The Krypto Report - July 09, 2017


#18 - I am HanAssholeSolo!


Episode Stats

Length

3 hours and 52 minutes

Words per Minute

167.68166

Word Count

39,062

Sentence Count

2,168

Misogynist Sentences

79

Hate Speech Sentences

156


Summary


Transcript

00:00:00.000 XSI
00:00:13.000 The sound.
00:00:43.000 With what some experts claim to be a Bigfoot screen, it is regarded as the highest quality audio of the creature ever captured.
00:00:52.160 I think what CNN did was unfortunate for them.
00:00:56.980 As you know now, they have some pretty serious problems.
00:01:00.940 They have been fake news for a long time.
00:01:03.580 They've been covering me in a very, very dishonest way.
00:01:09.340 Do you have that also, by the way, Mr. President?
00:01:12.320 But CNN and others, I mean, I know there's NBC is equally as bad, despite the fact that I made them a fortune with The Apprentice, but they forgot that.
00:01:21.960 But I will say that CNN has really taken it too seriously.
00:01:27.500 And I think they've hurt themselves very badly, very, very badly.
00:01:31.660 And what we want to see in the United States is honest, beautiful, free, but honest press.
00:01:38.380 We want to see fair press.
00:01:39.560 I think it's a very important thing.
00:01:41.200 We don't want fake news.
00:01:42.940 And by the way, not everybody is fake news.
00:01:44.900 But we don't want fake news.
00:01:47.140 Bad thing.
00:01:48.080 Very bad for our country.
00:01:49.080 Here we go.
00:01:49.820 Here we go.
00:01:55.600 Well, I'm a 20th century white house son of a gun.
00:02:01.400 And if you're looking for a king, whoop, well, baby, I'm a one.
00:02:07.100 By the time you see me, it's going to be too late.
00:02:11.140 Because I'm a genuine white Nazi billy with a wolf of hate.
00:02:19.460 Get going, let's go, let's go.
00:02:22.260 We've got to get to the next roadshow.
00:02:25.200 White power rockin' man.
00:02:28.300 I'm a Nazi, I'm a Nazi billy with a wolf man.
00:02:32.740 Yes, I am.
00:02:41.140 Welcome to the Crypto Report.
00:02:49.900 Welcome to the Crypto Report.
00:03:11.140 All right.
00:03:40.360 Welcome back.
00:03:41.140 We have a great guest.
00:03:44.480 This is the return of the publisher of the Daily Stormer, the number one alt-right website in the history of the world.
00:03:53.940 And according to the SPLC, the world's most hateful man, Andrew Anglin.
00:03:59.620 Welcome back to the Crypto Report.
00:04:02.460 It's good to be here, man.
00:04:03.880 Well, we wanted to do a show today because of this massive story that has burst out upon the internet and the mainstream media about the CNN versus Han asshole solo.
00:04:22.340 And before we get into it, I just want to say one of the memes that has started about this is the meme from like the end of the Spartacus movie where the Romans said to tell us who Spartacus is.
00:04:36.980 Give him to us and we won't crucify the rest of you.
00:04:39.820 And they all stand up and say, I am Spartacus.
00:04:41.920 Well, that's been changed to I am Han asshole solo.
00:04:45.060 So I am here to say officially that I am Han asshole solo.
00:04:49.520 And I take back my apology.
00:04:51.340 Fuck you, CNN.
00:04:54.480 I, too, am Han asshole solo.
00:04:56.980 He's a hero and a martyr.
00:05:00.560 Absolutely.
00:05:03.260 Yeah, no, this is this is a really weird story we got going on here.
00:05:07.360 It's very funny to see the the real time collapse of CNN, like the like the World Trade Center collapse, you know, just watching it go down.
00:05:18.160 As it implodes in on itself.
00:05:23.080 It's it's it's really it's really shocking.
00:05:26.800 It's it's really fun to see.
00:05:28.120 Trump just talked about it today.
00:05:30.160 He was asked about it when he was in Poland.
00:05:33.280 And he says, you know, I think they're going to regret threatening this guy.
00:05:39.400 Well, I think they will, too.
00:05:41.340 And another interesting thing about it is the first place.
00:05:45.080 I can't remember the first place.
00:05:46.660 Oh, yeah, I do.
00:05:47.380 It was WikiLeaks who pointed out how some of the laws of New York state and some of the laws of the federal government make what CNN did a felony.
00:06:00.020 And then today, Ted Cruz pointed out that it's also a felony in Georgia.
00:06:06.180 And he listed some different felonies that applied to it as well.
00:06:11.860 And I don't expect this stuff to be followed up in federal court.
00:06:15.960 You know, this kind of thing never is.
00:06:17.900 But this is a really, really bad look for CNN.
00:06:20.680 And I mean, what we have here is for any of the listeners out there who may not have known is what was it Sunday or Saturday or Sunday?
00:06:29.240 Trump tweeted out.
00:06:31.100 Or maybe it was the fourth.
00:06:32.520 I don't know.
00:06:32.840 I get my days all mixed up around these holidays.
00:06:35.340 It was the third.
00:06:36.760 I don't remember what day of the week it was.
00:06:39.060 That would have been Sunday.
00:06:40.820 Okay, Sunday.
00:06:42.140 No, it was definitely Sunday because it was...
00:06:45.480 Forgive me, as I'm a little bit low energy today.
00:06:48.960 I got a little bit of a cold.
00:06:51.320 People might notice a little bit nasally here.
00:06:54.100 But it was definitely Sunday because it was during the...
00:06:58.380 He dropped it right during the Sunday morning shows.
00:07:01.960 And he did that on purpose, obviously, so that all these big shows would have to cover this, you know, breaking news item.
00:07:09.200 And that they would then have to set the narrative for it.
00:07:12.140 And he knew that they were going to set the narrative of violence against the media based on this joke meme that he posted.
00:07:20.300 And that that was going to make these people look unhinged and ridiculous.
00:07:25.760 And just the basic fact that they're humorless.
00:07:28.280 I mean, this is something that people don't really like.
00:07:32.720 Nobody likes humorlessness.
00:07:35.520 I mean, well, it's a very specific type of woman maybe that enjoys humorlessness.
00:07:42.560 You know, like the sort of bitchy teacher in grade school or something controlling women.
00:07:51.960 But most people do not like humorlessness.
00:07:56.160 So, you know, he dropped that at exactly the right time where it had to be picked up by these main shows.
00:08:01.620 And they would set the narrative.
00:08:03.000 And, of course, the narrative that they've been trying to push as of late is that because of the of the explosion of the Russia thing, which I think we'll talk about later.
00:08:13.020 But since that thing collapsed in on itself, they had to come up with a new narrative to fill, you know, fill the spot of what we have to attack Trump nonstop.
00:08:21.340 What do we put in here?
00:08:22.360 And they plugged in that Trump is soliciting violence against the media.
00:08:28.600 Yeah. So that that this this GIF and I will say GIF, not JIF.
00:08:35.440 JIF is a peanut butter.
00:08:38.180 Yeah.
00:08:42.880 But this this this humorous meme that they he knew that they would respond to it in this way.
00:08:49.320 And I mean, that just it's like, are you serious that this is violence against you?
00:08:54.320 And then, I mean, they've just gone all the way with this.
00:08:57.300 And, you know, I mean, this is a key point that nobody is really touching on, I don't think, in any of the criticism.
00:09:04.080 And everybody's talking about, well, CNN, they're destroyed.
00:09:06.500 They have no credibility.
00:09:07.960 But in actual fact, they're they're a TV station.
00:09:12.700 They're not the New York Times.
00:09:14.720 That's a that's a print publication or, you know, print on the Internet.
00:09:17.900 I mean, they still actually print copies in New York Times.
00:09:21.320 Of course, they still do print this.
00:09:23.460 But, you know, I mean, written word is different than than a cable news station where their ratings are not dependent on their credibility as as truth tellers.
00:09:35.720 Their ratings are not even necessarily related to that at all.
00:09:39.940 I think this week is going to be their biggest week this year.
00:09:45.500 So far this year, I'm predicting that that it'll be their their biggest ratings week this year because of all this drama around them being fake news with this with this harassing this guy and flipping out about this about this gift.
00:10:01.400 So it's, you know, I mean, that that point is kind of getting forgotten about in all of this, that people are still going to watch this channel.
00:10:10.700 I mean, some people are just because it's entertaining, regardless of what their credibility level is viewed at.
00:10:16.460 Yeah, well, and one would assume if they're the slightest bit media savvy as well, that every time one of these horrible, horrible things for CNN's images, a journalism outlet happens, that they get probably for at least a week a huge spike in traffic from the rubberneckers.
00:10:40.020 And I include myself among the rubberneckers.
00:10:42.960 It's like this crap happens.
00:10:44.420 And you're like, oh, well, I wonder how Wolf Blitzer is going to try to explain this away.
00:10:49.360 So you go watch.
00:10:52.220 Exactly.
00:10:53.100 What is this wily kike going to say?
00:10:56.460 No, I mean, it is.
00:10:57.900 Even me, I'm like, I want to see Wolf Blitzer or Jake Tapper is like the new Wolf Blitzer, basically.
00:11:03.840 You know, and watching these shows.
00:11:08.220 And Chris Cuomo is, he's a goofy guy.
00:11:15.400 I mean, it's funny to watch the guy.
00:11:17.680 He's goofy.
00:11:18.920 I mean, it's enjoyable to sit there and watch this goofy guy with that woman shaking her head.
00:11:25.080 I can't remember his co-host's name.
00:11:27.960 Nobody can.
00:11:29.900 Yeah.
00:11:31.560 Whatever that bitch is.
00:11:33.840 Yeah, no, I mean, it makes for good entertainment.
00:11:37.640 So I don't know if I think they could sustain a long running marketing, a branding as like we're ridiculous and irate and we just lie to people.
00:11:52.660 Yeah.
00:11:53.420 And people would still watch the channel.
00:11:56.080 Because, and the other thing is, the other factor in this is that they're still going to have interviews with real people where you're seeing a person, you know, a politician or whoever they're interviewing talking.
00:12:08.920 They're still going to have that.
00:12:10.240 They're still going to have live coverage when some event happens that you turn it on and you see what's going on with live updates on the event, breaking news.
00:12:19.060 And that's something that, you know, I mean, the New York Times, I believe, is failing and I believe they are propping themselves up with bots.
00:12:28.100 They're buying traffic, which would be criminal if they get caught because they're defrauding advertisers.
00:12:33.920 But I think they are doing that.
00:12:37.600 But either way, I mean, they're laying off massive parts of their staff.
00:12:41.340 You know, I mean, the company is is collapsing due to a lack of of revenue.
00:12:47.960 And, you know, that's not that's not ever going to happen to CNN.
00:12:52.180 I mean, it could.
00:12:53.300 I guess people could stop watching it because they just know they're being lied to.
00:12:57.440 But I don't I don't predict that will happen.
00:13:01.280 Right.
00:13:02.200 Well, you know, you mentioned the the fake Twitter bot followers and stuff.
00:13:08.000 An interesting thing with CNN about this is, you know, every time this stuff happens, people go and they start trying to figure out what's really up with CNN.
00:13:16.460 And one of the stories I saw over on Breitbart was where somebody had just simply used Twitter audit, you know, and that Twitter audit goes and it measures the activity of the followers of whatever account you put in there and gives really accurate reports on how many of them are real and how many of them are bots and such.
00:13:37.080 And CNN was something like their this massive following base they had was something like 70 percent bots.
00:13:43.680 Yeah, no, that's probably true.
00:13:47.620 I could see that as being true.
00:13:49.620 I'm talking about The New York Times website itself, though.
00:13:53.660 They had they had Alexa reported that their number one traffic source was from China.
00:14:01.500 And The New York Times.
00:14:02.340 OK, firstly, you know, there's not that many people.
00:14:04.760 I'd say it's about one in a thousand, maybe less, maybe fewer Chinese people speak, understand fluent enough.
00:14:13.460 English to read The New York Times.
00:14:15.060 I mean, The New York Times is above a third grade reading level.
00:14:21.300 So few people in China can can even read it in the first place.
00:14:26.420 But it's blocked there.
00:14:28.880 I mean, The New York Times is blocked in China and somehow that's the number one traffic source.
00:14:32.500 According to Alexa, I guess Alexa could have gotten that wrong.
00:14:35.520 I mean, it's not a super reliable company.
00:14:40.960 I bet they I bet they didn't.
00:14:42.900 I bet what it is.
00:14:44.080 And now I'm not really super savvy about this stuff like Weave or like you or whatever, but it would seem to me like that The New York Times has some either an employee or a company that has a VPN set up somewhere with a giant botnet that they just don't turn it up high enough to DDoS the website.
00:15:07.000 And they have it just constantly doing hits, hits, hits, hits through some VPN.
00:15:13.320 Yeah, no, exactly.
00:15:14.680 It's just it's fake traffic that's designed to pop up your your ratings.
00:15:20.380 Generally, people do that for advertising purposes, which is it's defrauding the advertiser.
00:15:31.120 But, you know, I mean, The New York Times could be doing it just for publicity and, you know, PR reasons because they're being attacked by Donald Trump.
00:15:41.060 Yeah, well, it's an influence thing, too, you know, because one of the things that the media does and has always done ever since it's been the Jew media is that anything that is a political goal that they want to push or a anti-white narrative that they want to push, the media portrays it as this is what's normal.
00:16:05.060 This is what everyone thinks. And we are the paper of record. And that's that.
00:16:09.680 And they use their subscriber numbers back in the day.
00:16:13.420 And now I guess their web traffic to back that up.
00:16:16.760 You know, this is the most popular. Everybody loves it.
00:16:19.580 And then, you know, adversely, they try to take people like us who have opinions that actually are popular and claim that, you know, they're lone weirdos.
00:16:28.600 They're they're full of hate and they're not they don't live in reality and nobody agrees with them.
00:16:33.360 But that stuff just doesn't work all that well anymore. That's why they're having to resort to this nonsense.
00:16:38.100 But but back to the CNN aspect of this thing, they put well, I guess it started off if you and I learned this from reading your articles about it.
00:16:50.460 If you go back to OK, Trump tweets out this short.
00:16:56.000 It was actually what Trump tweeted was a short piece of video.
00:17:01.120 But the gif that Han asshole solo had made was identical.
00:17:07.040 So maybe CNN even docs the wrong person if they were actually trying to get the video.
00:17:12.080 But but the thing is, the way they got Han asshole solo was Brian Stelter was the first one.
00:17:18.100 He says he goes on Twitter and he says, do we know who made this gif or video?
00:17:23.640 I don't remember which way he put it. He posts that on Twitter.
00:17:26.580 And then the next thing you know, somebody at CNN has assigned this, I guess, what's supposed to be their elite core of investigative journalist,
00:17:37.720 Geraldo Rivera types to find out who Han assholes or who made the gif.
00:17:44.820 And it turned out to be this Han asshole solo.
00:17:47.080 And then they identified him and said, OK, now we've got his real info and stuff.
00:17:51.900 And that's when the shakedown happened.
00:17:53.380 Have I got anything out of order there?
00:17:56.400 Well, it was that kook.
00:17:59.260 What's that guy?
00:18:00.840 The guy with three names, Yate Sexton.
00:18:04.680 What's his first name?
00:18:06.180 I don't know.
00:18:07.300 He was the guy who originally found out it was Han asshole solo.
00:18:10.240 And then CNN dug up the the guy's information.
00:18:17.300 So, yeah, no, that's that's the way it went down.
00:18:22.180 But Brian Stelter calling for it was the was the kind of thing that people sort of weren't documenting as part of this timeline,
00:18:35.920 which was interesting because I have supposed that they could have been planning this for a while.
00:18:44.320 This idea of outing some anonymous person and threatening them for making fun of them,
00:18:49.840 that that could have been something that they kind of had on the on the back burner as a plan that they were looking for a point at which to deploy this this plan for for the purpose of threatening the entire anonymous Internet,
00:19:08.320 which I think was probably is going to turn out to be a very stupid thing to do.
00:19:14.960 But I mean, these people are not that Jews.
00:19:18.440 They always go too far.
00:19:21.000 I mean, you look at this, just the history of them where they get constantly kicked out of countries and then they're allowed back in after, you know, a generation passes.
00:19:28.720 People are like, oh, come on, look at these poor rat faced people over here in their robes.
00:19:34.900 Let them in.
00:19:35.640 They're hungry.
00:19:36.220 You know, I mean, white people are very, very high altruism.
00:19:40.220 So they're like, OK, let these people back in, I guess.
00:19:42.760 We can't remember why we kicked them out.
00:19:45.900 And then they get kicked out again.
00:19:47.320 And it's like, what do you do to do this?
00:19:49.480 You have to be going too far.
00:19:51.420 I mean, you have to just be taking it too far and you have to be the thing about taking it too far.
00:19:55.580 You have to be unable to gauge that you have to not know that you're going too far.
00:20:00.620 Else you would be like, OK, wait, we got to chill.
00:20:02.900 They know they know we just got to calm down for a little while because if we don't, they're going to get really angry and kick us out again.
00:20:10.940 We know this has happened to us before.
00:20:12.960 We just need to relax and dial it back a notch and let the let the goyim cool off for a little while.
00:20:20.400 But they don't do that. Instead, they push it all the way and end up getting kicked out of countries historically.
00:20:27.040 So I think that's really that really is what we're seeing now that Donald Trump has just put these people into a frenzied state and they're just they're pushing it too far.
00:20:36.420 So that's why you see these things. It's like, why would you do this?
00:20:39.580 Why would you think that you could get away with this and not have everybody hate you?
00:20:44.740 Yeah, well, I tell you, you're absolutely right about that, that they push it too far 100 percent of the time.
00:20:53.060 And, you know, in history, you see it play out in a fairly orderly and uniform way because, you know, memes and things like that couldn't spread nearly as fast before the Internet, especially before even the printing press.
00:21:08.900 And so, you know, these people would have to move into a society in mass and then have a few decades to really, really get the pause going before the white people would say, OK, enough of this and have a pogrom or, you know, burn down the Jewish ghetto or whatever.
00:21:23.820 They're in town and kick them out. But we see it happen over and over now.
00:21:28.420 Now, the Jews just constantly they get caught with this garbage that they're pulling now that we have the Internet and people can fact check in real time and they turn around and double down on it.
00:21:41.280 And because of that, I think that's just more proof of what people like you and I have been saying for a long time that, you know, it's not necessarily.
00:21:50.720 I mean, sure, there are plenty of conspiracies involved, but it's not like it's this big Jewish conspiracy, the way the media tries to portray what we think of it's evolutionary behavior that has been gets passed along through their mitochondrial memory from one generation to the next.
00:22:09.020 It's they evolved to be parasites like this.
00:22:13.500 And, you know, every once in a while, you'll hear you'll hear him speaking right out of their old reptilian brain straight from that mitochondrial memory when they say things like, oh, well, you know, yeah, there's lots of Jews in America.
00:22:26.500 But the reason that we want open borders and multiculturalism is because, you know, every time we're in a white country for too long, there's a Holocaust.
00:22:34.620 So we just feel more comfortable with a bunch of dusky people around.
00:22:39.020 I mean, yeah, and they're I mean, they're they're parasites now, but they're also ruling.
00:22:50.000 So it's a different it's a different dynamic that's never existed before and it never could exist until urbanization, because it's like before urbanization, you had because the Jew is an urban creature.
00:23:03.040 It does not work.
00:23:04.380 So it can only really live in an urban area.
00:23:07.200 And before, you know, when 97 percent or whatever it was, were living on living on farms and had their own, you know, food supplies, they couldn't ever reach this level of control that they've that they've reached now.
00:23:27.980 And I don't think they're really biologically designed for a position of control.
00:23:33.520 They were always kind of on the edges of society feeding off of it, you know, and they'd eventually that eventually piss everybody off from from doing that, mainly with the money lending stuff.
00:23:43.020 And apparently with kidnapping children and drinking their blood, sacrificing them to their God.
00:23:51.940 Right.
00:23:53.220 Well, another thing that has led to the rise of this deal where you have the the paradigm of the parasite Jew as our rulers is the spread of democracy that started in the late 1800s, excuse me, the late 18th century.
00:24:11.360 With as long as countries were ruled top down, it was impossible for the Jew to become a ruler by constantly whining in the media and stuff like that.
00:24:23.180 But it was the spread of democracy that allowed this to happen, where it's a bottom up thing.
00:24:29.540 And, you know, they they go and try to convince all the what they consider the stupid guy of what they want.
00:24:35.860 And once it becomes clear that they can't convince enough stupid guy, then they just convince the stupid guy to open their borders and they get some really stupid people to come in here, make sure they all get to vote.
00:24:47.440 And sooner, sooner or later, the Jews are running things.
00:24:49.820 Yeah. The only time that they've had as much power as they have, as they as they do right now in America was the Bolshevik period.
00:25:03.220 And I mean, that's not, you know, going very far back in history, but that's the only only time they had this level of power.
