Radio 3Fourteen - June 22, 2016


Women _ The Alt-Right_ The Awakened White Female


Episode Stats

Length

1 hour and 5 minutes

Words per Minute

184.73734

Word Count

12,049

Sentence Count

658

Misogynist Sentences

55

Hate Speech Sentences

67


Summary

On this week's episode of Red Ice Radio, we have a special guest on the show, Fash Britannia's co-host, Kathy, who joins us to talk about a variety of topics. We discuss the new Muslim mayor of London's ban on sexy women on public transport, and whether or not women are inherently left-wing. We also talk about the alt-right being infiltrated by homos and woman-haters, and the possibility that Milo Yiannopoulos is actually a homo. Finally, we discuss paganism, which is not LARPing.


Transcript

00:00:00.000 Thank you.
00:00:30.000 This is Radio 314 on the Red Ice Radio Network.
00:01:00.000 We do release a few excerpts in the TV section of Red Ice TV and on our YouTube channel, so check it out.
00:01:13.000 But to see the full show, you have to be a member.
00:01:15.380 If you're a member, be sure to log in to redicemembers.com on Saturdays at 5 p.m. Eastern U.S. time to watch Weekend Warrior live.
00:01:22.620 We'll also be implementing a chat function so members can communicate during the show.
00:01:26.940 Also, many of you know we're broadcasting selected filmed events live, and we have a couple more events coming up this month.
00:01:32.460 So be sure to follow us on Twitter or check out our website for updates since events creep up fast and we don't always have much advance warning before setting up the live stream.
00:01:40.900 And of course, I keep forgetting to tell you all that we have Red Ice T-shirts available for men and women, which I manufactured via my clothing label, Lana's Llama.
00:01:48.760 The T-shirts are super soft, made of 100% organic cotton, made in the USA by me.
00:01:54.560 You can visit lanaslama.com and enter Red Ice into the search field, or just go to redice.tv and you'll see the T-shirt banner.
00:02:01.520 One last thing, on June 20th, I was on the David Duke show, so visit his archives if you want to download and listen to that.
00:02:07.120 It's always fun talking to Mr. David Duke.
00:02:09.640 Now for Cathedral Princess, who hosts a show called Fash Britannia on TRS.
00:02:14.280 We'll talk about a lot in the next hour from the new Muslim mayor of London, who banned ads of sexy women on public transport systems, to questioning if women are inherently left-wing.
00:02:24.080 And we talk about the rumor that the alt-right has been infiltrated by homos and woman-haters.
00:02:28.820 I slip in a little bit of my thoughts on Milo.
00:02:31.300 We'll end by talking about paganism, which is not LARPing.
00:02:34.840 Kathy, up next.
00:02:36.380 Welcome, Kathy. Thanks for being here.
00:02:38.920 Oh, it's my pleasure. Hope you're doing well.
00:02:40.940 Not too bad. I think I heard you say that you had some Slavic roots.
00:02:44.060 Is that correct?
00:02:45.800 No.
00:02:46.740 Oh, okay.
00:02:47.920 Jeez.
00:02:49.140 I am 100%, as far as I know, Lithuanian, which is Baltic.
00:02:56.120 I came to England, actually, like six years ago to study for my undergraduate degree.
00:03:02.900 Yeah, and I've been here since.
00:03:05.220 So how did you become the host or co-host of Fash Britannia?
00:03:08.420 How did that come together?
00:03:09.180 Right, so it was a little bit after Fash the Nation came out that I kind of thought that,
00:03:15.400 well, there should be a British one, like a British podcast, politics podcast as well.
00:03:20.120 And there wasn't one, you know.
00:03:21.800 And at the same time, we had the TRS forums really sort of just starting out.
00:03:29.820 And I kind of, I joined the forums and I was like, well, does anyone want to do this thing with me?
00:03:35.920 You know, this podcast.
00:03:36.740 And, yeah, that's basically how it started.
00:03:41.420 We did run into sort of issues later on because of, like, you know, Britain and hate speech and that sort of thing.
00:03:49.780 Yeah, so at the moment, we are on a hiatus.
00:03:54.900 I'll see if I'm able to get something back up a bit later on in the year.
00:03:59.360 We'll see how it goes.
00:04:00.420 Is it one of those things, if you got caught talking about some of the things you talk about,
00:04:03.620 could they actually go after you for hate speech?
00:04:05.400 I mean, how aggressive are they with that?
00:04:07.760 Oh, they are getting more aggressive at the moment.
00:04:12.080 Like, I mean, six months ago, I would have said, like, they won't bother.
00:04:15.800 But now with more and more of, you know, with the latest kind of happenings,
00:04:22.440 the assassination of that MP and just other things, you know,
00:04:26.260 with national action becoming more and more sort of having more and more demonstrations and such,
00:04:31.460 it's getting a little bit more so that the establishment is coming after people.
00:04:37.480 And, of course, there was that lie that the killer said Britain first before he killed a woman.
00:04:41.300 And it was total BS, right?
00:04:43.100 Yeah, yeah, exactly, exactly.
00:04:44.620 It was complete nonsense.
00:04:47.940 Yeah, they'll just go to any lengths to, like, frame you if they even suspect that, you know,
00:04:54.180 there's anything non-kosher about you.
00:04:56.960 And, like, I mean, you might have heard of that guy who got arrested for, like,
00:05:04.040 teaching his doc to do the Roman salute.
00:05:07.520 Oh, yeah, I saw that.
00:05:09.420 This is unreal.
00:05:11.840 I mean, I just couldn't believe it.
00:05:13.060 I thought that was hilarious.
00:05:13.960 I thought that dog was so cute.
00:05:16.220 Yeah, yeah.
00:05:16.720 And the guy was, like, some sort of leftist commie anyway, and he was doing it as a joke.
00:05:21.100 But, like, none of this, none of it stops you.
00:05:23.380 I mean, as soon as, like, the establishment, you know, put that into Echoes,
00:05:29.420 as soon as they sort of latch on to you for anything, they'll go after you.
00:05:36.280 Yeah, I mean, the whole idea is, like, I would like to carry on with Fast Britannia at a later date.
00:05:43.800 However, like, I have to consider the balance between actually producing good old ride content and, you know,
00:05:53.360 not being in a position to, you know, suffer too much in case, you know, anybody doxes me or anything like that.
00:06:00.420 But, you know, there's this little value in having, like, a civic nationalist kosher podcast, you know, I think.
00:06:06.920 Oh, yeah.
00:06:07.740 Yeah.
00:06:07.940 So I'll have to weigh up the costs and benefits, and we'll see.
00:06:11.980 I think there will be a time when people can come out, but some people have to be in the closet for now.
00:06:17.140 It's funny because it's, like, how commies were in America, right?
00:06:19.900 They had to hide, and they had their secret meetings.
00:06:22.040 So it's, like, we're, like, the new communists, you know?
00:06:24.340 Jeez.
00:06:25.700 Yeah, yeah.
00:06:26.620 We are, in a way, except, you know, it was never, I don't think it was ever as bad for them as it can be.
00:06:36.980 Oh, yeah, I think that they lied, too.
00:06:38.640 Exactly.
00:06:39.040 This place was already so infiltrated by the 50s, you know, America anyway.
00:06:43.500 Yeah, exactly.
00:06:44.240 I mean, what's his name?
00:06:46.780 McCarthy did nothing wrong.
00:06:47.880 You know, he was completely right about the Hollywood and even the political establishment being infiltrated by communists.
00:06:57.700 I mean, because he was completely right.
00:07:00.840 Yeah, yes, he was.
00:07:01.900 So tell us how you've seen the UK change even in the time that you've been there.
00:07:05.460 Well, it's not, I mean, I've only been there six years.
00:07:13.820 So, you know, it's kind of been the same, you know, demographically speaking.
00:07:19.520 I mean, you're getting more and more people coming over.
00:07:21.560 They do kind of, in the media, portray, like, the EU migrants, you know, being the main issue.
00:07:29.420 But to be honest, like, over half of the migration into the UK is from non-white countries.
00:07:37.000 Yeah.
00:07:37.120 So, I mean, I did, originally when I moved, I lived, the university I went to was in quite a small town.
00:07:47.720 So it was very white.
00:07:49.580 And, you know, it was, it was like hardly, it was almost like being back home in that kind of way.
00:07:55.680 Yeah.
00:07:56.240 I watched this really sad documentary, Last Whites of the East End.
00:07:59.880 Did you see that one?
00:08:01.500 Yeah.
00:08:02.860 And then people were saying, it's so racist.
00:08:05.580 I'm like, these people are literally being pushed out of where they've been for hundreds of years.
00:08:10.660 And you're saying that they're racist for not wanting to be pushed out of where their family has lived for hundreds of years.
00:08:15.860 Yeah.
00:08:16.220 Yeah.
00:08:16.800 I know.
00:08:17.160 It's like this true statement is racist.
00:08:19.580 Yeah.
00:08:20.100 I know.
00:08:20.540 That's the level of discourse.
00:08:21.940 But yeah, but then I moved to do my PhD to like a big city.
00:08:27.520 And over here, it's very vibrant, diverse and enriched.
00:08:31.820 So, yeah, I did kind of like, you know, most of my life I lived in a white country and I kind of was ambivalent at best about the racial issues.
00:08:43.800 Like I didn't pay much attention.
00:08:45.620 Like, you know, I was, I was, I was never like a kind of like liberal on, on, on the issue, but I just didn't give it much thought.
00:08:53.360 And I didn't really, yeah, there was, there was never really any reason because I was never exposed to it much.
00:08:59.640 Yeah, sure.
00:09:00.140 Yeah.
00:09:00.300 It's like me.
