Red Ice TV - June 22, 2023


Midsummer 2023: White Folk Summer


Episode Stats

Length

2 hours and 4 minutes

Words per Minute

171.34557

Word Count

21,409

Sentence Count

1,962

Misogynist Sentences

45

Hate Speech Sentences

108


Summary

In this episode, we talk about the tradition of the midsummer celebration, the sad news about the passing of Eunice Swan of Twinella, and a tribute to the late Tina Swan of twinella.


Transcript

00:00:00.000 Transcription by CastingWords
00:00:30.000 Transcription by CastingWords
00:01:00.000 Transcription by CastingWords
00:01:30.000 Transcription by CastingWords
00:01:59.980 Transcription by CastingWords
00:02:29.960 Transcription by CastingWords
00:02:59.940 Transcription by CastingWords
00:03:29.920 Transcription by CastingWords
00:03:59.920 Transcription by CastingWords
00:04:29.900 Transcription by CastingWords
00:04:59.880 Transcription by CastingWords
00:05:29.860 Transcription by CastingWords
00:05:31.860 Transcription by CastingWords
00:05:33.860 Transcription by CastingWords
00:05:35.860 doing good yeah that would be a strange you can't uh celebrate the northern
00:05:39.960 midsummer in australia i remember i told you i did a christmas down there once and i thought it
00:05:45.080 was entirely bizarre cold ham it's like you're upside down christmas decorations when it's you
00:05:51.020 know hot yeah this is hilarious but yes it is a a healthy northern tradition dare i say european
00:05:58.620 tradition although although all people have honored you know solstices and all that seasonal
00:06:05.120 changes yeah midsummer belongs to europeans sure does all right anyway great to uh great to see
00:06:11.700 you guys hope you're doing well here this uh thor's day it's a little bit uh different schedule here
00:06:16.400 this week but that's how it goes uh doing a little bit of midsummer celebration tomorrow here so i
00:06:20.540 thought let's do it today instead uh and by the way it's making a comeback too i even when i went
00:06:26.920 into this little party store and i was looking for i know henrik's gonna laugh but i was looking for
00:06:30.560 a swedish flag balloons flag to surprise you with not fag balloons flag balloons yeah and um she's
00:06:38.500 the lady's like man i need to order some solstice stuff i feel like it's really making a comeback she
00:06:43.360 said even in her kids private school they were talking about doing some kind of midsummer solstice
00:06:47.860 thing i was like well that's good you should encourage that let's go with it yeah definitely
00:06:51.560 uh it's good we gotta bring though that's i mean if you are you interested in trad kind of stuff like
00:06:57.600 that's that's what you should be looking at yes that's the trad kind of stuff all right anyway we
00:07:02.160 got uh we got some uh different topics today some sad news we're gonna start on that in a little bit
00:07:07.520 here uh but always i do want to talk just you know we do that kind of every year it's it's good to
00:07:11.720 refresh our memory a little bit i have some new things that i haven't talked about before but uh
00:07:16.700 you know regarding the tradition of the midsummer poll at least what we think it comes from right
00:07:21.180 as usual there's always uh divided opinions about this a lot of modern thing and then when you begin
00:07:28.080 looking around you you realize there's tons of little like local nuances that maybe these guys
00:07:34.220 you know in like you know southwestern parts of sweden uh did very uniquely while people further up
00:07:39.780 north had like didn't do those kinds of things at all so it's very kind of uh that's good about it
00:07:45.100 too you kind of you don't want to homogenize everywhere you want to have little tweaks a
00:07:48.760 little variations yeah notice that there's different style maypoles too and i know you'll
00:07:52.960 get into that different ways to do it right yes exactly all right um anyway if you want to super
00:07:58.960 chat if you want to support the show enter percm.live slash red ice tv i think that should be up and
00:08:02.700 running we also have odyssey and rumble uh you can do rumble rants or you can do what do they call
00:08:07.840 it on odyssey again just hyper chats that's right hyper chat uh on odyssey all right so
00:08:14.940 should we begin then with the the sad news yes i see eunice is in the chat as well uh husband
00:08:21.120 of uh tina swan of twinella yep uh unfortunately we got the news that she passed on she had died and
00:08:28.520 i was very sad to hear that yeah um she died may 25th she was uh 37 years old now i first had her on
00:08:35.360 my show back in 2017 and i just adored her i thought she was just super sweet and so cool
00:08:40.320 and uh got to meet her of course uh in sweden and her husband eunice great people um and then
00:08:48.500 henrik you know you had them on together in 2020 we've done several live streams with her with her
00:08:54.620 and uh kobe days remember this february 20th 2020 yep yeah and i saw that eunice posted just a little
00:09:02.240 tribute so he was out of town when this actually happened i know some things get lost in translation
00:09:07.940 and uh for i'd like to have him on to be able to talk about it but he was away filming when he got
00:09:14.700 the news um she had died may 25th and he didn't get the news till june 2nd so he was on the road and
00:09:21.660 then he um he rushed home but there's a another tribute as well beyond this one if you want that
00:09:27.620 from sure yeah no of course we'll play them all right let's uh let's play this one here
00:09:31.940 kos at a medium share was established in Spanish and from country
00:09:46.440 casting
00:09:53.020 erityisen ylpeä olen nuorista jotka ovat irroittautuneet lopuu'toman viihd et are
00:09:58.440 I don't understand a thing, but I love hearing Finnish, I just gotta say that, because we had Finnish radio stations in Sweden when I was growing up, and I remember hearing the language many times.
00:10:11.380 It sounds very old.
00:10:12.480 Very old, oh yeah, the old language.
00:10:16.160 She was a petite, cute little thing.
00:10:19.660 I see Kudu in the background there, and that's from a conference, I think, right, with some of the nationalists, I believe?
00:10:36.420 There's no subtitles on this.
00:10:40.500 It's all right.
00:10:40.980 And since I'm also the only female speaker here, I thought that maybe I should try to bring some, like, a softer woman's touch to the topics.
00:10:53.280 And the title of my speech is Home is where the heart is.
00:10:57.700 And often when I have taken part in these nationalist seminars and discussions, I notice that we tend to get ahead of ourselves, that we talk about the grand political plans, we even start arguing amongst each other about the details of some nationalist utopia, that when we have the nationalist state, should it be economically right-wing or left-wing?
00:11:24.540 And we can actually end up in huge arguments about these sort of things, but we are not there yet, especially in Western and Northern European countries.
00:11:34.060 And the first things we need to do to even come close to having the nationalist state, we need to first rise the fighting spirit in people, to get people activated and interested in politics and get them to fight for what's theirs.
00:11:51.860 And after that, build a community.
00:11:53.620 I think they might be in front of the Finnish parliament, if I'm not mistaken.
00:12:09.360 Yeah, and the government was after her and Eunice many times for alleged, you know, hate speech charges, and they had, you know, nasty articles written about her as well.
00:12:19.520 Oh, yeah.
00:12:20.000 Yeah, taking a lot of flag.
00:12:22.400 And after the declaration of their world, it was also a good place in many nations, which is when you have the same sort of country.
00:12:39.680 I don't want to interrupt you either too much because I know there's some
00:12:59.680 things out there when I see and watch and stuff. It's okay, we can watch.
00:13:25.680 Even that reminds me of home, beautiful.
00:13:55.680 Let's play the one by Eunice and I'll explain a couple of posts on her blog. That was the one.
00:14:07.680 It was another very short one. It was just kind of music and some photos and stuff. If you want to say a few words. We'll find out tomorrow what happened.
00:14:14.680 Also, I see Eunice is in the chat. He has seven hate speech charges pending in court this year and some for her as well.
00:14:21.680 It was another very short one. It was just music and some photos and stuff. If you want to say a few words. We'll find out tomorrow what happened.
00:14:30.680 Yes. Also, I see Eunice is in the chat. He has seven hate speech charges pending in court this year and some for her as well.
00:14:40.680 A little bullshit. Now, she explained on her blog there were two different things. I know speculation was flying wild, but she explained on her blog. I did an English translation that she's been sick a lot since childhood.
00:14:50.680 It sounded like she had a lot of inflammatory diseases and inflammation issues that she was dealing with. She was even partially deaf in one ear because of an infection that was caught too late.
00:15:00.680 So she just was battling a lot of different health issues. And then it looked like she got a vertebral infection, which is an inflammation of the spine, infection of the spine.
00:15:12.680 And doctors were talking about possible paralysis, that she would be crippled from that. Now, there was also another blog post where she did where she mentioned that she took the jab.
00:15:25.680 And I know a lot of people are talking about this now. This was against her husband's wishes.
00:15:30.680 And she explains here in her blog post that she wanted it for ease for travel and work. She was worried about the future of where vaccine passports were going. And she thought that at least one of them in her marriage should have it just in case she worried about things like going to the grocery store. Right. And will we be able to get groceries?
00:15:47.680 Now, all of that has ended since, right? You can travel and work. She didn't think she was at risk. So she took two jabs. She explained that she had bad side effects immediately. Heart side effects, all kinds of issues. And she didn't think she was at risk, but obviously she was because she had these other health issues, right?
00:16:09.680 She had some bad side effects. And she questioned if she can even go to work anymore because it was getting in the way. She had the second jab in 2022. And then less than one year later, she had died. It sounded like, and I was going to ask you this, but it sounded like the spinal infection. Maybe, perhaps it was accelerated from the vaccine.
00:16:31.680 Well, I mean, how many times have we seen this now? And then it's circumstantial. Well, you know, there was other complications or they were ill of something else, but.
00:16:39.180 And that is a side effect.
00:16:40.480 Yeah, I mean, I think there's.
00:16:41.580 Spinal inflammation is also a side effect.
00:16:44.220 Right. Heart issues, you know, all kinds of things, right? So that's what we've seen. And then the medical establishment, because I see it's unrelated. It was nothing to do with it. This person died of whatever disease or whatever ailment, you know what I mean?
00:16:56.620 Yeah, I was really sad to hear that she had taken that. Yeah, that's, man, that sucks. That just, you know, more confirmation coming out all the time about how horrendous this jab campaign.
00:17:08.820 It just surprises me that there were people that had, that knew all of the evidence, you know, that knew stuff. And I know she questioned some of it. Well, why aren't people dying in mass then? Well, people are dying.
00:17:20.020 Now it's catching up. She died. Yeah, yeah. It's catching up. It's catching up. And some people it happened sooner. Some people it happens later. But she obviously had pre-existing health conditions. It was already weakened. And then I think that this kind of sped things up.
00:17:33.020 Yeah, definitely.
00:17:33.700 So, and she had said that she shouldn't be alive anymore. She, you know, that she thought she was going to die in her teens. And then here she was until 37. So I had questioned if she thought maybe, hey, maybe I'm going to, I'm going to die young anyway. What the hell? I'll just take it so one of us has it.
00:17:51.020 Maybe she felt like if she only has limited time, I don't want to be restricted by not being able to go anywhere. So she's like, I'll take the gamble at least. Then I can just move around for the, what was it, two years? I forget exactly how severe the restrictions were in Finland. I think it was pretty bad, at least for a while.
00:18:07.800 Yeah, she said she had several near-death experiences already. So she wasn't afraid of death, but not a good way to die. And it's so sad because I feel obviously she was too young. She had work to do and she had a husband and she left all of that behind. And so it's a good reminder. It's very sad. It's very sad. And also appreciate the days that you have.
00:18:32.320 Yeah, as I say, don't be sad that it's over. Be happy that it happened, right? I realize I have the wrong name down below. Obviously, she was married with Junos, right? So her last name was Luca, right? I have the wrong name down below. But just for clarification, we'll try to bring Junos on if he's willing. We heard from Junos just like five minutes before we're going to go on. So it was kind of hard to just pull everything.
00:18:59.360 I would have to change some stuff in the template for the show and stuff to be able to show everyone on screen at the same time, screen on the same time. But yeah.
00:19:07.060 We'll do a special little live thing in the coming week.
00:19:08.800 Yeah, do something live and talk a little bit more about it and see what has happened since. And of course, he has his other challenges too, just in Finland, the environment there, right?
00:19:17.420 But anyway, F in chat, I guess, for Tina Luca.
00:19:22.420 Rest in peace. In peace, Tina.
00:19:23.040 Yep. It sucks. So I wanted to, I did want to play a video because I came across this and it has to do with the vaccine and all that stuff, right?
00:19:31.640 And I wanted to, you'll catch it, right? I think this is somewhat longer, so I'm not going to play the whole thing.
00:19:39.540 But all this stuff about Peter Hotez has kind of bubbled up to the surface recently because, of course, he's one of the main vax pushers, right?
00:19:48.020 But, and it speaks to something, you know, I don't know what Tina felt about this, but I have, I saw people that were normally otherwise very, very, very on the level about a lot of different stuff.
00:20:01.080 But when it came to this, they, they just felt kind of fell in the trap. There was, the scare campaign was so relentless that many people just, you know, you can't screw around with this.
00:20:11.760 This is real. It's a series. We have to take it, blah, blah, blah, kind of thing.
00:20:14.200 I don't know if that was her situation, but the point was just a massive pressure, right?
00:20:18.660 And then, of course, it was the restrictions on top of that, the coercion of saying, you must do this if you want to move around.
00:20:24.440 You can't travel anywhere. You can't do this. You can't do that.
00:20:27.680 So this is not, this isn't only like, oh, you have a choice. This is your choice.
00:20:32.480 You know, you don't have to if you don't want to. For a lot of people, this was not a choice.
00:20:35.540 So Peter Hotez, who made a lot of money on this, shilling this death jab to, to many media channels out there.
00:20:45.060 He was in the news recently because there was a tiffy between kind of him and Robert F. Kennedy Jr. over in the States.
00:20:51.780 Robert F. Kennedy Jr. is running for president on the Democrat side.
00:20:55.360 He was on Joe Rogan. He's been on other shows and he's a skeptic of the vaccine.
00:20:59.280 So this is kind of bubbling up to the surface because of all of this, which is great.
00:21:02.620 And then basically, to make a long story short, they offered him Hotez, that is, because he's like, oh, look at this vaccine misinformation.
00:21:09.460 We have to ban Joe Rogan from Spotify. This is ridiculous.
00:21:13.240 And he said, well, why don't you come on? Come on to the show?
00:21:16.040 Because Hotez has said before, if you, if you, what is it?
00:21:20.280 If you deny the vaccine, right, then you're a vaccine, not only skeptic.
00:21:25.060 He calls it like a science denier, which is now, according to his argument, is like mass murdering people because you're not taking the jab.
00:21:32.140 Check that one out. Talk about reversing this situation, right?
00:21:36.380 But so people are like, OK, well, then you go on Joe Rogan and you, because it's one of the biggest podcasts out there, you present your information.
00:21:43.940 So you get this to as many people as possible. That's your moral responsibility now then, right?
00:21:48.540 You have to set the record straight. But of course, as usual, he chickens out and he just says, you know, I don't want to.
00:21:55.560 Oh, you have to have give me more money kind of thing.
00:21:57.660 It's not me, but he wanted to put it to a charity. At the end of the day, it was a bunch of different people chipping in money from all kinds of people.
00:22:04.060 So eventually it's like stands at like one point five million for like a charity of his choice.
00:22:08.500 Peter Hotez choice. OK, you donate to whatever you want.
00:22:11.860 Come on the show. You laid out no time limit.
00:22:15.080 It's just a debate with Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and like all of that on the table.
00:22:18.920 But of course, he chickens out and he goes to he goes on Mehdi Hassan on NMS NBC, the Saturday show, which basically doesn't have any comparable type of audience.
00:22:28.660 Right. And then he whines. Oh, what?
00:22:31.800 I saw his Twitter is like why it's why it's wrong to do to debate.
00:22:36.900 And you're not all these kinds of articles that are linked up anyway.
00:22:39.080 But so anyway, long story short here.
00:22:41.340 I don't want to play all of this is 12 minutes, but I want to play a little bit in the beginning.
00:22:44.780 I think it's the redacted team behind this, the redacted news team.
00:22:49.980 I'm not sure. I think you can see the logo up in the top left hand side corner.
00:22:54.620 But look at the spin of like of why he's evil is at least out the gates is not because, you know, what happened in the Western countries.
00:23:04.900 It's because he wanted to vaccinate Africa kind of thing. Right.
00:23:08.280 He said he says at some point the clip includes we got to vaccinate the world, which is insane.
00:23:12.300 I agree with that. We agree with that.
00:23:14.780 But the spin of the spin is I just know, just leave it alone.
00:23:19.320 Just back back off. Withdraw. Don't do anything.
00:23:22.180 OK, we get it. You get it, too, then, Africa.
00:23:24.560 But anyway, it just that's, you know, again, the West.
00:23:29.720 That's where the facts happened.
00:23:31.600 Like the like ninety nine percent of the right.
00:23:35.000 The dysgenics program has been in the in the West.
00:23:37.620 That's that's the mass murdering program.