00:25:08.600 And that only lasted, what, 13 years?
00:25:10.920 I mean, they pushed that, they pushed that past the dial, you know, very quickly, where people were just like, we can't take this anymore.
00:25:23.780 And, you know, Stalin came along and Stalin's like, well, I can solve this.
00:25:28.740 Yeah, they even turned the Soviets.
00:25:30.600 They even turned the Soviets anti-Semitic.
00:25:33.020 No, I mean, they, that was a totally, I mean, probably most people listening are aware that the Bolshevik revolution was like virtually 100% Jewish.
00:25:46.100 Especially, I mean, it was only, it was rumored in the, in the Russia, you know, but it's only been in the last decade that they actually confirmed that Lenin was Jewish.
00:25:56.260 Or maybe he, maybe he was half or a quarter, but I mean, he, he was, you know, considered himself.
00:26:03.260 He, he, he was partially Jewish and identified that way.
00:26:06.280 So yeah, the Bolshevik revolution was 100% Jewish and they had 100% Jewish rule.
00:26:14.160 Stalin was, was not Jewish and he had a bunch of the Jews executed and replaced the NKVD with the KGB.
00:26:21.640 He, he still had some Jews until they, I, I think they probably murdered him.
00:26:26.920 Yeah.
00:26:27.500 It was, it was during Purim that he, that he was probably poisoned.
00:26:32.020 I mean, this is long enough ago and a chaotic enough period that nobody knows for sure exactly how that happened.
00:26:38.640 There was no forensics, but there might've been forensics, but not, you know, ones that would be useful now.
00:26:46.860 But, um, it does look like he was murdered and, uh, that was because he had begun to crack down even harder on, on the Jews.
00:26:56.720 I mean, that, that, that, I'm not going to say that as like a hundred percent fact because I don't want to, you know, be saying a theory as if it's, if it's known as fact.
00:27:04.640 But I think that's most likely what happened with, with the death of Stalin.
00:27:09.080 Um, it's weird that the way that they're trying to play this down, because it's, it's not just this one thing.
00:27:16.220 It's been a hell of a rough couple of weeks for CNN.
00:27:19.900 Um, it started off with, uh, well, I'm not sure which thing came first.
00:27:25.400 You might remember, but the first thing that comes, the three, well, go ahead.
00:27:29.780 Well, the, uh, the, uh, Veritas, Project Veritas stuff, the James O'Keefe stuff, where he went in there and he got two producers and, um, Van Jones all to admit that the whole Russia thing was bullshit, that they all knew it, that they were pushing it for ratings, uh, and that they were going to keep pushing it.
00:27:53.180 And the one producer that he got, that dude was so stupid that as long as they told him, yeah, but you're such a smart, talented guy, he let them record him more than once.
00:28:03.300 Well, it was a different, um, it, it went back.
00:28:08.420 It was a woman the second time.
00:28:09.840 Right.
00:28:10.040 But, um, the, uh, yeah, no, I mean, he's a, he's a dumbass, man.
00:28:14.420 He starts talking again in a bar to some random person.
00:28:18.640 Um, I, I mean, I, I assume it was a good looking woman and he was, you know, saying, yeah, I'm that guy who you saw on the TV on a secret tape.
00:28:29.440 Yeah.
00:28:30.240 Women are like that.
00:28:31.680 I mean, it's probably, probably a good way to get laid, but, um, no, uh, the, the first thing in that timeline that happened was that CNN published a fake Russia story and they had to retract it.
00:28:47.200 And, and they fired the three guys who I think one of them had been working there for like 20 years.
00:28:51.600 I mean, these were, these were like, you know, uh, employees of the company that were, you know, they'd been working there a while.
00:28:58.680 They weren't just, you know, random people, um, uh, submitting an article or something, or, um, what do you call interns?
00:29:07.040 I mean, these, these were, these were, uh, salaried employees of, of CNN, um, investigative quote unquote investigative journalists.
00:29:17.260 And they fired all three of them for the, this fake news story, which, um, they had apparently just made up, uh, about one of the, one of the Trump guys colluding with Russia, that it was just a complete fake hoax story.
00:29:32.240 So they fired these three guys. And then the next day, O'Keefe dropped that first clip with the, with the guy saying that it's mostly bullshit right now.
00:29:44.240 It could be bullshit. And then my favorite part of that clip is when he says, you know, I don't know if that guy is gay.
00:29:51.760 He must be gay. That, that, that producer, he talks very faggy. Um, but he says, you know, Trump is kind of right.
00:30:00.860 When he says that this is a witch hunt. Yeah.
00:30:10.060 Yeah. Because there's nothing there. I mean, yeah, no, but I mean, just that he said, yeah, we were engaged in a witch hunt.
00:30:16.660 Trump is actually right. This is, this is an actual, um, witch hunt against him.
00:30:22.580 So, I mean, you know, that, that was just fantastic. I mean, to call it bullshit is one thing, but to say, yeah, we, we are engaged in a witch hunt.
00:30:30.880 Against this guy. And I mean, he says it's ratings. I, I think that's, you know, that's part of it.
00:30:36.000 That's an excuse. That's an excuse.
00:30:37.440 But I think that's like an excuse. Yeah. Cause it's, I mean, this is a, this is a Jewish ethnic agenda because they said, he said the first clip that, um, can't think of that producer's name right now.
00:30:49.260 Yeah. Um, as I say, I'm a little bit, a little bit foggy today. Uh, the, the, the first guy, the first, he called that American Pravda, which I thought was not a very good name.
00:31:02.000 But, uh, O'Keefe is a smart guy. He's not very good at all with branding. I even think Project Veritas is kind of a stupid name, but, um, yeah.
00:31:12.260 Uh, the, the, the, the first producer on that, on that first clip, um, from, I guess he was Atlanta or did they get that wrong?
00:31:22.620 That he was from Atlanta. I can't remember. But, uh, he said, um, that, uh, Zucker himself said after the, the climate accords thing, when, when Trump says that he was pulling out of the climate accords, that, that he called a meeting, which I assume is some kind of, uh, conference call, um, with, with all the, the head producers of, of CNN studios and said, okay.
00:31:51.620 Okay. This was great talking about the, the climate change accords for 36 hours. It's time to get back on Russia. So, I mean, that, you know, this was a pretty big story, uh, as far as if you're a leftist, you know, the global warming, um, they, they spent a lot of time talking about that.
00:32:12.000 And they, uh, historically, this was a big thing, uh, uh, you know, a crisis hysterical thing to talk about, but they just cut that out and went back to Russia. So, I mean, you know, this is, this is more than just, um, just ratings.
00:32:26.980 Yeah. It's, it's, it's the, uh, ongoing, uh, witch hunt, like they said it was. And the goal of it is to destroy Donald Trump and demoralize anyone, um, who does or ever did support him, uh, or any of his policies or any of that, uh, that that's what they've got going on.
00:32:48.140 And that's how, you know, uh, the whole thing ties together so well, like the same week, uh, I can't remember her name, but it's the blonde headed news bimbo that CNN has. She did, uh, one of these panel things where they bring in regular viewers like you and that they, she sat there and she asked this one guy, you know, why doesn't he think that the Russia thing has any merit or whatever?
00:33:15.800 And he gave an answer that made him sound just stupid as hell. Like somebody who sits around listening to Alex Jones all the time and really believes in the reptilians and the Germanic death cults and all. And then at the same time as all the project Veritas stuff started coming out, somebody on that panel apparently had had their phone inside their pocket recording audio, or maybe it was somebody who works for CNN. I don't know. Uh, gave O'Keefe the uncut audio from that.
00:33:45.220 And the guy gave a long, very reason to answer. And, uh, you can tell they spent more time chopping up these people's answers than they did given an actual interviewer producing the news clip.
00:33:56.220 Yeah, no, it was probably the, the guy actually, I don't know if he was Italian. He had a very New Yorky accent. I can't tell the difference between different New York accents, but, um, he was very, he was very well-spoken actually. They made him sound like a conspiracy theorist.
00:34:12.780 He's probably the one that recorded it, I think. But yeah, I mean, they, they just, the, the, the selective editing, that's why Alex Jones won't do, uh, recorded interviews.
00:34:24.660 He'll only do live. Um, and that's why, I mean, everybody knows that Alex Jones doesn't do recorded interviews. He only does live interviews. I mean, that's been the case.
00:34:34.340 I used to listen to Alex Jones, 20 years I've been listening to this guy, as long as he's been on air. I used to listen to him on a shortwave radio back before, you know, internet radio was even a thing.
00:34:44.200 You were listening to him when he was, uh, when he was a local guy in Austin.
00:34:48.280 Yeah, no, I, I've listened to the guy since nine, since before nine 11 happened, um, 99 or 2000, which I think he did have, uh, I guess that's not quite 20 years, but, um, anyway, yeah, he, he's always refused interviews unless they were live.
00:35:09.660 And, uh, uh, Megyn Kelly just thought this guy was gonna, I mean, that, that was one of the funniest stories. Everything just keeps getting funnier. Everything that happens keeps getting funnier.
00:35:20.800 But, um, Megyn Kelly thought she could record this guy and that he was just some dumb ass. I mean, this is a guy who believes in, uh, mind control rays and space and the weather weapons.
00:35:36.840 Yeah. Yeah. I mean, he, you know, I mean, I don't know people will, whenever you start talking about conspiracies, you're going to hurt somebody's feelings, but I mean, whatever the case, this guy believes in some really hardcore stuff, even if it's all true. Um, this guy believes in some hardcore stuff and you think that this guy is just going to trust you as Megyn Kelly, that he's just going to be like, Oh yeah, sure. You seem like a really nice person.
00:36:03.320 Yeah. So he, he recorded all that. You know, he recorded the interview itself and he recorded phone calls, which in Texas, you're allowed to record phone calls without, without the other person's permission. And a lot of the country that's illegal, but, um, in Texas, you're allowed to do it.
00:36:19.580 So he did that to her and then he, he posted it all and he set this bitch up. I mean, he knew that what exactly what she was going to do from the beginning that she was going to do a hit piece and chop up everything he said and make him look insane, which I mean, he might be insane, but you know, I mean, she was going to twist what he said using this.
00:36:38.260 Like you said, like they did to this, this guy on the, on the panel or the, whatever you call that town hall type thing. Um, the, uh, selective editing, which makes people look stupid. So that's, I mean, that's another way they just, it's fake news. I mean, it's not, it's not real. If you're not accurately communicating what an interviewee intended to say, then you're, you are lying.
00:37:04.180 Yeah. Well, one thing that no one should ever engage in is in these town hall type panels on these shows because they're never, ever honest with them that they always go one of two ways. Um, the ones like that one are always stacked heavy with white people and they're always purposely edited to make the white people who have normal opinions look stupid as hell.
00:37:30.460 But the converse of that is the ones the conservative guys will do. And the major offender here is like Sean Hannity. Every time black people do something bad, like some black lives matter, people shoot some cops or something like that. He'll have this big panel of black people in suits and all like that and get them up there.
00:37:52.120 And he, and he, and he edits everything to try to try to make it look like black people are actually just like you and me, except maybe smarter. And they're natural Republicans. If it just weren't for these liberals putting these bad ideas in their heads.
00:38:07.940 Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. That's, that's always the line that they're, they're just the same as us, except they're like children and can't think for themselves.
00:38:16.140 Right. Um, but, but, uh, but with all the, all these things combined, it, it, it just brings it to a super fine point that now you have CNN running around policing what is posted on the internet.
00:38:31.960 And like you said, this wasn't necessarily just about Han asshole solo. This was meant to, uh, just completely chill whatever's going on, uh, that they don't like on social media and such, because, uh, they kept pointing out, oh, look, he posted this picture of all the people who work for CNN with a star of David beside all the Jews.
00:38:53.880 And which of course meant like, there were two little pictures in there that didn't have one, but, um, so suddenly, um, you know, they're, they're, they've got all these narratives going at once.
00:39:05.860 You know, this, uh, news station that constantly has stories about Trump's cabinet, too many white men, uh, uh, general electric's board of directors, too many white men, just, just shit like that constantly.
00:39:17.780 But suddenly it's bad to point out CNN, too many Jews, right?
00:39:23.040 And yeah, no, even Ann Coulter brought this up.
00:39:26.480 Yeah.
00:39:27.760 Yeah.
00:39:27.980 Well, Ann Coulter, um, I think, uh, she's a lot closer to, um, what we think on the Jewish question than she lets on because every now and then when she gets good and excited, she lets it out.
00:39:40.020 Like, remember after that one debate when she said, just how many fucking Jews do you think live in America?
00:39:45.440 I mean, those were exact words.
00:39:49.620 Yeah.
00:39:50.620 She was live tweeting stuff.
00:39:52.620 Yeah.
00:39:52.800 She was probably drinking.
00:39:54.280 It was pretty late night debate and she was probably drinking and it came out.
00:39:59.380 No, she said this.
00:40:01.380 And it was infuriating.
00:40:02.940 I was watching the debate live, too.
00:40:05.020 And every single politician except Trump, and this was back when there were like 14 of them still in the debate.
00:40:12.700 Every single one of them, they asked what their vision for America was.
00:40:16.740 They didn't mention anything about America.
00:40:19.000 They all started talking about all the shit they were going to do for Israel.
00:40:23.720 Yeah.
00:40:24.580 No, you, you gotta, you gotta think that starts sending off red flags in somebody's brain.
00:40:30.040 Um, it doesn't, it doesn't though, uh, apparently, or it didn't with, with most mainstream Republicans because of the, uh, the Christian Zionism type stuff.
00:40:41.520 Right.
00:40:43.720 Well, the, the whole thing is they, they all see this as it's a thing they've been doing forever.
00:40:52.560 And so they're going to think that it's a good strategy until it has been proven to them time and time again that every time you mention Israel, you're going to lose votes.
00:41:02.780 Because, you know, these, uh, GOP, uh, congressmen and senators and such, they know, well, if their support is dropping on them, there's two things they can do.
00:41:15.160 And one of them, which is very effective is to start rattling the saber about some Muslim country, you know, claim that this Muslim country is, uh, about to set off a nuke over here or something.
00:41:26.200 And we've got to go over there and invade them.
00:41:27.760 But the most effective thing in the world is just start saying Israel, Israel, Israel, like a evangelical preacher from the South or something.
00:41:37.320 And all these people are like, oh my God, yes.
00:41:39.360 What a great man.
00:41:40.240 We must vote for him and help these Jews.
00:41:42.280 Yeah, no, but I mean, that's, that's kind of going away because CNN, when they were justifying this, they kept saying, uh, cause you know, they, they haven't backed down.
00:41:53.440 They've doubled down on, on threatening this guy and, you know, said that it wasn't really a threat somehow, which they can't, I mean, they can't explain how, I mean, it's a threat.
00:42:02.760 And then they'll, they'll say, well, here's this threat.
00:42:05.180 This is not a threat.
00:42:06.140 But it's like, um, you know, the snow is black.
00:42:11.020 Uh, but what they've been saying and trying to justify it, because they are justifying it rather than apologizing.
00:42:17.860 I mean, they could have thrown this Kaczynski guy under the bus and been like, well, we didn't approve this.
00:42:23.760 Um, but they're, they're justifying it.
00:42:25.800 And they're like, well, we can do anything to this guy because he made a meme about the Jews.
00:42:32.920 And, and anybody who does that, you know, it's like they're pure evil.
00:42:36.700 So you can just do anything you want to somebody as soon as they question the Jews.
00:42:41.960 And I mean, that, that's actually how they're presenting it as if that argument is going to be moving to the public.
00:42:47.520 Because I mean, at the same time, you know, liberals have, have believed in the Jews because a lot of their heroes are Jews, uh, rather than, um, because of the Israel thing.
00:42:58.960 But I, I mean, they're, they're turning on the Jews.
00:43:01.500 The Jews are in a pretty bad position right now.
00:43:05.000 I mean, they're, they're freaking out there because they're also at the same time that, I mean, we're seeing them freak out on the, on the right side because we're paying more attention to that.
00:43:12.560 But they're freaking out on the, on the, on the left as well over this, this Israel stuff.
00:43:18.180 And, you know, uh, BDS stands for boycott, divest, and sanctions, um, which is, you know, the movement to, to punish Israel for what they do to the Palestinians.
00:43:30.820 Um, and they're, they're not dealing with that intelligently either.
00:43:36.020 They're not, you know, dealing with it rationally and approaching the situation.
00:43:40.160 Like, like, what do we do about this?
00:43:41.900 They're just freaking out and calling everybody anti-Semites.
00:43:45.020 So, um, which, which gets the wrong response.
00:43:49.180 I mean, that's exactly how you don't want to deal with something.
00:43:52.180 Um, when, when people are, are critical of you.
00:43:56.040 I mean, I guess it used to work and they just think they can keep doing it.
00:43:59.720 But I mean, they, they have, they have data now that this is not working and instead of, you know, incorporating that data into their, their, their program, they just keep doing the same thing.
00:44:11.420 And, uh, you know, a lot of people are getting angry about this.
00:44:15.200 This is, this is coming.
00:44:16.660 I mean, Ann Coulter is kind of the, the, you know, the, the first person that was mainstream that we now see is like, I mean, she, that she's saying this stuff.
00:44:27.380 That, that clip of her, she's on some talk show talking about this meme.
00:44:31.460 And she says, well, what, what about it, CNN?
00:44:34.080 You seem to have an over-representation of Jews and you're going to talk about Trump has too many white males.
00:44:40.100 What is going on here?
00:44:41.260 What is going on with these Jews?
00:44:43.180 So, I mean, she, she went from the mainstream over to pretty much, I think her headspace is about where we're at.
00:44:50.260 And, um, you know, I think you're going to see more and more and more of that.
00:44:55.020 This is going into, into the mainstream.
00:44:57.680 And basically what they, what they keep doing is with their own programs, pushing it closer to the mainstream because making, um, Han asshole solo into a martyr.
00:45:11.440 And then also talking about how he's an anti-Semite, this brings it closer to the mainstream because it's like people naturally are, are siding with this guy.
00:45:21.120 Both, both left and right are saying, well, you know, I mean, you, you can't just hunt people down, anonymous people, random people.
00:45:28.200 I mean, anybody could have made that meme.
00:45:30.140 Who made that meme was irrelevant.
00:45:32.200 It has nothing to do with anything.
00:45:34.140 Um, and it doesn't even have anything, anything to do with anything from their side.
00:45:38.160 The only reason that they would have dug this guy up is to do what they did, which is to make an example of him as a, and publicly threaten him.
00:45:46.600 Um, and, and, you know, do that, uh, that he says he encourages others not to go down the same road that he went down.
00:45:55.980 Like, it's like he's, you know, became a, a drug addict or a serial killer or something, a rapist.
00:46:04.560 Um, yeah.
00:46:05.040 And, and the part about, uh, trolling is an addiction.
00:46:08.340 And before you feed your addiction, please consider the toll that it takes on random people.
00:46:16.180 He didn't write that.
00:46:17.880 He didn't write that.
00:46:19.040 But this is, this is like, uh, a real life version of, you know, the old dramatic crap where, you know, these bad cops go and arrest the wrong guy and they stick him in some room and beat him and threaten his family and stuff until he signs a confession that they wrote for him.
00:46:39.400 That's what we've got going here.
00:46:43.080 No, I mean, exactly.
00:46:44.740 It's like the, the, the, um, old Korean videos, confessions, or the ISIS does this too, where they, where they have people before they execute them, they give a, a confession.
00:46:59.200 Um, so it's, it's that same, that same kind of thing.
00:47:03.680 And then, then Kaczynski says, he just called me and he says, it's not a threat.
00:47:08.500 And then he's, he's glad I posted this.
00:47:11.120 I mean, cause this, this sickening, fuck, um, Jack, how do you say his name?
00:47:19.000 Posobiec?
00:47:19.780 Posobiec?
00:47:20.980 Posobiec or something like that.
00:47:22.520 Yeah.
00:47:22.820 Yeah.
00:47:23.280 Some, I guess it's Polish name.
00:47:25.760 Um, he's an alt-right turd.
00:47:29.060 Yeah.
00:47:29.780 So he made up this, I mean, at least he disseminated false information, whether or not he had some source that happened to be wrong.
00:47:38.360 I don't know if that was the case, I don't know why he's not calling the source out, um, because it would have had to have been from CNN.
00:47:44.820 But anyway, he, uh, he made this claim that it's a 15 year old homosexual, that, that Han asshole Solo is a 15 year old homosexual that just came out to his family.
00:47:55.580 I mean, he did this like elaborate.
00:47:57.280 He says he just came out that he's this cocksucker to his family.
00:48:00.540 And now he's scared because CNN, um, and I mean, I can see how he would think like this, cause I mean, he's, he's like the, the, the stereotypical rat fucker, this guy.
00:48:14.640 I mean, he rat fucker is a term for, um, political dirty tricks master.
