00:01:30.000We'll also be talking tonight about the DHS and its war against Trump supporters.
00:01:35.000We were supposed to talk about this yesterday, ran out of time.
00:01:40.000Ran 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.
00:02:00.000If you're a Trump supporter, if you're right wing, if you're involved in anything right wing, they are all over you.
00:02:07.000They are monitoring your travel, they're considering putting you on a no fly list.
00:02:12.000They're all over everything you've ever done because it's a domestic war on terrorism against the political enemies of the Biden administration.
00:03:48.000Tomorrow, I am debuting my brand new radio show on Telegram.
00:03:53.000I'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.
00:04:05.000So I've got a public channel on Telegram.
00:04:08.000I 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.
00:04:25.000So, we'll be trying it out tomorrow for the first time.
00:04:42.000It's going to be a telegram show on my telegram channel, a radio show, audio only live stream.
00:04:49.000To 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.
00:04:58.000And I'll be uploading those to NicholasJFuentes.com.
00:05:02.000So if you miss it, you can subscribe to the website.
00:08:29.000It was one of the great shows, one of the great shows of America First.
00:08:33.000I 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.
00:08:49.000And I went off on that for so long, I lost track of time and I ran out of time on the show.
00:08:54.000We had to go right into the Super Chats.
00:08:56.000But 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.
00:09:05.000And, you know, I've been covering this now for a couple of months.
00:09:09.000I've been involved in it, I've been a victim of it.
00:09:13.000Ever since the Capitol riots, there has been talk from the Biden administration, from intelligence circles, from Democrats.
00:09:22.000And even from leftists on social media and in regular media, they are talking seriously about a real war on terror in America.
00:09:34.000And the war on terror is against Trump supporters.
00:09:37.000And 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.
00:09:53.000It 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.
00:10:08.000There has been a legal surveillance and intelligence infrastructure that has been built up in order to combat Islamic terrorism.
00:10:19.000That is nominally the threat, which served as the pretext to create all of these ungodly powers for the government.
00:10:27.000Period of the past two decades, and what was designed to be directed outwardly against foreign entities, foreign states, or non state actors.
00:10:38.000Now 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.
00:10:53.000And they are using the Capitol as well as other things to broadly define.
00:10:58.000People that voted for Donald Trump, people that believe in conspiracy theories, people that are right wing, as potentially violent extremists or terrorists.
00:11:08.000And 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.
00:11:24.000And that's what this article is about.
00:11:26.000There was a big story about it in Politico yesterday, specifically about the efforts of DHS.
00:11:35.000And 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.
00:11:56.000It says The Department of Homeland Security is considering monitoring the travel of so called domestic extremists.
00:12:04.000And expanding its use of the no fly list according to law enforcement sources.
00:12:10.000The 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.
00:12:20.000And when they say national security, that means federal, that means feds.
00:12:25.000When 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.
00:12:37.000And they're turning it over to the spooks and the dogs and the scum and the insects and the parasites in Washington, D.C.
00:12:46.000It 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.
00:12:58.000Everything 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.
00:13:08.000It 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.
00:13:22.000There 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.
00:13:35.000When suspected extremists travel internationally, officials may be more likely to question them before they pass through customs.
00:13:42.000And to search their phones and laptops.
00:13:46.000So, in a word, you have no civil liberties.
00:13:48.000If you're right wing, they can interpret that broadly to mean domestic extremism, white supremacy, et cetera, et cetera.
00:13:57.000And then they're going to use that as a justification to track the flights that you book, possibly prevent you from boarding an airplane.
00:14:05.000When you get to the airport, they will search your phone, they will search your laptop, they will search your bag.
00:14:14.000Right wing to be a political dissident in America.
00:14:18.000A 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.
00:14:30.000So it's not even just DHS, but it's others too.
00:14:33.000On 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.
00:14:49.000The 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.
00:14:59.000And 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.
00:15:14.000According to the officials who spoke to Politico, conversations about domestic extremism and the no fly list.
00:15:20.000Are not just limited to people who attacked the Capitol on January 6th.
00:15:26.000Which is an important thing to understand.
00:15:30.000According 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.
