Our dear friend Posty is out doing a social experiment and checking out Somewhere Hot, so we have a guest co-hosted by Eddy, a talented editor and comedian, to talk about white power and comedy, and the role of comedy within the white power movement.
00:00:00.000If we can send the Sun Applied a co-host, that would be amazing.
00:00:03.940Tonight, our dear friend Posty is out doing a social experiment and, you know, checking out Somewhere Hot because Canada has been anything but hot.
00:01:11.520Yeah, for those of you who might not know who I am, I kind of got in with a Diagalon crew about like five years ago or so, before they were even Diagalon.
00:01:21.480And I got in through it through making like the political comedy, like taking down the social justice warriors and going all the way down that rabbit hole into becoming pro-white.
00:01:33.640And I kind of got in with them and started making comedy sketches and even like up to full length comedy movies that involve like conspiracy theories and elements of nationalism.
00:01:48.100And fast forward to the present, I know Maiden actually introduced me on one of the shows that we did for the Road Rage Terror Tour.
00:01:59.480So she introduced me for my comedy racist PowerPoint presentation in front of 500 people in a city near Hamilton, Ontario.
00:03:01.820Like, kind of, I know you did it at the Diaglon show, but this is something that you've dabbled in and worked in.
00:03:09.540And I know that your development as a comedian has changed significantly.
00:03:14.420You know, maybe you can talk to us about how you started.
00:03:18.080Well, I'd say that I'm more of a recovering comedian.
00:03:21.820Because I think that stand-up comedian, stand-up comedy in general, being the lowest common denominator for, like, a group of random people,
00:03:30.300I've found that I don't necessarily relate to the masses.
00:03:34.900And you could go the route of Sam Hyde and shock and offend the audience with ideas that offend them and they can't really comprehend because they're too red-pilled.
00:03:46.000But, yeah, I would say that I started off with comedy, like, making videos, going to school for film studies and whatnot.
00:03:56.140And I got into the local stand-up scene and I was doing open mics for about four or five years and doing, like, local pro amateur shows and stuff like that.
00:04:06.380And I went around filming comedians for a couple years as my full-time job.
00:04:11.740So, I have a bit of experience, like, watching lots of different levels of comedy.
00:04:17.660And that helped shape kind of what I did and don't like going into it.
00:04:24.620Well, like, okay, so something I noticed when I saw you do your performance live, there was a way that you build tension by awkwardness.
00:04:36.620And it's kind of this thing where everybody's on the edge of their seat, like, what's he going to say?
00:04:42.080And you do pop the balloon or, you know, pull the chair.
00:04:44.760But your tension is in kind of, like, this nervousness and it makes the audience nervous.
00:04:52.900Is that, like, a strategy for building tension?
00:04:57.120Well, yeah, comedy is just trickery, right?
00:05:00.360Like, you're just putting a twist on a situation, like, changing people's expectations.
00:05:05.840And I guess the more clever you do it, the better it gets that response.
00:05:16.860And to think, like, we did that show in, what, July of 2024?
00:05:22.700And how far along, like, the racisms have come, you know?
00:05:27.400Even in, you know, say, a Diaglon audience that's pretty red-pilled, that, you know, they were already getting, like, white consciousness going on.
00:05:35.660But some of your jokes, and I don't remember if you dropped a nigger in there, but you probably came close and you could see everybody was like, oh, my God, how far is he going to go?
00:05:46.320And now we are six months later and, you know, even longer, eight months later, and there's been Shiloh Hendrix and there's Kanye West now.
00:05:55.420And, like, the racism gauge is, like, moving into the red big time.
00:07:09.560Can you, what was with the, didn't they have, like, an opening act, which was, like, the street shitter hockey player or something like this?
00:07:26.540Like, what did he, what was he called?
00:07:27.820Something like street shitter hockey or something?
00:07:30.100Uh, yeah, their opener was a real Canadian, and he was wearing a jersey that said the Brampton Street Shitters.
00:07:38.320He was, he was rolling around the whole venue wearing the rollerblades with two wheels on each side of each boot.
00:07:45.340And holding his hockey stick upside down, wearing a turban, full brown body paint.
00:07:50.500That is not something I would have expected to see even, like, a couple years ago.
00:07:54.520But I think especially someone like Sam Hyde has kind of pushed the door open and made, you know, talking about these things and joking about them more acceptable.
00:08:03.720And the fact that it was in a room full of, like, hundreds of people, and they managed to get away with booking the venue, and nothing happened with that.
00:08:11.100Like, I remember doing the Rage Tour shows, like, the amount of decoy venues that we needed to do, and things in order to hide the venue so that Antifa and other people wouldn't cancel it.
00:08:36.520Steve, I see your hand up, but jump in, friend.
00:08:38.300I just wanted to say, I can't complain about Del Ginger being co-opted, because he took what I was doing in the URL and brought it to the RRL, so I'm all for it.
00:09:31.880It's our immune system flaring up, I think.
00:09:36.680Yeah, well, there was no shortage of Jeet fatigue at the Sam Hyde shows.
00:09:40.580I think, like, half of Sam's act was just a long-winded joke about waking up as Indian, just with, like, a 10, 20-minute long buildup.
00:09:51.000I don't want to give away any more of it, but, yeah, it was pretty good.
