00:44:02.000Tonight, we are going to look at, for our featured story, another coronavirus related development.
00:44:09.000And this is really more to what I was saying yesterday.
00:44:14.000Yesterday, we talked about the coronavirus lockdown in Los Angeles County, and also we talked about the coronavirus related recession.
00:44:24.000Which is probably going to be with us for some time.
00:44:28.000And tonight we're going to look at a statement that was put out today by an official from the World Health Organization, which basically says that we're never getting over the coronavirus.
00:44:40.000The official quote says that the coronavirus pandemic may never end.
00:44:45.000And what he's talking about essentially is that herd immunity and a vaccine may be more elusive than we initially thought.
00:44:53.000And I talked about this a little bit yesterday.
00:44:56.000The idea that most people, when they're looking at their coronavirus timetable for lifting the shutdown, at least from the government perspective, but even just across the board, when people are thinking about even vaccination or herd immunity, they're looking at a timeline of 12 to 18 months for the vaccination, which is the minimum amount of time to develop, distribute, and get the population vaccinated.
00:45:22.000And then they're looking at a year, two, three years for herd immunity.
00:45:26.000And a new report and a growing body of evidence suggests that.
00:45:30.000It might be way longer than that before we eradicate coronavirus.
00:45:34.000And we may never eradicate coronavirus.
00:45:36.000It'll be just like HIV or measles or a variety of other infectious diseases that we will just find ways to cope with for the rest of our lives.
00:46:09.000We need this coronavirus to end now so I can get a haircut.
00:46:14.000But so that's our featured story looking at the World Health Organization report.
00:46:18.000Our other big story we're talking about tonight is the special election in the 25th District of California, which was Katie Hill's district.
00:46:27.000If you remember, she was the congresswoman who got busted.
00:48:21.000I don't know if it's done now, but there was a debate earlier tonight, and it was Brandon Tatum and Bryson Gray, who Bryson Gray is a friend of the show, a friend of mine.
00:48:31.000They were debating Hotep Jesus and Uncle Hotep about the Ahmad Arbery case.
00:48:38.000And Brandon Tatum and Bryson Gray were arguing essentially what I've been arguing on the show, and the Hoteps were arguing that it was unjustified and all this.
00:48:49.000That's really the only interesting conversation, the only interesting news episode that has happened, saga, since the coronavirus pandemic broke out in the United States in March.
00:49:00.000And what I watch in that debate is people keep getting hung up on this idea of deserve.
00:49:06.000That's the operative word that people can't seem to get over, they can't seem to figure it out.
00:49:13.000And I was watching this debate earlier tonight, and that's what it just kept coming back to is, well, Ahmaud Arbery didn't deserve to die.
00:49:21.000Even though he wasn't a jogger, even if he was a burglar, he didn't deserve to die.
00:49:26.000And obviously, we've talked about it at length on this show.
00:49:32.000But, you know, that question is fundamentally irrelevant and not important and really not even a serious question at all.
00:49:40.000You know, when we look at the Ahmaud Arbery case, it was a 25 year old man tries to wrestle away a gun, which is lawfully being carried by.
00:50:02.000And honestly, this is what people talk about all the time this question of deserve.
00:50:08.000It's not just limited to this conversation, although you hear it a lot, but you hear this all over the place in a lot of political conversations.
00:50:14.000But, you know, the reason why it's a stupid question is because if you look at people dying all the time, does anybody really deserve to die?
00:50:22.000I mean, certainly there are people that do deserve to die.
00:50:25.000But most of the people that die every day for every factor you can imagine don't deserve to die, right?
00:50:32.000Even in a war, do the young men drafted into war deserve to die?
00:51:15.000If you're put in a self defense situation over firearm, it's not a question of deserve, it's a question of, you know, you have committed a crime, you've put someone in a self defense situation, and regardless of what your motives are, you know, or what your cosmic.
00:51:30.000Sort of, you know, when we're talking about deserve, whatever, you know, your karma is like, none of that really matters.
00:51:37.000But I kept seeing that come up, and I've been seeing that come up time and again.
00:51:41.000People saying, well, even if he was a burglar, still doesn't deserve to die.
00:52:44.000I'm watching the debate as a spectator, and I want to say my argument now on my show.