00:15:44.000So they're talking about people that had nothing to do with it.
00:15:47.000They'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.
00:16:00.000And this is a lot of what we've been seeing for the past few months.
00:16:04.000Honestly, they had been talking about this from the beginning.
00:16:08.000They had been talking about this from, I think, the day of, on January 6th, 2021.
00:16:14.000They were talking about no fly list and insurrection and all of everything that that entails from a law enforcement point of view.
00:16:23.000But now we're seeing it become a reality.
00:16:25.000These are serious conversations that are not coming from just politicians and just regular Democrats.
00:16:35.000I'm sure they're talking about it at the TSA too.
00:16:39.000And 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.
00:16:53.000And people just need to understand that this is how bad things are getting.
00:16:57.000A lot of people have a general idea, I think, obviously, at this point, that if you're right wing, the system is against you.
00:17:05.000But for most people, their concept of that is getting banned on Twitter, getting banned on Facebook.
00:17:13.000Both leftists and right wing people alike, their conception of system oppression or system targeting and harassment of right wing people is very trivial.
00:17:53.000And 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.
00:18:00.000I mean, they're treating us like we're terrorists.
00:18:04.000I was on a call with somebody earlier today.
00:18:07.000I 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.
00:18:16.000It's like they're treating us worse than terrorists.
00:18:19.000Like 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.
00:18:39.000Because we saw the other day, the shooter in Colorado was known to the FBI.
00:18:45.000This Ahmad Alisa character who carried out the mass shooting in Boulder, Colorado on Monday, he was known to the FBI on Sunday.
00:18:56.000And he walked into a grocery store with an assault rifle and killed 10 people.
00:19:02.000And obviously the cops are called and he's apprehended, and he had no problem doing that.
00:19:06.000But the FBI is working around the clock right now.
00:19:09.000The scum and the dogs at the FBI and the DOJ.
00:19:12.000They 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.
00:19:28.000If you trespassed at the Capitol, you have 100 FBI agents assigned to you.
00:19:33.000Statistically, I think they said there's, what was it, 1,000 DOJ lawyers and like 300 FBI agents.
00:19:40.000So statistically, there's like one agent.
00:19:44.000Per trespasser and three DOJ lawyers per trespasser.
00:19:49.000But we couldn't get the FBI to look at a mass murderer.
00:19:54.000The 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.
00:20:03.000I think the guy in Atlanta just wasn't even on their radar.
00:20:06.000I guess he was an MKUltra experiment gone wrong.
00:20:15.000It's hard not to see the parallel with what's happening at the southern border.
00:20:20.000You 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.
00:20:43.000100,000 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.
00:21:01.000But during a pandemic, and with everything else going on, you've got 100,000 people pouring across the border.
00:21:07.000And they're putting them up in hotels, convention centers, tents, and cages, and every other facility you can imagine.
00:21:16.000And they're scrambling to find resources for that while they've got three lawyers and an FBI agent for every single individual who.
00:21:25.000Trespassed in a peaceful demonstration at the Capitol on January 6th.
00:21:30.000I 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.
00:21:45.000In Chicago alone, people are terrified now to drive to the city because everybody's getting carjacked.
00:22:03.000What is that, five or six per day for an entire year?
00:22:09.000Carjackings, murders, mass shootings, the borders totally open and uncontrolled.
00:22:16.000And 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.
00:22:28.000And 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?
00:22:45.000Because you follow Nick Fuentes on Twitter, because you voted for Donald Trump.
00:22:50.000And I don't need to tell you what's going on here.
00:23:15.000We've talked about it on the show before.
00:23:17.000It's a term popularized by Sam Francis.
00:23:22.000And it sounds like a paradox, it sounds like an oxymoron.
00:23:25.000How can something be both tyrannical and anarchic?
00:23:28.000How can something be tyrannical, meaning dominated by an authoritarian government?
00:23:34.000How can there be order or an excess of order?
00:23:37.000But 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.
00:23:48.000Well, you now understand exactly what that means.
00:23:51.000You now understand exactly what it is like to be sandwiched, to be situated right in the middle of anarchy and tyranny.
00:23:59.000Anarchy on the one side and tyranny on the other.
