Based Camp - May 27, 2025


Hillary Clinton Comes Out As Great Replacement Theorist?


Episode Stats

Length

48 minutes

Words per Minute

179.27586

Word Count

8,774

Sentence Count

10

Misogynist Sentences

16

Hate Speech Sentences

38


Summary

In this episode, we explore the conspiracy theory that immigrants have far more children than native-born Americans, and that's why they should go back to doing what they were born to do, which is to produce more children.


Transcript

00:00:00.000 hello simone i am excited to be here with you today and today we are going to be exploring
00:00:06.080 through a few chains of evidence starting with hillary clinton great replacement theorist now
00:00:12.000 apparently conspiracist malcolm not even theorist she's making it happen she is going out there
00:00:20.640 and and telling these lies that immigrants have far more children than native-born americans
00:00:29.120 and that that's why they are being brought into the country it's not a good look in advocating for
00:00:35.280 this the heritage foundations project 2025 despite trump saying he knew nothing about it if you had
00:00:41.440 read it it's all in there it's all in their return to the family the nuclear family return to being a
00:00:48.640 christian nation return to you know producing a lot of children which is sort of odd because
00:00:54.720 the people who produce the most children in our country are immigrants and they want to deport
00:00:59.520 them so none of this adds up but you know one of the reasons why our economy did so much better than
00:01:04.880 comparable advanced economies across the world is because we actually had a replenishment because
00:01:10.560 we had a lot of immigrants legally and undocumented who had a you know larger than normal by american
00:01:19.280 standards families uh and she even points out illegal and legal immigrants you know not like oh maybe she
00:01:24.240 just means legal immigrants no she's explicitly like we are doing okay demographically because we the
00:01:30.480 democrats got you guys so many illegal immigrants and they're having way more kids than the native
00:01:37.120 population and that's why we brought them in but i want to be contrasting this sort of like weird
00:01:44.720 mask off moment with hillary clinton which was fun because she also cited our policy proposals in this
00:01:50.080 so now i know hillary clinton is watching stuff that we are putting out but we're going to be
00:01:54.880 contrasting this with also the reaction to the very small handful of 60 white immigrants from south
00:02:01.920 africa that has caused massive changes in leftist policy positions for example the episcopal church in
00:02:08.560 the united states shut down its programs to help immigrants just so it wouldn't have to help this
00:02:14.880 very small pool of white immigrants and for a lot of them it was like wait what about the people they
00:02:20.160 care about well apparently they care about them less than making sure they don't help a single white
00:02:26.480 immigrant that's pretty screwed up like even if i was like super racist against white people
00:02:32.880 but there were some white people in a larger sample of non-white people that i wanted to help
00:02:36.320 i don't know like i mean we see now the way they would respond they'd say we won't we won't do it
00:02:43.680 we won't help out of principle and i think that this is the horrifying aspect to all of this and as we go
00:02:50.800 into this is we are increasingly seeing and so often it's like slippery slope stuff with with you know
00:02:56.960 far left positions where they'll say oh you know we would never say that we would never fight for that
00:03:03.120 like that's just a crazy slippery slope argument that's a conspiracy theory and then five years
00:03:08.480 later they're like well why do you think we were letting in so many immigrants you know it's like
00:03:14.400 this is the what this is what's always been the case don't you know and we're like wait you said
00:03:18.160 this was a conspiracy theory you very firmly told us this was a conspiracy theory like five to ten years
00:03:24.800 ago in fact the kirsha cancellation that just happened the foxy girls the sweet foxy girl who was
00:03:30.400 canceled by a cenobite this girl she and a note here when i say said i'm not saying that all trans
00:03:39.040 people are said bites i'm saying that there is a specific category of human that has spent their
00:03:44.160 entire life searching for pleasure and self-validation and it has scrambled their mind and now all they can
00:03:50.240 do or get satisfaction from is hurting other people and and so she was canceled what they used to cancel
00:03:56.960 her was saying that she was a great replacement theorist when what she was doing in that very
00:04:01.920 video which she was accused of was simply discussing a speech given by a leftist politician in the uk
00:04:10.720 who had these concerns like an elected politician one of that i think one of the heads of the major
00:04:16.080 parties in the uk right now so we're going to be discussing all of this together i also thought it's
00:04:20.880 funny is hillary covering one of our policy proposals that this isn't the first time as i posted the other
00:04:28.400 day this very blatant effort to basically send a message most exemplified by vance and musk and others
00:04:37.120 that you know what we really need from you women are more children and what that really means is you
00:04:43.040 should go back to doing what you were born to do which is to produce more children and they are
00:04:51.200 talking about you know metals if you have six children so this is another performance about
00:04:56.720 concerns they allegedly have for family life so this is just another one of their you know make america
00:05:04.800 great again by returning to the lifestyles and the economic arrangements of not just the 1950s i mean
00:05:12.400 let's keep going back as far as we can and you know see what happens jedediah this is my roommate
00:05:20.640 and what shall i call this embodiment of virtue virtue come again virtue obedience hawkins good name no
00:05:28.640 doubt names do not carry us to the golden gates for certain no doubt we're gonna have a bonfire out
00:05:34.240 back eat some s'mores first for some more will ultimately give you some less and you will be consumed
00:05:40.560 upon the bonfire of vanity we're just gonna leave you two alone i am never alone in the company of
00:05:46.960 men come in silence sage choice which will make our gathering a blessed evening i will be gone by