00:52:53.000But that's what I've been seeing all week, and that's what we've been talking about for the past little bit more than a week on the show the killing and what we see with that situation.
00:54:54.000If you've been interested in the new designs, if you wanted to see them, I know people have been posting them on Twitter.
00:54:59.000Now everybody can buy, and you can check out the I'm with Groyper shirt.
00:55:02.000That might be my favorite one because it's funny.
00:55:06.000And I wonder what the reaction is going to be because you know there are going to be people who don't get it and they think it's stupid and they think they're like, this is ridiculous.
00:58:09.000Surprise, surprise, she's pot smoking.
00:58:11.000And you know what's interesting, by the way, before I move on, it's amazing to me that the left celebrates all that.
00:58:19.000But why should she be ashamed then, right?
00:58:21.000I mean, if Democrats are the new champions of hedonism and tolerance, of drug abuse, and of sexual deviancy, what is there to apologize for?
00:59:11.000We know that it's different in reality, but this is the world the Democrats want.
00:59:15.000They want to make it a world where everybody's doing that, top to bottom in the society legislators, presidents, governors, and there's nothing wrong with it.
00:59:28.000But I'll tell you about the special election.
00:59:30.000I'll read this report here from Politico.
00:59:33.000It says Republicans have won a special election for Congress in Southern California, reclaiming a suburban House seat that they lost to Democrats in the 2018 midterms.
00:59:44.000Democrat Christy Smith, a state assemblywoman, conceded defeat to Republican Mike Garcia on Wednesday, one day after the closely watched special election runoff for the seat vacated by former Representative Katie Hill, who resigned last year.
00:59:59.000Smith said in a statement We believe that the current tally shows Mike Garcia.
01:00:04.000Is the likely victor in the May 12th special election.
01:00:08.000As such, I'd like to congratulate him.
01:00:11.000Garcia, a former naval aviator, currently leads Smith 56% to 44%, with an unknown number of ballots left to be counted.
01:00:24.000The Associated Press called the race later Wednesday, about three hours after Smith's concession.
01:00:30.000His victory represents the first time in 22 years that California Republicans have captured a congressional seat from Democrats.
01:00:38.000But, like I said, So, it's been 22 years since Republicans flipped a House seat in California.
01:00:46.000But this House seat in particular had been controlled by Republicans since 1993, and it wasn't until Katie Hill won in 2018 that the seat went Democrat.
01:00:58.000So, that's not to say that it's not a significant victory, and we'll get into the significance of this race, but it is to say it's somewhat misleading for them to print.
01:01:09.000Well, Republicans haven't flipped a seat in 22 years, or was it that Democrats briefly flipped the seat through extraordinary circumstances, the flipping and the unflipping, right?
01:01:20.000And now Republicans recaptured it after a disgraced sex scandal.
01:01:24.000So it's not quite, you know, we have to put in a little caveat.
01:01:28.000Smith will get a second chance at Garcia in November.
01:01:31.000The same two candidates in the runoff also qualified for the general election, but Garcia's victory will no doubt boost his candidacy, drawing donors and national attention.
01:01:41.000Though the final margin is still in doubt, the party has hailed him as a top recruit with deep ties to the district.
01:01:48.000He was nominated for the Naval Academy by the district's former congressman, Republican Buck McKeon, and then returned to the district to work for the defense contractor, Raytheon.
01:01:58.000Republicans are already casting his win as the beginning of a reversal of the suburban drubbing they suffered last cycle when a 40 seat Democratic wave flipped control of the chamber after eight years of Republican dominance.
01:02:11.000The RNCC chairman Tom Emmer said in a statement, Congratulations to Congressman elect Mike Garcia for defying all of the odds and obstacles thrown in his path to decisively win.
01:02:47.000And now a decisive victory, 15 points, or I'm sorry, 12 points.
01:02:52.000I think it was 15 at one point last night.
01:02:54.00012 point lead right now with a Republican victory.
01:02:58.000And the obvious significance is that this is one of the midterms, which will give us an idea of what the 2020 election will look like on the down ballot races in the House.
01:03:09.000Right now, I don't think there are any forecasts.
01:03:12.000Which show that Republicans will recapture the House in 2020.
