
01:40:56.000 They're very funny.
01:40:57.000 But they're obviously of their generation.
01:40:59.000 Their comedy comes from their culture, their cultural artifacts.
01:41:04.000 Like my dad thinks it's the funniest.
01:41:06.000 I love my dad.
01:41:08.000 He thinks it's the funniest thing in the world because he's such a boomer.
01:41:10.000 He's such a dad.
01:41:12.000 He thinks it's the funniest thing in the world that if you say something and the phrase or the words that you say are contained in the refrain of an old song, he'll then sing that song smiling.
01:41:26.000 And he thinks it's the funniest thing in the world.
01:41:28.000 So, you know, you'll say something.
01:41:33.000 And if the words that you say, arranged in that way, are in any song from the 60s through the 90s, oh, he'll sing that part of the song.
01:41:43.000 And he thinks it's the funniest thing ever.
01:41:47.000 You know, like, when I was a kid, I used to say, like, okay, well, next time.
01:41:52.000 And there's this famous Louis Prima song that says, There'll Be No Next Time.
01:41:57.000 It's an Italian thing.
01:41:59.000 You wouldn't listen to Louis Prima when you're a child if you didn't grow up in an Italian household.
01:42:04.000 But there's this famous Louis Prima song.
01:42:06.000 It's called, There'll Be No Next Time.
01:42:08.000 And the song goes, You know, There'll Be No Next Time.
01:42:10.000 So anytime I was a kid, I'd say, Well, okay, well, like, next time.
01:42:12.000 And you'd be like, There'll Be No Next Time.
01:42:14.000 And it's like, Okay, why is that funny?
01:42:17.000 Why is that funny?
01:42:18.000 Because the things that I said, somebody sang them in a song, now you're singing that song.
01:42:26.000 That's that kind of like dad humor that it just like, oh, it gets under my skin.
01:42:32.000 I'm like, stop singing that song.
01:42:38.000 Anyway, my dad's trolling me.
01:42:41.000 My dad's trolling me.
01:42:42.000 My dad, he's the ultimate troll, the boomer troll.
01:42:48.000 Anyway, so yeah, somebody says real greaseball shit.
01:42:52.000 Yeah, that is real.
01:42:54.000 Listen to the Louis Prima.
01:42:55.000 We had the Louis Prima CD.
01:42:56.000 Yeah, yeah, that's my upbringing.
01:43:01.000 Anyway, so that's a little word on what was the question?
01:43:06.000 What the hell was the question again?
01:43:08.000 Billy Joel.
01:43:11.000 So to answer your question, I do like Billy Joel, but I do not like We Didn't Start the Fire.
01:43:19.000 Boomer culture is inferior.
01:43:21.000 It's inferior to Zoomer culture.
01:43:27.000 Because Zoomer culture is like the internet did for culture.
01:43:32.000 It's like what the printing press did for writing, you know?
01:43:35.000 It's like trying to compare the ancient manuscripts to, like, you know, a novel that was written in the 20th century.
01:43:42.000 Actually, ancient manuscripts are probably better.
01:43:45.000 But you know what I'm saying?
01:43:46.000 It's like the internet, the kind of interconnectivity that is allowed by the internet.
01:43:52.000 The bandwidth that is allowed by the internet, the exchange of ideas, the formulating and reformulating, and things coming together.
01:44:03.000 It's exponentially, you can't overstate how much greater it is than when people would drive their station wagon to the movies and they watch a funny actor do a funny movie.
01:44:15.000 Because funny people in the studio were like, what if we had a funny cowboy?
01:44:19.000 What if we had a funny.
01:44:22.000 Funny Star Wars.
01:44:23.000 What if it's Star Wars, but funny?
01:44:25.000 What if it was Star Wars, but we made a penis joke?
01:44:28.000 They're going to love this.
01:44:29.000 They're going to eat this up.
01:44:33.000 And it's family fun.
01:44:34.000 Fun for the whole family.
01:44:35.000 Family goes to see the movie and they laugh and they laugh.
01:44:44.000 Boomers.
01:44:44.000 Man, man, the boomers.
01:44:46.000 Nah, but we love them.
01:44:47.000 They're cute.
01:44:48.000 They're cuties.
01:44:48.000 They're cuties.
01:44:50.000 Boomers are cuties.
01:44:51.000 You know, they're adorable.
01:44:56.000 They're quaint, endearing.
01:44:58.000 They're from a simpler time.
01:45:00.000 We have to put them in a preservation society.
01:45:03.000 We're trying to preserve them, you know, we're going to keep them in a controlled habitat.
01:45:09.000 It's like these undiscovered tribes on desert islands, you know, there's rules of engagement because they have never made contact with civilization.
01:45:20.000 It's like Jurassic Park.
01:45:21.000 We're going to put them in an enclosure.
01:45:26.000 They could write letters to each other.
01:45:27.000 There's voicemail.
01:45:28.000 Hey, remember this?
01:45:30.000 Remember voicemail?
01:45:31.000 These kids don't know anything about that.
01:45:33.000 When I was a kid, remember the cord?
01:45:35.000 It was all the way across the house.
01:45:38.000 We had the cord caught in the door.
01:45:45.000 Yeah, we know.
01:45:47.000 Yeah, yeah, we know.
01:45:48.000 We know, we know.
01:45:49.000 Remember this thing?
01:45:51.000 Remember pen and paper?
01:45:52.000 These kids don't know anything about that.
01:45:55.000 Remember, it's like email.
01:45:57.000 It's mail.
01:45:58.000 Yeah, we got it.
01:45:59.000 We know.
01:46:00.000 We've seen it.
01:46:00.000 We've seen it in the movies, man.
01:46:02.000 We've seen it.
01:46:03.000 We know.
01:46:06.000 Anyway.
01:46:07.000 That's what they always do.
01:46:09.000 Boomers get together and they're like, remember?
01:46:13.000 But we love them, but we love them.
01:46:15.000 They show us how to do things.
01:46:15.000 They're endearing.
01:46:16.000 They're like the stamp goes in the top right and they're helping us out.
01:46:23.000 Black Laser says Have you forgiven my boy Flamenco?
01:46:27.000 Please do.
01:46:27.000 He is autistic and said he loves you.
01:46:30.000 Flam is a good boy.
01:46:31.000 He didn't do anything wrong.
01:46:32.000 No, he did do something wrong.
01:46:34.000 And I don't know if I could ever exonerate him, but we have a working relationship, you know.
01:46:39.000 Which is sort of like a detente, but I still hold it against him.
01:46:46.000 Frank Sinatra Groyper says, Congrats, Sailor.
01:46:48.000 You made it to Good Morning Groyper.
01:46:50.000 Well, not yet.
01:46:52.000 Not yet.
01:46:56.000 It's treason.
01:46:58.000 Xander says, Great show.
01:47:00.000 Garrett the Groyper says, Have you ever listened to Michael Savage?
01:47:00.000 Thanks.
01:47:04.000 If so, he would be a possible guest on the show?
01:47:07.000 I don't know.
01:47:08.000 I'm not in contact with him.
01:47:09.000 I don't watch his show.
01:47:10.000 I don't have anything against him.
01:47:12.000 Just.
01:47:13.000 Never was one of the shows I watched.
01:47:16.000 But thanks for the big super chat.
01:47:17.000 Maybe I'll get in touch with him.
01:47:20.000 But I really know nothing about him.
01:47:21.000 I never watched his show.
01:47:23.000 32 says, I hope you feel better, big guy.
01:47:25.000 Yeah, me too.
01:47:27.000 But thanks.
01:47:28.000 Xander says, Great show.
01:47:29.000 Thanks.
01:47:30.000 Super Lionheart says, All cops are faggots.
01:47:32.000 Well, not all of them, but a lot of them are.
01:47:35.000 Green Ghost says, I wonder if the Daily Wire would refer to the Colorado shooter as non white if he was from the Golan Heights.
01:47:41.000 Yeah, very true.
01:47:42.000 Very true.
01:47:44.000 American Crusader says, Nick, it's not said often enough, but you are an American hero.
01:47:50.000 You fight for this country even though it's in a diminished state.
01:47:53.000 You do everything for America and the people.
01:47:56.000 And I just want to say thank you.
01:47:58.000 I only wish I could do more to help.
01:47:59.000 Well, thank you.
01:48:01.000 Very kind.
01:48:03.000 I'm just trying to do my job.
01:48:05.000 You know, I'm just trying to do it.
01:48:07.000 I don't even think of myself that way.
01:48:09.000 I mean, I kind of do.
01:48:10.000 I, you know, I like, you know, I have an ego as every anybody who does anything of value does.