00:09:56.740And maybe that's kind of, yeah, you know, First Amendment freedom, and, you know, like, it's good that we're so close to the states,
00:10:04.400because they can, you know, keep that in check so that we, I don't know if Sam Hyde would be able to pull something like that off in the UK, you know,
00:10:13.980and make fun of Muslims or, you know, even make fun of the Indians in the UK, like, the oppression is real over there.
00:10:23.940I would imagine he would have been charged after the first weekend of shows.
00:10:27.980If he was doing it in the UK, in Canada, he would have been canceled.
00:10:32.060Because, like, just for example, there's this group called the Danger Cats that are, like, the media is basically chasing them around in Antifa and Native groups,
00:10:45.220trying to get them canceled from any show that they're doing, pretty much.
00:10:49.360And it's been going on for about a year and a half.
00:11:29.040Something to the strength of the Danger Cats is they've actually were able to, I guess,
00:11:36.280because they weren't always so racial or teetering this line that they've now been pushing.
00:11:44.200And one of the members, you know, was on Just for Laughs at one point.
00:11:50.120They've already established themselves.
00:11:52.200And I do know for a fact, like, there's certain venues that they've had that have gotten canceled and they have had to, you know,
00:11:59.740book a secret venue and then email the ticket holders, like, 12 or 24 hours in advance of the show to let them know about the venue change and where it is.
00:12:11.540But they also they've ingratiated themselves enough to some of the more established venues that those venues are not going to drop them because they know that their tickets sell.
00:12:23.340They know that an audience is going to show up and buy drinks and that it's going to be profitable for those venue owners.
00:12:29.080So kudos to the Danger Cats for the way that they've gone about it.
00:12:33.900And I'm happy to see how they've grown over the years.
00:12:38.580Yeah, it's definitely no laughing matter for them to have to go through all of that, especially considering they're not even like pushing white nationalism or anything.
00:12:50.680And they're still getting that treatment, but they're doing good with what they're dealt with there for sure.
00:12:59.640I've seen their show and like, I think that they're really turning into masters of their craft, right?
00:13:06.460How even it's three guys and they, you know, have their opening guy and he's pretty shocking and he warms up the crowd and and then there's Sam, of course.
00:13:18.980And, you know, he does this whole like, you know, 1980s rock star, you know, alcoholic character, really, really funny.
00:13:29.040And, and then there's Brandon, which is uncle, uncle, uncle hack, and he's a closer and he's fantastic.
00:13:37.820Like they really have a clean, decent, funny, edgy act, and it's worth catching.
00:13:46.000And, you know, buying the odd t-shirt there, they're definitely worth supporting because they're not even as daring as anything you would hear on white excellence, right?
00:13:55.320Maybe they're a little bit, but everybody has to put their phones away.
00:13:59.040Yeah, they're somehow the edgiest, like full-time comedians in Canada at the moment, I would say.
00:14:08.960Maybe Ben Bankus is a little bit up there, but I feel like he has more institutional backing for maybe one reason or another.
00:14:21.880Oh, Ben, Ben's getting big. Ben is getting big.
00:14:26.100He's, yeah, he definitely has institutional support.
00:14:32.440He was kind of, he's kind of funny, but, you know, he tours with a bunch of, you know, Middle Eastern guys.
00:14:37.160It's, I've, I've seen him live too, and it's like, meh, you know.
00:14:40.860And definitely the brown guys were all about, you know, white jokes and they were, it was low-hanging fruit and really lame.
00:14:49.340So, I, you know, I know some people love Ben Bankus, but I think his, Olivia Chow, Mayor of Toronto Voices, you know, his strong game.
00:15:00.060And Teresa Tam was strong game during COVID.
00:15:03.160I was grateful for his work during COVID.
00:15:05.800I couldn't believe he didn't get cancelled during COVID for his, you know, racist Instagram posts.
00:15:13.240He was getting, he was getting hounded by all the Asians, especially on TikTok.
00:15:17.580Like, they would get hundreds of them to go and email and, like, call blast the different venues that he would get booked at.
00:15:25.220And he had to have, like, a few, like, main venues who wouldn't cuck to it when they would do that.
00:15:29.640But he came out on the other end of that.
00:15:32.660And I think for the most part, if you just pull through, as long as you're not going all out with, you know, naming the Jew and stuff in your act, I think you could probably pull through on the other side if you persevere enough.
00:15:52.500Yeah, well, I haven't seen Ben Bankus live.
00:15:55.120I have had the privilege of seeing the Danger Cats on a couple of occasions.
00:15:59.720And they are smart for making everyone put their phones in Faraday bags because I'm sure if some of the footage of their act got out to the internet, they'd probably have a lot more heat put on them.
00:16:12.200But I will say they are very funny guys.
00:16:14.360All three of them are quite good at their craft.
00:16:18.140And they deserve all the ticket sales that they get.
00:16:23.500And I think that's really, whether it's Ben Bankus or Danger Cats, part of how you survive this cancel culture is having that demand and being able to show receipts to the venue.
00:16:35.000Like, this is how many people are buying tickets.
00:16:38.120This is how many butts you're going to have in the seats.
00:16:40.940And you can do the math on how many drinks you'll sell from there.
00:16:44.260So that is sort of the insulation to the attempts to cancel.
00:16:48.620I also think it's interesting to be a racist comedian in this climate.
00:16:59.440I think it would be a lot harder to start from the bottom up, like going to open mics and going through the ringer with all of that and building your way up.