00:05:54.560 evening those who caught when the sun descends caught the devil's design for certain ah yes people may
00:06:01.120 not know this deep lore malcolm but bill clinton actually gave a speech about me a few decades ago over
00:06:07.200 probably three decades ago about at this point but it was at this event called renaissance weekend
00:06:13.680 which was this like exclusive event for influential people and my dad was attending so i go and so all
00:06:18.800 the kids who go have to give a speech into all the two rooms full of famous people and so i i go and and
00:06:26.160 give a speech and there was a cardinal in the room and the speech that i had given and that everyone else
00:06:32.160 said given on the kids panel was on the country like states like each of us chose a state and we
00:06:38.400 researched it it was a very kid project anyway so this cardinal big muckety muck comes up and he goes
00:06:45.760 what do you think god is or what do you think god is like and now all the other kids go down and they
00:06:51.200 give the very generic answers and i come up very confrontational and i go first of all sir that is
00:06:57.760 completely off topic and and then i say and second of all god is everything that i want to be
00:07:07.200 and i of course saw this as a nothing has changed i meant lightning hands
00:07:12.720 i wanted palpatine powers i wanted to be the most powerful entity in the universe right but they're
00:07:29.280 they're reading this totally differently because cute little boy saying it so it's just assuming a
00:07:34.160 boy wants to be faithful and good and just like jesus and yeah so anyway bill clinton then goes up and
00:07:39.760 gives a speech at the event because apparently it went viral at the event that some little kid
00:07:43.680 had said this and everyone was talking about it bill clinton goes up and i think he used me as like
00:07:48.640 the center point of the speech and the speech was about how the next generation needs to be better than
00:07:52.800 this generation and that you know young boys like this malcolm collins well they're gonna go and do big
00:07:58.560 things one day they're gonna go and change the world yeah like propose that mothers get medals so that his
00:08:05.520 wife can defenestrate them for the the audacity suggesting that his wife can come out and be like
00:08:11.360 that now i'm the thorn in their side that they're reading about in paper you wanted the palpatine
00:08:15.920 lightning hands you're getting there slowly but surely i am i am forced torturing them from afar that is
00:08:23.760 that is why we invite the press over that's why we're doing this it's just to torture the clinton um
00:08:29.840 oh my god oh my god but it is it is great it is great okay so first before we go into the south
00:08:40.160 african thing i think this is really telling what were your thoughts on hearing this clinton speech
00:08:47.120 i was surprised because immigrant fertility levels just plummet after they come to the united states the
00:08:56.320 only immigrant fertility level that goes up from my understanding is south koreans because
00:09:01.680 well they plummet based on their native countries fertility often but off in many cases historically
00:09:09.760 now keep in mind in latin america today i'm pretty sure now over half of latin american countries are
00:09:14.160 well below the u.s in terms of tfr higher fertility rate oh but historically they were higher fertility rate
00:09:19.280 and a lot of immigrants came from historically i think a lot of older generations just stick with stats
00:09:23.680 that they've read 15 to 20 years ago so yeah i mean maybe she's just running off of information she
00:09:29.040 knows it also makes me think about recent information that's come out of doge where they've in doing
00:09:35.280 basically small audits and samples of either asylum or illegal immigrant populations finding that some
00:09:42.640 have indeed voted just makes me feel like there was a little bit more of this yeah we really are just
00:09:49.280 going to bring in immigrants illegal or otherwise and then ingratiate them to us and use that to gain
00:09:56.720 a majority of the voting populace in the united states and that the expectation was that they
00:10:02.400 would be high fragility the expectation was that they would be democrats and that that would help
00:10:09.200 the democrat cause what they said this very explicitly you saw a lot of gloating of the democrats says oh well
00:10:15.280 you know the the white voter is going to become the minority voter and and demographics are changing
00:10:20.240 and by this they meant you know more minority voters and that that is going to make them the
00:10:25.200 forever party than what they didn't expect but every republican ever always said is that the latin
00:10:31.280 american vote is coming to the right but in the last election you know over 50 of latin american men
00:10:36.080 voted for trump right like the vote has moved extremely to the right and they always should have expected
00:10:40.880 that i i think one of the things that the dims get so wrong about latin americans because they view
00:10:47.760 them through a racist lens of being a single culture the latin x mythical culture is they don't understand
00:10:55.840 how much latin americans are racist against other latin americans um that aren't their particular
00:11:02.080 country or background which we were horrified to discover when we oh when we bought yeah so our company
00:11:08.400 everybody who works with us is latin american and we regularly because inter latin american country
00:11:14.960 racism is tolerant and normalized like oh you're a cuban oh you're a venezuelan oh you're a whatever
00:11:21.600 like you must be like x y and z or you can't handle this type of task and so we have to deal with that
00:11:26.800 and it's very hard for us to deal with without ourselves crossing well here's the weird thing i i was just
00:11:32.240 listening this morning to someone talking in a podcast about how they grew up in a kind of
00:11:37.200 colorblind environment but it was one in which then everyone in his very diverse friend group growing
00:11:43.200 up like would use racial slurs all the time and there's this weird i don't know if it's a horseshoe
00:11:48.960 or a full circle with racism where when you get there's i almost feel like this like very happy medium
00:11:56.080 where like people acknowledge stereotypes or tendencies or averages and make fun of them but also don't use
00:12:02.720 them to judge or stereotype other people like they allow people to speak for themselves instead of
00:12:08.320 their well what's your point is you're saying that this is the way my point is that like i don't know