00:48:22.700 And this is what he does basically professionally.
00:48:25.760 And I think during the campaign, he did some stuff that was pretty cool, actually.
00:48:29.760 I mean, it was, you know, it's subterfuge and lies and deception and all this, but, um, uh, some pretty good stuff.
00:48:37.520 But I mean, now he's just started using this technique for self-promotion basically.
00:48:43.900 So he, uh, he made up this story, spread this disinformation that this was a, uh, 15 year old homosexual.
00:48:51.660 Um, when in actual fact, the guy said, which they dug this up and Posobiec deleted these tweets where he said this stuff about him being a 15 year old homosexual, which that went all the way up to Donald Trump Jr.
00:49:05.780 was, was, was reporting this.
00:49:08.500 Um, but it turns out he was a teenager in the, uh, when the Hubble telescope was launched.
00:49:16.580 He said, he said, I was in my teens.
00:49:18.080 So was I, I think.
00:49:19.780 It was 1990.
00:49:21.720 So.
00:49:22.060 Oh, okay.
00:49:22.480 That wasn't.
00:49:23.040 Okay.
00:49:25.020 Yeah.
00:49:25.640 So he, uh, he's in his, in his forties.
00:49:31.140 Um, right.
00:49:32.500 And he probably has a family.
00:49:34.920 I mean, he's 40 years old.
00:49:36.800 He's, I mean, you know, people's families are messed up now, but he's probably got kids.
00:49:41.580 Um, he might not still be married.
00:49:43.720 He probably has some corporate job.
00:49:45.860 He doesn't want to lose.
00:49:47.120 Yeah, exactly.
00:49:49.380 Exactly.
00:49:49.920 So, I mean, he's got, you know, quite a good reason.
00:49:53.680 I think at this point he should just come out.
00:49:56.080 Uh, yeah.
00:49:57.260 He's what I would do because.
00:49:59.540 He should sue for Soviet because.
00:50:01.660 One of my dragons.
00:50:03.140 Yeah.
00:50:03.580 I mean, you, you get, uh, you get attacked by, you get attacked by the Jews and then some
00:50:10.440 alt-white turd comes out and says that you're a goober smoocher.
00:50:14.240 I mean, it's like insult to injury.
00:50:16.820 Yeah, exactly.
00:50:17.900 That was probably worse than the, than the CNN threat.
00:50:20.700 But yeah, I'd much rather be, I mean, of course it's true in my case, but I would, I would,
00:50:25.740 I'm not saying one way or the other about Han asshole solo, but I mean, being an anti-Semite
00:50:31.260 is like a badge of honor and being a turd burglar is like the worst thing there is.
00:50:39.720 Yeah.
00:50:40.940 No, he, uh, I, there's, there's no evidence that he's, that he's a homosexual and we now
00:50:47.200 know that he's not 15 years old.
00:50:48.720 This is a, this is a rumor.
00:50:50.740 Um, you know, this is, this is a martyr.
00:50:53.740 We should look at Han asshole solo as a, as a hero.
00:50:58.780 Um, I mean, okay, whatever he cucked, he's a random guy on the internet.
00:51:02.420 I mean, it's, it's his, it's his, uh, avatar is his screen name.
00:51:08.540 But I mean, the, the threat here from CNN is that they're going to be watching him.
00:51:13.360 Like they're going to be tracking him.
00:51:15.180 So if he makes a new account to make memes with, then they'll come back and out him.
00:51:20.560 Um, yeah, it was the threat.
00:51:22.720 Like we, we are watching you and you know, I mean, they, they said, well, this isn't a
00:51:28.140 threat, but I don't think that they, they meant for anybody to believe that it's not a threat.
00:51:32.220 Like they, um, they didn't believe that anybody would believe that it's not a threat.
00:51:36.640 And I don't think they wanted people to believe that because they, you know, they, they, it was,
00:51:40.800 uh, like, okay, anonymous internet, you're on notice.
00:51:44.400 We're CNN, we're the, we're the internet police.
00:51:48.800 And if you, if you make a meme about us, we're coming for you.
00:51:53.700 Um, I think that was, you know, the whole purpose of it.
00:51:56.560 Well, what, uh, Han asshole solo should do on a personal level is I don't think he should
00:52:03.880 quit shit posting.
00:52:04.960 What he should do is he should get a VPN and start a new internet persona called Darth
00:52:11.360 nigger Vader.
00:52:12.960 And then he could continue.
00:52:16.060 But as far as the, you know, I think I need to touch on this for just a second, because
00:52:20.940 you know, we just saw it happen with poor Han asshole solo, which I mean, I can't say that
00:52:25.880 enough.
00:52:26.280 That's one of the funniest usernames ever.
00:52:27.980 I mean, I know it's simple and all, but I mean, it just rolls off the tongue so well,
00:52:32.920 Han asshole solo, but, um, it's understandable the way he reacted because I've been doxxed before
00:52:41.740 to, um, not while I was doing alt right stuff, but when, you know, you're posting under an
00:52:49.760 anonymous, uh, username and then one day you log onto the internet and there's your picture
00:52:56.680 and your real name and all this stuff.
00:52:58.540 And it's pointing at all the things that you did online.
00:53:00.720 Even if you haven't done anything that you're embarrassed about, it's shocking the moment
00:53:05.460 it happens.
00:53:06.060 You're like, Oh shit, what's about to, what all is about to start happening?
00:53:09.120 The phone's about to start ringing.
00:53:10.460 People are going to show up at my door.
00:53:12.160 And of course, none of that ever happens, but the internet reaches out and grabs you
00:53:16.720 like all of a sudden internet is real life.
00:53:19.540 I don't know.
00:53:20.240 I've always just used my real name because I was like, fuck it.
00:53:23.640 Who cares?
00:53:24.400 Yeah.
00:53:24.680 Well, you know, guys like us can guys like us can do that.
00:53:28.460 And of course, I mean, yeah, I'm as my door, but everybody in the world who follows me or
00:53:33.220 hates me or whatever knows exactly who I am because of that original doxxing.
00:53:37.360 I've just kept the username because I like the username and I like the Bigfoot persona
00:53:42.360 of the avatar and all that stuff.
00:53:44.080 And everybody knows me by it, but it is very freeing to be a public face in this movement.
00:53:50.060 And then I admit openly, you know, not everybody can do that right now because, you know, people
00:53:54.860 have, like we said, corporate jobs and family situations and stuff.
00:53:59.140 But nothing's going to really, I mean, yeah, some people have lost their jobs or whatever
00:54:04.720 or maybe been asked not to come back to, you know, the Elks Lodge or, you know, whatever
00:54:11.040 because of some opinion they expressed on the internet.
00:54:14.680 But it's not very likely that if you're just some anonymous dude that, like, if you posted
00:54:22.880 something about that, you're tired of black crime, that the new Black Panthers are going
00:54:27.720 to show up at your door and lynch your family or something.
00:54:32.680 No, it's exaggerated the idea that people are going to come for you because of something
00:54:39.800 you said on the internet, although, you know, this was a specific situation where CNN was
00:54:47.780 deciding to make this a huge story.
00:54:50.120 So, I mean, obviously there would have been, if they would have just released this guy's
00:54:54.220 name, they would have had reporters out there.
00:54:56.160 And if CNN is sending reporters, everybody else is sending reporters out front of this guy's
00:55:00.600 house.
00:55:01.720 I mean, that would have been nuts because he made a meme.
00:55:04.500 They've got, you know, an army of reporters outside.
00:55:07.200 And the other thing is, journalists, a lot of people don't understand this, they're like
00:55:11.780 cops.
00:55:14.200 I mean, they basically are, this is what this is, they're functioning as cops.
00:55:17.760 And I have these people harassing me and harassing my family, this Luke O'Brien guy, you know,
00:55:22.580 he's acting like a cop.
00:55:25.380 And they are like cops in that if you don't talk to them, they don't have anything to work
00:55:32.960 with.
00:55:33.340 Um, so if, if this, instead of going on and, and doing all this stuff with his account,
00:55:40.440 um, and deleting everything and then calling CNN, that was the, that was the timeline there.
00:55:47.300 CNN emailed and called him and I think messaged him on Facebook, like, Hey, we found you.
00:55:53.440 And then he went and deleted everything.
00:55:56.060 Okay.
00:55:56.660 Yeah.
00:55:57.340 So if he would have not done that and just been like, I don't know what the hell you're
00:56:02.880 talking about.
00:56:04.420 Um, he, they, I don't think they would have been able, I mean, maybe they could somehow
00:56:08.540 prove it, but I don't think they would have enough to prove it without the admission.
00:56:11.740 I think that they found probably what happened.
00:56:14.900 Cause they said they traced his social media.
00:56:16.780 Probably what happened was that he had posted on Facebook, a link to something that he had
00:56:21.780 done on Reddit or somewhere else using the name Han asshole solo and, um, you know, connected
00:56:30.100 it that way.
00:56:30.860 But he could have just said, well, I'm a different, I, he could have said nothing.
00:56:34.580 If, if he would have said nothing, I don't think they could have publicly proved that it
00:56:39.240 was him or that they would have even pursued it further.
00:56:41.720 Well, even if they remember that, that, that, that journalists are like cops.
00:56:46.840 If anything ever happens, don't talk to journalists.
00:56:50.360 Mike Enoch did this and caused himself all kinds of problems when he got doxed.
00:56:55.000 He talked to a journalist who is actually not that bad of a guy.
00:57:00.380 Um, one of the, one of the guys that does an alt-right beat.
00:57:03.540 He's, he's actually the, the only journalist can't think of his name right now.
00:57:07.640 Matthew chef something.
00:57:10.260 Um, shepherd, no, Matthew shepherd was that guy who had AIDS who got dragged behind
00:57:16.320 a, Oh, okay.
00:57:17.340 Okay.
00:57:18.040 I remember that.
00:57:19.060 But, um, yeah, yeah.
00:57:21.460 Was that in Texas?
00:57:22.660 I think it was.
00:57:23.600 That's Wyoming.
00:57:24.480 I think Wyoming, Wyoming.
00:57:26.800 Oh, that's crazy.
00:57:28.060 I got gays in Wyoming, but, um, yeah, at a college, no less.
00:57:34.600 Yeah.
00:57:35.040 Uh, no, um, so he, he talked to this guy who I think is, you know, wasn't even necessarily
00:57:42.040 trying to manipulate him or fuck him.
00:57:44.400 Just emailed him and caused himself a bunch of problems.
00:57:48.780 Um, so yeah, journalists don't, don't talk to journalists unless you know exactly what
00:57:55.360 you're trying to say to them.
00:57:56.780 But if, if anybody ever gets in a situation like Han asshole solo, where they're messaging
00:58:02.200 you saying, we, we found you, he, he, um, just don't respond or be like, I don't know
00:58:09.780 what the hell you're talking about, but I mean, really just don't respond because what
00:58:14.200 here's the bottom line of all that.
00:58:17.940 But even if they went to the trouble and got somebody like, you know, say you were posting
00:58:24.100 these things and you didn't use a VPN and they got your IP address and tracked it straight
00:58:28.740 to your house, they still haven't proved anything because all you have to say is, and for 90%
00:58:34.700 of people, at least this would be true is like, do you know how many people in my house use
00:58:40.220 the computer that uses that IP address?
00:58:42.800 Jesus, you're saying I did this.
00:58:45.000 There's four people live in this house.
00:58:46.560 You know, kids and stuff.
00:58:50.180 Yeah.
00:58:51.420 No, but, but seriously, the, the, the whole thing with these journalists and, uh, the way
00:58:58.020 that they operate it, they have, they are trying to be the self styled Stasi, uh, if you will,
00:59:04.720 of the United States.
00:59:06.600 And I guess in Europe, basically of Western civilization, because they go around doing this crap all the
00:59:11.820 time. And the one thing they really hate is if there is an impartial record left behind
00:59:18.060 of what they did. Because like, you know, we were talking about the news bimbo, uh, with
00:59:23.900 their panel and stuff. When that guy gave the, the uncut audio to O'Keefe, she sent him an email,
00:59:31.300 a one word email. It was all caps, bold font said, really? With like 10 question marks, you know,
00:59:37.600 like, Oh my God, what a terrible thing. You recorded me while I was recording you. Right.
00:59:42.760 And Luke O'Brien.
00:59:44.800 Oh yeah, go ahead.
00:59:46.340 Luke O'Brien did the same thing. He called me and you know, the readers know this already.
00:59:51.720 He called me and did an interview with me when he was trying to get, uh, when he was trying to
00:59:58.080 intimidate all your family and your childhood friends and stuff to talk to him about you because
01:00:03.100 he was going all over Twitter and he was just grabbing random Twitter people. And I'm not going
01:00:09.160 to name any names, but some of them are people that anybody in the alt-right knows those people
01:00:14.420 not only don't know you, they hate you. They have websites dedicated to claiming that people like
01:00:20.980 yourself and myself are Jews, or we work for the government or something like that. And he's like,
01:00:26.580 I hear your friends with Andrew Anglin, uh, please DM me here. I'm doing a story on him. So like for
01:00:32.620 four or five months, he was claiming he was doing this story and everybody that I talked to that he
01:00:38.160 contacted like that. He told him, and I'm right up against my deadline. I've got to publish now.
01:00:43.060 And that's what he told me too. He does this three hour interview where every question he asks,
01:00:48.820 uh, sounded like a cop trying to find a criminal and no shit. That's what the whole thing sounded
01:00:54.860 like. But then later on, because of some of the things that he had said, you know, you released a
01:01:01.120 tiny little snippet of him asking me a question and he emailed me and he was, he was like,
01:01:08.160 oh, that was so underhanded, underhanded, two-faced to record me.
01:01:13.940 Yeah. While these people, while these people are going around threatening everybody. I mean,
01:01:19.160 this guy was calling up my extended and I'm not going to go into details because, you know,
01:01:23.140 if he ever publishes, there's some stuff I want to hold back, you know, that I can release, uh,
01:01:29.060 afterwards. But, um, I don't think he's ever going to publish a story in the Atlantic after,
01:01:34.500 I mean, just what I've already said about what he's been caught in the documentation that I have
01:01:39.460 of what he's done. But I mean, it's, it's a nasty thing to start calling up people's family members.
01:01:45.360 I mean, look, if you want to try and kick my ass, like come hunt me down and fight me on the street
01:01:52.080 or something. I mean, that's one thing, but to just go after every, and extended family members who
01:01:57.320 I haven't even talked to in years to call these people up and start threatening them, you know,
01:02:01.540 say that you're going to defame them. And, uh, cause you know, I mean, my family, I I've got an
01:02:06.560 extended family and these people, uh, probably will presumably, um, haven't talked to all of them,
01:02:14.140 but I would think they probably wouldn't agree with what is on the, on the website. You know,
01:02:18.560 it's not, not obviously not a mainstream, uh, website, the daily stormer, but they're, they're,
01:02:26.460 they're my family. They're not gonna, they're not gonna rat me out to some,
01:02:29.520 some journalists and say some negative thing about me. And what, what he was saying is that
01:02:33.780 if you don't say something negative about him, then you're protecting him. And, um, that makes
01:02:41.820 you, he would say this line that makes you a part of the story, which I've talked to, I've talked to
01:02:47.500 several people on the, who, who he said that to on the phone. And then I've got that documented in,
01:02:52.640 in a text message and Facebook messages, um, where he would say that makes you a part of the story,
01:02:58.900 which means I'm going to, I'm going to defame you publicly. Um, if you don't do what I want you
01:03:05.220 to do, which is, I mean, it's, it's like the, it's like the, uh, Han asshole solo thing where it's,
01:03:10.860 um, probably illegal. I would, I would assume it's illegal. It's, it's blackmail. Um,
01:03:17.860 Oh, absolutely. And, and the thing is CNN acknowledged that that was the case because
01:03:23.560 in the preface to them saying that they were not going to publish his, uh, details at this time,
01:03:30.000 they talked about how, you know, uh, releasing people's names and info on the internet is a,
01:03:37.160 is this thing doxing. And, uh, it's a really dangerous thing. It exposes people to danger
01:03:43.500 of injury and losing their lives and all this stuff. And then they say, okay, so we're not going
01:03:48.740 to post Han asshole solo stuff anymore unless he's mean to Jews again. Yeah. We're, we're,
01:03:54.460 we're not going to dock them. Yeah. No, I mean, it's, and it's this, what's so incredible is that
01:04:00.640 the media views itself as a special, like an elite class that's beyond, I mean, like Jews, which they,
01:04:08.020 they are, they are obviously most of them are Jewish. It's all owned by Jews and they, and they,
01:04:13.640 but they take on this and you see non-Jews that are going along with it. Um, but they're, they're,
01:04:19.560 they're a victim class that they're, they're a victim of the people. Like the people are revolting
01:04:25.640 against them and, and they're, they're victims. And the first amendment somehow means that they're,
01:04:32.000 they're victims. And that to, to even say that they're lying, um, is against the rules that that's
01:04:38.780 what the first amendment was, was to make. I mean, this is how they, this is how they frame this.
01:04:43.260 Like the first amendment was written in the constitution to make it so you couldn't question
01:04:48.840 anything that the corporate media said, um, that that was the purpose of it to, to define them as
01:04:55.460 a sacred, as like a priest class that cannot be questioned. Okay. So, I mean, this is nuts.
01:05:01.740 I just pulled up this Washington post, um, after the Han asshole solo, uh, event on the fourth,
01:05:12.460 the, it was the evening of the fourth, um, we've published an article on daily stormer about it.
01:05:21.200 Um, saying, you know, you push this too far. Now we're coming back at you. And he said,
01:05:28.740 this, this woman who her name is own Heiser, Abby own Heiser. I don't know if that's a Jewish
01:05:38.460 or a German name, but, uh, she quotes, we've here, um, saying that we're, we're going to find
01:05:45.800 and go interview your family members. Um,
01:05:49.580 And she says, yeah, she quotes that. And then she says, it's a particularly threatening version of an,
01:06:01.740 of an inversion that is common on the internet today. Keep reporting on the Trump internet and
01:06:08.260 the Trump internet will decide it's quote reporting on you. And many mainstream outlets are still
01:06:22.640 struggling to contend with it. So they're going to, they're going to struggle some more before it's
01:06:27.880 over this. It's this, it's this attitude of like, how dare you? We we're in charge here. And,
01:06:35.000 you know, I mean, we've always had Bane as the mascot of our, of our site that, uh, you know,
01:06:41.140 do you feel in charge? Um, and that, that's really, that's really what this is. It's that,
01:06:47.380 it's that scene from the dark night where there's, it's actually a Jewish actor is screaming about how
01:06:54.660 things are out of control. And he says, I'm in charge here. And Bane puts his hand on his shoulder.
01:07:01.280 You know, Bane in that movie is very tall. Yeah. The actor is not actually, he was standing on a box
01:07:07.520 for that scene, but he's, he's hovering, you know, looming over this guy and he puts his arm on his
01:07:13.200 shoulder and he says, do you feel in charge? And right before he breaks his neck. Yeah.
01:07:20.520 Um, so that's, it's very much what's happening here that the media is, is screaming, we're in
01:07:31.040 charge here and the, and the internet, which I mean, you could call it the alternative media,
01:07:36.180 but it, because it's citizen media, I mean, I'm a citizen, I'm not a professional journalist.
01:07:40.760 Um, and, and, and, you know, all these people on, on Reddit, um, and, and even Alex Jones and, uh,
01:07:49.800 and the sort of more, uh, uh, better organized alternative media, um, is still, is still,
01:07:59.720 you know, citizen journalism basically. Um, but the, so the internet itself is, is revolting and these
01:08:08.360 people feel like they can keep telling us what to do. And so this, this, this Han Aso Solo,
01:08:13.780 this threat by CNN was the, was this, it's, it's that scene with them raging saying, you can't do
01:08:22.020 this to us. We're in charge. And this is response that CNN is getting now is, um, is, is asking if
01:08:31.480 they feel in charge. Right. Well, you know what the, the line you just said, you said the internet
01:08:37.220 itself is revolting. I can imagine the people at CNN saying those exact words, but with a completely
01:08:44.880 different meaning. But, uh, the, uh, uh, you're right. The internet's revolting, but the thing,
01:08:53.080 you know, this citizen journalism stuff, I've been involved in that for a long time. And I think that
01:08:59.360 that is the real media, uh, this Leviathan of professional journalism is, has been nothing but
01:09:08.620 a tool of propaganda and political power since way before I was born. And this idea that they're
01:09:15.780 the gatekeepers and they're the only people that the first amendment is for, they've been developing
01:09:21.260 that for decades and they've got the politicians on their side with it and everything. Uh, there was
01:09:27.080 an interesting case here in Texas, uh, over the last week or so where, uh, now it doesn't really
01:09:33.500 even matter what the law is. Um, if you're not, uh, a credentialed mainstream media person, the
01:09:41.260 government will deny you even when you have the explicit right to cover something. Cause like here
01:09:46.220 in Texas, we have a law and it's been ruled on by the person who is currently our governor, Greg Abbott,
01:09:54.040 when he was the attorney general of Texas. Uh, and it clearly states that any citizen of the United
01:10:01.480 States, whether he lives in Texas or lives in the town or County or whatever it is, where he's wanting
01:10:07.760 to go and film an open meeting of any government, uh, whether it's elected bureaucracy, whatever,
01:10:15.660 if they're holding an open meeting and you're a citizen of the United States in Texas, you have
01:10:19.320 the right to go there and record that meeting. And they have had some fairly controversial meetings
01:10:25.380 in some of these little bureaucracies. Uh, and this Mexican that runs this, uh, one little bureaucratic