01:48:17.000 But I don't even think about it that way.
01:48:20.000 I've always just been trying to have fun, trying to do the right thing, trying to tell the truth.
01:48:27.000 I'm being modest.
01:48:28.000 So I appreciate that.
01:48:29.000 Thank you.
01:48:31.000 The Blind Liquor says I went into a store today without a mask.
01:48:34.000 I have been in there four or so times in the last month with only a few problems, and it always is a female that says something.
01:48:42.000 Serious C word.
01:48:43.000 Can you even say that?
01:48:46.000 I try to avoid that one.
01:48:47.000 That one's got real emphasis, okay?
01:48:49.000 I didn't even know about that one for a long time when I was a kid.
01:48:56.000 So I try not to say that one on the show.
01:48:59.000 But yeah, that's how women are.
01:49:04.000 We all know it.
01:49:05.000 They like to get in your face, they like to give you a hard time.
01:49:09.000 Everything has to be just so.
01:49:11.000 There's no discretion, there's no human being moment.
01:49:14.000 They're like, these are the rules.
01:49:16.000 These are the rules.
01:49:17.000 And that's, you know, I'm going to ruin your whole day.
01:49:20.000 Women, women get a little bit of.
01:49:22.000 Leeway in there.
01:49:23.000 Like, I'm about to ruin your whole day.
01:49:27.000 Game on.
01:49:27.000 Game on.
01:49:28.000 I bet you all upset you more than you could ever upset me because I'm a maniac.
01:49:34.000 You can't ruin my day.
01:49:35.000 I'm a sicko.
01:49:36.000 I came here prepared for this.
01:49:38.000 I wanted this.
01:49:39.000 I came in here, you know, and my secondary objective was to get what I was coming for.
01:49:45.000 My primary objective always is to antagonize people and to cause trouble.
01:49:49.000 You have no idea.
01:49:50.000 You've just walked into my world.
01:49:52.000 You have no idea what you've just stepped into.
01:49:56.000 Right?
01:49:56.000 Women think they're going to ruin my day.
01:49:58.000 I will upset you.
01:49:59.000 I will cry when you get home from work.
01:50:02.000 That's how you got to be.
01:50:04.000 That's how you got to be in this society.
01:50:05.000 You got to be ready at all times.
01:50:07.000 You have to be mentally prepared.
01:50:11.000 Mentally prepared, mentally agile.
01:50:16.000 It's like heat vision.
01:50:19.000 I don't seek it out.
01:50:20.000 I don't seek it out.
01:50:22.000 But if you try me, I will ruin you.
01:50:24.000 I will upset everyone in this establishment.
01:50:29.000 Let's see.
01:50:30.000 Poop Smiths, his first time super chatter here.
01:50:32.000 Been watching your show.
01:50:34.000 Been watching since your stream with Lauren Southern and Destiny.
01:50:37.000 Still one of the funniest streams ever.
01:50:38.000 You have been vindicated with almost every battle you've been in.
01:50:41.000 Keep up the great work.
01:50:43.000 Thanks.
01:50:43.000 Say, that's a long time.
01:50:44.000 That's like.
01:50:46.000 Three years.
01:50:47.000 Yeah, right?
01:50:48.000 That's like three years, three and a half years.
01:50:50.000 So, hey, thanks for sticking with the show.
01:50:52.000 True, true.
01:50:53.000 I've been vindicated and try to find like one example where I wasn't vindicated.
01:51:00.000 This is what I do.
01:51:00.000 I'm good at what I do.
01:51:02.000 Epic Guy says Article 2, Section E in the UN's official definition of genocide replacing one population with another is legally considered genocide.
01:51:11.000 That's exactly what's happening in North America and Europe.
01:51:15.000 Very true.
01:51:18.000 Yeah, it is by definition a genocide.
01:51:20.000 I agree.
01:51:20.000 I agree with you.
01:51:23.000 Big guy says Groypers invaded the political Discord server so bad the mods had to close the general chat.
01:51:30.000 We are everywhere and we are inevitable.
01:51:32.000 I hope Saturday is productive and you don't have to put up with a bunch of gay leftists.
01:51:37.000 Bring it on, man.
01:51:38.000 I'm ready.
01:51:41.000 I think it'll be fun.
01:51:42.000 I think it'll be a good time no matter what happens.
01:51:47.000 I like the struggle, I like the fight.
01:51:51.000 Poop Smith says, What was the reason behind using Litecoin?
01:51:55.000 Just curious, trying to learn more about crypto.
01:51:59.000 It's got lower fees and it's faster and it's cheaper.
01:52:02.000 Xander Stones says, Another tip for being the only man to have the balls to call out what's really happening white genocide.
01:52:12.000 I'm so sick of Republicans talking about wokeism.
01:52:14.000 We need to call it what it is.
01:52:16.000 The Democrats are anti white and enacting anti white policies.
01:52:19.000 We need people to call it what it is.
01:52:21.000 Oh, thanks for the tip.
01:52:22.000 I wasn't doing that.
01:52:23.000 Yeah, thanks a lot.
01:52:25.000 Rachie says, honest question.
01:52:27.000 Do you think any of the nonsense of the last 60 years would have been possible if women couldn't vote?
01:52:32.000 Universal suffrage sucks, but women voting seems particularly disastrous.
01:52:36.000 It is.
01:52:37.000 No, I think it wouldn't be as bad.
01:52:41.000 A1 says, I have inside info and I need to warn groypers.
01:52:46.000 Make sure to turn your LinkedIn profile viewing options to private.
01:52:49.000 Feds try to trick people into clicking on a fake LinkedIn account, and they can see who clicked it if you don't do this.
01:52:56.000 Good to know.
01:52:57.000 I don't use LinkedIn, so good to know.
01:53:00.000 Justin says there's a 45 minute documentary called The White Slums of South Africa on YouTube.
01:53:06.000 It's very telling and shows what's to come.
01:53:09.000 White people are destitute there and nobody cares.
01:53:12.000 Today I've officially begun, or I'm sorry, that's the next one.
01:53:17.000 You can tell I'm starting to get stuffed up here.
01:53:20.000 No Kleenex in sight.
01:53:23.000 But yeah, South Africa, that's our future.
01:53:28.000 Many such cases.
01:53:31.000 Michigan Zoomer says, Today I've officially begun the RCIA process to become Catholic.
01:53:36.000 Thank you for being one of my biggest inspirations and for creating the AF community.
01:53:40.000 The friends I've made through it have helped me a ton with discovering true Christianity.
01:53:45.000 Shout out to Black Swan, especially Christ is King.
01:53:47.000 Hey, thanks a lot.
01:53:49.000 Glad to hear it.
01:53:52.000 We love to hear that.
01:53:53.000 Love to hear more Catholics, more souls saved, potentially not going to hell.
01:53:58.000 So glad to hear it, man.
01:54:00.000 Bleach says, it's kind of like we're living in Halo 2, where the prophets replace the elites and the military with savage brutes for free thinking and questioning the covenant.
01:54:10.000 Hmm, yeah.
01:54:11.000 I never played Halo, so I'll take your word for it.
01:54:15.000 Rachie Mama says, the reason I became a homeschool mom is that they flooded my kids' rural school with immigrants, and my daughter got beat up by a group of Guatemalan girls.
01:54:23.000 School wouldn't do anything because of racism.
01:54:27.000 I don't blame you.
01:54:28.000 That's happening all over the place.
01:54:30.000 Why put up with that?
01:54:32.000 Why subject your children to that?
01:54:33.000 I get it.
01:54:35.000 And parents are going to have to make a hard decision in the coming years because that's coming for everybody.
01:54:41.000 Jose Antonio says AF is inevitable.
01:54:43.000 So true.
01:54:44.000 G Bars, his thoughts on Johnny Cash.
01:54:46.000 Overrated.
01:54:48.000 I'm not a country boy.
01:54:49.000 I'm not a country boy.
01:54:50.000 So I don't.
01:54:51.000 Never really saw the appeal.
01:54:53.000 He's good.
01:54:54.000 He's good.
01:54:56.000 Johnny Cash is the best ever.
01:54:58.000 Really?
01:54:59.000 Really?
01:55:01.000 Yeah, not quite.
01:55:04.000 So, I mean, I like him.
01:55:05.000 I think he's okay.
01:55:05.000 But I've never heard Johnny Cash and been like, oh, my God.
01:55:08.000 Gosh, this is the best thing ever.
01:55:11.000 It's all right.
01:55:13.000 Oh, he's real.
01:55:14.000 He's singing and oh, and he's sad.