00:09:00.820 I grew up in a very white area, so I had no reason to think about race.
00:09:03.920 So kind of similar for you in the Baltic, I'm sure.
00:09:05.780 Yeah, yeah, exactly.
00:09:07.400 So when I moved over here and especially after, after I moved to the city, it's, it's been like, wow, you know, you, you, you kind of like, you know, liberals will tell you that, oh, all these people are racist because they're not exposed to, to the, the diverse and, and, and vibrant peoples of the world.
00:09:28.560 But, you know, it's the other way around.
00:09:30.200 I mean, the, when you get exposed is, is when you start thinking about it, when you start noticing the differences and, you know, unless you've been completely brainwashed all your life beforehand, you know, you can't help but, but see the difference.
00:09:43.800 So yeah, you have to, you have to live with them to know what it's all about, you know, and this is like, it's, it's totally understandable if you're forcing people to live with each other and they're so different.
00:09:53.260 Eventually there's going to be some people that hate each other, you know, it's not just some irrational fear that comes out of nowhere, right?
00:09:59.180 Yeah, yeah, exactly.
00:10:00.820 I mean, yeah, the, the whole idea is like diversity and proximity is conflict, you know, that's, it's just the way it's, it's always been and, and the way it always will be.
00:10:09.800 But, um.
00:10:11.040 Have you thought about going back to Lithuania or how are the Baltic countries?
00:10:14.660 I know they're kind of being forced to open up and diversify, right?
00:10:17.800 Um, yeah, the EU is kind of trying to push like the refugees on, on them and, and things like that.
00:10:25.200 It's, it's been, it's been going slowly.
00:10:28.080 I don't think that there'll be much enrichment and diversification, to be honest, because there's not much Gibbs there, you know, for, for them to, to, to have.
00:10:37.500 Um, so they'll just, even if like they, they get sent over there, they'll just leave, uh, at their earliest, at the earliest possibility.
00:10:45.580 Yeah, I've thought about checking out some of the Baltic or Eastern European places, places that people would say are kind of second world, I guess, kind of in between.
00:10:52.580 Because they don't have the welfare system.
00:10:54.300 So you can guarantee that it will remain European, which is kind of smart.
00:10:57.820 Yeah, yeah, exactly.
00:10:59.220 So, yeah, I mean, ultimately my, my aim is to, to go home.
00:11:02.840 Uh, that is kind of, I'm working towards that by like getting, um, more qualifications so that I can work in certain sectors over there, you know, and, and have a good life for me and my family.
00:11:13.140 So, um, yeah.
00:11:15.520 Now you probably get this question a lot, but what's your take on Brexit?
00:11:20.820 What's, what's going to happen?
00:11:22.020 I mean, either way.
00:11:23.440 Oh, well, it's, it's, it's quite close at the moment with the, with the polls.
00:11:26.760 Um, the, the leave side kind of surged ahead in the last couple of weeks.
00:11:31.560 And then there was that assassination, you know, the false flag probably.
00:11:36.840 Yeah.
00:11:37.500 And then, um, and now it's kind of, it's, it's, it's still a little bit ahead, but kind of remain catching up.
00:11:42.700 Oh, I don't know.
00:11:43.180 It's very exciting.
00:11:44.440 Like it's a couple of days away now.
00:11:46.660 And, um, I mean, I'm, I'm all for Britain leaving the EU.
00:11:50.220 I think it's the best thing for the country, um, in, in the long run, you know, even if like,
00:11:56.160 it means less Gibbs for like Eastern European countries in the EU, but like, that's, that's
00:12:01.040 probably a good thing in the end as well.
00:12:02.980 So, um, so yeah, no, I'm, I'm really hoping that they vote to leave.
00:12:06.720 I, I, I, at the moment, like I would not put money either way on what, on what was, what
00:12:12.280 the outcome was going to be.
00:12:13.680 But yeah, it's, uh, it's gonna, it's gonna come out quite soon.
00:12:17.760 I wonder if, you know, if they vote to leave, if anything's going to change or they're just
00:12:21.200 going to continue overriding and it's going to be business as usual.
00:12:24.340 You know what I mean?
00:12:25.900 Yeah.
00:12:26.420 Yeah.
00:12:26.920 Um, to be honest, like, um, I think that, you know, my main problem with the, with the
00:12:37.480 remain, with the leave campaign, sorry, is, um, them saying that, oh, look, um, these people
00:12:43.380 are, uh, you know, we're letting the EU people in, but we're not letting in the, um, you know,
00:12:49.100 the people from, from the Anglosphere, from the Commonwealth, you know, and that's, that's
00:12:52.720 code for like brown people.
00:12:54.880 Yeah.
00:12:55.100 Um, so, you know, it's, um, that, that's, that's the main concern to be honest with, with
00:13:00.860 what the, with the leave side are saying that, you know, we, we, we don't want to close the,
00:13:05.440 um, we don't want to close the gates to third world immigration.
00:13:08.960 We want to open it up, you know, which, which isn't, which isn't ideal.
00:13:13.240 But, um, I think that, uh, I mean, you can go tinfoil about this and you can say, oh,
00:13:20.080 uh, you know, the EU will never let Britain leave.
00:13:22.380 You know, they'll, they'll think of something, you know, they'll, they'll have this vote.
00:13:26.120 And if, if people vote to leave, there'll be like another renegotiation and they'll kind
00:13:30.220 of like remain in, uh, nominally, or they'll, they'll have this sort of relationship that
00:13:36.080 they might as well be in the EU, like, like Norway or something like that.
00:13:40.680 So there are, there are many different, uh, you know, kind of, um, ways that this could
00:13:45.920 go.
00:13:46.640 And it's really hard to say at the moment, like what it was going to be, you know, I'm
00:13:51.540 kind of like on the optimistic side, I guess.
00:13:53.500 I think that, um, you know, uh, there'll be a change of government, uh, if people do vote
00:13:59.960 to leave, you know, the, the current prime minister.
00:14:01.860 Wouldn't it be great if, uh, Britain exits and then Trump wins, that could actually set a
00:14:06.940 precedent for some cool things to start happening possibly.
00:14:09.800 Oh yeah.
00:14:10.880 Yeah, absolutely.
00:14:11.740 Like, um, I mean, more so than, than, than Britain exiting, like Trump's victory, uh, in
00:14:18.140 November, it would be a massive sea change because everything that happens in America,
00:14:22.960 it's, there are ripples across the world.
00:14:25.960 Um, and it will, you know, it will really reinvigorate like the, the popular stride in, in, in Europe,
00:14:32.180 which is, you know, the, the, the only people fighting back against all this pause that's going
00:14:37.860 on at the moment.
00:14:38.640 Um, but yeah, yeah.
00:14:40.260 With Brexit as well, like if, if Britain leaves the EU, that will, uh, it will help, uh, other
00:14:45.400 Eurosceptic movements in, in the, um, in the EU at the moment, like, uh, Finland is quite
00:14:50.520 Eurosceptics as, as the Netherlands.
00:14:53.140 Um, so yeah, we might, we might be seeing more countries sort of moving towards leaving as
00:14:58.900 well, which would be good.
00:15:00.460 Well, I also wanted to ask you about the new Muslim mayor of London, Sadiq Khan, who I remember
00:15:05.640 when he first came into office, he actually went in and thanked the Jewish community for
00:15:09.460 some reason.
00:15:10.180 But anyway, one of the first moves he makes is to, you know, ban ads of basically sexy
00:15:15.400 women on public transport systems.
00:15:17.460 And I know there was a lot of white, ugly feminists that were helping push this, but
00:15:21.340 it's like one step closer to the burqa.
00:15:23.160 But did you hear about this?
00:15:24.160 What did you think about it?
00:15:25.340 Yeah.
00:15:25.720 Yeah.
00:15:26.060 I mean, it's, it's, uh, it's creeping Sharia, isn't it?
00:15:28.960 Uh, in a way.
00:15:30.300 And it's funny how it's just another example of how feminism and Islamism is like what,
00:15:36.240 then the same thing, because you have these, you know, ugly fat cat lady feminists going,
00:15:41.360 oh, you know, this is, um, this is great because, you know, body shaming and, uh, you don't
00:15:47.320 want that.
00:15:47.820 And we don't want to see like attractive women on, uh, on our advertising.
00:15:52.920 You know, we, we only want like, uh, you know, body positive fat whales.
00:15:57.980 And it's funny in the ad that they show, you know, are you beach body ready?
00:16:01.620 We did a video about this recently real quick in our live show.
00:16:04.360 They're saying, you know, this is encouraging women to conform to unrealistic or unhealthy body
00:16:09.460 shapes.
00:16:09.780 I mean, she's healthy, she's thin, she's not too skinny, you know, too skinny.
00:16:13.740 She has like a perfect body.
00:16:15.160 I mean, it's like, don't you want women to, to have that ideal, that healthy, beautiful
00:16:19.880 ideal, right?
00:16:21.300 Well, no, because any sort of aspiration towards, uh, a objective beauty standard is wrong and
00:16:27.520 bad and, uh, uh, very, and basically leads to gas chambers.
00:16:32.120 Don't you?
00:16:32.980 I think too, they just want to have white people be ugly.
00:16:35.600 You know, they just want to make us fat and ugly and lazy and encourage us to be that
00:16:40.080 almost out of spite of like some kind of envy or something, you know?
00:16:43.680 Well, yeah, I know that's, that's, that's an interesting point because you can, you can
00:16:47.020 think about like trying to achieve a certain look as, as kind of like having, having a goal