00:23:40.420 But I feel that these people who did this little compilation, the vaccine, see what you feel when you when you're so obsessed with their own race.
00:23:46.880 They can't even see what's happening to our race.
00:23:50.080 We're the ones targeted who's obsessed with their own race.
00:23:53.460 Oh, well, we're talking about other blacks.
00:23:56.340 Oh, well, this is not blacks.
00:23:57.420 No, no, no. I know.
00:23:58.220 But I'm talking about like other blacks who say that, like, oh, they're targeting us now.
00:24:02.180 Oh, yeah.
00:24:02.480 They want to vaccinate.
00:24:03.380 You know, Africa.
00:24:03.860 I saw some blacks.
00:24:04.740 Oh, they want to kill us and mass murder us, blah, blah, blah.
00:24:07.300 But again, we've already gotten it.
00:24:08.820 It was like and again, a guy like this, he was talking about how, oh, we have to make it free for everybody and drop the drop the patents on it and stuff.
00:24:17.240 And neither this guy or Bill Gates or any of these people that had a big, you know, a finger in dealing with this whole campaign didn't do anything.
00:24:24.680 They didn't donate massive amounts of their funds and money to to get this to for free for the rest of the third world.
00:24:30.520 Of course, they didn't do.
00:24:31.460 It's all talk.
00:24:32.240 But anyway, let me play a little bit here.
00:24:33.700 There's some good compilations that's come out recently here.
00:24:37.380 Throughout the covid era, few, if any personalities have appeared on television more than Dr. Peter Hotez.
00:24:43.780 Dr. Hotez, welcome to the show.
00:24:45.400 Dr. Hotez, thank you so much for taking the time.
00:24:47.080 Dr. Hotez, welcome back to the NewsHour.
00:24:49.520 He has forcefully advocated the most authoritarian and destructive measures from lockdowns.
00:24:54.840 We may have to go through that full lockdown.
00:24:57.320 Intensify social distancing control.
00:25:00.600 Social isolation, absolutely mandatory.
00:25:03.560 Mask mandates.
00:25:04.580 Too many people are defiant of masks.
00:25:06.820 And most of all, to inject all of humanity with experimental pharmaceutical products.
00:25:11.980 Vaccine mandates.
00:25:12.920 Every kid over the age of 12.
00:25:14.840 Not only we're going to fully vaccinate the American people, but vaccinate the planet, vaccinate the entire world.
00:25:20.840 You have to aggressively vaccinate.
00:25:22.640 There's no real option here.
00:25:24.340 Vaccinate the Southern Hemisphere.
00:25:25.920 Vaccinate the African continent, South Asia and Latin America.
00:25:29.420 We're looking at up to eight, nine billion doses.
00:25:32.240 Let's go vaccinate the African people.
00:25:34.060 The security of the country depends on getting everybody vaccinated.
00:25:37.140 Hotez has received countless honors and awards from local restaurants.
00:25:42.140 It's fine to bring this up.
00:25:43.340 I'm not saying that.
00:25:44.200 Maybe I'm nitpicking.
00:25:45.520 Maybe I'm being too difficult here or whatever.
00:25:48.720 But do you see what I mean, though?
00:25:50.420 Yes, he said vaccinated America.
00:25:51.620 They included that there, too.
00:25:52.560 But it feels like they pulled that out specifically.
00:25:54.860 Look at what a racist Jewish Peter Hotez is, who obviously is a shit lib of if there ever was one.
00:26:03.280 He's as anti-white as they come, at least by default standards of just being a medical activist who's in the mainstream media sphere all the time.
00:26:11.660 I don't want to just zoom in on that, but I'm saying there's like mass deaths now.
00:26:19.660 There are like massive increases in excess deaths in many Western countries.
00:26:24.300 We showed the stats from the EU the other day.
00:26:26.300 It was like something like the average is about 20%.
00:26:29.400 We'll see what happens when stats from Italy and Sweden comes in because we didn't have those at the time.
00:26:35.200 Some countries, like Iceland, you had almost 50% excess deaths because of the jab, most likely.
00:26:41.560 I mean, shoot, even in my own personal life of the big circle of friends I have, everyone knows someone who got vaxxed and died soon after.
00:26:50.560 I hear about it all the time.
00:26:52.900 People that shouldn't have died.
00:26:54.760 They were healthy.
00:26:55.340 They didn't have any issues.
00:26:56.400 Yep.
00:26:57.000 Let's play a little bit more of this here.
00:26:59.000 To the American Medical Association and the city of Houston, where he now resides.
00:27:03.520 Hereby proudly proclaim this day, November 25th, 2021, as Dr. Peter Hotez, Dave, in the city of Houston.
00:27:10.960 He got his own day.
00:27:12.360 Can you believe that?
00:27:13.120 Oh, my God.
00:27:15.200 No one's going to remember that.
00:27:16.220 He's even nominated for a Nobel Peace Prize.
00:27:18.440 Peace Prize.
00:27:19.840 Creepy bow tie guy.
00:27:20.920 Peter Hotez has spent decades cozying up to powerful interests in the pharmaceutical industry, billionaire foundations, and the U.S. government.
00:27:30.080 He has treated the world as a laboratory, exploiting every opportunity to undermine regulation and test new drugs on unsuspecting populations, precisely the opposite image of a public health servant that he projects.
00:27:43.320 In 1989, Hotez's first postdoctoral award was from Pfizer, along with $100,000.
00:27:50.560 This allowed him to continue experiments for a human hookworm vaccine that he had begun years earlier, a project that, to this day, has not succeeded.
00:27:58.940 Mr. Hotez has been deeply embedded in the pharmaceutical industry since the very earliest stage in his career.
00:28:05.400 In 2003, he was a Pfizer visiting professor in tropical diseases at the State University of New York at Stony Brook.
00:28:12.840 The same year, he began work on a coronavirus vaccine, but shelved the project after the SARS virus flamed out, and he could not find funding.
00:28:21.400 Hotez's career has largely...
00:28:23.900 Isn't that interesting, though, that they actually worked on this early on in the process?
00:28:27.640 Oh, yeah.
00:28:28.040 And then, oops, then they kind of dropped it, and then it surfaced again.
00:28:31.520 We even had that clue about Moderna owning a patent together with the NIH for these types of vaccines that we're developing.
00:28:39.680 When they say, you know, when Trump showed up and, like, Operation Warp Speed, we brought this out into the world in six months, it's a miracle.
00:28:46.120 They already had it gone, yeah.
00:28:47.780 Absolutely.
00:28:48.140 They know they wanted it, they just wanted the excuse to wheel it out, but, anyway, I think that's enough of this one.
00:28:53.020 This goes on, this is ten more minutes of this.
00:28:54.720 Look, it's good, it's exposing him, as it should be, so I don't want to be too nitpicky here, but I kind of see that a lot in these fears, that it's, like, that Europe and America, Western world, can kind of be ignored, really, on this front.
00:29:08.740 And it's not until you want to go and vaccinate Africans or South Americans or something.
00:29:11.900 You mean the conservatives that are pointed?
00:29:13.900 Yeah.
00:29:14.140 And, ooh, look at what a racist, this guy.
00:29:18.420 Look, he's not, he's morally, you know, kind of, he's immoral.
00:29:21.960 He's like another Margaret Sanger, right?
00:29:24.240 She wanted to exterminate blacks.
00:29:25.520 Right, he's a eugenicist.
00:29:26.040 No, actually, she didn't.
00:29:27.180 No.
00:29:27.600 She was anti-white.
00:29:29.480 She was.
00:29:29.880 She was an anti-white communist.
00:29:31.060 Absolutely was, right?
00:29:31.920 I did a video about that years ago.
00:29:33.820 Now, so this one is good.
00:29:35.140 Yeah, so you can see, well, actually, you can't see that.
00:29:36.900 Redacted, it says up in the top, right, left-hand side there, so I think they're the ones who are doing it.
00:29:41.500 So, man, you guys got to step up to the plate here in regards to what happened to Europeans during this vaccine thing and focus on that as well, in addition to the other things you mentioned.
00:29:53.320 But anyway, I wanted to play one clip that's very good about this, what a slime bag he is, is this one.
00:30:01.420 Check this out here.
00:30:02.080 One of the things that we're not hearing a lot about is the unique potential safety problem of coronavirus vaccines.
00:30:09.560 And then, something changed.
00:30:11.980 Any vaccine released by emergency use authorization by the FDA is an outstanding vaccine.
00:30:18.140 J&J's vaccine has a risk of life-threatening blood clots.
00:30:22.460 When you hear the beep, that's the sound of safety.
00:30:25.500 So don't overthink it.
00:30:26.920 They're both really good vaccines.
00:30:29.740 They're all really good vaccines.
00:30:31.560 Get vaccinated now.
00:30:32.680 You gotta call now.
00:30:33.680 If you wait, it's gonna be really too late to protect your child.
00:30:36.700 If this was your child, what happens next could make it the worst day of your life.
00:30:41.080 So even though COVID poses zero threat to healthy children.
00:30:44.180 Vaccinate your children.
00:30:45.240 Do the right thing.
00:30:46.540 Be safe and not sorry.
00:30:48.240 I'm strongly recommending for adolescents to get their two doses of vaccine fully immunized after those two doses.
00:30:54.560 Advanced technology that can help save lives.
00:30:57.180 This is gonna be a long-lasting vaccine.
00:30:59.060 A long-lasting vaccine.
00:31:00.180 A few moments later.
00:31:02.360 We're seeing that two doses is not holding up well for emergency room visits.
00:31:07.920 It's not holding up well for hospitalizations.
00:31:10.360 Here we go again.
00:31:12.980 Everyone's going to need a booster.
00:31:14.740 You need that third immunization.
00:31:16.480 Triple the amount.
00:31:17.320 Get that third immunization.
00:31:18.820 The two mRNA vaccines were always a three-dose vaccine.
00:31:21.760 The two mRNA vaccines were always a three-dose vaccine.
00:31:24.540 I've always said this is a three-dose vaccine.
00:31:27.200 I've always said this is a three-dose vaccine.
00:31:29.420 This is a three-dose vaccine.
00:31:31.000 But I'm not done yet.
00:31:32.260 That third immunization.
00:31:34.160 The problem is it's not holding up.
00:31:36.720 So we may have to look at sort of innovative solutions.
00:31:40.200 Oh, God.
00:31:41.180 Not this again.
00:31:42.240 A fourth immunization.
00:31:43.680 Oh, God.
00:31:44.980 To keep them going.
00:31:45.660 To keep the country going.
00:31:47.020 We have to consider some out-of-the-box things.
00:31:48.760 A fourth immunization.
00:31:49.420 I mean, it's horrible.
00:31:50.060 People are dying.
00:31:50.820 Oh, I know.
00:31:51.160 It's like a dark comedy.
00:31:52.940 I know.
00:31:53.480 This is the most sick in the thing ever.
00:31:55.220 I've made that recommendation.
00:31:57.020 A fourth immunization.
00:31:58.300 But I'm still not done.
00:31:59.760 One semester later.
00:32:01.060 Unfortunately, the numbers are starting to trend up again.
00:32:04.100 So the hospitalizations are up.
00:32:05.760 And so the most important message that I have this morning is get your new bivalent booster.
00:32:11.220 Oh, my God.
00:32:11.920 And the leads were saying they got their booster.
00:32:13.800 And I was like, oh, I need to get mine.
00:32:14.920 It's a fucking vaccine shill if there ever was one.
00:32:17.540 Look at that trustworthy face.
00:32:19.580 And is that the bivalent?
00:32:21.520 Or is it the fourth booster?
00:32:22.900 Or does it matter?
00:32:23.860 Don't worry so much about the number of...
00:32:25.640 There's no wrong way to use it.
00:32:27.080 You have to get it.
00:32:27.720 If we say 10, take 10.
00:32:29.040 You can double or triple stack them.
00:32:31.400 The new bivalent one is doing a much better job.
00:32:34.140 You have to get a booster.
00:32:34.900 You need to get this new bivalent booster.
00:32:37.080 That bivalent booster for COVID.
00:32:38.540 But does everyone ages 12 and older need a booster?
00:32:41.680 The answer is yes.
00:32:42.860 Yes.
00:32:43.620 And by the way, if you're over 50 and have gotten two boosters and more than two to four months out,
00:32:49.860 you're going to need a third booster as well, a fifth immunization.
00:32:54.300 Five.
00:32:54.740 I don't think we're going to need an annual booster like flu.
00:32:58.240 So, eventually, Dr. Hotez supports yearly boosters, just like...
00:33:03.100 Oh, my God.
00:33:03.480 But I'm still not done.
00:33:04.740 It looks as though the boosters are not holding up quite as well as we'd like.
00:33:09.040 And I think our thinking is going to change in that what's going to happen is every,
00:33:14.980 you know, few months, we may need another booster.
00:33:19.380 COVID results each and every time.
00:33:21.660 You know, he just could not overcome that massive disinformation.
00:33:24.460 Hey, remember all these things you said?
00:33:26.060 Oh, they did.
00:33:27.080 In most of the recent tweets that he was making, this was in a lot of the replies.
00:33:32.660 Good.
00:33:32.900 So, people are bombarding him with this, you know.
00:33:33.860 And you know he's watching it, just like, oy vey, shut it down.
00:33:37.080 I hope so.
00:33:37.140 I hope he's watching.
00:33:38.720 God.
00:33:39.020 Yeah, I mean, it's like a net worth of like 40 million or something like that, this guy.
00:33:43.300 Oh, my God.
00:33:44.400 See, it's all this.
00:33:45.600 If there ever was a shill for vaccine companies, big pharma, it's him.
00:33:49.620 They're getting rich, killing people, injuring people permanently.
00:33:51.540 Brought to you by Pfizer.
00:33:53.320 40 million, right?
00:33:55.320 Famous pediatrician.
00:33:56.020 Will there ever be justice?
00:33:57.180 Will there ever be justice?
00:33:59.220 Well, that's my point.
00:34:00.200 There are going to have to be people responsible.
00:34:02.340 We can't let this go.
00:34:04.120 You know what I mean?
00:34:04.720 We have to.
00:34:05.740 And we know it's like they intentionally lie, too.
00:34:09.880 They go in front of Congress.
00:34:12.020 Some of these people, like Fauci, obviously, have done many times, right?
00:34:14.600 You have the situation in the EU between these lost text messages and secret communication
00:34:21.300 between Ursula von der Leyen, the president of the EU.
00:34:25.300 Is it commission?
00:34:26.140 Right, commission?
00:34:27.240 Anyway.
00:34:29.280 And Albert Bourla from Pfizer, for example.
00:34:32.180 Remember that?
00:34:32.820 Secret deal.
00:34:33.780 We're going to buy, you know, we'll purchase X amount of whatever was, billion of doses
00:34:37.640 or hundreds or millions of doses.
00:34:40.580 Yeah.
00:34:40.760 And now we're, you know, we're supposed to just take this and lay down and forget about
00:34:45.980 this.
00:34:47.020 No.
00:34:47.360 Like, we're going to need trials and catapults.
00:34:52.080 That's just, that's how this goes.
00:34:53.680 We cannot let this go.
00:34:55.080 And it's all very sneaky because it's like, okay, well, what was the cause of death?
00:34:58.380 Was it the vaccine or did it already exploit a weakness, right?
00:35:01.880 So they're going to use all these roundabout ways to wiggle out of that, right?
00:35:05.820 Well, you don't have direct evidence.
00:35:07.440 Like with Tina, for instance, you don't have direct evidence.
00:35:10.340 Well, there needs to be an autopsy.
00:35:11.640 And even then, what are they going to point to?
00:35:13.640 How can they say it was a vaccine?
00:35:14.700 Well, maybe if there's tons of blood clots.
00:35:17.780 That's like saying.
00:35:18.460 Mediate heart damage.
00:35:19.640 That's like saying you have a, you know, structural integrity or something, you know, in a building
00:35:24.460 or maybe this is a bad analogy, but I'm saying you get pressure on the entire system and there
00:35:30.580 was a weak spot.
00:35:32.300 But it's like, okay, well, what weight did you put on that weak spot?
00:35:35.420 You know what I mean?
00:35:35.660 It's like, oh, look here.
00:35:36.560 This is a, it's a cytokine storm.
00:35:40.080 It's an overreaction of the immune system or it's a heart issue, you know, kind of thing.
00:35:43.820 But yeah, but what triggered that?
00:35:45.120 What's the reason why the heart had inflammation or things like this, right?
00:35:50.500 And so they don't look at that.
00:35:51.820 They just see.
00:35:52.540 So they, it's a complete flip-flop, right?
00:35:54.400 In the beginning, it was like, look at all these COVID cases.
00:35:56.460 They ramp up the numbers.
00:35:57.580 They make everybody scared.
00:35:59.740 Everything is in red on every mass media channel in 2020, right?
00:36:04.260 Early 2020, everybody's terrified.
00:36:07.040 Everyone's scared into submission.
00:36:09.100 And now, you know, when it comes to like counting exes deaths and things, no, no, no, it's not
00:36:12.960 related to that.
00:36:13.520 Yeah, there's a, there's a huge spike in cancers.
00:36:16.180 Sure.
00:36:16.400 But that's totally unrelated to, to, to the, to the jab.
00:36:20.180 No, it's not good enough.
00:36:21.400 No, no.
00:36:22.300 Bill Biz says in the latest display of medical wokeness, the AMA has declared the BMI body
00:36:27.340 mass index as a racist standard due to its historically harmful use for racist exclusion.
00:36:32.120 Anybody surprised?
00:36:32.820 Well, so they're admitting that they're just saying a bunch of non-whites are obese and
00:36:36.620 fat.
00:36:37.360 That's what it was, right?
00:36:38.260 Wait a minute.
00:36:38.560 What are you saying here?
00:36:39.240 Like brown people are fat?
00:36:40.860 Is that what the AMA is saying?
00:36:43.140 There's white fat asses too, but I mean, there's a lot of brown and black fat asses as well.
00:36:47.180 Let me terp.
00:36:48.380 Let me terp.
00:36:49.500 What is that line?
00:36:50.280 Let me type in BMI racist.
00:36:53.840 Oh my gosh.
00:36:54.240 American Medical Association canceling BMI because it's racist.
00:36:57.340 Yeah, but you don't need a BMI to tell if someone's fat.
00:36:59.900 Like you can see it.
00:37:00.800 Oh my God.
00:37:02.560 And then here's the national...
00:37:03.600 I need to measure it.
00:37:04.600 Look at this one though.
00:37:05.080 I see it with my eyes.
00:37:06.400 Here's a national review cucked version of BMI was stupid, not racist.
00:37:10.200 That's right.
00:37:10.700 Oh God.
00:37:10.800 It was just stupid.
00:37:12.840 What do you mean stupid?
00:37:14.560 You want to keep people healthy and not overweight.
00:37:16.900 Of course there's good to have a norm...
00:37:18.900 Yeah, an ideal of what's healthy.
00:37:21.160 Weight.
00:37:22.220 Right?
00:37:23.020 Oh my gosh.
00:37:23.380 What is it?
00:37:23.740 It's your height...
00:37:26.300 What is it?
00:37:27.020 Minus your weight or plus...
00:37:28.480 I forget what it is.
00:37:29.160 Not being worried about being fat is stupid.
00:37:32.480 You should be worried.
00:37:33.360 Yeah.
00:37:33.880 But no, this is...
00:37:34.920 Oh my gosh.
00:37:35.180 They were saying it's...
00:37:36.300 The great reset, the...
00:37:39.380 Everything white people have come up with needs to be...
00:37:42.780 Everything needs to go eradicated.
00:37:44.020 Space Kang, thank you, says racial greetings to my pagan brothers and sisters.