01:10:33.100 meeting last week had a woman arrested because she went in there to film. And, uh, he had said that
01:10:40.500 the only people allowed to film would be people who were credentialed by the Capitol, which meant
01:10:46.920 mainstream media reporters. And the woman had her laptop with her there. And she had the law and
01:10:53.640 governor. I'm not, well now governor Abbott, then attorney general Abbott's, uh, uh, ruling on it,
01:11:00.680 uh, up there. And she's shown him, no, look, I have the right to do this. And it says right in here
01:11:05.520 that if you stop me from doing it, that you're breaking the law. And so they sent like three Mexican
01:11:10.620 state troopers out there and they arrested her. So this is going on everywhere and it's starting to
01:11:17.480 break down. This, this is why the government and the media don't like citizen journalism because
01:11:24.380 we're willing to go and cover things. But before I step off this topic, I want to say that in my
01:11:30.920 opinion, Daily Stormer and other websites like it are the real news now. And the reason we're the real
01:11:36.660 news is because we're honest in our bias, all this, I've never seen any, any journalist yet.
01:11:43.820 Who's not biased. They all, they, they have this religion of neutrality that they claim they're
01:11:49.240 just totally neutral, that it's just the facts, ma'am, just like drag net or whatever. But every
01:11:55.440 single thing they do is, uh, skewed horribly to whatever political platform they support, but they
01:12:03.280 lie about that and they try to present this as neutral fact. But now like guys like us who write
01:12:09.140 on Daily Stormer, we're right up front about where we're coming from. We're like, yes, we're, we are,
01:12:14.500 uh, neo-Nazi white supremacists. And, uh, you know, even if you don't see where we just flat out say
01:12:20.900 that you look at the website and it's covered up in merchants and Hitler's and pepies and all this
01:12:26.620 stuff. There's, we're not trying to trick anybody here. We're presenting the facts alongside our
01:12:32.040 opinions about those facts. And of course we do it with style and humor and all that, which the
01:12:37.900 media completely lacks the mainstream media. But, uh, but guys like us are the real media. Do you,
01:12:44.360 what do you, how do you, what do you think about that? Well, I think that, I mean, I, I think that
01:12:49.560 the, the, the corporate media is just obviously an arm of the establishment. I think that any person
01:12:56.520 on the street would, would say that, you know, you can't trust the media. Well, they do, they do
01:13:01.240 polls. Nobody really believes you can trust the, I mean, cable news media, um, or, or any of it,
01:13:08.440 any of the mainstream media, people, people understand that there's an agenda there. They
01:13:12.240 just kind of get, end up getting confused by it. But, um, yeah, it's, it's an arm of, I mean,
01:13:19.620 what we would have said is basically the government, but now that we have Trump, we have a sort of a war
01:13:24.440 inside the government, but it's, it's an arm of the, of the Jewish, um, ruling xenocracy. Um,
01:13:32.060 you know, it's, it's not, it's not there to, there's, there's an obvious and, and, uh, blatant
01:13:40.020 agenda that they, they pretend like they don't have. Um, which, I mean, in the case of, of, you know,
01:13:47.500 CNN with ratings, it's like, well, there, there is an agenda. I mean, on that level, um, you, you can,
01:13:53.520 you can know there's a, there's a, uh, a financial incentive there that they don't necessarily
01:13:59.720 fulfill by, by putting out the truth. But, um, I mean, when you, when you understand that these
01:14:06.240 people are, are political, I mean, they're not, these people like, like it's like virgins and
01:14:12.100 eunuchs, um, that are, that are reporting the news. I don't know how they can have no, no opinions
01:14:17.980 on it and have this, have this neutrality. But, uh, the other thing I would say is that in,
01:14:24.100 in the, I mean, for me personally, the, the facts matter a lot because, um, you have to
01:14:33.020 have a reputation. I think you, you have to have a, um, uh, uh, uh, um, a reputation for,
01:14:41.980 for telling the truth. You have to have credibility that as a, as a citizen journalist, which is what I,
01:14:47.980 consider myself, you, you have to build that, um, reputation of, of telling the truth and,
01:14:55.000 and, and reporting the facts. Um, you know, I, I'm not going to say that I've never gotten anything
01:15:00.120 wrong. I, I work a whole lot. Um, and there's been times when I have said something that was,
01:15:07.320 that was wrong. And when, when I, uh, when I do that, I, I go back and fix it and say, look,
01:15:12.660 I, I said, this was, was wrong. Um, I mean, there is some kooky stuff out there, obviously in the,
01:15:19.420 in the quote unquote alternative media where they, where they do just make stuff up. I mean,
01:15:24.580 when, when they talk about like fake news, there is some genuine that, that does go on. Um, and
01:15:31.360 there, there was some right wing pro Trump media that was, that was fake news. I mean, Alex Jones,
01:15:37.680 you know, I mean, it's, it's sort of either, or I, I don't, I don't see something or hear something on
01:15:42.680 Alex Jones and say, well, that must be a fact. Alex Jones said it because a lot of stuff, you know,
01:15:49.100 he does just seem to make up or, or, you know, exaggerate into the point where it's not anything
01:15:55.080 like the original fact that he's basing his statements on. So I, I do think there is some of
01:16:02.280 that out there definitely. Um, but for me personally, it's, it's very important to maintain a,
01:16:10.500 a reputation, uh, of accuracy so that I, so that I have credibility because, you know, I don't have,
01:16:17.500 we at the daily stormer don't have anything other than that. We're not, we're not a gigantic
01:16:23.480 corporation that has all this money, um, to go spend. And we in particular are not even able to
01:16:31.200 not only are we not able to advertise because of the SPLC, we're not even able to collect our
01:16:37.640 donations because of, of this Jewish, um, terrorist. Yeah. Um, so, you know, we, we don't have,
01:16:49.680 we don't have much money. We rely on people that are, that are willing to either mail in donations
01:16:55.700 to my PO box or, um, or use Bitcoin. Uh, so, you know, it's, it's a small operation. The only thing
01:17:07.260 that we have to keep us distinguished besides the fact, you know, we're funny and entertaining,
01:17:12.860 but, uh, the, the, the credibility factor, the, the fact that, you know, I mean, you can,
01:17:18.040 obviously there's opinions on it, but the opinions, like you said, are very straightforward.
01:17:23.140 Um, the facts as, as far as I, you know, I make a big thing of it, uh, with, with editing and,
01:17:31.120 and just making sure that anything that anybody writes is, is a hundred percent accurate based on
01:17:36.880 facts as, as are available to us. Uh, you know, I, I think that people that read the site know that,
01:17:43.860 that if you read something on there, it's going to be true. And if it turns out somebody made a mistake,
01:17:48.660 there's going to be a, a, that's going to be cleared up, um, as soon as it's known. So.
01:17:55.300 Right. And, and unlike when some outlet like the New York times posts a front page headline article,
01:18:02.240 that's completely false and they get caught to the point that they have to correct it. They correct
01:18:07.320 it like on page 52 of section D in a tiny little thing. When, uh, and I noticed this before I ever
01:18:15.480 started writing for daily stormer, it was something that I had practiced on my own shows and on my own
01:18:20.060 websites too. So I completely respect it. When you make a correction on daily stormer, you make it big
01:18:25.500 and bold and right up front. So to make sure that everybody knows, okay, I was wrong about this.
01:18:30.180 Here are the fact, here's the fact, here's what I got wrong. Yeah, no, I mean, we, uh, we reported on
01:18:38.060 that Posobiec claim because I mean, everybody was reporting on it. I don't know if we reported it as
01:18:43.900 fact, but, um, I don't, I don't think we said it was a fact, but reports say, you know, that this was
01:18:49.080 a, this was a 15 year old and we, I went back immediately within, within 12 hours. It had, it had
01:18:57.460 come out that, you know, we don't know that this is a fact, um, or that we don't know. It looks like
01:19:03.060 this is not the case. And then, um, yesterday I posted the, uh, the evidence that is not true.
01:19:12.080 The evidence that, uh, he's actually in his forties, Han Osso Solo. So, well, you can't trust
01:19:20.200 anything that comes out of these great big alt light figureheads because, uh, you made a very good
01:19:26.180 analogy about that in one of the articles, you know, you posted three or four of them in the last 24 hours.
01:19:31.560 So I don't remember exactly which one it was, but you said that Posobiec, and I believe you said,
01:19:39.160 either you said it or I thought it, one or the other, Posobiec, like Mike, Mike Thurnovich,
01:19:45.680 that he just constantly posts this really wild, uh, suppositional stuff as fact and claims that he
01:19:53.760 has inside sources. And, you know, as each one goes further down the Twitter timeline, people forget
01:19:59.940 about all the false claims that didn't pan out. But when one of them turns out to be coincidentally
01:20:04.940 true, you know, he'll pin that thing and say, see, see, I told you, I've got the sources.
01:20:12.160 Yeah. Yeah. No, he just, he just goes and makes outrageous claims that are unfalsifiable that,
01:20:19.840 you know, there's no, like with the, with the claim that Han Osso Solo was a 15 year old,
01:20:25.920 like, uh, there was no way that anybody could ever disprove that except the way that it happened,
01:20:34.620 which was, um, that it was, they found a, that, that Tubble heliscope that he was a teenager when
01:20:42.500 the Tubble heliscope was launched. So, um, besides that, there was no way it could ever happen. And I
01:20:48.780 mean, CNN would obviously come out and, and claim that it wasn't true, but he would just say, well,
01:20:57.040 CNN, of course, CNN lies about everything. They're just lying about this. Um, and that would create
01:21:02.840 controversy and it would go on and on and that would put him at the center of the, of the controversy.
01:21:08.580 Um, so yeah, I, I think that's really harmful to the movement, uh, a very negative thing to have him
01:21:17.840 out there doing that. Um, I don't know if people are calling this guy out at all or what's going on
01:21:27.040 with that, but he, he does just, he makes things up and posts them on his Twitter timeline and says he
01:21:34.220 has, he has insider information. Um, and, and like you described, if he, if he gets something wrong,
01:21:41.080 it just goes on down the timeline. Nobody's going to remember it, but if he gets something right
01:21:45.000 by, by coincidence or by, you know, prediction, he tries to game it like, okay. The, the thing about
01:21:51.360 specifically saying that he was gay and he just came out to his family and he's really, you know,
01:21:56.420 having a rough time because he just told his family that he loves Dick. Um, the, that is just,
01:22:04.220 bizarre. But when he came out and said it was a teenager, like that was kind of something that
01:22:10.120 very likely could have been true. Okay. So, I mean, and he, he says 15, but then it's like,
01:22:16.940 oh, well, it turns out he's 17 or whatever. You know, I mean, he could still be like, ha ha,
01:22:20.740 I was right. And cause that, that was kind of a, like a thing that seemed very highly possible
01:22:27.040 just based on what the meme was and what, what, what, uh, are the Donald is and what Trump's,
01:22:33.520 you know, internet fan base is a lot of them are teenagers. Um, so it made sense. The claim.
01:22:41.300 Well, the, the LG, just in my opinion, the LGBTQ part of it, that's the way he put it said he's a
01:22:47.620 15 year old LGBTQ, the LGBTQ part of it, um, is falsifiable with common sense for anybody who
01:22:57.740 understands the internet because you just look at the CNN article at the things that they claim
01:23:03.260 that he's posted. And these are not the postings of a lover of penis. These are the postings of,
01:23:11.600 uh, a regular guy who, uh, hates the Jews. Uh, uh, but, but the 15 year old part, see, that's where,
01:23:20.520 if it weren't for the Hubble telescope thing, that would make it the ultimate non-falsa by non-falsifiable
01:23:27.340 claim that Posobiec could have made because, uh, the only way to disprove it would be for CNN,
01:23:35.600 who is in the midst of this horrible, horrible PR controversy over even threatening to dox this guy.
01:23:43.020 They would have to actually dox the guy to disprove it, which at this point they are not going to do,
01:23:49.420 period. And so it's a good thing. There was a little bit of evidence out there.
01:23:54.240 Well, I think that also Kaczynski wouldn't have lied if, if it actually would have been a 15 year
01:24:01.600 old, he wouldn't have come out and said, no, it's not because there's such a chance that after this
01:24:07.880 blows up into a huge thing that the, the kid himself could be like, you know what? Fuck it.
01:24:13.440 I'm going to make a YouTube video and say, say who I am and what's going on with these people.
01:24:18.400 Well, yeah. And the odds are very good that even if they had spent all this money and time to track
01:24:24.620 him down, that once they did and it turned out to be a 15 year old kid, the public would have never
01:24:30.700 heard about it. They would have said, okay, there's nothing we can do with this story. What are we
01:24:34.200 going to do? Attack a 15 year old kid? Yeah, no. So, I mean, it didn't, it didn't really
01:24:39.760 make a lot of sense even on that level. But yeah, I mean, be careful with what, what you believe and
01:24:50.660 don't, don't just trust anybody on the internet. I think is a good, and look at people's, people's
01:24:56.120 track records of, of what they've done. And that's what I say, you know, we just had our fourth
01:25:00.560 anniversary. I've spent, you know, I, I've, I've had this principle from the beginning, you know,
01:25:08.240 I'm going to say what I think about things, but I'm going to make absolutely certain that I report
01:25:14.300 the facts and, and tell the truth. And, and I think I've, I've kept to that a hundred percent.
01:25:20.480 And so it's, you know, I think we have, we have a lot more credibility than, than any, any mainstream
01:25:27.700 media outlet. Oh, I mean, Daily Stormer. Go ahead. Daily Stormer is definitely the Nazi newspaper of
01:25:35.860 record. Yeah. Well, um, the, in that, that Comey hearing, you know, I mean, it was the, the, the New York
01:25:47.800 Times had made a, he said almost all of it when he was asked what, which parts of a, of a certain
01:25:53.240 story, uh, were fault, was false, were false, I guess. Um, and, and he said almost all of it,
01:26:02.280 they never issued a retraction. And, and when they, they recently got called out over that 17
01:26:10.000 intelligence agencies that this was just made up. I mean, it was a, it was a distortion of reality,
01:26:16.020 um, which the government even repeated that, you know, the, the 17 intelligence agencies. I mean,
01:26:23.360 the, the, the shift was out there saying it because the New York Times said it because of a
01:26:28.680 alleged, uh, you know, leak. Um, but it was, uh, when they, when they issued that retraction,
01:26:37.340 it wasn't even really a retraction. It was like a, um, correction. They said more, we're correcting
01:26:44.260 this instead of saying, well, we just lied about this because I mean, it's like, well,
01:26:48.820 if something is like, like Comey said under oath, which I think he did lie under oath,
01:26:54.100 but I don't think he was lying about this. Um, I, I think he tried to lie as little as possible
01:26:58.600 with what he couldn't get caught on, you know? I mean, I don't, I don't think this guy's a,
01:27:02.980 respects the oath very much, but I think he doesn't want to go to prison for perjury. Um,
01:27:08.680 or anything else that he's done, which he's done several things he could end up in prison for.
01:27:14.240 I'm, I'm sure. Um, even of what's public, but, um, you know,
01:27:19.960 admitting that he leaked private discussions with the president and all you'd think he'd already be in
01:27:25.700 jail. Yeah. I mean, you, you would think that that would be something that they'd at least be
01:27:31.880 under investigation. Um, but so he said this New York times story was, was a hundred percent false
01:27:40.860 or effectively, what did he say? Uh, pretty much all of it. Yeah. Um, so where, where did that come
01:27:48.680 from? Um, is it, is it people in the government leaking false information in, in which case, I mean,
01:27:57.900 that's kind of still on the New York times, um, for, for publishing this information as if it's fact
01:28:04.940 without, without being able to confirm it. Um, you know, I mean, they, they say our sources are
01:28:11.520 credible. Okay. Well, if you're publishing false information, but the, but the even worse version
01:28:18.060 is if they just made it up themselves and that's probably more likely. I think it's almost certainly
01:28:24.440 in the case with the, um, with the three CNN guys who got fired at the beginning of this,
01:28:31.060 this whole storm, uh, that CNN has been caught up in. Um, but that, that first thing that happened
01:28:38.280 right before, uh, right before O'Keefe started releasing his, his recordings, uh, that they fire
01:28:45.720 those three guys. And, and I think they just made that story up completely. I mean, that's kind of
01:28:50.540 Occam's razor there, uh, that it, that it was just a hundred percent made up by the journalists
01:28:58.520 themselves that they're just, and then CNN had to issue an internal memo that you can't write anything
01:29:05.320 about Russia unless we approve it first. Cause I think these people were just like, well, we can say
01:29:11.700 anything about Russia. Let's just make stuff up. Everybody's doing it. The New York times is doing
01:29:17.260 it. Uh, and editors are just like, yeah, yeah, Russia, just, just print it. Who cares?
01:29:25.860 That's what I was sitting here thinking as you described this, that like they issued this memo
01:29:29.800 that from now on anything about Russia, some editor is going to have to read it first. Well,
01:29:34.460 I'm pretty sure that most people would assume that CNN runs like what they think a new news
01:29:41.160 organization runs like where you have reporters write stories and submit them to editors who read
01:29:45.880 them and decide whether they're fit to publish or not. But apparently it's just a completely open
01:29:51.200 source office where all these, uh, dozens or hundreds, however many of, uh, you know, little
01:29:56.700 field reporters they have are just cranking out the crap and, uh, pushing the post button. Yeah. And
01:30:04.240 just pushing the post button. Nobody's even reviewing it. Yeah, no, I mean, somebody must be like,
01:30:10.480 hey, editor, I, I just finished this story about Russia. Do you want to, and then the editor
01:30:16.820 interrupts like publish it, publish it, publish it, go, go, go. Yeah. And write 10 more, please.
01:30:25.580 Yeah. Uh, I mean, it is just crazy. The amount of, the amount of stuff that they came up with,
01:30:30.880 it was just, it just like nonsense that just turns out it was, it was all just totally made up.
01:30:36.580 And I mean, the craziest part of it is how they've now just dropped that. Like, like CNN is that
01:30:43.720 meme. Russia is the floor. They're not touching it. Yeah. It'll be interesting to see how they
01:30:49.160 cover. I don't know if this is going to get up on the site before Trump meets with Putin, but, uh,
01:30:54.080 it'll be interesting to see how, how that, how they deal with that. Well, we're shooting to have it up
01:30:59.660 tonight. So in a couple hours after we get done recording it. So hopefully it will be,
01:31:04.000 but, um, I want to go ahead and let's bottom line the CNN thing. And, uh, so that we'll have time to
01:31:11.780 just quickly discuss a couple of other topics before we end the show. Uh, and what I mean by
01:31:17.760 bottom line is I think we've, uh, we've gone over the ins and outs of this whole thing, uh, pretty well.
01:31:24.640 So where are we at now? We are apparently in a meme war with CNN. Is that it? So, uh, are we
01:31:32.380 officially, uh, setting the storm or troll army on CNN on social media?
01:31:38.920 Well, yeah, I think that's already. Oh yeah. But I mean, it's, it's so much bigger than us now,
01:31:46.740 man. I mean, this isn't like, um, this isn't like one of our, our operations against a, you know,
01:31:54.540 isolated target before this is, this is the whole, this is. Oh no. Poll is producing memes at a rate
01:32:02.280 that I have never seen. This is Twitter's all about CNN today. Well, I mean, the whole world is
01:32:11.740 nobody can believe this is happening. Uh, the question is, will they be able to keep this up
01:32:19.220 as just like, we're to keep their ratings up and just be like, we're the bumbling idiot liars.
01:32:26.740 Well, they, they, they won't though. What, what this reminds me of is, you know, when you have
01:32:33.200 YouTubers who constantly do, uh, really stupid, dangerous things to get more views, you know,
01:32:39.980 eventually they shoot themselves, uh, they shoot a book that they're holding up. With a desert eagle.
01:32:46.200 Yes. With a desert eagle and they die. It's not something you keep doing forever. And like
01:32:51.200 with CNN constantly, uh, making themselves look like just complete asshole shills the way that they
01:32:58.740 do. Yeah. It brings them. Now this is just my opinion, but it brings them a lot of quick ratings,
01:33:05.600 but those quick ratings don't last. And at some point, the weight of the loss of any type of even
01:33:13.720 a perception in the public of journalistic integrity is going to be too much and they're not going to stay
01:33:20.260 afloat. It's going to drag them right under because nobody's going to trust them as a source of news.
01:33:25.760 And if they keep doubling down on this crazy shit, uh, they're, they're going to basically be a crappy
01:33:32.680 version of TMZ or the national inquirer or something like that. And people who want that stuff,
01:33:38.760 they've already got TMZ and the national inquirer. Yeah. I mean, that seems to be, they've, they've backed
01:33:45.900 off the, the whole Russia thing, man. That's just, that's buried now. So, um, I, I don't know. I don't
01:33:54.100 know what they're going to do. I don't know how they can do this thing that they just did with Han
