00:00:11.000all right we're good tonight friday we're having all kinds of technical difficulties Thursday, we weren't even on the air because of the IP configuration and all that.
00:00:24.000Friday, we had microphone issues, but we're back this week for another powerful episode, another powerful week of episodes.
00:00:43.000And I promised on Friday that there would be major developments, major changes here, major updates to the America First product, and it's all coming this week.
00:00:54.000Now, we got a lot to talk about tonight.
00:00:57.000I launched a poll about 15 minutes before the show started as to what our feature is going to be, because, you know, we've been talking about North Korea for a long time.
00:01:07.000We've been talking about North Korea for a long time.
00:01:10.000And most nights, it's updates about what's happening, minor updates here and there.
00:01:16.000It's a lot of gloating on my part because I happen to be correct about North Korea basically 100% of the time, as I am with most things.
00:01:26.000And so I said, you know, do we want to hear about North Korea or do we want to hear about what I was tweeting about this weekend?
00:01:32.000Which I read an article on vice.com, actually from a long time ago, from 2014, I think.
00:01:39.000And it was basically one of these articles that I typically like to hate read.
00:01:44.000It's, you know, because typically you'll see in Vice and the New Yorker and Slate Salon, they put out these outrageous headlines.
00:01:51.000And to be fair, it's really no different in the tactics than when I put out something outrageous on Twitter.
00:01:58.000You know, and I tweet out, make it illegal to speak Spanish in the United States.
00:02:14.000We can't help ourselves when the headline is like, you know, why my transgender six year old son is breaking stereotypes about, you know, whatever.
00:02:23.000And you got to go to read it just to say, oh, I just hate what's going on, you know?
00:02:28.000But so I was reading this article over the weekend, and at first I was hate reading it.
00:02:40.000There's actually a very, contained in this article, there's actually a very coherent, And an explicit and honest explanation or demonstration of how you get from a materialist world, how you can directly link the loss of God in our lives and in society to hedonism, to unrestrained, uncontrolled pleasure seeking in all of its worst forms and excesses.
00:03:08.000And I think that's a really important subject.
00:03:11.000And this is a great article to show you because it's so clear and it really just makes sense when you read it that way.
00:03:24.000And they point to things like the sexual revolution, or they point to things like the counterculture with music, or they point to media, which is owned by a particular group, you know, all these things.
00:03:36.000But I think there's no clear demonstration as to how an individual gets logically through, I think, very sound reasoning from the idea that the world is just matter, there is no immaterial, there is no God, there is no divinity.
00:03:51.000To, you know what, let's just yuck it up while we're here and we'll be drinking and we'll be partying and we're going to get our, you know, whatever on.
00:04:01.000And so I've got a new whiteboard, brand new whiteboard, and we'll be talking about that.
00:04:52.000Now I'll call her Chelsea, no problem.
00:04:55.000We'll be talking about that, and also we will be talking about Elon Musk and what he's been saying and what all of that means for us little people.
00:05:05.000Before we get into any of the news, first, most importantly, major announcement.
00:05:10.000There will be, well, it's an announcement about an announcement, admittedly.
00:05:18.000All the technology is set up on my website.
00:05:21.000I have had the finest America First technician, the finest America First alchemist in his laboratory with the test tubes and arcane automatons and golden computers.
00:05:53.000If you want to be the first to know about the details about the paywall, what's going to be in it, the price, how you can find it, where you can get to it, the whole program, you have to sign up for the mailing list on NicholasJFuentes.com.
00:06:09.000So if you go there, the link is actually in the description.
00:06:23.000You can go to the website and just watch the show live whenever you, you know, instead of going to my YouTube page or Twitter, if you just go to the website, it'll always be live streaming there.
00:06:57.000No, but really, we are in a climate where it's very uncertain our futures on social media.
00:07:04.000Our destinies are in the hands of people that hate us in Silicon Valley, where if one day the YouTube censors or the ADL or the SPLC, if they decide they don't like my Show, then there goes my 15,000 subscribers on YouTube.