00:37:47.740 Thank you.
00:37:48.480 Good to see you, Space Kang.
00:37:49.560 I know you're going to get into some Midsommar stuff next week.
00:37:51.720 Yeah.
00:37:52.040 I think we'll do that.
00:37:52.640 Things like hearing about that.
00:37:53.600 Yeah.
00:37:53.960 Did you do...
00:37:54.480 I think we have a couple on Odyssey.
00:37:56.800 It's great too because we have a bunch of Christian friends who are doing it as well.
00:38:01.360 Yeah.
00:38:01.840 I mean, we're having a party Friday.
00:38:03.140 We're invited to another one Saturday and, you know, I know Catholics, Christians, all kinds
00:38:08.420 of people that are celebrating it.
00:38:10.340 So that's fun.
00:38:11.160 Yeah.
00:38:11.320 You know?
00:38:11.720 Yeah.
00:38:12.040 Let's see.
00:38:12.540 What did I miss here?
00:38:13.540 Yes.
00:38:14.380 Wolf Supremacist66.
00:38:16.260 Hi, Henrik and Lana.
00:38:17.440 Long time viewer.
00:38:18.220 First time hyper chatter.
00:38:19.700 Thank you.
00:38:19.940 I'm terribly sorry to hear about Tina.
00:38:21.640 I only remember hearing about her a few times for her.
00:38:24.480 She was a great person and a proud nationalist.
00:38:27.100 Guess it goes to show your life is bleeding.
00:38:29.340 God bless her and all of you.
00:38:30.600 Yes.
00:38:30.940 Thank you.
00:38:31.400 Appreciate that.
00:38:31.980 Super chat.
00:38:32.460 That was nice of you.
00:38:33.100 Yes.
00:38:33.500 I forgot to mention it, but yeah, she was...
00:38:36.660 I mean, genuinely, every time I spoke to her...
00:38:38.780 Such a sweetheart.
00:38:39.340 Very, genuinely, very, very nice person.
00:38:41.600 Just wonderful.
00:38:42.740 She did great work in Finland trying to heal that sick nation.
00:38:47.460 I mean, it's like 10 times better in Finland than it is in Sweden.
00:38:51.780 Well, it's bad there too, but they haven't come as far as Sweden have.
00:38:56.000 We're literally like already down the tubes.
00:38:59.040 Finland is circling.
00:39:00.100 But no, she and Eunice, of course, did great work to try to help restore that country.
00:39:04.640 Courageous.
00:39:04.820 She's courageous.
00:39:05.700 Absolutely.
00:39:06.320 She's this short little petite thing.
00:39:07.580 I remember the first time I met her.
00:39:08.560 Oh, look at her.
00:39:09.100 She's so little and lots of courage.
00:39:11.000 Yeah.
00:39:11.260 Lots of courage.
00:39:12.100 Wolf Supremacist66 again.
00:39:13.620 They need to get in the pit in reference to these vaccine pushers.
00:39:18.140 That's right.
00:39:18.720 Brought to you by Pfizer.
00:39:20.720 The pit sponsored by...
00:39:22.900 Yeah, so we can all watch.
00:39:24.960 So Lord Aragon here too.
00:39:27.080 Hell, I just say for argument, a lot of young people in my area have passed away.
00:39:30.700 No reason why they weren't obese, etc.
00:39:33.560 F for Tina.
00:39:35.220 Yes, indeed.
00:39:35.680 Yeah, I mean, it's like, you know, just a random, like, overview of the situation.
00:39:44.980 Like, I see tweets all the time, like, oh, here's some young person that just died, you
00:39:48.860 know, because there's some people that, you know, parents, they put just a message on
00:39:52.820 Twitter, you know what I mean?
00:39:54.100 Yeah, and we don't know why, right?
00:39:55.700 And it's not said.
00:39:56.640 And some people I see, you know, in the replies, how did they die?
00:40:00.240 What happened?
00:40:00.920 You know, we don't want to be disrespectful, but, you know, everyone needs to know if it's
00:40:04.220 related to this, blah, blah, blah.
00:40:04.840 It used to be this way.
00:40:05.700 There was always a reason.
00:40:07.100 Oh, they had a heart problem.
00:40:08.240 Oh, they got hit by a car.
00:40:09.540 Oh, it was this accident.
00:40:10.600 Oh, it was cancer.
00:40:11.400 Now it's just like, oh, we don't know.
00:40:13.200 Yeah.
00:40:13.740 That's not normal.
00:40:15.360 Yeah, but was it some other cringe rapper just the other day?
00:40:19.120 I can't remember the name, but yeah, he's standing up on some outdoor stage rapping
00:40:24.300 and then all of a sudden he just, it was 45, kind of out of a gut or whatever, but
00:40:28.040 like, yeah, he just falls over with the mic, boom, goes down, dies, you know what I mean?
00:40:31.400 A little pressure on the heart and that's it.
00:40:33.000 A little nervousness, maybe a little, you know, a little stress in the situation like
00:40:36.440 that and then you go, you know?
00:40:38.700 All right.
00:40:40.160 All right.
00:40:41.400 Okay.
00:40:42.040 So, let's talk about Midsommar, right?
00:40:45.480 So, obviously we have the solstice that was happening yesterday.
00:40:49.160 It's a wonderful time of the year, I should say, for everybody, but I want to do, we've
00:40:56.340 run this a couple of times, but it's a good short little overview for those who haven't
00:41:01.540 seen it before.
00:41:02.440 This is from Skansen, which is just outside of Stockholm, an area there, but they usually
00:41:09.420 have, you know, concerts and celebrations and stuff.
00:41:11.460 It's kind of like a big park.
00:41:12.280 But anyway, this is a video from a couple of years ago.
00:41:15.380 Listen to this.
00:41:17.720 Midsommar is a national holiday in Sweden that celebrates the summer solstice.
00:41:24.080 At Skansen, the celebration lasts for three entire days and visitors can help making garlands
00:41:30.960 of flowers for the maypole.
00:41:32.860 Maypoles are believed to be part of an old fertility rite, the pole being a phallus that
00:41:43.640 fertilizes Mother Nature.
00:41:47.060 It was hoped that properly celebrating this rite would give a good harvest in the autumn.
00:41:53.940 Here you can be certain of a lively time with traditional Swedish entertainments and plenty
00:42:03.880 of fun.
00:42:05.740 Traditional fiddlers play for the ring dances, which are followed by singing, games and dancing
00:42:12.720 round the maypole.
00:42:18.000 Henrik, are we going to do that this week?
00:42:19.520 Join us this weekend.
00:42:21.400 You're not a dancing kind of guy.
00:42:22.900 See, it's one thing I kind of have a little hard time with.
00:42:27.120 Now, there's some interesting history here, actually, because the dancing part is fairly
00:42:32.400 new, right?
00:42:35.300 It was kind of weird.
00:42:36.160 Trying to get out of it.
00:42:38.500 It's new.
00:42:39.240 I don't want to do it.
00:42:40.080 It's not authentic.
00:42:40.760 Smoke it.
00:42:41.520 Smoke it.
00:42:42.380 I mean, I'm not going to jump around.
00:42:43.680 For kids.
00:42:43.960 You know that song, which means little frogs.
00:42:47.080 Yeah.
00:42:47.820 This is for the kids, right?
00:42:49.080 But that was like, yeah, I'm going to read here.
00:42:51.820 Hopefully the translation is good.
00:42:53.160 Look at that maypole.
00:42:53.360 That one's cool.
00:42:54.560 Yeah, because they say, yeah, små grodena, små grodena, ej öron svansar hava det, right?
00:43:00.060 They don't have any ears, no tails, and then they jump around like around the maypole.
00:43:03.620 It says here, dancing and playing around the maypole is a relatively new invention that
00:43:09.640 grew in popularity during the 1920s.
00:43:14.180 An element that grew stronger during the 20th century is the element of play.
00:43:18.360 The melody små grodena is an example of this, the small frogs, which first appeared in the
00:43:23.200 songbook in the 1920s.
00:43:24.480 The tune quickly became popular and became associated with the frog game.
00:43:30.580 That's a weird translation there.
00:43:32.860 With the, yeah, I guess you can translate frog game.
00:43:35.760 And Midsommar, the melody itself goes back to a French song, which British soldiers sang
00:43:43.400 during the Napoleonic Wars in the 19th century, and it was used as a, translation is a zealous
00:43:51.300 song, like a hate song, a hate song, nidvisa, we call it, which is basically to make, it's
00:43:58.200 a hate song about the French.
00:44:00.660 Did you get it now?
00:44:01.340 Frogs, the French, do you get it?
00:44:04.060 No?
00:44:04.800 Okay.
00:44:06.340 Anyway, so that's recent.
00:44:08.860 Oh, Sacre bleu, right?
00:44:11.300 Don't you get it?
00:44:11.780 No.
00:44:11.900 All right, so that's kind of new.
00:44:14.400 So I'm not, you know, I want to go back a little bit further than that.
00:44:18.140 Look, it's fun for the kids, so we'll do it anyway, right?
00:44:20.600 It's totally okay.
00:44:22.080 But it's hard if you have, you kind of have to have grown up with that, so you know what
00:44:26.020 to do.
00:44:26.400 It's very hard to like show, show other like Americans, you dance around like this, you
00:44:31.260 can't really do it.
00:44:31.880 They want to see it, Henrik.
00:44:33.120 They want to see it.
00:44:34.040 I will not do it.
00:44:36.700 But anyway, so, you know, have you noticed there's two words for it?
00:44:39.740 It's sometimes they say Maypole, and sometimes they say Midsommar's Pole, right?
00:44:45.160 Showing a couple of them.
00:44:45.860 Oh, I like that one.
00:44:46.940 That one is not too bad.
00:44:48.320 I think that's actually just a birch stem, just straight up like that.
00:44:51.520 And there's different styles and all that kind of stuff, right?
00:44:53.740 But actually, the kind of the Christian cross version is actually a more recent one.
00:45:00.780 You think, oh, that would be in the early days, maybe when they, you know, had Christianized
00:45:04.560 Sweden, and they want to make sure they kind of got rid of pagan symbols and things like
00:45:08.680 that.
00:45:08.980 No, it's actually that style right there that's in the picture now.
00:45:12.220 That's more recent.
00:45:13.440 In the beginning, it was actually just like a straight pole.
00:45:16.200 There's even, let me show you some of the pictures of that, wood carvings.
00:45:19.160 And these are from 1600s, something like that.
00:45:26.320 There's a couple of these, actually.
00:45:27.700 I should have imported all of them.
00:45:29.240 And this is from a kind of a book about Sweden, Suecia Antiqua is the name of it, written,
00:45:36.940 I think, in Latin, the whole thing.
00:45:39.200 And as you can see on the right-hand side there, do you see a pole there with a bunch
00:45:43.900 of wreaths?
00:45:45.020 Oh, yeah.
00:45:45.100 Or, oh, what was the word again?
00:45:46.540 What do they call it?
00:45:47.160 I think she even said it in the video.
00:45:48.640 I should have paid attention.
00:45:51.160 Garlands.
00:45:51.600 Is that what you call it?
00:45:52.160 Yeah, garlands.
00:45:53.120 Garlands.
00:45:54.520 And you can see that it's just a straight pole.
00:45:57.760 And then what they did is, let me zoom in on that a little bit, a straight pole.
00:46:01.680 And then they just kind of hung garlands or wreaths around, presumably attached to each
00:46:06.820 other, all the way down the pole.
00:46:08.780 And some, you know, some people still today, they actually just use a flagpole.
00:46:13.100 They don't even have like a, you know, a wooden pole or anything like that, or like
00:46:17.940 a special, you know, a tree that they take or anything like that, right?
00:46:22.460 So here's one.
00:46:23.340 This is from this picture, actually, the wood carving there from Skåra, which is one of
00:46:27.020 the oldest dioceses in Sweden, which is kind of interesting, right?
00:46:30.440 Because you think, oh, it would all be Christianized by then.
00:46:33.440 They wouldn't have any of these kinds of pagan symbols or whatever.
00:46:35.720 But no, this is, that was totally, they were totally cool at that, at the time.
00:46:40.580 A couple of other wood carvings as well.
00:46:42.120 Here you can see one down in the kind of bottom left, right there.
00:46:45.720 This is from Jönköping.
00:46:47.460 And one other one here, another Maypole that they showed from Hammarskog.
00:46:52.400 I think this is translated.
00:46:54.880 Hammarskog.
00:46:55.420 It's in the middle there.
00:46:57.460 So anyway, so Maypole, the word May has nothing to do actually with the month of May, which
00:47:03.060 I thought first, May or Maya is actually means to dress in green.
00:47:08.740 There's actually, I even remember a tradition we did in school when I was little.
00:47:13.920 And I don't even know how to describe it, but it's like, you make these little, like
00:47:19.140 in, usually in paper, like a little piece, it sounds weird, like, but a stick that you
00:47:23.940 hold it, you can hold in.
00:47:25.040 And then at the end of that, you had a bunch of different colored papers and stuff, right?
00:47:29.020 And you can just kind of wave it around, like, not like a pom-pom, but you know what
00:47:32.360 I mean?
00:47:32.520 Like something in that style.
00:47:34.000 And all the kids kind of just walk around and it's, you know, I forget what month that
00:47:37.480 is again, but maybe it is in May, to be honest.
00:47:39.880 But it makes sense, right?
00:47:40.780 Because we dress in green because that, not us personally, but the pole, we dress in green
00:47:46.480 because that's what nature does, right?
00:47:49.240 So it's kind of our act of going along what nature is doing, kind of recognizing that now
00:47:54.440 it's time.
00:47:55.000 I think even then the month of May is related to that word.
00:47:58.740 Everything is lush and green and growing.
00:48:01.120 It's green, exactly, right?
00:48:02.320 But yeah, you can see, here's some of the different designs is actually kind of interesting
00:48:05.000 to see, but very common, like just a straight down pole.
00:48:08.640 You've got to step it up next to your hand, Rick.
00:48:09.820 Oh, I know.
00:48:11.000 I'll show mine in a moment.
00:48:12.320 Look, I did this, like, kind of last minute.
00:48:14.060 Idahoin style, which is-
00:48:15.340 Yeah, it's a little different.
00:48:16.100 You have to use what's available, right?
00:48:18.020 In your area.
00:48:19.020 I mean, birch is kind of the to-go-to, unless there's some other, you know, tree that people
00:48:23.420 use maybe regionally in some other areas.
00:48:25.460 But you can't use pine and we're surrounded by pine.
00:48:27.500 Yes, exactly.
00:48:28.360 So we had to improvise and do a, what is it called?
00:48:31.280 Like a, is it a hazelnut tree?
00:48:32.960 That's what I thought it was, but maybe it's not.
00:48:34.780 Anyway, it's not as many works, right?
00:48:36.680 But no, so tons of different types of designs you could do.
00:48:39.880 It's not, there's no real, you know, kind of rule or whatever.
00:48:42.660 I was even thinking actually breaking the cross next year and turning them straight up like
00:48:47.600 that.
00:48:47.860 Like a rune.
00:48:48.180 So you actually get an algis rune.
00:48:49.960 That could be pretty cool, actually.
00:48:50.880 But you can hang things in them.
00:48:52.100 You can do all kinds.
00:48:52.480 Some people do ribbons.
00:48:54.300 Look at this.
00:48:54.700 That's one from 1920.
00:48:57.160 And there you can see how distinct it is.
00:48:59.200 And here's actually the military dressing a pole.
00:49:04.180 Maja, right?
00:49:04.920 The dressing in green.
00:49:05.760 Look at that straight, white, blonde military.
00:49:08.080 Yeah.
00:49:08.920 It didn't used to be white in Sweden back in the 1920s, right?
00:49:12.700 No, this is the military, right?
00:49:14.000 That actually is dressing up a pole and to celebrate the celebration.
00:49:17.560 But let me go back one there.
00:49:18.460 Look at that.
00:49:18.700 That's 1920s, too.
00:49:20.760 That's almost more like a Christmas tree, you know what I mean, in a way.
00:49:24.380 More so than a cross.
00:49:25.620 So the cross is actually somewhat later.
00:49:27.920 But it doesn't really matter.
00:49:29.640 You can do whatever you want.
00:49:30.440 Some people do the ribbons, right?
00:49:32.320 There's traditions in Germany, maybe even the Netherlands, where they basically tie ribbons
00:49:38.600 at the top.
00:49:39.300 And as you dance around it, you kind of dress the whole pole, right, in the different colors
00:49:43.740 and stuff.
00:49:44.200 Again, floral patterns or whatever.
00:49:46.840 Like this is what nature does, right?
00:49:48.560 Green, all the different floral flowers that buds at this time and stuff like that.
00:49:53.680 So it's basically an old pagan veneration to the principles in nature that things grow.
00:50:00.340 And if we are not part of that, going back to when we were kids, right, it's like when
00:50:05.180 we go out and recognize that it's time to begin, we're participatory in the process.
00:50:11.040 And maybe we even believe in some level where we used to believe that we ate it along, right?
00:50:15.340 If we don't go out there and, you know, my yard, as I say, then maybe nature won't happen.
00:50:21.380 It won't be a good harvest this year, right?
00:50:23.140 Sure, a lot of superstitions here.
00:50:24.680 But that's how it was like for ancient man.
00:50:27.520 We don't know how all of this works, right?
00:50:30.240 We just know that it's like magic.
00:50:32.340 All of a sudden, shit grows out of the ground.
00:50:34.020 We're dependent on this.
00:50:35.220 This is tied to our survival.
00:50:36.080 They didn't know if the sun was always going to shine.
00:50:37.120 They didn't know if the food was always going to grow, right?
00:50:39.080 That's just it.
00:50:39.700 And so you have to, it became a sacred, you know, ritual of sort, right, to tag along
00:50:45.280 in this, essentially.
00:50:46.680 What else can I say about it?
00:50:50.820 I think that's about the Maypole there, the different names for it.
00:50:54.700 It's kind of weird, right?
00:50:55.700 The Nordic Museum had a paragraph here.
00:50:58.500 They say, the Midsummer Pole probably came to Sweden from Germany during the Middle Ages.
00:51:04.540 We find the earliest depictions in, and those are the ones that I showed there,
00:51:08.500 Erik Dahlberg's Suecia Antiqua, published successively during the late 17th century.
00:51:14.420 The Midsummer or Maypole was probably used by deacons, students of the time,
00:51:19.540 and farmhands who went around small towns and villages singing May while begging for food and money.
00:51:26.120 Interesting.
00:51:26.460 The picture from Skara shows a Maypole with the rings strung over the pole itself.
00:51:31.480 Probably quite common for this time.
00:51:35.540 But in fact, for a long time, there was a great variation in the appearance of the Midsummer
00:51:39.220 Pole, and it was only during the first half of the 19th century that it took the appearance
00:51:43.420 that we see mostly today.
00:51:45.420 A pole with a crossbar adorned with two leafy rings.
00:51:49.300 But there are still variations in different parts of Sweden.
00:51:51.520 In Sweden, the continent, the Maypoles are on the continent, the Maypoles are often seen
00:51:55.480 earlier in the year than in Sweden.
00:51:57.520 In Germany, the wreaths do not hang from a crossbar, but instead around the pole itself,
00:52:02.960 as the design we showed earlier, kind of thing.
00:52:05.540 But I kind of like that.
00:52:06.620 No.
00:52:07.840 Well, two things I want to say.
00:52:08.860 I mean, obviously, this is a tradition that's celebrated in many European countries, right?
00:52:13.480 Yeah.
00:52:13.660 But why do they call it Midsummer, when it's not Midsummer, right?
