In this episode of Review Area, I'm joined by R.G. Miller, an anti-Yankee activist, and J.B.B., an educated and woke Southerner, to discuss the question: What is a Yankee?
01:03:54.900Three hundred thousand Yankees are stiff in southern dust. We got three
01:04:01.320hundred thousand before they conquered us. They died of southern
01:04:06.660fever, southern steel and shot. I wish there was three million instead of what we've got.
01:04:19.680I can't take up my musket and fight them now no more. But I ain't gonna love them, that is certain
01:04:28.840sure. And I don't want no pardon for what I was and am. I won't be
01:04:35.780reconstructed and I don't care what to am.
01:04:38.840Oh, I'm a good old rebel now that's just what I am. Oh, I'm a good old rebel now that's just what I am.
01:04:54.840Welcome back to Mysterium Fashi's episode 44, the Yankee question, part two. So before the break, we kind of got into the identity of the Yankee, the history, the synthesis, what his world view and ideology is, and the cancerous growth and spread of the Yankee world view and mindset within history and geopolitics, but also within our own circles and movement.
01:05:21.900Now, before the break, we hinted at that we were going to discuss the Civil War, and now I think we can get into it in earnest.
01:05:29.900What we see, the Civil War, to me, seems kind of the best manifestation of the forces that I was just discussing, that one can point to quite obviously.
01:05:39.560And it's a subject where I think that you have, again, probably a much greater depth and knowledge than I do, R.G., but we see the Yankee as the vanguardist of this system of, this Gnostic system of ideological or civic or pseudo-religious dominance.
01:05:57.420Then the American Civil War stands as the most obvious example of the forceful implementation of the system on a group of people against their own will.
01:06:08.540And I think that you can probably dig from there if you wanted to start with the opening commas.
01:06:13.520You know, like how do you frame to see the Civil War as the manifestation of this?
01:06:18.320Well, I'd kind of hinted that I think that Anglo, the narrative of Anglo history can be best understood as a cyclical re-manifestation of the English Civil War.
01:06:29.060There are things before that and things after that, but I think that's the same thing that we see here.
01:06:32.940I see the roots of 1861 in 1776 and the roots of 1776 in 1688 and 1660, et cetera, et cetera.
01:06:41.600I see that great civilizational divide between the Cavalier and the Puritan, the Southern and the Yankee as being manifested in 1861.
01:06:51.620Where you get into some conflicting points are when you understand that our people sinned in 1776 and we sided with the Yankee against the crown.
01:07:04.600Now, your people never did in Canada, but our people did.
01:07:08.140So you have some elements of Republicanism left in the South, of Yankeeism left in the South, God forbid.
01:07:15.280But at its core, at its core, the Republican, the Puritan says all men are created equal, and at its core, we said no, they're not.
01:07:23.600We wanted to submit to the natural, organic, natural order that God had ordained.
01:07:32.380Now, granted, we had rebelled against that 90 years earlier, but I think 1861 was at least a step in the way of repentance towards that.
01:07:38.600But I think that it was the manifestation of that great struggle between natural order and abstractions, Gnosticism, Materialism, Darwinianism, whatever you want to call it.
01:07:50.840That's the narrative I view the war through.
01:07:53.160Now, as far as like – I mean we can get into like historical little details and everything like that.
01:07:57.380I'm not a historian, but we can get into that as well if that's some stuff you want to bring to bear on it.
01:08:01.480But that's the narrative I see at play with the war between the states is the continuation of that great civilizational conflict among the Anglo people of Puritan versus Cavalier, Yankee versus Southerner, however you want to frame that.
01:08:18.140And I think that that broader fight, I mean essentially between the will of God and the will of man, which ultimately is the will of the devil, that is the narrative for history.
01:08:29.300And I think this is coming back to this pressing question.
01:08:33.640For me, the reason why I created this podcast was basically about Christianity.
01:08:38.700More than anything else, it's about talking about how the gospel is the center of the political life and that any political expression has to have the worldview of the gospel, of the Bible, right, as its central axis.
01:08:53.080And so you can't – if you're a Christian, you have to believe in a providential theory of history.
01:08:57.060You have to have a certain historiographic outlook where you see God manifesting himself in the events of the nations.
01:09:06.100That's like what the Old Testament is about.
01:09:07.780So what the Christian religion is about, right, is that God comes into history and that he is the invisible guiding hand behind its operation.
01:09:16.700Yeah, I agree with you from that perspective is I absolutely 100% agree.
01:09:21.260And I think that this is one of the reasons why, I mean, the – you know, the Confederate battle flag is still an international symbol of resistance to tyranny, you know, in Europe and other parts of the world.
01:09:32.840And this is how it's popularly perceived is because that spiritual reality, even though people might not know the historical details, I think is evident.
01:09:44.300But what I wanted to do is maybe – we don't have to get into the deep historical stuff, but I wanted to kind of – for our listeners who might not be really familiar with, you know, the history and the context of the war between the states, to kind of like lay out the narrative for them.
01:10:02.420So why don't we kind of go back to the founding of the American Republic and how it was conceived and how this was kind of betrayed by the Yankee race with the conflagration?
01:10:15.340Well, like I said, I've gone through times as, you know, a constitutionalist and believing that there was some, you know, decent aspects at play in the United States Constitution.
01:10:27.560But from a realistic point of view, you have to view – you can't view the war or the revolution through an Americanized model where history begins in 1776.
01:10:41.320You have to remember that there were – that Britain had colonies throughout North America, as far north as Nova Scotia, as far south as Bermuda, Cuba, Dominican Republic, things like that.
01:10:52.460But there was – the rebellion of 1776 was an ideological rebellion, and only half the colonies participated in it, half the southern colonies and most of the Yankee colonies.
01:11:05.300The deep south colonies of the Golden Circle and the far north colonies of Canada did not participate in the rebellion against the crown.
01:11:13.660But some of our people did, and all the Yankees did, and we united with them.
01:11:18.160Now, even basic modern history understands that there was a struggle between the two civilizational forces of the north and the south in building the United States.
01:11:31.760It began – the only way they could make it work was through a very, very loose union through the Articles of Confederation and even a pretty loose union through the later Constitution in 1789.
01:11:43.220And there was always this deep civilizational struggle and a vying for dominance between George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, John Adams, John Quincy Adams.
