postyX - June 13, 2025


Mens Health Month w⧸Based & Posty: White Excellence Radio


Episode Stats

Length

2 hours

Words per Minute

167.62675

Word Count

20,185

Sentence Count

1,222

Misogynist Sentences

7

Hate Speech Sentences

61


Summary

In this episode, we discuss men's mental health and how important it is to support our men. We have a special guest, Mr. Hammer from the Blood Tribe, join us to talk about his struggles with anxiety, depression, and stress.


Transcript

00:00:00.000 Thank you. Thank you. I what we have planned and based can also, you know, talk about this after but is in Canada. Anyways, June is men's health month. And we thought to counter signal the all the pride bullshit. And you know, take away the focus on that stuff and talk about men's health and not I mean, obviously, mental health is a huge aspect, but just all different aspects of health. So yeah, do you have anything else to add base?
00:00:27.200 Well, yeah, we have a very special guest, Mr. Hammer from Blood Tribe coming in, in the next hour. And, you know, there's a lot that we want to pick apart with, you know, what, like Hammer sort of undergoes the amount of stress and pressure that he's actually under and how he manages it. So we all have different stress in our lives, I think, that to the rate,
00:00:57.200 rainbow month is particularly stressful on our psyche, you're cutting in and out based
00:01:08.720 he's mass immigration is stressful on our, our psyches, the LA riots be able
00:01:17.860 based you're cutting in and out, I think, I don't know if you're getting a bad signal.
00:01:25.860 Are you still there? Oh, she's gonna drop and come back. So yeah, I think what she I'll let her continue
00:01:36.020 when she comes over. But I think she's just saying the, which you guys already know this, the psyche of
00:01:40.220 the white man, especially is, is, you know, not so good. It's not in a good place. And when you look around
00:01:45.700 you, and you see all the chaos that's happening, as much as some of us love chaos. And I think great things
00:01:50.640 come out of chaos, it also has an effect on the psyche, right? And we want to be able to have our
00:01:55.580 men be as strong as possible mentally and physically so that they can fight this battle. So yeah, we
00:02:00.720 thought we would chat and Hammer is going to come up in a bit when he's done. And I think he's going to
00:02:05.440 stream it. But again, we thought we would have the panel open to different men that we know, like the
00:02:10.180 men that are already up here to give, you know, some feedback on that too. So I'll let base finish
00:02:16.420 though. And then we'll continue. Go ahead, babe.
00:02:34.460 Based, can you hear us?
00:02:46.420 Well, maybe she's having an issue with her speaker. So yeah, she might be having. So we
00:02:53.540 can banter issues. Yeah, we can banter until then. That's fine. I see who's up here. Mr. Who's this
00:03:00.560 Mr. Oh, never mind. He's gone. Yeah, everybody's getting dropped. All I see is a bunch of connecting
00:03:08.680 images. Okay. All right. So what about you? In the US, you guys have like a month that they talk
00:03:19.920 about men's health? Or is it the same? Or do they care? No, I wouldn't be surprised if they do.
00:03:26.040 But I personally have never heard of it. You know, men's mental health, I guess, is something that we
00:03:34.980 Americans never really talk about. Men are kind of just like pushed to the side, told to suck it up,
00:03:43.800 get over it. You know, I'm sure it's very similar in most Western countries, right? Where men's
00:03:50.140 mental health isn't really an item that's on the agenda, which is unfortunate, because we all struggle,
00:03:56.740 right? Well, exactly. And I'm not saying like, I'm not going down the road, like, you know,
00:04:00.980 where you have these, you know, gender confused, you know, danger hair men that are like, Oh, I have
00:04:05.980 all these millions. I'm not talking about that kind of shit. I'm talking about Yeah, the fact that men
00:04:10.300 do hide it, they cover it up. And then until it gets to the point where maybe it's not manageable
00:04:14.840 anymore, right? And I kind of want to talk about how we get to that point, like, you know, and
00:04:19.300 obviously, things are have been escalated greatly in the last what 2030 years. So like, and I mean,
00:04:26.200 people aren't healthy anymore. Like I read a statistic saying like, most American men and
00:04:31.280 women are overweight, compared to like, in the 80s and stuff like that. So like, everything is going
00:04:36.200 bad, right? So I mean, it's part of a bigger picture. And yeah, I'm not, you know, I'm not
00:04:41.820 talking about the little, you know, faggots or whatever that are Oh, I have anxiety. I'm not
00:04:45.520 talking about that. I'm talking about severe, like mental health, like, you know, imagine trying to
00:04:49.800 support your family. And like, I can't imagine what you guys go through trying to support your
00:04:53.480 family. And then, you know, you see all these people taking your jobs, and the wages aren't
00:04:57.340 getting higher. And now you can't afford to support your family. So I can imagine that
00:05:01.280 has a lot of negative effects on mental health.
00:05:04.460 Yeah, a lot of my, a lot of my mental health. I struggle with the thoughts and feelings of
00:05:12.400 TND. It's it's a dangerous condition that only white nationalists suffer from.
00:05:18.280 Yeah, yeah, I know. Are you back based?
00:05:22.920 JD. Okay, you're good.
00:05:24.080 So check, check, total G. Yeah, yeah, you're good.
00:05:27.320 Annihilation. Yeah.
00:05:29.440 So go on what you were saying it before about, you had a good thing going, and then the speaker
00:05:33.780 kind of cut out.
00:05:35.200 Yeah, and then it went.
00:05:38.060 Yeah, so, well, I mean, ultimately, that's it. I think you guys were touching on that.
00:05:42.600 Exactly. It, I was, I was talking with a friend about it the other day. And, you know, in at
00:05:49.320 least in my little mini world with their soccer moms, and, you know, people on the parent teacher
00:05:57.520 committee, my particular political views would not be welcome and not celebrated. So it's isolating.
00:06:06.400 And, you know, they always say, when you're feeling these kind of mental health struggles
00:06:12.000 is to talk to people, well, sort of in my sort of professional world, or, you know, world where
00:06:19.960 I'm taking my kids here and there, these are not the people who I would be able to speak
00:06:24.820 to for the most part. You know, they're civic nationalists, they love their brown friends.
00:06:29.620 And so it can be quite isolating. And I think that's why people cling to these Twitter spaces
00:06:36.540 for dear life. And we get all this feedback going, you know, you got to touch grass and
00:06:42.200 make sure you get outside and log off is because when you do go outside, touch grass, log off,
00:06:50.060 it's like suddenly there aren't a ton of people around you who are, you know, playing soccer
00:06:57.100 with your kids or what have you, who share your views or even remotely. So it can be quite
00:07:04.600 isolating. And I think that can be blackpilling, because every time you turn around in Canada,
00:07:09.360 anyways, you see another Indian, it's like, Oh, my God, every time I turn around, there's
00:07:12.740 another friggin Indian can't get away from them. So become Yeah, like spot the white person
00:07:17.140 now. Yeah. Yeah. And it's just like, it's like living in London, the UK. It's like what it
00:07:23.780 is living in, we've renamed it in Ontario, because it's just a province full of nons.
00:07:31.280 And the political elite or the media elite keep on saying, you know, we have lots of room
00:07:37.060 in Canada, we've got all the room. And it's just they know that nobody's coming to their
00:07:43.760 gated communities. So they have nothing to worry about. Meanwhile, the working class are
00:07:48.960 drowning in friggin nons. Jump in wait, you know, I would, I would say what you ladies
00:07:56.360 are feeling, and what other white men are feeling in regards to, you know, this frustration,
00:08:02.900 it's completely healthy. Right? I want to say the powers that be want to paint this feeling
00:08:13.020 that we have this hatred, this, this uneasiness, this feeling of rage that we get when our homelands
00:08:22.040 are no longer looking the way that they were in our childhood. Right? I'll put it like that.
00:08:28.980 They're, they're framing it in such a way where there is a problem with us for being uneasy,
00:08:36.240 upset, and furious over these people who don't belong here, invading our spaces. So
00:08:45.220 and the top in the framing of mental health, right, since we are discussing mental health,
00:08:52.360 I would say this hatred is completely normal. And it should be used as a means of catalyst
00:09:00.480 towards positive action, not fed post the action, but positive action for the time when we do need
00:09:08.840 to get fed posty.
00:09:16.880 Sorry, my mic was muted. There's a bit of a journey, right? White to get from, you know, being black
00:09:21.840 pilled in your house and kind of not leaving and just being on the internet to go into the gym and
00:09:27.200 doing bench presses. Right? So it's like, how do we, how do men kind of motivate themselves to
00:09:32.320 take those first steps? Right? Because it's, it is easy to say, and it's not, they're not wrong.
00:09:36.540 Like when people come and say, you know, you need to get out, they're absolutely right. You do,
00:09:41.160 you do need to get out and exercise. It's extremely beneficial for your mental health, but
00:09:44.840 trying to motivate somebody to get and do that and, and to kind of take that first step. Right? It's
00:09:51.560 like, I don't know, because I'm a woman, right? So I don't, I know what might motivate me to do it,
00:09:55.400 but what motivates men to, you know, because what we're trying to do here is to try to help
00:09:59.740 motivate the men and help support them so that they're not suffering in silence.
00:10:10.160 You know, I want to say men suffering in silence, but this is just coming from a personal perspective,
00:10:18.720 um, seems to be the norm in our human condition, right? Of course, it's nice if we have shoulders
00:10:27.800 to cry on or the boys to talk to about certain things, or even a woman that can, you know, hear our
00:10:35.660 grievances. Um, but I also know that life as a man was never intended to be a
00:10:48.720 sunshines and rainbows. You know, um, the difficulties that we go through working our nine
00:10:56.920 to fives. And, and, you know, this may sound a little bit controversial in some circumstance,
00:11:02.060 but essentially carrying society on our shoulders through our labor. Um, that's, that's what we
00:11:10.500 were allotted when we were brought into this world. And I think, I think that when we,
00:11:18.740 when we're put in positions where our work isn't appreciated is when these, um, I guess when,
00:11:29.420 when these mental health things can become more apparent, anxiety, depression, um, thoughts of suicide,
00:11:37.920 and so on and so forth, um, because it's, it's, it's not easy always being a man. And just like how
00:11:46.960 it may not always be easy being a woman, we all have our differences and, and a different beast of
00:11:52.620 burden to bear. Um, but similar to what I was talking about earlier, um, it's not common for us to talk
00:12:02.140 about it. Um, and I guess maybe I'm just a little bit less in tune with myself in regards to most,
00:12:10.780 but I also don't feel like it is somebody else's burden to bear, you know, these, these thoughts,
00:12:17.040 these feelings, these, uh, emotions, anxieties, depression. Um, I, I'm the type of individual that
00:12:25.020 always tries to take my own inventory and be like, okay, you're feeling like S today. Why are you feeling
00:12:30.860 like S today? Oh, well, you're feeling like S because you didn't take care of X, Y, and Z. Now,
00:12:37.460 what are you going to do better to take care of X, Y, and Z? So like, I guess I have a little bit more
00:12:41.740 of a stoic outlook than most, um, when it comes to battling these totally normal, in my opinion,
00:12:49.860 thoughts and feelings in regards to, um, depression, anxiety, you know, think things of those mental health
00:12:59.620 categories. So what, Oh, we'll go to you in one sec, Steve. So what, what do you think as a man,
00:13:05.360 um, would like helps you? Is it just like, do you have, you said you have your own kind of
00:13:09.340 thing, how you work through it, uh, helps you to get, to get over that because, and the reason why
00:13:14.160 I actually wanted to do this space and I'll, I'll be transparent with you guys is that there's been a
00:13:17.720 few people, uh, in my peripheral real life, white men that have committed suicide in the recent months.
00:13:23.960 Um, some of them are my own age, some of them are younger. So I, I just like, to me, I'm like,
00:13:29.700 why, why are they like, not why, I guess I know why, but like, how can we help, you know, like,
00:13:34.820 whether it's strategies, whether it's, you know, um, encouraging them to join an active club. Like,
00:13:40.960 I don't know. I'm trying to find different ways to kind of help men without being overbearing,
00:13:46.000 you know? So I would say at least in regards to myself, and this is just being honest with you,
00:13:53.560 you know, hard on my sleeve, um, action, taking action always helps me most, but if there's one
00:14:00.400 thing that helps me when I'm feeling down and out, it's, um, appreciation, you know? Um, I know it's
00:14:08.540 kind of sounds a little bit silly and not super duper masculine, but when somebody that I care about
00:14:14.780 recognizes the fruits, the, the, my labors, it makes me feel good. You know, I work a nine to five
00:14:22.480 in order to put food on my kid's table and so on and so forth. And when my daughter shows me
00:14:29.860 appreciation, like, you know, I love you, dad. Thank you so much for working hard. That's something
00:14:35.740 that helps me. Or in regards, you know, I, I would say this, you, you're a wife, you, both of you guys
00:14:42.360 have husbands. Um, I'm sure, you know, just saying, you know, I appreciate everything that you do for
00:14:49.560 us in the family that you'd be surprised how far that goes. Um, or at least how far it goes with
00:14:55.720 myself. Um, I feel like society doesn't really give men their, their, um, what's the word that I'm
00:15:08.160 looking for. Well, they don't give them the appreciation. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. So go, go ahead,
00:15:16.480 unless you want to say something based or we can go to Steve. No, no, jump in Steve. Uh, for sure.
00:15:22.060 Yeah. I think this is a great space topic and I'm glad you guys are doing it. So kudos to you for
00:15:28.500 putting this on. Um, you know, I've, I've dealt with depression before and I think at a,