01:55:17.000 It's overrated, I think.
01:55:20.000 I think it's dramatic.
01:55:21.000 Johnny Cash.
01:55:23.000 Johnny Cash.
01:55:25.000 Johnny Cash is a legend.
01:55:29.000 I don't know.
01:55:30.000 Disagree.
01:55:34.000 Not a fan.
01:55:35.000 Not a fan.
01:55:35.000 Never did it for me.
01:55:37.000 Never really did it for me.
01:55:38.000 Sorry.
01:55:40.000 Let's see.
01:55:41.000 Modern Monarchist says there are two ways they use anti white agenda and hope it will succeed.
01:55:46.000 Either have many whites hate their own kind or have the rest terrified of resisting.
01:55:50.000 I think they are banking on the latter more.
01:55:52.000 I think they're doing both.
01:55:55.000 See how easy it is to enunciate these beliefs.
01:55:58.000 It goes against the narratives of whites who defend and enhance their kind as dumb hayseeds or metaphysical, lofty nutjobs.
01:56:04.000 This is why they censor you.
01:56:06.000 Very true.
01:56:08.000 As it's plain, it's easy, it's simple.
01:56:11.000 Amazing Llama says, I just realized Eric from that 70s show was cast in Black Klansman specifically because he sort of resembles you.
01:56:19.000 Yeah, that doesn't make any sense.
01:56:21.000 Their chant in the movie while in white robes was America First.
01:56:24.000 Fuck that movie.
01:56:26.000 I doubt it's that targeted.
01:56:28.000 America First is Trump's slogan.
01:56:30.000 I've never watched that 70s show.
01:56:32.000 I think that's a dumb show.
01:56:35.000 So I don't really know what you're talking about, and I don't think that's true.
01:56:39.000 Washington State Groyper says, Thank you for helping me rediscover God.
01:56:42.000 Great show tonight.
01:56:43.000 Thank you.
01:56:44.000 Hercules says blacks and Hispanic kids say their schools are bad because they're underfunded.
01:56:49.000 Then they get big funds from the government and they still ditch schools, smoke, get pregnant.
01:56:53.000 It's a waste of money to fund those schools.
01:56:55.000 God bless you, Nick.
01:56:56.000 Very true.
01:56:57.000 It's never enough.
01:56:58.000 More is never enough.
01:56:59.000 It's always just a good start.
01:57:02.000 Housing, education, medical, everything.
01:57:06.000 Welfare, reparations, unemployment, disability, social security.
01:57:11.000 It's never enough.
01:57:12.000 They always need more.
01:57:15.000 Just burn the money.
01:57:16.000 Just burn the money.
01:57:18.000 Might as well.
01:57:19.000 At least you get heat from it.
01:57:21.000 We don't get anything from it.
01:57:23.000 It's a great show tonight.
01:57:23.000 No scopes.
01:57:24.000 Shout out to Emerson's artwork on your timeline.
01:57:27.000 Talented guy.
01:57:28.000 Yeah, he's the best.
01:57:30.000 He is an infinite wellspring of content.
01:57:34.000 That cartoon is so funny.
01:57:36.000 I told them it reminds me of that painting of the jester who's sort of sitting, parties going on in the background, and he's sort of sitting alone.
01:57:44.000 Have you ever seen that one?
01:57:45.000 It's a famous painting from Poland, I think.
01:57:48.000 I said it reminds me of that.
01:57:50.000 So he's very good, very talented.
01:57:54.000 He's been doing it for a long time now, too.
01:57:57.000 Space France is a great show, Nick.
01:57:58.000 As always, it's so refreshing to hear you talk about race as it is.
01:58:02.000 What would you call the Midwestern nation state after we inevitably balkanize?
01:58:06.000 God bless.
01:58:07.000 I don't think that's going to happen.
01:58:08.000 I don't know.
01:58:08.000 I'm not a Midwesterner.
01:58:09.000 I'm not at liberty to say.
01:58:10.000 I'm a Chicagoan, okay?
01:58:12.000 I'm from the Chicagoland area.
01:58:16.000 It's not really Midwest.
01:58:19.000 You know, if you live in Rockford, that's Midwest.
01:58:22.000 If you live in Quad Cities, that's Midwest.
01:58:25.000 If you live in the west suburbs of Chicago, I don't think that's really Midwest.
01:58:31.000 So.
01:58:31.000 You know, my parents grew up in the city.
01:58:33.000 I mean, it's not really Midwest.
01:58:36.000 So I can't really say.
01:58:37.000 I'm fine to live in Chicago, the nation of Chicago.
01:58:41.000 I'm fine with that.
01:58:43.000 Give it back to the Italians, please.
01:58:45.000 Masato says Do you think multiracialism would work better if American identity were actually worth sublimating your racial identity to?
01:58:54.000 We started losing wars, losing economic mobility, and our culture and art went down the toilet.
01:58:59.000 Why would people band together as one under a failed banner?
01:59:05.000 Yeah, there's some truth to that, but I don't think you could separate the two out.
01:59:09.000 We got the decline because, well, I mean, not only because, but in large measure because of multiracialism.
01:59:15.000 So I think they're kind of inextricably linked to each other.
01:59:22.000 But yeah, I mean, there's something to be said about that.
01:59:24.000 I mean, there could be this ideology of excellence or greatness, but there's nothing compelling about America.
01:59:31.000 What's compelling about America as is?
01:59:34.000 Cardi B, and, you know, Joe Biden and Bill Gates and Jack Dorsey.
01:59:42.000 What's compelling about this country?
01:59:44.000 What's compelling about this story?
01:59:47.000 I mean, that's pretty cool, I guess.
01:59:47.000 Elon Musk?
01:59:49.000 The rocket ships?
01:59:50.000 That's the only cool thing going on.
01:59:53.000 Sammy T says, Groypers are colonizing the politics, Discord, the fire rises.
01:59:58.000 Yeah.
01:59:59.000 Grand Admiral says, it all hasn't been the same without really good comics.
02:00:03.000 I know.
02:00:04.000 Jimmy Nibotron says, Assistant Groypers should be guest tomorrow at noon.
02:00:08.000 Yeah, we'll see.
02:00:10.000 Bleach says the distinction between Jews and whites is best described by Eric Weinstein himself when he tries to connect with blacks by saying European Christians oppressed his ancestors just like theirs, right from the horse's mouth.
02:00:22.000 Yeah, very true.
02:00:24.000 Reformed Groyper says, Have a Mountain Dew on me.
02:00:27.000 Thanks.
02:00:29.000 Dusty Times says, Can I get a shout out to American Krogan?
02:00:33.000 You can find his back catalog on Odyssey.
02:00:36.000 I don't know who that is.
02:00:37.000 Epic Guy says, Feels like after the election, your replies on Twitter have been nothing but faggy liberals.
02:00:42.000 Don't know if it's Bots or what's going on?
02:00:44.000 Me neither.
02:00:46.000 Could be bots.
02:00:48.000 Modern monarchist says, well, actually, Nick, we Anglos have better culture.
02:00:51.000 We have beans on toast and put fags in our mouth and we chase foxes while laughing about how ugly our wives are.
02:01:01.000 This is good stuff.
02:01:02.000 Very classic racial banter.
02:01:04.000 I love the same old racial banter.
02:01:07.000 Beans on toast, beans on toast.
02:01:09.000 Italians aren't white.
02:01:12.000 Classic stuff, guys.
02:01:13.000 Really great.
02:01:14.000 Arrest Prince Andrews' best monologue I've seen in a while.
02:01:17.000 Can't lay it out any better than that.
02:01:19.000 We're fighting for two completely different realities.
02:01:22.000 When I saw Kaepernick say our July 4th was a celebration of white supremacy, I realized there's 0% chance we can live in harmony with that.
02:01:30.000 No point in pretending anymore.
02:01:33.000 True.
02:01:34.000 Epic Guy says, Only real OGs remember American Dissident with Jake Lloyd.
02:01:38.000 Yeah, the lost 10 episodes of that show.
02:01:42.000 Space Friend says, Hey, Nick, I got tattoos when I was younger and out of faith.
02:01:45.000 Now that I found Christ, I'm getting them removed on the 19th of April.
02:01:49.000 I'm so happy and thankful that God forgives.
02:01:51.000 God bless.
02:01:52.000 Congratulations.
02:01:54.000 Good for you.
02:01:54.000 Glad to hear it.
02:01:56.000 Mark says Destiny is also not a real name.
02:01:59.000 What do you think about calling him LGR for little?
02:02:07.000 Pain.
02:02:07.000 All I've ever known.
02:02:09.000 All I've ever known.