01:03:17.000And of course, we don't even know if Donald Trump will retain the White House in 2020, but nevertheless, the predictions for the House are dire for Republicans.
01:03:26.000So, this is kind of a white pill, something to look forward to.
01:03:30.000If Republicans can flip a district in California and flip a district that Democrats took over in 2018, obviously 2018 was the blue wave.
01:03:41.000They even win some surprising races in the Senate.
01:03:45.000If we could undo one of those gains that they made in 2018 in California, of all places, and by a giant margin, then that says that maybe 2020 will be surprisingly good for Republicans.
01:03:57.000Maybe they can replicate that success.
01:03:59.000Not just in that district, where then Mike Garcia will run again for a full term, but also across the country in battleground districts and maybe for the presidential election.
01:04:10.000I will say, however, that it is a very extraordinary circumstance that surrounds this race.
01:04:16.000We're in the middle of the coronavirus pandemic, obviously, so I don't think you have as many polling places as you do in normal times.
01:04:28.000I'm sure that turnout was depressed by the virus, and moreover, the Incumbent or the person that's vacated the office, Katie Hill, I mean, she was involved in this humiliating national, very public, very visible sex scandal.
01:04:45.000Is it a giant victory that in the middle of the coronavirus pandemic, a Republican beats a Democrat in a race where they're fighting over a seat vacated by somebody like Katie Hill?
01:04:57.000I don't know if it's as big as some people say it is.
01:05:00.000I don't know if this would be as big of a deal as it would be if it wasn't Katie Hill.
01:05:21.000I think it's obviously a good win, and I think it has some positive signs for the rest of the year and maybe for the 2020 election overall.
01:05:30.000But I have to tell you, if you look at the demographics again, that's the key.
01:05:35.000The Democrats are saying the reason that they lost, they're blaming it on Old white voters.
01:05:41.000They said, well, it's actually not a huge loss for us because this is a district that is disproportionately old and disproportionately white compared to the rest of California.
01:05:53.000But if you look at the demographics of the state, it's like 34% Hispanic.
01:05:59.000And this is what we have to really be thinking about at once, obviously, we have to be thinking about short term considerations.
01:06:08.000Short term considerations being like this special election.
01:06:11.000And short term considerations like the 2020 election.
01:06:15.000We have to think how are we going to flip enough battleground states and enough battleground districts to reclaim control of the House and retain the White House.
01:06:24.000And so we're looking at now, we're looking at those static demographic numbers now.
01:06:28.000But at the same time that we're thinking about all that, we also have to think about the 25th district, whether we won it now or even if we win it in 2020.
01:06:36.000Even if we win it in 2022 and we hold on, when you're looking at the demographic picture of this.
01:06:42.000District, just like all the other districts in the country, just like all the states in the country, long term, we know what the trajectory is.
01:08:52.000And I know the popular vote doesn't win the presidency, but the popular vote does have an effect on the Congress because the House of Representatives is the chamber of Congress that represents the people.
01:09:05.000So the popular vote is a pretty good barometer or an indicator of where the House is going to go.
01:09:10.000And ultimately, the popular vote is a reflection of the country at large.
01:09:13.000Sure, because of the way the electoral college works, you're obviously going to have it possible that Trump can win the college without winning the popular vote.
01:09:25.000But should we really strive to do that?
01:09:27.000Is that something we want to replicate?
01:09:29.000Is that something that is a positive development that a Republican cannot win the popular vote because there are too many Democrats in the country that are unpersuadable, inflexible, right?
01:09:40.000I don't think that's something that we should celebrate.
01:10:47.000And we need to think about how we can make that happen.
01:10:49.000But we also have to think about how are we going to engineer politics in this country such that we will have a future beyond the next election?
01:10:56.000Because that's all people are thinking about is the next election.
01:11:00.000How are we going to win two years from now?
01:11:02.000But that kind of thinking will not keep us in the game for longer than another two years.
01:11:07.000At a certain point, that luck is going to run out.
01:11:10.000And the two years after the last election that we can win is going to be a bloodbath.
01:11:14.000And it'll be a bloodbath every election going on into the future indefinitely if that's the kind of thinking that we're shackled to.
01:11:21.000So I see this, but I can't help but think oh, wow, we turned over a suburban district in California.