00:15:35.780 at a certain point you have to decide, you know, do I want to live? Yes. Okay. So what do I want
00:15:45.000 my life to look like? How do I want to live? And I think it's productive for men to at least write
00:15:53.860 down their thoughts and I'm not someone to just suffer in silence. White Reich and base maidens
00:15:59.120 both know this. I'm not afraid to, to call for a shoulder to cry on, um, but it's always with
00:16:05.680 trying to work towards what's the solution. How do I, how do I move forward? Right. And a lot of times
00:16:11.580 like just taking care of the basics in terms of getting enough sleep is a big one. Um, making sure
00:16:18.180 your diet is good, doing physical exercise, being in the sun, those little things will make a big
00:16:26.220 difference. And I agree with White Reich, um, having encouragement. When I've had people encourage me,
00:16:33.260 um, or show appreciation at a time when I'm feeling demoralized or just low on the grill,
00:16:40.440 it's made a big difference and helped me to want to keep going. And another thing is community.
00:16:45.920 A lot of these men who are suicidal, they, for one reason or another, either lack a community or the
00:16:54.160 community that they're in is not a healthy one or is not, um, one that is aligned with how they want
00:17:03.960 to live or what their views are. Right. Some people are in a community, uh, people where they're a social
00:17:11.940 outcast, if they were to be their genuine selves. And so they feel like they're inadequate because
00:17:18.000 they can't be themselves around these people for fear of ostracization. And that's again, where the
00:17:24.520 active clubs can really help out because you will be around like-minded folk. You're going to be around
00:17:29.860 men who will encourage you, who can set a good example and help you, uh, emulate that example.
00:17:37.080 Um, but yeah, I think a lot of it, it's coming down to taking inventory, um, taking care of the
00:17:46.600 basics in terms of maintenance, because again, a lot of men who commit suicide, they are drinkers or
00:17:53.340 drug users and that's not good for your mental health. And, uh, once you, um, do take care of
00:18:01.680 those basic things and sleep is a big one. I think sleep gets, uh, underestimated and how important
00:18:08.240 it is, um, sleep, diet, exercise, and then just being around like-minded people that will
00:18:16.080 really make a big difference. And then as far as like not getting demoralized and blackpilled,
00:18:21.740 I've found personally that the more activism I've been doing, the easier it is to stay white-pilled
00:18:28.440 because, you know, even if people would be like, oh, well, you just hand out flyers or,
00:18:33.880 oh, you just put up some stickers. What's that really going to do? Well, I'll just get the message
00:18:38.100 out. And it also gives you something, um, useful to do with your time that isn't say abusing
00:18:45.580 substances or give you a purpose, right? And then some degenerate. Yeah. And like, I wonder how little
00:18:55.300 sleep everybody is getting now, you know, there've been times where I've gone to bed and there's a
00:19:00.880 space been running and I've woken up and the space is still running, you know? Um, and some people,
00:19:06.940 I think they just like to play those games and push it to extremes, but, you know, we are radical
00:19:12.380 and extreme by nature, but with the advent of the cell phone and that kind of thing, I, I wonder how,
00:19:19.740 how few, how, like how much less, um, time we are actually contributing to, to, to sleep. And,
00:19:28.860 you know, we do it cause we have to, um, but not a lot of people don't want to, um, they do it cause
00:19:35.760 they have to. And so they, or they prolong those areas, those hours that they get to themselves,
00:19:41.200 right? You dedicate lots of hours to your work day and you work and work and work and work and work.
00:19:46.300 And then you finally get you time. Maybe you have to give it to your family and you know,
00:19:50.740 what have you. And then you get this you time. And so you want to extend that you time as far as
00:19:56.040 possible. And then it screws over the next day. Red, I see you there, brother. Hey, how's it going?
00:20:03.220 Actually, you know what? I think Newfie had his hand up first.
00:20:06.400 No, but forget that guy.
00:20:07.920 Oh, okay. Or wait, we're ignoring Newfie today.
00:20:11.220 No, I love you, man. I'm just teasing you.
00:20:13.600 Yeah, that's great. Go ahead, Newfie.
00:20:16.300 Yeah, no, my hand was up. I had put it down just cause I figured someone else put their
00:20:21.720 hand up after Steve. I was going to let them go ahead. Uh, cause I kind of like to listen
00:20:27.020 to other people's takes and then kind of build on it. I have my own take, but it's, it's my
00:20:31.740 own take is aimed more at, uh, younger men right now. And when I say younger men, I mean
00:20:36.920 like 20 year old kind of younger men, fresh becoming men. Um, but I didn't want to take away
00:20:43.000 from the focus of like what, uh, white just said. And Steve, like we're talking about men,
00:20:47.880 my age and men even older than me having that struggle as well. So I figured I'd let that
00:20:52.660 conversation a little bit too.
00:20:54.060 All right. Fair enough. Go ahead. Now we can go ahead. Red Red's younger.
00:21:01.780 I'm younger. I don't know. I'm in my early forties. I guess I'm, uh, yeah, you've got
00:21:07.760 this. I, when you were talking about being in an active club, I'm like, Oh my gosh, he's
00:21:12.660 like 25. That's amazing. Okay. Amazing. Go ahead. Yeah. Well, what I find, uh, uh, especially
00:21:24.620 with men and when it comes to depression, uh, it's not having any kind of like camaraderie
00:21:30.120 in your life, not, not having real friends, like, uh, knowing what it feels like to have
00:21:36.420 an actual friend that cares about you. Um, and actually is interested in the things you're
00:21:42.580 interested in, you know, where you can hang out with a group of people and just feel accepted
00:21:50.320 without trying to be something different for someone else. Um, a lot of, a lot of men have
00:21:58.000 a problem with that. I'm not saying, well, not a lot. There is some men that do have a problem
00:22:03.820 with, uh, trying to be involved in social events. Um, sorry, I'm getting too many texts
00:22:15.480 right now, but it, okay. Yeah. And they're having problems getting involved in social events
00:22:23.200 where I don't know if it's just because, uh, of some, some people because of COVID and being
00:22:31.780 locked down and not being able to go anywhere that affected a lot of people. Um, it also
00:22:37.380 brought people to back to doing drugs and drinking and, and becoming very antisocial.
00:22:44.980 Um, I even had a problem with that. I mean, I went through some trauma and stuff during that
00:22:51.080 time and, and I, I became very antisocial and very depressed and, and, uh, I just didn't
00:22:58.160 want to be around anybody, but when I actually started to be around people is when I felt
00:23:02.940 a whole lot better about myself and I started feeling great. Like it was like that dark cloud
00:23:08.760 got lifted when I was hanging out with real people and I wasn't in my head that whole time,
00:23:15.220 but we're, we're always taught as men to like keep your problems inside and work them out
00:23:22.440 yourself. Don't be a burden on anyone. Uh, we have a more important job to do. We're supposed
00:23:26.860 to be protectors. So work that shit out, be a man and kind of dust it off and keep going.
00:23:34.320 And when we keep doing that, all we are is just packing it in, packing it in. Eventually
00:23:38.520 it's going to explode and it could explode in a way that you end up committing suicide
00:23:43.580 or you do something very stupid and commit some kind of act of violence, reckless violence,
00:23:50.920 violence, and then you end up in jail for the rest of your life. So these problems do
00:23:56.240 need to be talked about, but they need to find that group. You need to just find your
00:24:00.880 people and, and, uh, just have a talk with them. And eventually those layers that you've
00:24:08.720 packed on will just start to release and release. And I believe that's the best way to kind of
00:24:15.040 help, um, getting people to do that. That's the hard part, but having promotional stuff,
00:24:21.300 like promote, uh, promoting the active clubs and maybe have some really like good, uh, optics
00:24:27.900 with some videos and promotional videos like that. So they're seeing it and like seeing like
00:24:33.760 the conversations and seeing how happy people are and that that will pique their interest.
00:24:38.320 They're like, Oh, okay. I want to do that. That's one thing I found where in the military
00:24:43.040 was good. It was like, because now you're going to have that camaraderie, you have that
00:24:47.220 brother feel where you feel like you've, you just met your family. You're, you're, you're ready
00:24:52.280 to die with these guys. And that is the same feeling you get when you do end up joining an
00:24:57.480 active club. You do feel that, but it's just getting, getting people to do that is, uh, the hard
00:25:03.620 part. But I believe if we can, you know, come up with some sort of, uh, visuals and, um, optics
00:25:11.900 for that to make it look, well, not make it look, just show how it really is. It would
00:25:16.640 show more interest in it. But I, I believe that a lot of, uh, active clubs right now are
00:25:21.160 building pretty, pretty, pretty well. So they're doing well, but we got to get those guys and
00:25:27.020 just got, got to have those people talk. Um, if you're, if you know anybody that, you
00:25:32.600 know, hasn't really reached out to you in a while, reach out to him, ask him how he's
00:25:36.700 doing. And then, you know, anything he says that he's doing, just, you know, encourage
00:25:40.300 it. Like, yeah, that's great, man. I'm proud of you. Or just any little thing he, he can
00:25:44.960 say, you know, and just got to reach out to those people. Cause those are the people that
00:25:47.880 are, are sitting around thinking nobody cares. And then once they get that text from
00:25:52.440 you or, or a call, they're like, Oh, right on like, yeah. Okay. Somebody cares. Like I
00:25:57.940 now I'm motivated to do, you know, X, Y, and Z. So I'll land that there though.
00:26:02.640 Well, and people remember that, right? Like this is all part of building community. Like
00:26:06.040 they will remember, like, you know, even if you're, you know, being called a big, bad
00:26:10.180 Nazi or white supremacist, right? That person, even if they're not, they don't totally have
00:26:14.580 the same beliefs as you. They're going to remember you were the one that asked them
00:26:18.380 that everything was okay, even though you're a big, bad, you know, Nazi and stuff like that.
00:26:22.120 So I think it also helps build community and helps, you know, just community. I don't
00:26:27.620 know. It builds community.
00:26:28.480 I don't know how you guys do it, to be honest. Like if, if I feel the pressure coming on,
00:26:36.940 I am on the phones and I'm calling my best friend or I'm calling Posty. Like I've got
00:26:42.800 a list of people that I'll go through cause I got to get it out. And then, you know, it's
00:26:47.460 sort of the male counterpart. It's like, I'm just going to push it down and I'm going to
00:26:51.540 push it down some more. And, um, there's like, it's a real part of this cultural character
00:26:57.400 or maybe it's an innate character is to suppress, suppress, suppress, suppress. And I actually
00:27:02.820 don't know how you live with it. Cause, um, you know, I, I, if I don't get it out, like
00:27:08.180 I don't even know what would happen. I'd probably be a lot more boozy in these spaces. That's
00:27:12.680 for sure. Newfie, you can go ahead now, brother.
00:27:17.540 Yeah. I'm glad I let him go ahead of me. Uh, cause talking about the buildup, that was
00:27:22.820 one of the things he said, you kind of bottle it up. You don't let it out. Um, that's one
00:27:27.340 of the reasons I'm kind of focusing my kind of mentality on the younger men. Uh, not that
00:27:35.380 the older ones don't deserve our attention as well, but I'm thinking, you know, next
00:27:41.280 generation, what's going to happen when these boys are my age now. Uh, and that comes from
00:27:47.920 like coaching a lot of boy sports in high school and stuff like that. Right. Like I did a lot
00:27:52.780 of coaching basketball and baseball, um, their current depression that they're in. And a lot
00:27:59.780 of boys, their age are, I call them boys for a reason, even though they're 20, 21 years
00:28:04.960 old are depressed, whether they know it or not, they are. And a lot of that comes from
00:28:10.140 lacking purpose. And when we talk about fulfilling a man's purpose, we often talk about like a
00:28:15.960 family, right? Start a wife or get a wife, start a family, have kids that brings you your
00:28:20.000 purpose. And that's true. But if you're trying to, to motivate younger men who are single
00:28:26.140 and 20, a family seems like a really far off thing. And then I can put myself in that
00:28:31.980 shoes, right? Like having, being a dad and having kids and pushing strollers around when
00:28:37.300 you're 20, 21 as a, as, as a boy, essentially, um, seems pretty far off in the future. So you're
00:28:45.240 not really going to get them hook, line and sinker and motivate them. If your whole messaging
00:28:49.620 is about that, you got to get them to that, but men need purpose. And if it's not going
00:28:54.820 to be a family, because you're trying to motivate somebody who's single and, uh, as some people
00:29:01.460 call it in cell or whatever the fuck, like the living that kind of online life. Um, so
00:29:07.300 you got to get your dopamine kick somewhere else, right? The, the, the fulfillment you get
00:29:12.120 from the family and the dopamine that comes along with that, those kinds of things are,
00:29:15.920 can also be found other ways. And you often say, we often say things like working out.
00:29:22.600 You don't really need to go to a gym and get a, like a year or a month membership and, and,
00:29:28.760 you know, gain a bunch of weight and become a muscle head. That's not really what working
00:29:32.440 out is. It's about having your body be useful to you rather than be useless to you, because
00:29:39.280 eventually you need to be useful to someone else. It might not be right now, but eventually
00:29:43.380 as a man, you will have to be useful to someone else. So trying to make yourself into what will
00:29:49.340 eventually attract somebody that could bring you the rest of that fulfillment is extremely
00:29:54.040 important. Um, you don't have to go to a gym. You can quite literally buy a set of dumbbells
00:30:00.420 up at Canadian Tire. And with a set of dumbbells, the amount of workouts you can do in your own