00:24:03.000We are situated between these people pouring across the border and the black criminals jacking your car.
00:24:11.000And mass shooters and MKUltra victims and pedophiles and so on.
00:24:19.000And then on the other side, we are facing a tyrannical surveillance security police state.
00:24:26.000On 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.
00:24:41.000Where they can create infractions and they don't even need to.
00:24:43.000They could detain you indefinitely even if you did nothing wrong without a trial.
00:24:48.000Take your stuff, go into your house, it doesn't matter.
00:24:52.000This is where Trump supporters find ourselves in 2021, situated between anarchy and tyranny.
00:24:59.000The laws do not apply to the criminals, they only apply to the law abiding people.
00:25:05.000The criminals are out there with reckless abandon, people that don't work, that don't pay taxes, and don't own anything.
00:25:12.000They are out there and the laws do not apply.
00:25:15.000They can steal, they can shoot, they can take your car, they can go back and forth across the border.
00:25:21.000They don't pay taxes, they do whatever they want.
00:25:26.000And then we find that the government is getting increasingly tyrannical, increasingly more authoritarian and scary.
00:25:33.000And 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.
00:25:48.000The system has to be completely dismantled.
00:25:51.000This is why, you know, lately the show has taken on a little bit more of a radical turn or an unconventional turn.
00:25:59.000A lot of Republicans believe in the military, they believe in the police, they believe in, you know, American exceptionalism on the world stage.
00:26:08.000I don't anymore because you see what all of that means for us, in effect.
00:26:15.000You see, the National Guard is deployed in our own capital.
00:26:32.000Are 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?
00:26:46.000They are the people that are propping up the tyranny side of anarcho tyranny.
00:26:52.000The police, the National Guard, the military, the intelligence agencies.
00:26:57.000I do not see myself as a part of America.
00:27:02.000America, as we see it embodied by the American regime, which is sovereign over America.
00:27:08.000I want America to fail against Russia and China.
00:27:12.000I want to see the military and the police defunded at this point.
00:27:17.000Because think about what the funding is doing.
00:27:19.000Think about what American power projection means.
00:27:22.000Maybe at one point, power projection for the American state meant projecting power against radical Muslims or against Chinese communists.
00:27:32.000Now, American power is being projected inwardly against you in your home and against your family.
00:27:41.000You know, all these capabilities, that $700 billion budget for the DOD, where do you think that's being spent now?
00:28:47.000And at the same time, we have to oppose the anarchy.
00:28:50.000I 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.
00:29:00.000Ultimately, what's going to be called for is sort of a parallel tyranny that is going to at once oppress the anarchic.
00:29:10.000Component, 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.
00:29:23.000Able to purge and root out the corruption from the tyrannical state and also able to keep the anarchic criminal component in check, too.
00:29:32.000That's what Donald Trump was supposed to represent, in a sense.
00:29:36.000Donald 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.
00:29:44.000He was also supposed to root out the corruption in D.C. and drain the swamp.
00:29:57.000That's the only synthesis that's going to solve our problems.
00:30:01.000Is law and order, yes, but drain the swamp.
00:30:04.000We'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.
00:30:17.000So that's the situation that we find ourselves in.
00:30:23.000And you can now begin to see the limits, maybe, of mainstream conservatism this worship of the troops, worship of the police.
00:30:30.000Don'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.
00:30:37.000But we have to think about, in effect, who they're working for.
00:30:40.000We have to think about, in effect, what their job is and what they're doing.
00:30:46.000You know, in the FBI and DHS and TSA, they're having conversations over there about abridging your rights and abridging your civil liberties.
00:32:35.000And you got to watch about even what you appear to be doing or appear to be saying.
00:32:39.000It's not enough to just not be criminal.
00:32:42.000It's not enough to just not say bad things.
00:32:45.000You 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.
00:32:56.000Because they're out there and they are looking to throw the book at people.
00:36:49.000This is after the COVID stimulus bill, which appropriated money for black farmers and for no other kind of farmers.
00:36:58.000And 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.
00:37:16.000And by the way, in case people don't know how this works, let me explain very simply.