01:11:30.000Like, is that, wow, amazing, great job.
01:11:34.000So it's going to be one of the final districts that has to go before California is completely a solid blue wall.
01:12:12.000We want to get back on top of things and start to engineer a politics that is favorable towards us.
01:12:18.000Because I got to tell you, It's not looking good in 2020.
01:12:21.000Even with everything that we have going for us in terms of the economy and approval and a very favorable coronavirus response, we still only have like a 30% chance of winning if everything goes our way because of the demographics that have been baked in.
01:12:55.000If we can rely on a white voting bloc, obviously the Republican Party is effectively a white voting bloc.
01:13:03.00090% of the people that voted for Donald Trump were white.
01:13:07.000But he said that if whites as a whole were a voting bloc, not just the people that vote Republican, but the white liberals too, if they were all voting more or less in the same direction, like Hispanics, Asians, and blacks, if he got 70% of whites or 80% of whites to vote in a certain direction, then.
01:13:26.000The popular vote would actually benefit us.
01:13:29.000Because then, if it was decided by the popular vote, if whites are still the majority or the plurality of the racial groups and they were all going 70, 80% in the same direction, then that might behoove us in the long run.
01:13:42.000Now, you know, again, that's a big if.
01:13:44.000That's a big if if all white people are voting that way, if white people become an ethnic voting bloc, that's a big if.
01:13:53.000But this is just one example of how we're going to have to think about the future.
01:14:25.000And people can try to mitigate the damage or try to get by the skin of our teeth in the next election, but there's no outcome where this wins.
01:14:32.000So, if we look at the current paradigm and say that this is destined to fail, what's the solution?
01:14:42.000And that's the kind of problem solving thinking that needs to be brought to the table.
01:14:47.000In other words, you could say that, well, we're going to get 49%, we're going to get 99% of the way there, but we're going to fail every time with the status quo.
01:14:59.000That is not preferable to a risky, Radical rethinking, a radical new plan that might have a 50% chance of working and 50% chance of failing, right?
01:15:10.000Because the current paradigm has a 100% chance of failing.
01:15:13.000So, literally anything else is probably more viable, right?
01:15:19.000The current paradigm, there are zero outcomes, zero permutations where this results in viable, lasting, sustainable victory for conservative, Christian, European ideas.
01:15:33.000So, that means that even if we do a really risky gambit, something totally unexpected, something maybe counterintuitive, even if that has a 10% chance of working, a 40% chance of working, That's higher than zero.
01:15:46.000So, something new and different and radical, something which might not even make that much sense, is preferable to what we have now because what we have now is destined to fail.
01:16:21.000And maybe Republicans recaptured it, but what happens in 2020 or 2022?
01:16:25.000Because the real story could be that this was the last dying gasp of Republican control of this district.
01:16:31.000And that would fit in line with the narrative for every other district in California, and soon to be every district in Texas, and every district in Georgia, and down the line, right?
01:17:11.000So, this is an article from Yahoo News.
01:17:14.000It says The new coronavirus may never go away, and populations around the world will have to learn to live with it, according to the WHO on Wednesday.
01:17:24.000As some countries around the world begin gradually easing lockdown restrictions imposed in a bid to stop the novel coronavirus from spreading, the WHO said it may never be wiped out entirely.
01:17:34.000The virus first emerged in Wuhan in China late last year.
01:17:40.000Michael Ryan says we have a new virus entering the human population for the first time, and therefore it is very hard to predict when we will prevail over it.
01:17:48.000The virus may become just another endemic virus in our communities, and this virus may never go away.
01:17:55.000HIV has not gone away, but we have come to terms with the virus.
01:18:01.000It says more than half of humanity has been put under some form of lockdown since the coronavirus began.
01:18:07.000But the WHO warned there was no way to guarantee that easing the restrictions would not trigger a second wave of infections.
01:18:14.000The WHO chief Tedros Gibraisis I don't know what his last name is, some ridiculous Moroccan or something, African nonsense.
01:18:25.000He says many countries would like to get out of the different measures.
01:18:28.000But our recommendation is still the alert at any country should be at the highest level possible.
01:18:34.000He said there was still a long, long way to go.