01:11:55.280There were two factors at play there, and it really – throughout the early 1800s to the mid-1800s, it really began to center – the conflict really began to center on the ideas we've been talking about,
01:12:11.580whether or not, you know, all white men are created equal or all men are created equal or they're not.
01:12:16.620The south had an agrarian hierarchical society where equality was not at play.
01:12:22.540The Yankees had an egalitarian society, which, as we had hinted to earlier, in practice looks much more tyrannical and petty than a hierarchical society does.
01:12:35.860It was – there were two separate – there were two separate nations that began to – that had been there from the very beginning, but they began to be more and more at odds with each other.
01:12:47.380And you have the Republicans in the late 1850s through on the Republican Party with Abraham Lincoln and abolitionists and things of that nature, and you had the conservatives or traditionalists in the south who wanted to keep – they wanted to keep their society as it was.
01:13:05.480Now, once again, it's a little bit schizophrenic in that we had contributed and aligned ourselves with the Yankees earlier against hierarchy and social stratification and authority.
01:13:20.940But we began to step back from that, especially when you read the fire eaters, when you read George Fitzhugh and people of his status.
01:13:31.720There was a beginning to step away from that and to embrace this agrarian hierarchical society as something that is good and natural and righteous.
01:13:41.620And when we were talking earlier about the Yankee and their desire to remake the world in their own image, they could not allow Christianity or traditional Christianity to exist and to have a foothold in North America.
01:13:57.460They had to eradicate it because, once again, that puritanical worldview, anything that is other than yourself, you have to either remake in your own image or else destroy utterly, as we see with the United States in their global expansion now.
01:14:12.720And that was the narrative that was leading up to the war.
01:14:16.320People get into, you know, was it about slavery, was it not?
01:14:21.560There were other things at play from economics to constitutional arguments, but it finally came down to we believe that you could keep that traditional social order as handed down by God, and they believed you couldn't.
01:14:35.640And thus they decided once the Republican candidate Abraham Lincoln was elected, Southerners understood there's only two options here.
01:14:44.220One, we submit to the Yankee yoke of oppression and tyranny, or else we leave.
01:14:51.560And we left, and they didn't like it, and that's when the war happened, and it was one of the worst things that happened in the history of the world.
01:14:58.520And we lost, unfortunately, but that's where we're at now.
01:15:01.020That's what we're talking about, the Yankee question.
01:15:02.500I really wish the Yankees were talking about the Southern question right now.
01:15:05.820Well, they probably wouldn't be because we wouldn't be.
01:15:08.340We don't have that puritanical mindset that had been left alone.
01:15:10.900But anyway, that's a very, very basic, broad painting of the narrative that led up to the war, if that's what you're wanting.
01:15:20.280And so I think that there's a couple of different levels of the conflict here.
01:15:25.200I mean, we have the competing economic systems, but I think that it comes back to the world view,
01:15:31.000is that it's not one particular aspect of the society or the civilization,
01:15:36.920but it's the entire approach to life and the way that the community, the economic, the religious life is structured and interacts with one another.
01:15:44.820And I think that this, you're correct, that this kind of civilizational schizophrenia goes back to the English Civil War.
01:15:51.820And I think even, you know, you could probably go back further and say, you know, the Norman invasion.
01:15:55.380You know, and generally the disintegration of the synthesis that had come about with the Christianization of Germanic England.
01:16:03.800And so I think that the – I mean, there's many different ways that we can look at this here.
01:16:11.500I mean, we can see – number one, one of the good examples is that the Civil War was one of the first examples of total war where both –
01:16:20.260why don't you jump right into this, Archie?
01:16:25.600Well, I mean, the total war – that's – when you start bringing up things, and I know I've said things that may have been uncouth or whatever online to people who say Sherman didn't go far enough.
01:16:34.760But the total war aspect of the American Civil War was almost the first of its kind.
01:16:40.840The Yankees had such a diabolical hatred for everything good and righteous, they thought they had to crush it from the face of the earth.
01:16:46.560The south – the southern states were the most well-off, wealthy, stable areas of North America prior to the war, after the fact they'd been in abject poverty even until now to a sense.
01:17:03.820The Yankee mindset cannot tolerate anything other than – they think in black and white.
01:17:09.260They think they had this American, overly linear, black-and-white view of glory, glory to hallelujah, the truth goes marching on.
01:17:17.220If you don't believe that – if you don't believe that you should let your black people flip free and we could hire them for pennies on the dollar, then you are evil and sickening.
01:17:27.020We're going to throw Irish migrants at you until we've burned down your homes, raped your grandmothers, destroyed your property, and sank you to the bottom of the ocean.
01:17:35.380That was the total war that my grandparents solved.
01:17:39.080My family has been in the south since the 1600s on all lines.
01:17:43.100And when you read the stories, when you read the history, it fills you with an utter rage.
01:17:49.480It was some of the world I'd ever seen before.
01:17:52.560And it was something – I mean I go back and forth on whether or not I think it was right just to be the righteous example of godliness like Robert E. Lee and fight by the rules of nobility and the rules of goodness.
01:18:04.720Or whether or not I should be Nathan Bedford Forrest and raise the black flag, kill them all.
01:18:09.800There's a part to play for both of those.
01:18:12.280But clearly we were facing an enemy that we never even – we didn't even understood.
01:18:16.980We thought in two different paradigms.
01:18:19.600We thought in two totally separate ways, the Yankee and the Southern.
01:18:59.220And I think that the strongest definition of this type of warfare is unchristian, I think, in its true sense.
01:19:05.380And it's – the shocking thing is that we have a thousand years, the great – not more than that, 1,500, 1,700 years –
01:19:12.800the great campaign of the Christianization of the Western Germanic peoples was to settle the internal violent and clannish disputes among them
01:19:20.440and to produce a stable social order of harmony whereby men could continue to be warriors and maintain their freedom and liberty
01:19:28.100and be peers with one another within the state, but embraced a fraternal kinship and a bond that enabled social cooperation.
01:19:39.180The descent of the feudal violence in the Middle Ages blossomed into a broader fraternal love for – or at least standard of operation for how you treat other Christians.
01:19:49.900And so that meant that if Christian states went to war against one another, that you treated your opponents with respect.
01:19:54.740You didn't – you know, you didn't try to humiliate or, you know, engage in any –
01:20:02.740Exactly, and a lot of people don't realize as late as the 1870s and 1880s, when the war was fought, Germany marched –
01:20:11.540the Germany marched their army into Paris, a treaty was signed, they went home, and everything was okay.