00:12:12.480 if our office was racist i just think that they had huge they'd be like no no no a lot of americans
00:12:18.400 argentinians do this and like some some but latin americans are actually fairly racist against other
00:12:24.320 latin americans okay if for example you look at like mexico take mexico as an example their policies
00:12:29.520 remember when everyone freaked out about like the stop and ask for somebody's id laws in arizona
00:12:34.400 that with like sheriff joe and how evil that policy was and everything and how racist that's the
00:12:38.880 standard policy in mexico for for for the way they treat other latin americans like
00:12:45.760 and in the u.s this policy was seen it's horrifyingly racist so yeah no it's it's pretty normalized
00:12:52.240 um no so you have that so basically they tried to pull off a great replacement they have admitted
00:13:00.640 this now but they were they didn't get the stats right they they won completely missed that latin
00:13:07.120 americans are much closer to conservatives culturally and and and and goal wise and that two that they
00:13:14.480 drop infertility rate dramatically after coming to the country to the point where they they dwindle pretty
00:13:20.080 quickly and it makes sense you know you're putting them in an environment and in a culture that they
00:13:25.120 haven't evolved alongside for very very long periods of time and how much of who you are is cultural and
00:13:33.280 evolved i think is hugely undersold one of the graphs that you were showing me today which just
00:13:40.480 shook me because i was like wait what that can't be that cannot be a thing is you looked up polyamory
00:13:47.120 on google trends to see where it trended the most well because you just said to me that some
00:13:51.600 communities are starting to turn against it and i was like that can't be it has to be at peak right
00:13:56.560 now and it's not it's starting to trend downwards but can you guess which state has the highest
00:14:04.160 interest in polyamory it's so you're gonna you're gonna hear this and you're gonna be like oh it must
00:14:08.480 be one of those like far progressive states right yeah like massachusetts or new hampshire
00:14:12.800 or washington a state or an environment that would have had a historic evolutionary reason where
00:14:18.320 people who normalize to their partners sharing other people having more kids that wouldn't be
00:14:22.640 the one where polyamory is the biggest no it's utah it's utah by a big margin it's and i saw this and i
00:14:30.160 was like wowzer like this hits the main population and so you know not wanting to be a stick in the mud
00:14:37.200 right like i'm like i'm gonna i'm gonna look at my own culture right i'm gonna be like okay i'm
00:14:43.120 from the backwoods culture we've done videos on it before this is a culture that is historically known
00:14:48.640 for like extreme levels of violence like ripping out people's eyes was really common was in it
00:14:53.440 if you look at the stereotype of someone from this culture in in horror movies and stuff like this the
00:14:58.640 greater appalachian culture hillbilly people you know they they will hunt you down and kill you and
00:15:03.680 eat you so i was like okay this is definitely gonna prove that this is not a persistent phenomenon
00:15:09.520 so i'm like i'm gonna look up for and see where it is most searched this is a fetish for seeing people
00:15:14.560 be eaten okay i was certain it'd be like manhattan or or california because who else is gonna be in
00:15:22.800 an urban in whatever enough environment to even know about such a niche thing right right so it was west
00:15:31.360 virginia but again stereotypes that is the heart of the greater appalachian culture so i was like
00:15:42.320 oh my god stereotypes now if you are a perceptive listener you might be thinking to yourself
00:15:48.080 oh come on malcolm that isn't the only negative stereotype about the greater appalachian people
00:15:55.120 i noticed you didn't take time to search incest by region and so i decided to and yes west virginia
00:16:06.240 and the greater appalachian region has the highest search rates for incest as well two very important
00:16:12.400 notes here this is not to say that the majority of people who are mormon ancestry are into their
00:16:19.600 partner sleeping with other people or the majority of people who have backwoods ancestry or into you
00:16:26.880 know hunting down and eating people or incest this is not to say i am into one of these things in the
00:16:33.440 same way that a mormon could find this interesting and cover this without being it in into it themselves
00:16:39.040 we're just saying that the rates are slightly higher in these regions and we were able to predict
00:16:44.960 just guessing okay where would there have been evolutionary pressure for these unique arousal
00:16:49.360 patterns and then we did the searches and it came up it's not like i i did the searches and then i
00:16:54.480 back put the data onto it but i decided to be like okay well what is something that i have talked about
00:17:00.080 finding uniquely hot i have talked about thinking vampires are uniquely hot let's see if that is
00:17:06.160 something that clusters with backwoods ancestry so i did a search of that and wouldn't you know it
00:17:12.560 kentucky arkansas utah west virginia and louisiana so again very backwoods heavy was a utah thrown in
00:17:21.360 there so that's an area where where i and mormons have overlap okay i decided to have a bit more fun
00:17:26.800 with this question so i googled trends for snm in this case it came up so strong west virginia i have
00:17:34.000 never seen a search result this regionally locked the the next highest one where west virginia gets a
00:17:41.280 100 on this one the next highest one is 69 in louisiana okay i can't just be picking on my own
00:17:48.080 people and mormons here so let's look at which search term is uniquely high in catholic states
00:17:56.240 states like california and texas well here you have ntr if you don't know what ntr is which translates to
00:18:05.680 being cheated on specifically arousal that arises from the emotional distress of being cheated on
00:18:11.840 which would contrast it with something like polyamory as an arousal pattern as to what
00:18:16.400 evolutionary pressure could have caused this i have literally no idea that said it doesn't seem to
00:18:21.520 overlap with the general catholic population just the latin american population in fact you can see
00:18:27.600 that the ntr search term has an almost perfect overlap with the percent latin american a state