00:30:05.140 home on your own time, uh, will gain you a lot of core strength and boost your, we'll
00:30:11.960 say your ego or your confidence or your morale or however you want to do it. But that kind
00:30:17.160 of stuff is really important for men because as you become a bag of milk, it's really hard
00:30:22.800 to get back into shape later in life.
00:30:25.440 But isn't that defeating the purpose, defeating the purpose of community? If you don't go
00:30:30.860 to the gym and meeting people, you can't, you can, if you want, but I know a lot of younger
00:30:36.120 boys that don't really enjoy the gym scene. Then I think it might be intimidation. I don't
00:30:41.200 know, whatever. Right. So it's like, here's a good way to start. You build up enough confidence.
00:30:45.800 And when you, once you get like a little bit of a workout and you start gaining muscles where
00:30:51.080 you didn't have them before, I promise you as a boy or a young man, that will be enough
00:30:56.560 of a kick to be like, yeah, you know what? I'm going to go get the membership. I got a
00:31:00.280 gym down the road for me. Like, it's almost like you have to baby them into it in a sense
00:31:05.020 is the way I'm approaching it. Boys, boys haven't been taught how to make friends the way boys
00:31:10.140 are supposed to make friends. Like I I'm 35 and my generation in high school, at least here
00:31:16.280 was the last that grew up as boys, making friends the way boys make friends. They're
00:31:23.000 not allowed to do that anymore. They're not taught how to, they're not allowed to. And
00:31:28.880 schooling is a big, big factor in that, right? The public school system. But that, but that
00:31:33.180 is going to turn them into shitty adults too, because if boys can't rip on each other and
00:31:38.480 feel each other out the way they're supposed to and create some sort of pecking order within
00:31:43.440 the group of friends, then they don't, they can't really police the behavior in their
00:31:48.620 group of adult friends. Like what we talked about here, how men are supposed to step up
00:31:53.200 and not allow shitty behavior, right? Tired online because all you can do is block people.
00:31:58.420 But in real life, the men in your group will prevent that from happening if they're good
00:32:02.160 men. But if they're not raised properly, if they're not allowed to suss each other out
00:32:06.600 as boys and develop that way, then they're not going to be able to do it in adulthood.
00:32:11.240 So I'll, I'll land it there for a bit.
00:32:16.960 Thank you, Newfie. Thanks. Yeah. Okay. Well, we got some chads are in the house. Welcome
00:32:22.520 Ferry and welcome, Mr. Hammer. Thank you for coming. Mr. Christopher, but I know Ferry's
00:32:29.800 got some thoughts on, on this. Please go ahead, boss.
00:32:34.240 Oh, I was just going to rip into Newfie with his, don't go, you don't need to go to the
00:32:42.480 gym. Yes, you do. If you can't bench three plates, squat four plates and deadlift five
00:32:47.960 plates, you're fucking useless. So you might as well start juicing like fucking crazy and
00:32:54.020 wreck yourself until you're a real man. So that's all I have to say. Go to the fucking
00:33:00.020 gym. Obviously I'm joking. He's 100% right. He knows that. That's what he gets for ripping
00:33:09.200 on me all the time. There you go, Newfie. You're getting paid back. Bloody fuck you,
00:33:12.940 bloody. I'm going to fight you, Benny.
00:33:14.340 All right. You want to, you got something to add, Hammer? You want to say hello?
00:33:21.840 Hey, I'm, I'm just, you know, picking up the conversation. I'm not quite sure where
00:33:27.000 everybody's at yet. So I don't know what exactly to chime in with. I will say
00:33:31.980 deadlifting five plates, great goal. You could probably do six if you really applied yourself
00:33:37.180 though. We were actually waiting for you to give us a take on how, uh, fishing alleviates
00:33:45.160 depression. Uh, yeah, well, fishing and hunting, I do a lot of both. Uh, I mean, last year I
00:33:53.000 probably spent 20 days in the woods hunting deer. I fish a lot. I fish a lot right now.
00:34:00.780 I'm fishing a lot, but, uh, it getting outside, man, just getting some sunlight in any way
00:34:06.980 whatsoever is really good for you. You know, staying indoors too much is bad for the, bad
00:34:13.640 for the soul, man. Uh, so however you do it, you know, find an excuse to get outside. I think
00:34:20.820 fishing is great, but I mean, you just go out shooting some squirrels, go out hiking, you
00:34:26.860 know, just breathe some fresh air, get some sunlight. But yeah, I mean, working out, obviously
00:34:33.320 that's another good one too. Uh, sometimes you just, there's something that you release
00:34:39.300 from working out that it can't, you can't get it out any other way, you know?
00:34:46.580 I like that those activities that Hammer brought up are, uh, you know, very, I don't know, white
00:34:51.940 man activities and very kind of like traditional activities. You know what I mean? Like they're
00:34:57.300 not the, Oh, uh, let's play, uh, you know, online games and shit like that. It's very,
00:35:01.860 and I honestly, I have noticed that a lot of the young boys, especially are getting back
00:35:05.600 into things like that. Like golf is a huge thing now where when I was a kid, that was
00:35:08.860 an old man sport. And now it's like the young kids are doing that. So I think you're, that's
00:35:13.060 right. Hammer doing fishing and all that stuff. It's coming back with the young kids.
00:35:16.160 And I think it's a very white man sport. Yeah. I mean, good thing about fishing is you
00:35:22.220 can do it just about any time in the year. The gear isn't that expensive. The license
00:35:27.100 isn't that expensive. And, uh, you know, you're, you know, it, not only is it like a mental health
00:35:34.220 practice, but you're working on becoming a more of a provider, right? You're self-sustaining
00:35:41.620 having a skill to pull calories from the wild is a good thing.
00:35:49.640 I wanted to ask you, like, do you do that kind of catfishing where they go like under
00:35:54.700 the dock and like, they sort of put their hands in there and then you try and grab a catfish
00:35:59.780 in the mouth by the gills. Do you do that kind of catfishing?
00:36:04.260 That's called noodling. I have never gone noodling before. Uh, I'm sure it's fine, but
00:36:11.380 not my style. I do like catfishing though. I've been trying to catch some catfish lately.
00:36:16.240 Not a good time of the year to fish for catfish. It's the spawn season and not really biting that
00:36:22.120 much right now, but I like them, you know, they're good eating. They're a good, uh, sport. Like they
00:36:29.080 fight pretty hard and yeah, catfish are all over, but I like bass a lot too. I like bluegill,
00:36:35.720 you know, but, um, nah, never really got into noodling.
00:36:42.640 I thought it was some sort of like pro white qualifier for women. I used to see
00:36:47.080 lots of girls who were doing it and I like, I guess I would, you know, die a cat lady if that
00:36:52.740 was the requirement. I thought it was just the bears that were doing that. I didn't know humans
00:36:57.320 were doing it too. I didn't make it.
00:36:59.500 Me either. I didn't freaking make it.
00:37:00.860 I've come to terms with that. I'm not going to make it either. So skull mask, go ahead.
00:37:06.780 Hello, my friends, brothers and sisters. Thank you for the mic. Um, I want to echo
00:37:12.140 hammer sentiment here, um, which it's nice to have you on the panel. It's a big fan surf. Um, but,
00:37:21.480 uh, more so I am a, uh, massive proponent. Hey, don't do that. I'm sorry. I'm trying to
00:37:26.340 get my dog out of some stuff. Um, I'm a massive proponent of like the outdoor activities myself.
00:37:32.800 Like I think that I personally love backpacking and rucking. I think that, um, there's a, there's
00:37:39.920 a big quality, there's a big element of kind of readjusting the dopamine that you get when you,
00:37:45.680 when you really get outside for like a series of days on end where you're actually kind of,
00:37:51.760 uh, you have everything in your, on your back and you're self-sufficient. It's a great, um, a great
00:37:58.180 way to detach from all these worldly issues and get your dopamine back to this natural baseline
00:38:04.460 level. Uh, you're constantly outside exposed to the elements. So you've got to be able to,
00:38:10.680 you know, deal with it when it rains and, um, rely on yourself. You could be like 20 miles away from
00:38:18.240 the road. It adds this element of kind of like exploratory danger that a lot of us just aren't
00:38:24.400 really going to get. Even if we go to the gym, we work out. Uh, I think that, um, just being out
00:38:31.120 in nature and being self-sufficient, like that really seems to, for me personally, it brings
00:38:36.700 everything. It has this grounding effect on my whole attitude and mood. And I think that, uh,
00:38:42.080 as like doing it with other people too, is phenomenal. I've done it alone quite a few times.
00:38:47.000 And that's kind of like, it's whole, it's a whole ordeal unto itself. But, um, I would
00:38:53.220 greatly advocate for doing a little backpacking, getting a ruck pack and going on like a five
00:38:58.980 or six day backpack through, through the wilderness. If you're in the United States or North America,
00:39:05.400 we have some exquisite trails. And, uh, once you get like a day in, you're almost guaranteed
00:39:12.420 to not see anybody depending on what trail you're in. So you get this solitude and it's a, it's a
00:39:18.700 phenomenal experience, but, um, the outdoor activities, I think are one of the best ways to
00:39:24.480 reset dopamine and get into a, uh, get into a better headspace as a man. So thank you again.
00:39:32.000 White power.
00:39:32.640 Hell yeah. And you know, also sometimes just getting out of cell phone coverage,
00:39:39.880 you know, you go, you do it right. Just about anywhere really that's, uh, secluded,
00:39:46.700 the cell phone coverage starts to become an impossibility. And, uh, it's nice to forcefully
00:39:52.720 unplug yourself like that.
00:39:55.360 Absolutely agree, brother. That's one of the things too. You start to notice that impulse to pull your
00:40:00.060 phone out of your pocket and play with it just completely disappears after a couple of days.
00:40:04.380 And it feels like you're, it feels like you've freed yourself from a mental prison when that happens.
00:40:14.280 Um, Chris, yeah, we, like, I guess we wanted to talk to you about like, you know, um, you know,
00:40:20.700 mental health and this kind of thing. And, and you are in a unique position. Um, I think a lot of
00:40:27.120 people strive to be in your position, um, where you're being pursued a lot by the law, um, by our
00:40:35.540 white enemies, by communists, by, you know, like all the Browns, all the nons, you know, they all want
00:40:43.220 a piece of you. And, you know, some of us are just like, we open our door and it's just little India
00:40:50.840 or little Africa. And, and it has such a profound psychological impact on us. Now that it's like
00:40:58.320 kind of getting people down. And so we were, we're just wondering, like, you know, what, what are your
00:41:05.060 coping strategies for kind of sort of feeling that pressure all the time of being pursued? You even
00:41:11.780 told me once, I think on your show that like you're hunted, they actually hunt you down.
00:41:16.560 Yeah. I mean, you know, getting blackpilled in all this is a problem that isn't necessarily,
00:41:26.580 you know, you don't have to have too much pressure for a lot of guys to, you know, feel overwhelmed
00:41:35.020 by the, uh, the weight of it all. Right. I mean, my situation is unique, but guys in very,
00:41:43.140 uh, you know, much more reduced situations, they get overwhelmed too, um, from all of this. I mean,
00:41:52.020 even if they're not being hunted per se, just, uh, seeing what's happening all the time to our people,
00:42:00.580 the situation that we're in, the direness of it. And you're basically a cornered animal. And, uh,
00:42:09.320 you have to watch, like, they, there's, uh, two nervous systems. You have the parasympathetic
00:42:16.360 nervous system. You have the sympathetic nervous system and the sympathetic nervous system,
00:42:21.260 I believe is when, uh, you're, you know, you have anxiety, fear, it's, it's either fight or flight,
00:42:26.980 right? You're in one of those two. And, um, you can't heal in that nervous status, right? You can't
00:42:38.200 rest. You can't reset. You can't, uh, like you fail to get grounded when you're like that all the time
00:42:48.420 because you're just, it's like, you're constantly feeling like that cornered animal. And I guess
00:42:56.100 what I always try to tell people is, you know, you got to keep your eye on the horizon. It's kind of
00:43:03.000 like being on a real long hike or something. If you just focus on the immediate, uh, intensity of the
00:43:11.060 present, right? Like maybe this long hill you're on, or maybe just the fact that your feet hurt or
00:43:17.840 whatever, you focus on the immediate pressure of the present. It'll overwhelm you. But if you just
00:43:24.880 keep your eye on the goal, right, keep your eye on the horizon, march towards the goal and realize
00:43:33.160 it's far away, right? This isn't a sprint. It's a marathon. Um, you got to find a way of pacing
00:43:41.680 yourself. I, and, uh, don't let it cause inaction. Don't let it stop you, but, um, find ways to
00:43:55.240 adjust your, uh, mental place so that you can keep moving forward, keep marching towards victory
00:44:04.780 without getting broken because you're not any good to us broken. Uh, you're not, you know,
00:44:11.920 so many times, like I I've traveled the country. I've met a lot of people that have been in activism
00:44:16.720 over the years. And there's this certain, uh, line that I get from people that I meet at like
00:44:25.120 parties or get togethers all the time. And it's around the lines of something like, oh yeah, I used
00:44:30.420 to do a lot of activism. Like you, I used to be an X, Y, or Z group. I did this or that March.
00:44:36.140 I was super active, but it got to me. And now I just hang out with people like this, right?
00:44:43.260 So that it happens a lot. And we have a retention problem that we have to solve. And I think that,
00:44:49.800 uh, you know, a big way of solving that is getting people to pace themselves better. But I think
00:44:57.460 a lot of guys don't exactly know what to do and they're investing a lot of time or, uh, effort into
00:45:06.960 these struggles or projects or collectives that fizzle out and burst or implode, et cetera. And, uh,
00:45:17.700 that, that is discouraging in itself, right? There's a lot of discouragement that comes from
00:45:24.020 seeing wasted effort. So I guess all I can say is get back on the horse. Don't let these people get
00:45:32.040 to you. Don't let the pressure get to you. For me and my situation, um, I'm a very ornery person. I,