01:18:37.000He said there is some magical thinking going on that lockdowns work perfectly and that unlocking lockdowns will go great, but both are fraught with dangers.
01:18:46.000So the gist of this is that this coronavirus, like a number of other diseases that we have and that we know about, just simply won't go away.
01:18:57.000That the coronavirus, like measles or like HIV, like he said, or like a number of others, will just have to be managed in the way that we manage other viruses.
01:19:07.000And it's interesting because, in the same breath that they say the coronavirus may never go away, they say at the same time we require maximum alert and maximum restrictions.
01:19:18.000And that if we lift restrictions, they'll be catastrophic.
01:19:20.000But don't you see the big picture here?
01:19:43.000Because all these people, even in this article, the World Health Organization chief, Bill Gates, and Fauci, they're all telling us the same thing.
01:19:51.000Increasingly, treatment, vaccines, even herd immunity might never be achieved.
01:19:58.000Herd immunity, because it is so contagious, May never happen because the virus is so contagious that you would need to have nearly 100% of the population get infected.
01:20:11.000And at that point, what's the point of being immune?
01:20:15.000If everybody gets that's not, you know, herd immunity is not a preventative measure or management.
01:20:20.000Everybody has to get the virus to achieve herd immunity.
01:20:32.000But they're also telling us at the same time, you cannot leave your homes until a Reliable treatment, or an effective vaccine, or even herd immunity is achieved.
01:20:42.000Well, you just said none of those things are going to happen.
01:20:46.000And just what they did yesterday, they extended the LA stay at home order for three months.
01:20:51.000In Illinois, J.B. Pritzker, our governor, said we're not going to relieve all the restrictions until coronavirus is eradicated.
01:20:59.000This is what they're seriously saying in all these states.
01:21:02.000And even the guidance from the federal government says that you need to see declining rates of the virus for two weeks in order to gate up to these phase one, two, and three.
01:21:12.000Reopening, you know, this reopening procedure, reopening sequence.
01:21:18.000But I don't think any of these states are going to pass that if they're telling us, if what they're telling us is true about the virus.
01:21:23.000It probably is true that you'll see a second wave.
01:21:26.000It probably is true that the virus will be with us indefinitely.
01:21:29.000If that's the case, then that makes the strongest argument yet for reopening, does it not?
01:21:35.000Is that not the best argument that a person could make?
01:21:39.000Well, if coronavirus can never be defeated, if it's never going away, If we're never going to develop a vaccine, then we better start to learn to live with it, right?
01:21:49.000Then we better start to learn how we can do contact tracing and testing and learn how to use better hygiene practices and create a society that is anti fragile, right?
01:22:00.000Create a society that is not susceptible to the virus because then we'll have to live with it.
01:22:06.000Being inside for the rest of our lives is not a solution.
01:22:09.000And I know that a lot of the coronavirus alarmists said that that was ridiculous to suggest.
01:22:15.000That this is what Fauci and Bill Gates and the WHO are recommending.
01:22:19.000I feel like a lot of the coronavirus alarmists were saying, oh, nobody's telling you you can't leave forever.
01:22:26.000Nobody's telling you you have to be on lockdown forever.
01:22:29.000We're just saying you have to be on lockdown for, you know, a couple months or a couple weeks or whatever.
01:22:34.000Well, now very clearly they're telling us we have to be on lockdown forever.
01:22:38.000Very clearly they're telling us we need a global government.
01:22:54.000If you watch this show, you know I never wanted to go there on coronavirus because I've been saying for years actually that a pandemic is bound to happen.
01:23:04.000I've been saying for years that this is going to hit our shores eventually.
01:23:09.000Not the coronavirus, but just any pandemic because of global supply chains, global travel, because of the bad hygiene practices in Asia and Africa and the Middle East.
01:23:20.000I said we were bound to have a pandemic within our lifetimes.
01:23:24.000So, what I was saying earlier this year was.
01:23:27.000Before we jump to conclusions about global government and the end times and all this, let's just take a step back and realize that pandemics are entirely possible.
01:23:38.000They're actually likely, given the climate right now.
01:23:41.000And I don't mean the climate in terms of the temperature, I mean, given this ecosystem of international travel, trade, interconnectedness, interdependence.
01:23:51.000It's bound to happen when the globe gets all bound up together that one bad epidemic in one place will spread globally.