02:02:11.000 All I've ever known is anguish.
02:02:14.000 My whole life.
02:02:16.000 Unceasing, unrelenting anguish.
02:02:22.000 Destiny is not a real name.
02:02:23.000 What do you think about LGR for little?
02:02:25.000 Maybe the ring isn't as good as FGR, but there's got to be something clever.
02:02:28.000 Little Steve should do temporarily.
02:02:36.000 Yeah, that's great.
02:02:38.000 That's terrific.
02:02:39.000 Great suggestion.
02:02:41.000 Mr. Person says, You say a tattoo is disrespecting your body, yet you eat pizza, cookies, and ice cream as though that is better?
02:02:48.000 Sounds like somebody's triggered.
02:02:51.000 Yeah, it is better actually because ice cream is delicious and tattoos are pointless and stupid.
02:02:58.000 You're drawing on yourself.
02:02:59.000 I'm eating something that is sweet and delicious.
02:03:03.000 I'm enjoying.
02:03:04.000 You know, it's fundamentally different.
02:03:06.000 A tattoo is like self expression, stupid form of self expression.
02:03:13.000 You're marking yourself.
02:03:14.000 What does that have to do with eating?
02:03:16.000 Huh?
02:03:16.000 What does that have to do with enjoying a fine, fine cookie, fine slice of pizza?
02:03:24.000 Where do you draw the line?
02:03:25.000 Oh, but you eat steak.
02:03:26.000 Oh, okay.
02:03:27.000 Yeah, we have to eat to live.
02:03:29.000 Oh, we want to eat nice things?
02:03:30.000 We want to eat things that taste good?
02:03:33.000 I mean, yeah, you'd be right if you're talking about getting fat, but we're not talking about getting fat.
02:03:39.000 It's sort of like when people say, Oh, you're against drugs.
02:03:42.000 Do you drink coffee?
02:03:43.000 It's like, okay.
02:03:45.000 Retard department.
02:03:48.000 Jamal says, What race do you suggest?
02:03:50.000 Some guy probably, head to toe and tattoos.
02:03:52.000 I'm not an idiot.
02:03:54.000 I didn't draw on myself.
02:03:55.000 You eat pizza.
02:03:56.000 Oh, yeah, okay.
02:03:57.000 Congratulations.
02:03:59.000 Jamal says, What race do you suggest mixed race guys should marry and start?
02:04:04.000 It's actually kind of sad.
02:04:05.000 People make these permanent life changing decisions.
02:04:09.000 And they're bad.
02:04:10.000 And then they're like, you eat pizza.
02:04:14.000 Sorry, dude.
02:04:15.000 I'm sorry you made a bad decision.
02:04:16.000 That's not my fault.
02:04:18.000 I will continue to enjoy pizza.
02:04:21.000 And you drew on yourself.
02:04:25.000 You scribbled dumb things on your body because you thought you would look cool.
02:04:31.000 Jamal says, What race do you suggest mixed race guys should marry and start a family with?
02:04:36.000 Dude, I don't know.
02:04:37.000 What a weird question.
02:04:39.000 Zoomer guy says, going down the tech tree to pick up optics so I could embark my units.
02:04:44.000 How is your Caesar game?
02:04:46.000 Very good, very fun.
02:04:50.000 I explained it last week, and I'm sure you saw that, and it was good.
02:04:54.000 Optics isn't very useful.
02:04:56.000 Navies tend not to be very useful until the late game.
02:04:59.000 I find that they're just not that helpful.
02:05:01.000 They're never really a game changer.
02:05:03.000 They don't help too much with land units or cities.
02:05:08.000 It's only really when you need to transport troops from one continent to another, which Doesn't happen actually that much, at least not until the late game.
02:05:16.000 So I tend not to even research the naval technologies.
02:05:20.000 That's the last stuff that I researched, to tell you the truth.
02:05:24.000 Let's see.
02:05:26.000 Kevin Brose says maybe it's the problem solution mindset of Republicans that maintains a libertarian disposition on race.
02:05:33.000 I'm certain many within the GOP could watch this episode and agree, but their reflexive memory invokes racial segregation of the 60s.
02:05:41.000 It's really sad how beaten down boomers are on this topic.
02:05:44.000 Yeah, you can't rule that out.
02:05:45.000 That's a big part of it.
02:05:47.000 They have been browbeaten and brainwashed, and there's some guilt in there, and some of it may be justified.
02:05:55.000 So, you know, because people did get treated in a bad way in this country at one time.
02:06:02.000 That doesn't mean you suicide your whole nation.
02:06:05.000 You privately feel bad about it, and then, you know, you just, you know, get over it, right?
02:06:09.000 Brad Pog says, What's your take on the Mr. Oinkers situation?
02:06:13.000 I don't know what that means.
02:06:15.000 Don't dock yourself in chat, says, I'm tattooed all over, and I'm the first one to tell people not to get tattooed.
02:06:21.000 When asked why not, most of the time I say they're overrated.
02:06:24.000 Almost without exception, tattoos are for losers.
02:06:28.000 Well, you're not a loser, but yeah, it's just not a good look.
02:06:31.000 I don't know why people do it.
02:06:34.000 It's expensive.
02:06:35.000 It hurts.
02:06:37.000 I don't think it looks good.
02:06:38.000 I see a woman with a tattoo.
02:06:40.000 It's disgusting.
02:06:41.000 I feel terrible.
02:06:42.000 Women should, especially, not get tattoos.
02:06:45.000 Men shouldn't either.
02:06:46.000 Not a good look.
02:06:48.000 Why do it?
02:06:49.000 Modern Monarchist says Whoever sent that Billy Joel super chat, DM me on Instagram or something.
02:06:54.000 Find me.
02:06:56.000 The number one Billy Joel respecter, Modern Monarchist.
02:07:00.000 Kevin Brose says, We didn't start the fire, saved my ass on the final for AP History back in high school.
02:07:05.000 If only for that, I'm a Billy Joel respecter.
02:07:08.000 I used to like that song when I was like a kid because it was kind of quirky and stuff.
02:07:13.000 And I was really into history.
02:07:16.000 But as an adult, I'm like, what was I thinking?
02:07:19.000 This is not a good song.
02:07:20.000 It's not even really a song.
02:07:24.000 So it's a very, very goofy premise, but.
02:07:30.000 That was interesting when I was a kid.
02:07:32.000 Kind of fun.
02:07:33.000 Costa Rican Outsiders says, Nick, I had a joke where people who wanted to get a tattoo are better becoming Helen Keller.
02:07:43.000 What the f, dude, man?
02:07:45.000 English, please.
02:07:46.000 English.
02:07:47.000 I had a joke where people who wanted to get a tattoo are better becoming Helen Keller.
02:07:54.000 Okay, yeah, that makes sense.
02:07:57.000 Got it.
02:07:58.000 But it sounds funnier in my head, so never mind.
02:08:01.000 Did that make sense in your head?
02:08:02.000 It didn't, I don't know.
02:08:03.000 It didn't even make sense to me.
02:08:06.000 Looking forward to tomorrow with Good Morning Groyper and here's some money.
02:08:09.000 By the way, can people from outside the USA donate to AF Foundation?
02:08:13.000 As always, with love from Costa Rica, go AF.
02:08:16.000 Hey, we'll love you too, buddy.
02:08:17.000 Hey, love you too.
02:08:18.000 Buenos dias.
02:08:20.000 Buenos dias, Groyper.
02:08:22.000 Oi.
02:08:23.000 Ay, ay, ay.
02:08:24.000 Buenos dias, Groyper.
02:08:29.000 No, thanks a lot for the super chat.
02:08:30.000 I'm not trying to be mean to you, but.
02:08:32.000 I just legitimately, I'm trying to read it.
02:08:34.000 I'm trying to understand.
02:08:36.000 I'm trying to achieve understanding.
02:08:37.000 It doesn't make any sense.
02:08:39.000 But you're trying.
02:08:40.000 Hey, muchos gracias.
02:08:42.000 You're trying.
02:08:44.000 That's worth something.
02:08:45.000 That's vale la pena, right?
02:08:47.000 What does that mean?
02:08:48.000 I think that means that's worth it.
02:08:51.000 Isn't that what that means?
02:08:58.000 It's worth it.
02:08:58.000 Yeah, yeah.
02:08:59.000 Vale la pena.
02:09:00.000 It's worth it.
02:09:01.000 It's worth it.
02:09:02.000 Hey, great job.
02:09:04.000 Uh,.
02:09:05.000 How do you say congratulations?
02:09:07.000 I don't even remember.
02:09:09.000 Bienvenidos!