00:18:34.560 is okay here's a fun one guess what is uniquely concentrated in the cavalier or deep south cultural
00:18:41.680 group search results for the term scat which is what somebody would be searching for if they had a
00:18:48.720 poo fetish i wonder i wonder why that is so i hate that i am the one who confirmed this uh my cultural
00:18:55.600 group is apparently literally and actually murderous incestuous hill people and again i need to
00:19:04.640 clarify this is not me saying i have any of those arousal patterns or that the average person from this
00:19:11.040 cultural group has these arousal patterns it would still be the minority of people within this cultural
00:19:15.600 group just slightly higher than in other cultural groups hello sir we have had a doozy of a day a real
00:19:22.480 doozy there we were yep minding our own business yep when all of a sudden out of nowhere these kids
00:19:29.200 started killing themselves all over my property yeah this one right here he dove head first right
00:19:34.240 into the wood chipper into woody right back there there's another one who shoved the spear through his
00:19:39.440 gullet i think they might be trying to kill the girl that we have inside look you know what she
00:19:44.560 can maybe explain the whole thing if i hadn't knocked her unconscious with a shovel
00:19:50.480 on accident on accident yeah she's in my bedroom
00:19:58.880 but the point i'm making here is people's proclivities do co-evolve with a culture that
00:20:04.000 they're in and if you take somebody from one culture and you pick them up and you plop them
00:20:09.280 in another culture this is also why in the video where we pointed out why doesn't christian work for
00:20:13.600 east asians and in that video we point out that despite the low fertility rates you see within
00:20:18.240 buddhist and confucian culture in korea for example christians both protestants and castles have a lower
00:20:24.320 fertility rate than korean buddhist or confucians and it's the same with japanese and we go across
00:20:29.440 the region we said that this is a very persistent phenomenon and it's it only makes sense worse when we
00:20:35.120 take in immigrants we often put them into fertility shredders like the centers of large cities so
00:20:40.480 they have incompetently handled this we are not great replacement theorists because i do not think
00:20:45.920 it worked but i do think that some people thought this was going to work not to keep in mind i don't
00:20:52.720 know if it was intention to like replace the white population i think the goal of this was to get
00:20:58.480 a a voter block that they thought they could control and manipulate and they just catastrophically
00:21:04.640 effed that up as as i've also pointed out because we're very close with the latin american community
00:21:09.600 a lot of people don't know why the latin american community went so far right so quickly one of the
00:21:14.240 big reasons was if you look at the la riots you know today for example korean immigrants are are
00:21:20.080 famously pretty right-leaning compared to other asian groups fun fact the only asian group more
00:21:25.280 conservative than koreans is vietnamese and one of the things that happened to their early communities in
00:21:31.040 the united states is during the la riots you know they were a recent and poor immigrant group at the
00:21:35.120 time and so their communities were around the black communities and so they were the businesses that were
00:21:40.160 targeted in this where you get the famous you know korean rooftop sniper in in the recent while
00:21:44.880 you wouldn't have heard about this on the news the communities that were being burned down and the
00:21:49.040 businesses that were being burned down were predominantly latin american in these these recent riots and they
00:21:54.000 did not go into the white neighborhoods really they were just going to the adjacent neighborhoods that were easy to target
00:21:59.040 and while the news may not have covered this latin americans transmit news and information about the
00:22:05.600 world through extended family networks and all of them know about this like most latin americans i know
00:22:11.040 have a family member who lost everything because of that and they saw how both the liberals covering this up
00:22:17.520 and the liberals not caring and cheering for this you know it's tim walt saying you know his wife smelled the
00:22:23.680 fires of fires of you know like oh this is a great day during the burnings those fires were likely first
00:22:29.680 generation immigrant businesses burning down you know that that's what you were smelling and and you
00:22:36.240 know like one of those games where you make a choice and there's old town play games and it goes
00:22:40.160 they will remember that popped on screen when she did that um they they will remember this so i i think
00:22:48.080 that it has been incompetently handled and it didn't achieve what they wanted it to achieve
00:22:51.680 yeah now if i go to this other thing i thought was even more interesting because they've come
00:22:57.600 more out about this whole no it wasn't about immigrants for us it wasn't about anything like
00:23:02.880 that it was about specifically non-white immigrants right so here you have the episcopal church through
00:23:08.480 its episcopal migration ministries eem announced on may 12th 2025 that it would end its nearly 40
00:23:14.960 year partnership with the u.s government for refugee resettlement and this is just because for the first
00:23:19.520 time in at least a very long time we we have a program for white refugees coming yes so this
00:23:27.040 decision was made in response to federal local directives to resettle white africaner immigrants
00:23:31.600 from south africa so this was only 60 people that they had to resettle we'll get into it you know
00:23:36.720 there is an active genocide going on in africa against them right now you know and the excuse that
00:23:41.840 they used is they said well these refugees shouldn't have gotten a bump over other refugees who have
00:23:48.480 been waiting in the system and i'm like then why were you okay with the illegal immigrants
00:23:55.200 like clearly they cheated the system why were you okay with them
00:24:02.720 and and the answer is because that's not why they're mad about this they're mad about this because
00:24:06.240 these individuals are white and because it high and because trump chose them when he is
00:24:10.480 deprioritizing a whole bunch of other immigrant groups he's not deprioritizing well he is slowing down