00:37:22.000Black poor people, from a fiscal point of view, are a net negative on the state's coffers, meaning this.
00:37:30.000They extract more from the government in services than they put in.
00:37:35.000By 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.
00:37:45.000Government's giving them free money because they're poor.
00:37:48.000If you're getting free money, you're not paying anything in taxes.
00:37:52.000You know, you may pay very little, most likely, you pay nothing at all.
00:37:56.000Yet they're getting services, they're getting, you know, roads and police.
00:38:01.000To say the least, they're probably also getting medical, they're probably also getting education, maybe housing, food stamps, etc.
00:38:08.000So they put nothing in, yet they get a lot out.
00:38:11.000They're also now getting cash out on top of that.
00:38:15.000They say that white people are not eligible to take the cash out because they're too rich.
00:38:19.000So that means that white people are putting the money in.
00:38:23.000What this is called is a wealth transfer from one race to another.
00:38:28.000If you're a white, rich or not, you pay.
00:38:32.000If you're black, rich or not, You take.
00:38:47.000Now, 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.
00:38:59.000You can use all kinds of public policy terminology to obfuscate what's going on, but let's be very clear about it.
00:39:06.000Nationally and locally, whites and Asians are the only groups that are a net positive fiscally.
00:39:14.000They're the only groups that are putting more in.
00:39:18.000Than they're taking out, that are paying more in than they're extracting in terms of value with the services they receive.
00:39:25.000Blacks and Hispanics are the opposite.
00:39:27.000So, this is the way that our country works.
00:39:29.000If 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?
00:40:05.000You know, let's say, for example, you have a farm, okay?
00:40:10.000Let'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.
00:40:31.000But for the most part, the fruits of my labor go towards a person that owns the farm.
00:40:37.000You know, I mean, I'm describing slavery.
00:40:39.000What I'm describing is the chattel slavery of blacks in America 150 years ago.
00:40:44.000We're essentially now creating that because that's what taxes are to an extent, right?
00:40:50.000I mean, you're working, you get paid for your work, and then you pay a lot of that money then to the government.
00:40:56.000So it's almost like the The money went straight from your employer to the government, and you worked for free then.
00:41:02.000You worked, and the value of that work was transferred to the government.
00:41:06.000Money is the way that you're able to give value to work.
00:41:37.000It'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.
00:41:55.000You know, they're working for you in a sense.
00:42:26.000It 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.
00:42:39.000The program is the latest experiment with a guaranteed income.
00:42:43.000The 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.
00:42:53.000The 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.
00:43:13.000Has so far raised $6.75 million from private donors, including Blue Meridian Partners, a national philanthropy group.
00:43:21.000To 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.
00:43:34.000Half 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.
00:43:45.000Participants will be randomly selected from a pool of applicants who meet the eligibility requirements.
00:43:51.000Oakland's project is significant because it is one of the largest efforts in the U.S. so far, targeting up to 600 families.
00:44:00.000And it is the first program to limit participation strictly to black, indigenous, and people of color communities.
00:44:08.000The reason white households in Oakland, on average, make about three times as much annually as black households, according to the Oakland Equity Index.
00:44:18.000It's also a nod to the legacy of the Black Panther Party, the political movement that was founded in Oakland in the 1960s.
00:45:20.000I mean, we're talking about families in need.
00:45:22.000What does a rich white person have to do with a poor white person?
00:45:26.000You 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?
00:47:11.000We should do away with programs like this.
00:47:13.000We should have programs that are not like this, programs that are color and race blind.
00:47:19.000The problem with that thinking is that this is inevitable.
00:47:25.000When 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.
00:47:45.000Unless 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.
00:48:04.000What I mean by this is simple let's take a city like Chicago.
00:48:07.000You've got almost equal parts whites, Hispanics, and blacks.
00:48:12.000Now, 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.
00:48:24.000And 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.
00:48:38.000Everybody is getting something, right?
00:48:41.000So it's imperative for social stability and cohesion and order.
00:48:47.000That 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.
00:49:02.000If there is even a slight discrepancy, real or perceived, you are going to get racial resentment and conflict.