00:16:52.260 that you're working towards.
00:16:53.420 And, you know, and, and you could say that the powers that be don't want anyone to be
00:16:57.620 too focused on a goal because it kind of, uh, you know, prevents, might prevent you from
00:17:03.480 like filling your body with rubbish and, you know, lying on the sofa and just watching
00:17:08.800 Talmud division all day.
00:17:11.080 Yeah.
00:17:11.540 And the other thing I noticed too, he, he was talking about Mr. Khan, you know, and he, by
00:17:15.360 the way, he said that he doesn't like his daughters riding bikes around London.
00:17:18.800 And I'm like, is that, that kind of reminded me of in Israel, some rabbis were banning,
00:17:23.140 what was it girls under 10 from riding bikes?
00:17:25.320 Cause it was too provocative or something.
00:17:27.260 I was like, whoa, you guys have dirty minds.
00:17:29.840 If that's what you think when you see a girl riding a bike, you know, but he said that he
00:17:33.800 wanted to get rid of advertising, which is demeaning people, you know, making them ashamed of their
00:17:39.160 bodies.
00:17:39.680 So girls that when they walk by, they don't feel uncomfortable about it.
00:17:43.480 And it's just like, come on, you know, get a self-esteem.
00:17:46.140 If I see another beautiful woman, so what?
00:17:47.980 Yeah.
00:17:48.200 She's beautiful.
00:17:48.960 Great.
00:17:49.360 You know, like, yeah, but now these people are like, oh my God, she's beautiful.
00:17:52.740 And her body's perfect.
00:17:53.660 I can't see it.
00:17:54.480 Take it away.
00:17:55.140 They're going to be like, just kill her or destroy her because she makes me uncomfortable.
00:17:59.000 You know what I mean?
00:18:00.200 Yeah.
00:18:00.440 Yeah, exactly.
00:18:01.040 It's, it's kind of like, you know, encouraging people's fragility instead of, you know,
00:18:06.160 saying, look, yeah, this is, you know, this woman is better looking than you.
00:18:10.320 And, you know, but there are things that you could do to maybe move, move towards that ideal.
00:18:16.140 You know, you could start exercising, you could start eating well, things like that.
00:18:19.660 You know, all these things are achievable, but instead they're kind of just trying to,
00:18:24.360 you know, clothe people in, you know, in like a, just a feather, a feather duvet and just
00:18:33.520 have them, have them safe and protected.
00:18:36.320 You know, have a safe space, have everywhere be a safe space away from anything that could
00:18:40.380 possibly upset anyone.
00:18:42.100 Yeah.
00:18:42.480 I just see, I just see a whole lot of jealousy, you know, basically in our society.
00:18:45.780 Now we just prop up the losers, the unhealthy ones, the unsound ones, the crazy ones.
00:18:51.520 And we tear down the beautiful, the smart, the people that we should be propping up in
00:18:56.140 our society, right?
00:18:57.660 Yeah, yeah, precisely.
00:18:58.660 I mean, in, in many different discussions and debates and TV shows in the UK, you will
00:19:04.160 often hear someone repeat the cliche of, oh, society is judged by how it treats its weakest.
00:19:10.700 Well, I mean, yeah, if you celebrate weakness and you celebrate like the, the poor and the
00:19:16.500 downtrodden and the miserable and the wretched, then that's what your society is going to be.
00:19:20.940 You know, if, if you, if that's who you care about, it's just, it just leaves.
00:19:26.060 It's a Statue of Liberty.
00:19:27.520 Ah, shoot.
00:19:28.180 I can't remember the Jewish lady who wrote the saying there, Statue of Liberty.
00:19:31.560 You, you might remember, you know, give me your tired and you're weak and you're poor.
00:19:35.420 This is like, that's a great way to start a nation, right?
00:19:38.700 Just give me all your losers and outcasts and your sick people.
00:19:44.220 Yeah, yeah.
00:19:45.680 Just give me the refuse of all the different countries and we'll, we'll make America great.
00:19:50.040 I'm telling you, that's what's happening here though.
00:19:51.900 And it's like, they don't let you in unless you have like a lower IQ and you need to go
00:19:55.780 on welfare, you know?
00:19:57.000 I mean, my husband, we went through all the proper channels to get in, you know, get him into
00:20:01.020 America and he was expensive.
00:20:02.540 It was long.
00:20:03.340 It was hard, you know?
00:20:04.960 Yeah.
00:20:05.420 And all these other people just, just get right in, you know?
00:20:08.280 It's like, how's that fair?
00:20:09.700 God.
00:20:10.160 Yeah.
00:20:10.560 I know.
00:20:10.940 Like the, the easiest way to like immigrate into, into America as a white person these
00:20:15.180 days, probably to like jump the border in, you know, from Mexico.
00:20:19.860 Sorry, babe.
00:20:20.300 I've got to get a tan, grow out that beard, just say you're from Latin America and then we'll
00:20:25.340 get you in.
00:20:26.300 Yeah.
00:20:26.540 I wondered too about the body shaming adverts.
00:20:28.760 It seemed like it was just about women.
00:20:31.660 So can men be shamed then?
00:20:33.540 Or could we have pictures of sexy men or would that be off the table too?
00:20:36.860 He didn't really say anything about that.
00:20:39.000 Yeah.
00:20:39.340 Yeah.
00:20:39.560 He didn't, did he?
00:20:40.260 Um, I think going back to that a little bit, like, uh, it, it is, uh, it is a far more
00:20:47.080 insidious, I think than, than like the feminists would have you think, oh, this is just about
00:20:51.740 like protecting the feelings of fat chicks or something like that.
00:20:55.200 But no, it's, this is a way that, you know, the, the, the, uh, the Muslims use the rhetoric
00:21:01.540 of the left to promote their own agenda.
00:21:04.100 And they, you know, the, the, they, they seem to be really, really good at it.
00:21:08.660 And it's, it's just so, um, terrifying how, you know, the, the left swallow that, you know,
00:21:14.960 hook, line and sinker.
00:21:15.880 Absolutely.
00:21:16.280 Like they, they don't even consider that this could be, you know, could have nothing to
00:21:20.420 do with like protecting the fat chick self-esteem.
00:21:22.780 No, it's, it's to do with, you know, Sharia and to do with, you know, getting women's bodies,
00:21:29.480 getting women out of like the public, public, um, public life and, and public view.
00:21:35.020 Exactly.
00:21:35.320 And then they just say things like, well, you know, it's sexist to look good or to show
00:21:39.080 your body because men look at it and it's demeaning.
00:21:41.780 So here, put on a burqa.
00:21:42.840 Okay, great.
00:21:43.420 You know, it's just weird to see them aligning to be converging, you know, and usually these
00:21:48.540 feminists are, a lot of them are atheists.
00:21:50.660 They hate Christians.
00:21:51.560 They hate pagans.
00:21:52.620 They hate, hate, you know, any of that.
00:21:54.120 But then when it comes to Islam, for some reason, they just love it.
00:21:57.340 So one day there'll be topless, you know, femins out there on the streets.
00:22:00.940 And then the next day they'll be wearing their, you know, hijab.
00:22:03.720 So basically in the end, they're just anti-white, right?
00:22:07.060 Oh yeah.
00:22:07.480 Yeah, absolutely.
00:22:09.240 God.
00:22:09.600 Well, you also, you also read another article that said, are women inherently left-wing?
00:22:15.340 Maybe you can elaborate more on this.
00:22:16.920 What are your thoughts?
00:22:18.120 Yeah.
00:22:18.340 Okay.
00:22:18.640 So I wrote this article originally quite a few years ago now, back for this certain libertarian
00:22:24.640 publication back when I was like a basic bitch libertarian.
00:22:28.900 I've all been there.
00:22:29.820 Yeah.
00:22:31.500 Yeah, yeah.
00:22:33.020 And, and so I did a bit of research, like I looked at voting patterns.
00:22:39.380 I looked at any, any scientific, more scientific surveys and studies that have been done.
00:22:45.920 And, um, it does turn out that basically, uh, women in general and especially unmarried women
00:22:54.720 tend to, you know, support government intervention, government programs, gives me that, that sort
00:23:00.760 of thing.
00:23:01.460 Whereas, um, married women tend to, um, tend to support more sort of conservative, uh, economic
00:23:08.300 and social measures.
00:23:09.160 And when you think about it a little bit, I mean, it's, it's pretty self-explanatory.
00:23:14.900 Like, um, once a woman is married, you know, she, um, she is, you know, traditionally supported
00:23:21.360 by her husband and she is interested, uh, her self-interest is to maximize her, her husband's
00:23:27.720 and her own, you know, the family's income, um, which, you know, various government programs
00:23:34.220 will only, uh, reduce, uh, by taxation and things like that.
00:23:37.360 Whereas, you know, uh, unmarried women and especially single mothers and, and people like
00:23:43.100 that, they are far more interested in, uh, you know, the, the government is your husband
00:23:48.340 basically.
00:23:48.800 So instead of being supported by one man, you're supported by all the men, all the men.
00:23:54.840 Yeah, exactly.
00:23:56.060 So your, your, your incentives are to, uh, to, uh, to vote for, um, for increased, you
00:24:03.140 know, government spending, increased taxation and, and things like that.
00:24:05.980 And, uh, various, various left-wing, um, uh, left-wing economic, uh, solutions.
00:24:10.980 But also I think, um, evolutionarily speaking, uh, you could look at it from, yeah, you could
00:24:18.120 look at it from like a socio-biological point of view.
00:24:20.600 Um, men are always like the, the protectors of the tribe.
00:24:25.040 Men are concerned with defending themselves from the other.