00:07:20.000If Jack Dorsey of Twitter.com decides, you know, I don't like this kid, he's breaking too many minds, he's waking too many people up to the truth, he's letting people know that I'm an actual demon and we need spiritual warfare, and he shuts my account down, and, you know, that's it.
00:08:49.000The reason we celebrate Memorial Day is to remember the troops.
00:08:54.000And you know, initially, my approach would be to say something to the effect that it is unfortunate and it is tragic that we have so many dead troops, troops that have died overseas in wars that could have been prevented.
00:09:09.000And on Memorial Day, we recognize the sacrifice.
00:09:12.000We recognize people that gave their lives.
00:09:14.000But it's very difficult for us on this show when we see the profound folly of many of the engagements over a long period of time where people have gone over and needlessly given their lives.
00:09:30.000I think today has to be all about, really, just about the troops themselves and their families.
00:09:37.000You may disagree with the politics of it.
00:09:40.000You may say, I disagree with this war or that war, and certainly we've done it before and all the rest.
00:09:45.000But I think today you have to set aside to remember that we have to have a military.
00:09:51.000If not for the people that are on the front lines, if not for the people that give up their lives, well, they sign up basically to give their lives at some point in some kind of a struggle to defend the homeland, to defend the country.
00:10:05.000If not for those people, we wouldn't be here.
00:12:38.000You know, the people that are going to call her the thing she doesn't want to be called to make a political point, they're almost as bad, in my opinion, as the other side because I don't care what she wants to be called.
00:12:54.000And who cares if it's Chelsea or who cares?
00:12:57.000But nevertheless, Chelsea Manning, who we know she was the whistleblower.
00:13:02.000A few years back, she got arrested for leaking, I think, hundreds of thousands of classified intelligence, classified documents from the Pentagon and from the DOD.
00:14:14.000She's male to female transgender, I guess.
00:14:17.000She's this radical lefty kind of a person, and also, I think, severely mentally ill.
00:14:22.000Not only because of the transgender thing, but just if you've witnessed her behavior over the course of the last few years, I mean, just a very erratic and strange person, a very irrational type person.
00:15:20.000I can take people I don't know hating me, but not my own friends.
00:15:25.000I tried, and I'm sorry about my failure.
00:15:27.000And so, you know, and to me, I read this kind of stuff, and it just makes me want to put a bullet in my head because you hear this so often among like teenage girls and effeminate men.
00:16:29.000The really sick and perverse, and maybe like the feminine side of narcissism, is like this weird, deceptive thing where it's just all about me.
00:17:20.000But this is a person who hates everything that we stand for.
00:17:24.000This is a person who is in rebellion against God, in rebellion against the natural order.
00:17:29.000In rebellion against morality, against a stable political system.
00:17:33.000I mean, this is a person that if anybody that we loved did anything remotely similar, would probably gloat about it.
00:17:40.000You know, if you saw somebody like myself in a similar position, which you never would, by the way, Mossad, but if you saw any comparable person in a situation like this, maybe like, I don't know, take a parallel.
00:17:52.000Maybe it's like Lauren Southern, and she's like, oh, you know, I really can't hack it.
00:17:58.000Or, you know, anybody like that, she would gloat about it.
00:18:01.000She's like, oh, boohoo, Nazis are going to kill us, you know, that kind of thing.
00:18:06.000She looks at the death of our nation, the death of our people, and says, oh, boohoo, Nazis are so mad that their country is being blown to smithereens, their children are getting raped.
00:18:17.000You know, so that's why I have very little sympathy for this character.
00:18:21.000But of course, who does have sympathy for this character?
00:18:24.000The entirety of the conservative media, the alt-white media, none best.
00:18:31.000Demonstrated than by Ben Shapiro, who tweeted last night as so profound, so brave, stunning and brave.
00:18:38.000He tweeted out, quote, at Chelsea, I hope you deleted, because she later deleted those tweets.
00:18:44.000He says, I hope you deleted those tweets because you decided against harming yourself.
00:18:49.000You're a precious creature of God praying for you tonight.