01:33:59.580 asshole solo and, and, and keep functioning at all besides as, as a mockery of themselves.
01:34:07.740 I think they did really, that would be the best route for them to go is just kind of embrace this.
01:34:13.740 Like, yeah, we're liars and we're incompetent and we're Jewish.
01:34:20.740 Especially that last part.
01:34:25.440 Yeah. That, that should be their catchphrase. I can't remember what CNN's original catchphrase was
01:34:34.660 all news all the time or something like that, but their catchphrase remember you're watching
01:34:39.640 CNN. Yeah. But their catchphrase, their new catchphrase, in my opinion, and I'm, I'm encouraging
01:34:47.060 everyone who lives anywhere near any type of CNN corporate headquarters, especially if you're one
01:34:53.180 of these people that like can go stand outside one of those windows when they're doing their live
01:34:58.600 broadcast where they have idiots outside waving and trying to get on TV, uh, either post signs that
01:35:04.540 say this around CNN or go to one of these things and hold these signs up. You want to sign with the
01:35:10.000 CNN logo on it, big and bright in red and right under it, have it say real Jews, fake news. Just go hold
01:35:17.640 those up. But, um, but anyway, I want to move on. Um, there's, uh, you mentioned, uh, just in passing
01:35:30.400 while we were talking about this, you said that we have a war inside the government now because Trump
01:35:37.480 is there. And, uh, the whole Trump presidency has been very tumultuous emotionally, I guess you would
01:35:44.820 say, uh, for people who really, really want to support Trump. And he has been signaling, uh, over the
01:35:53.300 last few weeks that he's kind of moving back towards his, uh, base that got him elected. Uh, at least
01:36:00.500 he's signaling that he's doing that. Uh, where, what is your opinion right now on, um, how the alt-right,
01:36:08.680 uh, the real alt-right should be, um, concerning supporting Trump?
01:36:14.580 Well, I've always been 100% for Trump as an individual. And I believe that he, he meant
01:36:24.900 what he said when he, when he was running for president. Um, uh, and then, that he was always
01:36:33.440 genuine. I mean, but the, what could happen, I mean, the guy can be blackmailed, he can have some
01:36:38.980 kind of sex thing, you know, that could be really embarrassing or, I mean, who knows,
01:36:44.900 it could be an underage girl. Um, I, I mean, I don't think he's a pervert, but, you know,
01:36:49.820 whatever, it could be something, you know, related to sex, um, that he could be blackmailed on,
01:36:55.840 which is what I thought could be happening when he did that serious strike or he could be threatened.
01:37:01.760 I mean, you know, they could inject you with something and, and say like, well, you need this
01:37:05.680 antidote every 12 hours or whatever. Um, or you're going to die. And he could, they could do that to
01:37:11.820 his family. You know, I mean, all, all kinds of things. They could, they could set it up like,
01:37:16.440 which I think is actually what happened. They presented him how he was going to be impeached
01:37:21.640 if he didn't go along with the program. And so he did that Syria thing in order to buy himself some
01:37:28.280 time, because you remember when he did that, I mean, everybody remembers, I guess, if they're thinking
01:37:33.300 about it, it's also weird. The, the, this series of events since the inaugural, I mean, the series of
01:37:39.220 events since Trump went up there and said they're rapists. Um, I mean, the, the series, this has been
01:37:47.260 three years ago. It's, it's been a, it's been a wild ride. Um, but the, the, the events since the
01:37:54.940 inauguration, when, when he, um, did that thing with, with Syria, I think that he did that knowing
01:38:05.040 that, you know, I have to get these people off my back and it worked. I mean, you had the Jews and
01:38:10.580 they, they, they stopped point blank. They completely forgot about Russia, right? It was just gone. It
01:38:17.660 just disappeared because they were like, Oh, well, it looks like, and, and the, and they printed articles
01:38:21.900 saying, well, he's a normal Republican now. He's, he's, he's, he's, he's, um, moderating himself and
01:38:29.380 he's normal. He's finally presidential. He's finally presidential. Exactly. Exactly. They, they,
01:38:35.500 they went along with all of this and, um, you know, I think this was, I think this was a fake out. I
01:38:41.440 think that it, that it is now that, that we've, we've gone far enough away from this, that we can see
01:38:47.180 that this was, this was something that he did in order for them to respond that way because,
01:38:53.260 you know, he never fired Steve Bannon. And I, I think that he did that in order to buy time to get
01:38:59.260 in a position where he could do what he did by firing Comey and then breaking this whole thing
01:39:05.840 down. Because as soon as he fired Comey, when, when they all came back 100% after it had disappeared
01:39:12.740 completely, they came back full force just then with that, with this Russia thing. Um, you know,
01:39:19.480 I mean, that signaled to me because you don't know what's going on with Trump, but you can watch how
01:39:24.980 other people who know more than you are responding to it. And, uh, what they did there when, when they,
01:39:32.380 when they responded in the, in the whole government and the media, because the government had forgotten
01:39:36.500 about it too. I mean, you know, there's these, and, and Tucker Carlson was the only person talking
01:39:41.300 about it and he would ask government people, Democrats, like, so what's going on with that?
01:39:45.320 It was the, it was the sky was falling and now it's just gone. What's going on with that,
01:39:50.660 with that Russia investigation during that period between the, the April 6th strike and the, um,
01:39:58.380 and the firing of Comey, which was five weeks, he asked Democrats about that and they would just say,
01:40:03.940 oh, well, you know, I guess, I don't know. Um, but nobody else was, was even talking about it besides him.
01:40:11.300 But when this came back like that, it's like, well, I mean, he must be doing something to anger
01:40:17.520 these people and whatever, whatever he's doing to anger them is, is going to be something that,
01:40:23.840 that we agree with. There is nothing that Trump can do that, that makes Jews mad. That is not going
01:40:29.300 to be something that, that is good for us in the long run. And it's like, I mean, just the amount of
01:40:34.080 stuff that he's done so far. Um, and, and just, I mean, with the narrative itself, you know,
01:40:40.320 the Overton window that we always talk about, uh, pushing this so far, but I mean, with this stuff,
01:40:46.260 with the war on CNN and, uh, besides the stuff that's not getting reported, which, you know,
01:40:53.240 he talks about that this is not getting reported. And I think probably I should be trying to do more.
01:40:57.920 We should be trying to do more to, um, to report on this stuff that that's positive that's happening.
01:41:04.380 I mean, with, with the economy and the, and the jobs and, and so on. I mean, there, there is a lot
01:41:09.120 of just basic stuff that, that is happening that, that is just like nobody could have imagined what
01:41:16.580 would actually happen. You know, jobs coming back to the United States. Nobody thought that that was
01:41:20.800 actually going to happen. Um, and, and immigrants being rounded up and deported. Nobody believed that
01:41:27.640 was actually going to happen. Of course, it's not in the numbers that we would like, as far as the,
01:41:31.360 I think the jobs basically are in the numbers that we would expect or would, would be okay with it.
01:41:36.540 The immigration thing is, is more complicated, but ultimately bottom line answer to your question is
01:41:42.640 that I think we need to, to look at what Trump is doing and how it's affecting things. And I mean,
01:41:49.560 when you see this thing that he has done to the media to say that, you know, you don't support him. Um,
01:41:55.900 I, I don't understand. I don't understand that, that, uh, logic. I mean, as long as it'll be
01:42:02.840 interesting to see what happens with the Putin meeting, but I can explain the logic some, and I, I agree
01:42:09.440 with you, uh, 100% on where we should be with Trump right now. But I, I'm one of these guys who
01:42:15.480 recently has been very unhappy with Trump. Uh, and the, the thing was, and you mentioned it right
01:42:22.440 off the bat, the Syria thing. Now in hindsight, who cares about the Syria thing? I mean, if you're
01:42:28.460 really, really that upset about the Tomahawk missiles killing a few Brown people, then I don't
01:42:34.420 know what to tell you. Well, it was symbolic of promises. Right. But that doesn't bother me.
01:42:41.160 A few Brown people got blown up one day. Who cares? But really, but, uh, the, the thing is
01:42:48.580 the reason that it bothered me so bad was because, you know, I've been around a while and I've seen
01:42:56.180 how these things in the past have worked out nearly a hundred percent of the time, ever since we started
01:43:02.360 these endless wars in the middle East. And I just could have sworn that the next thing that was
01:43:09.440 going to happen was going to be boots on the ground. And we'd have another place where we were
01:43:14.200 shedding blood and treasure and all that forever at the behest of the Jews, like in Iraq and Afghanistan
01:43:20.960 and so on. But it didn't turn out to be that it was like you said, a symbolic gesture. And, you know,
01:43:27.440 if you're going to make a symbolic gesture, blowing shit up is that's pretty symbolic.
01:43:31.400 And, uh, uh, and that was it, you know, it's like, Hey, and now I don't agree with his reasons for
01:43:38.660 doing it. You know, it was allegedly some babies gassed and, you know, there's really no proof of
01:43:42.520 that. There's some photos of kids with, uh, oxygen masks on their face, but honestly, can you tell,
01:43:49.960 is there some way you can look at those photos and say, okay, these are for sure Syrian kids who just
01:43:55.400 got gassed by Assad and not, uh, Palestinian kids in Gaza who just got gassed by the kikes? Cause I
01:44:02.020 look at them and I can't tell one from the other. Well, Assad himself did an interview with, uh,
01:44:10.260 some Western media and said, I mean, he, he kind of said it timidly that he didn't want to be called
01:44:17.240 a conspiracy theorist, but he said, we don't even know if this is real. These could be actors
01:44:23.660 that found, he said, there's no other evidence besides the video itself. And we don't know where
01:44:29.040 this evidence came from. There's nobody, there's no witnesses coming out and saying, you know,
01:44:35.620 um, the, uh, the, what's that guy in, in England, um, that lives in his attic and he's a one man
01:44:43.180 organization. Um, Oh yeah. I know who you're talking about, but I can't think of a Syrian observatory
01:44:48.260 for human rights. Is his name Hassan? I mean, whatever, some Haji name. He's a, he's a Sunni,
01:44:54.420 uh, extremist ISIS supporter from, uh, from Syria who lives in England and gives all these reports.
01:45:02.520 So he was, he was corroborating the authenticity of that video. And you know, the, the Jewish media
01:45:07.700 just quotes this guy, um, uncritically. I mean, they just, they just quote him like, well,
01:45:13.480 whatever this guy says is the truth. Um, so, you know, there was that, but yeah, I mean,
01:45:20.580 the video could have been, it could have been faked. And, and then you saw they came out and
01:45:26.720 people were freaking out, like Trump's going back to Syria, um, where, where they came out and said,
01:45:32.660 uh, that he might be planning another chemical attack. And this was some kind of a fake out as well,
01:45:39.220 because then, uh, they came out and said, well, no, that's not happening. We looked into it and we
01:45:48.260 turned out, it turned out that's not real. So, um, yeah, I, I mean, it'll be interesting to see that
01:45:56.420 now with the Russia story, I mean, cause this is the whole, this is one of his campaign promises and
01:46:02.140 Coulter in that interview that I mentioned earlier said that, um, the first campaign promise was
01:46:09.940 immigration. And the second one was the foreign wars. And then I think she gave as a, as the third
01:46:19.100 one or maybe fourth, cause she said the economy too, what was, was making, uh, making peace with
01:46:25.620 Russia and ending this. I mean, it, it doesn't make any sense that the U S unless you're looking at it
01:46:30.640 from, you know, a crypto angle of, of, uh, uh, you know, of the Jewish issue and this, this kind
01:46:41.860 of globalist plan to get everybody on board with this one world government concept. Um, the, the,
01:46:50.240 the conflict with Russia does not make any sense based on any set of, of objective facts. You can't
01:46:56.840 make any sense of it because it's like, well, why would we not, why are we provoking these people?
01:47:02.220 Why don't we just be friends with them? It'll be good for our economy. It'll be good for global,
01:47:06.500 you know, peace. Uh, and, and, you know, there, there's no reason Putin is always out there saying,
01:47:12.840 well, let's talk about it. Let's talk about it. Let's talk about it. So why would you not,
01:47:16.880 why would you not be friends with Russia? I mean, they have a, they have a value system much
01:47:21.160 closer to the average American than, um, than the value system of the, of, of the average French
01:47:28.040 person or the, the German or even, you know, British is, well, Britain is closer to us, but
01:47:36.080 as far as mainland Western Europe, um, they're pretty alien as far as their, their, the way their
01:47:46.040 culture has developed. I mean, I wouldn't alien, maybe an extreme word, but it's, it, uh, point
01:47:52.580 being, we're much closer to, to Russia as far as, as the average American, you know, the Trump voter,
01:48:00.320 what they believe, um, and, and how they view life and human existence. I mean, you know,
01:48:06.120 Christianity and, um, Western culture and, and so on. It, this is, this is very close to the,
01:48:12.480 what, what, what Russia represents. Uh, I mean, Russia is, is a Christian nation. So.
01:48:18.600 Right. Um. Well, you know, the Jews have us convinced that Israel's our greatest ally and
01:48:24.940 the Russian Federation's our greatest enemy. When the fact of the matter is, if it wasn't for the
01:48:30.180 influence of this Jewish media and the influence of Jews in government, the American people would feel
01:48:37.480 the opposite way. Russia is the other white superpower and the average Russian on the street,
01:48:43.620 um, looks at the world in a way far more similar, uh, to the way that guys like you and I are even
01:48:51.720 people on the softer part of the right wing, you know, the alt whites and, you know, some of your
01:48:57.680 more hawkish, uh, GOP types and all that than, uh, anybody in any of those Western European countries,
01:49:05.060 even the UK, you know, so they should, they, they would naturally be our greatest ally and Israel
01:49:11.660 our greatest enemy if we were left to our own devices. Yeah. I mean, Russia doesn't have agents
01:49:18.320 directing our foreign policy. They don't have organizations set up there. The Russians are not
01:49:24.620 controlling our media. I mean, Israel is, is a foreign nation. Okay. But every Jew
01:49:33.440 has de facto citizenship of this foreign nation. So whether or not a, a Jew has ever been to Israel,
01:49:45.500 they should be looked at as an agent of this, this country because they have de facto citizenship.
01:49:55.040 I mean, you could have some kind of system if you want to talk about quote unquote American Jews,
01:49:58.980 where, where they go up there and, and like renounce, um, their Israeli connections. Um,
01:50:07.740 but otherwise, I mean, if you wanted to come out at like, well, race doesn't exist and so on and so
01:50:12.880 forth, um, you could, you would still say, well, these people have to renounce their, their connection
01:50:19.220 to this foreign power or otherwise they're, they're functioning as agents of a foreign government.
01:50:26.100 I mean, that's just basic common sense, whether, I mean, from, from the mainstream worldview that,
01:50:32.360 that makes basic common sense. Well, absolutely. I mean, you know, the, the, everybody, um,
01:50:38.460 especially in our movement, you know, they always have it at the forefront of their mind about these
01:50:43.940 Israeli American dual citizens, but dual citizenship itself, even if you're just talking
01:50:50.800 about civic citizenship, the way that we have it in the West. Now, dual citizenship is just an
01:50:56.740 abomination to the national, national sovereignty of both countries involved. Uh, and it should be
01:51:03.740 eliminated altogether. I mean, the United States is just lousy with U S Mexico dual citizens, even,
01:51:10.940 even like the anchor babies are U S Mexico dual citizens because Mexico grants them citizenship for
01:51:16.960 being born to Mexican parents, even though they were born here. Uh, so, you know, and, and you can
01:51:25.140 look at the Mexicans and see the problem with this, you know, they, they claim that, uh, they're Americans
01:51:30.420 and stuff. And then they turn right around and say, we're taking this back and making it Mexico again.
01:51:34.420 And every, every time they, uh, demonstrate about something that the Hispanic community doesn't
01:51:39.260 like, you don't see the only American flags you see them flying are the ones they set on fire.
01:51:43.600 They're flying Mexican flags right here on our soil. And you know, these people all need to,
01:51:49.660 all these dual citizens need to be rounded up and told, okay, pick one because you're about to pick
01:51:56.580 one and that's where you're going. And if you want to stay in America, you're going to be an American
01:52:01.440 citizen and you're going to surrender all rights to any kind of shit that you had back in the old
01:52:06.540 country. You know, you're not going to be able to vote there. You're not going to be able to hold
01:52:10.000 off there. You're not going to be able to live there, that you're going to be invested in this
01:52:13.700 country. Now, of course, I think that if they're not white, they should be, they shouldn't be given
01:52:18.480 a choice. They should just be sent back to where they come from. But, you know, just speaking as
01:52:23.900 general civic policy.
01:52:25.600 Yeah. If you believe this, if you, if you believe this, I mean, you know, a lot of countries don't
01:52:31.080 allow dual citizenship. It's a, it's a, it's a new Western idea that doesn't really make any sense
01:52:40.920 that you would be allowed. I mean, it makes sense for some third world countries to do it or for
01:52:46.060 Israel to do it because they're gaining a benefit to allow their people to go other places and function
01:52:51.000 as citizens of, of another, of another countries, of citizens of another country. And, you know,
01:52:59.240 it's, it's profitable for them to do so. Like I know the Philippines allows it, um, because they
01:53:06.600 have a lot of people they send to other countries to work. And if they can get citizenship in those
01:53:12.200 countries, then they're going to be sending back more money. So that's beneficial Israel. We know
01:53:17.640 why they allow it. Um, because they, you know, they want all these agents in other countries
01:53:22.720 controlling everything. Um, but for, uh, all things being equal, I mean, if you, if you're a powerful,
01:53:30.740 um, you know, developed country and you're not sending people to control other people's governments
01:53:37.800 as agents of your government, um, there, there's no reason that you should allow the, the very concept
01:53:45.720 of dual citizenship is, is kooky. Yeah. Well, and, and it gets so ridiculous when you start looking
01:53:52.200 into the details about it because it like a month or two ago, um, there was some story, I believe in
01:53:58.380 the LA times and they were framing it like these were all good things or whatever, but it was some
01:54:05.320 talking about the dual citizenship of Mexicans and it had certain specific examples. And one of the
01:54:11.480 examples was, and this is in some close to the border and some border state, uh, which makes it most
01:54:17.640 likely either California or Texas just based on the numbers because I can't remember to be honest,
01:54:23.340 but this, uh, there's an official, uh, in an American city. He's a city councilman, an elected
01:54:29.900 official. And the reason that he is a city council when there's, he's got this dual citizenship and he
01:54:38.300 lives in Mexico and he pays his taxes and everything in Mexico, but he drives his children across the
01:54:43.700 border to go to school every day. And he drives across the border to go and be a city councilman
01:54:48.760 in a town in America. So you've got this Mexican citizen who doesn't even want to live here and
01:54:55.040 who doesn't even pay taxes here, but is bringing his mutts over here, uh, to go to school on our tax
01:55:01.980 dollars while sitting on a city council in one of our towns voting in programs to help get more
01:55:08.960 wetback dual citizens over here. Yeah, no, it's, it's absurd. Uh, there's no, no excuse for this.
01:55:20.000 Yeah. Well, I guess, uh, since we're getting so close to the end of the show, we're going to move
01:55:25.240 on a little bit. Uh, I want to talk about something a little personal, but that the listeners, uh, I know
01:55:31.140 are interested in and they need to hear, and you're a guy who knows a lot about this, uh, and that's diet
01:55:36.840 and fitness. But before we start the discussion of diet and fitness, because it's related and it's
01:55:42.540 something you've written about lately, um, what is happening to Lauren Southern? You had an article
01:55:47.700 up yesterday with a bunch of pictures showing how Lauren Southern is getting obese.
01:55:54.540 Yeah. I mean, this is the thing with women. Um, they peak, uh, I mean, people say, Oh, you're a,
01:56:03.400 you're a nasty pervert, but I mean, it's just the fact that the woman's body will naturally peak at
01:56:08.500 about 16, uh, years old. And then it's going to go downhill from that. If, if she just sits around
01:56:16.580 all the time and, and Lauren Southern is only 22 and she's letting, you know, she's letting her body
01:56:22.320 get out of control. She's letting it slip away, um, from a lack of, of physical activity and presumably
01:56:29.620 a poor diet. Uh, you know, I mean, she, she works on the internet, so she's sitting down all day. I
01:56:35.360 mean, I deal with this. I have to, you know, make it, make a very serious point to, to, to, to get
01:56:41.820 exercise and to get relatively intense exercise, uh, as often as I can, because I spend so much time
01:56:49.340 sitting in this chair. Um, I also try and figure out how to stand up and work. I'm going to get a