01:20:16.360It wasn't until this modern era that war means utter annihilation.
01:20:21.300And that's – now, to be fair, I mean, I've talked a lot of – I've talked a lot of crap about, you know, 1930s Germany and stuff like that.
01:20:29.300I'm still an avowed anti-Nazi, not because they're too far right, but because they're too far left, but that's a nuanced subject.
01:22:23.340And once again, you get to that element of schizophrenia in the Puritan mind.
01:22:27.360In their march for equality for the black man, they ended up submitting him to horrors that the worst slave owner never did.
01:22:35.320And they ended up plummeting the black man and the black family into utter levels of poverty and despondency and oppression that slavery never could have done.
01:22:50.220And I mean, I'm kind of the opinion – when it comes to the Yankee question, I'm kind of the opinion that George Fitchie was right.
01:22:57.180The only way we can make them Christians again is to enslave them.
01:23:00.140I mean, literally, until you can bow the knee to a man, you'll never bow the knee to God.
01:23:03.580And I think that's something we can all even – we can all, whether or not as parents or whether or not as sons,
01:23:09.760we can all understand that the way to understand submission to God is submission to your betters.
01:23:14.760And that's something that we understood that they have never understood.
01:23:16.820The Yankee doesn't think they have a better.
01:23:18.720The better – the only way they determine superiority in hierarchy is through rhetoric and talking or social cues.
01:23:25.780There is no understanding of a natural hierarchy that God made someone better than me.
01:23:30.780And that's the problem with the Yankees.
01:23:32.620They don't think anyone is better than them.
01:23:33.900And I think that actually this kind of bites at an extremely important sociological observation is that the Yankee race originating from Middlesex, England, and the Southeast is the only example in the history of the world before the modern period that had the nuclear family.
01:23:49.220When you have the husband, wife, and then two children.
01:23:52.940And then as soon as the children reached the age of maturity, they would be married and leave the household.
01:24:25.940And I think that it's the lack of this authority within the position of the patriarch in the nuclear family that might combine with that kind of mercantilist mindset with under Eliza, which might more than anything else contribute to this kind of revolutionary mindset, which we find common among the Yankee and the Jew.
01:24:57.620But I think you can see that even in the most blase mainstream aspects of Southern culture versus Yankee culture, what is it that Southern boys say to their betters?
01:25:09.160And I think one of the biggest things that could best happen to the Yankees, they learn to say, yes, sir, and fucking obey.
01:25:16.140That's the biggest problem with the Yankees.
01:25:17.960They think they're the equal of their betters.
01:25:20.380And the same people who denied Christ and the same people who say, crucify Christ, give us Barabbas, they thought they had a better mind than God.
01:25:28.720They thought they could – the same way the Talmudic Jew thought they could out-debate God and win, the same way the Yankee thinks they can out-debate God and win now.
01:25:35.540They think they are the greatest thing since sliced white bread.
01:25:38.820But they don't even understand those basic aspects of human society.
01:25:49.340It's just this manipulation through kind of technical knowledge of the physical world, these forces of power, ultimately for nihilists, ultimately for their own – the satisfaction of their own ego.
01:26:00.640And I see like the Yankee is just this manifestation of that – like the – I'm not a huge Jungian psychologist, but like the Jungian shadow.
01:26:09.820We all within us have this draw towards this corruption, towards rebellion against God and authority, the glorification of our own ego at the expense of our family, at the expense of our duties, you know, the personal corruption of sin.
01:26:22.400And whereas the Yankee, this society just seeks to legitimize that within a socially acceptable framework, and that's all that matters.
01:26:31.320And to get back to some of the things we talked about earlier and including – and apply this to the modern alt-right, which – that's what this podcast is about, and I think that's what people need to hear because there's a lot of – there's a lot of young people out there who their only interaction with anything aside from classical liberalism is the alt-right in podcasts.
01:26:45.660So I think they need to understand this.
01:26:47.580I think one of the biggest symptoms you see of that in the alt-right, and I'm going to qualify this some, is the – you know, the mocking and the denigrating tone towards the so-called normie while the people who are worthy of respect are the most woke or whatever.
01:27:04.940That gets back to the Gnosticism and abstract-oriented mind of the modern Yankee is that what you think is who makes you what you are, your own will, your own volition, your own mind, your own thought.
01:27:16.820Now, there are plenty of problems with baby boomers in modern society.
01:27:20.380I wouldn't be on this show if I didn't realize there were those problems.
01:27:22.560But when you live in a traditional society, especially in the South, the way all the Southern men I know act, is they're still in awe and a respect for those who are better than them, even if they are not so-called woke on the JQ or woke on this or that.
01:27:40.340But the idea that your worth and your deserving of following is defined by rhetoric and your opinions on certain matters is the epitome, the epitome of this bullshit Yankee egalitarian bourgeoisie mentality.
01:27:58.940Whereas traditional men, whether Southern or from anywhere else, can say, yes, sir, and understand that there are people who are better than them in a real sense who don't understand as much as them, all the Yankee understands is who can make the funniest Jew jokes and make – have their voice echo or whatever while they're saying something snarky.
01:28:20.580No, and I just – two episodes ago, I just recorded an episode of Personal Character.
01:28:24.280And this is my whole point is that if you – it doesn't matter what your ideology is, if your personal character is shit, you're a dog, and that's all there is to say.
01:28:33.280And that even if you're correct, even if you believe the truth, if you don't actually live it, it doesn't mean anything.
01:29:06.840And so the – you know, Christianity or these religions, these are philosophical constructs that have pragmatic utility in the organization of a nice white society so you can have your comfort politics and your racist liberalism and your bourgeois capitalism.
01:29:49.460And I think it just – it comes back to this – it's essentially just – I mean, pragmatic – it's like this pragmatic attitude combined with ego worship.
01:29:59.040I mean, and I don't know – I just – I'm convinced that at a certain level it's just a spiritual illness and that there's almost no other explanation for it than that.
01:30:10.540I mean, I'm not sure if it's a consequence of the political philosophy, this ideology of the biology of some combination, synthesis of all that.
01:30:21.720But what we find is just this severance from – I mean, that real world, lack of anything else, and an obsession with one's own material well-being.