00:19:37.000When they go out there and they say, oh, it's just this race to see who could say the most heartfelt and dramatic thing about Chelsea Manning, oh, please, I hope you're safe, all the rest, this is nothing more than a very shameful and masochistic contest to see who can appeal to the left the most, who can get the left to say, you ate, white boy, essentially.
00:20:17.000Because months ago, you had a young man by the name of Andrew Dodson, who was 34 years old when he passed away in March as a result of an apparent suicide.
00:20:29.000And the reason that this young man killed himself, he was a Christian, a brilliant inventor, I mean, really a great man.
00:20:36.000He grew up in the South, and his dream, he was a good friend of Millennial Matt's.
00:20:40.000And I was talking to him about it when the news broke.
00:20:43.000The only public record of it at the time, this happened months ago that he killed himself.
00:20:48.000But the only public record about it was from an obituary in a local paper that we didn't even find out about until months later, until about a week ago.
00:20:57.000And so me and Millennial Matt, a good friend of mine, we were talking over the phone about it, just what a tragedy it was.
00:21:03.000And he was telling me what a fantastic guy this guy was, where he was at the Charlottesville protest.
00:21:08.000And this is the reason he killed himself.
00:21:10.000He was at the Charlottesville protest, and he got harassed by the media.
00:21:21.000And they made it so that his life was such a living hell that he took his own life.
00:21:25.000And that was telling me how, even when Dodson was in Charlottesville, he was getting maced.
00:21:30.000He was getting his butt kicked by Antifa, by leftist protesters.
00:21:34.000And he was telling them, I love you because he was a Christian.
00:21:38.000And so, even in the face of evil, even in the face of people who wanted to kill him for his political beliefs, he said, I love you with his eyes open.
00:21:46.000Burning because he had mace in them, telling them, I love you.
00:21:50.000His dream was just to provide, I think it was just cheap and clean power for the state of Arkansas.
00:21:55.000He was an inventor, and so he wanted to engineer a way to create solutions for the infrastructure there.
00:22:02.000And so this was a fantastic, upstanding guy.
00:22:05.000Did we hear anything about him from the Ben Shapiro's of the world, from the conservative review TV, from any of these characters?
00:22:13.000You know, suddenly we're all about, we have to put aside politics because.
00:22:19.000Who we are on the inside is so much more important, and everybody's just a precious creature of God.
00:22:25.000Did Ben Shapiro hear about Andrew Dodson, who killed himself because the media targeted him for having the wrong opinions because he attended a demonstration exercising his amendment rights, First Amendment rights?
00:22:38.000Did he wax dramatically about, oh, he's a precious creature of God, and what a sad and terrible thing that the media did this?
00:23:28.000Ben Shapiro, he actually went after Charlottesville people.
00:23:30.000He went after them with all these people.
00:23:33.000He said, you know, you shouldn't kick them off the internet, but as he said on Dave Rubin a few years ago, the real racists should be hunted down and their lives ruined and all the rest.
00:23:43.000And so I think when you put that comparison, one up against the other, I think you get a pretty good idea that these people are phonies, they're frauds.
00:23:51.000They will bend over backwards for Chelsea Manning, who is currently running for Senate on a platform of eliminating borders.
00:24:00.000Shutting down all prisons and letting the inmates out, forming a universal basic income free health care.
00:24:06.000I mean, she wants to destroy the country.
00:24:08.000This is a transgender freak who wants to see drag queens in elementary schools and your toddlers on hormone replacement therapy and all the rest.
00:24:17.000This person, this individual, who, by the way, doesn't care if we live or die, would gloat if we died, would probably kill us ourselves given the opportunity.
00:24:25.000But we're going to bend over backwards for her and say, oh, you're a precious creature of God, all the rest.
00:25:23.000You listen to these pundits, and they go on these rants, you know, and it's so self indulgent, it's so self righteous, where they get on their soapbox on their little show, where they're getting paid.
00:25:34.000By the way, these people to go on their rants, which are so.