02:09:12.000 Buenos Dias.
02:09:14.000 You're watching.
02:09:15.000 Good morning.
02:09:15.000 You're watching Buenos Dias Aguiper.
02:09:20.000 Yeah, bueno.
02:09:22.000 Good job, good job.
02:09:23.000 Muchos gracias.
02:09:25.000 Great effort, great effort.
02:09:26.000 You tried.
02:09:29.000 Thanks a lot.
02:09:30.000 People are donating.
02:09:31.000 Funds are pouring in, pouring in.
02:09:35.000 But thanks a lot, man.
02:09:36.000 Love you too, buddy.
02:09:37.000 Much love.
02:09:38.000 Hope you live in paradise, probably.
02:09:40.000 The weather is so nice in Costa Rica.
02:09:42.000 I bet you live in paradise.
02:09:45.000 You walk outside your front door.
02:09:48.000 Knock down a coconut and you drink a little coconut deal, and then you're on the beach and it's fun in the sun.
02:09:56.000 What are you doing worrying about America first?
02:09:58.000 You're on the beach, man.
02:10:00.000 Enjoy.
02:10:02.000 Modern monarchists is pre-Zumer comedy.
02:10:05.000 It's like George Carlin said Catholic priests are rapists.
02:10:08.000 Durr, dir, dir.
02:10:10.000 That Dwight guy sure is weird on The Office, but it's Andy that really gets me.
02:10:13.000 Shut the F up, millennials.
02:10:15.000 Aren't you a millennial?
02:10:17.000 Aren't you a millennial?
02:10:21.000 Aren't you?
02:10:22.000 I mean, I don't know, but I thought you were a millennial.
02:10:26.000 So, I don't know, man.
02:10:28.000 Why don't you watch it, maybe?
02:10:29.000 I don't know.
02:10:29.000 Are you a Zoomer?
02:10:30.000 I forget.
02:10:31.000 I forget where you fall there.
02:10:33.000 The Billy Joel Respect is going to talk shit about boomer culture.
02:10:37.000 Okay.
02:10:38.000 Now the Billy Joel Respecter, now the Billy Joel Fan Club is going to talk to us about boomer culture.
02:10:44.000 Okay.
02:10:46.000 No, I kid.
02:10:47.000 Yeah, George Carlin.
02:10:48.000 People were so impressed.
02:10:49.000 He was so clever.
02:10:51.000 Oh, my gosh.
02:10:52.000 My brain can't handle it.
02:10:54.000 This guy should run for president.
02:10:56.000 Carlin for president.
02:10:58.000 Grow up.
02:10:59.000 Basterisk says, I'll buy you what I used to clean my air dust pollen.
02:11:04.000 Dander, I sent you an email about it.
02:11:07.000 Thank you.
02:11:09.000 Yeah, I'll check it out.
02:11:10.000 Maybe I could buy one.
02:11:12.000 He says that you could use a water fountain, like a decorative water fountain, pulls the dust out of the air.
02:11:18.000 How does that even work?
02:11:19.000 I could probably get something like that.
02:11:21.000 I'll look into it.
02:11:23.000 I don't know.
02:11:23.000 I think I just need to not live in the house with the dog.
02:11:25.000 People are like, what if you just.
02:11:26.000 No, I think I understand.
02:11:29.000 Just need to get rid of me or get rid of the dog.
02:11:33.000 Let's see.
02:11:34.000 Modern Monarchist says, I got so much from my parents.
02:11:36.000 They were born mid 50s and had me in the 2000s.
02:11:39.000 Oh, so you're a Zoomer.
02:11:40.000 I didn't know that.
02:11:41.000 I feel like I am born in a weird time.
02:11:44.000 Born in the wrong generation, man.
02:11:46.000 I think I've seen you before.
02:11:48.000 You're the guy in all the YouTube videos and the comments section saying, Music these days sucks.
02:11:54.000 This is the stuff.
02:11:55.000 Yeah, that's the ticket.
02:11:57.000 Oh, Chuck Berry, yeah, Frank Sinatra.
02:12:00.000 This is the good stuff.
02:12:02.000 I'm not like my friends because I think all this pop music is trash.
02:12:06.000 I was born in the wrong generation.
02:12:08.000 I think I've seen you before.
02:12:10.000 I think I've seen you.
02:12:11.000 You're the guy in the YouTube videos in every comment section.
02:12:17.000 Wow, modern monarchist.
02:12:18.000 I didn't know I was dealing with an e celebrity.
02:12:21.000 I've seen you throughout my entire life in the YouTube comment section.
02:12:27.000 Yeah, pop music is trash.
02:12:29.000 I just can't relate to people my own age.
02:12:32.000 I'm 14 and I love Elvis Presley.
02:12:35.000 I'm 13 and I love this Sammy Davis Jr. song.
02:12:40.000 I'm nine years old and I love this stuff.
02:12:44.000 Oh, yeah?
02:12:46.000 Yeah, good for you.
02:12:48.000 Congratulations.
02:12:50.000 That was me.
02:12:51.000 I mean, I would never put that in the comments, but I would listen to all that old music and I would see those comments.
02:12:55.000 And even back then, I would facepalm Epic Fail.
02:13:00.000 Why don't you shut up and enjoy it, fellow eight year old?
02:13:03.000 Hey, fellow nine year old, why don't you shut up and enjoy Louis Prima and Keely Smith performing Old Black Magic in Las Vegas?
02:13:11.000 Just enjoy it.
02:13:12.000 You don't need to comment.
02:13:15.000 Fellow nine year old, epic fail.
02:13:19.000 So, I was there.
02:13:23.000 I was like a tourist there just passing through.
02:13:29.000 A ghost.
02:13:31.000 Rabbi Groyper says I'm surprised you didn't get the Puerto Rican horror reference yesterday.
02:13:36.000 It's what Phil Leotardo calls Vito Jr. while he's in his goth phase.
02:13:40.000 Okay, well, I've seen that scene.
02:13:41.000 I don't remember every phrase from The Sopranos.
02:13:45.000 Huey Long, Respector, says, boomer iPad.
02:13:48.000 And people throw in like a throwaway remark and they're like, oh, it's from that show?
02:13:55.000 Huey Long, Respector, says, boomer iPad and minion memes need to be banned.
02:13:59.000 Shut up.
02:14:00.000 Minion memes are funny, dude.
02:14:01.000 If you can't see that, you're the boomer.
02:14:04.000 Jesus, Respector, says, how do I get over a girl?
02:14:06.000 Why don't you grow a pair first?
02:14:10.000 No, I get it.
02:14:12.000 I get it.
02:14:16.000 Look, I'm a twisted individual.
02:14:20.000 I'm an obsessive individual.
02:14:22.000 I get it.
02:14:23.000 I get being hung up.
02:14:24.000 Look, you just got to stop thinking about it.
02:14:28.000 Honestly, that's the best advice that I could give you.
02:14:33.000 Just stop thinking about it.
02:14:35.000 You don't want to.
02:14:36.000 It's a weird thing because thinking about it makes you miserable, but you want to think about it.
02:14:42.000 It's a very bizarre dynamic, it's a very bizarre sort of thing.
02:14:47.000 But you just have to try to forget about it as best as you can.
02:14:50.000 Just try to put it out of your mind.
02:14:52.000 Just forget about it.
02:14:55.000 Think about other stuff.
02:14:56.000 Do other stuff.
02:14:57.000 Just forget about it.
02:14:58.000 Because people tend to wallow.
02:15:00.000 They tend to go around.
02:15:03.000 They get into orbit.
02:15:04.000 They orbit planet femoid.
02:15:07.000 They're in orbit, tractor beam activated, and they just go around and around and around.
02:15:13.000 And they keep thinking about her and they keep thinking about her.
02:15:16.000 And it's just stop.
02:15:19.000 Just out of sight, out of mind.
02:15:21.000 Stop looking at your old texts.
02:15:23.000 Stop looking at your old texts and reading them.
02:15:25.000 That's the worst thing you could do.
02:15:27.000 Stop looking at pictures.
02:15:29.000 Just, you gotta forget about it.
02:15:31.000 You gotta move on.
02:15:33.000 Trust me.
02:15:37.000 But, honestly, the only thing that works, time.
02:15:44.000 Try to forget about it in time.
02:15:47.000 And over time, You'll be surprised.
02:15:49.000 It may take a long time, years.
02:15:51.000 Sometimes it takes years to truly get over something.
02:15:55.000 And even still, you can't think about it.
02:15:57.000 Even still, you just kind of put it out of your mind.
02:16:03.000 But yeah, there's no real.