01:23:59.000So, I was saying that months ago, take a step back and realize it's entirely possible that a disaster like this is within the realm of possibility and not exclusively the result of conspiracy by global elites.
01:24:15.000Maybe the coronavirus itself was organic in the sense that even if it was created in a lab in China, maybe it was an accident that it got out, right?
01:24:26.000Maybe this wasn't designed by a global planner.
01:24:32.000Is more or less organic, more or less it is a natural disaster.
01:24:36.000But the response, the response to it certainly does reek of conspiracy.
01:24:44.000Because, of course, if this coronavirus is something that we just have to live with, what is the prescription by the WHO and all these doctors?
01:24:54.000Well, it is that everyone everywhere must remain on lockdown.
01:25:18.000If somebody gets diagnosed with coronavirus, they're going to trace all the people they were in contact with, right?
01:25:25.000That is one way we could do a managed reopening so that in order to prevent an epidemic, if somebody gets tested positive, we can search out and find all those disease vectors, all the people that they.
01:25:36.000Possibly infected, test them, quarantine them, and make sure that the spreading stops there before it spreads further beyond that one person.
01:25:44.000So look at the measures for contact tracing.
01:25:47.000Google and Apple have teamed up to use everybody's phone in the country with a new software update that they'll be using Bluetooth technology to track everybody in the country.
01:26:00.000And through the Bluetooth technology built into the operating system, they'll be able to detect who you are.
01:26:06.000Who you were in touch with, who you were in close proximity with, so that if you get sick with coronavirus, then the government and these giant tech companies can collaborate and the tech companies can say, well, according to our Bluetooth data, you know, Nick Fuentes was nearby, Jada McNeil, Patrick Casey, Jake Lloyd, Scott Greer, and we need to round all those people up and quarantine them.
01:26:30.000So if what they're saying is true and coronavirus is permanent, this entails massive power, a massive power grab.
01:26:40.000By government, by giant corporations, by Silicon Valley, by tech companies.
01:26:46.000And then there's another step who do all the governments of the world answer to?
01:26:52.000Who does the U.S. federal government and the Chinese government, all these governments, ultimately answer to?
01:26:58.000Maybe this institution doesn't have direct control of the governments, but certainly this institution will be expected to manage the governments, give guidance to the governments, collect information from the governments.
01:27:12.000The World Health Organization is the one that's collaborating with all these countries and putting out the guidelines and collecting data internationally.
01:27:20.000So I don't mean to go full conspiracy, but it's pretty obvious what's happening.
01:27:25.000Well, we're going to have to stay inside until the coronavirus pandemic ends.
01:27:29.000By the way, the coronavirus pandemic never ends.
01:27:33.000Now, update your operating system on your phone.
01:27:38.000Now, you're going to rely on the government for your check.
01:27:40.000And now, the government will pay for your health care because all the hospitals have gone bankrupt because they canceled elected procedures and turned away all kinds of people for routine visits and so on.
01:27:51.000And now, the government will control the supply chains and the government will manage quotas and all this and direct economic activity.
01:27:58.000And if you walk outside your house, the government will arrest you and throw you in jail.
01:28:04.000So I'm not trying to go full conspiracy yet, but it's hard for me not to see some kind of an agenda begin to take shape.
01:28:31.000Like I said yesterday, look at their share price.
01:28:34.000So it looks like this confluence of global elites in governments and in coalition, I should say, of billionaires, governmental elites, other people, they stand to gain the most from this.
01:28:49.000And you see it time and again government officials getting their hair cut or going out to eat or not wearing masks.
01:28:57.000It seems like none of them really are following their own guidelines.
01:29:02.000The rich, the powerful, the well connected.
01:29:05.000So, I think we have to really keep an eye on this.
01:29:08.000And more than anything, we have to reopen our country.
01:29:12.000Because if that's the way it's going to be, then let us deal with it in our own way.
01:29:16.000If this is just going to be our lives, you know, nobody's saying to shut down the whole country because of HIV.
01:29:22.000Nobody's saying to shut down the whole country because of measles.
01:29:25.000We didn't even shut down the country over polio.
01:29:28.000You know, some things were shut down like public pools and whatever, but we didn't shut down the country like this for any other infectious disease.