00:52:18.940 Well, this is just, this is kind of like you laughed on as well, right?
00:52:24.380 It takes, no, that's always on the 24th.
00:52:26.900 Okay, that was a bad example.
00:52:28.260 This is, I think it's essentially related to the fact that Swedes want to get drunk,
00:52:32.720 and so you can't just have this on a Wednesday.
00:52:35.140 You know, the summer solstice is here, it was on a Wednesday, but it's always the closest
00:52:39.720 Friday to the summer solstice, right?
00:52:42.560 So Midsummer is, Midsummer is technically, was yesterday, on Wednesday, the 21st of June,
00:52:47.940 that's when the summer solstice is.
00:52:50.180 Yeah, but why do they, saying Midsummer, all these people have been asking me this,
00:52:52.800 sounds like it's the middle of summer, when technically it's the start of summer.
00:52:56.600 Well, if you look at it from the point of view of the sun, right, that is the height, the peak,
00:53:01.120 as I said, it's northernmost position that it will be, and then it starts going back from there.
00:53:06.360 So yes, you have probably warmer temperatures even in July and August,
00:53:10.060 but you have a delay, essentially, right?
00:53:11.700 So the sun travels across the sky, it goes all the way around,
00:53:14.880 and then it starts going all the way around.
00:53:18.220 It starts getting higher and higher, and then eventually it starts going back again.
00:53:21.540 So essentially, now we have peaked, right?
00:53:24.420 The sun has peaked.
00:53:25.300 We're in the middle of how, you know, well, that's the tallest point,
00:53:30.700 but that's the middle point of summer, because now it starts going back again.
00:53:34.000 That's the longest day of the year, right?
00:53:36.680 Yeah, but you get a kind of a delay in the temperature differences kind of thing.
00:53:40.100 Okay, that makes sense.
00:53:41.180 So that's the closest I would say, right?
00:53:43.200 Yeah, I even had, did I not bring them all soon?
00:53:45.200 No, that's too bad.
00:53:46.640 I'm assuming I could find this.
00:53:47.240 Jertrusker says, happy summer solstice.
00:53:49.040 It's a beautiful European high festival.
00:53:50.900 It depicts the beauty of our people, good midsummer.
00:53:53.120 Yeah, let me play this one.
00:53:55.900 This is actually just Swedish, but there's a, this, I think it's a,
00:54:00.200 some Swedes that are in America, but they could travel back home to celebrate.
00:54:04.060 It's not subtitled or anything, but we could play a little bit.
00:54:05.840 It's just a minute long.
00:54:06.600 It's from SVT.
00:54:17.220 What do you do on midsummer?
00:54:19.220 We dress to midsummer pole and do a bunch of fun stuff.
00:54:24.160 You can swim, you can play.
00:54:25.460 We do have a camping and you snow.
00:54:28.720 And have a really fun.
00:54:30.020 So they're out camping.
00:54:31.240 Where do you live?
00:54:33.080 USA.
00:54:34.260 My mom is from Sweden, so we're here.
00:54:37.240 Her mom's from Sweden.
00:54:38.500 Mm-hmm, so they're there visiting.
00:54:40.220 Understood that, Henry.
00:54:40.960 Family, yeah, they're there.
00:54:41.600 There's no traditional holiday festival in the year of explaining.
00:54:46.180 What do you think about that?
00:54:47.120 Man får göra det bästa utav allting, helt enkelt.
00:54:50.380 They're just saying that we have to adapt to the situation.
00:54:52.840 Man kan göra det med bara familjen eller typ så.
00:54:57.080 Man måste inte ha så många gäster.
00:55:02.480 All right.
00:55:03.820 Say that a little flavor of how it looks.
00:55:06.060 All right, there you go.
00:55:13.720 Good stuff.
00:55:14.440 Little kid stuff for you, too, right?
00:55:15.700 But, yeah, no, so obviously summer solstice, right, very important point for Europeans.
00:55:22.960 Man, is there a lot of megalithic sites all along, scattered all throughout Europe.
00:55:28.100 I mean, there are other parts of the world, too, of course.
00:55:30.100 But that line up, this is some pictures here from Ã…les Stena, which is down in the south.
00:55:35.240 Remember that one when we were there?
00:55:36.060 Oh, yeah.
00:55:36.700 Ustad, beautiful place.
00:55:38.160 But there are basically, this is just a huge sun calendar.
00:55:41.720 There's an author, I actually had him on the show many, many years ago, called Bob Lind, Bob G. Lind.
00:55:46.560 And he did kind of the work on detailing that, that the whole thing was basically like a calendar, you know, kind of like.
00:55:53.960 There's Orkney, there's Brittany, Karnak, right?
00:55:58.860 There's this endless amount of these stones everywhere.
00:56:01.840 And maybe not all of them are, you know, calendar systems or something like that, but many of them are.
00:56:06.020 And they're lined up perfectly along the summer solstice.
00:56:08.600 Obviously, you have Newgrange, Ireland, right?
00:56:10.880 Tons of these locations all over the European continent.
00:56:14.300 So, it's cool.
00:56:16.520 It's good stuff.
00:56:17.600 Yeah.
00:56:17.760 I like to remind people, too, that haven't been to the Nordic countries in the winter, how dark it is, right?
00:56:25.500 So, then they really appreciate when the sun returns.
00:56:28.660 And then you have the, like Russia has the midnight sun, right?
00:56:32.520 The white nights.
00:56:34.300 And you have a version of that, obviously, up in Sweden, too, where the sun just kind of goes down and then goes back up again.
00:56:40.400 And the high northern places, it basically doesn't seem like it goes all the way down.
00:56:45.580 It just stays light.
00:56:47.460 It does, right?
00:56:48.440 And here's the footage.
00:56:49.900 I should have imported that earlier.
00:56:52.300 Here's some footage, right?
00:56:53.360 The midnight sun.
00:56:54.980 This is in the Arctic.
00:56:56.360 And as you can see, it doesn't even, like, go down below the horizon.
00:56:59.340 It just kind of brushes up against it.
00:57:01.840 And so, of course, this made it very easy, you know, I think, for the people alive at the time to see where, kind of, at what time in the year,
00:57:10.300 the sun, you know, peaks, so to speak, of, like, how far down it comes.
00:57:14.500 You can just, you know, pick a spot on the horizon, essentially, a mountain chain or whatever,
00:57:19.860 and you can see, like, you know, that the sun is either getting closer or further away from that, depending on what time of year you're looking at it.
00:57:26.140 Here's another shot from Sommarøy, I think it is, in Tromsø, Norway.
00:57:31.320 Beautiful time of year.
00:57:32.200 I mean, I just, I love the, love the midnight sun, the endless nights.
00:57:37.780 It barely gets dark.
00:57:39.260 Where I lived, kind of around the Gothenburg area, that you get maybe, like, an hour and a half of darkness around this time of year.
00:57:44.920 But after that point, it gets light again.
00:57:47.840 I remember needing the blackout curtains if you wanted to sleep in.
00:57:51.640 I'm used to that.
00:57:52.540 Yeah, yeah, you like that anyway.
00:57:54.220 But, yeah, I experienced, obviously, in Sweden with you, and then I also experienced it in Russia.
00:57:59.260 Yeah.
00:58:00.020 It was pretty cool.
00:58:00.680 Yeah, that's right.
00:58:01.960 And, of course, a lot of the people that hang out at Stonehenge, you know, during the summer solstice as well.
00:58:07.620 And, yes, there's some...
00:58:08.520 The LARPy pagans.
00:58:09.260 Yeah, there's some cringe Wiccan elements here, too, which I don't, you know, don't like, you know, particularly.
00:58:14.580 But it is what it is.
00:58:16.500 That's what they do.
00:58:18.240 But, no, we want to go back.
00:58:20.640 Of course, we shouldn't forget either the, in Ukraine, Russia, other Eastern European countries,
00:58:27.700 they have their own version of this as well.
00:58:29.140 Usually huge bonfires, right?
00:58:32.060 That's a big fire right there.
00:58:33.780 That's a big fire.
00:58:34.440 This is from Ukraine Pilpets, I think it is.
00:58:37.620 It's a village in Ukraine, this footage here.
00:58:40.800 Good stuff.
00:58:41.620 Yeah, lots of bonfires happening Friday.
00:58:42.920 This is what we used to do.
00:58:43.920 Yes, exactly.
00:58:45.640 All right.
00:58:46.880 I love it.
00:58:47.400 I think that's what I got on that front, to be honest.
00:58:51.680 Is that good enough?
00:58:53.160 I think so.
00:58:54.260 I'm looking forward to Friday.
00:58:56.040 Yes.
00:58:56.420 Are you going to show what you were working on?
00:58:58.040 Oh, yeah, that's right.
00:58:58.140 Okay, yeah, yeah, yeah.
00:58:58.840 I forgot.
00:58:59.780 See, I'm all strung out here.
00:59:01.840 Here is what we're going to celebrate.
00:59:04.680 So, I actually hang a Viking banner at the top of that, right?
00:59:07.720 The raven, the black and red banner, the Viking banner classic.
00:59:12.360 But, of course, you can hang a flag there, too, of your nation.
00:59:15.860 Maybe it's a Swedish one or an American one, wherever you are.
00:59:18.460 But, yes, I did manage to get it raised up.
00:59:22.600 And, as I said, I went with the standard kind of cross design.
00:59:25.720 I'm going to do two garlands or wreaths, rings, hang on the sides as well.
00:59:29.500 But, next year, I'll probably just break those and do them straight up
00:59:32.040 and do, like, an algis rune or something like that.
00:59:34.620 That should be good.
00:59:35.300 It's kind of cool, you know?
00:59:36.540 I just did this on the fly.
00:59:37.660 Idaho style.
00:59:39.520 Yeah, one aspect that's hard is that I'm used to just, like,
00:59:44.020 layers of nice, rich, deep mud that you just dig a hole,
00:59:47.900 and you just put down the pole.
00:59:49.560 There's so much rock here.
00:59:51.400 So, it's, like, kind of hard to see, like, is it going to stand?
00:59:53.960 What's happening?
00:59:54.780 You know, kind of thing.
00:59:55.560 So, I had to, like, rush and hurry to make sure that it's done for tomorrow.
00:59:58.320 It's expensive to put in a well, depending where you're at in northern Idaho.
01:00:02.180 They have to go deep in some places.
01:00:05.040 Yeah.
01:00:05.280 Before you buy land, you want to check that.
01:00:07.240 It's rocky around these parts, for sure.
01:00:09.420 Yep.
01:00:10.360 All right.
01:00:11.200 No, I think that's it.
01:00:12.000 So, that's what we're doing tomorrow.
01:00:14.440 No schnapps, though.
01:00:15.520 But, you know, a big drinker, so.
01:00:16.780 Nah, I mean, it's more for posterity.
01:00:20.480 Is that the term?
01:00:21.840 It's more for nostalgia, maybe, if anything.
01:00:24.940 Yeah, I mean, and obviously, I mean, we would do, we should mention that, too.
01:00:27.460 But, yes, herring is a classic for sweets.
01:00:29.980 Potatoes, those good little yellow potatoes.
01:00:31.960 Strawberry cakes.
01:00:32.360 Soured milk, is that what you call it?
01:00:33.960 No, gräddfil.
01:00:35.120 What is that again?
01:00:36.000 Is that the, no, not soured milk.
01:00:38.260 That's the wrong term.
01:00:38.940 If we go, I guess sour cream.
01:00:40.500 Close to sour cream.
01:00:41.940 Yeah, creme fraiche, I think.
01:00:42.820 Yeah, fresh dill or, well, I guess, that's chives, right?
01:00:47.700 Chives, is that what that is?
01:00:48.880 Yeah.
01:00:49.440 Fresh chives.
01:00:51.120 Except it's harder to get those really good shrimps.
01:00:54.100 You're always missing those.
01:00:55.200 Yes.
01:00:55.360 The ones that you get up around Norway, right?
01:00:58.020 The North Atlantic.
01:00:59.000 They're very tasty little shrimps, for sure.
01:01:01.300 I do miss those shrimp sandwiches.
01:01:02.400 I miss me my shrimps, for sure.
01:01:05.580 The herring, I don't miss that as much.
01:01:07.320 Ah!
01:01:07.760 The herring is a classic.
01:01:10.100 You get used to it.
01:01:10.700 The Russians eat it, too.
01:01:11.860 I just never quite.
01:01:12.920 You get to have it early.
01:01:13.700 That's the thing.
01:01:13.780 Yeah, we got to have it early, because our kids will eat it, and they like it.
01:01:16.880 You know, I just didn't grow up eating it, so that's probably the problem.
01:01:19.580 You know, there's a couple of classics like that.
01:01:22.720 You got to give up.
01:01:24.300 Hey, by the way, check this out.
01:01:26.040 I saw this.
01:01:26.780 Speaking of ancient stuff.
01:01:28.180 Well-preserved 3,000-year-old sword found in Germany.
01:01:32.460 Archaeologists from the Bavarian State Office for the Preservation of Monuments have announced
01:01:36.680 the discovery of a well-preserved Bronze Age sword in the town of, check that out, Nerdlingen.
01:01:43.660 That's a fantastic name.
01:01:45.100 Bavaria, or Bayern, Germany.
01:01:47.580 Most Bronze Age remains around Nerdlingen belong to the Urnfield culture, often divided
01:01:54.040 into several local cultures with a broader Urnfield tradition, which emerged around 1,300 B.C.
01:02:00.800 The Urnfield culture grew from the preceding Tumulus culture, which is basically like the
01:02:06.480 Aryan invasion, the Yamnaya kind of thing, right?
01:02:09.160 That's the, hey, even Highlander shows that, right?
01:02:11.960 The Kurgan shows up, and he's the cool base guy.
01:02:16.200 Anyway, and developed advanced metalworking skills in bronze weaponry and armor.
01:02:22.120 I was, someone pointed that out to me.
01:02:24.740 Bronze is a very soft, right?
01:02:26.980 It's kind of, it's easy to work with.
01:02:29.420 I mean, I'm not saying you can't kill people, but it's kind of interesting that that's the,
01:02:33.280 it's not an accident.
01:02:34.400 They went to that first, of course, and then they went to iron, and then, you know, eventually
01:02:37.980 now we have steel, right?
01:02:38.980 But that they would, some of them would be weak.
01:02:42.460 I forget who brought that up, and I don't even know if it's true, right?
01:02:44.920 But like the bronze weapons is, was obviously not superior in that sense, but it might, might
01:02:52.400 have been enough to do the trick anyway.
01:02:54.080 I got to check it.
01:02:54.940 There's some, probably some, you know, papers or something like that.
01:02:57.360 I got to check that out.
01:02:58.360 Anyway, the sword was found among a deposit of grave goods and weaponry alongside the
01:03:03.660 remains of a man, woman, and child.
01:03:05.560 Here we go again with the, remember the family structure, the shitlib cultural Marxist Judeo-Bolsheviks.
01:03:11.620 They say, oh, families, and the patriarchy is a recent fascist construct by, what, Christians
01:03:18.340 or something, right?
01:03:19.080 Isn't that what they say?
01:03:19.740 Yes.
01:03:20.720 And it's like, no, some of the earliest graves that we have shows family units, right?
01:03:25.480 This is at least among Indo-Europeans or Aryans or Yamnaya mixed with hunter-gatherer populations,
01:03:35.560 whatever.
01:03:35.920 At least for them, that was common, right?
01:03:38.820 The discovery is extremely rare for this part of Germany, and most burial mounds have
01:03:43.500 long been looted during antiquity or opened during the 19th century, which is like that.
01:03:49.400 Can you imagine, can you imagine at the time, like it's-
01:03:52.000 All the amazing stuff.
01:03:53.320 It's like, the year is 1352, you're in Germany.
01:03:57.520 It's like technically the Dark Ages, right?
01:04:00.500 And, or maybe, is that technically later?
01:04:03.340 Renaissance with the Renaissance?
01:04:05.100 Anyway, it doesn't matter.
01:04:06.340 Not yet.
01:04:06.920 But there's no, there's no major, there's no government, not that that's better, but
01:04:13.880 like a system in place, like, uh-uh, you can't rob this grave field.
01:04:18.540 You know what I mean?
01:04:18.880 It's completely, essentially completely lawless, you know, unless you're like inside the castle
01:04:23.780 walls or something like that.
01:04:25.820 But can you imagine how many of these burial mounds and tumulus and things like that have
01:04:30.740 been robbed over the years?
01:04:32.000 Yeah, yeah, people just quietly holding these things, because I know they'd be snatched
01:04:36.600 and put in a museum.
01:04:37.800 Yeah, or even worse, well, I mean, not in the 1300s, they wouldn't, right?
01:04:41.960 They would be, they just took it for themselves.
01:04:43.660 Maybe they melted it down.
01:04:45.280 Can you imagine how much of that has been actually destroyed over time?
01:04:48.400 But we're still finding stuff.
01:04:49.740 That's what's remarkable about it, right?
01:04:50.820 Still, farmers are tripping over stuff.
01:04:53.780 They're plowing their field, and boom, whoops, look at that.
01:04:56.160 It's a gold, you know, largest gold find in 200 years.
01:05:00.540 The sword is similar to the bronze D-type Rixheim sword, in that it uses a solid hilt made
01:05:07.280 by overlay casting of the handle over the blade, although the sword type has been described
01:05:13.920 as octagonal.
01:05:15.500 Doesn't that look, that looks like an elven, like in the Lord of the Rings, or something like
01:05:18.600 an elven blade, right?
01:05:21.800 The hilt is ordinately decorated, while the blade, I'll have that in picture a little
01:05:25.980 bit more, the blade shows no indication of impact marks.
01:05:29.380 See, that, okay, these are obviously made maybe for a very high position, high status,
01:05:36.200 you know, probably male, right?
01:05:38.900 A king or chieftain or something like that, but many of them were not used, kind of like
01:05:42.560 many Viking boats that were built specifically to put into these kind of tumulus or burial
01:05:47.660 mountains in some regards.
01:05:48.700 They built the most, I mean, look at the Ostseberg ship in Norway, for example, right?
01:05:53.280 As far as I know, it was never sailed, but they built the most extraordinary thing.
01:05:57.800 Even the wagon that was included as well might have actually been made just for the purposes
01:06:02.020 of that burial.
01:06:03.500 And it's amazing that we can actually still, you know, dig that out of the ground, or at
01:06:08.100 least the outlines of it.
01:06:09.220 It's common that the wood might have decomposed, but the rivets are still in place, so they
01:06:13.800 can scan it and then do like a 3D rendering of how it actually looked, you know, things
01:06:17.400 like that.
01:06:17.840 But the wagon, that famous Ostseberg wagon, that's still, that one they, you know, they
01:06:22.600 restored, they did a version of it, but that one I think they actually took out of the ground.
01:06:27.080 Anyway, it says here, this suggests that the sword had a ceremonial function or was a symbol
01:06:32.020 of high status.
01:06:33.020 However, according to the researchers, it would have served as an effective weapon at the
01:06:39.060 center of gravity.
01:06:40.000 As the center of gravity on the front part of the blade indicates that it would be used
01:06:43.720 predominantly for slashing.
01:06:46.180 Matthias Feifel, or Feil rather, head of the Bavarian State Office for the Preservation of
01:06:51.360 Monuments said, the sword and the burial still have to be examined so that our archaeologists
01:06:55.900 can classify this found more precisely.
01:06:57.860 But it can already be said, the condition is exceptional.
01:07:02.060 A find like this is very rare.
01:07:04.320 Whether the sword was locally crafted or was imported is currently being investigated.