00:45:40.940 I guess it's just being a ginger, you know, uh, I'm very highly, a high confrontational person.
00:45:48.140 I'm very calm in confrontation. So I don't get as triggered by the enemy as much as for me. Uh,
00:45:59.460 I think the, the most weight from all this comes from our circles, actually from our, um, you know,
00:46:08.480 air quotes, our guys, right? The, the people are all kinds of different reasons. You know,
00:46:13.460 the, the inaction, the coping, the slander, the, you know, ridiculous, infinite infighting those,
00:46:22.100 that stuff gets to me more than anything. And for me, getting over that stuff is really just,
00:46:27.800 uh, investing in the right people, but I see Fairman's guys hand up. So I'm going to let him
00:46:33.020 talk a bit. I've been rambling. Go ahead, Terry. Oh, you just, you just nailed a bunch of things.
00:46:41.880 The thing that from what I've seen burns guys out more than anything is the,
00:46:47.760 the pressure that's put on them or the expectations that are put on them from our own guys.
00:46:54.160 And the funny thing about it is usually the worst fucking people that are the ones putting that
00:46:58.720 pressure on them. It's the guys who are doing absolutely nothing who won't shut the fuck up
00:47:03.460 about, you know, what they're doing or not doing, or should be doing, or not doing well enough or not
00:47:10.140 doing enough of. And, you know, it's always the people doing nothing that are, are putting that,
00:47:14.680 that pressure on them. And that does have a cumulative effect. Like I've seen it wear on,
00:47:21.540 I mean, it's worn on myself. I'm sure a hammer can relate. Um, just constant, just that constant
00:47:28.260 fucking ankle biting naggery that comes from those types. It needs to be crushed, but regarding
00:47:34.780 retention too, I think one of the things that, um, it's actually kind of a weird thing, but I think
00:47:42.140 that part of what leads to guys, you know, getting frustrated or disenchanted with being part of
00:47:51.140 something is the lack of action. It's there. There's a lot of hurry up and wait a lot of sit there and do
00:47:57.900 nothing. Um, you know, cause there's not much you can do. And so like, I think the Australians have
00:48:04.460 a good perspective on this, which is like, if you have guys in your org, they have to have tasks.
00:48:10.540 They can't just be sitting around, you know, for, for weeks on end, um, doom scrolling and not doing
00:48:19.080 anything productive. They have to, um, you know, be, be put into a department, be put into a specific
00:48:26.460 role and said, here, this is your job. Now do it well. And then an expectation that they're going
00:48:31.520 to do something and then providing them those small goals and tasks, and then providing them
00:48:37.600 more after those are completed, it gives them a sense of purpose. And all of a sudden, once
00:48:42.080 they're active, that kind of endless rumination about, um, you know, the state of the world or how
00:48:50.420 bad things are starts to go away because they're focused on a, on a specific task and they're
00:48:55.960 accomplishing it. So they're all of a sudden they don't really care. Like, you know, they
00:48:59.560 start to see how we're making progress as opposed to just sitting there waiting for something
00:49:04.340 to happen. So I don't, that's my approach on that. But you guys are touching on for when
00:49:11.660 it comes to the wilderness stuff. For me, what you guys were describing, I get that like three
00:49:16.460 times a week at jujitsu, that kind of like disassociation that look, there's, there's nothing
00:49:22.400 that will make you forget everything else going on in the world. Like a 225 pound guy,
00:49:27.940 um, you know, latched onto your back, trying to choke you to death. Um, that, that puts
00:49:34.520 things in perspective real quick. Um, you know, and you've got a guy trying to rip your leg
00:49:39.220 off and you don't, and you're fighting, you know, for your, you know, metaphorically for
00:49:45.000 your life, all of a sudden, whatever drama was going on on the internet or whatever the stupid
00:49:49.580 thing the president or prime minister said that day is completely irrelevant. So that's
00:49:53.900 why, you know, for me, whether it's jujitsu or Thai sparring or boxing sparring, um, it's
00:50:01.280 so good for guys. There's that line from fight club that I think is so true. And a lot of you
00:50:07.640 will probably know it, but it's like after fight club, everything else in your life just
00:50:11.700 has the volume turned down. Um, and any guy who's done that kind of training knows exactly
00:50:18.340 what the fuck I'm talking about. Like after you do 10 rounds of hard Thai sparring, you
00:50:24.280 are as you're cool as a cucumber. There's nothing in the world that's going to bother
00:50:28.260 you because every, you know, all those hormones, all those endorphins, all that stuff is just
00:50:34.360 unloaded from you. And there's, you know, it's basically just numb. Um, and it's a good
00:50:41.300 feeling. I think we had radio then Steve. Yeah. I was just going to say to what a hammer was saying
00:50:53.080 around the pacing, you know, I I've long seen the burn bright and fade fast guys. I think whenever
00:50:59.920 you're doing anything and you're doing it a hundred percent, you're doing it regularly,
00:51:03.020 whether it's gym guys, you know, I would always have, you know, I was, I don't know how big hammer
00:51:07.980 is, but once upon a time, it was probably about the same size as hammer, give or take a couple
00:51:11.220 pounds. And, uh, you know, I've kind of maintained that even not being, you know, super Jack, but
00:51:16.520 long story short, the gym, the gym is a perfect example. Faraday's talked on it, whether it's,
00:51:20.640 you know, a BJJ or whatever, but you have these guys, they come in and they think that there's,
00:51:25.180 you know, some, you can shortcut all, all day long. I've seen guys that are shortcut Kings,
00:51:29.700 not natty at all. Um, and they don't get the gains because they think it just happens overnight.
00:51:34.980 You can, you know, you can shortcut all you want. And if you're just Colonel milk jugs,
00:51:39.320 it does not get it done. So anything to take some time to acquire, it takes time. It takes
00:51:45.520 patience. It takes consistency. And there's a lot of guys who think we can just shortcut these things
00:51:50.720 and shortcuts and, you know, rounding some edges here and there are not a bad thing. I'm all for
00:51:55.400 efficiency. You know, I'm all for a degree of accelerationism, but I think in general, um,
00:52:00.740 I've seen a lot of guys with a lot of hobbies, a lot of passions, a lot of interests,
00:52:04.260 whether it's political ideological, they burn real, real bright and they fade real,
00:52:08.760 real fast. And I think the guys with staying power, avoid that. So I just want to kind of
00:52:13.400 comment on what he was saying. Cause I think it's, it's definitely a phenomenon with type
00:52:16.580 eight guys. Um, we're guys that think things are easier than they really are. Cause they
00:52:20.560 haven't done them. Uh, it might look easy. Some guys, you know, naturally are good at this
00:52:24.920 or good at that. And they make it look easy, but oftentimes it's not, it takes years of dedication
00:52:29.360 and work and a lot of time, energy and effort devoted to it. And you can apply that to really
00:52:34.420 life. Um, but there's a lot of things that guys do in particular working out. It's one
00:52:39.320 of them. You know, some guys just are naturally able to put on muscle. Some guys can't. So
00:52:45.080 it's just, it's, it's one of those things where that's just that general phenomenon. I've witnessed
00:52:48.900 countless things over and over and over again, guys get into hobbies. They go hard.
00:52:52.780 Guys jump from hobby to hobby to hobby. I've known guys that like become, you know, want
00:52:57.920 to be drift car drivers over a fucking night. And it's like, you know, guys just jump around
00:53:02.580 and then they usually don't stay with it. So just wanted to add that in.
00:53:07.060 The, the other aspect of this too, that's interesting is, um, you know, cause you just
00:53:14.200 kind of said it like guys, I think underestimate the amount of effort that's going into things
00:53:19.400 like active clubs and stuff like that. Like, do you know how much fucking energy it takes
00:53:24.440 to manage 200 guys? Like, just let's put this in perspective. If you have an organization
00:53:30.060 of 200 guys, think about what managing a company of 200 people would be like, even if you're
00:53:35.980 not at the very top, if you're, you know, in the top 10% of the leadership or, you know,
00:53:42.340 the top 10% of the org at the leadership level, think about what that's like at that scale.
00:53:47.500 And so people see these organizations and they see these guys doing, you know, stuff
00:53:53.140 with 20 guys, 30 guys, 40 guys, whatever. Right. Stuff like Patriot front. And they're
00:53:57.220 like, Oh my God, there's only 200 guys. It's like, yeah, that's a lot. Like to organize
00:54:02.380 at that level where you're all these people are coming together simultaneously. That is
00:54:06.600 a shitload of effort. And if you don't believe me, why don't you try it? Try it. It's not
00:54:11.840 fucking easy.
00:54:12.480 Do you want to go ahead, Steve?
00:54:17.840 Steve, jump in there.
00:54:19.560 Sure. So Hammer was talking earlier about, you know, being caught in the moment and having
00:54:25.540 the bigger picture view. I think sometimes it also goes the other way where people are
00:54:29.960 so daunted by the bigger picture and maybe they have a goal, whether it's personal one
00:54:37.420 or a more altruistic one. And it's very daunting. And I've found personally that just trying to
00:54:44.640 break things down into, uh, into smaller goals, steps to accomplish that larger one. Um, you
00:54:51.980 know, keep the bigger picture in sight of why you're doing these simpler things, but just
00:54:56.700 where it all gets daunting to break it down in more manageable steps. And then that way
00:55:01.500 and having a checklist, right? Feels good to scratch something off the list, check something
00:55:07.280 off. Um, and really whether it's fishing or, you know, beating up your friends at the, at
00:55:15.420 the gym, having a healthy hobby that allows you to take that time to dissociate and just have
00:55:22.400 some fun, whatever that fun is for you. Obviously, you know, working out martial arts, it's very
00:55:28.600 physical and that exertion does help to, uh, to expend hormones and, uh, give you endorphin
00:55:35.000 kicks. So it's a great one, but anything that really gives you pleasure, uh, in a healthy
00:55:40.120 way, you know, fishing, music, hunting, stuff like that. It's a, it's a good way to recharge
00:55:46.400 the batteries.
00:55:46.940 Thanks, Steve. We brought, I brought up truth. She's a lovely, very intelligent lady from
00:55:53.320 Australia who knows a lot about health in general. So welcome truth. Go ahead.
00:56:00.660 Hey guys. Um, love hearing all the talking points and, um, it is true. Keep it simple,
00:56:07.720 keep it consistent. So when I work with people and I've worked with people a couple of decades,
00:56:11.860 I've written books, programs, tools and techniques to help people with their mental health and wellbeing
00:56:18.720 and, um, a lot of good talking points, you know, uh, going outside, definitely we do not
00:56:25.580 have proper air ventilation in our homes. I don't build it like that anymore. So our lung
00:56:31.300 function, having the right oxygen in our bodies, our blood circulation is key. This is why we feel
00:56:37.940 great when we go camping or fishing or to the beach. So definitely, um, a plus and really we are
00:56:46.320 trying to build, to have the best relationship with ourselves because when you build that best
00:56:51.760 relationship with yourself and start to have that self-commitment, you're going to draw and be
00:56:57.520 something of an inspiration to others. And I think with the white, um, nationalist movement
00:57:04.120 and with the young people, it's for them to understand that, um, their inheritance is here.
00:57:11.260 Their fathers, forefathers built the countries they are walking on. So they need to feel more
00:57:17.340 confident in that. And that confidence, that energy is going to make the nones run away. So it's about
00:57:24.920 telling these younger kids that as well, this is your inheritance. You're the only one that's entitled
00:57:30.020 to it. And, um, I think that's going to help them with some confidence setting goals. As Steve said,
00:57:36.240 small goals is key. Um, you don't want to do big things, but if you're really feeling depressed and
00:57:43.320 you're feeling that heaviness, that wall, that's not, um, allowing you to do anything, you know,
00:57:49.820 20 minutes walk a day, just start by walking around the block. And as you do that and be consistent
00:57:56.520 with it within a couple of weeks, that's going to get further and you're going to, um, build your
00:58:00.960 confidence and feel better about it. Ferryman brought up a great idea, um, when he said there's
00:58:05.920 ideas people, and that happens to a lot of us where we've got a lot of ideas, but we can't put it into
00:58:11.160 action. So that is a big thing of trying to meld in your ideas with your actions. And as you start to
00:58:18.700 take those small actions with your ideas, you will feel a sense of accomplishment and achievement.
00:58:23.640 And that's definitely going to help your mental health. And of course, being around the right
00:58:28.320 people is key. If you're around negative people all the time, it's going to be really hard to be
00:58:33.620 positive and to have, you know, courage and fortitude for the things you want to do.
00:58:40.020 So always find those people that inspire you that go, yeah, you know, you want to,
00:58:44.680 it's not to compete with someone else, but it's just to feel inspired. Look at what they're doing.
00:58:48.460 You know, I've got something I can bring to the table and that's what we all need to do.
00:58:53.700 So there's just a couple of little points I thought I'll bring up. And, you know, there's
00:58:57.640 also a lot of limiting beliefs that we've been brought up with a lot of propaganda, especially
00:59:03.860 in the white European community. We see it at schools as well, when they're telling kids
00:59:09.200 that, you know, whites are nothing that now Vikings were black, you know, so we really have
00:59:15.580 to go deeper into that and change that mindset as well. And there's plenty of really simple tools
00:59:21.000 and techniques to, to do that. And I've seen amazing transformations when we remove those
00:59:26.660 limiting beliefs and shift that shame and guilt that is not ours to hold on to anymore.
00:59:31.780 Um, so yeah, so just pinpoint the biggest issues that you feeling you're struggling with in life