00:24:28.740 Whereas women, uh, tend to, um, you know, if, if like, uh, an enemy tribe like to takes
00:24:35.220 over and, uh, it's, it's kind of like a, a more successful tribe takes over like a certain
00:24:40.820 tribe, then women will benefit evolutionarily really from mating with, with the new men of
00:24:47.020 the, the more successful tribe.
00:24:48.280 Yeah, women have been war brides, right?
00:24:50.020 They've been married off and then they have to adapt to those people.
00:24:53.080 Right.
00:24:53.340 Yeah, yeah, exactly.
00:24:54.280 So, uh, back from then and, and, and, and here, you know, you will, it, it, it, it seems
00:25:00.800 to have happened, you know, from a, from an evolutionary point of view, the women are far more like
00:25:05.320 inviting and open to, um, in general, I mean, not, not every woman, obviously, but in general,
00:25:11.860 more, more open to, uh, like, uh, the other, uh, compared, compared to men.
00:25:16.200 So that's, again, that's kind of like a, a leftist thing.
00:25:19.420 I didn't really talk, discuss that in the article at all.
00:25:21.880 This is, this is something that's really come to light.
00:25:24.360 And in the recent, uh, invasion of Europe, where you see like naive young girls being
00:25:32.180 like, oh, refugees welcome.
00:25:33.400 And then they get raped, you know?
00:25:34.900 Yeah.
00:25:35.240 I know.
00:25:35.520 I wonder what makes that be that way because you and I, or you strike me this way as being
00:25:39.900 loyal, loyal to your people.
00:25:41.620 You know, if I was married off like that, I'd probably try and kill my way out.
00:25:45.420 You know what I mean?
00:25:46.040 I wouldn't just settle.
00:25:47.720 I'm just not that way.
00:25:48.660 And I always wonder what makes us different?
00:25:50.300 Is it just personality?
00:25:51.580 Is it how we're raised or these other women more susceptible to programming?
00:25:55.680 Have you ever thought about that?
00:25:57.860 Um, yeah, it's, it's, it's a case of an axol, isn't it?
00:26:01.660 Um, where you, you, you will have, you know, you, you have these, these general traits,
00:26:06.700 but then you have outliers.
00:26:08.020 And I think we just happen to be outliers.
00:26:11.320 Um, you know, that's why we're here doing like, you know, alternative right shows rather
00:26:15.940 than being leftists.
00:26:18.480 Yeah.
00:26:19.280 I know.
00:26:19.920 I wonder a lot of times too, you know, if our natural state, well, I would think so biologically
00:26:24.540 speaking, I know you got into the other aspect of it, but it would be to be more conservative
00:26:29.760 if you, I hate the word conservative, but more based around biology, which is more about
00:26:33.580 honoring the family unit, just stepping in line with that role.
00:26:36.900 So a lot of times I look around at these women and I think, eh, they're just products of
00:26:40.340 programming.
00:26:40.880 If they're really honest with themselves, a lot of these women, I think are just really
00:26:44.220 miserable.
00:26:44.880 What do you think?
00:26:45.500 Yeah, I think so.
00:26:46.320 I agree with that.
00:26:47.240 Yeah.
00:26:47.800 Uh, it's, it, I think the, the, the society, the way it is at the moment, it kind of like
00:26:53.560 encourages the worst, uh, excesses of like the, uh, the, the feminine sort of empathy
00:26:58.700 and, um, and, uh, you know, the, the, the, sort of more leftist tendencies in women, I
00:27:04.920 think, uh, you know, whereas, uh, normally you would have them, you know, focus on their
00:27:10.180 family, focus on their maybe extended circle, uh, you know, of, of, of, of like the, the
00:27:15.580 community, you know, the, the village or, or whatever.
00:27:18.480 Now you, you know, these women are atomized, so they just, they, they just focus on like
00:27:22.840 their pets and, and, you know, the, these third worlders.
00:27:28.460 And I find a lot of these women, they don't even support each other.
00:27:31.780 No.
00:27:32.060 You know, that's one thing I appreciate with a lot of the nationalist women.
00:27:35.320 It's like a true, a true sisterhood, you know, they actually have each other's backs
00:27:38.720 and they think like a tribe and it's not all catty and, you know, judgy, but I find these
00:27:43.420 liberal women can just be total bitches.
00:27:45.860 You know, they don't even support each other.
00:27:48.000 Oh yeah.
00:27:48.360 Yeah.
00:27:48.540 There's, there's absolutely almost no solidarity between them, no matter how much
00:27:52.820 like feminists are always pushing the sisterhood, you know, they're, they'll be the first ones
00:27:57.460 to like make a catty comments about someone's nails or things like that, you know, that you,
00:28:03.540 you wouldn't, you would never do like as a, as a, as a, as a nationalist.
00:28:07.880 This is just stupid.
00:28:09.360 You know?
00:28:10.080 Well, there's something I read that I think you had said somewhere in a comment or a show,
00:28:14.760 but you like the one vote per household idea that we originally had.
00:28:17.980 I've talked about this quite a bit too.
00:28:19.620 I'm totally with you there, but what are your thoughts on this?
00:28:22.820 Yeah.
00:28:23.700 Yeah.
00:28:24.020 I mean, absolutely.
00:28:25.000 I, um, uh, I think that, that, that would be probably if we are keeping like a, a sort
00:28:32.460 of a Republican style democracy, uh, as, as the, uh, the preferred type of government,
00:28:37.620 which I might, uh, I mean, this is a whole lot of different discussion, you know, we could
00:28:41.400 have, but like, if you are sticking with that, then one, uh, one vote per household, uh, and
00:28:46.900 especially like, like a property owning household, I would qualify that as well, uh, would be the,
00:28:52.480 um, the, the ideal way of, of, uh, going about things because there you have, um, you have an
00:28:59.860 economic unit that is, uh, interested, uh, that, that has, has a stake in, uh, in society.
00:29:07.560 Uh, and yeah, I think that's, that's, that's how it should be, you know, instead of having
00:29:12.260 all these, uh, one person, one vote sort of things, even though like, uh, you know, other
00:29:17.520 people might have no stake in society, you know, people who live with welfare, who don't
00:29:20.860 pay tax, you know, they, they, they have nothing to lose.
00:29:23.760 If there's like a bad, um, uh, if they elect a bad government, you know, whereas, uh, whereas
00:29:29.980 people who are, who are productive, they, they do.
00:29:32.300 So I think that's how it should be limited.
00:29:34.340 Yeah.
00:29:34.780 I always look at it too.
00:29:35.940 It's like the family unit is like a healthy organism in a society.
00:29:39.460 That's part of a larger body, right?
00:29:41.540 It's kind of like based on a evolutionary need, a survival.
00:29:45.580 We have to have the unit.
00:29:46.840 We have to be unified.
00:29:48.300 The house has to be unified.
00:29:49.660 I say this all the time, but I wouldn't be married to my husband if we were.
00:29:53.760 Voting differently, right?
00:29:55.500 I mean, that would create tension and division in the household.
00:29:58.560 So of course it'd be one vote.
00:29:59.980 You have, it's about having peace, right?
00:30:02.520 Peace within the family and peace within the larger family, which is the society.
00:30:06.600 But now what we've doing, we've done even back then, you know, a lot of the women that
00:30:10.100 were fighting for their right to vote, a lot of them, sure, some were married, but there
00:30:13.940 was a lot of losers and spinsters and outcasts and, you know, lesbians and stuff.
00:30:20.440 And so, like, we had to change all of society to be able to include them.
00:30:24.220 You know what I mean?
00:30:24.920 Yeah.
00:30:25.240 Yeah, I know.
00:30:26.640 Exactly.
00:30:27.120 I think there's been, there's been some studies done to say that, you know, the most successful
00:30:31.100 families that, you know, are ones where the husband and wife have the same political views.
00:30:37.000 I mean, I think that's, that's a given.
00:30:38.560 Like you have to, you have to view the world in the same, in the same way.
00:30:43.220 Otherwise, you know, it's not going to work.
00:30:45.840 And yeah, there's always been like, you know, there's always been a role and a purpose in
00:30:52.820 society for these, you know, the women who, who did not form families, you know, the spinsters,
00:30:58.000 you know, the nuns, et cetera.
00:30:59.400 There's, there's always been like, they've always had a role to play, but now they don't
00:31:03.300 really have that role anymore.
00:31:05.740 They, they, they, they're kind of like, they are rootless now, you know, they, they have
00:31:10.340 the, the, the duties of like taking care of the elderly parents or taking care of, you
00:31:14.900 know, their nephews and nieces.
00:31:17.360 But now they're just like, what do they do?
00:31:19.560 They just take care of cats and, you know, spread their poisonous political views.
00:31:23.800 It's true.
00:31:24.820 Yeah, exactly.
00:31:25.280 There's always going to be those exceptions to the rule and women who don't marry or have
00:31:30.220 a family and whatnot.
00:31:31.520 But now it's like everything has to be catered to them and their bitterness right now, which
00:31:35.660 is, it's a mistake.
00:31:37.040 We should just be like, shut up, go over there, you know?
00:31:39.940 Yeah, yeah.
00:31:41.080 Because, because really, if you're not part of the family unit, your line's not going to
00:31:45.140 be around anymore.
00:31:45.860 So why are you having a say in the future of politics when you don't have any stake in
00:31:50.400 it, you know?
00:31:50.940 Yeah, yeah, precisely.