00:17:08.140Because they would just stomp on you and cancel you, and you would be blacklisted very early on.
00:17:15.060I would say it's probably better to get a huge following online first, like a cult following, kind of like what Diagon did with the Rage Tour.
00:17:24.700And then you're able to sell out shows like that, and people will come to you, and you'll have your fans already coming to you.
00:17:29.880Where if it's just like you're getting random people or you're subjecting people at some random bar to your jokes, it becomes more like Sam Hyde in his early days when he would post his stand-up clips.
00:17:41.600Where he's just walking half the fucking audience or, you know, doing something crazy that ironically built up his online audience, even though everyone in the actual audience there seemed to hate it.
00:17:53.480Like him reading out pages and pages of facts about gay people and dropping faggot slurs and whatnot and, you know, just clearing out a whole room.
00:18:07.140Stuff like that went really viral online and gave him a cult following, but not the best way if you're trying to, like, get in with other venues and whatnot.
00:18:18.960You've been tracking him for a long time.
00:18:20.620I didn't study it, but his Dear Elon letter I found really profound, and though I wasn't really tracking his career intensely, perhaps like you were, I did kind of see that this was like a culmination of the mastery of his craft.
00:18:40.940Because he was so good, because he was so good and so gross, like, you know, he'd spit and, like, he'd just spit in random places, like, blow his nose.
00:18:50.780He was kind of gross, but he was, you know, really poignant in what he had to say to Elon and touching on those H-1B workers.
00:18:59.460Well, I'm glad he came back to comment on, like, political matters, because just, I guess I'm the Sam Hyde historian of this space right now.
00:19:10.320But back in 2016, he got a show on Adult Swim, which is part of, like, Cartoon Network, and the show was called Million Dollar Extreme World Peace.
00:19:22.400And he was taking it pretty far online at the same time his show was getting, like, really good ratings on the network and getting pretty popular.
00:19:29.700They only released six episodes of the first season, and, yeah, he was going hard, even making some, like, white nationalist posts.
00:19:39.140And then eventually the Jewish, like, BuzzFeed reporters, they all had some big stories and scoops on him.
00:19:48.180They got, they, like, a bunch of Jews staged, like, a coop at Cartoon Network and said they were going to quit if they don't cancel the show.
00:19:57.000So that kind of fucked his shit up for a while.
00:20:01.200One of the guys in his troop left, and I think he kind of chilled out with the political messaging for a bit.
00:20:07.920And he got a lot more popular with the mainstream crowds and got, like, a big following on YouTube after getting banned.
00:20:15.960And then he became, like, a comedic boxer at all these influencer boxing matches.
00:20:23.740And now he's back to commenting on political matters with, like, a new authority from all these different audiences that he's brought together.
00:21:59.460And, yeah, like, so here we are, you know, is this a weird time to be alive or is this a weird time, you know?
00:22:08.420I mean, it might be a great time to be alive because all this shit has been happening.
00:22:15.100I, first of all, you know, some of you guys may know this, but I'm pretty new to race consciousness.
00:22:20.820Like, the last two years, I want to say.
00:22:24.780But, you know, once you wake up and you look at all the evidence that you've been ignoring or you've been brainwashed about what it means, you realize we've been fucked for a long time.
00:22:37.020And, you know, there were a lot of people who were in this movement that were awake that whole time.
00:22:46.980And it must have been really difficult to see.
00:24:13.960It was pretty, you know, getting canceled, like, any time that I was working with a club, even though I, it's not like I went in, it wasn't.
00:24:29.360And I warned those and what they were going to hear.
00:24:32.060And they were like, no, we don't believe in cancel culture.
00:24:35.600And then, yeah, just enough of the right kind of complaints.
00:24:38.900And suddenly they're full-on believers of cancel culture.
00:24:45.900When we were booking the tour for Diagon, we had to have, like, two venues a lot of the time.
00:24:53.400Or our venues needed to be secret and only ticket holders could get the address, like, three hours before the event to just decrease the chances of an attack.
00:25:05.260I don't know if it's that bad for you.
00:25:13.620You know, I've got an AI system that runs on them to see if they've got any kind of liberal signs in their background.
00:25:21.160And if they do, their ticket gets canceled.
00:25:25.380And they only get the location that's right, like, a few hours before.
00:25:31.460So, yeah, I'm having to do the same thing.
00:25:33.240And it gets a little frustrating, you know, because some of the people, like, even though you tell them this, they're like, where's the location?
00:25:38.660And I'm like, all right, you guys know exactly what the issue is.
00:25:42.560And it says right on there you're going to get the location the day of.
00:27:10.720For a little while, I think, you know, I think we do need to start turning the tide on them.
00:27:20.280They can't be allowed to, like, you know, abuse us like this because it's abuse.
00:27:26.560It's communists running shit, you know, running on their moral high ground because they have a whole, you know, Jewish Marxist system that tells them that they're morally superior.
00:27:40.020And this is their way of kind of developing some sense of self-worth because, you know, they're pieces of shit and they don't really do anything and they know that.
00:27:51.640And so they need this sort of proxy value system to give them a sense of moral superiority.
00:28:21.880So there were people who came before us.
00:28:24.060I think now being pro-white is, you know, easier than it even was a year ago, never mind 30 years ago.
00:28:32.660And, like, we're, you know, just seeing how the media, like, the anti-white hatred, case in point.