00:25:38.000Oh, I know it's not exactly politically correct, but black people should like Republicans because don't you know Democrats form the KKK?
00:25:49.000You know, this kind of shit where they present as politically incorrect.
00:25:52.000Oh, it's so dissonant, it's so outrageous, and they get a big fat paycheck from their conglomerate, you know, whatever media enterprise they're with, whether it's Daily Wire, CRTV, Fox News, you know, they get on their soapbox on a platform, and who pays for the platform?
00:26:30.000So you tell me, you get on these soapboxes from, you know, in the first place.
00:26:35.000Can you really get on a very truthful and politically incorrect rant if the way that you're getting paid is through corporations putting their advertisements for, you know, Check out the all new Kia Forte featuring interracial couple, interracial gay couple having gay sex on the commercial.
00:27:01.000But then again, they get up and they go on their big rant.
00:27:05.000And to me, it's just repulsive to see that kind of stuff because they're out there and they present as though they're morally outraged, they're indignant.
00:27:14.000Oh, you know, we're so self righteous.
00:27:17.000But when it really gets down to it, You can't even say some nice words about people who want to see your race not get genocided, but you bend over backwards for the other side.
00:27:31.000I don't think we really have time for Elon Musk.
00:27:34.000Well, the thing about Elon Musk, and I'll go over it very briefly because we've talked about it before.
00:27:40.000That was Chelsea Manning and conservative media in general.
00:27:44.000But there was another big episode on Twitter, another big cultural episode, which is that Elon Musk has been really freaking out about media lately.
00:27:52.000The media has been all over him about Tesla and the poor performance of some of his companies and whether or not it's a sustainable business model.
00:28:01.000Brett Stevens in the New York Times came after him.
00:28:03.000All kinds of reporters have come after him.
00:28:05.000And so he's really gone after the press in a big way, saying they spread fake news, they lie, all the rest.
00:28:11.000Very good stuff that you get it from a figure other than a political figure, other than a right wing political figure.
00:28:18.000When you get it from Kanye West, don't trust the media.
00:28:21.000When you get it from Elon Musk, don't trust the media, we're in good shape.
00:28:25.000That's really paradigm shifting when you have major thought leaders who are basically apolitical and basically universally liked challenging those institutions.
00:32:29.000I start to ferret out, like, basically a coherent thought process, a coherent narrative about how somebody gets from a standard modern position into hedonism.
00:32:41.000What leads somebody to take pride in being a slut?
00:32:44.000Because, you know, the article of the, or rather the title of the article is not only that this person's a slut, but no, that this person is proud of it.
00:32:55.000And she defends her position, and I think it's, you know, it's not really justifiable from our metaphysics, but I think it is interesting to get an insight into how.
00:33:03.000Most people are thinking in the absence of God.
00:33:06.000So she writes, and this is really where it all starts here.
00:33:11.000She starts to question the idea of promiscuity.
00:33:17.000She says, well, first, let's look up what promiscuity means in the Oxford Dictionary.
00:33:22.000What she says is the factor state of being promiscuous, immorality.
00:33:28.000So she says that the word is defined as having or characterized by many transient sexual relationships.
00:33:33.000But of course, it doesn't tell us how many is many.
00:33:36.000Because, like so much of this debate, the exact amount of people you need to sleep with to qualify as promiscuous is an arbitrary judgment imposed by other people.
00:34:10.000I'm not an expert on biblical history.
00:34:12.000But what I do know is that in the absence of an extrinsic authority, which means an authority outside of man, something bigger than us, a creator, something larger that bestows us with the moral code, you cannot have objective morality.
00:34:31.000Because, of course, if I make a moral judgment and I say, for example, It is wrong to rape.
00:34:38.000To have sexual intercourse with another person without their consent is wrong.
00:34:43.000Without authority, without authority that comes from outside myself, which is an objective form of knowledge and in some capacity, somehow I understand it, without that, it is exactly this an arbitrary judgment imposed by other people.
00:35:22.000What if somebody just regrets it later?