01:30:33.540Yeah, idea, material well-being, right, that kind of thing.
01:30:38.220And to be clear, I've said some things that are very hard against the Yankee.
01:30:41.480I do believe the Yankee can repent, for the record.
01:31:59.100We're the people of God in some way, shape, or form.
01:32:01.660And God will bring judgment and calamity upon you until you repent and return to him.
01:32:07.360And repent – that's the thing is all right people don't understand.
01:32:12.280When they think of repentance, they think repentance is everyone gets up together, has a big push at the beer hall, and stabs all the people who are bad, and kills all the Jews, and ushers in this brave new world of the future.
01:33:13.900I believe that the king can do whatever he wants.
01:33:16.780I have these great grand ideas and ideologies about monarchy, but when it comes to the monarchy that God has given them, good or bad, they have nothing but contempt.
01:33:26.240And that is the epitome of self-worship and will-worship and idolatry, saying, okay, God, I obey the – I'll obey my dad if I agree with what he says.
01:33:36.400I'll obey my mom if I agree with what she says.
01:33:38.880I'll obey the king if I agree with what he says.
01:33:59.700And that's because you've isolated it correctly.
01:34:03.340Again, there's no – I mean all ideology or politics is is the application of eternal principles to contemporary circumstances and people.
01:34:12.660And it's the working out of the interrelation between those two and how to live.
01:34:17.480And so if we don't actually turn away from evil and falsehood, which is degenerative, which is corruptive, and that remains who we are, an integral part of our worldview, how we operate, then we're always going to die.
01:34:28.980We're always going to suffer corruption and fall into Hades because that's who we are.
01:34:39.360And so there's no way to free our civilization, ourselves, our people, from the hand of death that is upon it without turning to Jesus Christ in repentance and accepting his life-giving sacrifice upon the cross.
01:34:51.600And ultimately, I mean, he says exactly what that means is that you have to humble yourself and worship him, acknowledge your divinity, and say, Lord Jesus Christ, Son of God, have mercy upon me, a sinner, and take up your cross and follow him.
01:35:58.500Your will is subjected to God one way or the other, and all you're bringing is more destruction and more calamity upon yourself.
01:36:08.720And, I mean, there are ways in which that relates to the southern history as well.
01:36:13.200I'm not going to get into them, but we are not going to win this by the force of arms.
01:36:18.180I'm not saying arms are never – I'm not a pacifist by any means, but we are not going to win this battle by having – by trying to force it with our own hand, whether by politics or by force of arms or by rhetoric.
01:36:32.580The will of man will never, ever, ever bring about repentance.
01:36:36.940Repentance is submission to Christ, submission to God, and repentance from our sin, and that's it.
01:37:15.340It's going to be essentially, you know, one way or another in service of the devil given a long enough track record.
01:37:22.760And so I think fundamentally that's why I agree.
01:37:24.600I mean, and it's just that the Christian worldview has to be at the center of any sort of, you know, return to normalcy.
01:37:34.000And I just, there's no, you know, in America, in North America, we've reached Babylon levels of degeneracy.
01:37:42.920I mean, it's insane, and there's no way that any sort of functioning, coherent, healthy, familial life, civilizational life is going to reemerge and assert itself as the God-ordained authority unless it is consistent and repents and follows these Christian principles, as our ancestors did time and time and time again when they got into these calamities.
01:38:03.480And one of the things I think could be really, really helpful to bring out right now is when it comes to obeying Christ, what does that mean?
01:38:12.800In the modern right wing, whether it's religious or alt-right or political, to them, obeying Christ is they look at the Bible or they look at whatever they think divine revelation is.
01:38:22.820They determine by their own will what they think it is, and they say, we're going to enforce that.
01:38:27.700Whereas in the traditional way, obeying Christ and submitting to Christ is submitting to a man who Christ has put over you.
01:38:34.060And that's – to me, that's a huge difference.
01:38:37.780One of them is seeing – now, we can bring this into – I'll bring this into the idea of monarchies.
01:38:43.240That's where I see the highest level of schizophrenia.
01:38:58.060Their monarchy is an idea, not a person.
01:39:00.380Whereas in the Christian and traditional view of the world is society as being familial in nature, whereas – where the king is the father, et cetera, et cetera.
01:39:12.000There's different schools of thought on that.
01:39:14.060But the way a woman submits to Christ is not by saying, I've read all these Christian books.
01:39:24.320The way a woman submits to Christ is by submitting to her husband, good or bad.
01:39:27.260The way a child submits to God is by fearing their parents, and that's what we need.
01:39:32.940We need to have that ethos return to the Christian right is that we are submitting to Christ in his – in what he has physically put over us, not in deciding what we think Jesus thinks and needing to implement that by our own will.
01:39:47.460If that makes any sense, I hope that didn't come across wrong.
01:39:49.620I think that's a huge issue we have here.
01:39:53.260I think that that's the result of this kind of Protestant individualization of the interpretation of Scripture and then the organization of the community.
01:40:03.260Because I think if we look at the Old Testament, a perfect example of this is David and Saul.
01:40:07.400And so even – Saul is the anointed of God, and David many times, even when Saul is oppressing him and orders him, refuses to execute him because he knows that he's God's anointed.
01:40:43.520It's not just about individual interpretation of Scripture.
01:40:47.100That's so – that's a more peripheral issue.
01:40:49.940You can even – which I don't hold to it, but you can hold to the individual ability to discern what the Bible means.
01:40:56.180The issue is a much more spiritual and moral one.
01:40:58.480The issue is I can say, you know what, Daddy?
01:41:01.720The Bible doesn't say that and you're wrong, but I'm going to obey and bow the knee to God and bow the knee to you whether or not I think it's right or not.
01:41:11.740That's the big issue at play is not whether or not you can interpret the Bible for yourself.
01:41:15.980The big issue at play is whether or not you will submit to the rule of God in time and history and flesh and blood as opposed to exert your own will over God's.
01:41:35.100You're always going to have a human level where there are differences, opinions on what this says or what this doesn't say.
01:41:41.700It's the issue at play is an ethical and moral one where you say, yes, sir, and obey whether or not you think or have an idea that it's different.
01:41:50.940I think what it comes back to is family.
01:41:53.280I think that that's the best way to understand it is that the life in the Christian church, life with Christ is a familiar relationship.
01:41:59.760By baptism, we're made sons of God by adoption, St. Paul says.