00:28:40.020Was we brought over 50 white South Africans to America to get away from, you know, murder, rape, extortion, and, you know, backwards, like, everything's backwards now in South Africa.
00:29:02.540The more they do this, the more normies that are woken up.
00:29:06.920That's what's going to happen, you know, because on the other side, what you basically have is weak men, right?
00:29:17.260These sort of feminist boys trying to get tail by pretending to be part of, pretending to be allies.
00:29:24.960And stupid chicks, a lot of stupid chicks who mostly are pretty dysgenic looking, you know, they're, like, I want to, they're not even mids.
00:29:35.340And this is their social credit, you know.
00:29:39.080So you generally just have, like, weak people on the other side.
00:29:41.900And then, of course, you have the minorities who, it's just, you got to, like, you know, look, man, they're not figuring out how to organize themselves in this way.
00:29:52.700They can't figure out how to overturn a government system like they did in South Africa on their side.
00:29:59.480And so that's when you start going, all right, if you guys didn't figure out how to get running water, there's no way that you figured out on your own how to overthrow a European government system.
00:30:22.400And there's a long history of it, too, in South Africa.
00:30:26.640It's something that people don't really want to talk about with Arania, but there's a lot of Jewish influence with Arania, which is being sold as this white wonderland.
00:30:36.620But it's really landlocked and, you know, easily surrounded.
00:30:40.900And it doesn't have access to waterways.
00:30:45.260And yet they still, by the way, they still made it into a prospering society, which should show you, it's like, you know, the thing they always try to say, there was this guy talking about it, this Jew, of course, talking about it on some news program.
00:31:01.420I forgot what it was, I just did a video on it yesterday, where he's saying the South Africans took all the good arable land from the blacks, and that's why the blacks are poor.
00:31:12.620So the Iranians were really like, all right, we're going to go to this fucking totally desert land that has nothing going for it, and we're going to turn it into a prospering society.
00:31:26.160So you'll see them come back around with, this is our land, and you took the best things, and it's like, you know, what I think would be fucking wonderful is for all the South Africans, the white South Africans,
00:31:41.520Americans to set fire to their farms and their homes, and leave, leave, go to the European countries around the world that are being flooded by migrants, they should be accepted by every single European country,
00:31:57.320and kick out all the migrants, and be like, here you go, you can have all of this, you know what, don't even set fire to it, because then they're going to say you ruined it, don't even set fire to it, leave it as is, okay, just leave.
00:32:09.660And then, let's go ahead and talk and see, and then, you know, it won't matter, because what they'll come back and say is, yeah, but this is, of course, after you exploited us for so-and-so years, how did you expect us to rise up?
00:32:21.240So they've always got an excuse, but the satisfaction is they're all going to starve to death, and that's going to be fabulous.
00:32:28.060Well, like, and I guess, you know, there's an argument, because, you know, we look in Canada, right, and we're being, like, invaded and surrounded by Indians, which is one of the most more, like,
00:32:39.100it's horrible, it's fucking horrible, it's a fucking nightmare, and so, you know, we're wondering, like, well, what's that supposed to mean, like, you know, for us, well, we're getting drowned in Indians,
00:32:49.720and so we're all going to go to Thunder Bay, and we're all going to move in and turn Thunder Bay into a bustling city?
00:32:56.540There's, like, a territorial imperative, like, we can't, like, they've been there 500 years, like, the white Dutchman.
00:33:02.680Yeah, no, no, I mean, they're not going to leave, and nor do I think they should have to.
00:33:36.000And, you know, apartheid was the worst possible thing in the world, and they were the most evil people when they knew, like, just build a wall.
00:34:39.760And to give a Canadian example, they were so easily exploited because they hated each other.
00:34:45.320The French allied with the Algonquin and Huron, who despised the Iroquois, and the British allied with the Iroquois, who despised the Algonquin and the Huron.
00:34:55.520And when the French and the British were fighting each other here in Canada, like those feather tribes were fighting alongside each corresponding army.
00:35:05.960So they hated each other so much, they were going to fight with the white men.
00:36:58.360You know, the problem is white people have a tremendous sense of empathy and compassion and rationality.
00:37:05.660And, unfortunately, not enough awareness of the reality of evil and psychopathy.
00:37:11.620And so these people do these things, and white people try to understand it from their own point of view.
00:37:16.960Like, you try to have a rational understanding, and you negate the possibility that the goal is to genocide you because it's not your goal for people.
00:37:32.740And so when you do that, you end up with tons of confusion.
00:37:35.780You can't make sense of it because it doesn't make sense without that key missing element that says these people are evil and they're trying to genocide your whole population.
00:37:43.860I would call it, Leonarda, suicidal altruism.
00:37:49.940There is for sure a suicidal altruism.
00:37:52.560There is also, I just think, a complete refusal to acknowledge the existence and reality of evil within other conscious groups because, well, other, you know, human groups.
00:38:06.480Because we need to believe that they can be made like us because the alternative of realizing that they can't necessitates what would be considered a completely racist policy of self-governance.
00:38:22.480And, like, the European mind can't handle that because, you know, we want to believe in the equality of all human beings.
00:38:28.600So it's not going to ā that's why you can't factor this in, right?
00:38:33.880But once you do, you say, okay, let's just suspend that for a second and let's assume that there is an existence of evil and that what you're seeing are people whose consciousness is tapped into that existence of evil and are operating from that paradigm.