00:31:53.060 So how do we turn around white women to get their heads, you know, screwed back on straight
00:31:57.680 and doing the damage of all this leftist programming?
00:32:00.060 I always think about this.
00:32:01.120 I'm always trying to come up with ideas, but what are your thoughts?
00:32:03.300 Oh, that's, that's very, I know it's massive, massive, massive, it's massive.
00:32:09.460 I think, I think reality will ultimately do that for us because there's only so long that
00:32:16.740 you can deny reality.
00:32:18.520 So there's been, you can take that in several ways.
00:32:23.680 So there's been more and more studies, again, coming out saying that, you know, the happiest
00:32:27.520 women are the housewives and, you know, long work hours are bad for women's health and
00:32:34.420 things like that.
00:32:34.960 And I think, I think you could even, you can even see maybe a little bit of a movement
00:32:40.820 of, you know, the current, you know, the millennial generation, no matter how like paused it could
00:32:47.180 seem at the moment.
00:32:47.860 But there's a bit more, I think of a, of a movement towards more traditional, at least
00:32:52.200 hobby wise, like there's, there's more people like engaging in traditional hobbies.
00:32:56.760 There's more people, you know, maybe looking at traditional lifestyles.
00:33:01.680 I think there's, it's a little bit more of that, you know, slowly, slowly, I think reality
00:33:06.380 will catch up on, on women and, and men, you know, in, in, in our societies.
00:33:11.480 I just, you know, just have to hope that it's not too late, not before we're like overwhelmed
00:33:15.240 by the brown hordes, which who, again, like the, the, the invasion of Europe.
00:33:21.640 I mean, that I'm sure has helped to red pill a lot of people and, and a lot of women, you
00:33:26.960 know, I mean, there's, there's only so, so many news reports you can hear about rapes
00:33:33.260 and things like that before you kind of like, you're wondering, you know, I could be next
00:33:37.080 if I, you know, if I don't cancel this holiday I have to Germany, you know, I could, I could
00:33:42.900 go there and, and be raped, you know, um, and, and things like that.
00:33:46.660 So I think there's, I think only the, um, the, the, the most rabid, most brainwashed
00:33:51.340 feminists, uh, are not seeing that, uh, at the moment, especially, especially in Europe.
00:33:57.240 So I think there will, there will be, um, I'm, I mean, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm optimistic.
00:34:01.400 I think there will be a slow shift towards, uh, something a bit more traditional, a bit
00:34:06.280 more folkish, um, in, in society, just because that's, that's how reality is.
00:34:11.600 And, you know, you can't fight against it very long, uh, before it kind of bites you
00:34:17.160 back.
00:34:17.720 So that's true.
00:34:18.400 I think also feminists are just becoming a laughingstock.
00:34:21.060 They're just becoming a joke.
00:34:22.560 A lot of people aren't taking them seriously anymore.
00:34:24.460 They're not the ones setting the trends anymore.
00:34:26.300 They're not the ones who are on the edge, you know, everything they say and do is just
00:34:30.420 retarded.
00:34:30.980 So now it's more of, I see the trend changing where it's going to be a lot more, you know,
00:34:35.460 kind of classy, wholesome women that are, you know, that are nationalists that want to have
00:34:40.220 families and women follow other women.
00:34:42.820 So it's just about setting, setting new trends, unfortunately, but trends always go back and
00:34:47.340 forth, right?
00:34:47.820 It's always going left and right, left and right.
00:34:49.420 And I'm always wondering how do we stop making it go to the left and just keep it on the right
00:34:53.600 for a long time, you know?
00:34:55.400 Well, I think, um, there's, uh, there's also, uh, some evidence to say that, um, children
00:35:02.180 inherit the political views of their parents, uh, to, to an extent.
00:35:06.280 I mean, there, there'll always be exceptions to that rule.
00:35:08.640 You know, you'll, you'll have the, uh, the leftist boomer parents and their, uh, 1488
00:35:12.280 children and things like that.
00:35:13.580 But in general, there'll be, um, uh, there'll be a, uh, uh, a sort of, um, you know, genetically
00:35:19.700 and, and culturally and, and sort of, uh, uh, the, from, from, from nurture, you will,
00:35:24.880 you will mainly have people take on the political views of their parents.
00:35:28.860 Um, and, you know, as, as we well know, you know, liberals, leftists, they, they don't
00:35:33.460 have children or they have like one, you know, in the forties.
00:35:36.600 Yeah.
00:35:37.040 So, um, so, uh, there's, uh, there's no, um, uh, you know, they're not going to turn up
00:35:44.140 like the, the, the, they won't be, you know, leftists in, in, in a couple of generations.
00:35:50.020 That's right.
00:35:50.480 It's all demographics, isn't it?
00:35:52.680 Yeah.
00:35:53.360 So basically that I always say that too, if the lefty chicks aren't breeding, that's
00:35:57.700 actually a good thing because then women like us can, you know, make up for that.
00:36:00.900 And then it will be our children really that inherit the future and there'll be much more
00:36:04.940 hardcore than ever before.
00:36:06.620 I think.
00:36:07.300 Yeah, exactly.
00:36:08.400 Exactly.
00:36:08.820 You know, they like, uh, is it one of the few groups in America that have a reproduction
00:36:13.980 rates, uh, above replacement are like, uh, you know, evangelical Christians and, um,
00:36:19.680 Mormons and, and, you know, the white people like that.
00:36:22.580 So they'll, you know, so that their children will be the ones that inherit, inherit the
00:36:27.240 future.
00:36:27.740 And we just need to uncuck them and then it will be better because a lot of these Mormons,
00:36:31.560 unfortunately, you know, for some reason, they always do these news stories when this
00:36:35.460 family adopts like 10 black kids, you know, it's always makes the news and they push it
00:36:40.180 like, it's so amazing.
00:36:41.240 And it's a lot of Christian families that are doing that, unfortunately, somehow they're
00:36:45.220 just, I don't know, their pastors are telling them to do it.
00:36:47.720 And then they interview them and ask, why did you adopt so many, you know, kids, all these
00:36:51.740 different ethnicities?
00:36:52.660 God told me to do it.
00:36:54.200 I'm like, are you sure it was God or maybe it was some subliminal programming telling you
00:36:58.180 that?
00:36:59.100 Yeah.
00:36:59.460 Yeah.
00:36:59.660 That, that, that whole, uh, evangelical cuckery thing where you, you literally like, uh, cause
00:37:07.320 massive distress to your children by adopting 10 dindus.
00:37:11.460 I mean, it's, it's, it seems, you know, completely, absolutely bizarre to me.
00:37:16.680 I mean, I guess there's, there's sort of like an explanation you could go into the whole,
00:37:20.460 um, uh, Christianity as kind of like a, uh, uh, a universalist, uh, Jew religion sort
00:37:28.780 of thing.
00:37:29.200 Um, that, that might, you know, that could, could, could be the cause of that, you know,
00:37:33.400 the, that could, uh, amplify like white people's, uh, empathy and the, the whole pathological
00:37:37.920 altruism question, but, um, but yeah, that, that, that, that, that, that, those sort of
00:37:43.040 explanations.
00:37:43.440 But yeah, I think, um, uh, these people, thankfully, I think are quite rare and I guess
00:37:49.180 they, they, they're just like people who get massive, uh, dopamine hits from like the
00:37:54.940 over the, over the top virtue signaling.
00:37:57.440 I think afterwards they have buyer's remorse though.
00:37:59.720 You look at some of these guys that are paying for all this now and they just look like they're
00:38:03.760 just a fish under, you know, just fish out of water, just so confused and dazed.
00:38:09.300 What did I do?
00:38:10.460 You know, cause usually it's the woman that's pushing it, right?
00:38:13.000 It's not men that are saying, let's go adopt 10 African kids, right?
00:38:16.380 Yeah.
00:38:16.940 Yeah, it is, isn't it?
00:38:18.080 And then, and then when, when the Tyrones and Jamals are like, are they, you know, causing
00:38:22.800 trouble at school and, uh, uh, not, not doing as well as the, you know, natural children
00:38:28.040 and, you know, maybe even like, uh, beating, beating up on, on the other kids, you know,
00:38:33.500 they, they, they do live to regret it.
00:38:35.320 It's just, it's just terrible for the, like the, the natural children.
00:38:38.480 I know.
00:38:38.980 I feel sorry for them.
00:38:39.820 I see them.
00:38:40.380 I'm like, Oh, poor thing.
00:38:41.600 You know, I would be pissed if I was little and my parents adopted, you know, 10 kids.
00:38:45.960 I remember there was a time when my parents were thinking of, uh, adopting someone, but it
00:38:49.880 was like a distant relative, right?
00:38:51.580 And she was in Kazakhstan, but she was a little mixed, a little Asian.
00:38:54.240 And I remember just like seeing the picture and thinking, no, you know, I had this jealousy
00:38:59.840 and this rage about it and then, uh, ended up not happening.
00:39:03.220 Yeah.
00:39:03.540 Like I could hardly cope with like my siblings being born.
00:39:07.560 Like, so someone, you know, I was that jealous.
00:39:11.480 Having like a random kid coming into the home would have been like, yeah, terrible.
00:39:16.960 All right.
00:39:17.600 Switching gears.
00:39:18.300 Well, you and I know, you and I both know this isn't true, but there's some rumors spreading