02:16:05.000 Some people, that's the thing.
02:16:06.000 When it comes to these kinds of matters, people are always like, some things, you just have to go through them.
02:16:14.000 I've never understood this like, how do I not be uncomfortable?
02:16:19.000 You know, you're going to go through things in life that just suck.
02:16:23.000 And you just have to endure it.
02:16:25.000 There's no hack, there's no trick.
02:16:28.000 It just lasts, and you just have to deal with it, you know?
02:16:33.000 I've never understood this.
02:16:37.000 How do I not die?
02:16:38.000 Okay, well, everyone's going to die.
02:16:41.000 How do I not be sick?
02:16:43.000 Okay, well, everyone gets sick.
02:16:44.000 Well, how do I get over a girl?
02:16:47.000 Well, you're just not going to be over her for a long time.
02:16:51.000 You just have to deal with that.
02:16:52.000 You just have to accept that.
02:16:54.000 It's unpleasant.
02:16:56.000 It's an unpleasant feeling.
02:16:58.000 And it will just be there.
02:17:00.000 It's a status condition.
02:17:01.000 It will wear off in 25 turns.
02:17:04.000 Minus five, minus five charisma.
02:17:09.000 It's a status effect until you, you know, 25 turns, two in game days, and it'll wear off.
02:17:09.000 Right?
02:17:20.000 But there's nothing you can do about it.
02:17:21.000 You got stung by the, what's the mosquito in Fallout New Vegas?
02:17:29.000 I forget what they're called the wasp.
02:17:32.000 You got stung.
02:17:33.000 You got bit.
02:17:35.000 Radclaw.
02:17:36.000 Rads plus 15.
02:17:37.000 You just got to take it.
02:17:39.000 Take it like a man.
02:17:39.000 Just got to take it.
02:17:40.000 You just got to take it.
02:17:41.000 A lot of stuff, you just got to take it.
02:17:44.000 Sorry, that's life.
02:17:48.000 So, how do I get over a girl?
02:17:52.000 How do I get over a girl?
02:17:53.000 She's just so pretty and she's just so perfect, and we had everything in a village.
02:17:59.000 If we had it, then we'd be so great.
02:18:03.000 You know, one of the biggest things, one of the biggest things to me, red pill moment, red pill moment, one of the biggest things is thinking through to its logical conclusion.
02:18:13.000 I think about this, this used to be helpful to me.
02:18:17.000 Think it through to its logical conclusion, okay?
02:18:19.000 Girl of your dreams, girl of your dreams, of your real girl.
02:18:24.000 Not like practical, like really, if you could have it all, if dreams could come true, and what would it be like?
02:18:32.000 Well, eventually, you know, we're all just human beings.
02:18:37.000 What do you think you're dreams are dreams for a reason, right?
02:18:43.000 In other words, what gives dreams their.
02:18:50.000 What makes them so appealing, you know, why you long for them is because they have a dream like quality.
02:18:56.000 There's a sort of intangible quality.
02:19:00.000 The things that are tangible are familiar, and the things that are familiar are not novel.
02:19:06.000 And the things that are familiar and not novel, they're not all that exciting.
02:19:12.000 It's not really as good as you think it's going to be, right?
02:19:15.000 I mean, really, you've really got to think about it as far as life goes.
02:19:19.000 I don't mean to depress people or anything, but what do people think is going to happen in their lives?
02:19:25.000 Even if their wildest dreams come true, I want a big house, I want a fancy car, I want a hot wife.
02:19:31.000 Okay, well, you know, a hot wife is just like a girl, you know, just like a girl, just like any other girl, but she's prettier.
02:19:38.000 Okay, so what?
02:19:40.000 So you want to have sex with her?
02:19:42.000 Having sex with a pretty girl?
02:19:43.000 Oh my gosh!
02:19:45.000 You get married to a pretty girl and you have sex with her for 20 years?
02:19:45.000 Okay, and then what?
02:19:50.000 And, like, kind of like, what difference does it make?
02:19:53.000 Is it marginally better?
02:19:55.000 I don't know.
02:19:56.000 Everything is diminishing returns, right?
02:19:59.000 Everything is diminishing returns.
02:20:01.000 Everything becomes familiar.
02:20:03.000 And the same goes for, okay, it's a house.
02:20:05.000 It's a structure that you live in.
02:20:07.000 Look at this cool gadget.
02:20:08.000 Okay, and then it's just another fucking boring thing that you have, right?
02:20:13.000 I got a Nintendo Switch.
02:20:14.000 I played it a few times and never again.
02:20:16.000 It's just another thing like that.
02:20:18.000 Oh, this is a car.
02:20:19.000 This is a cool car.
02:20:20.000 Okay, it's a car.
02:20:21.000 It gets you from point A to point B.
02:20:22.000 But it's faster.
02:20:23.000 It's more comfortable.
02:20:24.000 Okay, but we understand basically what these things are.
02:20:28.000 They get marginally better.
02:20:31.000 But over time, everything has diminishing returns.
02:20:33.000 Everything gets familiar.
02:20:34.000 So that's something that helps with me people get very obsessive about if only, if only I had this.
02:20:41.000 If only things were like this.
02:20:43.000 If only my dreams could come true.
02:20:46.000 And then what?
02:20:47.000 And you'd still wake up every day and brush your teeth and put your pants on.
02:20:51.000 And do the same things that you've always done, that you've mostly experienced.
02:20:58.000 Oh, I want to travel!
02:21:00.000 It's nature!
02:21:01.000 It's nature!
02:21:02.000 What are you going to stand on the Grand Canyon and say, wow, that's really something?
02:21:08.000 And then you get in a car, you drive on the highway.
02:21:13.000 What is that?
02:21:15.000 We're driving in the car on the highway to see the Grand Canyon.
02:21:20.000 Well, you've never seen the interior of a car before?
02:21:22.000 You've never driven on the highway before?
02:21:25.000 We did this.
02:21:27.000 Dude, it was crazy.
02:21:29.000 We went to nature and we hiked around and we.
02:21:33.000 There were trees like you've never seen.
02:21:35.000 It was beautiful.
02:21:36.000 Oh my gosh.
02:21:38.000 That's great.
02:21:39.000 That's cool.
02:21:39.000 That's great.
02:21:40.000 You should enjoy these things.
02:21:40.000 You should do that.
02:21:42.000 But let's kind of like recognize it for what it is.
02:21:47.000 If you can't appreciate life for what it is, you know, you're really never going to appreciate things that you think they're all cracked up to be.
02:21:55.000 You know what I mean?
02:21:56.000 If you can't appreciate your life now, if you can't appreciate what you have, you'll never appreciate what you may get or what you dream about.
02:22:05.000 You have to learn to just be an appreciator.
02:22:08.000 And if good things come your way, great.
02:22:12.000 But you just have to appreciate sort of the fabric of life, the daily sort of rhythm and the daily, you know, the little things in life.
02:22:23.000 Not even just the little things, but just life itself.
02:22:26.000 You've got to be in it.
02:22:27.000 You've got to be loving it.
02:22:28.000 You've got to be enjoying it.
02:22:31.000 The stuff that life is really made of, you know, you can't live for the frosting.
02:22:35.000 You can't live for the cherry on top.
02:22:37.000 You've got to live for the main course.
02:22:39.000 You got to live for the whole thing.
02:22:41.000 Got to appreciate the whole thing.
02:22:42.000 So that's just on things in general.
02:22:46.000 You know, people, I can't get over this girl.
02:22:50.000 This used to happen to me because I'd be like, oh, if only.
02:22:53.000 And even still, sometimes, you know, you ever have a dream?
02:22:58.000 You ever have a, not like, not dirty, not dirty.
02:23:01.000 But I'm saying, you ever have like a wholesome dream?
02:23:04.000 Sometimes, hey, sometimes dirty.
02:23:08.000 We're guys.
02:23:09.000 We all have them.
02:23:11.000 It's quite enjoyable.
02:23:12.000 But I'm saying, you ever have a dream and you're like, you wake up and you're like, come on, you know?
02:23:19.000 You ever have that?
02:23:20.000 You ever have a dream and you wake up and you're like, damn it?
02:23:24.000 Maybe you do, maybe you don't.
02:23:24.000 I don't know.
02:23:25.000 But I sometimes wake up from a dream and I'm like, man, you know?
02:23:29.000 Because a dream can be so good.
02:23:32.000 And then you wake up and it's like, ah, now I gotta wake up and brush my teeth, you know?
02:23:38.000 Now I gotta wake up and make a phone call or whatever.
02:23:43.000 But you got to bring yourself back to earth and you got to be like, you got to be like, okay, well, dreams aren't real.