00:38:53.580You go, yeah, if somebody was trying to kill a stronger group and a more intelligent group, they would need a war on all fronts and specifically a psychological war where any attempt to call out the violence that is being perpetuated on them results in them being called, you know, evil.
00:39:18.180And so once you factor that in, you go, oh, yeah, this all makes sense.
00:39:21.880Yeah, no, of course, if we organize, they're going to call us evil because to them we are because we're ruining their plans.
00:39:28.540If I call out the behavior, yeah, they're going to call me racist because that's the only tactic they have to handcuff me by doing attack as opposed to addressing the very valid claim that my people have a right to existence.
00:39:58.140So thank you for beating me to the punch.
00:40:00.840I was just going to say, you know, this isn't something that was always true about Europeans, although we've always been more empathetic and altruistic than other races.
00:40:10.860We used to have a lot more of a racial consciousness and a sense of tribalism.
00:40:16.580And it has been something that has been undermined and subverted on several fronts through the media, through our institutions, such as colleges, even governments.
00:40:27.220So it is a it is something that we have to push back against now.
00:40:32.940And it's it's more difficult to do after 100 plus years of it than it is if people had started to push back more vociferously from the get go.
00:40:44.580Because I think about the South, both pre and post civil war, and there is much more of an identity.
00:40:50.440There is much more of a sense of racial consciousness amongst whites in Southern America than exists today, even in that same region of America.
00:41:00.280Well, you know, I do wonder whether what what we've been told is true.
00:41:10.760I wonder if the whites did not push back.
00:41:14.040I did I have read some historical documents, you know, like newspaper op eds and responses that reveal a awareness of racial consciousness, but also reveal this.
00:41:31.800What do we call it enlightenment psychology being in people as early as the 1900s, where, you know, we were told on the one hand, we were told that, you know, whites in the South were so belligerently racist that they were just going out and lynching random black men for whatever they, you know, whatever cause, you know.
00:41:57.540And then you go read some of these primary source documents from random white people, and you see a desire to evaluate black people on an individual basis on their individual actions, and that what you saw happening was just punishments for crimes.
00:42:16.620And the reason that that's called racism is because the black population has been told that they have nothing to be accountable for, no matter what they do to white people, it's perfectly okay because of slavery.
00:42:35.200And that's why you see this reaction to the white South African refugees coming in, and you hear them say it, they say it out loud, they deserve punishment for the quote unquote sins of their ancestors of apartheid.
00:42:49.940So you have a dual thing where black people are not responsible for anything, even the things they do, and if you notice a pattern in their behavior and then want to have a stereotype about them as a group, you're a horrible person because you shouldn't evaluate them individually, but white people should be evaluated not just on the basis of the actions of their people now, but on the actions of their people historically too.
00:43:16.380And again, this makes sense if you realize that this ideology is being created by a group of people who hate you and want you dead and want to handicap you from any ability to fight back and stop their agenda.
00:43:31.220Well, and somehow we get attributed as sinful for actions that weren't even of our ancestors.
00:43:40.360I allude to the 92% of slave ships that were owned by Jews and 78% of slave owners in America at the height of slavery were Jews.
00:43:48.880So just the only really attribution you can make to Europeans is that we permitted it to occur within our society, but by and large, it was not our ancestors who were the slave owners who were driving that slave trade.
00:44:02.620In fact, it was our ancestors who were the first that put a stop to it.
00:44:06.720Sure, but again, the ideology is created by the very people who ran the slave ships.
00:44:12.300So they're going to, it's diabolically evil, right?
00:44:16.400Because they know they're guilty of it and they know that if the people, if the black people knew, they would have a fury and rage towards them.
00:44:26.560And not only do they want to offload whatever fury and rage they would rightfully have towards them, but they also want to stoke it higher, you know?
00:44:35.380And you go, well, that is so diabolically evil.
00:44:37.600You have to realize you are fighting evil when you're dealing with these people.
00:44:42.300Well, something I wanted to add, you guys brought up the South and it's a factoid.
00:44:50.200More white people have been lynched in United States history than any black person has ever been lynched, you know?
00:44:56.940So they use these false narratives in order to create this pity party for a racial demographic that really doesn't need it, right?
00:45:07.860It's like what you said, Leonardo, it is diabolical.
00:45:27.900And it's unfortunate that a lot of us have fallen for it.
00:45:32.100But I think what we're witnessing, at the very least on an internet level, is that we're kind of fed up and we're tired, right?
00:45:40.000This Shiloh Hendricks thing that came around was a great way of all of us sticking together, you know, collectivizing as a tribe of white people.
00:45:49.340And sometimes even other races we're participating in and just saying, you know, we're fed up with this.
00:46:01.480But I think we're starting to witness a shift.
00:46:09.060And people like you, racist comedians, you offer a platform for people to kind of be unashamed of who they are, despite you guys being forward-facing and kind of hitting a lot of flack for it.
00:46:25.520And, you know, I'm not a ā I don't run from people being like they're racist because most of the time they're just trying to use it to be ā they're disingenuous and they're trying to handcuff you.
00:46:38.120And so I don't react to that like, oh, my God, I'm not because I know what their point is, you know.
00:46:45.820But they're ā first of all, they're going to shift their understanding of racism to be whatever they need it to be in that situation.
00:46:52.260But my understanding of racism is a sort of irrational hatred of a group of people just because you don't like the color of their skin.