00:59:38.640 and just, um, looking to that and then that can, you can then expand from that and heal
00:59:44.500 that, but never give up. If anyone's feeling really desperate and, um, you know, in a heavy
00:59:52.580 place, right? Cause that's what depressed means. Press down, never give up. There's always someone
00:59:56.900 you can talk to. There's always someone you can reach out, um, to. So just, yeah, never give up.
01:00:02.160 Just go for a walk, start there and cut out sugar as much as possible, white sugar, um, and have a
01:00:09.160 look at your food and maybe it's just start with a healthy breakfast. Then you can introduce healthy
01:00:13.540 lunches, whatever, as big or as small as you need it to go. Um, and I think that's what I'll leave
01:00:19.900 it at that for now. Thanks guys. Thanks truth. Thank you so much for coming up. You're so
01:00:25.480 knowledgeable radio. Did you want to go? You had your hand up, but now it's, yeah, I'll just add
01:00:29.080 something really quick. I don't know who said it, but I think one of the things, and this is
01:00:33.300 I think somebody was talking about black pills, white pills. A lot of guys are kind of haters.
01:00:38.620 There's guys out there that there's a lot of jealousy. I've kind of come to observe both in real
01:00:44.280 life, you know, everyone's, you know, sort of saw when we're sure there's a lot of jealousy among
01:00:48.080 non-whites that that's one of the top things. I'll never admit it. Um, but your average low IQ
01:00:53.800 payment ape is inherently jealous of is not even white male equivalent because it's not an equivalent,
01:01:00.620 but you guys know what I mean. So, and I think that that translates over to the, the egotistical
01:01:05.240 alpha males that a lot of us deal with in various ways, shapes, and forms. And I think that that's
01:01:10.840 another thing guys were talking about the, um, you know, a lot of the resistance coming from within.
01:01:14.880 Um, so that's just one thing I noticed. I think it's, it's toxic, you know, goes by different
01:01:19.440 names. Um, but it's not always, I think accurately described for what it is. You got a lot of guys
01:01:25.020 that, um, you know, it's, it's, it comes from jealousy and subconscious jealousy in some way,
01:01:30.700 shape or form. I think, you know, they, they put guys down and fairy rails in this constantly.
01:01:35.380 And he's right for rightfully. So, uh, guys criticizing other guys that when they're not doing anything
01:01:40.520 better or, or even remotely close to better, or even trying to do better. So I did, I think that
01:01:47.220 there's too much criticism to go around and not enough, uh, you know, positivity, uh, if I was to,
01:01:53.020 you know, maybe kind of give a low grade take on the matter. Um, and I just wanted to kind of add
01:01:58.140 that to, I think, uh, what the guys were talking about earlier. Yeah. Too much talking, not enough
01:02:02.480 action. Go ahead, fairy. It's also undue criticism. I'll just quickly add it. It's undue criticism.
01:02:07.660 Like, you know, it's real easy to fucking criticize guys. You know, criticism is like,
01:02:12.000 you know, or assholes. Everybody's got, you know, them in droves. So I just think there's
01:02:16.520 plenty of criticism and not enough, you know, just good faith, masculine, positive reinforcement.
01:02:26.140 Well, it's funny too, because like, I don't know, those people who know me know, like I would
01:02:30.740 happily shut the fuck up and just get behind somebody who was better at this, uh, in Canada,
01:02:37.280 if there was someone, but if they exist, I've never heard of them. So, you know, I don't even
01:02:42.380 want to really be doing this to be honest. So I would much rather be in a support role
01:02:48.280 than in a public facing one, but it is what it is. I was going to address, um, something truth
01:02:55.720 had said there, which is there's this tendency of like, at the individual level, taking care of
01:03:03.680 yourself is part of nationalism. Like you are the nation, like you are the people.
01:03:11.360 And there's this weird tendency that people have where, like, I find it odd because, um,
01:03:17.880 you know, like, I'll use myself as an example here. If something's not quite right with me,
01:03:23.060 you know, whatever my, like what, I'll just like use a real example. Like my fucking hip
01:03:26.840 has been, I don't know, feeling weird the past couple of weeks. I should probably go get it checked
01:03:31.500 out, but I won't. Um, but if my dog was limping, I would like take him to the vet immediately
01:03:37.580 to like, get it checked out to make sure that he's fine. Cause like, you know what I'm saying?
01:03:42.440 So there's this tendency of people to care more for the things that they care for than to care
01:03:48.920 for themselves. And we see this all the time with like people and say like kids, um, you know,
01:03:54.220 you'll have somebody who's as a parent, they'll be shoveling fucking goy slop down their throat,
01:03:59.780 but they would never let their kid do that. Or at least, you know, that some people do,
01:04:04.260 but you get what I'm saying is like, they'll eat fucking chocolate bars and drink pop like away
01:04:09.400 from their kids, but they would never let them consume that shit on a daily basis the way they
01:04:14.300 are. And so what I'm getting at it, or, you know, they'll make sure that their kids are staying
01:04:17.940 active and stuff like that, but they're not doing it themselves. And so there's this, you know,
01:04:23.240 importance. And I, I absolutely despise the people who counter signal this, like, uh,
01:04:28.620 Daniel Tyree had a good post about this, you know, what is the simple things that you can do
01:04:33.800 as an individual at the individual level to support nationalism. And one of the things he lifted was
01:04:39.580 listed was, you know, lifting weights or just being like, you know, physically healthy.
01:04:44.340 And there's always some faggot in the audience that is either a fat fuck or Brown or subversive
01:04:50.640 or something like that, that has to counter signal that messaging there are they, they can't help
01:04:56.340 themselves. They're either a fuck effeminate nerd, a fat piece of shit, or they simply
01:05:01.760 are just bitter. And they'll do things like, Oh no, you should just make money and, uh, you
01:05:08.160 know, gain power. And I don't know, influence and stuff like that. And it's like, you know,
01:05:13.220 what makes that a lot easier to do when you're healthy and when you're, you know, you have charisma
01:05:19.280 because you're not a fucking dysgenic piece of shit. Um, you know, whenever you look the part,
01:05:24.500 um, there's the advice of, uh, you know, being physically active and taking care of yourself
01:05:29.960 is not just like obvious self-help advice, because that is obvious self-help advice.
01:05:36.540 It's much deeper than that. It's understanding that you are part of the nation. You are a reflection
01:05:41.600 of the nation and the state of the people at the individual level compounds and manifests at a
01:05:47.740 societal level. And it's not a mistake that when we look back at videos of our people 40, 50, 60 years
01:05:55.220 ago, and we see that they're all fit and they're all healthy and they're all dressed right. And
01:06:00.020 they're, you know, they're, they're not dressed slovenly and they carry themselves differently and
01:06:04.200 they have good posture and they're not staring at their phones and they're, you know, making eye
01:06:08.460 contact with people and saying hello to them and just conversing with one another on the street.
01:06:12.560 It's not a coincidence that we don't look like that anymore. And the way you fix that is by at
01:06:18.940 the individual level, encouraging people to write those habits and then encourage those for those
01:06:24.600 people to encourage others to do the same. And the last thing I'll say on this is that the easiest
01:06:29.080 way to sell anything is to fucking look good. Um, the strongest optic, the best optic is strength.
01:06:37.060 So when you go to some, like how many times have we seen this whenever you have, like I'll use the
01:06:42.920 example of like when Joel Davis debated Drew Pavlou, like just look at the difference in the energy and
01:06:49.640 the way they carry themselves and the physiognomy and the fitness and all this stuff. And that helps.
01:06:55.540 I mean, Joel wrecked them intellectually too, but compound that with the fact that like, just look at
01:07:00.480 them like debate over whose worldview is better. Like whose worldview is more compelling. Um, you know,
01:07:07.040 look at like Jared Taylor versus like one of these, um, you know, academic Jews or something like
01:07:13.000 that. Like, you know, they're fat hunched over fucking, you know, all fucked up and like, you
01:07:17.440 know, just a repulsive, right. Um, you know, our people take care of themselves and that is the best
01:07:23.180 way to embody the views of what, whatever it is, whether it's nationalism, national socialism,
01:07:29.520 fascism, like all these things obviously are interrelated. And like, that is the way you carry
01:07:34.520 yourself at the individual level. So it's not a simply a matter of like, um, you know, get fit
01:07:41.200 to mog lefties. Although that's fun. It's much deeper than that. It's addressing a problem that
01:07:47.320 exists with us at the individual level that manifests at the societal level.
01:07:52.480 And it's all interconnected with mental health too. Right. So that's as far as I'm concerned.
01:07:57.200 Anyways, uh, Nanya, go ahead. Thanks for coming up, buddy. Yeah. Thanks for the mic. I appreciate
01:08:04.040 it. White power. Uh, I guess I joined a little bit late, had a, uh, a little bit longer at Chuck
01:08:09.380 E. Cheese's for my daughter's birthday than I thought we were going to run, but it's all good.
01:08:13.380 Um, to touch on what Ferryman was talking about. And I, you know, I think that's a hundred percent
01:08:17.760 right. Uh, when it comes to a lot of people can, the saying we have in the military is
01:08:24.640 do as I say, not as I do. Uh, and I think that translates a lot into the civilian world
01:08:30.060 too. There's a lot of people that, you know, maybe they had a shitty upbringing, uh, such
01:08:34.540 as myself. And I am also guilty of this, uh, but for different reasons. Um, and they want
01:08:41.100 their kids to be better, but they don't really give a shit about themselves. Now I'm not that
01:08:45.940 way. Um, but I am in some aspects, uh, but it's because, uh, you know, I blew both my
01:08:54.300 shoulders out in the military and I just, I can't, I can't be as physically fit as I
01:08:58.040 used to be. I just can't. But at the same time, I push my son to be as physically fit
01:09:03.780 as he can. You know, I can still go down and do 25 pushups in a row without being fucking
01:09:08.460 tired. That's no big deal. Um, and I, I make sure that my son does that kind of stuff.
01:09:14.580 He's doing pushups, he's doing sit-ups, you know, he's on the track team. Uh, he's,
01:09:18.320 uh, you know, getting himself physically fit and thus helping him to be more mentally fit
01:09:24.220 in the process. You know, you can't, you can't be mentally fit if you're not physically fit.
01:09:29.040 Now there's, you know, few and far between people that can do that. They're just geniuses
01:09:33.180 that are fat or, you know, skinny fucking twigs. And that's, that's here nor there, but
01:09:39.200 at the same time, there are a lot of people out there that just, like he was saying,
01:09:42.940 they'll, they'll go behind the scenes when their kids aren't watching and they're drinking
01:09:47.100 soda and eating fucking hamburgers and shit. And then they'll tell their kids, Oh, you
01:09:50.280 can't do that because it's bad for you. I mean, that's to me, that's just straight up
01:09:54.000 hypocritical. And I don't, I don't want to live like that. I don't want my kids to turn
01:09:58.840 out like that. So I let my kids know, look, you know, I'm not eating this cause it's not
01:10:03.100 healthy. That's why you're not eating it. You know, I, I'm not going to go behind their
01:10:06.600 backs and do that. They want to have a chocolate bar once every two weeks. Hey, big fucking
01:10:11.260 deal. Have a chocolate bar. You're going to go out there and sweat your ass off, mowing
01:10:14.020 the lawn anyways, or whatever. But at the same time, it's like, we really need to understand
01:10:20.780 that as individuals out in public or in a group setting, we have to set a standard for
01:10:28.520 ourselves. And it's just like also what Ferryman was saying, you know, strength is the best
01:10:33.980 optic. You can't go out there and expect someone to listen to you, especially if they're like,
01:10:39.620 yeah, you need to do pushups and this. And they've got a fucking huge beer belly. I'm like,
01:10:43.840 dude, why would I listen to you? And our children, you know, they think the same thing. They might
01:10:50.120 not think it on the same intellectual level as, you know, an adult on the street, but they still
01:10:57.240 see that stuff and they still think it. So I think it, it comes back to us as individuals and
01:11:03.620 especially us as parents, we need to be teaching our children this kind of stuff. We need to make
01:11:07.620 sure that they understand that, you know, eating healthy and exercising and limiting screen time
01:11:14.120 and knowing the truth of the world. What's really happening is just, it's so important for mental
01:11:22.260 and physical wellbeing that we've been, we've been propagandized so much that there's so many people
01:11:29.460 out there that just don't understand anymore. They'll, they'll look at the fucking food pyramid
01:11:33.620 and be like, Oh yeah, the government says this is great. You know, and they're sitting there eating
01:11:37.180 fucking shit and wondering why they're getting fat and can't run and all this kind of stuff. So
01:11:44.640 I mean, it all just comes down to being able to look at yourself in the mirror and having that
01:11:51.080 introspection and saying, look, I need to be better. And then having the motivation to do it. And if you
01:11:55.940 don't have the motivation to do it, ask a buddy, ask a friend, ask your neighbor, get on these
01:12:01.220 spaces and ask somebody. If you need someone to give you a kick in the ass, just ask. Lots of
01:12:06.460 people will help you. And I'll leave it at that.
01:12:12.700 Thanks, Nenya. That's actually important. Yeah. Hammer?
01:12:16.700 Chris, jump in there. Yeah.
01:12:18.940 I was going to say, um, a couple of you guys mentioned it, but you know, as far as
01:12:23.400 like the weak, fat and sad people trying to, uh, I don't know, there's something about
01:12:33.260 the sad that they admit the old saying goes, misery loves company, right? The sad wants you to be sad.
01:12:40.400 The weak wants you to be weak. And remember that, you know, anyone that's counter signaling strength,