01:42:03.860And so, you know, your family is your family whether you like them or not.
01:42:11.520Your folk, your race, that's your family whether you like it or not.
01:42:14.360And even if they're, you know, degenerate or wicked, they're your blood and you have to love them and serve them insofar as it's in concordance with the will of God.
01:42:24.020And so that means right or wrong, right or wrong, victory or damnation.
01:42:27.780And that's what it comes down to right or wrong, victory or damnation.
01:42:52.080And so there's a real, you know, it's not some sort of, you know, abstract notion.
01:42:57.440It's not some sort of investiture of the state.
01:43:00.180It's a familial and sacral position fundamentally, right?
01:43:05.020And then the state apparatus is just what we call whatever goes on around that, which is usually should be very small.
01:43:11.600And so I think that this comes back to the difficulty is that in the modern age, we've seen the total debasing and denaturing of monarchy so that they're not.
01:43:19.500I mean, it's, you know, many of them are not even sacral anymore.
01:43:23.240They make no pretensions or claims to be following in the lineage of Jesus Christ or to be these institutions.
01:43:28.800And so it's, you know, like the Queen of England, for instance, you know, she can't be the head of – I mean, I don't know what your particular – my understanding is traditional ancient theology, a woman can't be the head of the Anglican church.
01:43:41.980Say what you will – listen, I mean, there's other things at play here, but say what you will about whether or not she's been good or been bad.
01:43:54.260Secondly, whether you like it or not, she – in her coronation, she was handed a globe with a cross on the top of it and saying this is to remind that you are ruling your people the way Christ rules the world, rule with grace and truth.
01:44:09.240She said – she took an oath to defend the faith of the people of England.
01:44:14.900So, I mean, there is some sacral elements of that.
01:44:16.720Now, that's where we get into the issue, which is schizophrenic in nature, but the crown of Great Britain still has a sacral nature to it, whether they are in a shitty position or not a shitty position.
01:44:39.640I mean, the czar of Russia was murdered ritually by Jewish rabbis in a ceremony.
01:44:43.960Yeah, no, there was, and there's an official investigation being opened by the church in Russia into the fact that the czar's murder was literally a ritual killing by Jewish rabbis.
01:44:56.320I think that every Russian should be orthodox and be coming back to the home people, so.
01:45:00.140Yeah, well, and that's the thing is that the – there is a specific ritual that's done among these Kabbalists called the killing of the king ritual.
01:45:07.080And the – Dr. Johnson, Matthew Raphael Johnson has a great lecture on YouTube that you should all go look up.
01:45:12.920But it's precisely about the dethroning –
01:45:15.140Tell me that's not the same as killing Jesus.
01:45:39.700And so the whole idea is the dethronement of the patriarch, of that authority within public life.
01:45:45.820And we can see this on every level – economic, psychological, cultural, religious, political – is the destruction of the patriarchal authority of a natural familial bond, which is, you know, beyond the ego.
01:45:58.360And ultimately, I think what comes back to R.G., is it by humility.
01:46:03.480And humility is not a debasement of yourself, but humility is a submission to just authority and an understanding that, you know, you're not the best and that other people are above you in terms of hierarchy.
01:46:15.720And then you have to submit to them as to Christ even if, you know, you think they're pricks.
01:46:21.860You know, and so it's like, you know, if you – like, you know, for orthodox priests, you know, and you go to church, you know, your relationship with your spiritual father, that's the – your father confesses you.
01:46:31.120That's how the Holy Spirit speaks to you.
01:46:32.880That's how God is speaking to you, right?
01:46:35.080And so when, you know, you repent of your sins and you go to him, right, and you confess your sins and he gives you a prescription is literally what the word in Greek means.
01:46:42.960It's like a medicine, right, to aiding your repentance, penance, right?
01:46:46.740That's the will of God being expressed through a man, right?
01:46:49.820And so the – it's, you know, we are – the nature of the corruption is that it's not always perfect, but that the judgment seat, the judgment of Christ is about our own heart and our own disposition towards him and towards our superiors in our life, not necessarily the empirical reality of the sinful world in which we live.
01:47:11.020And that's what I think is at the heart of everything we come back to, the Christian worldview, is that it's kind of this – the Gnostic error is actually anti-spiritual because it presumes that the spiritual reality must be manifest in the sinful world around us where it's not real.
01:47:28.120Exactly, right, and that's – it's this false messianism, this idea that a certain scheme of social organization can produce, you know, this Edenic harmony, which is, as we know from grace, is impossible because we're fallen and corrupt people, that the harmony that to come will happen after the resurrection, right?
01:48:29.460You know, I mean, that's what a monarch is, is he is a grandfather for the whole nation.
01:48:34.840You know, that's all that it is, right?
01:48:39.980One of the things a good friend of mine said, which really stuck with me, and don't take it as not –
01:48:45.360as Gnostic or spiritualistic or anything, but he said, we are entering a time where Christendom is falling apart.
01:48:52.960But no matter what, if Christendom is to live on, it needs to live on within our own hearts and within our own families.
01:48:58.400We must maintain that Christian worldview and that Christian, traditional, hierarchical Christian society in our own people and in our own families as well.
01:49:17.600And so we receive from, you know, the early apostolic times is it's – families are converted.
01:49:22.500Nations are converted, not individuals.
01:49:24.140And in the reality of the kingdom of God, which is manifest in the church, that's within our own households, our own local economies, right?
01:49:31.860And then, of course, that comes together in the parish life and in the national life, you know, the imperial life, whatever, depending on how large the state that we're living in is.
01:51:28.940And so any relationship with the absolute divine means not only humbling yourself to one person but to three persons with a single life.
01:51:36.080And so for us, the whole worldview, politics, religion, spirituality, it's not only personal as in real and instantiated, but it's communal by definition because of the nature of the trinity that we worship.
01:52:28.760And I mean I think that this comes back to one of the key errors of the Yankee but also – and I think specifically of the Yankee, not even necessarily of the Jew, is the politicization of the entire society.
01:52:40.060Whereas politics in the past is a specific job.
01:52:45.380It's a class or a craft that is engaged in by a specified or a specialized group of leaders and administrators or also in the traditional English setting by the free men of the society which legitimize certain deputies to execute their will.
01:52:59.780And what happens is with the democratization is people – you know, you shouldn't – you don't judge your mother politically.