00:47:06.660And I can say with absolute confidence that I don't have that.
00:47:09.920Now, some people do, and they may feel totally justified in it because of, you know, all they're seeing and being targeted.
00:47:16.780I'm not here to campaign against that.
00:47:18.960There's enough of that shit happening that I'm not going to go there.
00:47:22.720But I have absolutely no problem saying, yeah, I don't have a completely irrational and bigoted hatred.
00:47:30.140And, in fact, you know, even though I get angry at these things and I talk about it openly, I do actually work to not be consumed by hatred because it is poisonous.
00:47:40.640You know, it does actually toxify your body, I believe, you know, to be that way.
00:47:48.200And I also have the experience of knowing different members of different races who aren't that, right?
00:47:58.080And this is the thing with white people, right?
00:48:00.560We do have the ability to evaluate people on an individual basis.
00:48:04.920Nevertheless, just because I have that does not mean that I'm going to then say, okay, well, I have this experience of some good black people and some good, believe it or not, Indian people and Hispanic people or whatever.
00:48:22.680So that does not mean that now I'm not going to speak to the trends that I'm seeing in these groups and the fact that these groups want to kill us and that I'm going to modify my language, you know, to make that acceptable to you.
00:49:30.800I was just going to say, the thread that Leonardo is getting on here is the inability to converse in abstracts.
00:49:40.180And it's a symbol, or sorry, a sign of midwittery or bad faith actors.
00:49:47.380So the way I like to explain this to people is if I say, you know, human beings have five digits on each hand and somebody goes, well, that's not true.
00:49:58.860I know somebody who has four digits on one hand.
00:50:04.800What that does is it takes the conversation away from something productive where we can all find consensus on what is the truth and turns it into something where we're just going to go off into endless tangents about what it is.
00:50:22.940When you notice these patterns and you bring it up and you say, well, look, blacks are clearly disproportionately doing these, you know, gang beatdowns of white kids.
00:50:36.060What they're trying to do is either one, they're either one, an idiot that can't think in abstracts, you know, that all they can understand is their own personal experience.
00:50:45.680Or two, they're a bad faith actor who wants you to ignore something that is very real and very observable because it's not conducive to their politics.
00:50:56.080And so this is the way we have to convey this.
00:50:58.060Every time somebody tries to do this where they're like, well, I know a good one.
00:51:03.620The point is this pattern is real and we can't constructively address this problem until we can admit that it's real.
00:51:11.200And so that's why they do what they do.
00:51:12.980As long as they can keep you doing this, these linguistic games and arguing like that over, as White Reich said, outliers, then we're never going to advance the conversation and we're never going to be able to address these problems.
00:51:28.640Leonardo, you might have to unmute, dear.
00:51:55.020And that's a great point, you know, the way you said it, that it's like they need to uphold their personal politics.
00:52:03.500That makes them feel like, oh, look, I'm one of the good white people.
00:52:07.620I can evaluate people individually, you know, and that's and it's really just very selfish.
00:52:13.160And it's about people not being able to.
00:52:17.400Not being able to tolerate the negative feelings of when the society says you're this bad thing.
00:52:23.820Well, what I've been able to witness, Leonardo, is that people are willing to sell their best interest downriver in order to virtue signal.
00:53:00.440And it is midwittery and it's cowardice.
00:53:04.100Honestly, that's that's the thing that I'm really seeing more than anything is that you can't have any other moral virtues if you don't have courage.
00:53:17.340This is also the same kind of conversation applies like you.
00:53:22.180You would inherently understand this is like comedy.
00:53:24.960Like the reason racist jokes are funny is because there's truth to it.
00:53:28.980And there's always like you make a joke and there's some like imagine some butthurt faggot in the audience being like, well, that's not true.
00:53:36.920I know a Chinese guy who doesn't eat dogs.
00:53:42.360Yeah, I don't have to I don't have to imagine it.
00:53:45.240I experience it pretty consistently, you know, but you're but you're you're totally right.
00:53:50.820It's like the jokes wouldn't that that's actually what bothers them so much.
00:53:54.020That's why they like you see if something wasn't true, they could just let you say it and it would fall on its own because it's not true.
00:54:02.980But they need to shut it down because if something is true, then it has legs and they don't want people openly speaking these truths because it raises consciousness that they don't want to happen.
00:54:16.140And so then they have to shut it down as their only defense mechanism.
00:54:22.400They also frame it as punching down when you make fun of like black people for stealing bikes or something.
00:54:30.860But like, I think that black person is punching down on the little white kid when he steals the bike.
00:54:59.560Let's go look at every great comedian, every great joke.
00:55:03.440Well, and I think the irony of the term punching down, what it really does is it twists truth and reality, right?
00:55:19.540The fact of the matter is, is that white people are around 7 to 10 percent of the world population.
00:55:25.360We are the minority, internationally speaking.
00:55:28.640So the fact that these people, they come to our countries and they claim this quote unquote minority status as a means to browbeat us in our homelands, to placate to whatever, you know, their sensibilities.
00:55:46.920We'll just say their sensibilities, whatever it is, you know, gives me this, gives me that.
00:55:53.140You're a colonizer, et cetera, et cetera.
00:55:55.960It disregards the facts at hand, right?
00:56:00.660And the fact at hand is that white people are losing their homelands fast, bringing back the concept of suicidal altruism, where if we don't put our foot down, we will become extinct.