01:56:55.740 special desk for that, but, um, no, I mean, for, for women, um, they, they retain weight, um, more than
01:57:04.140 men and, and they will just turn into blobs very quickly. I mean, that, that youthful, um, you know,
01:57:13.080 I mean, they, they're, when they're teenagers, they just think they have this magic power, um, and this
01:57:21.500 power over men because they, they, they get this beauty, uh, as they, as they, uh, go through
01:57:30.920 adolescence and, and men are, you know, treating them differently than they, than they treat everybody
01:57:37.620 else because it's just a, it's a, it's a natural biological response to that. When a, when a young
01:57:42.820 fertile woman, um, is around you, you feel a need to, you know, be nice to them and protect them and do
01:57:50.020 whatever they want you to do. Um, but that, that is all, kill your rivals. Yeah. No, seriously, go
01:57:59.980 ahead. Go ahead. So yeah, they, uh, it goes away pretty fast and if they don't, they don't keep it
01:58:06.260 together. I think a woman can end up peaking at about 24, 25, even 26. If she, um, if she takes care
01:58:15.320 of herself, um, because you know, I mean, you can, women can develop muscle and I, I think it's, um,
01:58:22.780 I posted some pictures kind of, you know, trolling people of some, some girl that had like ripped abs,
01:58:29.720 which I, you know, a lot of people don't think that's attractive. I don't, I don't really think
01:58:33.600 it's attractive either. If you can see like strong definition in a woman's abs, uh, but exercise and,
01:58:42.460 and, and, uh, improving your health, your, your physical fitness does make a woman more attractive
01:58:48.860 and her butt can get bigger. Her legs can get where, where it's, you know, more, more firm in
01:58:54.060 her legs and butt. Um, and the, the posture can get even, you know, better. A lot of younger girls do
01:59:02.760 not, are not growing up with very good posture so they can, they can improve that through, through
01:59:08.600 exercise. So I think a woman can theoretically be more, much, much more attractive as, as a, as a 25
01:59:16.460 or 26 year old than as a, as a, as a 16 year old. Um, but they, they do have to work for that. And I
01:59:24.400 mean, the same is, same is true of, of men. And the thing is age thing, but with the working thing.
01:59:31.400 Right. But the thing is with the women, uh, and aging, um, if they stay fit throughout their life,
01:59:39.460 uh, and I'm not saying that they're at their peak or anything like that, but they can stay
01:59:44.720 attractive, especially to whatever man that they're with as they age, you know, into their
01:59:50.460 forties and such, they can stay very attractive if they stay in shape. Now I'm not saying, Oh, you
01:59:56.380 know, they're, they're still hot babes. Like when they were in their twenties, I'm not saying
02:00:00.520 that at all. But you look at a woman in her forties who's even if she's not obese or whatever,
02:00:07.200 but who just sits around on her ass all the time and pretty much does nothing. And you compare that
02:00:13.200 to some woman who's at the gym or the aerobic studio or whatever, you know, three to five times
02:00:18.400 a week working her ass off and watching her weight and all that. There's a huge difference even in
02:00:23.160 their forties and fifties. But, um, uh, but yeah, fitness, uh, very important thing, but I wanted to get
02:00:30.260 on. You, you, you had a pretty good, uh, rant in that article and it's not the first time that
02:00:37.440 you've done it. And you were using Lauren Southern as the example, but this goes for the vast majority
02:00:43.540 of these women, these political women on YouTube, especially ones that are all lied or all right,
02:00:49.720 is that, um, uh, watching them and sending the money and all, uh, that's basically these dudes
02:00:56.300 jacking off to girls on YouTube, right? Yeah. Um, uh, you know, I, I obviously played it up,
02:01:05.060 joking around, acted like it was literal masturbation. I'm sure some of them actually
02:01:09.320 do that, but that was me saying that all these guys are jacking off was more to push the point
02:01:14.600 that they're, they're using this as like a virtual girlfriend. And I think that men have a, I mean,
02:01:20.900 men should be aware of what's going through their heads. I mean, that's what, that's how you develop
02:01:25.760 and grow as a person is, is being aware. I mean, this is the old know thyself, um, of, of, of looking
02:01:33.620 at what's going on in your own head and looking at the reasoning behind why you do things. And men
02:01:37.740 have a drive, which is perfectly good and natural in itself to take care of women. I mean, men have a
02:01:45.760 drive to give women money basically to give them resources. It's an actual biological drive to turn
02:01:53.300 over resources to women. Uh, because that's kind of the, you know, I mean, that's, that's how the
02:01:59.360 species survives. You have to, we, we evolved to, because the guys who didn't have that never would
02:02:05.760 have spread their, their genes. Um, at least not to raise healthy children. Maybe they, maybe they
02:02:11.840 would have raped some woman and, and left her and the kid would have been born. But I mean, then there,
02:02:16.080 if, if the guy didn't stay and raise it, then there's a high chance of it not surviving or not
02:02:21.460 even being born. So, um, we've evolved. Our, our ancestors were the kind of men who took care of
02:02:29.540 women. I mean, by, by the fact that we were alive, that means that our ancestors had some of that,
02:02:34.860 um, in them. So, so we have a drive to, to do that. And what these guys do with these women on,
02:02:42.800 on YouTube and Twitter and these, that they send money for to is that they're like, um, they're,
02:02:50.220 they're doing that as a response to a, this biological drive. Cause they don't have girlfriends
02:02:55.280 or, or, you know, I mean, ideally they would have wives and children, um, that they're taking care of.
02:03:03.600 So they, they have this itch to, to send resources to some woman on the internet. Uh, and I think this
02:03:11.540 is, you know, it's fine if, if men just want to do that and they realize that they're fulfilling a
02:03:17.020 biological urge to do that. Um, and they, they think they need to do that, but I mean, don't do
02:03:23.780 that and say that you're doing it because it's helping the movement because it's not, there's no,
02:03:29.400 there's nothing coming from, um, Lauren Southern or one of these other women that sit there and just
02:03:37.060 read blogs and then repeat the information on, on a YouTube video. I mean, that's not waking people
02:03:46.800 up. I mean, it's, it's for people who already like this stuff to think, to have this fantasy of a girl
02:03:53.760 who understands them, which is a, it's a really childish thing. I mean, um, it's a mommy to a large
02:04:02.080 experience. It is. It is. Yeah. It's, it's a need for approval from a woman, which is what this,
02:04:07.840 uh, you know, with single mothers and absent fathers, um, or, or single absent mothers. Um,
02:04:18.020 a lot of men have grown up and, and my generation millennials insecure, uh, and needing approval,
02:04:27.420 looking, looking for that approval from, from mommy. Uh, well, and it's, it's not, it's not just the
02:04:34.420 mommy thing either, because ever since, um, you know, we liberated women several decades ago,
02:04:41.860 society has taught boys from a very early age that they, if they ever want to score,
02:04:48.200 if they ever want a girlfriend, if they ever want a wife and children, they have to seek the approval
02:04:53.840 of these women. Yeah. Yeah. So, uh, you know, this, this fantasy idea that you have to, you have to
02:05:04.960 find some woman who, who agrees with you politically and so on. I think that that's, that's a big part
02:05:11.480 of what's going on that day. This, these women who are capitalizing on this financially, as well as
02:05:19.840 just, I mean, women love attention. So, I mean, there's nothing more, um, appealing to a woman than
02:05:28.880 being a, a YouTube cam whore, uh, because that's, it's unlimited attention coming at you and instant.
02:05:38.440 Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. And from everywhere. And, you know, I mean, that's like with these, with,
02:05:43.580 with Facebook and these, I mean, even tender is, is one that women really use for, for validation of
02:05:51.020 themselves. Uh, the thing about women, another thing about women is that they have no natural
02:05:56.900 self-esteem from inside themselves. They, they, they, they only can get their, their self-esteem
02:06:05.980 from the approval of men. They, they, they are driven to get, get approval from men, which I mean,
02:06:12.940 in a, in a natural situation, what's supposed to happen is that the, the, the man and woman get
02:06:19.880 married and form a monogamous relationship. And the, the, the man provides the woman with that,
02:06:28.460 with that, um, confidence in herself, because I mean, a woman is naturally insecure. Okay. Because
02:06:36.020 she's physically incapable of, of protecting herself, um, from predators and from, you know,
02:06:44.100 whoever, uh, other men, she, a woman is, I mean, the, the fact of the matter is Spartacus wrote this
02:06:51.720 today. The fact of the matter is a, a 12 year old boy can beat up pretty much any woman. Yeah. Um,
02:06:59.640 I mean, the physical strength difference there is, is just massive, uh, cause women are designed to,
02:07:06.540 to carry children. So, you know, a woman is naturally has no self-esteem and security in
02:07:12.680 herself because of that physical, um, attribute, the difference between men and women physically.
02:07:19.660 So, uh, she needs to get that, get that from a man. And this is basically an overload of it. What
02:07:26.380 the internet does for women is just give them an overload of, of male attention. And that's what,
02:07:32.080 um, you know, that's, that's what a lot of this is about. And, and that's the, it's what a lot of
02:07:40.380 modern society is about. I mean, that's what I always tell guys with, with going to the club like
02:07:46.820 this, trying to meet girls, women do. Well, there's about a 48 hour period every month when a woman
02:07:55.120 maybe will have sex with a random man, but generally they won't. I mean, generally a woman has
02:08:00.940 no drive or reason to have sex with some random guy. Um, especially if she's picking from a pool of
02:08:09.120 guys, is she going to pick you? Uh, probably not. I mean, unless you're, you're extraordinarily
02:08:15.240 attractive. So this whole thing with the clubs is basically for women's, um, self-esteem. You're
02:08:23.120 basically paying to go give a woman her, her self-esteem in these, in these club scenes. I mean,
02:08:31.400 people do get laid, you can get laid, but it's not something where you go out there and it's not
02:08:36.340 something that you should judge yourself if you go out there and you, and you don't get laid at some
02:08:40.620 club. Um, basically the, the primary thing is that it's a scam for women to get, uh, their self-esteem
02:08:51.280 boosted by men courting them in this rapid fashion where it's like, Oh, you know, can I buy you a
02:08:57.020 drink? Okay. And then you're just giving this woman all this free attention that, that boosts her
02:09:02.280 self-image. But they now do that on the internet. And, um, it's a, it's an exploitation. It's a,
02:09:08.600 this is the term that men should learn and, and, and put this in their brains,
02:09:15.020 lodge it in their brains, that this is a sexual exploitation of men. That's what that is.
02:09:21.460 Yeah. I mean, and the thing is, it's when, when you just break it down to its fundamentals,
02:09:26.420 it's a really stupid thing that it happens the way it does anyway, because
02:09:30.380 just take Lauren Southern specifically, um, Lauren Southern, basically from what I can tell,
02:09:38.500 she goes and reads a few articles on Breitbart and VDR or whatever. And she finds something that
02:09:46.440 she says, okay, I can talk about this on my YouTube channel today. And she goes and finds herself a
02:09:52.400 shirt that exposes a couple of feet of cleavage. And she makes sure and gets the cleavage nice front
02:09:58.640 and center and puts on plenty of makeup and all that. And she gives you a pushup bra. Yeah. And she
02:10:05.420 gives you a regurgitation of what she just read on VDR or Breitbart. And so you have to ask yourself,
02:10:12.640 if you're really in this for the politics or the information or whatever, are you better off
02:10:18.120 getting it straight from VDR and Breitbart, or are you better off getting it from Lauren Southern's tits?
02:10:26.020 Okay. Cause that's, that's basically what it is. You, you, you, you're watching this for her tits.
02:10:31.680 Yeah. If she didn't have, if Lauren Southern said exactly the things that she says, but she was some
02:10:39.660 250 pound, uh, nerd woman with big thick glasses, uh, and no makeup and just a horrible face and all
02:10:47.960 that. But she had the exact same voice and said the exact same things. Nobody'd watch her channel.
02:10:53.000 No, absolutely not. Uh, and, and if you think about the channels with men that you do watch,
02:11:00.800 it's, it's not really somebody that just read a, read a one or two blogs and is then regurgitating
02:11:06.160 the information. I mean, if you, if you, if you compare her to the, to the men's channels that you
02:11:11.700 watch, I mean, the men's channels are, are giving some form of, of insight that, you know, would,
02:11:18.180 I, I always say that I'd rather have transcripts because I don't really like watching videos,
02:11:22.240 but I mean, I think of, you know, different, different people, the black pigeon speaks.
02:11:28.640 I always post his videos. He sometimes has stuff that I'm like, huh? Yeah. That's a interesting,
02:11:33.560 uh, angle on that. I mean, not very often. He's usually just giving a presentation of something,
02:11:38.360 but he's doing it in a very poignant, uh, manner. Yeah. Uh, but sometimes he comes up with things,
02:11:45.340 uh, that are, that are different. I mean, you think about the other top, what are the top alt
02:11:50.220 right YouTube channels, even millennial woes. I don't really agree with a lot. I don't really
02:11:54.600 post his videos because I don't agree with a lot of what he says, but you know, I, I, I listen to it
02:12:00.980 and it's like, well, you know, there's some interesting thoughts here. There, there's something
02:12:04.380 being presented that's been, been processed in his brain. Um, doom guard is a good one. Uh, I mean,
02:12:11.540 he, he presents new angles on things. Um, you know, I mean, that's usually what you're, what
02:12:19.680 you're looking for in, in content, not somebody just to, just to repeat something that they read
02:12:24.120 on blog. Even the guys who aren't trying to be totally serious, like, uh, Beardson, right? You
02:12:31.260 watch a Beardson video where he's just trolling and making fun of something and you get more original
02:12:36.980 thought about whatever the political topic is than you get from these women.
02:12:42.380 Yeah, absolutely. Uh, I've, I've never seen any original thought from a woman just generally.
02:12:51.760 And there, there's not really any creativity there. It's just, it's, it's not any, it's not
02:12:56.540 mean to say that it's just a, it's a biological reality. I mean, there are no great women in history.
02:13:04.300 I mean, that's extreme, but there, there are very few women that you would, you would say
02:13:10.440 were great scientists or, or novelists or artists. Um, you know, Mary Shelley is, is one that was,
02:13:19.860 but I mean, she was married to, uh, uh, Percy Shelley, one of the most brilliant, uh, men of
02:13:26.400 that era. Um, I mean, was he helping her out with that? The one that you can say actually
02:13:32.020 was good is Ayn Rand, who was Jewish. Well, see, that's where I disagree. Now I do agree
02:13:40.060 that there was a lot of original thought in what she did, but, uh, I always thought she
02:13:44.640 was a horrible writer. Yeah. I mean, I don't know. It's, it's a pretty good Atlas Shrugged
02:13:54.040 is a, is a relatively good, um, novel, I would say from a literary perspective in my view.
02:14:02.760 Um, yeah, it's very long. It's not fantastic. It doesn't come. I mean, the reason that it's
02:14:08.520 so celebrated is one, the, the Jewish ideology of it and another, the, uh, the fact that it
02:14:15.240 was written by a woman. So there's two sort of reasons that they have to, to celebrate.
02:14:20.280 This is a great novel, but I mean, I think it's, it's relatively good. It would be a,
02:14:27.260 it would be probably in my estimation, and I'm not saying this because I'm a prude, but
02:14:32.960 it would be a lot better in my estimation. If you took out the approximately five or 600
02:14:38.540 pages that are basically harlequin romance type porn, you know, all the sex scenes in it
02:14:46.460 with Dagny Tiger, but they just get, they get boring. I mean, it's just the same thing
02:14:53.340 over and over, but yeah, but yeah, you're absolutely no Tom. No. Yeah. Now there's a
02:15:00.180 writer, but anyway, that's so, uh, so yeah, I agree with you that when it, when it comes
02:15:05.840 to, um, creativity, you don't find too much of it in the female sex. And, and I think a
02:15:11.720 lot of that is just easily explained by the natural evolutionary role of male and female,
02:15:18.300 uh, the role of a male is to, uh, to create, protect and all that. And the role of a female
02:15:26.500 is to think up, what does she want? You know, I mean, it's just like, if you, if you look
02:15:31.340 at go on any dating website and look at the men and the men in their profiles, they're all
02:15:37.880 explaining the things they've accomplished and the, uh, the ways they can provide and
02:15:44.260 all that. And then you go look at the women and the women are all saying, you know, I really
02:15:48.520 like it when a guy takes me to this kind of restaurant and I'm not a person who likes to
02:15:52.520 stay at home. So make sure you're going to take me to amusement parks and, and you know,
02:15:56.860 this and that, or, you know, it's, it's all, I like this, give me this, give me this. It's,
02:16:01.220 it's a complete kind of a yin yang dynamic going on there. And when you're, when you're,
02:16:06.960 when you're set, your default setting is give me, give me, give me, give me, you're not
02:16:11.440 going to be creative.
02:16:13.520 No. And I mean, it just, it just goes back to the basic function as, as a species that
02:16:20.560 reproduces sexually. I mean, you can even say beyond, um, mammals, but definitely, definitely
02:16:27.600 mammals and primates. Um, you know, the, the male is, is the stronger one that produces
02:16:36.520 the food. Whereas the female is not every primate is like that, but okay. Human beings,
02:16:42.580 we can say this, that the, the male is the one that all throughout history has gone out
02:16:47.380 to get the food for the woman who's pregnant producing babies. That's how the species survives.
02:16:52.440 So everything basically extends from that and, and gathering food, it requires more intelligence,
02:17:00.180 more of a drive, um, and, uh, more of an ability to work with others, more, more to, to cooperate as
02:17:08.000 a team. Um, more of all the things that we associate with, with the concept of masculinity,
02:17:13.920 then, then the things that we think of as feminine, which are just related to, as you say,
02:17:19.680 needs. I mean, a woman is there to take because she's giving it to children. I mean, it's not
02:17:24.920 anything negative in a natural setting. It is now just like everything in our society is perverted,
02:17:31.640 but I mean, she, she naturally exists to take things from men and give it to her children.
02:17:39.260 So, I mean, that's, that's what goes on. And when the woman is not having children,
02:17:43.900 she's just a bottomless pit where you're throwing money into it. And what are you getting? You're
02:17:48.840 getting sex, I guess. Um, well, not necessarily. Well, yeah, that, that article, that, uh, daily
02:17:57.060 mail, um, article where that woman, I think she was an American woman, but it was in the daily mail,
02:18:03.200 uh, was, was having guys take her on trips and then she was requesting separate rooms and she was
02:18:09.860 telling women like, yeah, this is a really good way. You can see the world. You don't even have to
02:18:14.160 have sex with these guys. They'll just pay for you to go on trips as long as you just talk
02:18:18.840 to them. And it's like, wow. Yeah. And that article didn't surprise me because a few months
02:18:26.460 back and I talked about this on the show, but I never ended up doing the writing about it because
02:18:32.900 it just didn't pan out to be something I wanted to spend that much time on. But I thought it might
02:18:37.540 be a good idea because a few months ago, this sugar daddy, sugar baby business was all over the news.
02:18:43.520 And I thought, yeah, I mean, everybody knew what a sugar daddy and a sugar baby was. It's been around
02:18:48.700 forever. You know, some married dude, um, who wants a little on the side. Um, you know,
02:18:55.560 at some point the term mistress fell out of, uh, uh, the lexicon and they started calling
02:19:00.960 them sugar babies and he's the sugar daddy cause he'll give her so much a week or so much a month
02:19:05.240 to support herself. And he gets to come over and have sex with a young chippy every, whenever
02:19:09.000 he wants to, or whatever. But so I went and I checked it out and you know, I, I, uh, um,
02:19:15.200 set up profiles on a couple of these, uh, sugar daddy, sugar baby connect websites to see what
02:19:21.220 was good, what was up with them. And it was amazing how upfront these women were with this stuff.
02:19:26.780 But the funny part of it was this super huge percentage of them who would like in their,
02:19:33.700 uh, profile, they'd say how, you know, how much of an allowance do you require? And they'd be like
02:19:38.500 $10,000 a month. And this would be some just halfway decent looking woman who says,
02:19:44.480 and we are never going to meet and we are never going to have sex. We'll do whatever we do online
02:19:51.280 via chat. And I'm like, holy crap. Yeah. I'm like, holy crap. These broads think that chatting via text
02:19:59.660 message and video chatting over Skype and whatever, uh, is worth $10,000 a month for a couple hours,
02:20:08.500 a week of some dude whacking off when there's all the free porn in the world, unfortunately on the
02:20:14.900 internet. And, uh, I didn't know about this. Yeah. Yeah. I mean, especially if you made the
02:20:22.640 account and looked at it, that'd be a good article, man. I guess I could, I guess I should. I mean,
02:20:28.840 like the, I don't know if it's the biggest one, but like, you know, a lot of them wanted money to