00:24:16.720 other immigrant you know coming here yeah let's be honest let's go into this other groups that
00:24:25.200 shut down programs right yeah so the u.s conference of catholic bishops migration and refugee services
00:24:31.280 the largest refugee resettlement agency also ended a century old program in april 2025.
00:24:36.000 country goodness gracious the church world service another face bait group was the one organization
00:24:43.120 that didn't of the major organizations and i point out here when people are like oh why don't you just
00:24:47.520 come back to the classic churches why are you this weird techno puritan thing why do you actually read
00:24:52.400 the bible just you know let the catholic clergy handle that for you and i think that this is why you
00:24:58.320 know i look at what the episcopals have done i look at what the catholics have done and i see that their
00:25:02.560 organizations were some of the first and most thoroughly corrupted by the the urban monocultural
00:25:07.840 virus that this isn't like some far left organization this is the episcopal church in the united states
00:25:14.800 that did this these organizations are the architects of the most dastardly policies that the left can devise
00:25:24.480 okay these organizations want you gone they don't want you to be a part of america they don't want
00:25:33.760 you to have anything to do with america they want to have a a population that they believe they can
00:25:41.600 control and what they didn't realize is that hispanic immigrants aren't little idiotic peons who are going
00:25:48.320 to do whatever they're told they are just like you and me which is going to do what's in their best
00:25:54.240 interest and i think what a lot of people are seeing is that despite promises to the contrary
00:26:00.160 the democratic party is not historically delivered on a lot of people's best interests well yeah we've
00:26:05.680 covered this even if you look at like black populations if you if you look at black populations
00:26:09.760 of the united states when they live in cities that are more democrat historically there are gaps
00:26:16.480 between them and the white populations now generally whether you live in a conservative
00:26:19.520 or a democrat region if you're black in the united states you're typically going to score
00:26:24.080 lower on tests and you're going to make less money but you will be dramatically closer to the
00:26:29.520 white population if you're in a republican controlled area than if you're in a democrat
00:26:33.280 controlled area the big study that showed this is really fascinating now what did this organization
00:26:39.040 that the episcopal because i i i find it ironic just how many people who they said they
00:26:44.160 cared about they were willing to hurt just to spite 60 white people just that's what really gets to
00:26:49.840 me is you'd let that go but i think there's just it's not just racism malcolm i think it's also trump
00:26:57.840 derangement syndrome it's okay well now that you've gotten involved in this i have nothing to do with
00:27:02.160 it i'm dropping it there's this i think racism the bigger part but we'll talk about that in just
00:27:06.240 a second let's let's talk about what the organization did episcopal migration ministries the refugee
00:27:12.240 resettlement arm of the episcopal church facilitated the research settlement of refugees in the united
00:27:15.840 states for nearly 40 years their work included receiving refugees assigned by the government
00:27:20.720 providing initial support such as housing food and clothing offering case management job placement
00:27:26.160 assistance english language training and cultural orientation that's awesome i wonder what their
00:27:30.320 cultural orientation looked like i mean you know it's it's a church thing this is how they get
00:27:35.200 oh no no no no no no no no no these are organizations that are freaking out about this i'm sure a
00:27:39.920 bunch of of you know crazy trans whatever had gotten into these organizations and with brainwashing
00:27:48.400 these people's kids you we see this over and over again with the stuff that's coming out of you
00:27:52.880 know that that organization that they shut down whatever it was american aid right i i would be very
00:27:56.880 surprised but this is the episcopal church their job is to get and they yeah that what i'm saying is
00:28:02.480 this is the episcopal church and they shut all of this down over just not helping 60 white people
00:28:06.320 they were clearly very very far down this particular spiral perhaps you're right
00:28:13.360 operating through a network of 12 affiliates across the united states and florida now i was trying to
00:28:17.920 get how much money had the government given the church to do this eem received federal funding
00:28:22.480 through the state department's bureau of population refugees and migration while exact figures of 2025
00:28:27.920 funding are unclear we know that the program allocated an approximately 1.2 billion dollars
00:28:34.640 for across nine resettlement agencies meaning that they guessed around 207 dollars per refugee
00:28:42.320 for the resettlement costs now if you're like okay well there is a genocide going on in south africa
00:28:48.640 right there have been over 4 000 white farmers killed since 1994 if you're like yeah but people get
00:28:54.400 murdered in south africa all the time well the murder rate for a regular person in south africa
00:29:00.960 so keep in mind this is going to be high yeah 150 per 100 000 um i'm sorry it's not 150 it's it's 45
00:29:08.000 per 100 000. okay 150 is insane yeah okay for the farmers it's 150. oh ah okay yeah there's um there's some
00:29:18.320 disparity so it's over three times higher than your average if i had to yeah like if you had to choose
00:29:24.640 to be in a group which group would you be in yeah i would clearly not want to be a farmer and and and
00:29:29.920 this accounts to 300 to 400 farm murders annually which is you know horrifying to me and if you want
00:29:38.480 to get how normalized this is the head of the aff julius malema led the song kill the boars
00:29:48.080 the song yes it was a song about killing with a tune and white africans someone thought about
00:29:54.720 the tune that it was put together during the apartheid period about how they wanted to eradicate
00:30:00.480 the boars and he thought that this would be normal and he's you know still a politician he still works
00:30:04.960 was the ruling party in south africa this is this is normalized this is what they sing at political
00:30:11.120 rallies let's kill like these these farmers right you know okay so yeah if in the united states we had