01:12:47.480 they're never a strong person. Why? Why? There's something there, right? There's a connection
01:12:55.380 there. And I've noticed this with, um, a lot of, you know, air quote, there's been over the years,
01:13:03.540 there's been leaders air quote in this community that have had, uh, underwhelming physiques at best.
01:13:13.720 Right. And they'll often have a line about how they've prioritized their time in some way or
01:13:23.860 another that makes them superior. And their, you know, repulsive physique is a reflection of their,
01:13:34.080 you know, exceedingly wise, uh, prioritization of time, but it doesn't really take a bunch of
01:13:43.540 time to not be a disgusting, weak, fat slob. Um, if you're really pressed for time, if you don't
01:13:51.800 have access to a gym, believe me, it's hard, especially for me, like I I've been in the gym
01:13:57.840 for ever, you know, my entire adult life, I've had all kinds of, you know, long runs of just
01:14:07.720 heavy, hard power lifting. And there's a certain, uh, habitual nature to the way I train it.
01:14:16.820 Training with a gym for me is very hard. So I get that, but you know, a burpee routine is shown to
01:14:25.020 make people extremely fit with very little time. Uh, there's a guy on YouTube who talks about it.
01:14:32.080 He's got like, he does like 80 minutes a week of burpees and he's shredded. Right. Um, another one
01:14:39.640 that you could think about that's that you get a lot of bang for your buck time wise, and you can
01:14:45.160 do anywhere is jump rope and jump ropes are cheap, dude. You can get a really nice jump rope on Amazon
01:14:53.820 for like $10. It could be in your car at all times. And, uh, they say 10 minutes of jumping rope is
01:15:02.080 equivalent to 30 minutes of running. It will kick your ass real quick, real, real quick. Especially
01:15:08.880 if you're, you know, you don't have great cardio, you get to starting on it. You'll, you'll see that
01:15:14.480 that jump rope will whip your butt. So, you know, in that case, golly, man, if you were jumping rope
01:15:21.060 for 15 minutes a day, you're going to be shredded, aesthetic, strong, et cetera. So their argument
01:15:31.400 kind of doesn't hold water really because their argument's always about, oh, I, I, I'm a fat
01:15:40.100 or, and or weak slob because I spent my time more wisely than you. I don't like that one, but yeah,
01:15:49.820 the weak wants you to be weak. The sad wants you to be sad. So remember that once all these people
01:15:56.340 that we're talking about, not only when it comes to fitness, but you know, we touched on it a little
01:16:00.440 earlier about, you know, just the, the, uh, naysayers in this movement or the slanderers or
01:16:08.040 whatever, the detractors, all those guys, they're just sad people and they want you to be sad. So just
01:16:15.120 keep that in mind. It's, it's, it's also just, I've, I've heard the same kind of stuff that you're
01:16:21.460 alluding to from certain people. And it's just like, it's obviously a terrible argument because,
01:16:27.200 so let me get this straight. You're sacrificing your health because your time is so important to
01:16:33.040 the movement right now in this very moment that you're going to create conditions where by the time
01:16:40.040 you hit your late forties, early fifties, you're going to have so many debilitating health conditions
01:16:45.420 that you're basically no longer useful to the movement at all, because you can't even do the
01:16:50.900 things that you were doing before. Like why, like, like longevity. And as we were talking about earlier,
01:16:57.600 pacing yourself appropriately is a huge part of this. And like, that's why what's fucking Jared
01:17:03.800 Taylor's like in his late seventies. Now I forget how old he is, but like, he's still going like,
01:17:09.440 look at how fit he is at, at 80. And he's like on doing speaking tours and, and just using him as an
01:17:15.340 example, but even, you know, there's other older folks too. And, but the, the other thing too, is
01:17:22.080 that I was going to mention this as well, is that it goes beyond just even the physique thing. It's
01:17:27.660 like, don't you want to, you know, this ties into what I was just getting at with the debilitating
01:17:31.980 health conditions? Like, don't you like not want to be a burden on your people? Like, I, I understand
01:17:39.620 that, you know, certain things are unavoidable, you know, you can't all, you know, cancer can get
01:17:44.760 anyone right. And like, you know, your heart can, you know, you're a man, like, I like heart attacks
01:17:51.120 happen, shit like that. Right. Um, but a lot of the stuff that is, you know, causing our people to be,
01:17:57.500 um, in terrible conditions right now are completely avoidable. It's like, do you really
01:18:02.380 want your people to bear the burden of your health? Um, because you know, they will, because
01:18:09.000 they care about you, but is that something you, you, you want to put people in that position?
01:18:14.100 Um, do you want to have to devote all these medical resources and energy and time from care providers
01:18:21.560 to support you? Like, is that really what you want to do? Uh, some want to put on other people
01:18:27.560 because you were fucking lazy to skip rope or go for a walk? Like what, I don't even understand how
01:18:33.880 you can call yourself nationalist. Like if that's your perspective is like, I'll just be a burden on
01:18:39.440 everybody else. Like, well, you don't care about yourself. So you don't care about that part of the
01:18:43.720 nation and you don't care about, you know, what you're doing to the collectives. You're clearly not
01:18:48.460 a nationalist. So like this idea, again, where people, you know, kind of turn their nose up at
01:18:54.280 the guys who hammer physical things into overall health as being part of nationalism. I think they
01:19:00.260 fundamentally just don't understand what nationalism is.
01:19:05.960 And you're going to end up in the hands of Browns. If you go the way of the healthcare route,
01:19:11.320 you'll find yourself.
01:19:12.200 Oh yeah. Yep. And you're not going to be taken care of at that point. And as somebody who worked
01:19:17.040 with seniors, I'll just say this quickly, Ferry's absolutely right. You don't want to be in need
01:19:21.480 of any kind of healthcare because you're not going to get it. Number one. And if you do get it,
01:19:26.460 it's going to be so shitty. You'll wish you didn't. So yeah. Uh, none. Yeah. Yeah. So I was going to
01:19:34.760 touch on a couple of things, but I wanted to, uh, talk about what Ferry said first there. Um, and one of
01:19:40.420 the key things that I got out of what he was talking about was that, you know, you don't want your
01:19:44.920 people to end up having to take care of you. And I think that's the biggest, that's to me,
01:19:50.700 that's the biggest term, uh, because a lot of white people don't consider, consider themselves
01:19:58.380 part of anything. They are just there, you know, maybe they're part of their family. Maybe they're
01:20:03.940 part of a workforce, but they're not considering themselves part of a people. They don't, they don't
01:20:10.700 think like that. And it's been programmed into us, you know, by the Jews and, you know, all the,
01:20:16.680 the propaganda that's happened. White people just around aren't like, yeah, I want to be better
01:20:23.480 for my people. And that's just not how a lot of people think nowadays. And that's something that
01:20:29.380 we need to change. Um, the other thing I was going to talk about, I wanted to go back. Uh, I don't
01:20:35.280 remember who was speaking before Ferryman, but he said, uh, you know, the, the people who are sad
01:20:40.260 want you to be sad and that kind of stuff. And as true as that is, I think the, one of the issues
01:20:51.040 there is there's so much going on when it comes to mental health nowadays, that a lot of people have
01:20:59.860 given up even trying to, you know, help themselves. Maybe they'll help their kids. Maybe they'll help
01:21:05.020 a friend, but it goes back to that, you know, reflecting in the mirror thing. People don't
01:21:09.080 want to help themselves. Uh, and they just, they're so overwhelmed with everything that's happening
01:21:15.780 that they just don't seek help. And that's a big problem, uh, in the military. Now I'm former
01:21:22.620 military and I know it was a problem for me, um, early on too, because in the military we're taught
01:21:29.460 only, only females ask for help. You know, if you're a man, you don't fucking ask for help.
01:21:34.820 I don't care if you're hurting. I don't care if you, you feel like something mentally is going
01:21:39.120 wrong. You don't ask for help because then you're a bitch, you know? And that's that there's a lot of
01:21:44.320 that. That to me is the definition of toxic masculinity. Now I know the definition is a little
01:21:53.560 bit different, but when I look at that, that's exactly what that is. Because if you're a man,
01:21:58.840 you need, especially if you were raised properly, you know, when to ask for help. It doesn't matter
01:22:06.940 if somebody says you're going to be a bitch if you ask. And it took me a long time to figure that
01:22:12.600 out. You know, uh, I was in the middle of fucking, I think it was Afghanistan and I had a, I had an
01:22:20.360 anxiety attack because we just had a bunch of rockets fucking come in and we had to duck for cover.
01:22:25.620 You know, this happened all the time. It wasn't the first time. And I had an anxiety attack and I
01:22:30.180 had never had an anxiety attack before. And I was like, what the fuck is going on? And I knew
01:22:36.880 immediately I need to go get fucking seen because this shit isn't right. And that's one of those
01:22:43.340 reflecting times, you know, you have to, you have to say, I need some fucking help. And I went and
01:22:48.360 sought help. And you know, I got help from counselors, but the military is not the best at helping
01:22:53.940 people. They threw a bunch of fucking drugs down my throat that numbed me for years and
01:22:58.600 years. So I had no feelings, but it helped the anxiety. But that's, that's, that's besides
01:23:07.280 the point. The point is it does, there's absolutely nothing wrong with asking for help. If you're
01:23:13.980 a man, you have to, you have to take that step because taking that step, um, to help yourself,
01:23:21.820 isn't only going to help you. It's going to help everybody around you. It's going to help the people
01:23:27.160 that care about you and it's going to make you a better person. So I'll just leave it there.
01:23:33.320 That actually, that was really great. And I think that's really important, especially
01:23:37.180 for, you know, people in the military or anybody like anybody who's been, you know, arrested or
01:23:42.340 anything like that. You, and I don't want to talk about, you know, trauma and trauma dumping and all
01:23:46.620 those fancy words, but you do have, um, a residual effect from that, even if you don't think you do
01:23:52.660 right from the different things that happen. And that's why you, you know, in your case,
01:23:56.040 you had an anxiety attack, even though you've gone through this already a million times. Right.
01:23:59.840 So I think it's important to, you know, be able to say something because it doesn't mean you're a
01:24:04.320 failure. Like men, they're, unfortunately they're right now, they're being put in impossible
01:24:09.560 positions. So I don't even understand how you're able to, you know, just manage day to day, let alone
01:24:14.720 raise a family and be the providers and the, you know, conquerors of our white utopia.
01:24:23.740 I think Rusty had his hand up next and then we'll go back to Hammer.
01:24:28.340 Rusty.
01:24:31.100 Yeah. Um, and another one that's good.
01:24:34.220 You know, they've done studies, uh, and they found working out solid workouts, you know,
01:24:40.680 good regimen. You're not, you know, uh, and, uh, just as effective as antidepressants.
01:24:47.200 So there's that. And then, you know, if you can't get to the gym or whatever, honestly,
01:24:53.880 right now I'm not even going to the gym, but I just work out at home and you'd be amazed at how much you
01:24:59.660 can do with even a single, um, dumbbell for your, for yourself. So like, I wouldn't recommend,
01:25:07.840 like say the dumbbell I use for everyone else, but, uh, it just depends who you go in, you go to
01:25:14.080 Walmart, test out a few dumbbells, see how long it takes like, uh, to get tired with it. If you're
01:25:19.520 getting tired on that dumbbell and, uh, uh, you know, um, eight, 10 reps or so, it's probably a
01:25:24.800 good size dumbbell to start with. And you can do so many different exercises and then your calisthenics,
01:25:31.820 right? So a lot of calisthenics, uh, someone had touched on burpees, uh, great, super great. And,
01:25:38.300 uh, pushups, all of that stuff, right? Dips, all of these things will get you. If you're,
01:25:44.240 if you're on it, you can get yoked. Thanks, Rusty. Go, Mr. Hammer.
01:25:56.340 To be honest, I forgot what I raised my, what I was going to say, but yeah, I could say though that
01:26:01.100 like, you know, one of the questions here, I, you know, cause, uh, Fairman was talking about,
01:26:09.080 you know, your role in the nation with this sort of thing, like self-improvement, but it's
01:26:15.580 also just the general culture that we're building together. It's, uh, by, you know, participating in
01:26:24.340 these sorts of activities, encouraging these sorts of activities, we are creating a collective
01:26:29.180 consciousness and, you know, what good is this movement? Is this, uh, what good are we all going
01:26:37.820 to be together if we're not all fit, if we're not all dialed in, if we're not all smart and,
01:26:42.980 and, and well-read, right? That's another, another part of self-improvement, you know,
01:26:48.140 working on your reading, working on your skills, becoming a skilled individual. Um, so it's a,
01:26:56.660 it's a culture of improvement that we really need to acknowledge that we're creating because
01:27:03.560 if we allow the naysayers to this, to, you know, get a foothold in any kind of way, then they're
01:27:11.480 detracting from that culture, that collective consciousness, and those guys need to be bullied
01:27:18.420 out. Yeah. I wanted to get into reading because I know we talk a lot about the physical, but
01:27:25.160 again, you know, our sleep's being impacted by our phones and are the amount that we're reading,
01:27:31.380 like the ability to actually get off the phone and get into a book. I know that reading is really
01:27:36.980 important to you, Chris, and, um, you're doing a lot of your, your podcasts are devoted to reading.
01:27:44.300 You know, if, uh, the FBI are going to be tracking you, they might as well be learning in your streams.
01:27:52.540 You're going to improve their IQ, uh, Hammer. He's going to improve the IQ of the FBI.