00:49:11.000You know, for example, when you talk about schooling, black schools notoriously are bad, and white schools notoriously are good.
00:49:20.000Now, You could get into the weeds about a conversation about funding and resources, but there are resources poured into all the schools.
00:50:26.000Do Hispanics interpret this to mean that, okay, Okay, well, now all this attention is on the black schools and nobody's paying attention.
00:50:33.000Do you see how quickly then conflict is generated, conflict is stirred up based on real or perceived inequities, inequities which are unavoidable?
00:50:46.000You get groups of people together, and groups stick together, they're sticky.
00:50:52.000Blacks, 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.
00:51:03.000They all do on some level, and some are more vocal and open than other groups, as we know.
00:51:08.000And some are, you know, they do care more about race than other groups.
00:51:12.000But 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.
00:51:18.000As long as you have different groups, you are going to have inequality.
00:51:23.000And as long as you have inequality, you are going to have racial resentment.
00:51:28.000And 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.
00:51:47.000It necessarily follows from what we know about human beings.
00:51:51.000Human beings are tribal, human beings are unequal, and human beings are jealous.
00:51:57.000And 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.
00:52:06.000Living 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.
00:52:41.000They're sharing our places of business.
00:52:43.000They are sharing city blocks and subdevelopments and neighborhoods.
00:52:49.000And because there are unequal outcomes, because there are clashes in values and perceptions and expectations and identity, racial resentment is being bred.
00:53:23.000We 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.
00:53:44.000We presuppose that there's something noble about undertaking this risky experiment in social engineering.
00:54:56.000And this is where conservatives don't go far enough.
00:54:59.000They accept the premise that we can live in a society where we just simply aren't racist.
00:55:06.000Because 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.
00:55:41.000For large groups of people to be smashed together, sharing the same stuff with wildly different ideologies, and they're unequal, therefore getting unequal outcomes?
00:55:51.000Do you think it's even possible to create that kind of a situation and not breed resentment and then therefore get conflict?
00:56:19.000If diversity creates conflict, if diversity creates resentment, if it is unavoidable to move towards a ranked racial caste system when you've got.
00:56:34.000A diverse range of races in a particular polity, then let's mitigate the factors that are causing the problems.
00:59:14.000We're the real ones that don't see race.
00:59:17.000But how far is that going to get you in a world where everybody else does see race?
00:59:22.000How 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?
01:01:34.000There's a political struggle, a social struggle, an economic struggle between teams, between groups.
01:01:42.000And it undermines the very fabric, the seams that bind a nation together.
01:01:48.000When I say fabric and seams, it's a very carefully chosen simile, very carefully chosen metaphor.
01:01:56.000What 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.
01:02:05.000And undermines the very foundation of why you have a coherent unit, a coherent polity at all.
01:02:13.000If Chicago is just this tripartite, you know, turf war between blacks, Hispanics, and whites, do you not then have three different cities?
01:02:23.000Do you not have three different flags and three different communities and three different nations, broadly speaking?
01:02:29.000It undermines the very foundation of why you have a country or a city or a state all together.
01:02:36.000That's how we have to be thinking about these things.
01:02:38.000And some conservatives say that we could just ignore that.
01:02:42.000I mean, they're like liberal now on race.
01:02:44.000No, 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.
01:03:24.000Sorry, 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.
01:04:54.000You 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.
01:05:06.000You know, those are kind of the foundations on a real nation, on a real civilization that ought to remain together.
01:05:15.000And, you know, there's a lot of folks out there, I said it yesterday Tucker, Steve Bannon, others, they reject this.
01:06:48.000And 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.
01:06:57.000Is 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.
01:07:17.000We 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.
01:09:21.000And we've got to accommodate for that.
01:09:23.000We've got to think very carefully about that.
01:09:26.000And we've got to accommodate that when we think about how do we govern.
01:09:30.000This 330 million person empire that is rapidly falling apart at the seams.
01:09:36.000We've got to think very seriously about those things.
01:09:40.000People 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.
01:09:58.000Because people are different, the groups exist, they are unequal.
01:10:04.000And then this is why it's never going to work.
01:10:07.000This is why it's never going to work the way that people say it is.
01:10:11.000This 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.