00:35:24.000What if you kind of agreed to it, but things went on that you didn't quite like, or maybe things happened that you didn't quite agree with, but maybe you consent?
00:36:25.000Well, there's many intelligent people who disagree with you.
00:36:28.000But This is the fundamental problem, and this is where we start to see how this is so explicit, why this is such a, in my opinion, such an insightful piece.
00:36:38.000Not for any other reason than for observation.
00:36:40.000I don't mean to say that she's making like this is life changing stuff.
00:36:44.000I mean, this is all very standard in the modern world, but she says it in such a way that I think is worth studying.
00:36:50.000It's just an arbitrary judgment imposed by other people.
00:36:54.000And so she goes on to say, well, how does time fit into it?
00:36:57.000What if an 80 year old has 10 sex encounters, but what if they're all in the same week?
00:37:02.000And then she goes on, this is the final conclusion, which is none of it makes sense because it's just an idea and a shitty one at that.
00:37:08.000And this is so, this is also very typical how dismissive modern people are of customs, rules, traditions.
00:37:16.000Once these morals do not have the weight of divinity, once they don't have the weight of God, not only do they lose their authority, and so people can say, yeah, screw you, I just disagree, and you're not going to change my mind.
00:37:29.000Not only can that happen, but actually they can adopt disdain.
00:37:33.000Actually, they can adopt a very dismissive attitude.
00:38:32.000So the place where we begin with this is the problem of morality.
00:38:38.000And let me get back to my other screen here so I can elaborate with my hands a little.
00:38:42.000The first problem that we see, the first real definitive conclusion we have in this article about materialism, which is the idea that the world is only made up of matter and there is no soul, there is no God, there is no realm of forms, but it's purely the material and nothing else.
00:38:59.000The first conclusion that we come to, or the first problem that is presented, is that of morality.
00:39:27.000If so, there's no way for you to say authoritatively, without the use of coercion, well, my right and wrong is the correct one.
00:39:35.000That's the first problem is authority.
00:39:37.000The second problem with morality is what is morality if you don't believe in the soul, if you don't believe in the immaterial?
00:39:45.000If we are merely carbon atoms, as they like to say, we're just stardust, we're the universe becoming aware of itself, and oh, we're just the process of Chemical processes in our brains, synapses firing, chemical reactions.
00:40:01.000You start to think about man in a very mechanical way, that we are merely the process of impersonal processes happening at a subatomic level.
00:40:12.000I don't really act, I don't really speak, and I don't really have value if all I am is a mixture of different inanimate atoms.
00:40:19.000In the same way that we don't really say that a rock is moral, we don't say that a tree is moral, we don't say that a dog is moral.
00:40:38.000What does it matter what happens to you and I on this tiny little rock?
00:40:43.000If there is no God, if there is no soul, who's to say it matters what happens to this collection of atoms as opposed to my collection of atoms?
00:40:51.000In the same way, they talk about a fetus as a tumor it's a collection of cells.
00:40:56.000Well, you know, for all a collection of cells, how can we say that one thing is moral and another thing is immoral?
00:42:13.000Sometimes they don't do it and they're fine anyway.
00:42:16.000Sometimes they're promiscuous and they have bad outcomes.
00:42:18.000But nevertheless, because we can't say definitively that there are good outcomes, we can't say it's moral or immoral.
00:42:25.000This is what Ryan Dawson kind of hinted at in our debate about morality.
00:42:29.000He said that the reason why more, why more, the reason why some wars are justifiable is because they have good outcomes.
00:42:36.000Well, I'm sorry, that really is not a moral calculation, right?
00:42:40.000He said, well, the reason we can determine a secular morality is because some things make you healthier, and some things make you smarter, and some things make you more comfortable.
00:42:52.000But of course, this is only based on outcomes.
00:42:57.000The question which has stood for thousands of years, posed by Plato in the Republic, is what would happen if there were no adverse consequences?
00:43:04.000Would you still act in such a fashion that is, traditionally speaking, immoral?