01:53:26.820And, you know, we know that we all know family members, know people who won't associate with us or think we're scum because of our values and nothing we can do about that, right?
01:53:34.600Christ would say, shake the dust from your feet and move on if people won't accept you, right?
01:53:38.220But if they repent, you've still got to accept them and you still fight for them even though they oppose you.
01:53:42.540You've worked for what's the best for these degenerate people because they're your people.
01:54:00.760You know, and it's – and ironically, I mean, you know, this is something that these – a lot of the will-of-power types, they ignore that, like, even the pagan tradition says this.
01:54:10.860Even the pagan tradition says that, well, I mean, if you're like – if we look at the natural order, there's this magnanimous love that supports everything, not just what is useful, but everything, right?
01:54:21.500This general life, not just a specific mercantilist mercenary life that's beneficial to one or another.
01:54:42.280I don't know how, but somehow it relates to their Gnosticism and their idea that the ideal – well, that's what it is.
01:54:48.080They believe the ideal supersedes the physical.
01:54:50.320They believe the ideal of the great Aryan man or whatever supersedes the fact this is your sun and this is your blood.
01:54:56.320And if something is not utilitarian in their own definition, then all of a sudden it is worthless and is not deserving of any form of love or fraternal brotherhood whatsoever.
01:55:13.820And before the Gnosticism – this is just an excuse.
01:55:16.900It's for mercenary purposes because many of them, they don't really believe in these ideas.
01:55:21.200It's – they're just utility, you know, and that's what I come down to, that this – the biggest critique of the alt-right is that they're postmodern.
01:55:33.000They don't hold – many of them seriously don't hold seriously what they believe, and anything that they do hold seriously is just racial scientific determinism.
01:55:44.320You know, and so it's just – that's – you know, there's no love, I guess, is what it comes down to, and that humility and love always go hand in hand because with humility, you stop valuing yourself as the center of the universe, right?
01:56:00.180And in the center of your life, of the cosmic axis, how things actually work is placed outside of you, right?
01:56:06.820That's placed in the figure of Christ who is the center of the universe.
01:56:09.560He's the logos, the cosmic order, the word of God, right, who created heaven and earth and governs its natural laws and extends that love to all of mankind.
01:56:18.320So, like, when you watch a David Attenborough documentary and you see, you know, these beautiful things about the natural world, that's Christ, the personality of Jesus Christ who is there in the natural order.
01:57:03.980Whether you want to say that's the king, that's the father, or that's the Vulcan, Stada, or whatever the fuck German words you want to use, I don't give a damn.
01:57:10.500But still, Christ breaks into time and history in flesh and blood.
01:57:16.120And that's one of the things that totally destroys Gnosticism is that Christianity is a flesh and blood religion, that Christ is a flesh and blood man, and that this is the message of the gospel is that the flesh and blood man has become deified.
01:57:29.900It's become exalted by the grace of God.
01:58:18.320Because if you weren't, you wouldn't tolerate it, it wouldn't be a fucking question.
01:58:21.600It's just, you know, yeah, it's insane.
01:58:26.540And I mean, I think that the difficulty, the natural difficulty is also that, I mean, people are desperate, right?
01:58:31.700You know, I want to kind of put a little bit of mercy and sugar here before we get to the end, is that people are desperate, and the modern world is extremely degenerate.
01:58:40.020And it produces people who have, you know, they don't have fathers in their lives, and they come from degenerate and broken economic backgrounds, and all of their culture and their reality and their theology and their life is shaped by, you know, 4chan.
01:58:55.120I have a high level of empathy and sympathy for these type of people.
01:58:59.680I'm not trying to be some hard-handed, hard-ass who's trying to just say, you know, you're horrible, stop, seep into the cracks of history and stop existing.
01:59:10.020I understand there are other factors at play here, and as much as I may try to bring light to some of the things behind this, I understand, and I have empathy for those who were raised, you know, they have two shit-libbed parents, and they went to public school and all this stuff.
01:59:27.420I understand that, and I think that is a symptom of our broken, broken system and our broken, broken religion as well.
01:59:36.500I mean, it's a spiritual malaise that has taken over our people, and I understand that.
01:59:41.940I'm not trying to be hard-handed or overly angry at the individual people here.
01:59:47.980No, but I think that at the same time, I mean, we have to be this way with the sin.
01:59:54.860You know, if you don't, I mean, if you don't alienate sin from yourself, if you don't hate it, right, then you can never overcome it.
02:00:02.420And that's what the Christian life is about, is this is why they hate Christ and they hate his gospel.
02:00:07.560Because what his gospel says is that if you accept baptism and you put on Christ spiritually and you alienate sin from who it is as the center of your character, the core of your existence, and rather the core of your existence is Christ, and it's him who lives in you, right?
02:00:23.440That you can be in the sinful world, that you can live here where it's imperfect, where the ideal is not manifested in the real, and you can still be saved, and you can still be glorified with him at the resurrection and be seated as a judge, right, in the age to come, right?
02:00:40.660And that is the unwilling—that's what they don't—they will not accept that, right?
02:00:44.280They will not accept that because that means that people that they think are shit and that they don't like, right, can be glorified with Christ.
02:00:50.660And I understand, I mean, there's a lot of people that I hate, you know, that, you know, probably will get to heaven while I burn.
02:00:59.620You know, it's just like, that's just—that's life, you know?
02:01:02.200And I think that the only difference between a Christian and anyone else is that the Christian will not be surprised when he burns, right, because they'll know his sins.
02:01:24.300Make sure that you mention the southern states cannot redistrict without satanic Yankee approval that forces minorities to win elections in our states.
02:01:32.820Look up the congressional districts through the south.
02:01:35.700They're gerrymandered for specifically blacks and Mexicans to run unopposed.
02:01:49.440So, Arch, do you want to—with the quote I just read, do you want to come back to this?
02:01:54.360I don't know a whole lot about this, but I think that he basically just wanted to talk about, you know, the lingering effects of the occupation and reconstruction of the southern people that continue even to this day.
02:02:03.780And I think that this is just, like, a good point to talk about how, in many ways, the American Civil War is, like, the prototype of the later American and British imperial projects, which is, like, the exporting of this foreign civilizational way and militarily forcing it on other people.
02:02:50.780Okay, I'll read the quote again to you.
02:02:53.480Make sure that you mention the southern states cannot redistrict without satanic Yankee approval that forces minorities to win elections in our states.