00:30:20.320 politicians singing songs like let's hang the some slur from africans from the tree like let's hang the
00:30:31.040 african slur from the tree everybody let's dance around the hanging tree you'd be like and and an
00:30:37.280 african from the united states said hey i'd really like to leave any country in europe would consider
00:30:42.960 them a refugee any country in europe would consider them a refugee oh right sorry yeah if they have if
00:30:49.120 donald trump had done something like that before winning the election any country in europe would
00:30:53.920 consider them you know this is the the fact that this is happening and that they have the statistics to
00:30:59.600 prove it and that the left is still like no this isn't happening i love that video of them bringing
00:31:04.640 over and ambushing the south african president with videos arguing about his country's racism
00:31:11.040 and the left freaked out they're like he was ambushed it's like well he should have been ambushed
00:31:15.120 like he's doing a genocide do you guys not care it's like how the left completely doesn't care
00:31:21.840 about the uyghurs even though it's a muslim group that's being genocided it's like oh but it's
00:31:26.160 cute little asians doing it we can't hate the chinese trump doesn't like them oh my gosh
00:31:34.640 yeah that is uh it is interesting how so much talk is out there about palestine and yet there's not
00:31:42.480 i mean i guess you know it's not like the us is actively supporting the ccp which is in turn
00:31:48.240 you know genociding uyghurs however we do have the issue of
00:31:52.320 the left regularly attempts to support the ccp ideologically they argue it's a great place to
00:31:58.000 be they argue that it's all over the top it's not really bad you see this i mean remember with
00:32:03.360 the whole tiktok thing and everything like that the left loves the ccp oh oh whoops again i guess
00:32:12.880 yes my god i don't know what to say i just want to give everyone the the benefit of the doubt i i
00:32:20.080 it's so hard for me and i think a lot of this is subconscious i don't think you know we go back to
00:32:26.880 the episode that we did on how on average in general progressives are more likely to prioritize
00:32:34.160 a larger circle of identity including animals and nature and to deprioritize their own internal circle
00:32:40.960 whereas conservatives are more likely to be like my family my clan my people my culture my country
00:32:46.640 like all these things matter a lot more the things that are closer to them and i think this is more
00:32:52.480 an extension of that that if there's hatred it's hatred for your own group and i wish i could find
00:32:58.160 this i'm really struggling to find these stats but there's i came across information about different
00:33:04.080 groups in the united states like ethnic groups in the united states and how they felt about out group
00:33:08.800 people and like the only group that that hated their own in-group more than everyone else so
00:33:17.360 everyone else is like really cool and chill with with others which was great white people appear to
00:33:22.000 just hate their own like that was where the bias was so like in general my takeaway from this research was
00:33:28.080 a lot of different like there isn't a lot of out-group hatred with pretty much any ethnic group but
00:33:33.760 there is in-group hatred with white people yeah and like i was pointing out was the like polyamory
00:33:38.720 thing and stuff like that the other fun thing that we noted about mormons is that they do a lot of
00:33:42.960 like swinging compared to other groups and we have another episode where we talk about that in more detail
00:33:48.880 most likely because you had this genetic selection effect was in that culture and when we talk about
00:33:55.200 you know aggregate differences between cultural groups they are persistent they do matter between white
00:34:03.200 groups there is not a white population i was just talking with simone about this again yesterday and
00:34:08.160 how sometimes it feels like when we are trying to relate to people from different white cultural
00:34:13.680 groups they feel almost like a different species like i cannot begin to imagine the way that they're
00:34:20.400 perceiving the world or the things that are driving their actions because they seem so foreign to me
00:34:27.440 just like there is not a black population i mean as you pointed out many many times in the past
00:34:33.200 different groups in africa have more genetic distance from each other than most
00:34:37.760 non-african groups right specifically europeans and asians are closer together than most africans are
00:34:44.320 yeah so like for us to make this monolith of you're black you are white right but especially
00:34:49.120 you're most people most people who are educated are aware of that like dude i didn't know that that blew my
00:34:54.240 mind a lot of educated people are not aware of is how different white groups are even american white
00:35:01.440 groups and things that you know you can see in trend data you can see this in unaliving rates as we've
00:35:08.400 shown you can see this in murder rates as we've shown like if you look at the greater abolition
00:35:14.080 cultural region for example as well really high murder rates if you can control for cities where
00:35:20.000 cities also have high murder rates but if you if you control for cities there you see like one
00:35:24.480 really unusually high murder rates but it's like why would you have this predilection for like ultra
00:35:29.360 violence within this cultural group a given their history we should probably go over that a little
00:35:34.560 bit it was mostly because they were based in small clans that sort of survived in lawless
00:35:41.120 environments like they were the ones who set up like the regulators they would either try to keep
00:35:44.960 police out of their territory or set up local informal law courts and stuff like that right
00:35:50.800 and you needed the types of communities when you have these these very violent clan based environments
00:35:56.640 where if a neighbor you know tries to take a few acres of your land they don't do that because their
00:36:02.320 family's going to be butchered right like you you need that sort of fear and this is why if you look at
00:36:08.240 maps of where different religious or cultural groups in the u.s spread and where they stopped in a lot of
00:36:14.560 regions you'll see a lot more mix of cultures and then it's like you hit the the like a wall of the