01:07:08.420 There are three main distribution centers during the Bronze Age for octagonal swords of this
01:07:13.300 type.
01:07:13.720 One is in southern Germany, the other is in northern Germany and Denmark.
01:07:18.100 A comparison of the casting techniques and the decorations show that some of the octagonal
01:07:21.980 swords in the north are apparently replicas of South German forms, while other pieces would
01:07:27.020 be genuine imports or the product of wandering craftsmen.
01:07:31.200 Anyway, there it is again.
01:07:32.560 Cool stuff.
01:07:33.980 Right?
01:07:34.980 Yep.
01:07:35.800 All right.
01:07:36.200 Henrik Nerden out on the sword.
01:07:38.980 Am I going too slow here?
01:07:42.700 Hey, I've got to enjoy something here.
01:07:44.320 Come on.
01:07:45.440 No, let's go straight to the migrant rape games right now.
01:07:48.440 Right, exactly.
01:07:49.800 Because it is summertime after all, you know, so I saw there's a bunch of chimp outs happening
01:07:54.260 at the pools all over Europe.
01:07:55.940 I mean, are we surprised?
01:07:57.560 Mm-mm.
01:07:58.320 No.
01:07:59.560 Yeah, what is it?
01:08:00.220 What is it?
01:08:00.800 Water parks?
01:08:02.700 What is it?
01:08:03.100 Water parks?
01:08:03.500 Blacks love those, and I won't share water with those people.
01:08:06.980 Hey, by the way, hey, by the way.
01:08:09.540 No.
01:08:10.000 Not going to do it.
01:08:10.980 There's a big, huge theme park in Germany called, I think it's called Europark or Europark
01:08:16.680 or something like that.
01:08:17.460 Not European park.
01:08:18.460 Europark, I think it is.
01:08:19.860 They had a massive fire just here a few days ago.
01:08:22.280 I actually, I didn't follow up on what happened, but a lot of things.
01:08:26.320 You know, sometimes they set fires.
01:08:29.120 There's actually hostile people in our countries that are like intentionally doing like arsons
01:08:33.360 and stuff.
01:08:33.860 Yes.
01:08:34.100 Even like the woods are burnt down, but in some cases it's cultural.
01:08:37.560 You know, churches are burnt down.
01:08:38.880 There's other things that are older that's being burnt down.
01:08:41.720 But anyway, should we do the hungry piece here maybe?
01:08:44.260 Let's do it.
01:08:44.880 Except I want to get, Patton was right.
01:08:46.860 Thank you.
01:08:47.280 Keep up the good work, folks.
01:08:48.700 Thank you.
01:08:49.160 Yes.
01:08:49.920 Yeah, Hungary and Poland are disappointing, but as we said, they were what, 10, 20 years
01:08:56.380 behind, right?
01:08:57.860 They usually are.
01:08:58.460 I mean, even my Russian friends say that about Russia.
01:09:00.720 Like, they're 20 years behind, but they'll catch up to a lot of this global homo bullshit.
01:09:06.240 Communism retarded them.
01:09:08.200 That's basically what it is.
01:09:09.460 And they're not just, it takes a little bit longer.
01:09:11.780 Are you saying communism was good, Henrik?
01:09:14.060 Yeah, because it's secretly based, because it did, look, it didn't come to these regions.
01:09:18.680 I've heard people say that.
01:09:19.680 It's just the most dumb argument I've ever heard.
01:09:21.980 It's so based that they murdered all these Europeans.
01:09:25.560 Yes.
01:09:26.380 It's very based.
01:09:27.140 Judeo-Bolshevism is super based and very pro-white.
01:09:31.740 All right.
01:09:32.320 Anyway, it's a black pill here.
01:09:35.980 Hungary have, of course, for a while been very good on the migration question.
01:09:39.720 And we covered a thing in the latest Western Warrior over at RedEisMembers.com where there
01:09:44.000 are now beginning to be kind of cracks in the Hungarian migration policy.
01:09:48.040 Not for this reason.
01:09:48.940 We'll get to this story in a second.
01:09:49.900 That's how they do it.
01:09:50.560 They chisel their way in.
01:09:52.520 It's the liberal, the capitalist, we've got to make our money.
01:09:56.040 We've got to make the money.
01:09:57.100 Come on.
01:09:58.100 Corporations are basically putting pressure on Hungary, saying we have to have more workers.
01:10:02.240 We're running out of workers.
01:10:03.340 And people from Ukraine and other neighboring Eastern European countries, they're running
01:10:08.220 out, was the argument.
01:10:09.360 So now we have to open the borders and give special kind of a special set of rules for
01:10:17.640 people from other parts of the world so they can come as what it called migrant workers.
01:10:23.220 Right.
01:10:23.340 That's what they want.
01:10:24.480 If they're going to do it, I'm not sure.
01:10:26.300 But those cracks are beginning to appear.
01:10:28.500 And that comes, unfortunately, in conjunction with this story that talks about how the EU court
01:10:34.260 now, the top EU court, have basically ruled and said that Hungary's migration policy is
01:10:40.480 illegal.
01:10:41.480 You can't do that.
01:10:43.540 Right.
01:10:43.960 And then you begin to wonder, why are they even part of the EU at this point?
01:10:47.800 Yes.
01:10:48.440 Just get out.
01:10:50.680 At the same time.
01:10:51.580 You don't have any sovereignty?
01:10:53.340 You can't say what happens in your country?
01:10:55.240 I think they should jump ship.
01:10:56.660 But at the same time, could it be that some, they still are thinking this, well, we can do
01:11:02.380 as much as we can for as long as possible to try to remain sovereign in spite of all
01:11:07.260 the EU, you know, kind of top down decision makings, because that's a layer above the
01:11:11.540 national, you know, loss and stuff like that.
01:11:13.860 Right.
01:11:14.020 The EU law supersedes in most cases.
01:11:15.640 There's lawsuit about this back and forth, but that's how they wanted it.
01:11:18.540 And that's how it is for the most part.
01:11:19.800 The EU comes in and says, nah, oh, yeah, you got to do this.
01:11:22.440 And then nations are forced to do it, which is dumb.
01:11:24.860 But I'm saying if Hungary were not part of the EU, maybe they would have had like
01:11:32.000 crippling sanctions against them at this point just because they're not joining Global Homo
01:11:36.120 as quickly.
01:11:37.560 Right.
01:11:37.800 Is that possible?
01:11:38.580 So they're thinking like, at least we're part of the EU.
01:11:40.860 They can't do exactly what they want against us.
01:11:44.500 They will anyway.
01:11:45.740 And eventually they will break you down.
01:11:47.600 But at least that might have bought them time.
01:11:49.400 Is that the thinking?
01:11:50.500 I don't know, but you got to try.
01:11:52.500 You got to put your foot down.
01:11:53.660 Otherwise, it's just going to get worse.
01:11:56.400 Yep.
01:11:56.660 A judge ruled that Viktor Orban's plans to push asylum applications to Serbia and Ukraine
01:12:03.480 are a breach of EU laws.
01:12:05.900 It's not it's not only that they're like, oh, oh, they don't take asylum seekers, you
01:12:10.400 know, or they don't process them.
01:12:11.820 That's illegal.
01:12:12.260 No, it's not even that.
01:12:13.220 It's about the fact that Hungary have said, you know what, let's process them outside of
01:12:17.720 the country.
01:12:18.380 Right.
01:12:18.540 Even Sweden has had this topic surfaced a few times, which is still it.
01:12:23.760 Look, it's it's at one step in the right direction, meaning you don't have to bring
01:12:27.700 these people to your country and then you process their application.
01:12:31.660 Obviously, we shouldn't process any applications.
01:12:34.400 We're full.
01:12:35.140 We don't care if maybe, you know, from other European countries.
01:12:38.860 Yes, that's OK.
01:12:39.920 If it's for work or some people marry or whatever it is, that's fine.
01:12:43.320 Well, that's not asylum anyway.
01:12:44.420 But you know what I mean?
01:12:45.260 Like those.
01:12:45.740 Even every poor non-white person in the world is an asylum seeker.
01:12:49.720 So it never ends.
01:12:50.700 It never ends.
01:12:51.800 Just say no.
01:12:52.780 You know, we have to have as much as it sucks operating in the political system, we still
01:12:58.180 have to continue to try to push people, candidates or politicians to to to stop these things.
01:13:03.860 Right.
01:13:04.080 If we're part of the UN's compact for migration or the migration compact, we need to pass laws
01:13:10.600 that nullify those things as a where we know we're down.
01:13:13.360 We're going to pay.
01:13:13.840 We're not doing that anymore.
01:13:15.180 Ha ha.
01:13:15.560 We're out kind of thing.
01:13:16.520 But anyway, we'll see what happens here with the with Hungary.
01:13:19.120 Let me read a little bit so we get some background here.
01:13:22.200 The EU's top court has once again reprimanded Hungary over its migration policy.
01:13:26.600 The European Court of Justice, more like injustice, am I right?
01:13:30.500 The EU ruled Thursday that Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban's push to outsource asylum applications
01:13:36.080 to the Hungarian embassies in Belgrade in Kiev is not good enough.
01:13:41.640 You can't do that.
01:13:43.220 That's a breach of EU law.
01:13:44.960 Can you imagine this shit?
01:13:46.700 The law which effectively limited migrant flows to Hungary requires four nationals to submit
01:13:51.540 a pre-asylum application to the country's mission to Serbia or Ukraine before applying
01:13:56.400 for international protection in Hungary, and I think that they hadn't taken in that many
01:14:00.300 anyway.
01:14:01.200 You can process it, but the restrictions or the applications should be really hard.
01:14:08.020 You know what I mean?
01:14:08.300 Yeah, just denied.
01:14:09.400 It means asylum candidates already present in Hungary must travel abroad to file the request.
01:14:15.620 Why does Serbia or Ukraine agree to this, though?
01:14:20.360 Isn't that interesting, too?
01:14:21.140 So, Hungary says certain people, such as Ukrainians fleeing Russian invasion, are exempt.
01:14:25.840 Good, right?
01:14:26.540 So, they're helping Ukrainians.
01:14:27.880 That's good.
01:14:28.740 But no, the ruling on Thursday, EU judges wrote that the law amounts to a disproportionate
01:14:34.420 interference with the right of those persons to make an application for international protection
01:14:40.020 upon their arrival at a Hungarian border.
01:14:43.240 It's like, what?
01:14:44.880 Their rights supersede our security.
01:14:47.560 Isn't that incredible?
01:14:48.460 Mm-hmm, yep.
01:14:50.080 Wasp TV says, their greed is insatiable.
01:14:52.840 Wasp TV also says, more workers, less wages, and less of our civilization remains to inspire
01:14:58.000 work, too.
01:14:58.800 And it's always this, we need workers.
01:15:00.560 We need workers.
01:15:01.460 Well, why must it always be from non-European countries?
01:15:04.600 Because I know there's a lot of white Americans that would love to go live in Hungary easily
01:15:08.720 and go help the workforce there.
01:15:11.180 You notice how these migrants and asylum seekers, they're never European people, ever?
01:15:16.200 Very rarely.
01:15:17.580 Well, why does the European worker have to be rake over the coals, as you say?
01:15:21.220 Yes.
01:15:21.400 Why can't they be in a position where they can have higher leverage?
01:15:25.680 And instead, internally in the country, the positions that these companies are so desperate
01:15:31.100 to fulfill or fill, instead then, would go to somebody internal in the country, right?
01:15:37.840 You might not get them right away.
01:15:39.680 And yes, someone might have to educate them a little bit to get a certain position that's
01:15:44.100 needed.
01:15:44.840 But can you imagine the salaries that corporations would be willing to offer those people?
01:15:48.820 Yes.
01:15:49.060 That's how it works.
01:15:49.640 That's the incentive.
01:15:50.800 Oh, look at this.
01:15:51.340 It's all these positions.
01:15:52.200 Now, all these companies are hiring engineers or whatever.
01:15:54.760 Okay.
01:15:55.180 It takes a few years, but the Hungarians then educate themselves or younger ones in that
01:15:59.520 field, and then they have a good paying job in their country.
01:16:01.780 It's fine.
01:16:02.220 No, it's this instant capitalist gratification.
01:16:05.340 Boom.
01:16:05.720 Now, immediately.
01:16:06.340 And then I love it how it's like, oh, we need workers, but we're going to import people
01:16:09.740 who don't work and from countries where they're like lazy asses.
01:16:14.540 You know, like...
01:16:15.440 Import the workers that go on the dole right away.
01:16:17.260 It makes total sense.
01:16:19.420 It's all a fucking scam, you know?
01:16:21.940 And then now we have Poland, if we want to talk about that.
01:16:24.480 They want to make easier entry for Poland, yeah, for immigrants from over 20 countries
01:16:30.860 to come into Poland.
01:16:32.380 Now, this Yimby Poland is like, he's pro.
01:16:34.960 He thinks this is awesome, right?
01:16:36.640 Poland will simplify immigration for citizens of Ukraine.
01:16:39.240 All right.
01:16:39.960 Saudi.
01:16:40.740 Why do Saudis need to be there?
01:16:42.520 Iran, Qatar, Kuwait, Turk.
01:16:44.680 That's wealthy Arab nations.
01:16:47.060 They import in their own workers already.
01:16:49.480 Like, United Arab Emirates, Armenia, Georgia, Pakistan, India, Thailand, Kazakhstan, Vietnam,
01:16:56.880 Nigeria.
01:16:57.700 I mean, what the hell?
01:16:59.920 You don't need workers from, you know, Vietnam and Nigeria.
01:17:04.360 They don't even work in Nigeria.
01:17:05.300 Who's going to pick the berries?
01:17:07.080 Lana.
01:17:07.460 I mean, this is absurd.
01:17:08.720 Over 4,000, 400,000 a year?
01:17:13.060 That's a lot.
01:17:14.180 That's a shit ton.
01:17:15.720 Everyone's like, well, okay, welcome the rape gangs, because that's always what happens,
01:17:20.000 right?
01:17:20.540 I mean, and it's not, obviously, I'm not gleefully, ha-ha, I was right.
01:17:24.500 I take no pleasure in this.
01:17:26.960 But we said this many years ago.
01:17:29.060 We said they will do this eventually as well.
01:17:31.580 They will be submitting to pressure, or the wrong people will be put into place in political
01:17:37.260 positions or lobby positions in these Eastern European countries, and they're going to start
01:17:41.720 opening their borders, too.
01:17:42.700 We said it.
01:17:43.260 Scroll down this, Yimby Poland, so you can see this tweet.
01:17:45.700 He, in response, he says, wow, what an insufferable amount of racists, quote, tweeting this with
01:17:50.680 their disappointment in base Poland, because they're bringing in more brown people.
01:17:56.260 And then he even, like, was saying that, oh, are you afraid of brown people?
01:17:59.340 It's like, dude.
01:18:00.100 Yes, we don't want them in our countries.
01:18:01.740 Look, it's not being afraid.
01:18:04.080 We're, like, disgusted and shocking.
01:18:06.580 It's shocking and appalling what's happening to our countries after mass immigration.
01:18:11.320 Open your eyes, Yimby Poland.
01:18:12.760 Look at what's happening in Germany, Sweden.
01:18:15.660 Name, pick a white country.
01:18:18.040 Is it better since we're importing in these brown, cuddly teddy bears?
01:18:22.300 Yes.
01:18:22.580 No, it's not.
01:18:23.480 It's definitely much better.
01:18:24.820 Who wouldn't want to have more?
01:18:28.040 It's not afraid.
01:18:28.740 We just don't want them.
01:18:30.220 We don't need them, and we don't want them.
01:18:31.820 I'm saying, like, yes, I'm afraid of losing our civilization and our people, and that's
01:18:36.200 what's going to happen, right?
01:18:37.060 Look at what, we'll play it again, but look at what happened in Bordeaux, France, right?
01:18:42.060 We didn't even play this one in any of the shows yet.
01:18:45.180 Like, this is a daily occurrence in most of our countries now.
01:18:49.300 There's always a case like this.
01:18:51.240 It's some lunatic, madman, unhinged African or Middle Easterner or is an Arab or something.
01:18:57.340 They're going to violent spree, right?
01:18:59.200 Look at this.
01:19:00.140 Yeah, we don't want them.
01:19:01.360 Like, against a woman and a little girl.
01:19:03.040 Look at this.
01:19:03.580 We don't need these people.
01:19:04.900 We don't want them.
01:19:05.680 We don't like them.
01:19:07.100 Better still, make an example out of him in Minecraft, of course.
01:19:11.940 You know, test a new modification in Minecraft, one that, I don't know, catapult maybe, something
01:19:17.980 like that.
01:19:18.360 The crime is going to go up, of course.
01:19:22.520 And then also, it's just like, what was it, Germany?
01:19:24.880 They were importing into the Nigerians too.
01:19:27.020 It's like, what skills can Nigerians possibly offer you?
01:19:32.400 I don't know.
01:19:33.380 It's a mystery.
01:19:35.360 And some of these other countries as well.
01:19:37.160 And it's just the sheer ignorance of this guy posting this, oh, you are just racist who
01:19:42.420 are afraid of these brown people.
01:19:43.660 Have you not, and then his comments are just hammering him, like, have you not been to
01:19:47.640 London lately?
01:19:48.400 Have you not been to Germany lately?
01:19:50.120 Have you not, like, been to Ireland?
01:19:52.260 All these places.
01:19:53.720 We're seeing, we see what happens when you import in the third world and the so-called workers.
01:19:59.520 Because you know it's not going to be workers.
01:20:01.680 But what the hell?
01:20:02.420 Well, they list, yeah, Saudi and Qatar and Kuwait, United Arab Emirates.
01:20:07.480 These are rich countries.
01:20:08.840 They need workers in their own countries.
01:20:10.360 What are we doing importing those people into Poland?
01:20:12.420 Well, it's the shuffle.
01:20:13.280 Because then those people, remember they brought it, they bring in from, like, India or what
01:20:17.920 was the common, what was the main demographic that, like, Saudi Arabia as they're expanding
01:20:22.500 with all their, you know, lunatic building projects with their oil money, right?
01:20:27.140 Like, Qatar maybe more so.
01:20:28.560 But yeah, it was like Philippines and, you know, what was it else?
01:20:32.240 It was some of those countries, like Southeast Asian or something like that.
01:20:35.240 I forget what it was.
01:20:36.180 But it's this shuffle, even Sri Lanka, India, I think, in some regards, right?
01:20:39.660 But it's this major shuffle.
01:20:40.900 That's what they want.
01:20:41.620 Global homeowner wants this, like, hey, you go over there, you go here.
01:20:44.560 Poles go to the UK.
01:20:45.520 Then UK people, they go to Spain or even, you know, South America or something.
01:20:51.100 And then South Americans go to North America, USA and Canada.
01:20:54.100 And then those people, they can flee to China and work over there.
01:20:57.480 And everything is just, like, you know, blended out, mixed out.
01:21:01.760 Yeah, and here you have, like, Pakistan and India are on this list.
01:21:04.260 So you know what's going to happen.
01:21:05.260 Like, millions of Indians and Pakistanis, because there's millions and millions of them.
01:21:10.600 There's a billion in India.
01:21:12.040 They're all going to try and get into Poland.
01:21:13.580 Oh, you need workers on there?
01:21:14.600 And the next thing you know, you know, I've got a, what's his name?
01:21:17.920 Humza Yusuf running for first minister and saying, Poland is too white and we need to import more people like me.