00:43:14.000The parable goes, well, what if somebody, I think it was the Shroud of Torah or something, he goes, what if somebody put on a shroud and it made them invisible and they were able to steal something without any bad consequences for themselves?
00:44:09.000But she goes on to say, so much of our lives are spent taking the bin bags out, brushing our teeth, waiting for the microwave to end, wondering when we can take our shoes off because our feet ache.
00:44:23.000It's dull and tedious and savage and cruel.
00:44:26.000And you have to go to work and feed your kids and send people birthday cards and all that old shit.
00:44:31.000Those moments of pure release, though, that hedonistic abandon, they're the bits that make life worth living.
00:44:40.000Sure, you can have special moments with the person you love, but don't look down on those of us who like to rub genitals with anyone and everyone.
00:46:11.000You have special moments, there's things that make you feel good, but for the most part, it's just the stuff that sucks.
00:46:16.000It's waking up early in the morning, it's eating stupid breakfast, waiting for the microwave, and it's driving to work, it's sending birthdays, it's stuff that sucks.
00:46:29.000And this is something that's universal for Christians, for atheists, and unlike many secularists on the left and on the right, but mostly on the left, she acknowledges that it is not good.
00:46:41.000You know, there are progressives, there are these people, these like the, on both sides, there are people that say that we've made progress, essentially.
00:46:49.000Jordan Peterson comes to mind, Sam Harris comes to mind.
00:46:52.000People that say, you know what, in the absence of God, even though people are killing themselves and all the rest, there is less war.
00:47:24.000We know it when in the summer we want it to be cold, and in the winter we want it to be hot, and when we're hungry we want to eat a lot, and when we eat a lot we don't want to feel so sick.
00:47:33.000And I mean, we know what it means to be human, which is to suffer, which is to long, which is to strive, to be not satisfied.
00:47:41.000And so she gets at something very fundamental here.
00:47:43.000So, first, she says there's no morality.
00:47:45.000She acknowledges that life is suffering, but here's where it really gets dark.
00:47:50.000Life is suffering is universal, but it is a necessary part of the ingredient for hedonism.
00:47:55.000It's something that everybody, I think, inevitably comes to grips with, at least in private.
00:47:59.000Maybe in public they say, oh no, progress is real.
00:48:01.000In private, we all know we're suffering.
00:48:06.000She says basically that life is meaningless.
00:48:09.000She says basically that life has no intrinsic worth, because of course, in the absence of God, When God is not even in your head, when you're not even thinking about that, what is the meaning of life?
00:48:20.000It's special moments with the person you love, I guess.
00:48:25.000Moments of hedonistic abandon, pure release, rubbing genitals with people.
00:48:32.000There's no meaning of life for her, so it's just about alleviating the suffering.
00:48:37.000If there was meaning, if there was God, if there was something more, we would say that the meaning of life, we would say that what gives the suffering meaning, or what takes us out of it, what distracts from it, you know, something to get out of this.
00:48:48.000Problem, to solve this problem, we would say, well, we give our lives to our country.
00:51:11.000It means that you're born into the world, and no matter what, inside of life, within life, by the nature of life, there is meaning inside of it.
00:51:23.000In the sense that some people will tell you, well, the meaning of life is finding your passion, the meaning of life is improving yourself, it's working out, it's playing a musical instrument, it's making a movie, making something beautiful, yeah, something like that.
00:51:57.000It's not cooked in, it's not baked in.
00:51:59.000It's something that we kind of have to make for ourselves.
00:52:02.000And Nietzsche really popularized this in the 20th century where he said, well, the meaning of life is overcoming, the meaning of life is to make it so that.
00:52:11.000Even if there were an eternal recurrence, even if you lived the same life forever on repeat with nothing changed, you get to a point where you would embrace that.
00:52:21.000And the story goes this is how he conveyed it.
00:52:24.000He said, If a demon came into you in one of your darkest nights, one of your worst nights, and told you that you were doomed to live this life exactly the same way forever on repeat, if you would truly overcome, you would embrace that and say, Wow, I love life.
00:52:40.000And that's how you're supposed to find meaning.