00:36:19.760 greater appalachian cultural group and and and waves just stop often it's like oh we're gonna skip
00:36:25.360 that and go immediately over here because it was an incredibly dangerous place to be and this is why
00:36:31.120 if you were was in this culture and you were uh squeamish about this sort of stuff you would have
00:36:37.280 survived at the same rate which is is is it means that you're going to see things differently and as i
00:36:43.200 pointed out catholics and i see this when i talk to catholics they so structurally see things
00:36:47.920 differently that sometimes i even struggle to have like if then like long conversations with them
00:36:54.800 because i struggle to understand the way that they structure their arguments and and this is what i call
00:37:01.360 high catholics now there's high catholics and low catholics low catholics are people who are more like
00:37:05.680 mainstream high catholics are the very intellectualized catholics like the irish catholics and italian
00:37:11.120 catholics i think mostly the irish catholics is where you get high catholics from and they'll
00:37:16.480 always like come down to like an analogies to like a beauty and grandeur and the way they're
00:37:22.160 describing something i'm like yeah but that's not like an argument for something that's that's that's
00:37:26.240 like a perception it comes down to as we describe in the pragmatist guide to life standards of evidence
00:37:31.520 so in the pragmatist guide to life we we basically say you need an objective function something you
00:37:35.920 think has intrinsic value that you want to maximize or a cluster of things then you need
00:37:40.400 basically an ideology sort of like a hypothesis as to how you will maximize these things which will
00:37:47.040 be altered as you learn new information but you also need to under you have a basically a very
00:37:52.080 disciplined framework for what you believe to be true and what you believe to be acceptable evidence
00:37:57.040 like the wikipedia equivalent of a trusted source and the i think the problem is your standard of evidence
00:38:05.280 you know what you consider to be a source of truth is very different from some versions of well many
00:38:11.760 other people sources of truth especially catholic because there's a lot of catholic stuff that really
00:38:16.800 is based off of more aesthetics and feelings and general sentiments rather than here's the data
00:38:23.040 here's a consequentialist result etc well and appeals to authority are are really big like appeals to
00:38:29.200 this is how things were done in the past and i don't see any of this as like intrinsically negative i'm
00:38:33.600 just pointing out that it is structurally different and it means that like when i am engaging with
00:38:40.480 different i think that there's a huge problem when people try to create like a pan american
00:38:46.560 white identity because there isn't a pan american white identity i remember i was talking with this
00:38:52.480 person online and they said oh well there used to be like if you go back to early america and i was
00:38:58.160 like did you like were you like not educated about the way the colonies worked your average you know
00:39:03.680 quaker northerner was more different from your average southern slave owner during that period
00:39:10.800 culturally speaking of like the cavalier cultural group than i am from your average american muslim
00:39:17.360 in terms of what they ate what sort of entertainment they consumed as what they did in their free time
00:39:23.920 what type of work they did how they got to work what they believed about god i mean yes they may have
00:39:30.080 been nominally christians but for example the quaker concept of god was very different than the cavalier
00:39:36.080 concept of god probably more different than your average mainstream evangelical american concept of
00:39:44.240 god and your average conservative muslims concept of god which i think would surprise a lot of people
00:39:49.440 who hadn't explored the beliefs from that period of american history if you want to dive deep on this
00:39:55.760 check out the book albion seed or american nations there isn't a pan american white identity i have like
00:40:03.760 culturally i for example am closer to most latin american immigrant groups than i am to high
00:40:11.280 catholic groups yeah i have an easier time talking to them i have an easier time making arguments i have
00:40:16.960 more friends in those groups that's why you know we worked in in latin america we have a lot of friends
00:40:21.680 who are latin american but it's a cultural group that i just get along with really well and i think that
00:40:27.440 yeah that's that's really interesting and i see this in our kids you know we had reporters here
00:40:31.600 from germany and they were just surprised by how much our kids fought that they had like
00:40:34.880 sock and boppers and they were constantly fighting each other and i was like well kids fight right
00:40:39.200 like i fought all the time as a kid and they're like yeah but like the girls fighting like what are
00:40:43.440 they doing and i was like they're having fun he starts it too which is so funny and then and then
00:40:48.640 they did like like one of them would like punch the other and they fall over and like and they'd be
00:40:53.280 like do you need help little one and i'd be like do not coddle him he cries he's gonna get smacked get
00:41:00.000 back up buddy you know and it's it's funny because i see that we actually had a problem with this on the
00:41:05.520 cruise ship recently whereas the way that we raise our children is meant to be very rambunctious and
00:41:13.440 aggressive rough and cultivate in them like we actively work to make them as tough as aggressive as
00:41:21.520 uninterested in like being hurt or anything like that as possible and it's put us in a position where
00:41:28.640 the other children are too fragile for us to leave our kids alone with other kids especially when our
00:41:37.280 kids are a group and it's not like they're picking on other kids or anything like that they're actually
00:41:43.120 i don't think i've ever seen our kids pick on another kid it's just playing in a very
00:41:50.480 rough and tumble way enthusiastic way yeah well it's one playing in a rough and tumble way and two
00:41:57.040 having a dangerous amount of confidence for a young kid like you know going up to another kid
00:42:02.240 and being like hey give me your toy i want to play with it for a bit and the other kids like they're
00:42:06.160 like come on sharing right and then the other two like come up behind him and he's like yeah sure you