02:23:53.000 I'm not talking about a dirty dream.
02:23:55.000 I'm not talking about that.
02:23:56.000 I'm not talking about a dirty dream.
02:23:58.000 I'm talking about like, I'm talking about like a more wholesome dream.
02:24:02.000 I'm talking about these dreams where, you know, it just sort of feels right.
02:24:06.000 I'm talking about wholesome.
02:24:08.000 Get your mind out of the gutter.
02:24:09.000 I'm not talking about that.
02:24:11.000 Now, sometimes that's great, but.
02:24:13.000 But I'm talking about, you know, you have a dream and it's like, whoa, I feel like, you know, there's like this completion.
02:24:20.000 I feel like, you know, it's different for everybody, for, you know, whatever you're after or whatever.
02:24:29.000 But you wake up and you're like, damn it, the dream was good.
02:24:33.000 Life is not in alignment with that or life is not there.
02:24:39.000 You got to realize it's like that's a feeling.
02:24:43.000 In your brain.
02:24:46.000 Okay, anyway, I think that makes sense.
02:24:48.000 So that's my answer.
02:24:49.000 How do I get over a girl?
02:24:51.000 Well, you just got to appreciate what you got, be thankful for what you got.
02:24:55.000 Diamond in the back, sunroof down, right?
02:24:59.000 It's got to be thankful for what you got.
02:25:04.000 But, um, anyway.
02:25:07.000 People are saying, Cooper, I'm not talking about that.
02:25:10.000 I'm not talking about that.
02:25:12.000 You people, you're not real human beings.
02:25:14.000 You're not a real human being.
02:25:15.000 You're not like me, okay?
02:25:17.000 I'm a real human being.
02:25:19.000 You don't know what I dream about.
02:25:21.000 You don't know what I dream about.
02:25:22.000 I'm not dreaming about that.
02:25:24.000 I mean, sometimes, but that's not what I was talking about in this instance.
02:25:29.000 Sickos, you people, whatever.
02:25:31.000 Whatever.
02:25:35.000 You failed the human check.
02:25:35.000 Not real.
02:25:37.000 James says, I tried to get Michael Malice to have you on.
02:25:40.000 I think he would like to, but the fags in New York City would lynch him if he did.
02:25:44.000 He is an incredibly effective person against the establishment, despite your differences.
02:25:48.000 He also introduced me to Yarvin.
02:25:50.000 Yeah, he is effective.
02:25:51.000 I don't have a problem with him.
02:25:55.000 John Cabbage says, F to Francis Trovo channel.
02:25:58.000 Such a shame.
02:25:59.000 That guy cracks me up almost as much as you.
02:26:01.000 Yeah, it's a shame.
02:26:02.000 He's got a good show.
02:26:03.000 He's a good streamer.
02:26:05.000 I don't think he did anything wrong.
02:26:07.000 So, I don't know.
02:26:08.000 I hope he gets it reinstated.
02:26:10.000 SoCal Mike says the Anglo and Med agree.
02:26:13.000 Johnny Cash is overrated.
02:26:15.000 Waylon Jennings is the king.
02:26:17.000 Who is that?
02:26:18.000 Waylon Jennings?
02:26:24.000 Why can't I search this?
02:26:26.000 Okay.
02:26:29.000 I don't know who that is.
02:26:35.000 See, I didn't listen to this stuff.
02:26:36.000 I grew up.
02:26:38.000 Listening to the same CD, same Rat Pack CD at every communion, every party.
02:26:46.000 What are the, it's got, you know, the Rat Pack Plus.
02:26:49.000 It's, you know, Dean Martin, Frank Sinatra, Tony Bennett, Louis Prima.
02:26:58.000 That's the CD that I grew up listening to.
02:27:01.000 The Goodfellas soundtrack.
02:27:03.000 That was the soundtrack of my life.
02:27:06.000 We didn't listen to Waylon Jennings and Johnny Cash.
02:27:08.000 It's a southern thing.
02:27:10.000 These Southerners, you know, I talk to these Southerners, and that's like all they listen to.
02:27:14.000 It's real, as far as the culture goes, it's not quite there.
02:27:18.000 But it's all a country and, you know, the food that they eat green bean casserole and, you know, the goofy stuff.
02:27:28.000 I'm like, oh, oh.
02:27:31.000 But have you ever had eight finger Cava Dills, huh?
02:27:34.000 Have you ever had eight finger Cava Dills?
02:27:36.000 Wow.
02:27:38.000 Tony Bennett plays in the background.
02:27:39.000 Now, this is culture.
02:27:41.000 These people, they're like, let's listen to.
02:27:41.000 This is living.
02:27:45.000 What's this?
02:27:45.000 And a Johnny Cash, and we're gonna have bars, smoked meat, smoked meat on the grill, or whatever, you know.
02:27:52.000 That's not culture.
02:27:53.000 You ever go to a nice Italian restaurant?
02:27:55.000 You have Cava Dills, my favorite, eight finger Cava Dills.
02:28:00.000 Got the Tony Bennett playing in the background.
02:28:03.000 You get bread with the olive oil and the cheese.
02:28:08.000 Never have that.
02:28:09.000 And then after dinner, you have a nice cup of coffee, cookies, and cakes and things.
02:28:14.000 And down there, they're like, you know, they're walking around in like a big field.
02:28:23.000 Hey man, hey man, how's it going, man?
02:28:27.000 Dinner will be ready in just a second.
02:28:30.000 They're playing, I don't even know, Taylor Swift, they're playing Johnny Cash and some stupid pop country song.
02:28:40.000 Meatloaf will be ready in a sec.
02:28:42.000 Green bean, possum, possum cash will be ready in a second.
02:28:47.000 Okay, thank you.
02:28:49.000 Thank you very much.
02:28:50.000 Where's the coffee?
02:28:51.000 Where's the cake?
02:28:53.000 Where's the Zeppelin?
02:28:55.000 Nah, just kidding.
02:28:56.000 Just kidding.
02:28:57.000 It's not nice to make fun of Jaden like that.
02:29:00.000 It's jokes.
02:29:04.000 That's how these country people are, though.
02:29:06.000 No cap.
02:29:07.000 No cap.
02:29:10.000 Basterisk says, My boomer mom cannot comprehend how Fauci is Italian, Catholic, and Jewish.
02:29:15.000 Is he Jewish?
02:29:17.000 I didn't know that.
02:29:19.000 Anime Racist says, Followed your advice and made a Tinder account to talk to women, but brah, like big fat piggy, hangs a flag in her room, says, Tits out for the boys.
02:29:28.000 I think the boys are doing okay on her own.
02:29:32.000 Well, look, I said, I didn't say download Tinder.
02:29:35.000 I said, if for the person that asked, somebody said, you know, what did they say?
02:29:42.000 They said, like, oh, I don't want a family, but I may be too awkward to, you know, get married.
02:29:50.000 And I was like, well, if you're awkward, then practice.
02:29:52.000 Get a dating app and practice.
02:29:54.000 Go on dates.
02:29:55.000 It's non committal.
02:29:56.000 You're not looking to get married, you're looking to practice.
02:29:59.000 I said, use it for that.
02:30:00.000 Go on dates.
02:30:01.000 People that you would never get married to just for the practice, just to practice approaching and, you know, working on your game and everything, just getting comfortable.
02:30:10.000 That's what I said.
02:30:11.000 People are like, Nick said to use dating apps.
02:30:13.000 It's like, I never said that.
02:30:14.000 I said, if you, for this guy that said, oh, I'm socially awkward, well, practice.
02:30:20.000 And Tinder is a good way to do throwaway shit.
02:30:23.000 Like everybody, go on dates.
02:30:27.000 And you may hate these people, you may have no intention of seeing them ever again.
02:30:30.000 That's all the more reason.
02:30:32.000 It's totally expendable.
02:30:33.000 Go on a date.
02:30:34.000 If you mess up, you got nothing to lose.
02:30:36.000 If it goes terribly, you never have to see that person ever again.
02:30:39.000 You don't even want to.
02:30:41.000 Helps you get comfortable, helps you get in the zone.
02:30:43.000 That was the advice.
02:30:47.000 So that's the point.
02:30:48.000 You should match with people that are disgusting, and then it's low stakes.
02:30:52.000 You don't care.
02:30:53.000 You could come into it confidently.
02:30:56.000 What's the worst that could happen?
02:30:57.000 She leaves, and oh no.
02:30:58.000 I mean, you don't even like her in the first place.
02:31:01.000 Finland Zoomers just saw that episode of In the Thick you did with Baked Alaska, most keynote content on YouTube.