00:56:14.660And it almost seems like we're willing to help every other out group except ourselves.
00:56:22.220And the way that they've been tricking us to do that is through these tactics that you've been talking about, Leonardo.
00:56:28.260Yeah, it's through the tactics of creating a guilt, shame of yourself, a desire to prove yourself as being one of the good ones by helping other people look at how much empathy and compassion I have and the poor downtrodden souls.
00:56:43.180But even the concept of punching down just reveals their racism.
00:56:45.900It's like, okay, so you are admitting they're below us then, right?
00:56:51.700You know, that's the thing that shows you that, you know?
00:56:55.180And this thing about courage, you know, comedians, you guys just really should not have any fucking respect for comedians, for actors, for entertainers on any level.
00:57:08.040They are the weakest of the week, they are the most morally corrupt, cowardice is rampant amongst comedians.
00:57:19.500Now, maybe it was always this way, I don't really know, but it's insane.
00:57:24.760It's not just cowardice, it's like backstabbing and awful, awful human beings who are like crabs in a bucket, you know,
00:57:33.620scrambling to get to the top by whatever means of being as sycophant as possible.
00:57:40.320And then anybody who breaks the rules and succeeds, they attack like a swarm, like a mind-controlled swarm,
00:57:50.840because it reveals to them that following the rules was never necessary,
00:57:56.220and that in fact they betrayed themselves for nothing, because not only do they not have success,
00:58:04.780but now they don't even have their own soul, because they sold it for pennies.
00:58:11.440Yeah, I think stand-up comedians get a good, like they think very highly of themselves,
00:58:22.640as if they're the beacons of truth right now, but the vast, vast majority of them do not fill that role.
00:58:29.640And I think that they're very, they like to pat themselves on their back and be very self-congratulatory.
00:58:35.380But like you said, most of them are cowards.
00:58:38.120They like to pat each other on the back too for conforming to the rules and upholding the status quo.
01:10:39.540I mean, it's a little tangent here, but I don't know if I would go so far as to say Roseanne has made great contributions to comedy and to television.
01:10:52.480I'd highly recommend Devin Stack's episode on the Roseanne series.
01:10:57.740He did it in part of a series on, like, you know, the people who say, oh, man, if we could just go back to the 90s.
01:11:05.340Roseanne, like, Roseanne was a little before my time.
01:11:08.600But if you, like, so I didn't really watch it, but I did, I think my sisters watched it for sure.
01:11:14.800And when you look at some of the content in that show, you realize that was really the beginning of where the degeneracy kicked off on cable TV.
01:11:24.620That was where they first started introducing concepts like LGBT.
01:11:30.720It was where they really went to town on the male role.
01:11:34.840Like, if you look at all the characters in that TV show, every single one is a fucking cuck.
01:11:40.540Every single one just gets absolutely trampled on by the women in the show.
01:11:44.960There was, you know, emphasis on, I think there's an episode where, like, they explore, like, lesbianism and stuff like that.
01:11:57.300So, like, this was cable TV, you know, something that millions of Americans were watching in the early 90s.
01:12:03.860And it's, you know, part of a systemic problem here that was, you know, a link in the chain of where we've gotten today.
01:12:12.260So, I don't know, maybe go review that episode, Bethan, and you might change your opinion on Roseanne.
01:12:33.820He also has even touched on shows further back than that.
01:12:37.160Like, All in the Family is one that conservatives like to point to and say, oh, that's based.
01:12:42.520But Archie Bunker, you know, even if he said the word nigger on the show at one point, like, that same show is chastised for it.
01:12:50.440And they use it as a whole, like, anti-racism plot narrative.
01:12:55.100Archie Bunker is really, like, one of the beginning TV shows for the cucked male husband and propagating a lot of these degenerate ideologies.
01:13:12.820And even with Roseanne, like, Roseanne's sort of this emboldened woman who's, like, kind of the head of the household with the, yeah, with the husband being sort of, like, you know, the cucked male.
01:13:36.200And, you know, just, I mean, just writing a series and that kind of thing as far as what the behind-the-scenes work was, it was a lot of work.
01:13:43.800But I absolutely hear that, of course.
01:13:48.260It was, like, the LGBT stuff was snuck in the back door.
01:13:54.920So, all right, so I was just kind of interested because Roseanne's been, you know, quite the gatekeeper in the MAGA movement and, you know, keeping everybody pro-Jew, right, with, and keeping everyone in line.
01:14:10.580And so I did catch a clip, Leonardo, on your Instagram, and you were on the Whatever podcast, and you started to go into, like, a conspiracy theory about CIA, MI6, and Mossad, and you, like, could see the host start to freak out.
01:14:30.960But, I guess, kind of, like, what do you think of the Whatever podcast as a podcast?
01:14:37.380And, you know, did you feel your collar get yanked a couple of times while you were on it?
01:14:45.500Well, no, because I didn't stop talking about things I wanted to talk about.
01:14:50.100And I didn't really give a fuck about the podcast.
01:14:53.060You know, I specifically went on there because I thought it was disingenuous what they were doing, where they're just bringing on stupid girls to look stupid.
01:15:05.920When I wrote him a message, I told him, I was like, you know, I think that you guys are disingenuous, and I'd like to give a different perspective of women.
01:15:15.920And that's exactly what I did, you know.
01:15:17.760And, you know, there's some things they do which is good, which is that they do sort of show the stupidity of these girls.