01:10:22.000This 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?
01:10:35.000And the whites go, why do I have to live under this administration?
01:10:39.000In other words, why are we putting up with this?
01:10:55.000Okay, but I think you understand the point.
01:10:57.000I'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.
01:11:06.000They're happening with increasing frequency.
01:11:09.000You know, these anti white policies, this POC type stuff, the advent of BLM.
01:11:22.000It affects you more personally and more directly.
01:11:25.000And we've got to set the record straight from the perspective of this burgeoning populist nationalist movement from the ruins of the Trump administration.
01:12:23.000It comes down to those fundamental things.
01:12:26.000It comes down to the fundamental, which is the groups are real and they're not equal.
01:12:30.000That's the fundamental assumption, the fundamental belief that differentiates us from the others.
01:12:39.000The 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.
01:12:52.000That's the kernel, that's the seed, that's the nucleus of their view on why we can take a more liberal approach.
01:13:02.000Because at the core, they believe the groups are not as real as we think they are.
01:13:08.000They think they're socially constructed, they think they're skin deep, they think race is skin color.
01:13:13.000They don't believe the groups are real, and they don't believe that the groups are unequal.
01:13:19.000And proceeding from that, they believe that the only thing preventing us from getting along.
01:13:23.000Is like we just haven't tried the right thing yet.
01:13:27.000Oh, we're being propagandized into disliking each other.
01:13:32.000It's about sort of this residual effect from history and past misdeeds.
01:13:40.000What we need is an enlightening to realize that we're all the same, we're not unequal, and we're not all that different.
01:13:51.000But that's wrong because we know scientifically.
01:13:54.000And we know historically that the groups are real.
01:14:30.000It's not because bad people are causing it.
01:14:32.000That's the natural, and what would be.
01:14:36.000What would be exceptional, what would be the outstanding cases if they were getting along?
01:14:40.000That 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.
01:16:15.000And 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.
01:16:30.000They say some base things, but their foundational belief is liberal.
01:16:43.000We 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?
01:16:58.000Saw some very cringe takes in reply to your tweet today about genocide and think people need to know the basics.
01:17:49.000And there's more to being black, therefore, than just having black skin.
01:17:53.000It's that the Africans have the black skin and the Europeans have the white skin.
01:17:58.000And 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.
01:18:16.000And 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.
01:18:30.000And it's sort of a unique case because obviously Jewish people have a sharp contrast with Christians.
01:18:37.000And 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.
01:18:52.000Christians believe that Jews reject their Messiah, right?
01:20:18.000Statics 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.
01:20:34.000Mass immigration is the class attacking population decline.
01:21:20.000I think there's also something to be said about wealth disparity, political trends.
01:21:25.000It'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.
01:21:37.000But of course, there are many factors that go into that too.
01:21:43.000Fat Florida Paleo cons is Beardson when he finds out he is half Scott.
01:22:58.000Search up my name after the Capitol riot.
01:23:02.000How 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.
01:24:26.000Yeah, here, go eat some beans, little guy.
01:24:29.000You're welcome for creating your country.
01:24:31.000British 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.
01:28:39.000Yeet Peterson says now, it's been 25 years since his last live stream, and nobody has seen heads or tails of him.
01:28:46.000But 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.
01:29:01.000I'm going to forward you an email, forward you a chain email.
01:29:13.000And he was a professional hot dog eater.
01:29:15.000And one time he ate so many hot dogs, he choked to death.
01:29:19.000And 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.
01:30:55.000K 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.
01:31:07.000Hope that hay fever, whatever it is, subsides for you soon.
01:31:10.000Yeah, me too, because I'm dying, dude.
01:31:13.000Yeah, boomers are very stuck in their ways.
01:31:15.000You really can't, it's like impossible.
01:31:20.000You 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.
01:34:53.000They had, I don't know, books or something.
01:34:56.000They had books and phonographs, and then.
01:34:59.000I 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.
01:35:11.000But you grew up with all the good stuff, and it's like, yeah, none of this makes sense anymore.
01:35:18.000You know, these Mel Brooks movies actually aren't very funny.
01:36:11.000That's like a boomer's idea of comedy.