01:29:49.000But are we going to have a scenario where many people die, but the government assumes total control and the economy is destroyed and everything is warped permanently?
01:29:59.000Or is it going to be that people are going to die, but we more or less learn how to live with it, manage it?
01:30:05.000You know, people are able to eat at restaurants and see movies and engage in the economy and all the rest and still have their sovereignty.
01:30:11.000I think that's the question at this point.
01:30:14.000Yes, the coronavirus is very terrible.
01:30:28.000Well, maybe not the opposite, but there are other ways to cope aside from, you know, completely isolating and preventing yourself from possibly being exposed.
01:30:37.000It's to take reasonable precautionary measures.
01:30:40.000People die from things every day that are more or less preventable.
01:30:44.000Heart disease kills people, car accidents kill people all the time.
01:30:49.000Do we say that, well, we have 50,000 car accidents and deaths this year, so nobody's going to drive for the foreseeable future?
01:31:05.000Heart disease, in a lot of cases, is preventable.
01:31:08.000In some cases, it's genetic and there's extraordinary circumstances.
01:31:12.000But what if you just have diabetes, or what if you just can't control how much you eat, or you're obese, or whatever?
01:31:17.000Are we going to say, okay, no more food?
01:31:20.000Okay, everybody's going to get their food rationed because too many people are dying from heart disease.
01:31:24.000It's not a perfect analogy, but the principle is the same.
01:31:29.000You know, it's a new risk factor and it's going to contribute a lot more deaths than all the other risk factors before.
01:31:37.000As we're adding a new category on top of it, it's a big category.
01:31:41.000And I get that, and that's going to suck.
01:31:43.000But this is something that people should be able to live their lives, take their chances, and if you want to have all the proper precautions, then you can do that.
01:31:50.000Nobody's stopping anybody from quarantining.
01:31:53.000If you and your family want to quarantine, you can do that.
01:32:06.000Public health is something that all the society is in on together.
01:32:10.000But you, because you don't want to get the virus, cannot force everybody to remain inside and have their livelihood destroyed and have their plans disrupted and their whole lives alter their trajectory.
01:32:21.000So we have to be reasonable about this.
01:32:23.000And I think that's what's gone out the window.
01:33:42.000We want a state that takes care of people, but not like this, not run by these people.
01:33:47.000So, until that point, you know, I'm against this government overreach, government control.
01:33:52.000We want the government to overreach, you know, when it comes to social conservatism and economic nationalism and those kinds of things, not like this.
01:34:36.000When you say that kind of stuff to me, it just sounds like a retarded communist who's like, any thoughts on, you know, neo Trotskyite Maoism with Leninist leanings?
01:34:49.000There's some really good work being done by Trans Kula Killer and, you know, really, I think, I think, yeah, I think Furry Proletariat 88 is, or 89.
01:35:03.000They probably wouldn't use an 88, but they probably use Furry Proletariat 17.
01:35:08.000Is working on this on his YouTube channel.
01:35:10.000No, I'm not really familiar actually with neo absolutism.
01:35:56.000Livid City says At the conservative club at my university in Toronto, all they did was get drunk and vape until one guy came in who thought I was crazy and told me to check out rising star Nick Fuentes.
01:36:48.000I, of course, understand what you're saying, but it's weird that people have never heard of me, but then they look into it, and then it's like you have people that have been watching since Groyper Wars or for the past couple months, maybe even since TikTok.
01:37:27.000I didn't do it much before, but I do want to get back outside.
01:37:31.000So Illinois is not opening until June 1st, I think.
01:37:34.000And I don't know, it might even be extended beyond that.
01:37:39.000Yamato Empress says Ramsey Paul has recently been going off on cringe third positionists who are basically just communists who don't like brown people.
01:39:13.000And by racist, I mean, and then it's, you know, it's what we think it means, which is hating non white people.
01:39:20.000I do think that that is real, you know, that there are people out there that just don't like non white people.
01:39:25.000I don't think it's very common, but it does exist.
01:39:28.000And there are a lot of these so called third positionist Wignats that are just like, well, they're totally liberal, totally progressive, but, you know, they just don't like non white people, which, um, Yeah, that's not what we are.