01:27:57.700 Red pill the cops while they're at it. So. Hammer's like a modern LeVar Burton reading rainbow for
01:28:04.480 racists. That's, that's Hammer reading rainbow. So yeah, I wanted Hammer if you wanted to dive
01:28:12.360 into, uh, like reading, maybe even what to read, but you know, like, you know, again, it's all for
01:28:17.980 our mental health, but to advance us. Golly. Yeah. I mean, there's all sorts of things that you can
01:28:27.980 read. I like to say that at the end of a book, I'd like to find myself a better man after reading that
01:28:34.980 book. And, um, that excludes a lot of stuff like, you know, novels for the most part fiction. And, um,
01:28:44.200 but sometimes not necessarily, not necessarily, I would say like, uh, as far as a recommendation
01:28:51.160 list of reading, it's hard for me to really listen, give you a giant list, but I'll tell you,
01:28:58.880 I just finished Lawtrop Stoddard's Rise and Tide of Color on stream. I think everybody should read
01:29:05.840 that one. Um, you're obviously read all of the national socialist stuff, read all Godfrey Peter's
01:29:13.220 books, read Hitler, um, and more. And, uh, you know, get it, get, get a little bit more
01:29:21.960 in touch with the history of American races. You know, um, there's a book that I'm reading right now
01:29:29.040 by Theodore G Bilbo. It's called separation or mongrelization. Take your choice. And he was a
01:29:37.800 governor and a Senator in Mississippi. Uh, so he was a powerful man and, uh, his insights are amazing,
01:29:46.100 but yeah, um, it is hard at first, you know, when you're used to this, like fast, uh, you know,
01:29:55.880 under one minute video, uh, this, this short attention span feeding thing that we're all
01:30:04.880 kind of trapped in with the phones. It is kind of hard at first. Yeah. And pop culture and TV,
01:30:12.240 even Netflix, it's hard to get away from that and force yourself to read at first. But if you just,
01:30:18.180 you know, dedicate yourself to like a page number a day, right? If you just do 20 pages a day,
01:30:25.200 you'd be pretty amazed that you can get steady, um, rate of books completed and it feels so good
01:30:35.080 to finish one. You know, you'll have such a good feeling afterwards. So as long as you make sure
01:30:40.320 it's a good quality, uh, text. Right. But yeah, I think all of us need to become, you know, philosopher
01:30:47.580 warriors and we really should spend a lot more time reading and reading a lot of the same things so
01:30:54.880 that we have, uh, a unified message that we're delivering, right?
01:31:03.500 Yeah. When we had, we were talking to Jared Taylor, um, I think it was radio that asked him about,
01:31:09.500 you know, GLR and George Lincoln Rockwell. And if he'd read any of his readings and
01:31:15.640 he, he, he wasn't comfortable with us going to GLR, he wanted to go back to, you know, it's more
01:31:22.180 important to read the documents of the founding fathers and that kind of thing. And it was,
01:31:26.960 it was a really tight bob and weave area. Um, but we did try and, uh, ask him about, uh,
01:31:34.740 his knowledge of GLR.
01:31:36.100 His argument was similar to, um, Rousseau, I would say it's, it's about Americanism as opposed to
01:31:43.580 Europeanism. I mean, obviously Jared Taylor understands the European ethnic heritage of
01:31:49.220 Americans, but he's more of a fan of American history about American nationalism, American
01:31:56.380 ethno-nationalism. So he didn't dodge it completely. Um, but he gave him a nod. I mean,
01:32:04.160 he didn't counter signal GLR at all. I, you know, he, he, I think his criticism was it was his
01:32:09.660 GLR was before his time. So he just happened to be WW2 vet, a Korean war vet, and his era was his
01:32:16.800 era. And he was, you know, the A&P was not that far removed from the war. I mean, he operated just
01:32:24.520 10, 20 years removed from the end of world war Jew. And, um, I think that that was his criticism that
01:32:31.180 probably wasn't in the right air to try to push such hard pro-European, you know, hard right
01:32:37.920 nationalism. Um, so I thought he had a pretty new, it was, it was a respectable response. Um, I thought
01:32:44.260 from, uh, from Mr. Taylor. So, but no, he, he didn't want to go too deep down that road. Cause I
01:32:49.980 don't, I don't think that's his wheelhouse and where he's most comfortable operating is. I think
01:32:53.760 anybody who knows his work would agree. I, I, I can hear what you're saying, but I think
01:33:00.880 if anyone who's actually read GLR would, they wouldn't call it European politics. He's very
01:33:09.120 American and it would be really hard to have read. Like if you have read white power, you
01:33:18.000 would personally agree just for the record. I was just articulating with Jared's thoughts.
01:33:21.780 I, I could not agree more. I totally agree with you. Yeah. Yeah. And you know, there's
01:33:26.060 a lot of like, so a lot of these guys don't even embrace some of the American like, uh, politicians
01:33:31.480 of our past because their, their desire for optics keeps them from even, you know, he's like
01:33:40.520 the guy, Theodore G. Bilbo, I was just talking about was a legitimate, one of the most loved
01:33:46.580 politicians in Mississippi history. And, uh, you know, not exactly what a lot of these
01:33:53.960 people would promote because he was extremely racist. Right. Uh, there's, there's a few
01:33:58.480 others, you know, like, uh, James K. Vardaman, right. Uh, dude, there's a, there was a Senator
01:34:05.700 in Mississippi, um, uh, John Sharp Williams that actually was advocating for T and D man.
01:34:13.020 He was a Democrat. Was he not? Oh, all of, all of the South was Democrat. It was resurrecting
01:34:20.680 the Democrat party. I've heard you talk about this. I've never really dealt, delved into
01:34:25.180 this. I mean, is that, could there be a hard right turn or racialist turn with a racialist
01:34:30.260 turn within the Democrat party? Is that even plausible in our lifetimes? Have you given thought
01:34:35.080 to that? No, I don't think it's plausible anymore. I don't think any of the parties that exist
01:34:41.340 are worried because once you get into their party system, then you have to start playing
01:34:46.280 ball with them. And that's one of the reasons that I think the South kind of, uh, they, they
01:34:53.980 got, I got kind of got drugged down with, with the Democrat party and they tried to, they
01:34:59.540 had like the, the Dixiecrat revolution thing. I don't know if you know about that, where they
01:35:04.680 tried to break away from the Democrats, but yeah, I don't know about making the Democrat
01:35:10.960 party racist, but it was racist. The Democrat party was very, the Democrats were the real
01:35:16.700 racist. And, uh, yeah, it's, it's crazy, man. When you, when you start to read that history
01:35:23.700 and a lot of American history, you know, even if you go far back, like to the, you know, national,
01:35:32.420 uh, conventions for the constitution, there was a lot of arguing back and forth, even back
01:35:39.160 then when it came to ratifying the constitution. And it was a slim majority that, you know,
01:35:45.220 those, those things, those directions were, uh, chosen with a very slim majority with an
01:35:53.340 aggressive debate on the other side. So there was never any, um, I guess, extreme continuity
01:36:02.760 with all of the air quotes founding fathers, right? They, they, they all had their own
01:36:09.000 debates and arguments, but we're getting off, I think a little bit. So I'll just stop.
01:36:14.540 No, I love it. I kind of wanted to just touch on that. Truth, you had your hand up, sweetie.
01:36:19.500 Please go ahead.
01:36:20.820 Yeah. Um, I think it's great conversations about all of that, but look, books are great
01:36:24.940 to inspire people and especially look into your folklore, the folk tales, the dances, you know,
01:36:30.740 all the stuff that your ancestors used to do. That's a great thing to inspire. Just another
01:36:35.140 thing with the mental mindset, um, with when we're talking to other people, like, I think
01:36:40.780 everyone has their different strengths and we need to play on that. And not everyone's
01:36:44.600 going to look all buffed, like they've just come out of the gym. And I think that's okay,
01:36:47.900 but they can still have a healthy lifestyle, which will keep them sharp and have a lot of
01:36:52.280 clarity, uh, within their mind. And the other thing we can do is, um, sometimes when, you
01:36:57.720 know, if someone's talking to you and they keep saying to you, you need to do this,
01:37:00.640 and you, you, you, our defenses go up and then we just go blank and we're not interested.
01:37:05.680 So I think what's best is for those that are older, that have been maybe at the routine
01:37:10.960 with the gym for years and years, and it's like a natural reflex for them to be more about
01:37:17.260 sharing what they do and why they do it and how it makes them feel. So tell your story
01:37:21.960 and that's going to inspire the younger generation or those that are sitting on their ass that
01:37:26.920 are thinking about it, not doing it to start to do it.
01:37:29.800 So if you're like, look, I do this because it makes me feel good. It's good for my mental
01:37:33.160 heart, whatever it is. And I think that's, um, a great way to inspire people to, to get
01:37:39.340 up and, and have that clarity and to live a healthy lifestyle. And again, I just want to
01:37:43.780 say, keep it simple, keep it consistent, start small. Don't try and go big because you'll
01:37:49.500 go backwards. So, you know, if you haven't exercised for a long time, just start small and then
01:37:56.000 build up on that slowly and slowly. Thanks guys. I'm going to drop down on the phone
01:38:00.240 because I'm going to be heading out, but I'm still going to stay with you guys.
01:38:02.520 Okay. Thanks, Truth. I, I, I do think that's important. What Truth said too, like, I really
01:38:07.560 think that, you know, regardless of what you do, you have to really just keep everything
01:38:12.400 healthy. It's like a whole balance. Um, yeah, we love our Australian white nationalists over
01:38:22.140 there. And, um, I love that these spaces keep us connected and, and, and that's such an important
01:38:28.440 part. I think of all of this is, is not feeling alone and feeling isolated. And, uh, you know,
01:38:35.220 the internet gives us that gift. And I, I mean, I wouldn't, you know, have the opportunity to know
01:38:41.480 any of these people in these spaces, had it not been for, you know, the invention of the internet,
01:38:48.100 if you will. Um, but it keeps us connected and it, and it helps us not feel so lost. Um,
01:38:54.020 so I guess like reading's really key exercise, really key social connections, really key. I mean,
01:39:02.740 and this did, the space did stem from, you know, a place for, you know, as Posty was saying is that,
01:39:08.920 um, you know, there's been suicides in her life and, you know, none yet can attest in the military,
01:39:15.920 you know, suicides happen all the time. And, um, you know, we're just trying to go like,
01:39:21.960 how can we help? How can we support you? What can we do? And, uh, cause we don't want to lose another
01:39:27.480 good white man to, um, you know, this oppression that we're everyone's feeling, but it's coping
01:39:35.180 with differently. I think even one of the most inspiring things has been, you know, watching
01:39:40.760 the ferryman transform, you know, like a couple of years ago, you know, he wasn't, he wasn't feeling
01:39:46.700 great at all. And now when you talk to, you listen to him or speak with him, it's like, he's never not
01:39:53.560 been a total fit, Chad. And, but, you know, we've watched those who of us who know Ferry have
01:40:00.180 watched him transform before our eyes, particularly in the last two years. And, um, yeah, now he seems
01:40:08.320 like undefeatable. So it's inspiring to see that transformation too. It didn't happen quick and it
01:40:15.520 didn't happen overnight, but God damn it, it did happen. Amazing.
01:40:20.880 I'd like, I'd like to see what Chris or hammer thinks about like mentoring. Like I am a big
01:40:26.740 believer of paying it forward. So like the same thing is, you know, like I may have gone through
01:40:31.440 the same struggle. So now I'm going to try to help you get through your, your struggle. And I think
01:40:35.160 that's another way to build community. So I'm assuming you're a mentor for a lot of different
01:40:39.780 people. And how important do you think that is in these guys, like, especially young guys having a
01:40:44.040 good mentor? Yeah. Mentorship is a huge deal. We actually just started a, uh, system, a program
01:40:53.620 where every, every time someone comes up, uh, as eligible to be a prospect in order to move up
01:41:03.120 as a, to become a prospect, they have to get a sponsorship. And the sponsorship has to come
01:41:10.760 from any of our full members that have volunteered to sponsor this new guy. And they'll take on that
01:41:17.360 role of, you know, direct mentorship to that individual and show them the ropes and check
01:41:24.220 in on them and all that sort of thing. And just trying to create some accountability, um, there.
01:41:29.520 So, yeah, I, I definitely am a fan of it. It's a trick, you know, um, to keep track of people.
01:41:39.000 And yeah, we spoke about suicide a little, you know, been in situations like that, really,
01:41:44.420 I've lost friends to suicide and thought to myself, dang, what could I have done? Right.
01:41:50.540 And look, like, you know, I, my advice in any, to anyone in that situation would be to not beat
01:41:58.240 yourself up, you know, too much about it. Cause you're not the reason they killed themselves, but,
01:42:04.820 um, take the instruction from it either way. Right. So be mindful of your brothers, uh, check in on them.
01:42:14.920 Um, and, you know, when it comes to, I guess, mentoring people, having goals for them, having,
01:42:25.140 uh, uh, Fairman talked about this a little, kind of like tasks for them to complete,
01:42:30.760 giving them a little bit more at a time, uh, as you go increasing that load, as you see their
01:42:38.140 performance increase is a, is a important thing. But, um, also when it comes to you and seeking a
01:42:45.980 mentor, that is a trick in itself. And, you know, that's another good thing that books provide
01:42:53.060 really is that there are guys in the past that, uh, can act as mentors for you now for your character.
01:43:01.040 I think a great example is Robert E. Lee reading about Robert E. Lee has really been a really
01:43:07.500 amazing, um, mentor ship to me, even though the guy has been, you know, gone for almost 200 years.
01:43:16.960 Right. But it, it works. Right. So yeah, finding, you know, sometimes it's hard because our world
01:43:25.420 that we, the world that we live in, it's hard to find, uh, elders that you actually respect