01:36:13.000That guy got hit in the head with a coconut.
01:36:19.000You know, Zoomer comedy, we really have like everything at our disposal.
01:36:24.000We'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.
01:36:35.000So, 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.
01:38:13.000A lot of the stuff you just can't explain to, you could never just explain this to a boomer.
01:38:18.000And 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?
01:38:49.000You know, like I was thinking the other day, oh my gosh, I can't even believe I'm going to tell this story.
01:38:53.000But, 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.
01:39:06.000And your parents were funny because they watched movies.
01:39:10.000Like 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.
01:39:25.000You're funny because you pick up on funny expressions and things that your parents say that a child could not know, would not know.
01:39:36.000Like 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.
01:39:47.000Like I remember I gave a speech for student council president in seventh grade.
01:39:53.000I used to write in the paper in fifth and sixth grade.
01:39:57.000And 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.
01:40:06.000Because my mom would help me write this stuff.
01:40:09.000My mom would make suggestions about this stuff.
01:40:19.000And my parents' humor was coming from Seinfeld.
01:40:21.000It was coming from, like I said, old sitcoms, old movies.
01:40:26.000I 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.
01:40:38.000So I was like, yeah, this simply won't do.
01:41:12.000He 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.
01:41:26.000And he thinks it's the funniest thing in the world.
01:43:46.000It's like the internet, the kind of interconnectivity that is allowed by the internet.
01:43:52.000The bandwidth that is allowed by the internet, the exchange of ideas, the formulating and reformulating, and things coming together.
01:44:03.000It'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.
01:44:15.000Because funny people in the studio were like, what if we had a funny cowboy?
01:45:00.000We have to put them in a preservation society.
01:45:03.000We're trying to preserve them, you know, we're going to keep them in a controlled habitat.
01:45:09.000It's like these undiscovered tribes on desert islands, you know, there's rules of engagement because they have never made contact with civilization.
01:51:02.000Epic Guy says Article 2, Section E in the UN's official definition of genocide replacing one population with another is legally considered genocide.
01:51:11.000That's exactly what's happening in North America and Europe.
01:54:00.000Bleach 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.
01:54:11.000I never played Halo, so I'll take your word for it.
01:54:15.000Rachie 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.
01:54:23.000School wouldn't do anything because of racism.
01:57:36.000I 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.
02:00:10.000Bleach 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.
02:01:14.000Arrest Prince Andrews' best monologue I've seen in a while.
02:01:17.000Can't lay it out any better than that.
02:01:19.000We're fighting for two completely different realities.
02:01:22.000When 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.
02:05:03.000They don't help too much with land units or cities.
02:05:08.000It'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.
02:05:16.000So I tend not to even research the naval technologies.
02:05:20.000That's the last stuff that I researched, to tell you the truth.
02:18:03.000You 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.
02:18:13.000I think about this, this used to be helpful to me.
02:18:17.000Think it through to its logical conclusion, okay?
02:18:19.000Girl of your dreams, girl of your dreams, of your real girl.
02:18:24.000Not like practical, like really, if you could have it all, if dreams could come true, and what would it be like?
02:18:32.000Well, eventually, you know, we're all just human beings.
02:18:37.000What do you think you're dreams are dreams for a reason, right?
02:18:43.000In other words, what gives dreams their.
02:18:50.000What makes them so appealing, you know, why you long for them is because they have a dream like quality.
02:21:42.000But let's kind of like recognize it for what it is.
02:21:47.000If 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.
02:21:56.000If 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.
02:22:05.000You have to learn to just be an appreciator.
02:22:08.000And if good things come your way, great.
02:22:12.000But 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.
02:22:23.000Not even just the little things, but just life itself.
02:29:19.000Anime 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.
02:29:28.000I think the boys are doing okay on her own.
02:29:32.000Well, look, I said, I didn't say download Tinder.
02:29:35.000I said, if for the person that asked, somebody said, you know, what did they say?
02:29:42.000They said, like, oh, I don't want a family, but I may be too awkward to, you know, get married.
02:29:50.000And I was like, well, if you're awkward, then practice.
02:30:01.000People 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.