00:52:43.000That there is any intrinsic meaning, which would be God, which would be anything like that.
00:52:47.000She just says, oh, well, there is nothing really inside of life that we could say is meaningful, that provides for that need in our heads of why are we here?
00:52:59.000And that gets us to the fundamental here, which is life is suffering.
00:53:03.000You combine these three ingredients, and inevitably you get to hedonism.
00:53:08.000For the reason that, in the first place, in the absence of meaning, if life is suffering and there is no reason for the suffering, there is no purpose for the suffering, The imperative becomes pleasure seeking.
00:53:28.000They want to take the shortest trip from point A to point B.
00:53:32.000And so, if there's no reason to really do anything and we're just here, we have to survive, and things kind of suck, the imperative becomes the pleasure principle.
00:53:42.000How can we ameliorate the suffering as much as possible?
00:53:45.000How can we alleviate the suffering as much as possible?
00:53:48.000If life is suffering, how do we get out of it?
00:54:22.000And we want to be well fed, and generally we want to be comfortable.
00:54:26.000And that could be said for most people.
00:54:28.000But the problem with materialists is there is no limit to the pleasure seeking, there's no parameters on it.
00:54:34.000Whereas maybe a non denominational Protestant would say, like, oh, as long as I don't kill anybody, I'm basically being okay.
00:54:44.000As long as it's not too excessive, it's okay.
00:54:46.000The materialist says, no, there's no rules.
00:54:48.000This is where you get the sick notion that we need to have sex with as many people as possible, as much as possible, all the rest, no restrictions, no limitations.
00:55:00.000We can go across the whole spectrum in terms of as many guys as we want, and many girls as we want, and as many different creepy things as we want, and in public, in private, with babies, with the elderly, and on a bus, on a train, black people, white people, fish, dogs, you know.
00:55:17.000Horizontally, we'll do it all, and vertically, in terms of frequency, as many times as possible with all these different groups, right?
00:55:31.000These three core principles, you get these basic conclusions here, and it all amounts to hedonism.
00:55:40.000In the absence of intrinsic meaning, in the absence of morality, if life is suffering, the natural conclusion, I think the logical, the coherent conclusion is let us be hedonistic.
00:56:17.000And, you know, we have it pretty hard.
00:56:19.000So let's make it not so hard while we wait to perish, while we wait to vanish forever.
00:56:24.000And that is the sickness of materialism.
00:56:26.000You see these problems, and it is the necessary, inevitable consequence of the lack of a God.
00:56:32.000We all have an appetite for these things, we all have an appetite for an explanation for suffering.
00:56:38.000An explanation for existence slash intrinsic meaning in our lives, and a moral code.
00:56:44.000These are three things that we have to have, but that the secularists, that the materialists cannot provide for, cannot explain on secular grounds.
00:56:52.000And you have to wonder then, if we are built and it is baked into our condition for thousands of years, why would that be the case?
00:57:03.000Why would it be baked into us that we need a reason to be here if there wasn't a reason?
00:57:09.000Why would it be baked into us that we had to have an explanation for suffering if there wasn't one?
00:57:13.000Why would we have baked into us this longing for universalism, for morality, for brotherhood, if none of these things existed?
00:57:52.000When people die and we fear death, this is something, it's the only thing, one of the few things that we all will experience at some point.
00:59:44.000There was one case I remember in the UK, I think in like 2015, where they were just throwing them in the garbage and just horrible, horrible things.
00:59:52.000I mean, that's look, the country can go all brown.
00:59:55.000The country can go completely sideways.
00:59:58.000But a country that has no respect for A country that has no respect for innocent, helpless babies.
01:00:05.000I mean, that's just not a society that's worth keeping around, I'm afraid.
01:00:09.000They deserve everything they have coming, if that's the case.
01:00:49.000Why do we start in the middle of the story when she's already chosen to have unprotected, unsafe sex and sex that is going to turn into a child, right?
01:00:57.000I mean, there's always a risk that that's going to happen.