01:21:24.020 It's disgustingly white here.
01:21:25.860 Mm-hmm.
01:21:26.460 Yeah.
01:21:27.840 Yeah, so it's about 37.75 million people.
01:21:31.400 That's in, yeah, it's okay, 2021.
01:21:33.600 In Poland.
01:21:34.940 It's an ethnostate.
01:21:36.160 It's a Polish.
01:21:36.980 You know, let's say this, yeah, 40, 40 million.
01:21:39.820 What is that then?
01:21:40.340 Is that 1%?
01:21:41.380 Am I getting the math right?
01:21:42.160 Well, it's, the point is, isn't the U.S. like importing legally like a million migrants a year?
01:21:49.060 Yes, a city a year, and that doesn't even include the illegals.
01:21:50.700 Not that that's any better.
01:21:51.820 I don't know, to make the comparison.
01:21:53.260 I mean, the U.S. is this big country.
01:21:54.360 And we've seen what it's done.
01:21:55.120 But like 350 million people, right?
01:21:56.760 But they import like a million people each year.
01:21:59.140 That's half of that.
01:22:00.360 Almost half of that.
01:22:01.660 Mm-hmm.
01:22:02.320 Right?
01:22:02.840 That's insane.
01:22:03.620 It's a lot.
01:22:04.120 With a country of 10 times less people in Poland.
01:22:06.920 And all the countries that they're bringing people in from a lot of these non-white countries
01:22:10.320 with their work visas, they are super strict.
01:22:13.260 Like, Saudi, remember I did when they attacked me in the Saudi paper calling me the poster
01:22:18.240 girl of white supremacy?
01:22:19.540 Because I basically wanted policy that the Saudis have.
01:22:22.700 Yeah.
01:22:23.000 Remember?
01:22:23.460 And they are hardcore in those countries.
01:22:25.500 They'll, like, follow you and they will kick you out when your work visa is done.
01:22:29.920 And they make it really clear, you are not one of us.
01:22:32.980 Like, they are second-class citizens in these other countries when they go there to work.
01:22:36.960 Yes.
01:22:37.920 I mean, hell, there's slavery in some countries.
01:22:39.820 You can buy slaves in Libya right now.
01:22:43.040 Do you see any major kvetching about this?
01:22:45.060 No.
01:22:45.300 The only kvetching is about how Europe is not taking in more migrants.
01:22:48.420 And, oh, oy vey, there's a nationalist party that's getting voted into power in some European
01:22:54.520 countries or at least getting close to it.
01:22:56.860 And that's virtually a holocaust.
01:22:58.880 You know, think about the six trillion.
01:23:00.480 Will you?
01:23:00.940 For God's sakes, let them in, all of them.
01:23:05.300 It's, yeah.
01:23:06.580 Watch and see what happens.
01:23:07.720 But notice how it's, like, one by one, each white country getting hammered with the same
01:23:12.200 bullshit, same propaganda.
01:23:14.460 We need workers.
01:23:15.600 Okay, well then, fuck your capitalism.
01:23:17.860 Shut it down.
01:23:18.520 Obviously, that's it.
01:23:19.920 And that's why neoliberal.
01:23:21.040 But, again, you have these people.
01:23:23.300 You know, remember that lady in the middle?
01:23:25.280 Yvette Cooper.
01:23:26.200 She's the one who mentioned red eyes by name in the Scottish parliament.
01:23:29.780 That's right.
01:23:30.740 How do I get you to take it down?
01:23:33.660 Remember that?
01:23:34.860 And then, of course, like a year later, we were banned from YouTube.
01:23:36.760 And then the first minister is bitching about me in Scotland.
01:23:39.220 I love it.
01:23:39.400 Isn't that funny?
01:23:39.940 Yeah.
01:23:40.580 And ironically, as I said.
01:23:41.960 I'm probably banned from there now.
01:23:42.820 I should try and get it.
01:23:43.480 Yeah, I should try.
01:23:44.480 Ironically, as I said in one of the videos recently, if people like us would still have been
01:23:49.060 on these platforms, and it's not that.
01:23:51.580 It's not like, oh, it's over because we're not on YouTube.
01:23:53.900 But I'm saying there's a delay, right?
01:23:55.120 I mean, it takes a little time for Rumble to build up and BitChute and Odyssey.
01:23:58.220 And, you know, they slow us down a little bit.
01:24:01.120 That's what they managed to do with all the censoring and banning.
01:24:03.140 They cannot stop us.
01:24:04.280 It's impossible.
01:24:05.220 And I won't just mean us, red eyes.
01:24:06.540 I mean everybody speaking about these things.
01:24:08.700 Like, the trends are going in our direction, so we're doing fine.
01:24:12.300 It's going to, we're going to fix this, right?
01:24:14.920 But ironically, if we still were out there on the major platforms warning people, maybe
01:24:22.800 the kids in Nottingham wouldn't have been stabbed.
01:24:25.520 Maybe they would have the know-how that they're like, eh, they know to never relax, maybe.
01:24:30.980 Or something like that.
01:24:32.460 Right?
01:24:32.640 I'm saying these people with the refugees welcome signs are the ones that not only have brought
01:24:37.580 in the hostile forces into our countries, they're also the ones through the censorship
01:24:41.340 that is disallowing our fellow folk in Europe, in European countries, to become aware of
01:24:48.540 what it is that's really happening out there, which in many cases are partially at least
01:24:52.760 what leads to the murder of a lot of our people.
01:24:56.040 We don't, you know, most people are just not savvy to this.
01:24:57.980 They don't understand.
01:24:58.680 They don't, you know, they think everything is great.
01:25:01.840 No, it's fine.
01:25:02.520 It's the same country as when I grew up, you know, whatever, 20 years ago, however all
01:25:06.460 these kids are now, right, out there being, well, I'm not saying just kids die, but I'm
01:25:12.720 saying at least kids would have the chance to like, hey, look, you got to watch out out
01:25:16.780 there.
01:25:17.260 You know what I mean?
01:25:18.600 That's what we need.
01:25:20.740 Information distribution networks help to warn our fellow Europeans.
01:25:24.820 Watch out because like it's not the same countries anymore.
01:25:28.400 It's unsafe.
01:25:29.200 So, yeah, refugees welcome, ban and censor everybody that keeps talking about how it's
01:25:34.320 not good.
01:25:36.340 Diversity is beginning to mean a death, actually.
01:25:41.300 And we'll get to the next story that kind of actually underlines that from a completely
01:25:45.000 different perspective, right?
01:25:46.880 But we'll get to it.
01:25:48.100 Check this one out.
01:25:48.980 Just a quick other mention here.
01:25:50.440 France, hundreds of fighting aliens camp out at the Palace Royale Square.
01:25:55.920 They're being assisted, these bargains, by liberal activists, and they're demanding free
01:26:01.160 taxpayer-funded housing.
01:26:03.200 Oh, they're workers.
01:26:04.460 They're voting workers.
01:26:05.360 These are your workers right here.
01:26:06.420 Look at this.
01:26:06.800 They're going to take care of your old people.
01:26:09.780 They're giving tents.
01:26:11.720 All these young black men.
01:26:13.380 Yeah, they're working hard.
01:26:14.440 Yep.
01:26:15.120 Working hard, begging for handouts.
01:26:17.120 Totally working.
01:26:17.700 It's the same.
01:26:19.980 Every time, it's the same.
01:26:22.640 And there's the white women.
01:26:24.240 Look at that.
01:26:26.880 The Africans.
01:26:28.580 And then the French women.
01:26:31.740 That was one white guy there, but there you go.
01:26:34.600 Yep.
01:26:34.960 It's going to be so much better, folks.
01:26:36.760 This is just, it's just, we're being enriched at every turn, right?
01:26:43.380 Italy.
01:26:44.680 The situation in Italy is out of control.
01:26:46.920 In the last 24 hours.
01:26:48.420 It's been for a while, yes.
01:26:49.360 It has been.
01:26:49.800 22 boats have arrived with 1,400 illegal immigrants.
01:26:53.900 Only men.
01:26:55.260 Stop the invasion.
01:26:57.040 Save Europe.
01:26:58.140 Just don't feed their ass, and then they have to go home.
01:27:00.620 Say, we're not giving you food.
01:27:01.820 We're not giving you a house.
01:27:02.880 We're not giving you jack.
01:27:04.720 Here's that.
01:27:05.120 Go home.
01:27:05.720 Look at that.
01:27:06.020 That's the face of like, I'm going to be.
01:27:09.060 Got it made.
01:27:09.740 I'm coming to be suppressed by white supremacists.
01:27:12.880 That's right.
01:27:13.220 That's the face of that.
01:27:14.360 Give me the food.
01:27:15.180 Give me the money.
01:27:16.060 Give me the girls.
01:27:17.100 I'm here now.
01:27:18.280 I've arrived.
01:27:19.180 I'm brown, and I'm awesome.
01:27:20.480 Where's the white women's at?
01:27:22.580 Ugh.
01:27:24.120 Anyway, we don't have to play that.
01:27:24.960 I just get triggered when I just see a sea of them.
01:27:27.200 Well, yeah, of course.
01:27:28.220 I don't give a shit if there's one nice guy there.
01:27:29.780 You have to go back.
01:27:30.940 Well, remember Australia?
01:27:32.040 For a while, they had a policy of actually just blowing up boats, and it's basically
01:27:35.260 because you're not welcome to our island.
01:27:37.400 That's awesome.
01:27:38.480 Yes.
01:27:40.500 Yep.
01:27:41.700 It just takes that message, and then people stop coming.
01:27:44.380 That's just it.
01:27:44.940 That's all they're going to respond to.
01:27:46.660 You have to put your foot down hard and say, no, you're not doing that.
01:27:49.660 Now, it's this intensely, obviously, by design, weakened response.
01:27:54.620 We're like, oh, well, oh, we've got to help the migrants.
01:27:58.220 Remember the, was that Spain?
01:28:00.540 Maybe that was in Cueta or something like that.
01:28:02.180 Let me see if I can find it.
01:28:03.080 Again, imagine if it was boatloads of young white guys.
01:28:08.020 Yeah, pouring into, you know, some.
01:28:10.900 They would be going.
01:28:12.760 Yeah, they would kill people, right?
01:28:14.860 They would kill whites that were illegally crossing.
01:28:17.880 Let me see.
01:28:18.400 Here's.
01:28:19.480 NATO would be there, like, immediately.
01:28:21.580 Let me see if this is one of them.
01:28:22.740 Is this one of them?
01:28:23.920 Remember that girl who's, like, hugging the African that just arrived?
01:28:28.100 Yes.
01:28:28.220 Remember that?
01:28:28.820 I remember the stories of some of those who got raped, and they were still like, don't
01:28:32.820 blame the migrants.
01:28:34.660 Not their fault.
01:28:36.080 They just don't know that raping is wrong yet.
01:28:39.860 Yeah, it's not.
01:28:40.320 They don't bear a responsibility because they don't know Western standards.
01:28:43.900 In their culture.
01:28:45.380 Yeah, look at this.
01:28:46.200 Remember this?
01:28:47.820 And he's like, this is so easy.
01:28:50.500 I'm so going to hustle my way.
01:28:52.040 It's so easy.
01:28:54.660 And she's even like, okay, get off me now.
01:28:57.040 Yeah, like, it's caressing, like, it's a, it's a, like, look at this, the feeding, like,
01:29:01.520 where's your sippy cup?
01:29:03.120 Where's your bottle?
01:29:04.000 You want your bottle, little baby?
01:29:05.300 She, this woman needs to go and have children.
01:29:09.560 That's what she needs to do instead of stopping, you know, stopping this silly behavior.
01:29:13.120 You know what her children are going to look like?
01:29:15.560 They're going to be mulattos.
01:29:16.760 They'll be, they'll be beautiful.
01:29:19.900 The refugees welcome, am I right?
01:29:21.600 Isn't that what it's, uh, isn't that what it's all about so we can get a little bit,
01:29:24.520 but really, at the end of the day, what we need is kind of like, we just need a little
01:29:27.900 bit more of this.
01:29:28.980 That's, this is what we need more of right here.
01:29:31.720 Look, and it's like he was coming after them because the mom was like, oh, look at that,
01:29:35.320 look out for the unhinged black guy.
01:29:36.560 Get back in, honey.
01:29:37.500 You know, and then he's like upset about that.
01:29:39.500 So he goes and beats him up.
01:29:41.240 Look at this poor little girl.
01:29:42.660 Imagine if that was your daughter, Henrik.
01:29:44.980 I, he would, it would be dead.
01:29:46.500 Yes.
01:29:46.900 There's, there's no way about it.
01:29:47.900 Most of the men, most of the white fathers watching, if this was your wife and your kid,
01:29:53.780 I know exactly what you would want to do to this guy because that's the normal, healthy,
01:29:59.000 natural response.
01:29:59.620 It's a human response because.
01:30:00.820 Human response.
01:30:01.620 That which you love, which is being murdered or violently attacked, that you hate and you
01:30:08.340 hate because that's a human emotion that you use for being motivated to protect what
01:30:13.980 you love.
01:30:14.420 And then in the future.
01:30:15.200 It's perfectly natural.
01:30:16.000 That little girl is always going to be watching her back when she sees a guy that looks like
01:30:20.640 that.
01:30:21.120 I hope so.
01:30:21.660 Behind her.
01:30:22.760 Right.
01:30:23.100 And then, oh, well, you're racist.
01:30:25.000 Well, what about her lived experience?
01:30:28.540 That's right.
01:30:30.380 Yeah.
01:30:30.820 All right.
01:30:31.280 One day.
01:30:32.300 One day.
01:30:34.020 Only so much.
01:30:35.760 All right.
01:30:36.120 Should we do the submersible here a little bit?
01:30:38.600 Yeah.
01:30:39.120 Okay.
01:30:39.940 The Titanic is taking the.
01:30:41.720 More lives.
01:30:42.380 More rich people down.
01:30:43.460 Uh-huh.
01:30:43.920 Titanic keeps killing billionaires.
01:30:48.580 I thought we could just play a little bit of the BBC to just, I mean, I think most
01:30:51.800 people know, know about it and maybe you're caught up to speed even, but again, it's the
01:30:56.120 interpretation here, which is that the, which is, which is, again, goes to emphasize that
01:31:03.320 our worldview is correct and it's insane to prioritize diversity over, well, physics, I
01:31:12.020 guess, or function or knowledge, ability.
01:31:15.760 Anyway, here's a little bit of the backstory here from BBC.
01:31:17.940 Let's play a couple of minutes of this here.
01:31:19.160 But we start with that huge search, the race to save five people who are on board a submersible
01:31:25.100 that has gone missing in the North Atlantic, close to the wreck of the Titanic.
01:31:29.680 Earlier, the U.S. Coast Guard said that the vessel may only have 40 hours of breathable
01:31:34.620 air left for the five people on board.
01:31:37.660 Well, ships and planes are scouring the ocean around 640 kilometers off the coast of Newfoundland
01:31:43.480 in Canada.
01:31:44.260 The search area is as large as the U.S. state of Connecticut.
01:31:48.960 Officials say an underwater search vessel has now been launched.
01:31:53.380 Well, the Titanic, which sank in 1912, lies nearly 4,000 meters below the surface.
01:31:59.880 On Sunday, all contact with it was lost with the sub about an hour and 45 minutes into its
01:32:06.940 dive.
01:32:07.920 Our correspondent Jessica Parker has this report on the daunting task that is now facing rescuers.
01:32:14.260 These are the last known photos of the Titan submersible.
01:32:18.960 They were taken on Sunday morning, just before it began its descent.
01:32:23.740 An hour and 45 minutes later, contact was lost.
01:32:30.040 It's a five-man capsule that people crawl into.
01:32:33.940 This was filmed by the BBC last year.
01:32:36.160 It shows people being bolted in from the outside.
01:32:43.860 The sub then plunges into the ocean's depths.
01:32:47.640 Those on board are believed to be the British billionaire Hamish Harding, British businessman Shahzada Daoud and his son, French explorer Paul-Henry Najolet, and this man, Stockton Rush, the chief executive of the expedition company Ocean Gate.
01:33:06.500 It's basically a Sony PlayStation-style controller.
01:33:09.580 Here he is in a 2022 CBS documentary.
01:33:12.700 It's not a video game.
01:33:13.160 Showing how the vessel was operating.
01:33:14.600 That was a big joke of all of this, of course.
01:33:16.640 It's like he cut corners.
01:33:18.280 There's been endless amounts of warning about, like, you shouldn't do this.
01:33:22.800 They even have an interview with the guy later on.
01:33:24.400 We don't have time to watch that now, but he basically says, we knew, you know, he said the underwater community, I think you call it, is a very small one, and they said, we've been amazed that, you know, this hasn't happened sooner.
01:33:39.080 We were kind of just, it was just a disaster waiting to happen, essentially.
01:33:42.380 Yeah, they made two previous trips before, right, before this June 18th.
01:33:47.200 Down to the, did they actually reach the Titanic?
01:33:49.120 Yeah, Ocean Gate Expedition said, began offering trips to the Titanic wreckage in 2021, only made two previous trips before.
01:33:56.180 Okay.
01:33:56.940 So I guess that's a little joystick work.
01:34:00.140 Yeah, it was a, that little, that little, the little PlayStation remote control.
01:34:04.400 Unbelievable.
01:34:04.760 A little tiny bit of solder right there, you know, that you have, right, for the, to, you know, activate right propeller or whatever they have in there.
01:34:13.180 That failed, and then you're done.
01:34:14.400 Oh, God.
01:34:15.060 ... created via a games console, while construction pipes...
01:34:19.400 Now, that wasn't what happened. We'll get to what actually happened here.
01:34:21.920 ... were used for ballast.
01:34:23.720 This is an experimental sub. People are informed that it's very dangerous down there.
01:34:28.940 Questions about the safety of the sub are now inevitably being raised.
01:34:31.600 Sounds like an adult version of Ben Shapiro, didn't it?
01:34:34.360 ... is simply on trying to find the vessel.
01:34:36.860 One Coast Guard official I've been speaking to described the search as like looking for a needle in a haystack.
01:34:45.000 The area that we search is roughly about the size of Connecticut.
01:34:50.120 As we continue on with the search, we're expanding our capabilities to be able to search under the water as well.
01:34:57.580 The sub was towed out to sea from Newfoundland before arriving at the wreck site on Sunday.
01:35:02.800 It then began its dive in coordination with the mother ship, the Polar Prince.
01:35:07.960 Once a vessel goes below 1,000 metres, it'll be in darkness, no light.
01:35:13.380 Farther down is the Titanic wreck, 3,800 metres under the North Atlantic.
01:35:20.200 Mike Rees is one of the few people who've made the trip before.
01:35:24.280 He describes reaching the bottom of the ocean.
01:35:27.000 When you touch bottom, you don't really know where you are.
01:35:31.260 And again, the compass immediately stopped working and was just spinning around.
01:35:36.520 And so we had to flail around blindly at the bottom of the ocean,
01:35:41.520 knowing the Titanic was somewhere there.
01:35:44.200 But it is so pitch dark.
01:35:47.380 In the sea's murkiest reaches, this is what people pay nearly £200,000 to see.
01:35:54.700 Ocean Gate Expeditions says it's getting help from government agencies and deep-sea companies,
01:36:00.520 and it's praying for the crew's safe return.
01:36:04.100 Jessica Parker, BBC News in Boston.
01:36:06.120 Okay, yeah, I think that's good.
01:36:07.260 This is an introduction in terms of what actually happened here, right?
01:36:10.800 So we have an update, right?
01:36:12.700 Do you want to play some of the updates?