01:43:31.480 that can get depressing, you know? Um, so that's another good thing about reaching out into this
01:43:42.100 community and getting into the organizational side is that you can find guys that have an
01:43:50.120 incredible quality about them, have incredible experience and can provide a much better example
01:43:58.140 for you. Um, then you'll find in the outside world. Even myself, I find some of my guys as mentors to
01:44:08.560 me in a lot of ways, right? Because they're older, they've done more, whatever they're, you know,
01:44:14.880 they've got a really nice, successful family, et cetera. So yeah, look for the examples when,
01:44:21.980 where you can find them, attach yourself to them and, uh, you know, try and help the young ones up
01:44:30.580 along the way as well.
01:44:35.160 I just wanted to, cause I have you for like 15 more minutes, Chris, I wanted to indulge in asking
01:44:41.760 a question about, you know, someone often we, in these spaces, we, in the same sentence, um,
01:44:49.120 they'll bring up Thomas Rousseau of Patriot Front and then they'll bring up Tamar from Blood Tribe
01:44:54.200 and seeing that your organizations are so like optically different, right? And yet you guys are
01:45:03.100 often brought up together in the same sentences. Like, how do you think that your organization,
01:45:09.680 or let's just say like you and Rousseau are similar, but different in your approach?
01:45:14.600 I, well, I'll, I'll be fair for one thing. I don't know Rousseau on a personal level. So I don't want
01:45:29.960 to, I don't want, I don't want anyone to think that I, um, to assume that I am speaking out of just
01:45:37.240 like, you know, great knowledge of him as a man and a leader. A lot of the stuff, when it comes to
01:45:42.420 leadership, a lot of that stuff happens behind the scenes out of all of our sight, right? I can
01:45:48.460 definitely tell you that from experience that most of the work is behind the scenes. So, um, there's
01:45:56.280 the, really the only thing that I have to go off of there to compare myself to him is how he is
01:46:02.360 perceived publicly. And, uh, I don't necessarily know if that's exactly fair. I will say like
01:46:12.120 Fairman was saying to pull off what he's pulled off. It is no small thing. Uh, organizing marches
01:46:19.000 with that many men so many times in a row or over the years is an incredible achievement. It really is
01:46:25.800 to get 200 guys in one place. I'm very envious of that. I would say that, uh, he's a great speaker.
01:46:34.560 That's another thing that, uh, I like to take as an example from what the work he's doing. I see
01:46:42.320 his speeches and I want to improve my own, right. Um, the way that we're different, I think that,
01:46:51.560 you know, we are pursuing different things. Um, I'm not necessarily into the whole, you know,
01:47:03.240 fascism, uh, aesthetic and the whole, uh, you know, America thing. I, I, I think we have to create
01:47:12.920 something new, right? And that's what I'm trying to do. Create something new with a new spirit,
01:47:20.240 but I also don't want to like, you know, detract from any of his work. I don't want to sound
01:47:27.160 negative, right? I don't want to like put the guy counter. Yeah. We're not going to count.
01:47:33.080 So, but it's just interesting because, you know, like you're red and black, he's kind of blue,
01:47:38.940 red, white, and blue. And yet, um, you know, you're standing underneath the swastika. He's standing
01:47:45.000 underneath like an American flag and Americana kind of aesthetic. And yet, you know, and it seems
01:47:52.820 that you guys are up to really different things. And yet it's perceived that you guys are both moving
01:47:59.800 that Overton window. Like you're pulling in the same direction. Um, which is kind of interesting
01:48:05.920 that you're both pulling in the same direction under different flags, different aesthetic,
01:48:10.740 and perhaps different objectives, but we're all going to the right, like one way or the other.
01:48:16.940 Yeah. I like to call myself the anchor at the end of the Overton window. All right. I'm at the end
01:48:22.060 here, pulling everybody my way as hard as I can. But I think people see a similar, uh, spirit with us.
01:48:31.280 They, you know, and probably there's something similar, uh, just similar ways that we affect
01:48:38.580 people, right. Inspiring them. And, uh, you know,
01:48:43.460 things they get to feeling pretty bleak. Like nobody is doing anything. Nobody wants to try
01:48:51.960 to help. And they see somebody at least trying and pushing as hard as they can. And, uh, yeah,
01:48:59.620 it gives them a little fire too. Uh, that's something I, you know, I always say about the Roman salute is
01:49:06.100 it's like a way of projecting your energy into the next white man. And even if he isn't really that
01:49:14.300 into it, he can't help, but receive it. Right. It's like a, a forceful entry of energy that, uh,
01:49:22.900 they become the receptacle of, but yeah, I think people, um, they need the heroes and that's what
01:49:31.680 they're getting out of seeing us both. Right. Um, but as far as comparing, you know,
01:49:38.220 his project to mine on like a, you know, on the details, it's really hard for me because
01:49:46.680 all I know is like things that I've heard about them and things that I've seen. And I know that
01:49:51.440 that's extremely, uh, an extreme small fraction. Right.
01:49:54.920 Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. You know, and I, I like, I, I admire both of your work and, and different styles,
01:50:02.620 right. You know, you use much stronger language than he does, you know, he's very careful in, um,
01:50:08.460 in his language, but I think, um, he's got sort of this desire to kind of sneak into that normie
01:50:16.360 language where yours is really clearly going to be like a shock and awe kind of approach. Right. And,
01:50:23.400 and I think both have, have value. Um, you know, I, I was saying like, if, you know, MS 13 were invading
01:50:32.540 my apartment building and blood tried showed up, like I wouldn't actually give the shit, like what
01:50:38.960 flag you guys wanted. I just want you to protect my kids. Right. So, but I know that you guys being
01:50:47.580 under the banner of the swastika empowers you. Um, and, uh, and it's what you guys need to move
01:50:54.280 forward. And I'm never going to counter signal. Um, you don't counter signal people who are further
01:51:01.560 to the right than you, or we, we have to unlearn how to counter, counter signal our own radicals.
01:51:07.800 And I don't, I love what Patriot Front does, but you know, it doesn't shock me, you know, kind of like
01:51:13.840 a blood tribe demonstration would be far more shocking. Right.
01:51:20.360 Yeah. And, but, you know, it's also like, what, what are we trying to create in the end too?
01:51:28.200 You know, um, you know, like, for example, I've heard in the past that a lot of guys who just
01:51:34.720 talk about NS stuff too much or Hitler too much gets removed from Patriot Front. I've heard this
01:51:42.080 from multiple people that have been in Patriot Front. So it's not just an optics thing. It's also
01:51:48.880 internal, right? So what are we trying to create? It's a, it's a different project and the optics
01:51:58.280 reflect the creative project as well. Right. So, um, my guys, nobody ever gets in trouble for being
01:52:07.360 too racist. Nobody get ever gets in trouble for being too much of a Nazi. That is in inconceivably
01:52:14.660 ridiculous to me. Right. So the creative product in the end is very much different. The community in
01:52:24.660 the end is very much different. And, uh, what we'll end up looking like in 30 years is going to be
01:52:31.980 very, very much different because the whole time they're sandbagging, we are doubling down. And that
01:52:39.840 is a very, very, very dynamic difference. Yeah, no, definitely no one's going to be in trouble
01:52:50.100 in your group for being too racist. That's the whole goal. It's like, you might get kicked out
01:52:57.880 for not being racist enough. That's might be, might be more of the problem. So, no, I think that's
01:53:05.040 funny, but it's interesting, you know, like in these spaces, you know, we have white nationalists,
01:53:10.780 we have fascists, we have national socialists, we have ethno-nationalists, like a lot, you know,
01:53:16.200 again, now there's the Christian versus the atheist pagan wars that are going on. Um, and,
01:53:24.360 you know, ultimately we're, we're all just trying to be folk first, right? Our people are being
01:53:29.840 genocided. Our people are, you know, in Canada, we're being, um, you know, demographically replaced
01:53:37.200 by Indians and Africans and the Chinese. And in, you know, America, it's very similar, right? And in
01:53:43.980 Europe, it's the Muslims and the Africans and Australia, it's the Indians and the Chinese. So
01:53:48.880 we're all being sort of ambushed by, um, by nons, by browns and, uh, whatever our, like,
01:53:59.140 I think of blood tribe is, is like an immune system response, right? Like you're literally
01:54:04.660 our T cells trying to defend our body from extermination. And so, and then there's people
01:54:12.680 out there trying to counter signal the T cells that are just doing their job in, in reacting
01:54:17.900 to, you know, a virus. Um, so I want to know your thoughts on that.
01:54:25.600 Yeah, for sure. Uh, and it's not that I want people to be shocked by us. To be fair, I would
01:54:35.140 think it would be a better scenario if people were not shocked by extreme racism, right?
01:54:41.760 Like my goal isn't to always be shocking. My goal is to move people into being exactly
01:54:49.940 like me, right? To influence them to be, oh, blood tribe is here. Yay. It's a parade. Let's
01:54:57.340 all celebrate and, uh, gather around the street as they marched by. Like that's, that's the
01:55:02.920 goal, right? So moving, uh, moving people forward and normalizing what used to be very normal
01:55:13.060 is the project, right? So compromise and making a compromise with people now where they're standing
01:55:23.220 now in the whole Overton window is not only, um, accepting defeat from the beginning, but
01:55:33.720 you're not even embracing the racism of past Americans and James K. Vardaman, governor of
01:55:41.980 Mississippi, most beloved governors ever. I mean, he, he had a crazy reception in one of
01:55:47.760 his elections where the whole freaking state traveled by horse, by buggy, by railroad.
01:55:53.200 To celebrate his inauguration. This man has a quote saying, if every single black in the
01:56:00.860 state of Mississippi has to be lynched to maintain white supremacy, it will be done. That's a
01:56:07.860 governor. That's a normal, uh, American thought pattern from not that long ago. So I'm, I'm not
01:56:18.320 interested in making some compromise with something in the middle when all those people in the middle
01:56:25.900 failed, right? Everybody who compromised failed. That's the trick that we've been trying forever.
01:56:34.180 There was people arguing with Vardaman about optics back then at the turn of the century.
01:56:40.600 There's been people arguing for better optics the whole time and they've been winning. They're the
01:56:46.860 ones that have had the most of the power. They're the ones that have moved us further away from the
01:56:54.260 truth. Right. And, uh, I don't think that that's a winning strategy. I think the winning strategy is
01:57:03.340 shaking people up and showing them that it's okay to, uh, be as aggressive for your folk as possible.
01:57:11.620 We're going to call you pastor Chris. Yes. I would listen to a sermon from you any day there, Hammer.
01:57:24.400 It's amazing. All right. Okay. Well, we're at the end of our show and, um, before we go, I just wanted
01:57:31.800 to acknowledge one thing that white Reich said earlier. And I think that all the women, I hope the
01:57:36.500 women that were listening in here, maybe he took something from that. Cause I did. Um, he said that men
01:57:41.160 sometimes just want to be appreciated and sometimes, you know, you may just have to say that, like maybe
01:57:45.460 you just assume it, but I think like, especially if they're fighting the good fight and I mean,
01:57:49.400 they're putting their neck out there and stuff like that. Like maybe we need to, you know, be a
01:57:53.460 little bit more, um, generous with our compliments and, and just realize that, you know, it's not just
01:57:58.920 about us, even though sometimes it thinks that way and women tend to think that way, but you know,
01:58:03.260 they might need a little bit of support too. That's all.
01:58:05.060 Yeah. And Chris Bullhouse, we appreciate you. We appreciate you so much and we appreciate
01:58:13.660 everything that you look forward to your Sunday sermons when you start them. Yes. We'll be showing
01:58:18.060 up with our church best.
01:58:19.320 But, you know, we do, we do appreciate it and we appreciate the, um, the guys who keep the 1488 radio
01:58:30.420 machine going in the white excellence radio machine going because it's tireless, thankless work. And
01:58:37.960 it's full of armchair quarterbacks who are, you know, yelling at the people on the field, running the ball.
01:58:45.960 So, um, we do appreciate it and we're thankful for those who are doing a thankless job. Um, thank you,
01:58:55.140 Posty for, uh, coming up with this content. Um, yeah, I'm actually, I'm actually glad and I didn't want to,
01:59:00.940 like I said, not that I wanted it to be about me, but just seeing how the men and especially younger men
01:59:05.140 are struggling. I thought it would be nice to have the men have their say and let them talk about it.
01:59:09.080 Cause I mean, we don't talk about this that much, right? With the men. So what was it about? How
01:59:16.460 many plates, like how many plates to be doing Chris? Yeah. How many? All of them. They've got to be
01:59:24.040 doing all the plates. Do all of the plates. Okay. Get your, get your testosterone check too, man. I mean,
01:59:33.960 you know, the average testosterone these days is 50% lower than it was 50 years ago. You might have
01:59:41.160 a problem and it's impossible to be happy when you have low testosterone. It's just physically
01:59:45.760 impossible. So get your testosterone check, man. That might be a thing. Yeah. It's like,
01:59:52.440 and our food's being poisoned and the water's being contaminated. And they're not eating enough
01:59:56.480 meat. The air is being sprayed. Yeah. Yeah. The men aren't eating enough red meat, I think too. So,
02:00:01.420 you know. Yeah. You need to hunt some elk. Yeah. Get someone from the nature, not the farm raised
02:00:07.280 stuff. Get some wild game meat. Eat some bear. Become more bear. And if you're on, in Australia,
02:00:13.260 I heard the kangaroo is not bad either. So there you go. There you go. All right. All right. Thanks,
02:00:20.320 everybody. See ya. Wait, Mythos. Admin, you got this.