01:01:02.000That's, I think, the sickest thing about abortion it's just a complete abdication of responsibility.
01:01:07.000If you make a bad decision, If you make a bad choice because you are not able to control yourself, you're not able to discipline yourself, you're just this animal, we can't expect people to not have sex.
01:01:19.000We can't expect people to not have as much sex as possible and in the least safe ways.
01:01:26.000Well, then it has to be taken out on a life.
01:01:29.000We would rather murder somebody than exercise a little bit of agency on our own part.
01:01:34.000Instead of saying, hey, why don't we just stop having sex so we don't have to kill babies?
01:01:39.000They say, no, no, we'll kill babies because we want to have our sex.
01:01:42.000I mean, what a sick society we live in.
01:01:45.000And it cannot be justified on any grounds.
01:01:47.000There are many people in the alt right.
01:01:49.000This is one of the big reasons I left the alt right.
01:01:51.000The profound immorality of when they say things like abortion should be legal for euthanasia, or I'm sorry, not euthanasia, for eugenics purposes.
01:02:01.000I mean, that kind of thing to me is reprehensible.
01:02:04.000And obviously against the Catholic faith.
01:02:06.000And that was one of the big things where I said, I don't really fit into this framework.
01:02:10.000My worldview does not orbit around the demographics of the country.
01:02:52.000They send in a super chat or a stream lab in like the last minute of a two hour show, and then they get bent out of shape when I don't answer it.
01:03:00.000Maybe you want to, it's a two hour show.
01:03:27.000Well, I think it's just kind of a very profound manifestation of how society is being oriented now around the consumer as opposed to the producer.
01:03:39.000You know, before the point of capitalism, the point of markets and industry was to make our lives easier, was to make it so that, you know, we could have our meats and we could have our cheeses and we could have houses and things and that kind of cars and all that, railroads.
01:07:53.000In Boston, I spent as much time as possible in my room on the computer or reading or in the library or, you know, at McDonald's or at, where do we used to go?
01:08:06.000Tasty Burger for my Boston fans down by Fenway Park.
01:08:13.000The few times I did, well, actually, no, actually, I had a couple of friends who were girls.
01:08:18.000They both ended up being psychopaths who tried to destroy me, and that's not even a joke.
01:08:24.000Not even to be like, oh, people are out to get me, but unironically, they just very recently tried to cause all kinds of problems for me, which is typical.
01:08:33.000But no, I mean, most of the time when I went out, it was to talk with my main group, and we would go to Tasty Burger, and we would just light the place up talking about human, what is it, what's the human biodiversity, talking about the Jewish question, talking about miscegenation.
01:08:50.000And it was always very dangerous because we'd go in and we'd be eating our burgers and just yelling about all this stuff.
01:12:02.000Ezra Levant, you know, fired all his staff because, you know, Faith Goldie, among others, because they were like, hey, what's going on with the fact that Jews are overrepresented in media by 2,000%?
01:13:36.000You know, he did a lot for the country, but then he did that, and that was something special.
01:13:42.000Because it would have been very easy for him to say, Oh, I hate this.
01:13:46.000This would have been such an easy moment for him to turn the narrative on its head and say, I'm not a racist because look, I condemn these bad people.
01:15:03.000Amer Bear, use adblock, preferable U block origin.
01:15:08.000Cert Dopnon, if one million persuasive people convince 50. Black people to leave the United States would be a less racist society and they would be less oppressed.
01:15:44.000A very good introduction to Christianity for people that have a lot of misconceptions about it because I think he lays it out in a way that is sensible and that is reasonable for most people.
01:15:53.000Because, you know, as an outsider, I think it's difficult to get acquainted with a lot of these things, but he explains it in such a way that's very well written, very well reasoned, and it's great stuff.
01:16:04.000Cloudstar, creature comfort makes it painless.
01:18:01.000Click the notification bell to get notified every time we go live.
01:18:05.000And remember to go to NicholasJFuentes.com to sign up for our mailing list to find out all the latest details about the upcoming premium membership, the paywall, which is coming back.