01:36:14.880 Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah, you can play that.
01:36:16.760 Yeah, there's, let's see, Ocean Gate Titan Submersible.
01:36:19.300 Obviously, it was found, it was 1,600 feet away from Titanic in the Atlantic Ocean.
01:36:24.720 The U.S. Coast Guard said all five people are dead,
01:36:27.160 and the bodies are not expected to be recovered.
01:36:29.460 No, of course not, because there was an implosion.
01:36:31.420 We'll show an animation of what that implosion looks like,
01:36:33.700 so there's not going to be any bodies to clean up here.
01:36:36.820 Here we go.
01:36:37.280 Yeah, here's one.
01:36:37.860 Check this out.
01:36:44.660 Now that's it.
01:36:45.820 And we have one more.
01:36:46.860 What happens if a submarine sees...
01:36:50.360 Oops, loud animation there.
01:36:55.120 Yeah, basically it implodes and explodes in and of itself.
01:36:57.920 Someone said, like, it goes quicker than, like, you know,
01:37:01.180 you'll be turned into nothing, essentially,
01:37:04.240 because of the pressure in, like, a millisecond.
01:37:06.400 So someone asked, are they going to recover the bodies?
01:37:08.360 What bodies?
01:37:09.200 No, there's nothing left to recover, essentially.
01:37:11.220 Literally nothing.
01:37:12.000 And so, of course, you know, here's the tired old line here
01:37:17.220 that keeps happening, right?
01:37:18.860 Diversity equals death.
01:37:21.560 Titanic Tour CEO, which is the Stockton guy that was sitting there
01:37:26.180 with his little PlayStation controller with his thing,
01:37:30.100 didn't hire 50-year-old white guys because they weren't inspirational.
01:37:36.180 Yeah, and the last white guy he fired, he was the safety officer,
01:37:40.480 and I believe he called it a death trap, right?
01:37:42.600 There you go.
01:37:42.880 So, well, there you go.
01:37:43.900 He was right.
01:37:44.840 It was a death trap, and people died.
01:37:47.800 Now, are you going to admit you were wrong?
01:37:49.920 Here's...
01:37:50.280 No, you can't.
01:37:52.400 Here's Ocean Gate.
01:37:53.560 At least they were white, but even that's not good enough.
01:37:55.740 If they were black, maybe that wouldn't have even made it that far.
01:37:58.640 It's the point, though, that it's like, for whatever reason,
01:38:02.300 you cannot have white men, right?
01:38:04.380 That's the no-no.
01:38:05.540 And so look at what happened, right?
01:38:07.380 These are the women of Ocean Gate.
01:38:09.080 They are submersible pilots, data analysts,
01:38:11.600 business development managers, engineering project managers,
01:38:14.800 marketing aficionados, mothers...
01:38:17.820 Well, maybe they should have stayed home then, huh?
01:38:20.620 Foundation presidents, conservationists, explored, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.
01:38:24.040 They should quit immediately.
01:38:26.200 They're the best.
01:38:26.960 And thought leaders, all working together to open the oceans.
01:38:32.620 I think it collapsed in on itself when enough of these people rolled around.
01:38:36.820 $250,000 a ticket those guys paid.
01:38:39.140 Yeah.
01:38:39.900 So basically, go...
01:38:41.200 They paid $250,000 to die.
01:38:42.260 Go woke, die, right?
01:38:44.200 Yeah.
01:38:44.380 That's the slogan.
01:38:45.680 You go woke, you die.
01:38:48.160 That's...
01:38:48.560 Because our countries are...
01:38:49.640 We're going woke, and we're dying.
01:38:51.160 And speaking of going woke, by the way,
01:38:52.400 I saw a good meme here
01:38:54.520 that you always have to be reminded about
01:38:57.100 what's actually behind the mask.
01:38:59.540 And it's not that the LGBTQ promotion is insincere.
01:39:03.840 I think that they sincerely want that worldview,
01:39:06.920 and they sincerely want to use that against us.
01:39:09.160 Because it's a weapon, right?
01:39:10.340 It's a weapon against us.
01:39:11.220 But there's other forces behind the woke-ism stuff.
01:39:18.680 It's safe for conservatives to say woke,
01:39:21.180 but all of those tenets that's part of woke
01:39:24.600 is part of the same old, tired, cultural Marxist,
01:39:29.220 Judeo-Bolshevik bullshit that we've been talking about before.
01:39:32.740 So that meme, it settles it right there.
01:39:35.460 Let's keep that mask on.
01:39:36.960 Let's not tell everybody what's actually behind that thing, right?
01:39:39.180 But believe it or not,
01:39:40.460 there's actually a Ghislaine Maxwell connection
01:39:43.160 to Ocean Gate as well.
01:39:45.420 Someone did a thread about this here.
01:39:46.820 But remember, we actually played clips
01:39:48.380 with Ghislaine Maxwell talking in front of the UN.
01:39:53.460 Remember that?
01:39:53.860 And she talked about the preservation of the oceans.
01:39:56.240 She was like...
01:39:56.880 I forget exactly what position she had.
01:39:59.820 She was like some ocean preservationist.
01:40:02.340 Well, you know, trafficking young girls
01:40:04.000 that helps save the environment,
01:40:05.840 helps the ocean.
01:40:06.900 Helps the ocean.
01:40:07.480 And it's that, you know...
01:40:09.300 What is it like spinning the...
01:40:11.600 What is that called again?
01:40:12.780 Like the lotto or whatever you call it.
01:40:14.760 Like the board.
01:40:15.560 Like different things on a wheel.
01:40:18.100 Let me see.
01:40:19.320 What charity should you be involved in?
01:40:21.280 Or what environmental cause is it going to be?
01:40:24.120 You know, they pull it down.
01:40:25.740 The oceans.
01:40:26.680 Oh, yeah.
01:40:27.560 Okay.
01:40:27.960 Let's do the oceans, everybody.
01:40:29.620 That's a good thing.
01:40:30.300 There's a connection between the board of OceanGate,
01:40:34.320 which is OceanGate indeed,
01:40:36.960 which just lost a submersible,
01:40:38.960 and Ghislaine Maxwell.
01:40:42.020 Here's...
01:40:42.440 What is this here?
01:40:43.180 Here's OceanGate tweeting out this, right?
01:40:44.960 On this International Day of Human Space Flight,
01:40:48.280 we're celebrating NASA's...
01:40:49.420 NASA Hall of Fame astronaut OceanGate,
01:40:52.280 the Incorporated board member,
01:40:55.020 Dr. Scott Parazynski.
01:40:59.200 Parazynski.
01:40:59.880 Sorry.
01:41:00.340 Parazynski.
01:41:01.960 Okay.
01:41:03.580 There's a connection.
01:41:04.300 Scott Parazynski is with the Maxwell-Epstein crew
01:41:08.260 via the former advisor of mine
01:41:10.300 who was secretly friends with Isabel Maxwell
01:41:12.840 and took Epstein money.
01:41:15.120 He did...
01:41:15.320 Is this 100% true?
01:41:16.540 I'm not sure of this to claim in a way.
01:41:18.260 He didn't tell me this was when offering an attorney
01:41:21.000 to help after I spoke about misconduct.
01:41:23.980 May the English is not 100% here.
01:41:25.760 This is Scott Parazynski with him
01:41:28.700 and the crew around me.
01:41:30.500 Oh, that's her?
01:41:31.500 Is that her in the picture?
01:41:32.680 Is that what she's saying?
01:41:33.320 Is that her?
01:41:34.240 Okay.
01:41:34.660 Oh, interesting.
01:41:36.960 Okay.
01:41:37.640 Yeah, here's Parazynski with him
01:41:39.340 and crew around me at the time.
01:41:41.000 This UN list is the next level F'd,
01:41:45.440 meaning fucked, I guess.
01:41:46.900 Yes.
01:41:47.400 It includes Ghislaine Maxwell.
01:41:49.120 Well, all these people worked together
01:41:51.380 on digital health initiatives with the UN.
01:41:54.340 Okay, there you go.
01:41:54.880 Interesting.
01:41:55.840 Yeah, I've got to find that speech again
01:41:57.360 that she did.
01:41:58.880 She's spoken in front of the UN
01:42:00.440 like eight times or something like that,
01:42:02.620 I think, Ghislaine Maxwell.
01:42:03.920 And most of the times it's been...
01:42:05.660 Is she part of the board here?
01:42:07.760 And most of the times it's been
01:42:08.960 about the ocean issue,
01:42:11.260 ocean preservation.
01:42:13.080 Is she in here?
01:42:13.920 Maybe she's not in here.
01:42:14.920 Anyway, okay, that's a number of people here
01:42:17.480 associated in the doc.
01:42:18.620 She'll link up here.
01:42:20.220 Can we see here?
01:42:21.120 No?
01:42:21.440 Okay.
01:42:21.700 All right.
01:42:22.420 Anyway, let me keep going here.
01:42:24.740 It's a partnership with none other
01:42:26.680 than Cavendish Global.
01:42:28.480 I've heard of that before.
01:42:29.940 Scott Parazynski was part of that.
01:42:31.660 The man on the bottom left
01:42:33.320 wanted me to introduce...
01:42:36.200 Wanted to introduce me
01:42:37.720 to astronaut Scott Parazynski,
01:42:39.700 who is on the board of OceanGate.
01:42:41.460 Ironically, I texted this thread
01:42:43.560 to a point of contact of theirs
01:42:45.240 a few days ago,
01:42:46.380 suggesting I am not as dumb
01:42:48.100 as they thought.
01:42:49.760 Yeah, here we go here.
01:42:51.320 Ghislaine Maxwell was working
01:42:52.700 with Cavendish Global
01:42:53.800 and the UN on Ocean Partnership.
01:42:56.220 The UN video is now removed.
01:42:57.620 Oh, is it now?
01:42:58.280 We played that at one point,
01:42:59.660 but I have a loose transcript.
01:43:01.080 They cite Italy and Bill Gates
01:43:06.120 as key to their initiatives.
01:43:07.700 Okay, I see what you're saying.
01:43:09.900 That's her with Amir Dozal,
01:43:12.460 UN and board of Terra Mar.
01:43:14.980 That's right.
01:43:15.340 That's what her group was called.
01:43:16.700 Terra Mar,
01:43:18.180 which means what?
01:43:18.860 Earth, ocean, right?
01:43:19.940 Doesn't it?
01:43:21.080 All right.
01:43:21.680 Anyway, I think this goes on
01:43:23.720 for a little bit here,
01:43:24.260 but you get the idea.
01:43:25.800 Some people said, too.
01:43:27.000 What was it again?
01:43:27.740 You said something.
01:43:28.480 It was the...
01:43:30.020 Was there some anniversary
01:43:32.120 or something of the...
01:43:33.500 No, there's one conspiracy flying around.
01:43:35.620 I was just trying to follow that.
01:43:37.380 But like, okay...
01:43:38.220 I think the English
01:43:38.740 is not the best on her there.
01:43:40.140 Where exactly is that going?
01:43:41.680 Okay, no.
01:43:42.160 There's another conspiracy
01:43:43.460 flying around.
01:43:44.600 The last time there was
01:43:45.280 a major new currency
01:43:47.120 introduced into humanity
01:43:48.780 was 1913.
01:43:50.120 That was just after
01:43:50.820 the Titanic was sunk,
01:43:52.640 killing off the major opposition
01:43:53.880 to the new Federal Reserve note.
01:43:56.120 So now we have
01:43:56.680 major currency crisis
01:43:58.200 just as the BRICS nations
01:43:59.500 are going to announce
01:44:00.260 a gold-denominated currency.
01:44:02.280 And the Pakistani billionaire
01:44:03.620 who was on board
01:44:04.880 with his son there
01:44:05.700 is involved in the new currency
01:44:07.280 and now he's dead.
01:44:08.460 So that's just one theory.
01:44:10.680 I'm sure there's other people involved.
01:44:12.140 I don't know if they just need this guy
01:44:13.420 and it's all going to fall apart
01:44:14.260 without this guy.
01:44:15.140 But, you know.
01:44:16.240 Well, because, I mean,
01:44:17.120 the OG,
01:44:18.520 the Titanic there, right,
01:44:20.980 was kind of an entire conspiracy there
01:44:23.760 of just...
01:44:24.260 It was all the wrong,
01:44:27.100 from our perspective,
01:44:28.340 billionaires,
01:44:29.080 jumped ship last moment.
01:44:30.540 Remember?
01:44:30.880 Oh, they forgot to show up.
01:44:32.240 They forgot their ticket.
01:44:33.180 They couldn't.
01:44:33.780 They were sick.
01:44:34.560 Blah, blah, blah, blah.
01:44:35.280 That's right.
01:44:35.780 And at least some,
01:44:37.680 maybe not all of them,
01:44:38.580 but at least some of the good guys
01:44:41.020 at that time
01:44:41.940 went down with the Titanic.
01:44:44.300 A lot of things changed.
01:44:45.280 But wasn't there even a connection
01:44:46.840 to, like,
01:44:49.080 yeah, the,
01:44:49.920 as you said,
01:44:50.340 the currency issue, right?
01:44:51.180 The Federal...
01:44:51.740 One thing led to...
01:44:53.380 I think this was one of the conspiracies.
01:44:54.880 Like, the Titanic was, like,
01:44:56.260 one thing that initiated all of this,
01:44:58.340 but it essentially ended up
01:45:00.200 with, like,
01:45:00.560 the Federal Reserve,
01:45:02.280 essentially,
01:45:02.860 you know,
01:45:03.060 at the end of it,
01:45:04.020 essentially.
01:45:04.740 But, no,
01:45:05.340 they have other conspiracies
01:45:06.540 of them swapping the vessels.
01:45:08.580 I said Lusitania the other day,
01:45:10.340 and it's completely wrong.
01:45:11.700 It's the Olympia, I think,
01:45:13.320 is actually the one, right?
01:45:14.160 They had the Titanic
01:45:15.060 and the Olympia,
01:45:16.500 and they switched those,
01:45:17.600 remember?
01:45:18.040 Mm-hmm.
01:45:18.420 I've heard that.
01:45:18.760 And it was an insurance scam,
01:45:20.200 and that had...
01:45:21.060 Olympia had issues...
01:45:21.760 I think it was Olympia
01:45:22.480 had issues,
01:45:23.480 and it went down,
01:45:24.300 and then the, you know,
01:45:25.360 that ship was...
01:45:26.020 Anyway,
01:45:26.380 not that it matters.
01:45:27.140 It is what it is, right?
01:45:27.900 But, yeah,
01:45:28.560 this is extreme fascination
01:45:30.060 with the Titanic.
01:45:33.320 To go see it,
01:45:34.160 pay 250,000
01:45:35.780 to get down in there,
01:45:37.580 basically not be able
01:45:38.360 to see anything, but...
01:45:39.160 Well, you know,
01:45:39.340 they saw the movie
01:45:39.980 with Leonardo DiCaprio,
01:45:41.300 so...
01:45:41.760 Maybe that's why.
01:45:44.380 What was the song again?
01:45:45.940 Oh, God.
01:45:47.220 Far...
01:45:47.940 On the ship.
01:45:48.960 Do, do, do, do.
01:45:50.820 Do, do, do, do.
01:45:52.480 Do, do, do, do.
01:45:54.220 Did they play that?
01:45:55.520 As they were imploding?
01:45:57.000 Oh, man.
01:45:57.900 What was the knocking then?
01:45:59.240 They said that they had heard
01:46:00.180 knocking every 30 minutes
01:46:01.820 or something like that?
01:46:03.480 That's the ship ready to blow up.
01:46:06.100 The submarine ready to blow up.
01:46:07.860 It was the,
01:46:08.460 some weird thing about,
01:46:09.800 like, why didn't they
01:46:10.840 kind of initiate search
01:46:12.980 right away?
01:46:13.680 Warning signs?
01:46:14.060 Yeah, there was a number of...
01:46:14.940 Like, oh, maybe we should
01:46:16.020 go back up top, right?
01:46:17.440 Well, maybe they couldn't.
01:46:18.460 Maybe they just,
01:46:19.200 it just sunk, right?
01:46:20.780 I mean, it's not a submarine.
01:46:22.140 A submersible is different.
01:46:23.220 You just,
01:46:23.540 but you basically do just sink, right?
01:46:26.260 But you have, you know,
01:46:27.300 anyway, they,
01:46:27.920 did they run out of oxygen?
01:46:30.100 How many hours did they spend there?
01:46:30.780 They didn't even test the oxygen,
01:46:32.220 by the way, too, I saw.
01:46:33.940 There were so many things
01:46:34.680 where I was like,
01:46:35.240 ah, how is that possible?
01:46:37.260 How did that billionaire
01:46:38.060 not know that, too?
01:46:39.660 Well, at least they,
01:46:40.400 at least they didn't
01:46:41.680 hire any white men, you know?
01:46:44.140 Well, they had some for a while,
01:46:45.440 but then they fired them.
01:46:47.340 All right.
01:46:47.960 Oh, my God.
01:46:48.780 So we should end with
01:46:49.660 it's Capture the Flag month.
01:46:51.560 Let me see.
01:46:52.020 Let me just play this one.
01:46:53.240 Oh, you want more of that?
01:46:54.200 I don't know.
01:46:54.980 Let me see if this,
01:46:56.220 this might be not good here.
01:46:57.360 Let's check it out.
01:46:57.780 As of this time,
01:46:58.900 oxygen within the still-missing
01:47:00.320 Titan submersible
01:47:01.140 is believed to be fully exhausted.
01:47:03.240 That being said,
01:47:04.080 bits and pieces of information
01:47:05.320 are still being tossed around
01:47:06.640 on this platform like a...
01:47:07.760 Okay.
01:47:07.940 Anyway, I don't think...
01:47:09.360 Do they even go into the fact
01:47:10.280 that they imploded?
01:47:12.000 Maybe they didn't.
01:47:12.900 Anyway, they talked about
01:47:13.540 the material and stuff, right?
01:47:14.700 There was some carbon...
01:47:16.580 Was it carbon fiber
01:47:18.840 with titanium or something?
01:47:20.300 I don't know.
01:47:20.620 Something like that
01:47:21.260 with the material they used
01:47:24.280 and it was like untested.
01:47:25.420 It was not that great.
01:47:26.260 There had been prior issues with it.
01:47:28.320 Yeah, here's the guy,
01:47:28.920 the quality control,
01:47:30.000 David Lockridge.
01:47:31.540 That was the...
01:47:32.060 I guess that's the white guy.
01:47:33.220 Let me just listen to him
01:47:34.100 at least then.
01:47:34.920 That's the white guy
01:47:35.580 they fired, I believe.
01:47:36.300 In 2018, Oceangate Director
01:47:37.640 of Marine Operations,
01:47:39.120 David Lockridge,
01:47:39.920 began voicing his concerns
01:47:41.200 over quality control
01:47:42.300 as well as testing
01:47:43.180 of potential flaws
01:47:44.340 in the Titan itself.
01:47:45.560 Surprise, surprise.
01:47:46.640 Lockridge was not only
01:47:47.680 fired immediately,
01:47:48.860 but later on that same year,
01:47:50.160 the company would sue him
01:47:51.220 over an alleged breach
01:47:52.200 of contract,
01:47:53.140 stating he had disclosed
01:47:54.240 confidential information
01:47:55.500 to OSHA,
01:47:56.300 a list of which included
01:47:57.300 but was not limited
01:47:58.200 to the following.
01:47:59.180 David raised concerns
01:48:00.180 over the company's decision
01:48:01.220 to perform dives
01:48:02.160 without non-destructive testing
01:48:03.740 or a form of analysis
01:48:05.120 used on...
01:48:05.920 All right, basically,
01:48:06.560 there are their retards.
01:48:07.680 Go woke, die.
01:48:09.020 There it is.
01:48:09.540 Okay.
01:48:10.000 Well, I guess you deserve it.
01:48:11.740 I guess so.
01:48:12.380 That's what happens.
01:48:13.640 Fuck around, find out.
01:48:14.980 Live by the anti-white sword,
01:48:16.480 die.
01:48:17.100 Yes, that's exactly.
01:48:18.880 Let's keep them coming here.
01:48:20.160 We can do this all day, folks.
01:48:22.140 All right.
01:48:22.640 Want to do the last one?
01:48:24.020 Yeah, that was kind of funny.
01:48:24.960 It's Capture the Flag Month.
01:48:26.320 A lot of people
01:48:26.840 have been seeing these
01:48:27.620 hideous rainbow
01:48:28.940 and tranny flags
01:48:30.180 going up in their neighborhoods
01:48:31.280 and there's some footage
01:48:33.740 here of a homeowner.
01:48:34.520 Oh, thank you.
01:48:34.960 That's the ATV environment.
01:48:35.920 Yeah, this guy has this huge...
01:48:37.860 He's not that big,
01:48:38.680 but he's just loud.
01:48:39.280 It's northern Idaho.
01:48:39.780 They've got all these
01:48:40.280 like crazy vehicles
01:48:41.940 and they can drive them
01:48:42.820 around everywhere.
01:48:43.860 The other day,
01:48:44.660 we heard this huge explosion
01:48:45.920 and all these neighbors
01:48:47.100 were out.
01:48:47.600 I thought the gas station
01:48:48.980 blew up,
01:48:49.380 but no,
01:48:49.660 it was just some kids
01:48:50.880 behind us
01:48:51.440 shooting up a tannerite.
01:48:52.740 Tannerite,
01:48:53.300 which is a massive explosion.
01:48:56.180 Yeah, just the cops
01:48:57.480 were looking around.
01:48:58.900 Like, what was it?