00:42:12.560 can play with it for a bit and then he goes and like cries to his mom it's like dude if you didn't
00:42:17.280 want to give it up then don't give it up you know push them away that's what our kids would have done
00:42:20.960 um you know they so they don't like go up and snatch things from people or anything like that
00:42:25.840 but they definitely are they know what they want right or they'll climb on top we kept getting in
00:42:31.360 trouble in the cruise ship because they kept climbing on things or climbing under things
00:42:34.960 and of course like we built our house so that they climb on things right like that i wanted yeah we've
00:42:40.080 we've fortunately or unfortunately trained our children to climb on anything look at videos from
00:42:46.560 when i was a kid remember i told you of the stories of me climbing up the side of my house and
00:42:49.920 always get in trouble with the neighbors on the vines and we found an old video she was watching
00:42:54.960 because you're just watching videos of like my parents interviewing my granddad and then out of
00:42:58.400 the blue you see me climbing up a second story window like looking in and waving as a like a five-year-old
00:43:09.520 granddaddy you're being paged granddaddy
00:43:19.920 like this is clearly not safe and my parents do not look concerned they are not like getting
00:43:35.600 up to run out and get me off or like do anything they're like oh hey look he wants to wave at the
00:43:40.000 camera and then they go back to what they're doing classic classic yeah this is back when kids could be
00:43:46.560 kids you know but i remember this from my own childhood remember i told you that in italy because
00:43:52.560 i lived in italy for a while my brother and i were always getting in trouble and it was always bambino
00:43:58.000 you know yelling at us because we know we'd climb over a fence or climb up the side of an old building
00:44:02.240 because there's so much fun stuff it is like assassin's creed over there there's so many easy
00:44:06.640 holds so so in in italy you're not supposed to let your five-year-olds climb up the ancient church
00:44:12.560 side or something you know so they or something just maybe whatever always i had this memory of
00:44:18.720 always getting in trouble and now it's clicked for me when i see my own kids always getting it
00:44:23.680 i'm like oh it's the same thing i wasn't being a bad kid i was just raised in a culture where i was
00:44:30.480 expected to be and and trained to be significantly more rambunctious and confident and aggressive than
00:44:37.520 other kids were and when i was put in an environment with these meeker children they sort of like
00:44:43.280 panicked yeah yeah where their parents did not want to go out anymore because they're so fine
00:44:50.080 at home it doesn't cause any trouble they're happy they're not being bad in public either
00:44:57.760 well i know they're going out and doing their own thing like when i get in trouble they're like well
00:45:02.800 one of your kids left the park and is playing in the field and i'm like why is it wrong that he's
00:45:07.200 playing in the field why do i have to force all the kids to play on the part and they're like i'm
00:45:11.600 like he's not gonna die like let him do what he wants
00:45:18.800 yeah so what is you know we've got hillary clinton like what's what what are we taking away
00:45:23.840 from my thesis here is that i think that they're they're i i won't say that great replacement theory
00:45:30.240 is real so if anybody takes this video says malcolm is arguing for great replacement theory i am not
00:45:33.760 because i don't think that that was the intention i think that there was an intention to allow
00:45:41.280 demographics to shift i think as hillary said that the left saw immigrants and a believed higher birth
00:45:49.200 rate was in immigrants as a pathway towards fixing demographic collapse they knew that falling fertility
00:45:58.400 rates were an economic issue and they thought that they could fix it with with immigrants and if
00:46:05.680 you look at other things they said they also thought that the immigrants would vote for them
00:46:08.960 and so they saw this as useful from both perspectives fixing an economic problem and also
00:46:13.520 fixing sort of an existential demographic problem
00:46:19.520 yeah it was well i mean i i could argue that there was a great replacement conspiracy and that we
00:46:24.720 wanted to replace problematic and troublesome conservative americans with receptive and grateful immigrants
00:46:38.960 because that would make sense i mean that doesn't seem unreasonable to me if i wanted to get votes and
00:46:46.480 make sure i got elected i would probably want to do that too so you know just seems reasonable to me
00:46:54.560 but yeah it's it's odd it is odd all right i love you to death simone i love you too gorgeous
00:47:09.280 all right so after three days of reporters raiding our house german news team for what was the korea
00:47:15.840 japanese and then german before that we did a bunch of screeds about how we're happy the germans are going
00:47:21.040 extinct and muslims don't ban ivf like they do so you know we gotta see if we can we can get get a
00:47:28.160 something viral out of this with the japanese we went full otaku we're like oh we're otakus for having
00:47:33.520 kids because it's like subversive to have kids these days and that only an otaku somebody who's otaku for
00:47:38.720 children you know like a weirdo obsessive but for children would be able to replace themselves in this
00:47:43.840 country as it is today what's wild is just how much our kids have normalized film crews like to them
00:47:49.680 it's not weird it would be weirder for them to see an electrician in the house fixing something than it
00:47:55.360 would be for them to see a full-out film crew with all the lighting all the suitcases all the
00:48:01.600 so funny oh my gosh it's wild yeah they just have like a giant film camera in their face where they're
00:48:08.160 like eating and they're not paying attention at all yeah they're just like oh this is normal
00:48:11.760 obviously i'm famous obviously the news is here to interview me why the film crews come he says
00:48:16.960 because he's very fancy yes it's the fanciness and specifically because our son octavian is fancy
00:48:23.520 but he is he's not wrong he is very fancy all right
00:48:28.800 you bopped him with the soccer bopper toasty you gotta get him back
00:48:43.520 that would be very strong oh yeah oh toasty you gotta power up power up
00:48:49.760 whoa you gotta boost your power bam bam bam