00:39:24.220 in the alt-rights been infiltrated by, you know, a bunch of homos and woman haters.
00:39:28.420 I hear this all the time coming from a certain sector, you know, that just agitates all the
00:39:32.100 time.
00:39:32.840 And of course, of course, there's also certain mainstream press and then this other faction
00:39:37.940 that's among us, uh, that's, uh, just being very divisive, likes to point to mainstream
00:39:42.520 articles and say, see, see, see, you know, like Milo's the spokesman of the alt-right
00:39:46.740 because the mainstream press said so, even though he isn't.
00:39:49.460 So what do you think about all this, you know, homos and woman haters in the alt-right?
00:39:53.020 Well, I can say that I've never experienced anything that I would consider to be like
00:39:58.740 woman hate.
00:39:59.680 You know, you, you, you get the, uh, the, the, the, the thirsty beta neats, you know,
00:40:03.800 of the internet, like being, marry me, Kathy, you know, things like that, you know, but,
00:40:09.860 um, uh, but like overall, um, I've, I've only ever, you know, had the, the nicest, uh, you
00:40:16.640 know, you know, all the, all the guys that I've interacted with have, have always been,
00:40:21.520 you know, uh, more than, more than kind and more than nice and more than accepting of,
00:40:26.180 of like me as a, as a woman being a, you know, a bit more outspoken and, uh, a bit more sort
00:40:32.140 of active in the alt-right.
00:40:33.760 So I, I've never, ever had any, any issues.
00:40:36.680 I, you know, there's, there's a couple of maybe edgy neats on the, on the TRS forums
00:40:41.360 or things like that saying, oh, women should be like in burkus or whatever.
00:40:45.140 But, but yeah, nothing, nothing that I would, I would never think that there's like women
00:40:51.460 haters or anything like that.
00:40:52.640 Neither have I, I've experienced the complete opposite.
00:40:54.820 It's been guys that have been very kind, you know, I've, I've met quite a few people being
00:40:59.200 out at different conferences and stuff and it's always been very cool.
00:41:02.440 They've always been very gentlemanly.
00:41:04.120 So that's just lies that are starting around and I just, I don't appreciate this.
00:41:08.060 I always like to kind of defend some of those guys because they're actually good guys and
00:41:12.240 the mainstream press just loves to say, see, they just think women should be in the kitchen
00:41:16.200 all day.
00:41:17.060 You know, it's just like, like that's all, all we should be doing just chained in, in
00:41:21.140 the kitchen all day.
00:41:22.240 It's just ridiculous.
00:41:23.680 Well, yeah, I know because like, uh, the, the, the mainstream press and like, you know,
00:41:27.820 the, the, the feminist and, and, and people like that will think that, you know, if, you
00:41:31.980 know, if women want to be traditional is because they've been brainwashed and beaten up by
00:41:37.080 their, you know, oppressive fathers and oppressive husbands or whatever, you know, they, they couldn't
00:41:41.520 possibly want to, you know, work in the family, work in the home and be, and, uh, and raise
00:41:47.260 a family, you know, that has to be because they've, they've been brainwashed.
00:41:50.160 So, yeah.
00:41:51.780 Yeah.
00:41:52.140 I went to an alt-right conference and that's when Bruce showed up too.
00:41:54.980 And that's when a lot of these other rumors started.
00:41:56.820 See, see, it's proof.
00:41:58.120 It's evidence.
00:42:00.000 They all support Roosh.
00:42:01.460 So I really hope Milo doesn't show up at an alt-right conference this year because, uh,
00:42:05.200 you know, looking forward to seeing what will happen if he does.
00:42:08.280 Yeah.
00:42:08.680 What do you think about Milo?
00:42:11.600 Oh, I mean, I, I, I see the, the benefits that he, like the, that he brings, like he,
00:42:17.460 um, he, he's sort of like a stepping stone towards the right pilling for, I think, quite
00:42:22.760 a lot of normies because he's like edgy, but, you know, but it's, it's kind of like, it's
00:42:27.360 okay to like him because he's gay.
00:42:29.280 Oh, I know.
00:42:29.660 It drives me nuts.
00:42:30.820 Yeah.
00:42:31.600 Yeah.
00:42:31.840 So I, I think it kind of helps, you know, people to ease into some of the, uh, some of the
00:42:35.900 ideas and then, you know, the, I think quite a few of them, uh, having been like eased
00:42:41.960 into things like anti-feminism and, and things like that will then be more susceptible to,
00:42:48.260 um, some of the more sort of, um, uh, you know, uh, edgier, edgier things.
00:42:54.820 So, I mean, I think, I think he has a place.
00:42:57.020 I mean, I'm not, you know, some of the things, stuff he does is a bit like, it is, it is degenerate,
00:43:02.340 but, but like, I mean, we, we, we don't have to, um, we can use him, you know, he's, he's
00:43:07.560 not, he's not like the leader of the alt-right or whatever, whatever the Jews try to, try to
00:43:12.700 try to put him across as, you know, but he's, I think he's, he's useful in many ways.
00:43:16.860 And as long as we use him and he doesn't use us, I think that's, uh, that's how it should
00:43:22.300 be.
00:43:22.560 Yeah, that's always the, the annoying thing there is I noticed that there's quite a few
00:43:27.360 Jews that are kind of emerging in this kind of new right media that are cultural libertarians
00:43:32.280 and they're kind of like trying to be the opposition to the left now, you know, you've
00:43:37.460 got Braid Bart and Rebel and all these other factions, uh, Stephen Molyneux, but a lot of
00:43:42.540 them are Jewish.
00:43:43.500 Did you know that?
00:43:44.880 Yeah, yeah, yeah.
00:43:45.540 I knew about, I knew about Steph.
00:43:47.420 I knew his, uh, he's got like a, he's got some, uh, some echo in him and, and a few others.
00:43:52.080 Yeah, it's, um, uh, yeah, it's, it's, it's, it's hard to, to, to know like how much damage
00:43:59.760 they'll do and how, like the cost, the cost and benefit analysis to having these people,
00:44:03.900 I think, uh, it hasn't yet been done.
00:44:06.420 You know, we, it might be that they're like genuine, I think, I think Stefan, he's, um,
00:44:12.740 I mean, I, I, I first came across him like a few years ago now when, when, uh, I did,
00:44:17.300 I was a basic bitch libertarian and, you know, he was all about the, the anarchy and, uh, I
00:44:22.860 holding a gun to my head, you know, that's that, that sort of thing.
00:44:25.240 And he's, he's definitely come, uh, come far from, from that.
00:44:28.880 You know, I think he's, I think he's genuinely, um, into the, the race realism stuff.
00:44:34.700 I think he's, he's genuinely into some of the, uh, some of the, the edgier stuff now.
00:44:38.540 Um, I think he's, it's kind of life and reality that, that's, that, that's, uh, that's kind
00:44:44.860 of red pilled him.
00:44:45.740 Yeah, we had him on the show years ago, actually.
00:44:48.260 Henrik had him on the show before anything.
00:44:50.000 And, uh, yeah, he does say some good things.
00:44:51.920 I just can't stand huge egos and arrogance.
00:44:54.860 It just really turns me off.
00:44:56.540 And it just, it's just like all over that guy in Milo, you know, I just, I just can't
00:45:00.160 stand it.
00:45:00.620 I just can't listen to it.
00:45:01.880 And then it's funny with, uh, Stephen Molyneux, he always talks about Jews are just really super
00:45:05.440 duper smart, you know?
00:45:06.600 So there's no big, uh, Jewish conspiracy.
00:45:08.780 And it's like, you almost want to play him some of the Holocaust survivor stories and some
00:45:13.660 of the stories that they, they claim happened during the Holocaust and say, okay, if you're
00:45:17.880 super duper smart, you know, explain some of these things, right?
00:45:21.120 Yeah.
00:45:21.400 Yeah.
00:45:21.600 I think, I mean, uh, I, I, I admire him in the, in the sense that, uh, he, he does seem
00:45:27.060 to be like intellectually honest.
00:45:29.160 So like, you know, he, he, he does seem to take facts and then, and then form his conclusions
00:45:35.540 after the facts rather than the other way around.
00:45:37.420 But I think, you know, because of his heritage, there might be one, uh, one thing that he, one
00:45:44.580 barrier that he can't cross and it might be the, uh, the, the JQ.
00:45:47.520 But, um, but he has called out like, uh, Jews that, uh, uh, that are like, uh, oh, open
00:45:55.460 borders for, for Europe and not for Israel.
00:45:57.480 So he has called out people like that.
00:45:59.260 So that's good.
00:46:00.140 Yeah.
00:46:00.700 So where do you think that the alt-right is heading?
00:46:02.800 Everyone always says it's just a big tent, right?
00:46:04.900 So anything can kind of go under there and, and there's, there's pros and then there's
00:46:09.020 some cons with that.
00:46:09.880 But where do you think it's heading?
00:46:11.060 Is it emerging into something else?
00:46:12.780 Or, I mean, this is clearly just kind of a pit stop.
00:46:14.980 So, yeah, well, I think, um, because it's, uh, you know, it's a movement of nationalists.
00:46:21.380 It will be different in different nations.
00:46:24.300 I mean, I think, you know, in America is, is definitely, um, we'll, we'll see what happens
00:46:30.560 with the Trump presidency.
00:46:31.760 Cause that seems to be like the, um, the, the main kind of, uh, alt-right campaign at
00:46:36.260 the moment is, is, is that, and, and, and if Trump gets elected, I think there will
00:46:40.560 be, um, more and more, um, you know, it'll go from strength to strength.
00:46:44.560 It might go from strength, strength to strength, strength, sorry.
00:46:47.280 Um, regardless because of like the, the changing demographic trends and, and the, the inevitable,