02:02:59.900Look up congressional districts through the south.
02:03:01.900They're gerrymandered specifically for blacks and Mexicans to run unopposed.
02:03:15.060Um, as far as it gets into, like, the, um, the specifics of politics and everything, I don't follow that too much.
02:03:21.640But I do know that these districts have been gerrymandered both to our benefit and to our detriment in different times in history.
02:03:28.980But, um, yeah, I mean, once you say that everyone can vote and everyone can do everything like that, it becomes a, it becomes a weapon that can be used against us.
02:03:38.700Um, once we say, you know, blacks and Mexicans can vote, then you can gerrymander things.
02:03:44.840And that, that's, that's the, the paradox of democracy is democracy is not the will of the people, so to speak.
02:03:50.820Democracy is usually the will of the oligarchs.
02:03:52.640Um, the only difference between here and a pure oligarchy is we make people think they have a, I have a say in the matter.
02:04:00.820But, yeah, I mean, that, that, that's, that's been going on for a long time.
02:04:03.560Now, thankfully, thankfully, it's just in second rate state elections most of the time, um, where, you know, you can have a few radically liberal black and Mexican senators or state senators, state congressmen.
02:04:15.680And, thankfully, it hasn't done too much, um, to affect our overall political clout, which I think the biggest thing that's affected that is simple, simply Yankee migration, in my opinion.
02:04:25.740Now, I grew up in Polk County, Florida.
02:04:48.120They decide they want to make it back in their own image.
02:04:50.220It's, it's, it's something, I think it's, I mean, subconscious in their, and subconscious to them.
02:04:56.280They can't even escape that unless they specifically try.
02:05:00.200But I think Yankee migration is the biggest threat on stuff like that.
02:05:02.760I mean, once you let Yankees live amongst you, they will try to remake you in their own image.
02:05:07.520And, unfortunately, we're a little bit too polite on stuff like that, in my opinion.
02:05:10.940I mean, we have, even though we have a more hierarchical worldview, we're also much more just live and let live.
02:05:18.420We're not going to tell you how to live your life.
02:05:20.480So that, that's where we get into a lot of this stuff, especially in Florida, North Carolina, Northern Virginia, where these Yankees come down.
02:05:26.140And instead of, instead of fighting back, we move somewhere else, which that's what I did.
02:05:29.380That's why I live in the Ozarks now, because I got tired about, I got tired of living around Yankees.
02:05:34.020I mean, nothing, nothing brings more hate to my heart than going home for a wedding or for something else and to see how much it changes every time.
02:05:42.960You know, there's, there's a Chili's on the corner and a Walgreens on this corner and Yankee subdivisions left and right.
02:05:48.880I think that's the biggest threat we face here as far as, like, the Yankee domination over the South.
02:05:53.440Yeah, I can tell you that from kind of a multicultural perspective in my town, where I, because of the immigration policies crafted by, you know, this, the same group, basically, Canadian Yankees, I guess you could say, people with the exactly the same ideology, exactly the same worldview, the same pedigree.
02:06:12.160You know, I mean, like, week by week, month by month, I can see the demographics shifting in my town, you know, with, you know, blacks and browns and, you know, importation of these foreign cultures, the degeneration of the people, the, like, the more blue hair, you know, fat, these old ladies, right, just, just descending into nothingness, right?
02:06:35.580You can see it, right, from the top to the bottom of the society, everyone is, is growing physically weaker, physically uglier, physically more deformed, right, abnormal.
02:06:47.960There's nothing uglier than a Yankee, is there?
02:06:49.840There's supposed to be something in the blood.
02:06:51.020I mean, we talk about ethnicity, but there must be something in the blood.
02:06:54.160Well, and it's just, like, I know what you mean, and the word, I think, is it's this, like, this particular ability to express this, like, kind of Anglo-Yankee bovine female cow, just with these women.
02:07:05.860You know, I can't hold a bit anymore, and I'm surrounded by these thoughts, you know, with the yoga pants and the hair on their head, right, just with these goat eyes, these cow eyes, right?
02:07:21.900But, yeah, no, it's, I know what you mean, man.
02:07:26.080It's, well, I mean, we, I mean, whenever you, whenever we're in a union politically with the Yankee, I mean, it's never going to be to our, never going to be to our benefit.
02:07:35.340I mean, it, they took our Negroes back in the 1860s.
02:07:38.880They're taking, I mean, they decide you have to use the same water fountain in the 1960s.
02:07:42.960Now they're just gerrymandering things to where they can have as much clout as they can with the minorities.
02:07:47.860I mean, but at the same time, we have a high resilience.
02:07:51.960Even in Mississippi, the most black state in the union, we still have the battle flag in our state, in the state flag.
02:07:57.740We still have, we still have a good grasp on, on local control on that for the best, I mean, as best we can, at least.
02:08:26.220I mean, they almost have a suicidal, suicidal tendency as well, the Yankee does, where they want, where they think that the normal is bad and the other is good.
02:08:36.440And they want to, they want to put that on our own people as well.
02:08:58.540Now we're going to go into Cali Yuga News.
02:09:01.920Now, RG, I don't know if you have the notes up in front of you, but the way that we usually do this is we pick one or two stories and we read out the headlines and we kind of cover it.
02:09:09.860And so you're free to select any of the ones that I've put there.
02:09:13.400If you've got something you think is relevant to bring it up, let me know if one jumps out at you.
02:09:25.300I think that what we're going to do is we're going to do this one from Slate.com.
02:09:29.820And so this story is covering the release of a new movie called Call Me By Your Name.
02:09:38.220And this is a movie coming out of Britain and I'm going to read to you.
02:09:41.440In September, James Woods, the actor and prolific Twitter bigot, retweeted a post that said 24-year-old man, 17-year-old boy, stop.
02:09:50.260The tweet referred to Call Me By Your Name, the new adaption of a much-loved novel by Andre Eichmann about Elio, the precocious 17-year-old,
02:09:58.900has an intense romance with Oliver, a 24-year-old scholar, stealing with Elio's family of bohemian intellectuals for the summer.
02:10:12.640Basically, this Woods being Woods, he added the hashtag NAMBLA to his tweet, invoking a long-despised fringe group that the alt-right has successfully weaponized to smear anti-Trump protesters.