01:48:59.560 Everyone thought
01:48:59.960 it was a sonic boom
01:49:01.060 and it hardly leaves
01:49:02.100 any smoke.
01:49:03.560 You know,
01:49:03.740 not a whole lot of smell,
01:49:04.960 but man,
01:49:05.800 it is loud.
01:49:06.820 It was loud, yeah.
01:49:07.540 I think I asked you,
01:49:08.520 why do you need
01:49:09.020 explosive targets?
01:49:11.220 Why do you need anything?
01:49:12.780 Because it's fun.
01:49:13.420 America is blowing up
01:49:14.220 and it's loud.
01:49:15.140 It's like no warning
01:49:16.460 within a city like that.
01:49:18.300 Hey, this is...
01:49:19.140 Okay, I can't resist.
01:49:20.240 There was some guy
01:49:20.980 down the street
01:49:21.500 who said like,
01:49:22.500 sheetrock was shaking
01:49:23.720 off his walls,
01:49:24.700 you know?
01:49:25.180 It's like, God.
01:49:25.900 Well, I mean,
01:49:26.580 again,
01:49:26.880 here we go.
01:49:27.920 This is a perfect opportunity
01:49:29.760 for me to play this clip.
01:49:31.020 I was like,
01:49:31.300 can I find it?
01:49:32.000 Can I...
01:49:32.500 Is there a shoe in here?
01:49:33.640 Can I wedge this clip
01:49:34.820 in somewhere?
01:49:35.880 Now is the perfect time.
01:49:37.580 Here we go.
01:49:38.860 God bless the Second Amendment.
01:49:40.480 Here we go.
01:49:40.840 That is fucking amazing.
01:49:57.860 Shit.
01:49:58.460 It's funny to me.
01:49:59.500 Come and get him.
01:50:04.120 What's that going to cost?
01:50:05.080 That's like out of...
01:50:06.140 Terminator.
01:50:07.280 The Matrix.
01:50:08.540 Remember that?
01:50:09.000 They have the exoskeletons
01:50:11.620 shooting on the squid robots.
01:50:14.160 The guy probably lives
01:50:14.740 in northern Idaho.
01:50:18.740 This is actually
01:50:19.560 a civilian-owned quad gun.
01:50:22.140 I mean,
01:50:22.520 you could hear something
01:50:23.820 like this out in the forest
01:50:24.980 in Idaho
01:50:25.400 and you'd be like,
01:50:25.940 yep, yep,
01:50:26.620 someone's got weapons
01:50:28.060 and they're shooting things.
01:50:29.500 There's so many preppers
01:50:30.900 and off the gridders
01:50:32.080 and just like...
01:50:33.200 I talked to this one guy
01:50:34.580 who builds some
01:50:35.280 of these bunkers
01:50:35.900 and stuff
01:50:36.220 and he was telling me
01:50:37.020 about some people
01:50:38.060 they have freeze-dried food
01:50:40.060 inside their walls.
01:50:41.840 There's so many cool bunkers
01:50:43.700 and setups.
01:50:44.880 Well, again,
01:50:45.840 it takes us back
01:50:46.500 to the shall not
01:50:47.480 be infringed, right?
01:50:49.240 That's part of the
01:50:50.720 Second Amendment.
01:50:51.760 Shall not be infringed.
01:50:52.880 Which essentially means
01:50:53.860 anything the state has,
01:50:55.960 you can have.
01:50:57.520 And how's that
01:50:58.200 going to be interpreted now?
01:50:59.660 It's going to go
01:51:00.000 out the window
01:51:00.420 because, of course,
01:51:01.020 now information
01:51:02.340 is a weapon.
01:51:04.120 Nanotechnology
01:51:04.480 is a weapon.
01:51:05.940 DNA and genetically
01:51:07.320 engineering
01:51:08.120 is a weapon, right?
01:51:09.280 All of this
01:51:09.760 are technically...
01:51:10.700 These are arms.
01:51:11.980 These are weapons.
01:51:13.160 What's our defense?
01:51:14.060 You could argue
01:51:14.540 that censorship
01:51:15.340 is a breach
01:51:17.040 of the Second Amendment
01:51:19.760 because it's like
01:51:20.880 now you can't use
01:51:22.460 a weapon
01:51:23.440 that they're using
01:51:24.360 against us.
01:51:24.980 Anyway, I digress.
01:51:26.240 Here's...
01:51:26.720 Back to the point here.
01:51:28.380 Here is the
01:51:29.040 capture the flag
01:51:30.080 moment.
01:51:30.860 I love, too,
01:51:31.500 by the way,
01:51:31.860 how now this
01:51:33.160 has a disclaimer
01:51:33.840 that this is
01:51:35.140 sensitive footage.
01:51:36.480 You might be upset.
01:51:37.380 You might get
01:51:37.660 a heart attack.
01:51:38.160 You do this
01:51:38.440 with Trump flags
01:51:39.140 all the time.
01:51:39.860 Of course.
01:51:40.160 Well, that's fine.
01:51:40.600 That's the first...
01:51:41.100 You can burn
01:51:41.820 American flags.
01:51:43.320 You can stomp
01:51:43.920 at the seat.
01:51:44.380 The Supreme Court
01:51:45.160 rule, that's
01:51:45.740 your First Amendment
01:51:46.860 right.
01:51:47.560 You steal a gay
01:51:48.480 flag, a pride flag,
01:51:50.600 a pride fag,
01:51:52.140 then you are
01:51:53.780 performing a hate crime.
01:51:56.840 warning, distressing
01:52:01.220 images.
01:52:04.240 Go, man, go!
01:52:05.660 Go!
01:52:06.320 This one's even
01:52:07.160 better.
01:52:07.620 That's the second time.
01:52:07.860 June 2nd, 2023.
01:52:12.560 Yeah, there we go.
01:52:13.540 Yes!
01:52:14.460 You know how
01:52:15.100 teenagers used to
01:52:16.420 teepee houses?
01:52:17.620 Like, they need to do
01:52:18.480 this stuff now.
01:52:19.240 Like, just take that
01:52:20.620 flag down.
01:52:22.040 Take it.
01:52:22.440 Yeah, definitely.
01:52:24.200 Or you could do...
01:52:24.600 You're charged with a
01:52:25.080 hate crime for saying
01:52:25.840 that, right?
01:52:26.660 Yes.
01:52:27.560 Be quiet.
01:52:28.180 Or alternatives.
01:52:42.820 Good man.
01:52:44.060 Good man.
01:52:44.180 And then when you've
01:52:45.420 done that, you switch
01:52:46.500 over to this.
01:52:48.100 You finally are ready.
01:52:49.540 There's that flag.
01:52:50.440 Get it.
01:52:50.780 Get the flag.
01:52:52.440 Is that a little drone?
01:52:53.860 We'll capture it.
01:52:54.280 We'll stomp on it
01:52:55.860 and we'll shoot the
01:52:56.700 shit out of it.
01:52:57.660 That's right.
01:52:58.100 And then we'll put it
01:52:58.940 back.
01:52:59.600 We'll give it back.
01:53:00.740 So technically we
01:53:01.500 didn't steal it.
01:53:02.400 Here's a little piece.
01:53:04.100 Here's a shred.
01:53:04.980 We're helpless as white
01:53:05.920 people.
01:53:06.100 There's nothing we knew.
01:53:07.180 But you can use it
01:53:07.780 for toilet paper
01:53:08.840 before you do all
01:53:10.040 that.
01:53:13.140 Yikes.
01:53:14.680 All right.
01:53:15.760 Well, and you know
01:53:16.580 what?
01:53:16.800 Let me...
01:53:17.240 Okay, last clip here
01:53:18.500 and then we'll wrap
01:53:19.060 up here.
01:53:19.400 But they...
01:53:21.280 I mean, they're
01:53:21.920 dropping our flags
01:53:24.600 to the ground
01:53:25.880 for the sake of
01:53:26.800 setting up pride flags.
01:53:28.340 Look at this here.
01:53:30.380 It's the UK.
01:53:35.900 You can't have that
01:53:37.040 one up there
01:53:37.620 at the same time?
01:53:38.380 Nope.
01:53:38.520 It's got to be just
01:53:39.020 all tranny flags?
01:53:39.880 It's got to be above it.
01:53:40.700 Yep.
01:53:41.440 You're taking the wrong
01:53:42.120 fucking flag down, mate.
01:53:43.420 At least you know that.
01:53:48.100 Well, just doing my job.
01:53:49.760 Don't do it, exactly.
01:53:50.300 I'm just doing my...
01:53:50.880 I hate this.
01:53:51.380 It irritates me.
01:53:51.760 Look at that.
01:53:52.380 I hate this.
01:53:52.880 Look at the disgrace
01:53:53.360 of dropping out.
01:53:53.700 If there was just a white
01:53:54.800 strike and they were
01:53:56.140 like, no, we're not
01:53:57.180 doing that.
01:53:58.760 And it's the same guy
01:54:01.760 you hear.
01:54:02.080 I mean, you're taking
01:54:03.200 the damn wrong flag down
01:54:05.400 and then it's like,
01:54:06.120 I know I'm taking
01:54:06.800 the wrong flag down.
01:54:08.160 That's your problem
01:54:08.660 right there.
01:54:09.120 It's the same guy.
01:54:10.620 What I'm saying is
01:54:11.160 it's the same.
01:54:12.440 They grew up together.
01:54:13.700 It's that English
01:54:14.680 working class.
01:54:15.800 I can't exactly pinpoint
01:54:17.280 the...
01:54:18.120 Is it a Londoner?
01:54:19.940 Is this Regent Street?
01:54:20.920 I forget where that is,
01:54:22.040 but I can't pinpoint
01:54:22.840 the dialect.
01:54:23.400 But the point is,
01:54:24.060 listen to how similar
01:54:25.260 they sound, right?
01:54:26.200 You're taking the wrong
01:54:30.540 fucking flag down, mate.
01:54:34.600 At least you know that.
01:54:36.140 At least you know that.
01:54:37.720 Well, stop doing it.
01:54:39.100 I agree.
01:54:39.580 This is the problem.
01:54:40.660 Just doing my job
01:54:41.980 is what got us here.
01:54:43.540 You know, stop doing
01:54:45.280 the job of anti-whites.
01:54:47.380 Yes.
01:54:48.140 Yeah.
01:54:48.500 And global homos
01:54:49.800 celebrating pedophiles.
01:54:51.640 Anti-hetero.
01:54:53.160 Stop doing it.
01:54:55.060 Anti-hetero agenda.
01:54:56.280 I just...
01:54:56.800 Just know.
01:54:57.700 Yeah.
01:54:58.360 Like have some
01:54:59.020 organization, guys.
01:55:00.640 Cockney.
01:55:01.080 Yeah, is it a Cockney accent?
01:55:02.360 Yeah, maybe you're right.
01:55:04.600 Albert...
01:55:06.160 Albert and Herbert.
01:55:08.000 Fuck, fuck.
01:55:09.880 Albert and Herbert.
01:55:11.640 Fantastic TV program.
01:55:12.560 Why don't they get
01:55:13.040 some of those
01:55:13.560 hard-working Nigerians
01:55:15.560 they imported
01:55:16.160 to do the job?
01:55:17.220 Mm-hmm.
01:55:19.740 Yeah, he's like,
01:55:20.160 I know that.
01:55:21.100 I'm taking the wrong flag.
01:55:22.280 I know that.
01:55:23.260 Well, supremacist 66 says,
01:55:24.420 well, he should have said,
01:55:25.140 well, stop doing it.
01:55:26.960 Wolf Supremacist 66 says,
01:55:28.880 I know what you mean, Lon.
01:55:30.120 Every time I see footage
01:55:31.060 of thousands of migrants
01:55:32.100 on those boats
01:55:32.780 or tens of them,
01:55:33.880 I picture one of the eagles
01:55:34.960 from the Lord of the Rings
01:55:36.000 attacking a thousand orcs.
01:55:38.420 Yes.
01:55:38.780 That is a true
01:55:39.580 London accent.
01:55:41.260 Is that what it is?
01:55:41.720 Yeah.
01:55:41.980 A certain part of London,
01:55:43.560 I would assume, right?
01:55:44.380 Is that Cockney?
01:55:46.380 Is that a part of London?
01:55:46.880 The poor part?
01:55:47.240 Anyway.
01:55:48.360 The poor white guys
01:55:49.160 are going to screw.
01:55:49.580 Yeah, it's the working,
01:55:50.360 yeah, of course,
01:55:50.880 you know that.
01:55:51.280 You know it's the working class.
01:55:53.320 Always is.
01:55:55.200 Pagan Bear says,
01:55:56.000 support what you like.
01:55:57.220 Thank you.
01:55:57.680 Thank you.
01:55:57.940 Appreciate that.
01:55:58.540 All right, guys,
01:55:59.200 we're going to wrap up right there.
01:56:01.160 Hope you guys have a great midsummer
01:56:04.360 if you celebrate that kind of stuff.
01:56:06.880 I guess we should do
01:56:07.820 a couple of shout outs
01:56:08.880 and stuff like that too, right?
01:56:10.480 We got to say thanks
01:56:11.400 and all those good things.
01:56:13.400 Guys, if you want to join us
01:56:14.860 for more,
01:56:16.060 please do it over at
01:56:17.300 redisemembers.com.
01:56:19.120 You can join us at Odyssey
01:56:20.120 or Subscribestar,
01:56:21.300 whatever you prefer.
01:56:22.460 It's $10 a month.
01:56:23.240 You get access to,
01:56:24.300 of course,
01:56:24.920 Western Warrior,
01:56:25.800 kind of our flagship show.
01:56:27.100 We spend the most amount of time
01:56:28.780 preparing, recording,
01:56:30.740 and editing,
01:56:31.260 and making it just
01:56:32.320 perfect for you.
01:56:34.000 So I think you'll enjoy it.
01:56:36.080 If you want to get
01:56:37.220 a cheaper subscription,
01:56:39.360 less per month,
01:56:40.200 you can get a longer subscription.
01:56:41.640 We have them all the way
01:56:42.540 up to two years
01:56:43.240 and it's almost 35% off.
01:56:45.540 I've got to do the exact math
01:56:46.540 on that one day,
01:56:47.440 but something like that.
01:56:49.700 Also, of course,
01:56:50.480 you can do a,
01:56:51.120 we have a plus tier
01:56:52.220 for those of you guys
01:56:52.880 who want to do
01:56:53.220 a little bit extra for us.
01:56:54.680 And then, of course,
01:56:55.460 we have an executive producer
01:56:56.780 and a producer tier,
01:56:58.900 which is kind of our special,
01:57:00.700 super duper extra fan base
01:57:02.820 supporting crew out there.
01:57:05.180 And, of course,
01:57:05.940 again, just keep in mind,
01:57:08.360 we don't have
01:57:08.960 any venture capitalists.
01:57:11.180 We don't have
01:57:11.720 any angel investors.
01:57:13.200 We don't have
01:57:13.500 any major sponsors.
01:57:15.060 We don't have
01:57:15.360 any commercials
01:57:16.620 or ads in the shows
01:57:18.120 that we do.
01:57:18.940 So this is how we do it
01:57:20.500 so we can continue
01:57:21.260 not only to survive
01:57:22.500 doing this,
01:57:23.460 but continue to grow
01:57:24.560 so we can do it more
01:57:25.420 and do it better.
01:57:26.300 So that's the reason
01:57:27.580 why we charge
01:57:28.480 10 bucks a month
01:57:29.340 for you to get access
01:57:30.660 to Western Warrior.
01:57:32.500 Other exclusive videos,
01:57:33.860 second hour
01:57:34.320 of many of the interviews
01:57:35.060 we do and stuff like that too.
01:57:36.000 And we do have
01:57:36.320 more interviews,
01:57:36.840 by the way,
01:57:37.540 in the pipeline coming up.
01:57:39.060 But thank you so much
01:57:40.360 to our executive producers.
01:57:42.740 T. Lothrop Stoddard,
01:57:44.380 V. Miller,
01:57:45.480 Resin Revolt,
01:57:46.620 Good Luck Lap,
01:57:48.000 Jake,
01:57:48.900 Red Pill Rundown,
01:57:50.260 Chalky Milk,
01:57:50.880 French 47,
01:57:52.880 Mark Smith,
01:57:54.120 No One Jeebs,
01:57:55.060 President Obunga,
01:57:56.380 Mongoose,
01:57:57.720 William Fox,
01:57:59.200 Angry White Sarkamom,
01:58:00.620 The Second Wanderer,
01:58:01.840 Operation Werewolf,
01:58:03.480 The Ride Never Ends,
01:58:04.980 Francis Parker Yockey.
01:58:06.600 It's a great name.
01:58:07.200 Dill Bob,
01:58:08.260 Last Place Simp,
01:58:09.860 Joseph Hart,
01:58:10.980 Purple Haze,
01:58:12.700 and JP.
01:58:13.600 Thank you so much,
01:58:14.140 guys.
01:58:14.620 Also to our producers,
01:58:15.840 MrWalker696,
01:58:17.420 Johansson,
01:58:18.600 Leroy Dumond,
01:58:19.620 Snarkpup,
01:58:20.340 Eyes Open,
01:58:21.220 Mr. Lemry,
01:58:22.020 Yuri Nhu,
01:58:22.520 Obadah Hexwill,
01:58:23.560 Single Action Army,
01:58:24.840 and George Porsche.
01:58:26.340 Thank you to you guys as well.
01:58:28.240 We appreciate all of you.
01:58:29.680 All right.
01:58:30.280 I think,
01:58:30.640 is that it for us today?
01:58:31.900 It is.
01:58:32.740 We'll get a little happy family picture
01:58:35.000 of you guys here at the end.
01:58:35.940 Hope you have a wonderful midsummer
01:58:38.300 wherever you are, guys.
01:58:39.920 Celebrate it with family.
01:58:40.860 Do whatever you need to do out there
01:58:43.340 to stay connected.
01:58:43.680 That's not our dog,
01:58:44.240 by the way.
01:58:44.900 That's not our dog.
01:58:45.680 That's right.
01:58:46.580 I'm not ready for a dog right now,
01:58:48.120 okay?
01:58:49.340 Anyway,
01:58:49.660 from the Palm Grants,
01:58:51.020 I guess.
01:58:51.560 Thank you so much for being here today
01:58:53.320 and for watching.
01:58:54.220 We appreciate all of you.
01:58:55.360 I think you have one more
01:58:56.220 that I want on Odyssey.
01:58:57.740 Or is it Queecap?
01:58:59.740 Hail Henry.
01:59:00.560 I think it's Queecap.
01:59:01.660 Is it?
01:59:02.100 Thank you for the stream
01:59:03.060 and thank you for your support.
01:59:04.380 Appreciate it, guys.
01:59:04.800 Thank you for your support, guys.
01:59:05.800 We appreciate all of you.
01:59:06.920 We'll see you at Red S Member
01:59:08.280 or Odyssey over the weekend here.
01:59:10.540 What, Monday, I think,
01:59:11.360 as usual.
01:59:11.840 We'll get a Western Warrior up.
01:59:13.560 Good stuff coming up.
01:59:14.400 Thank you, everybody.
01:59:14.900 We'll see you guys later.
01:59:16.340 Happy Solstice.
01:59:17.060 See you on the other side.
01:59:47.060 Bye-bye.
01:59:48.060 So expect, getting to work what's happening.
01:59:49.700 Bye-bye.
02:00:03.240 Bye-bye.
02:00:04.520 Bye-bye.
02:00:04.820 Bye-bye.
02:00:05.140 Bye-bye.
02:00:05.420 Bye-bye.
02:00:06.240 Leave a funny going up.
02:00:07.180 Bye-bye.
02:00:07.780 Bye-bye.
02:00:08.400 Bye-bye.
02:00:08.680 Bye-bye.
02:00:09.240 Bye-bye.
02:00:09.840 Bye-bye.
02:00:10.240 Bye-bye.
02:00:10.980 Bye-bye.
02:00:12.840 Bye-bye.
02:00:13.160 Bye-bye.
02:00:13.720 Bye-bye.
02:00:14.920 Bye-bye.
02:00:15.600 We're like crystal
02:00:24.780 We break easy
02:00:28.280 I'm a poor man
02:00:32.220 If you leave me
02:00:35.820 I'm applauded
02:00:39.720 Then forgotten
02:00:42.340 It was summer
02:00:46.000 Now it's autumn
02:00:49.740 I don't know what to say
02:00:56.280 You don't care anyway
02:00:59.800 I'm a man in a village
02:01:03.580 Without good
02:01:05.380 I will trade
02:01:07.100 Here comes love
02:01:08.920 It's like honey
02:01:10.480 You can't buy
02:01:12.200 It worth money
02:01:14.000 Not a loan
02:01:15.860 Anymore
02:01:16.860 You shoved me to the core
02:01:19.680 You shoved me to the core
02:01:22.860 We're like crystal
02:01:34.400 It's not easy
02:01:46.020 With your love
02:01:47.680 With your love
02:01:49.680 You can't beat me
02:01:53.500 Every man
02:01:56.820 And every woman
02:02:00.060 And every woman
02:02:01.820 Need someone
02:02:03.680 So keep it coming
02:02:05.340 So keep it coming
02:02:06.920 Keep it coming
02:02:08.840 Keep it coming
02:02:10.560 Keep it coming
02:02:12.220 Keep it coming
02:02:14.020 Keep it coming
02:02:15.720 Keep it coming
02:02:17.340 I don't know
02:02:19.220 What to say
02:02:20.980 You don't care
02:02:22.840 Anyway
02:02:24.220 I'm a man
02:02:26.500 I'm a man
02:02:26.520 In a village
02:02:28.380 Without good
02:02:30.080 I'll be trade
02:02:31.700 Here comes love
02:02:33.600 It's like honey
02:02:35.120 You can't buy
02:02:36.980 It worth money
02:02:38.760 You're not a loan
02:02:40.020 Without a loan
02:02:41.820 You shut me to the core
02:02:44.180 You shut me to the core
02:02:47.760 You can't buy
02:02:50.340 You can't buy
02:02:50.680 That's right
02:02:50.940 You have to say
02:02:51.960 You're not a loan
02:02:52.660 ition
02:02:53.200 You're not a loan
02:02:54.240 You're not a loan
02:02:54.680 You're not a loan
02:02:54.940 You're not a loan
02:02:55.860 You're not a loan
02:02:56.400 You're not a loan
02:02:56.540 You're not a loan
02:02:57.460 You're not a loan
02:02:57.500 You're not a loan
02:02:58.680 You're not a loan
02:02:58.940 You're not a loan
02:02:59.320 ar
02:03:01.400 You're not a loan
02:03:02.760 You're not a loan
02:03:04.240 You're not a loan
02:03:05.940 You're not a loan
02:03:06.900 You're not a loan
02:03:08.560 You're not a loan
02:03:08.960 You're not a loan
02:03:10.260 You're not a loan
02:03:11.400 You're not a loan
02:03:13.220 You're not a loan
02:03:14.940 You're not a loan
02:03:15.600 You're not a loan
02:03:17.420 I don't know what to say
02:03:31.600 You don't care anyway
02:03:35.140 I'm a man in a rage
02:03:38.980 With that girl I retreat
02:03:41.980 Here comes love
02:03:44.200 It's like honey
02:03:45.760 You can't buy it worth money
02:03:49.360 You're not alone
02:03:50.880 You shut me to the floor
02:03:55.020 You shut me to the floor
02:03:58.560 You shut me to the floor
02:04:01.900 You shut me to the floor
02:04:15.760 You shut me to the floor
02:04:24.720 bye guys have a great midsummer everybody we'll see you boys and girls later take care
02:04:54.720 you