00:46:52.640 um, increase in like white racial consciousness, um, in Europe as well.
00:46:58.500 I mean, you'll, you'll, you will, in national, different nationalist movements, whether they
00:47:02.660 consider themselves alt-right or not, but it's basically, it's basically that they, um, they
00:47:08.940 will have to, uh, with, with, with the, with the increasing immigration and, and, and in
00:47:15.080 the invasion of Europe, they will have, um, uh, more and more of a, of a sway, I think
00:47:19.360 in political life.
00:47:20.200 If you, you know, you had the, uh, you had the Austrian presidential elections and you
00:47:24.420 had the, the, uh, the, uh, the, uh, appalling, uh, voting, voting fraud there going on.
00:47:31.920 Um, and, and you have, it'll be interesting to see what happens with the French elections
00:47:36.100 again, uh, whether they'll be able to, uh, stump Le Pen again, but, but I think, I think
00:47:41.280 eventually like it will, it will just, it will keep, keep rising.
00:47:44.880 I think I'm, I'm, I'm optimistic on this.
00:47:47.000 That's right.
00:47:47.240 It's true.
00:47:47.600 You know, I, I, I always think the term it's, it's a generic, but it just applies
00:47:51.400 for America when people say white nationalism.
00:47:53.120 I'm like in Europe, it used to be, they're all white.
00:47:55.380 They were just nationalists.
00:47:56.600 You didn't have to say white nationalists, you know, it's like a crack up when people
00:47:59.720 say, Henrik's a white nationalist.
00:48:01.240 No, he's a Swedish nationalist.
00:48:02.720 He's from Sweden.
00:48:03.800 You know what I mean?
00:48:04.460 It's just funny.
00:48:04.860 Yeah.
00:48:05.520 Yeah.
00:48:05.780 I mean, I, uh, being European, like, uh, and being a nationalist, um, I completely
00:48:13.280 understand like the, um, you know, the, uh, the importance of, of, of
00:48:17.460 ethnic nationalism of, of different countries.
00:48:19.180 But I do take, uh, the view that the other, like, like, like maybe like Richard Spencer
00:48:25.200 does, like the other, they, um, they see all of us white people as, you know, as one.
00:48:31.740 That's right.
00:48:32.360 And so they, you know, they, I think in Europe, we do have to show solidarity and we do have
00:48:38.740 to show unity as, as a race, you know, as a European race, um, we should put aside our
00:48:44.980 quarrels and just combat this, this much greater threat that's, that's, you know, existential
00:48:50.360 for us, for us at the moment.
00:48:52.280 So, um.
00:48:52.480 That's right.
00:48:52.740 We've got big fish to fry.
00:48:53.980 So we've got to put aside some of these pesky differences and team up here.
00:48:58.320 Yeah.
00:48:58.860 I think too, in America, you just have a generic white because a lot of people just don't even
00:49:02.400 know where they're from anymore, you know?
00:49:03.780 So you just have to be comfortable with that term, but yeah, I, I see different, uh, parties
00:49:08.260 emerging out of Ulterite.
00:49:10.060 I think I see some interesting things coming out of there.
00:49:12.540 So I think it's good and we should encourage a lot of people to come under that tent and
00:49:16.000 then it will shuffle out and sort out as it will, you know?
00:49:18.640 Yeah.
00:49:19.060 Yeah.
00:49:19.340 Yeah.
00:49:19.920 So last question for you, I wanted to ask your, your journey into, uh, how should I say,
00:49:24.380 I guess, paganism or, you know, pre-Christian spirituality?
00:49:28.060 Yeah.
00:49:28.320 Yeah.
00:49:28.520 Uh, paganism.
00:49:29.200 I mean, um, if you want to be precise, it's, uh, Romova is the, um, the, the, the, the
00:49:35.800 Lithuanian, the old Baltic pagan, um, pagan religion that, uh, uh, uh, people tend to
00:49:41.500 subscribe to, um, back home.
00:49:45.640 But, um, it's, it's kind of, it's kind of paralleled my, my initial journey into nationalism.
00:49:51.180 So I, um, you know, I kind of, uh, uh, I was raised Catholic, uh, you know, attended
00:49:57.300 church, had my, had my first communion, things like that.
00:50:00.600 Um, and then I kind of, um, broke away from that in my early teenage years.
00:50:07.060 And I was looking for other things, you know, I, I explored, uh, different, different faiths
00:50:11.680 and different, different, uh, spiritualities and sort of like, always, always kind of like
00:50:15.700 on the, uh, on the pagan side of it, you know, I looked into things like, like Wiccanism
00:50:19.480 and things like that.
00:50:20.160 But, you know, none of that really ever kind of attracted me until I, until I found like
00:50:24.580 the, um, the, uh, the, the traditional, uh, Baltic faith, uh, the, um, uh, and, and from
00:50:33.640 then on, I mean, I, I, I was quite active, quite, even, you know, I, I would, um, uh, you
00:50:39.740 know, go, uh, be, I was part of the community.
00:50:42.320 I'm, I'm kind of still am, you know, whenever I can, you know, whenever I go back, I, I go
00:50:45.800 to, to, to the, whatever, uh, celebrations that they're holding and, and whatever rituals
00:50:50.500 that they're doing.
00:50:51.900 Um, and, uh, yeah, so I've just been, um, I've just been part of that ever since really,
00:50:57.380 uh, just, uh, doing, doing what, what I can, you know, uh, to, to kind of keep, keep the
00:51:03.000 faith alive.
00:51:03.820 Um, and kind of.
00:51:04.900 Midsummer's coming up, right?
00:51:05.960 Yeah.
00:51:06.080 I know the Baltic countries are pretty good.
00:51:07.640 There's a lot of real pagan pockets.
00:51:09.920 They still celebrate a lot of those pre-Christian seasonal traditions, which is really cool.
00:51:14.020 So, yeah, yeah, well, uh, Midsummer is a, uh, is a bank holiday, you know, I think.
00:51:18.600 Yeah.
00:51:19.200 Yeah.
00:51:19.700 Um, but, but yeah, so, so, so, so that, that, that's, that's a very important, uh, that's
00:51:23.400 a very important holiday for us.
00:51:24.580 I noticed one thing, you know, some of the alt-right gang might say, some of these younger
00:51:29.600 guys will say, well, you're LARPing, you know, I hear people always like say, well, Lona,
00:51:33.900 why are, why are you pagan?
00:51:35.360 You know, you're LARPing.
00:51:36.420 It's like, actually, no, it's following the natural earth cycles and honoring ancestors is as grounded
00:51:42.220 as it gets, right?
00:51:43.680 Exactly.
00:51:44.040 Following some made up guy in the sky.
00:51:46.300 That's, that's kind of LARPing.
00:51:48.180 Yeah.
00:51:48.560 For macaque on a stick.
00:51:52.100 No, I mean, I, I, I have, uh, I have deep respect for a genuine sort of, uh, Christians,
00:51:58.780 especially, especially Catholics, I think, and, and Orthodox, I think these.
00:52:02.980 There's a lot of pagan elements there too, by the way.
00:52:04.820 Yeah, that's very, yes, exactly.
00:52:06.180 So they, that's, that's like European, you know, old white Christianity, I think.
00:52:12.560 Uh, cause it, cause it was Christianity that was taken and adapted to, to suit the, um,
00:52:17.680 local ways, ways of life, you know, the, the, the local celebrations, the local rituals,
00:52:23.320 the local, um, you know, all the, all the gods were just renamed to saints basically.
00:52:27.100 And, and things like that.
00:52:28.240 But, um, but, but, but, yeah, I think there's, um, uh, you know, that, that they, they kind
00:52:33.540 of, that there's like a, a little bit maybe of a conflict between the, uh, the Christians
00:52:38.000 and the pagans.
00:52:38.740 I wish there wasn't, you know, I'm cool with whatever people want to believe in.
00:52:41.740 That's, that's, that's their business, but we just have to respect each other and, uh,
00:52:45.440 be cool about it, you know?
00:52:46.860 Um, yeah, yeah, I think, I think there's, um, it's, I think it's, it's, it's more important
00:52:51.380 really to like, to have that sense of spirituality and to have that, that sense of, um, the, the
00:52:57.420 greater, uh, you know, uh, something greater, uh, be honest and to have that sense of like,
00:53:03.460 especially, uh, connection to your ancestors.
00:53:06.760 Um, and as long as people have that, however it manifests, I think is, um, is, is, is fine
00:53:13.180 and, and is, uh, is, you know, uh, a completely, um, compatible with, with the, uh, the nationalist
00:53:19.320 outlook.
00:53:20.300 I think ritual is good too, though, because for me anyway, it forces me, like I know midsummer
00:53:24.240 is coming up or there's other holidays.
00:53:26.060 It forces me to kind of slow down, remember where I am in the season, what's going on around
00:53:31.280 me, honor, honor people in my line, you know, because we can get so busy.
00:53:35.560 And so there really is something powerful about coming together with your folk and kind of
00:53:40.080 meditating on, on your people and your goals and your purpose and your past.
00:53:44.220 I mean, it's a very powerful thing, you know, chanting on the runes around the fire.
00:53:48.340 It's, it's very primal, very ancient.
00:53:50.560 Oh yes, absolutely.
00:53:51.440 I mean, the, the sort of feeling you get, uh, when you're part of the circle, I think
00:53:56.880 is just so, I can't really describe it as the sense of euphoria and that sense of belonging
00:54:03.680 and a sense of rootedness.
00:54:04.860 I think it's, it's so healing and it's, I think it's, it's so important for people to
00:54:10.460 be able to feel that, you know, however, however you do it, whether, whether it's, it's in a
00:54:15.680 church or whether it's, whether it's, uh, you know, around a fire, it's, it's just, it's
00:54:22.000 just vital, I think to, to everybody's life and, and people who don't experience that.
00:54:25.840 I think they're much the poorer for it.
00:54:28.080 Yeah.