02:20:34.180 register. And of course I wasn't doing that because if, if there's one thing I have no intention
02:20:38.260 of doing, it's contacting some whore who wants $10,000 a month, even if it's to bang her once
02:20:43.500 or twice. But, uh, uh, but yeah, I mean, it's just endless to actually cover it. You'd have to
02:20:53.360 write a whole series of articles because there's so much weirdness and psychotic behavior going on
02:20:58.420 with these women and, and the types of money they're asking for and the types of relationships
02:21:03.120 they're offering and everything. But, um, but yeah, I mean like they, they, they're just so
02:21:09.380 entitled to everything now. And, uh, apparently it correlates with IQ too, because you'll see like
02:21:16.760 these 250 pound black women who are on there talking about, I'm worth $20,000 a month, but I ain't got
02:21:24.280 but a couple of hours a month to see you, honey. Who is paying this? That's nuts. I mean, I, I knew
02:21:32.760 about these websites, of course, it's been in the media and it's, it's just, like you said, it's just
02:21:38.420 a mistress. This has been going on forever. I mean, for all of recorded history that men have had
02:21:44.640 younger women that they gave money to, uh, you know, supported their lives so they could have sex
02:21:49.580 with them when they're, you know, whenever they want, um, after their wife is old. Um, or, you
02:21:58.380 know, if the wife, I don't think it's just because the wife is old. I think in a lot of cases it's
02:22:02.400 because the wife is emotionally disconnected or whatever. Well, it's, it's been a thing forever
02:22:08.780 that after they have a few babies, they quit putting out, you know? Yeah. So, so, you know, it's,
02:22:16.900 I don't, I don't think we need demonized men over the concept of, of mistresses. Um, no,
02:22:22.860 but it is a, no, I wouldn't say, and you were doing that. I just felt, I just wanted to make
02:22:27.480 it clear that I don't agree with it. I don't think there's anything wrong with it, with an
02:22:31.340 arrangement. Now, now this whole way of doing it through these websites and all, there's a lot
02:22:36.100 of problems with that. But I mean, like if you're some, well, I think there is something, I think
02:22:40.660 there is something wrong with it when a man is married that he shouldn't be having a mistress. I
02:22:46.040 think that, I think that you can say that. It's just that you should also be able to understand
02:22:51.200 where these men are coming from, I guess. Yeah. Yeah. If you, if he's married, right. But I'm
02:22:55.560 just saying, okay, just take all the other details other than the mistress or sugar daddy, sugar baby.
02:23:02.880 No, I mean, it's, it's a logical thing really. Otherwise, if the guy's not married, this is,
02:23:07.860 this is a good arrangement.
02:23:09.040 I mean, you know, if you've, if you've run across some young gal and you know, you want
02:23:15.040 to have a sexual thing with her and, uh, you don't, you don't want, I mean, you obviously
02:23:21.360 and openly don't want like a romantic relationship with her. Like she's going to be your girlfriend
02:23:26.200 or your fiance or something. And she's willing to do that. It's a perfectly legitimate relationship.
02:23:31.620 In my opinion, say, okay, well, you know, I'm going to pay your rent on this apartment here.
02:23:36.240 And so I'm giving you what you want and you're going to give me what I want. Right. You know,
02:23:39.480 I mean, there's nothing wrong with that. Now, if you're married, yeah, it's a whole different
02:23:42.140 thing, but I'm not going to demonize anybody. Like he said, but let's get onto the next thing
02:23:46.700 and we'll finish the show up. It was the actual fitness. And the reason that I was wanting to
02:23:51.240 bring this up, I talked to you a little about this before we started recording is, um, I knew
02:23:57.120 over the last few months that I was getting out of shape. Um, but I, as I said to you in private,
02:24:04.600 this, uh, getting overweight thing is it's a very insidious thing because everybody sees
02:24:10.340 it except the person that it's happening to as it happens. It's happened to me several
02:24:14.360 times in my life that I've lost a lot of weight and then gained a lot of weight or whatever.
02:24:19.040 And you definitely notice yourself losing the weight because you're having to, to do things
02:24:24.980 like restrict your food intake and pick and choose what you're going to eat and not eat and
02:24:30.440 exercise and things like that. So you're watching, but when you start gaining the weight and getting
02:24:35.200 out of shape, it's not that way. You know, you know, you look in the mirror every day
02:24:38.860 and the changes are slow enough that you still see that same guy and it's everybody else who
02:24:43.280 sees how big you are. Well, when I, when I went to Houston and Austin and I saw the videos
02:24:49.340 of myself, I was like, man, I knew I was overweight, but God, look at that gut. How did it, how did
02:24:54.000 I get this way? And so I'd been talking to you for a while about, you know, your diet
02:25:00.760 regimen and things like that so that I could try to lose a little weight and get back to
02:25:05.220 exercising and everything. And I don't know, a couple of weeks ago, I guess, maybe 10 days,
02:25:11.780 two weeks, something like that. I started going real strict by it. I think it was when I got
02:25:16.160 back from Houston and saw myself. I was like, oh no, I got to do something about this. I can't,
02:25:20.940 I can't be going out there representing with this thing hanging over my belt.
02:25:25.460 And in, in that short period of time, I've already lost over 10 pounds and my gut's a lot
02:25:32.020 smaller. And as soon as it will quit raining every day, I'm going to start riding my bicycle,
02:25:38.360 try to get my cardio back in shape a little bit to where I can start doing some strength training
02:25:43.240 and stuff, but it's already showing dividends. And the stuff that you've told me is really simple
02:25:48.460 and it's based on paleo. Um, but just in general, uh, you know, what, what do you think about,
02:25:56.800 uh, I mean, you know, I know there's, there's a lot of people out there that try to shame
02:26:01.660 people in the alt ride into losing weight when they see them on video and stuff at public events.
02:26:07.160 Oh, I don't come out. No, I don't want to see you on video again, you fat bastard or something like
02:26:11.380 that. Uh, and I don't think that's a very good, uh, way to get them to do it, but I think a good way to
02:26:17.800 get people. I've done that and I, I regret doing it. You're right. We should. Yeah. Right. But,
02:26:22.760 but I think that, um, um, encouraging people is a good thing. And so just, uh, real quickly,
02:26:31.520 just list off a few reasons that you think people should be in better shape.
02:26:37.500 Well, I mean, it's mainly just how you feel and how, how you view yourself. I think,
02:26:41.820 I think that anything that you do should be basically, well, I mean, that sounds bad to say
02:26:48.160 that anything you should do should be for yourself, but anything that you put energy and time into
02:26:52.360 should be for, um, you know, a goal. Um, basically I'm just saying not, not doing it for women in
02:27:00.740 particular, though. Um, I, you will obviously get more women and in that way is doing something for
02:27:06.840 yourself, but just, I mean, if you're going to get in shape, you should say, I'm doing this for me
02:27:12.200 because I care about myself and I want to take, I want to take care of myself. I mean, I think that's
02:27:17.360 an important position to start from. Um, and because you, you care about, you know, your, your people,
02:27:25.000 your society, your race, you, you want to represent that, uh, in a way that's, you know, that, that your
02:27:32.340 ancestors would approve of that you, they can look down and, and say, uh, that they're, that they're
02:27:38.080 proud of what you're doing. I mean, that's, I, I think about that a lot and I mean, maybe it's not
02:27:42.580 real. Maybe our ancestors are not looking down on us, but even if they're not, um, the, the viewing it
02:27:50.000 that way can be very, very helpful. Um, I think to, to view it in those terms, but, um, uh, I, I think
02:27:58.320 to, to mainly do it for yourself is, is the reason that you should be in shape. And I mean, just
02:28:03.120 cause you, you, you feel better and you feel better about yourself psychologically. I mean, I,
02:28:08.480 it's more like, well, what is the reason that you would, you would not want to be feeling good,
02:28:14.600 feeling, being at your best, looking your best and, um, and so on. Why, why would you not want to do
02:28:21.540 that? And how much energy, excess energy are you expending on not doing that, not taking care of
02:28:29.440 that aspect of your life? How much, how much energy does that drain from you? And, uh, it ultimately,
02:28:35.240 if you added it up as a math equation, it would be that it takes away a lot more energy than just,
02:28:39.920 just taking care of yourself would, would take. Oh, absolutely. Uh, and, and, uh, just right off the
02:28:47.780 bat. Uh, just think of this. Um, and this is something I know from personal experience and
02:28:53.520 I'm pretty sure anybody who's ever struggled with their weight, when I say this, they'll say,
02:28:57.400 yeah, me too. Um, when you start putting on weight and like, say, you know, you're going to go out
02:29:03.420 somewhere and you're going to meet people or meet a woman or whatever, and you go take a shower and
02:29:08.720 get all ready and everything. And you go to putting your clothes on and you grab this shirt that you're
02:29:12.720 like, yeah, this is my best shirt. I look good in this thing. And you pull it on and it's like skin
02:29:17.120 tight and looks horrible. Well, Oh no. And you know, you have to find something else. It's not
02:29:22.020 just that you have to find something else to wear, but it's like, you suddenly become extremely
02:29:25.780 self-conscious about your appearance right at that moment. And it doesn't go away when you change the
02:29:31.280 shirt, it affects you throughout your whole day and it messes with your confidence. Now, you know,
02:29:37.920 and I'm one of these guys who I've got plenty on tap, but, but still I like to have as much as I can.
02:29:44.640 And another thing is, uh, you're a lot more effective person when you're fit. What you said
02:29:50.440 about it costing you more energy to be not fit than it does to be fit is absolutely true because,
02:29:57.000 uh, like you can be fit with, uh, you know, as long as you're watching your diet and stuff with a very
02:30:03.300 small amount of exercise. When I say small amount, it would probably sound like a big amount to somebody
02:30:07.880 who doesn't do it, but having done it myself in the past, you know, five or six days a week
02:30:13.000 of one hour. Each of those days of some type of intense exercise is not that much. It seems like
02:30:20.920 it at first, but once you get fit, you actually start looking forward to it for a lot of reasons,
02:30:25.660 because it, it actually makes you, even though the exertion and all, uh, is, can be somewhat painful
02:30:34.220 or uncomfortable or whatever, uh, you actually get, uh, physical and emotional pleasure out of
02:30:41.660 doing it because of the hormones that it releases and the blood pumping so thick through all your
02:30:47.140 muscles from the tip of your head to the tip of your toes and all that. Uh, but there's a lot more
02:30:53.180 long range stuff to this. Uh, and I'm one of the few people in the alt-right who can speak to this
02:30:58.220 since I'm like Methuselah in the alt-right being 50. And, you know, I know a lot of guys and it
02:31:04.680 doesn't bother me. Don't get me wrong, but a lot of guys in the comments, they'll, they'll talk about
02:31:09.940 me being an old man or something like that. And, you know, since these guys are teenagers and 20
02:31:15.260 somethings and all, I understand. I thought a 50 year old was an old man back then too, but let me tell
02:31:20.140 you, that is not the case. When you're 50, if you've taken care of yourself at all, you are at a very
02:31:28.080 prime point in your life as far as your power as, especially as a male. I'm, I can't speak to
02:31:35.440 females on this, but because though you have lost some of your physical or a lot of your physical
02:31:42.240 vigor, you can make it up, uh, a good percentage of that by being fit. And for every bit of that
02:31:50.400 physical vigor that you've lost, you've still got all your marbles. You're still, your intellect is
02:31:55.080 still just as sharp as it ever was, but you've got all this experience, this life experience on
02:32:00.740 top of it. And so if you keep yourself fit, uh, you're a lot more powerful male in the eyes of
02:32:09.340 all these people. And you're, if you are somebody who does something like we do or whatever it is
02:32:14.020 you do, whether you're in management at some company or you run your own business, or you're
02:32:18.780 just a worker on an assembly line, whatever it is, you're going to be a way more effective
02:32:22.520 person about at doing it. And you're not going to feel tired all the time. And, you know, as a
02:32:27.680 person who's overweight right now and middle age, I got to tell you, I feel tired all the time and
02:32:34.280 it affects my work. Uh, when I was fit, uh, really fit before I started writing for Daily Stormer,
02:32:41.720 unfortunately I've been out of shape for a while and didn't realize how badly, but like when I was
02:32:46.720 doing the concerned citizen stuff, um, I was, uh, posting like six articles a day and going out and
02:32:53.640 following around cops and filming them and going up to the city hall and raising hell there. It was like
02:32:59.180 16 hour work days. And the only reason that I would stop was because I ran out of things to cover that
02:33:05.380 day. And now I'm like, I can sit at my desk and know, Oh yeah, I've got this thing I could write,
02:33:13.440 but I'm just going to sit here and look at the screen a while. Cause damn, it's just seems like
02:33:18.000 it's going to be hard. And, uh, and so, you know, uh, having that physical fitness, I think is the most
02:33:27.920 important thing that you can do about being a productive person, uh, more important than just
02:33:35.800 about everything else combined. I mean, if, if your life's disorganized and, and all that, I mean,
02:33:42.200 yeah, sure. You can do a thousand different things. You can make lists, you can move stuff
02:33:46.220 around, you can make schedules and all that, but none of it's going to have near the effect of just
02:33:51.780 getting in physical shape. And it's really not that hard to get there, is it?
02:33:56.520 No, it's not. And I don't think people have to get, get huge. I'm not very big. You know,
02:34:02.480 I talk about, I talk about physical health a lot and people will say, Oh, you're not,
02:34:07.860 you know, you're not a huge guy. Um, you know, I'm pretty short to begin with, but they're talking
02:34:14.560 about my, my muscles, um, that I'm, that I'm not huge, but I am in, in relatively very good
02:34:22.000 shape. Um, I have, my muscles are not huge, but they're very, very tone defined. Um, I, I look
02:34:29.060 healthy. Um, and it's, it's not, I mean, if, if you want to be like a serious bodybuilder,
02:34:36.400 you know, that's, that's a lot of work, but to just get in shape. And I mean, you will,
02:34:41.380 you will grow muscles at over, over time. I mean, even as you go past 30, you can still,
02:34:47.620 still be developing muscle. Um, but I mean, the, the idea is just to be, be at your,
02:34:55.080 what you would be in nature basically, or, or something close to it where you, um, you're just
02:35:01.880 lean and, and healthy, not carrying around extra weight. And I, I think it's kind of
02:35:07.280 just a baseline for life that to, to do anything you should just start out with, with the, I
02:35:13.660 mean, it's like an old cliche, but you know, the most important thing you have is your
02:35:17.760 health. Um, I mean, that's especially now in the, in the material with the kind of material,
02:35:24.460 um, wealth that we have in our society where even people on welfare are doing relatively
02:35:29.780 great compared to historical norms. Um, you know, I mean, there, there's no real excuse to,
02:35:38.340 to not be, not be healthy. It doesn't take that much energy. And I mean, when you see somebody,
02:35:45.340 especially young people who are overweight, it just, it just says like, I have no self-control
02:35:51.960 at all. And I don't really care about anything. I don't care about myself. I don't care about the
02:35:57.840 people around me. I don't care about anything. Um, I think that anybody naturally gets that
02:36:05.020 impression. I mean, whether they are consciously aware of it registering or not, which as I said
02:36:12.180 earlier, you know, know thyself, you should be consciously aware of things that are going on in
02:36:17.660 your brain as much as you can be. But, um, you, anybody reacts to an overweight person negatively.
02:36:26.680 And obviously the, the older you get, the less likely people are to do that because it's more
02:36:32.260 common because of the metabolism and just the body, the changes, hormonal changes and so on that
02:36:38.640 go on with the, uh, with the body as you age. And, and some people naturally just carry more weight as
02:36:45.300 they age. I think they can, there's things you can do to offset that of course. But, um, yeah, I think
02:36:51.900 it's just a basic thing that you should be, you should be in shape. There's not, there's not any
02:36:56.020 excuse not to be, uh, I mean, you know, there, there's no, no reason not to be. And people do not
02:37:04.060 respect people who don't have that basic self-respect because that's what it says to go in to any
02:37:10.840 situation where you're overweight. It says, I do not have respect for myself first and foremost.
02:37:16.440 Yeah. And you, you have to have self-respect, uh, in enough measure that other people see you have
02:37:26.400 it before they will respect you. Exactly. Yeah. But, but yeah. And, and like I say, it's,
02:37:33.300 it's not that hard a thing to do. And, um, it does appear as, uh, you posted a couple of times
02:37:40.020 semi cryptically that at some point, whether we want it or not, there's going to be a bad
02:37:47.660 shit hits the fan situation, most likely a race or type scenario. And if there's one thing you don't
02:37:54.000 want to be, when that happens, it's some 300 pound dude whose backside is the shape of his recliner,
02:38:02.960 who has built his bulk on Funyuns and Mountain Dew, because you're going to have a hard time.
02:38:10.020 Yeah. Yeah. There's that. And just any, if you're not, if you're not used to physical activity and
02:38:18.740 you get in that situation, I mean, you should feel comfortable in your own, in your own skin,
02:38:23.500 which is why I, um, encourage martial arts training. I mean, there's a, there's other kinds
02:38:31.000 of fitness people can, people can focus on, but I think the, the best for young men that I,
02:38:37.020 I always say is to do, um, some kind of martial arts, uh, people like just standard MMA or jujitsu,
02:38:48.300 um, box Western boxing is okay. I think Muay Thai is very good, which you're going to get elements of
02:38:55.020 Muay Thai. If you just go to something that says MMA, um, or, or any of the other Asian martial arts,
02:39:02.380 I think Muay Thai is probably the best of the, of the Asian martial arts. I think it's the most
02:39:07.280 useful for, for actual situations. There's not, there's not a lot of grappling in Muay Thai,
02:39:13.660 is there? Yeah. Okay. See, that's the problem. That's the problem I have with some of these
02:39:19.180 systems is how much grappling they put in them. And that stuff's great. If you're in some situation
02:39:27.260 where it's a one-on-one fight and no matter what happens, it's going to remain a one-on-one fight.
02:39:33.100 But if you're learning martial arts for the purpose of like, if you get attacked in the street or,
02:39:40.700 you know, even something more specific, like you're a person who goes to these rallies and you want to
02:39:45.320 be able to defend yourself if a bunch of Antifa attack you or something like that, uh, this grappling
02:39:51.980 stuff, if you just, if you have it just so memorized into your muscle memory that you go to that,
02:39:58.740 well, when you wrap some dude up and hit the ground with him, all his buddies are going to
02:40:02.660 start stomping you. You know, I think you're a lot better with striking and kicking type martial arts.
02:40:08.560 Yeah, no, I mean, there's, there's no, there's no on the ground fighting and, uh, in Muay Thai that
02:40:15.460 they're going to teach you at a regular Muay Thai class. If you go to an MMA class, you're going to learn,
02:40:19.960 uh, wrestling. Yeah, the Brazilian Jiu Jitsu. Yeah. Yeah. Basically what they use in normal MMA is,
02:40:27.320 uh, is a mix of Brazilian Jiu Jitsu and, and Muay Thai. But, um, Muay Thai is all, is all striking.
02:40:36.040 I mean, it's, it's standing combat, uh, kicking and punching. Well, that's what you need then. Yeah.
02:40:43.280 Yeah, no. So, uh, yeah, that's the, uh, also even if you live somewhere that you can't find,
02:40:49.920 in Muay Thai, um, one thing I've noticed is that even in tiny little towns, nobody's ever heard of,
02:40:55.440 like one up the road here called Yandis, they have a gym there where they've got a guy who's
02:41:00.360 certified that teaches kickboxing, you know, and they're, they're teaching you to strike with your
02:41:05.020 fist and kick with your feet. That's a hell of a lot better than nothing. Yeah, no, I mean,
02:41:09.960 kickboxing is going to be probably some variation of, of Muay Thai at this point. I mean, it's kind of
02:41:15.840 like with, with the, um, with the UFC training, I mean, they reduced everything to, um, the,
02:41:23.940 the most efficient, uh, systems. So for the, for the standing combat, it's, it's basically
02:41:33.380 some variation of Muay Thai for any, any training. Uh, and then the, then the grappling wrestling,
02:41:40.180 uh, element is, is going to be Brazilian jujitsu. Um, so, you know, both, both are good and helpful.
02:41:51.200 I mean, uh, if you're smaller, you know, I'm only five, seven, I weigh less than one 50 usually. Um,
02:42:01.700 and, uh, you know, it's something where it's, it's going to be wrestling for me is not, is not that
02:42:12.720 really good of a sport because it's so much based on your weight if you're wrestling. So yeah, I've,
02:42:19.820 I've stuck to the, uh, the boxing more myself. Um, yeah, size has more practical and useful.
02:42:28.720 Yeah. Unfortunately for people who are smaller, you, if you're smaller and you're somebody who's