01:39:44.000You can be against so called free market society without being against capitalism, without being against private property, without being against markets, things like that.
01:39:54.000I'm fundamentally in favor of capitalism, broadly speaking.
01:39:59.000What I'm not in favor of is neoliberalism, which says that all aspects of our society must be market.
01:40:06.000All aspects of our society must be competitive and market based.
01:40:24.000There's a little bit of room between, like, being left wing on economics and saying something like, you know, if you want a job, just pick up and move to North Dakota, right?
01:40:35.000Or you have a moral right to buy and sell from China.
01:40:38.000Like, there is room between that and being a left wing socialist, communist, whatever.
01:45:39.000So, yeah, I wouldn't trust the WHO to begin with, let alone, you know, after all this.
01:45:44.000Jose says, economic life is not meant solely to multiply goods produced and increase profit.
01:45:49.000It is ordered, first of all, to be to the service of persons, of the whole family, and of the entire human community so as to correspond to God's plan.
01:45:59.000Okay, well, it's a little bit clunky, but yeah, I basically agree.
01:46:25.000And then everyone just thinks I have corona.
01:46:28.000Yeah, it's been a rough year for me, too.
01:46:30.000I think it's not even allergies anymore.
01:46:32.000I think at this point, I probably have a growth in my nasal cavity.
01:46:36.000I was reading the other day that if you have chronic congestion but no mucus, it could be polyps or it could be tissue, which is not like cancer.
01:46:48.000It's not like people the other day were, that's cancer.
01:46:51.000It's benign, but if you have chronic rhinitis from allergies, then you can then develop tissue that will obstruct your nasal passageway.
01:47:04.000So I got to go to the doctor, get it checked out.
01:48:38.000Prophet says, I love how the show recycles stale memes and stays fresh, but do you think that, quote, we will even be calling Ron Groyper instead of cringe in nine months, like Dick Spencer has claimed?
01:48:49.000Well, the thing is about we say we're cycling stale memes, it's not even that it's recycled, it's that it is reappropriated in new ways.
01:48:59.000This is always how meme culture has worked.
01:51:59.000Anthony says, Many of your viewers failed to connect why Christianity is essential to Western civilization, mistakenly taking you as solely a proselytizer.
01:52:13.000Can you explain to them why the West is contingent upon Christ and how it affects politics, science, and nation?
01:52:19.000That is a really annoying super chat, so I don't know if I'm going to do that.
02:00:37.000Polish American says Nick, I had the same thing as you or something similar.
02:00:40.000They required a procedure where they numbed up my nose and began to scrape out bones and growth in my nose, blood from my nose for 24 hours afterwards.
02:00:48.000I hope I don't have to do anything like that.
02:00:50.000I read that you could take a drug and it gets rid of, if you have tissue buildup, it gets rid of the tissue.
02:00:56.000So I'll have to, so thank you, thank you from the peanut gallery about the procedures, but I'll see the doctor.
02:01:09.000Pizza Times says, You're right about the race mixing question, and as mixed teen, it sucks not being able to know what side you should take.
02:01:58.000Yeah, I was brought up with the genealogy wasn't a big thing.
02:02:01.000A lot of people, I remember, like, I went to high school with this guy, total chooch, who, you know, he was like, I can name my ancestors all the way back to the Mayflower.
02:03:25.000Zoomtard says, My co worker often brings up the alt right in our conversations, and I find it amusing to pretend I have no idea what he is talking about.
02:05:08.000I apologize if that's too graphic, but that's the first thing that they do.
02:05:13.000Then, Mute it for two seconds if this is going to be uncomfortable for you.
02:05:19.000Then they take your penis and they cut around, they like skin your penis and they pull the penis outside the skin and then like through the ball sacks.
02:05:35.000And like, it's been like a year since I've seen it, but the kind of, they're like slicing and pulling things inside out and they make new, they make a new incision and they like.
02:05:47.000Put your penis head through a hole that they make in your balls so that that is like a.
02:06:25.000It's like they're literally putting your junk on a butcher's table and they just like, you know, they just start chopping it up, chopping and snipping and slicing and they.
02:23:41.000I mean, I had my eye on certain girls in high school or even going as back as middle school, but once they cross that bridge, and especially the age bridge, more than anything, forget about it.