02:10:24.780Hammer, who is running the press rounds for the film, had a quick response on Twitter.
02:10:28.600Anyway, it's just it's like the movie basically is about like this Jewish relationship between like this older Jew and a Catanite, right?
02:10:44.140And what's important is not the semantics or whatever around it.
02:10:50.200What's important is to highlight the cultural warfare aspect of this, right?
02:10:55.040I mean with the – I remember right in 2006 and 2007 when the internet atheism was really getting big and you had the highest onslaught against like the Slippery Slope meme.
02:11:10.320Well, it's like, okay, here we are in the future, right?
02:11:12.560And, you know, they have gay Jewish Catanite romances, right, as a mainstream like award-winning, premiering at, you know, different artistic film festivals movie.
02:11:27.620And it's like there's almost – like there's – it's kind of difficult like because you – like what do you – you know, what are you supposed to say to this in terms of like the essence of the film?
02:11:36.020And it's degenerate from top to bottom.
02:11:38.460The fascinating thing, right, is that this is like – this is a common thing to discuss in bourgeois like leftist – you know, I guess you could say Yankee, but cosmopolitan circles.
02:11:49.620That the level of discourse is just that – is total depravity.
02:12:23.980It is totally depraved, to use the theological term.
02:12:28.220I mean, that's the world we're living in right now when – I mean, a 24-year-old man, a 17-year-old – there are just so many aspects at play here that cannot be described as anything other than totally depraved.
02:12:42.260You know, and I think that the disgust that you highlight is critical.
02:12:45.300I was on a certain Exodus Americana stream last night discussing something, and basically I was saying that, well, disgust is the opposite of beauty, right?
02:12:53.980And so disgust is triggered when we see something that's not beautiful, that's not in accord with the cosmic harmony, which is Christ, basically.
02:13:02.780And so people with a strong sense of beauty also have a strong sense of disgust.
02:13:07.140And so we can have physical disgust, of course, for things that are not in accord with physical beauty, but also spiritual disgust, right?
02:13:12.760For things that are not in accord with the spiritual order, right?
02:13:15.560And so people that, like, lack this disgust for spiritually ugly things, that's because they're dead, right?
02:13:23.540And that's the thing, I mean, is that early Christian teaching, you know, the church fathers teach, you know, that it's the spirit of God which quickens a man metaphysically, right?
02:13:34.160And without the spirit of God abiding within him, he can lose his soul as he walks around on the earth.
02:13:39.600And that when he dies, he's already living in hell.
02:13:42.640That's just a formality of the separation of his soul from his body.
02:13:46.880And so that's the thing, is that these people who have become this depraved, I mean, they are, you know, they're already in hell.
02:13:56.200And that's why we're seeing this manifested around us, because that's the spirit within which they live.
02:14:02.640And so this is the thing, is, like, I mean, you know, the problem is, I mean, kind of bringing it back to our anti-Yankee, anti-alt-right thing, I mean, is that this, there's, many people in the alt-right know better.
02:14:12.940They don't have a fucking, they don't have any sense of the disgust at, you know, abortion or the euthanization of, you know, elderly and the disabled and so on, right?
02:14:23.500There's not basic categories of sacredness or moral justice.
02:14:32.060And usually these ends up being just funny memes for the alt-right, too, and they don't have that same level of intense moral disgust on this.
02:14:39.080There's so many things that play on this as I'm reading this story.
02:14:42.780But first of all, these people, Slate is acting like it's, you know, it's so horrible that, you know, this is going to add to, you know, the relationship between homosexuality and molestation and stuff like that.
02:14:58.580And at the same time, you can kind of see, that's the one thing that gives you a little bit of hope, is you can kind of see, even in the most depraved, deranged aspects of society, there's still something left, something left of the order that God placed on us that people can't leave.
02:15:12.320You're looking at this, I thought that was a woman.
02:15:47.660And that's – the book of Job is all about this.
02:15:49.520This is why even the devil himself, he can't do anything without the permission of God, right?
02:15:54.160Because the very structures of the universe, the existence itself is something that comes from God, right?
02:16:01.180And so that leftists, no matter what they do, they can't escape from the classical, the eternal worldview that Christianity offers because that is reality, right?
02:16:14.220And that is the foundation and the predicate of their whole social order.
02:16:29.900But I mean it kind of gets into the philosophical question.
02:16:33.920It's just mostly about repentance at the end of the day.
02:16:36.140There's not really much more to say about this because it's like – I mean you can get –
02:16:44.500What you said about wickedness and sin being a distortion and destruction of the good, and also it's – like you said, sodomy is – it's a complete reversal of the good.
02:16:57.740But it takes sexual relations, which are created by God to create life, and they create death, not only by not procreating children but also by causing things like AIDS and STDs and things like that.
02:17:10.640But it's almost like they take the book that God gave them.
02:17:14.840They take the rules that God gave them.
02:17:16.440They try their best to flip it on their head, but they're still condemned in the end.
02:17:21.460I mean they are still condemned in the end by the – they play by God's rules even when they try to distort them, and they're going to be punished for that in the end.
02:17:32.340But that's the thing is that what we've seen is that these people make that distortion of the rules of God.
02:17:38.920That's their – the foundation of their character.
02:17:42.080Their life is built upon rebellion against God, and that's why these people will die because they've chosen death.
02:17:48.740That is who their personality is, right?
02:17:51.000And that's what a demon is essentially.
02:17:52.920It's an angelic mind, a bodiless mind that has chosen death, that has chosen rebellion against God as the foundation of its existence.
02:18:01.620One of the things that's funny, once again, I mean the sinful mind, it is schizophrenic in a way.
02:18:07.060But one of these big – one of the highlights I have on this, it says the age of consent laws are not a universal red line that automatically makes a relationship predatory or not.
02:18:16.320But these are the same people who were taking alleged stories about Roy Moore from back in the day about dating a 16-year-old and saying that's predatory, even though one of them is much more in line with moral Christian sexuality than two faggots, a 24-year-old and a 17-year-old engaging in illicit relationships.
02:18:38.880They – it's almost comical when you see the level of – I mean hypocrisy over years, but the level of schizophrenia with the left, and that's why it comes down to – it's not about these little legal jargons.
02:18:53.860It's not about legalism or Talmudism or whatever word you want to use it.
02:18:57.240It's a moral issue of right and wrong.
02:18:59.440They hate what is good, and they love what is evil.