00:54:28.200 And we have to have that release too, especially us when we're monitoring all these icky things
00:54:32.180 all the time, for me, it is a positive thing to be able to just go put my feet in the
00:54:36.360 dirt and just kind of meditate and just let it, let it out, you know, otherwise you can
00:54:41.020 just implode basically.
00:54:43.360 Yeah.
00:54:43.620 Yeah.
00:54:43.860 I mean, one of the things I miss the most, you know, living out here in a foreign country
00:54:48.820 is, is, you know, that, that feeling of belonging and the, and the feeling of, um, of rootedness
00:54:53.500 and the, and the, and being able to be one with nature, because, you know, it's, you
00:54:57.860 know, over here, you, you know, you can go, you can go into, into, you can find some nature,
00:55:02.960 you know, there's, there is nature in the UK.
00:55:04.740 I mean, you can, you can find, you can find nature, you can, you can go and, and feel a
00:55:08.300 bit of a connection, but it's not the same.
00:55:10.440 Um, I mean, especially for, for like, uh, especially in Europe where you're so, um, if you are like
00:55:16.960 a pagan and a nationalist, you are just so tied to, to your own community and to, to your
00:55:22.020 own, um, to your own people, you know, it's, it's, it's really hard to be, to be away from
00:55:25.800 it, but, you know, whenever, whenever I go back, it's just, it's like I'm renewed, like
00:55:30.060 I'm refreshed, you know, it's like, it's like my, my home, like the, the, the, the earth
00:55:34.580 itself is kind of speaking to me in a way.
00:55:36.800 Yeah.
00:55:37.420 Oh yeah.
00:55:37.840 It's powerful.
00:55:38.400 I think our ancestors never meant for us to live in these huge cities like that.
00:55:42.360 I would see it healthier of like a lot of smaller fragmented communities that sometimes
00:55:47.380 come together for events.
00:55:48.880 But I think it's just, it's a, a, a clusterfuck, you know, in the city of just like all this
00:55:55.180 bad stuff that happens when you get that many people in a close area together.
00:55:58.940 I don't think we ever meant to live that way.
00:56:00.540 I also think when it comes to England, I think that, I think overpopulation is a true concern.
00:56:06.860 Environmentalism is a true concern.
00:56:08.340 And I'd like to see my husband and I talk about this all the time, like a rewilding movement
00:56:12.440 that you hear about.
00:56:13.360 But I always say, bring back the Oaks.
00:56:15.120 Let's knock down a lot of these like Soviet block government buildings and these refugee
00:56:19.980 asylum centers and let's plant trees there again and bring back the forest.
00:56:24.480 Yeah, no, exactly.
00:56:25.380 I mean, the left have really hijacked the, the, the, the, the whole concept of environmentalism.
00:56:31.500 But I think it's, it's absolutely a nationalist thing is, you know, you, you want to keep your
00:56:36.600 land beautiful, you want to protect it, you want to, to, to have it, you know, to, to,
00:56:41.660 to keep it safe from, from contamination.
00:56:44.640 And, you know, you know, you want to be able to take pride in, in, in your surroundings.
00:56:49.160 Um, so yeah, I think, I think it's, it's really important.
00:56:52.380 And, uh, yeah, just, just, just having like, being able to like, even, even living in a
00:56:59.300 city because like Vilnius, um, is, is where I lived most of my life.
00:57:02.940 You know, it's, it's a really green city.
00:57:04.760 I mean, despite like the, the, the Soviet buildings and things like that, like there's,
00:57:08.780 there's a lot of parks and a lot of trees and a lot of, so like you can, if you go like
00:57:13.780 on one of the hills and you just look across, you know, there are buildings, but there's
00:57:17.840 so much greenery as well in, in the summer, so many trees and things like that, you know,
00:57:22.000 it's just, it's just better that way.
00:57:24.020 And, and over here for, for whatever reason, you know, that the cities really are just paved
00:57:28.580 over, you know, there's, there's very little, especially like in the city center, there's
00:57:32.220 very little green city centers, there's very little greenery.
00:57:34.900 Whereas like, you know, in, in, in my experience, you know, there's this parks and there's, there's
00:57:40.120 greenery in, in the city itself.
00:57:42.240 So I forgot to ask you, I forgot to ask you one more thing when we were talking about pre-Christian
00:57:47.820 societies, you know, a lot of people try and say, well, patriarchy is very much a Christian
00:57:51.300 thing.
00:57:51.640 It wasn't like that before, you know, what do you think?
00:57:53.620 What, what was the balance like of men and women in our societies before Christianity or
00:57:58.800 patriarchy?
00:58:00.060 Um, I think that, you know, this, there are natural gender roles that people fit into, uh,
00:58:08.160 as, as a rule, you know, and I think that, that, that reality has always been with us and
00:58:12.860 has always been reflected in, in, in, in this, in this sort of pre-Christian society.
00:58:17.800 So, you know, you would, you had like, uh, men as the, the warriors, um, men as the raiders,
00:58:24.300 men as, you know, the, the protectors.
00:58:26.600 And you had, you had women in, in, in their particular roles, uh, that, you know, you could,
00:58:31.940 you could say that there would have been like some exceptions and you, you know, you could,
00:58:36.540 you could point to the, the archeological findings of, of women buried with, with weapons and
00:58:41.660 things like that.
00:58:42.060 But I think that that, that would have been like a, a rarity, you know, an exception rather
00:58:46.180 than, rather than the rules.
00:58:47.420 So, um, yeah, I think, I think they, they just followed the natural rhythms of life.
00:58:52.460 And just biology, they probably didn't even have a word for it.
00:58:54.920 They didn't even need a word like patriarchy because it was just like common sense, right?
00:58:59.180 They just fall into their biological role.
00:59:01.520 Exactly.
00:59:01.880 And they, they would never think that, uh, a certain, a certain role is, is less than,
00:59:07.400 than something else, you know, it's, it's whatever you, you as, uh, as, uh,
00:59:11.660 as a person, you know, fit into is, is, is what is, what is, is suited for you.
00:59:16.320 You know, if, whether you're like, if you're a man, you know, you have, you have certain
00:59:20.380 roles and obligations because of your biology.
00:59:22.440 And as a woman, you have certain roles and obligations, part of your biology.
00:59:26.340 And that's, that's just the way it is and the way it should be.
00:59:29.520 Well, Kathy, thank you so much for your time today.
00:59:31.880 I know you're a new mom.
00:59:33.060 So thanks for making time for us.
00:59:34.880 Oh, that's fine.
00:59:35.600 I hope the little one, he's right there, right?
00:59:37.280 Is he, uh, he's, he's been, uh, he's been taken into, but no, yeah, it was my pleasure.
00:59:43.780 Uh, it's, it's, it's been really nice talking to you and I'm a great fan of your show.
00:59:47.080 All right.
00:59:47.260 We'll have to do it again sometime.
00:59:48.140 Okay.
00:59:48.760 Yeah, we'll do.
00:59:49.560 Okay, cool.
00:59:50.980 All right.
00:59:51.500 On the gay thing, there's a certain blabber mouth who's been accusing every single guy
00:59:55.060 in the ultra right of being a homo, which of course is gossip and nonsense.
00:59:58.420 My thoughts, sexual deviants have always existed in society, but they were relegated to the
01:00:03.860 dark corners, but today they're a central focus in society, propped up as being even
01:00:08.380 better than those boring straight relationships.
01:00:11.380 This of course is destructive and genocidal.
01:00:14.240 I know of just a couple of gay nationalists and they don't push the gay lifestyle or even
01:00:18.060 talk about their sexuality.
01:00:19.660 In fact, they prop up the family unit as natural and healthy.
01:00:23.020 However, gays like Milo who are flaming, flamboyant, talk about their sexual adventures
01:00:27.740 are full of ego, try hard to be shocking is not something I support.
01:00:31.720 In his swag store, he actually sold a t-shirt that said BBC with a picture of a black rooster
01:00:38.160 on it worn by a blonde white girl.
01:00:40.520 The BBC stood for Big Black Cock.
01:00:43.500 Really.
01:00:44.820 Although he says some common sense things, his drive that I know of isn't about creating
01:00:48.540 European ethnostates or keeping white countries white.
01:00:52.000 I think there's a trend of former libs switching over to more alt-right-esque topics simply because
01:00:56.680 it's shocking and it has shock value.
01:00:58.640 It gets attention and we know Jews love to play persecuted underdogs.
01:01:03.920 And anyone who says the alt-right doesn't touch the JQ isn't part of the real alt-right.
01:01:09.120 The Jewish memes going around aren't just jokes without anything behind them.
01:01:13.340 There's so much more I want to say on this, but I'll leave it at this for now.
01:01:16.340 At the end of the day, I don't know Milo, but for me, I just don't take him seriously.
01:01:20.100 In fact, that flaming, arrogant attitude just turns me off altogether.
01:01:23.240 I don't care if it's put on or if others like him, it's just not for me.
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01:01:40.880 Talk soon.
01:01:41.340 We'll see you next time.
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01:03:11.340 We'll see you next time.
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01:04:11.340 We'll see you next time.
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