01:15:28.720But I don't know that that does anything, really.
01:15:33.800I mean, maybe it does in some sense when you have these viral clips that reveal this, like, girl being real stupid.
01:15:40.720Because women are very social creatures, and we take cues from the social structure for what kind of behavior is acceptable and, you know, the kind of stuff that's going to get us attention and, you know, approval.
01:16:02.520And so changing the culture for women is very, very important because they, the culture was changed to get them to be on the side they're on now.
01:16:11.620So maybe in some way some of these viral clips that really make fun of these women and so how behavior is and how they really shouldn't be doing it, I think those are good.
01:16:28.440But the particular women that come on, from what I've heard, their stuff just gets boosted.
01:16:36.840You know, they, it doesn't really hurt their income.
01:16:40.800Like, their OnlyFans just goes higher.
01:16:42.980So they still have this powerful monetary reward system.
01:16:47.040I think you just nailed, these have been my exact thoughts on that fucking podcast.
01:16:54.920I think that they're, like, under the pretenses of trying to find some kind of reconciliation between the genders and what's been going on with them, they are monetizing the fight.
01:17:07.940They're not actually trying to reach some kind of reconciliation.
01:17:11.400They're trying to profit off of the continued and, honestly, the enhancing this disharmony between genders.
01:17:19.140And the fact that they, like, just, you nailed it right at the end there.
01:17:23.200The fact that all the women they bring on, all they do is amplify them, give them more followers, and give them more attention, which is exactly what they want, shows you how disingenuous that fucking, I, if there is one guy I think is a fucking crypto Jew, it's the host of that fucking podcast.
01:18:09.080Right, well, he's not morally righteous, and I'm pretty sure he probably tries to bang some of those girls, which is, I mean, it's just gross.
01:18:15.520But, yeah, he's kind of rude, and then, and, you know, he thinks, like, I don't know, he thinks, like, all the women should be super grateful to be on his podcast, because it's going to blow them up, and I'm like,
01:18:25.380uh, that, I don't fucking need that, I'm not a fucking OnlyFans girl, I'm not selling anything, I just came here to give a different perspective, and kind of reveal some of the stuff, and that, that is actually what ended up happening, you know?
01:18:44.520I find it funny with the, with the audience for that podcast, uh, you know, it's obvious rage bait to get them all fired up, and, like, those algorithms can go pretty deep with just women saying stupid things online, but it's pretty funny that, you know, they're, they're also, those, that same audience is blowing up their OnlyFans after.
01:19:04.520So, that goes to show who they're really targeting.
01:19:09.980Well, and this is a bit about men who are looking for, you know, these, I mean, look, man, you know, a lot of men say, oh, this is bullshit, but at the end of the day, if the girl's hot enough, they'll simp, they will, that's what they're doing, and it's like, you can't really expect society to change when men are still rewarding this bad behavior, and you are, you are rewarding bad behavior.
01:19:36.000For every one OnlyFans whore, there's a thousand men supporting them.
01:19:40.380This is not a women problem, any less, or any more than it is a men's problem.
01:19:47.060Like, this is, and honestly, I personally put the blame more on men in these, like, look at those fucking, I'm not going to say their names, I refuse to say their names, but those two sluts from the UK, like, for every one of them, there's thousands of guys that are willing to participate.
01:20:04.520And it's us that has to correct this behavior, not women, for all the reasons that you've kind of already touched on.
01:20:10.700Women kind of do things for attention, they do things for consensus, they just adopt to whatever the morality of the society is around them.
01:20:18.820And if we want to change that, it's men who have to put an end to it, not women.
01:20:24.560Women are going to follow, and unfortunately right now, they're in the leading position, they're in the leadership position, and this is why they're crazy and a bunch of banshees, because we're not made for that.
01:20:37.860And it's too much pressure for us, honestly.
01:20:40.800Like, I'm a woman, look, I think in a lot of ways I'm an outliner on this, but it's also because I'm older and I've had a lot of experience and reflected on things and woke up and could think about these things.
01:20:52.220But at the end of the day, in my personal relationship, he's got to be the leader.
01:20:59.400And I recognize that in order to do that, I have to defer and not make everything a fight.
01:21:04.560Well, and this is a bit of an obvious take, and some of the people in here have heard me make it before, but I'm convinced that feminism was the ideology propagated first to turn women against men, because that was the only successful way to turn men against women.
01:21:24.760And traditional men venerated their women.
01:21:27.700And they would hold themselves responsible for the actions of their women, and that's something that we've really seen men let go of in the modern age.
01:21:36.920Well, believe it or not, actually, it started before that.
01:21:40.200They actually worked on men's psychology first with the James Bond movies, where, you know, before that, you know, you always had these couple of playboys that would always happen.
01:21:51.740You know, you had kind of high alpha, high testosterone men.
01:21:54.580And they were more, I think they functioned more in a society as warriors, and they were not, you know, they were interested in bedding multiple women or whatever.
01:22:05.440But the vast majority of men before that time were interested in finding a woman to settle down with and start a family.
01:22:13.280And then you have these James Bond movies coming in and glorifying this sort of male gigolo in a way, except like, you know, he's a debonair and he's so charismatic.
01:22:28.420And the reward system is that the more women he gets, the higher his value is, right?
01:22:36.760And then this is made to appeal to a lot of men, and they want to be that.