02:31:08.000 What's your relationship like with your father, LMAO?
02:31:10.000 Yeah, thanks.
02:31:11.000 Good times.
02:31:16.000 Washington State says, Not sure if you've been asked this yet, but what are your thoughts on the Suez Canal situation?
02:31:21.000 I don't know.
02:31:22.000 Isn't it just a ship blocking the Suez Canal?
02:31:25.000 I mean, what's there to say about it?
02:31:28.000 Epic Guy says, Modern Monarchist, what's your at?
02:31:30.000 Kevin Brose says, So you're doing the radio show and the standard show tomorrow?
02:31:34.000 You're a beast, Nick.
02:31:35.000 Great show as always.
02:31:36.000 Thank you very much.
02:31:38.000 Yeah, I'm a legend.
02:31:39.000 Modern monarchist says, I was born in 2001.
02:31:42.000 My parents are boomers, though.
02:31:43.000 Wow.
02:31:45.000 Same with me, but my parents were born in the 60s.
02:31:47.000 I was born in 98.
02:31:51.000 Modern, I just read that.
02:31:52.000 Costa Rican outsider says, It sounded funny in my head because I think in Spanish.
02:31:56.000 LOL.
02:31:57.000 We don't have coconuts in San Jose, but back at home we do.
02:32:00.000 Don't tease me with that, Nick.
02:32:03.000 Sometimes I miss home.
02:32:05.000 I caramba.
02:32:06.000 Lo siento.
02:32:09.000 That sucks.
02:32:10.000 Wow.
02:32:12.000 Sorry to hear that, but you're in San Jose.
02:32:16.000 Hey, you're having a great time.
02:32:17.000 One day you can return home, right?
02:32:19.000 Return to tradition.
02:32:20.000 But thanks a lot, buddy.
02:32:22.000 Sometime maybe I'll visit.
02:32:23.000 I'll come down to Costa Rica, hang out on the beach, drink from the coconut.
02:32:28.000 Is coconut good?
02:32:29.000 I've never had coconut water.
02:32:32.000 Jamal says yes.
02:32:33.000 Don't dox yourselves as people who are of mixed race should breed with the chosen people.
02:32:39.000 Thank you, by the way, Jamal, for the big super chat.
02:32:41.000 I just saw that.
02:32:42.000 Thanks a lot.
02:32:42.000 He says yes.
02:32:43.000 Big super chat.
02:32:44.000 Thanks a lot.
02:32:46.000 07's in chat.
02:32:48.000 Jesus Respecter says, What are the best ways to help the movement?
02:32:52.000 Super chats help spreading the show, getting involved in politics, developing a skill.
02:33:01.000 You know, you really kind of got to freelance at this point in time.
02:33:04.000 We have interns, we have enough right now.
02:33:07.000 Other than that, you kind of got to freelance.
02:33:10.000 Have kids, become an asset that we could call upon you in the future.
02:33:15.000 Become an asset.
02:33:16.000 Not like of the government, but like, you know, be a value add if you joined up with the movement.
02:33:23.000 George says, thoughts on Elise Stefanik?
02:33:25.000 Don't know who that is.
02:33:27.000 360 No Scope says, hi, Nick.
02:33:28.000 Which Louis Theroux documentaries have you seen and did you like any of them?
02:33:32.000 He is massive in England and it will be mad to see you on the telly here.
02:33:38.000 Absolutely mad.
02:33:40.000 Oi.
02:33:42.000 He is massive.
02:33:44.000 Yeah.
02:33:45.000 I haven't seen any full documentaries.
02:33:47.000 I've seen him on Joe Rogan.
02:33:48.000 I've seen him on some talk shows.
02:33:50.000 I've seen some clips from his documentaries.
02:33:52.000 Um,.
02:33:53.000 He's okay.
02:33:54.000 He's quirky.
02:33:55.000 He's kind of funny.
02:33:57.000 He's got a funny way about him.
02:34:00.000 He's a little bit condescending, I feel like.
02:34:02.000 It's almost a little bit arrogant, this like.
02:34:06.000 He comes in, pretends to be all stupid and goofy, and oh no, but he knows better.
02:34:11.000 Real pretentious.
02:34:12.000 So he's got a little bit of that air.
02:34:14.000 I mean, look, international documentary filmmaker.
02:34:17.000 He's just a British chap in America, and he's filming us like we're animals or something, like he's on a safari.
02:34:24.000 There's something about it which I don't care for, but.
02:34:27.000 He's nice enough, you know.
02:34:29.000 Nice enough.
02:34:30.000 You can talk to him.
02:34:30.000 He's civil.
02:34:31.000 It is what it is.
02:34:35.000 But yeah, it'll be interesting.
02:34:37.000 It'll be interesting to see.
02:34:39.000 I'm excited for it.
02:34:41.000 Jimmy Nibotron says LOL, imagine being a zoomer and not a 2000 year zoomer.
02:34:46.000 Pathetic, yeah.
02:34:47.000 We paved the road for you, bitch.
02:34:49.000 Okay?
02:34:50.000 Oh, you were born in 2000 or whatever.
02:34:52.000 We paved the road for you when you were in diapers.
02:34:56.000 When you were in diapers, we were making history.
02:34:58.000 Okay?
02:34:59.000 We played Snake on the Nokia in the doctor's waiting room.
02:35:04.000 And we played Webkins and we had Light Bright.
02:35:07.000 And you were sucking on your thumb.
02:35:09.000 You were crawling around on the ground when I was making Darth Vader Light Bright.
02:35:15.000 Okay, you stupid idiot.
02:35:17.000 I was eating Wonder Balls when you were blowing snot bubbles, you fucking baby.
02:35:23.000 I was eating Wonder Balls with the candy inside.
02:35:26.000 Not going to choke on it.
02:35:29.000 Because I'm a grown ass.
02:35:31.000 I was a grown ass baby.
02:35:32.000 I was a full blown toddler at that point.
02:35:35.000 So, yeah, don't forget where you came from.
02:35:38.000 Let's pump the brakes a little bit, all right?
02:35:40.000 Let's not forget the real enemy boomers, Gen X, millennial.
02:35:43.000 Don't take it out on me.
02:35:44.000 I created you.
02:35:46.000 I created you.
02:35:47.000 I'm your leader.
02:35:47.000 I'm the voice of this generation.
02:35:50.000 Show a little respect, numbnuts.
02:35:52.000 Show a little respect, youngster.
02:35:54.000 You little whippersnapper.
02:35:59.000 Paved with 98 Zoomer blood.
02:36:03.000 You walk on ground that was paved in 98 Zoomers' blood.
02:36:10.000 So, anyway.
02:36:14.000 Yeah, all these snot nosed punk 2000s.
02:36:18.000 Oh, I was born in 2002.
02:36:20.000 Yeah, congratulations.
02:36:22.000 You missed Star Wars 3 in theater.
02:36:24.000 How are you, real Zoomer now?
02:36:25.000 You're kind of appropriating, don't you think?
02:36:28.000 What's your culture?
02:36:29.000 Billie Eilish?
02:36:29.000 Billie Eilash?
02:36:31.000 Yeah, congratulations.
02:36:32.000 That's real based, real edgy.
02:36:34.000 Hi, I'm a Zoomer.
02:36:35.000 My culture is Billy Eilash and Joe Biden, and I'm trans.
02:36:39.000 Yeah, 2000 Zoomers, really epic.
02:36:43.000 Okay, all right, that's our last super chat.
02:36:46.000 That's going to do it for me tonight.
02:36:47.000 Remember, tomorrow, 12 p.m. Central Time, t.me slash nickjfuentes, the first episode of Good Morning Groyper.
02:36:55.000 So check that out.
02:36:57.000 AMA on the Discord Politics server on Saturday.
02:37:01.000 Check me out at nicholasjfuentes.com.
02:37:03.000 You can access the whole catalog there for just a small monthly or yearly fee.
02:37:09.000 Remember, I'm on the air Monday through Friday, 8 p.m. Central, 9 p.m. Eastern Standard Time, only on AmericaFirst.live.
02:37:16.000 As always, I'm Nicholas J. Fuentes.
02:37:17.000 Thank you for the super chats.
02:37:19.000 Thanks to our subscribers, everybody that watches the show.
02:37:22.000 We love you, and I will see you tomorrow.
02:37:24.000 Until then, have a great rest of your evening.
02:37:28.000 Americanism, not globalism, will be our credo.
02:37:35.000 It's going to be only America first.
02:37:40.000 America first.
02:37:44.000 The American people will come first once again.
02:37:48.000 With respect, the respect that America