02:42:36.480 willing to get into fights, you really need to learn martial arts more so even than the bigger
02:42:41.320 guys. And that's not saying the bigger guys shouldn't learn it, but with all other things
02:42:46.020 equal, no matter what kind of fight you're talking about, size matters most. And, uh, that's why guys
02:42:52.940 like me, you know, I never bothered taking martial arts classes when I was young and I never
02:42:58.700 even bothered working out or anything. Cause I'm like six, four. And when I'm completely fit,
02:43:03.880 like with no fat, I'm 235, 240 pounds. And, uh, you know, when I am fat, hell, 260, 280.
02:43:12.100 And, uh, uh, so I had this natural advantage, you know, I just, I always went around throughout my
02:43:17.800 whole life going, ah, nobody kicked my ass. I'm great old big dude. Nobody kicked my ass,
02:43:21.600 but now I'm older, you know? And, um, as you get older, you know, you start to lose a little of
02:43:28.500 that bravado because, you know, like you go out and try to split some, uh, a half a cord of wood or
02:43:35.000 something for the fireplace. And you're like, damn, I am not the man I used to be. And, and, uh, I'd
02:43:41.560 really like to, uh, participate in some martial arts myself, but, uh, I do have the advantage of,
02:43:47.680 uh, you know, having been a smart mouth redneck my whole life. So I got in a lot of, uh, fights like
02:43:54.020 that. And then I, of course, as everyone knows, went to prison three times. So I must've fought,
02:43:58.420 uh, like a box car full of blacks. And so, you know, there's, uh, there's nothing better than
02:44:05.940 experience to teach you. I mean, it's a painful, uh, teacher, let me tell you, but it's a good way to
02:44:12.100 learn, but I, I still, uh, would benefit tremendously if I went and took
02:44:17.260 kickboxing or movie tire, even just, you know, karate or Taekwondo or something is anything that
02:44:22.500 teaches you to improve your punches and your kicks and kind of gets you going in a system is
02:44:26.280 going to help. But, uh, I, I agree. I've heard a lot about the movie tie and if it is a standup,
02:44:31.000 uh, fighting system, which you say it is, I have no reason to not believe you. Um,
02:44:36.640 no, I misunderstood what you asked before when you said, when you ask about grappling,
02:44:41.400 if you were talking about Muay Thai or MMA, um, the Muay Thai has no wrestling. I mean,
02:44:47.560 there's no, there's no element of wrestling. Yeah. It's a form of boxing. It's a standardized
02:44:53.960 combat, uh, system that is, uh, that includes kicking. Um, but it's a, you know, it's a martial
02:45:01.520 art. So there's rules as to how it's performed in, in ordered, uh, combat, um, competition.
02:45:11.400 Style combat. There's rules. Um, so there's no, there's no on the ground fighting. Um,
02:45:19.000 that's good because like I said, out in a public type situation, whether it's, you're getting mugged
02:45:25.720 or, uh, you just had words with some group of drunks or something like that, or whatever it is,
02:45:31.800 the last thing that you want, because they'll always are almost always, it'll start off as one
02:45:38.040 on one with all of his buddies watching or something like that. But the last thing you
02:45:42.660 want is to end up on the ground with him because that's when the, that's when the bystanders start
02:45:47.620 kicking heads. Yeah, no, it's, it's, it's more practical to be able to punch people. I mean,
02:45:55.160 in reality, um, if you hit some guy, if you get the first punch landed, you know, in a fight,
02:46:03.180 you're certainly going to win it. I mean, there, there's very little chance that if you land a
02:46:08.300 solid punch, even if the guy is twice your weight, um, that you're not going to be able to get in a
02:46:13.860 whole bunch more punches and kicks after that. Um, and, and the thing is going to be over. Uh,
02:46:20.940 and you know, I mean, me being smaller than, than average, uh, I've kind of learned that if
02:46:28.940 somebody starts getting in my face and saying, you know, we're going to go, we're going to go,
02:46:32.860 you just have to hit them first. Um, you know, not like a sucker punch, but if somebody's coming
02:46:38.680 at you like that, you got to make sure that you land the first solid punch on, on somebody's face.
02:46:44.680 Um, and you know, uh, it's something that I think any man is going to feel better about himself and
02:46:53.460 feel, feel more comfortable in his own skin. I think that's a good way to put it. Um, when he,
02:47:00.520 when he has that, that confidence. And I think that affects other areas of your life too. I think
02:47:05.880 that if you're a, you know, working on a career, you're a professional, it gives you, it gives you
02:47:09.760 more confidence. It'll give you more confidence dealing with women. If you, if you, if you're
02:47:13.460 physically comfortable in yourself and you feel like you can look around and be, uh, aware of the
02:47:19.380 environment and be able to deal with any kind of physical, um, challenge that, that comes on you.
02:47:25.460 So I think that's another good reason to stay fit and to, uh, to train. Yeah. Well, that's all good
02:47:33.100 stuff. So hopefully, uh, that will inspire a lot of our readers who, um, are not in peak physical
02:47:41.360 condition to get out there and exercise and maybe take some martial arts classes. But before we go,
02:47:47.180 I know I had said that was the last topic, but something just occurred to me that are we going
02:47:50.800 to talk about diet? Well, oh yeah, we can do that too. Okay. Uh, with the diet thing. Yeah. I started
02:47:57.000 doing, you gave me some very basic tips about your diet plan. Now you wrote a whole series on this
02:48:03.280 back in the day about what, a year ago, something like that. It's been, um, I have revealed. Yeah.
02:48:09.380 And I was going to say, I saw, I saw it, uh, on the website back when it, you know,
02:48:14.320 used to have a link to it over in the sidebar, I think. Um, but I never did get a chance to go
02:48:20.220 and read all that because I was constantly consuming the political stuff. And so I asked
02:48:25.940 you about that. Oh, probably two or three months ago. And I didn't start actually doing any of it
02:48:31.140 until the last couple of weeks, but it's a very simplified version of paleo is what you told me
02:48:37.840 where there are, uh, there's a certain short list of ingredients that you just do not eat
02:48:42.980 and you take those out and then you make your diet consist of mostly good meat protein and some
02:48:51.840 white rice and good vegetables and fruit, the kind that we would have eaten, um, as your, as we evolved
02:48:59.900 as Europeans, you know, you don't want to go out and eat a bunch of, uh, pineapple and mangoes and
02:49:04.160 crap that are full of sugar that, you know, had nothing to do with our evolution. And so like, uh,
02:49:10.180 you know, say just for the meal I had today, I made a steak and I had some white rice with some
02:49:16.920 green beans and carrots in it. And I ate all that I wanted. I ate until I was full and I'm losing weight
02:49:21.880 doing this. Yeah, absolutely. Um, the diet, you know, is very simple there. It's like a gigantic
02:49:32.120 industry, you know, it's like these things that are, that are simple, um, but that, that are needs
02:49:39.160 so that people can make money on them. It's like, there's all this information released and it just
02:49:45.420 piles on top of itself. Um, that a lot of it is going to end up being useless. I mean, it's like
02:49:52.140 every self-help book you read, some of them are different. I think I, I've read, um, not too long
02:49:59.080 ago. I read Scott Adams. Oh, what's it, how to fail at everything and still come out on top,
02:50:05.580 or it's got a real long name. Um, and that was something a little bit different. It was
02:50:10.080 creative and original, but I mean, most self-help books are going to be rewrites of, uh, of Tony
02:50:17.120 Robbins basically, which, you know, I mean, it's, it's good material. If nobody's ever read
02:50:22.280 some of the early Tony Robbins stuff, it actually is good material. I mean, he basically rewrites the
02:50:30.200 same book over and over again. And I, you know, there's different stuff in the self-help, um,
02:50:34.600 area, but a lot of it is just like, well, we know this sells, so we're just going to make it more
02:50:42.660 complicated or, or whatever, you know, it's like this, the same thing with the stuff about how to
02:50:48.600 deal with women. It's like, well, it's pretty much basic, simple things, but there's always going
02:50:53.640 to be people needing this. So let's release a bunch more information about it and maybe make it
02:51:00.080 overcomplicated. Um, so the, the diet stuff, I mean, they've done a lot of this and there's also
02:51:07.100 been, I mean, with this food pyramid and so on, I mean, there, there's been industry involvement
02:51:12.500 and there's been historically, there's been the, the poverty issue that, you know, you need people
02:51:19.100 to eat a lot of bread because that increases the population and people are poor. They have to eat
02:51:23.940 bread all the time. Um, bread is not good for you. It's just not, I mean, I know people like bread and
02:51:30.280 there's European traditions associated with it. It's the same thing as beer. You know, people like
02:51:35.100 beer. It is a, it's not as old a tradition as bread. I mean, people drank wine and liquor before
02:51:42.360 there was a long, long time before there was beer, but, um, you know, people like this stuff
02:51:49.720 and they'll get angry if you say, well, you know, this really isn't good for you. Um, but
02:51:55.560 you know, a simple diet, simple, simple, simple, you can eat as much food as you want until you're
02:52:02.500 full because this thing where you try to count carbs does not actually work. I mean, I guess
02:52:09.560 it would work theoretically, but most people just can't do that. It's not sustainable long
02:52:16.580 term. And also if you're, if you're using a normal calorie counting diet, um, it, it's
02:52:23.060 going to slow your metabolism through the, through the process of, of reducing the amount
02:52:28.500 of calories itself, which is going to cause it to be harder to lose weight. I mean, if you
02:52:34.780 slow down your metabolism, it's harder to lose weight. So the, anything to do with restricting
02:52:40.360 food is not good. The basic concept of paleo, which I mean, this is in itself been confused,
02:52:47.220 uh, the, the, the, the concept and, and maybe the word is not really that great to use anymore
02:52:56.440 because it's been attached to a lot of things which were gimmicky and, and stupid. But the
02:53:01.740 basic concept of a, of a paleo diet is to go to what your body has evolved to eat that
02:53:08.560 you, you evolved in a certain, uh, situation that was before, um, modern agricultural, well,
02:53:18.400 you know, historical agricultural society that are, that our evolution kind of stopped at
02:53:23.660 that point. And people argue about that. Okay, whatever. But the, the fact of the matter
02:53:29.300 is if we eat a diet that is closer to what hunter gatherer people ate, we are healthier. That's
02:53:36.180 just a, that's just a basic fact. Um, and so with bread, just briefly, basically, uh, anything
02:53:46.060 that has a shell on it is going to have poisons in it, in the shell to stop birds from eating
02:53:52.300 it. And this is, these are called anti-nutrients and they're very diverse. They have a low effect
02:54:01.000 on you. They're, they're not like outright poisons, but they are, well, they kind of are,
02:54:05.860 but they're just in such low doses when you're eating bread, um, that you don't know what it's
02:54:12.420 doing to your body. But this is what wheat and brown rice. Um, and you know, people say that
02:54:20.820 this gluten thing is a gimmick. Yeah. Uh, but the, the oatmeal does have a shell. Yeah. And,
02:54:26.280 but people will say there's gluten is a gimmick. Well, I don't know. People sure seem to feel a lot
02:54:31.220 better when they, when they get off of gluten, the body doesn't seem to be able to process this
02:54:35.240 and it causes inflammation inside of your body, which is negative. Yeah. Because like when I went
02:54:43.440 to Houston, uh, even though I wasn't following your diet closely, one of the things that I had done
02:54:49.660 that I'd been doing for a while was I had cut the gluten out because I had read about it and I was,
02:54:56.840 you know, all the time having these symptoms that people would have who it turned out, you know,
02:55:02.040 they were gluten intolerant or whatever. And I think most people are gluten intolerant. I think
02:55:06.760 the unusual ones would be the ones who are gluten tolerant, but the, um, uh, when I went to Houston,
02:55:15.340 um, you know, we stopped at Denny's and had like eggs and biscuits and stuff like that. And I think I
02:55:22.460 had a hamburger and when I, anytime that I eat anything with weed in it, my abdomen swells up big.
02:55:31.580 I mean, to the point that it's painful, uh, sometimes, but it's really the inflammation.
02:55:37.740 You can just see it happen. You just eat like the bun of a hamburger after you've taken yourself
02:55:44.480 off of gluten and your body's not used to it anymore. And within an hour, your gut's just
02:55:49.600 going to be sticking out. Like you ate three people's Thanksgiving dinner. Yeah. And your body
02:55:57.100 really reacts to it strongly once you've been off it. And then you see, you know, what you had in a
02:56:02.060 low, low amount all going on for however many years, probably presumably your whole life that
02:56:09.140 you'd been basically poisoning yourself. Um, because you know, sometimes I will break my diet. I don't,
02:56:19.160 I try not to do it very well. Let me explain why. I mean, theoretically, it wouldn't be a big deal
02:56:24.700 to do it once a month or whatever. It wouldn't be any deal at all. But if you are on a good,
02:56:30.480 healthy diet and then you break it, you just feel terrible. I mean, I don't eat anything with sugar.
02:56:35.420 I don't eat anything with grains. Um, I, I don't eat any of that at all. And I prefer to keep it that
02:56:42.440 way. My last birthday, somebody brought me a cake and it was like a social situation where I had to
02:56:49.200 eat a piece of this cake because they made it and it was also sweet. And I tell you, I got the smallest
02:56:54.620 piece of cake I could manage and I felt terrible after eating this. This was, I'm on my birthday's
02:56:59.480 coming up. This was a year ago. I still remember this very clearly. I haven't eaten anything sugary,
02:57:05.420 since then. Um, when we did the, um, the election day live stream, uh, we talked for a little bit
02:57:13.280 about, uh, you said that, you know, when you were finally tired and, and you were ready to go, you
02:57:18.600 said, yeah, I got to go. I've been feeling like crap all day because I thought for the, well, it may
02:57:24.280 have been the inauguration. We did a stream for both. It was one or the other, probably the inauguration.
02:57:28.500 You said, I thought, well, to celebrate the inauguration, it's one day I would have beer and pizza.
02:57:33.680 And it has just, uh, destroyed me. Yeah. It's not a good feeling at all. And there's no reason to do
02:57:41.500 it. Yeah. Um, and as far as, you know, what you were saying about the, the theory of paleo, I got to
02:57:51.440 say just from my personal anecdotal experience, uh, before I even started doing it, when I started
02:57:56.280 looking at, you know, the few things you had outlined for me to start doing, I thought, well,
02:58:02.200 this makes sense because, you know, um, my, I come from a family that just only as far back as my
02:58:09.220 grandparents, they were extremely poor, but they weren't, but they ate well because they weren't
02:58:15.600 living out of going to the grocery store. They were farmers. And so, you know, they had some hogs and
02:58:21.460 a cow and, and, uh, uh, great big vegetable garden and stuff like that, that they would eat
02:58:27.460 from. And so just about everything that was okay on that list was just stuff that they had eaten,
02:58:34.280 except for beans and biscuits. If I took beans and biscuits out of the diet that my grandparents
02:58:39.480 ate and served until the day they died, that was basically the stuff that I could eat on the paleo
02:58:45.640 diet. And these people always ate all they wanted and they were all fit. Even, I mean, and it's not just
02:58:51.140 because they were working their asses off in the fields because, you know, grandma and grandpa and
02:58:55.460 all, they stayed fit, uh, until they were in their nineties and died and they hadn't worked the farm
02:59:01.680 since, I don't know, 30 or 40 years. Yeah. Um, it's, it's not, it's not hard to do. And I think you can
02:59:11.520 do it with, with minimal exercise. I mean, you know, I mean, some people will say they don't have time
02:59:15.740 to exercise, which I can understand the last few months. I mean, it'd been really, uh, busy for me.
02:59:24.080 Uh, I've had a lot of, you know, stress going on too, with just everything that's been happening.
02:59:29.080 And, um, I haven't had as much time to, to work out. And I mean, I haven't gotten fat. I still make
02:59:37.320 sure to go twice a week. Um, but I, I don't think that anybody, I, I, you can maintain a healthy,
02:59:44.660 a healthy weight. Um, you're not going to maintain optimal fitness with no, with no exercise, but I
02:59:50.160 think you pretty much can, at least until you get to be pretty old. Um, you can maintain a healthy
02:59:57.840 weight and be pretty lean. Um, just based on diet alone. I mean, that's the main, the main thing
03:00:07.100 related to health. I mean, we did, we talked all about working out and so on, but the, it is a
03:00:12.760 bigger thing. Diet is a bigger thing than, than physical exercise. And on minimal physical exercise,
03:00:18.240 you can, assuming you somehow do not have time, which is usually exaggerated, I think by people,
03:00:25.480 because you're talking about five, six hours a week. But, um, if you, if you really don't,
03:00:31.980 you can't stay relatively fit just based on diet. And the basic idea is to eat things,
03:00:36.580 not necessarily exactly what your, what your ancestors ate, but things that are things that
03:00:42.720 line up nutritionally with, with what they ate. So like, um, the, the main carbohydrate source
03:00:50.220 historically for, for white Europeans would have been, um, tubers and potato type root vegetables
03:00:57.960 rather than grains, which we, we came up with the idea of grains. That's kind of what a civilization
03:01:04.640 developed from because it allowed the storing of food and, you know, the, the overproduction of food
03:01:10.640 that you could maintain, uh, an excess population of, uh, instead of a core, um, group, you know,
03:01:18.280 you could have extra kids, uh, that could be fed. So, um, what, what we ate was, was potato type vegetables,
03:01:28.420 root vegetables, tubers, and identical to this in, in nutritional content, basically identical,
03:01:37.480 relatively identical as white rice. So you can eat white rice, uh, on this diet, even though it was
03:01:45.800 not, um, and, and I say on this diet and people think of that word diet as meaning like to lose
03:01:50.500 weight. That's not what I mean. I mean, diet as in the food that you consume, just straight what,
03:01:57.580 what you eat. I mean, when, when I say, you know, I'm on this diet, it's not like when somebody says
03:02:03.160 they're on a diet and they're trying to lose weight. I mean, I say that this is, this is my diet. This
03:02:07.340 is what I eat, um, every day and, and plan to eat every day for the rest of my life. I have no reason
03:02:16.300 to, to change this. So at four carbs, you go for, uh, basically potatoes or white rice is a simple
03:02:26.580 straight up. I mean, there can be fruits involved there that are, that are high carbohydrate. I don't
03:02:32.020 really encourage people to eat necessarily a lot of fruits. Um, I think they, they are okay. Um,
03:02:39.560 I mean, you, obviously there's, you can eat bananas. These are a tropical fruit, but they're not,
03:02:44.200 not necessarily bad for you. That that's a pretty good carbohydrate if you're working out,
03:02:49.200 um, and you need a lot of carbohydrates. The, the carbohydrate regulation should be based on
03:02:55.340 your physical activity. So if you're, if you cut down your physical activity, you need less,
03:03:00.640 you need fewer carbohydrates. So, um, you know, when you're, when you're working out every day,
03:03:07.380 you're, you're going to eat big meals with, with a lot of carbs, uh, which I would say rice and
03:03:14.380 potatoes. Uh, you know, if you want to throw in some apples, bananas, and this type of stuff,
03:03:18.720 it's okay. Um, but then you want to eat a lot of meats with, with, with fats, uh, and, and protein.
03:03:29.820 Um, you can eat eggs and then just, I don't really recommend chicken because so much of it has,
03:03:37.340 um, uh, hormones, hormones. I mean, it's already not a very high quality meat. Just the fact of the
03:03:44.420 matter is even if it's natural, it's not an especially high quality meat. And chicken,
03:03:49.740 chicken is such a foul, dirty animal to start with. Most people, if they went and saw the chicken
03:03:56.820 coops where the chickens are. Did I detect a pun? What's that? No, you said, you said foul. I thought
03:04:04.080 it was. Oh yeah. Yeah. Well, yeah. Vile, I guess would be a better word, not a pun, but they're
03:04:09.620 filthy. Um, if, if you just, if you must eat poultry and don't get me wrong, uh, I'm from the
03:04:17.260 South. I like fried chicken as much as any nigger, but I can, of course I can't eat the fried chicken
03:04:23.900 now because that's white wheat flour that you make it with. But, but the chicken's a nasty animal. If
03:04:28.500 you, if you just have to have poultry for, um, uh, some of your protein, you're a lot better off
03:04:35.760 eating like a turkey breast that is certified not to have hormones and antibiotics in it.
03:04:41.880 Well, I mean, people complain about the, the costs at Whole Foods or, um, you know, one of these
03:04:49.460 organic grocery stores, Whole Foods is basically taken over like Starbucks style of the, of the
03:04:55.440 organic grocery store industry. So that's probably what people's local organic grocery store would be.
03:05:02.720 But, um, uh, people say it's too expensive, which, I mean, I say the number one thing you need to spend
03:05:10.060 money on is your health. You can also go into these places is what I do and ask for wrong cuts,
03:05:16.800 miscuts, um, of beef or pork or whatever. And they'll usually have some and, and sell them to you
03:05:23.680 at cheap. Right. Um, but if you can't afford, uh, you know, health foods or organically raised
03:05:33.340 animals, um, it's better to eat beef or pork than it is chicken for sure. Yeah. And there's a lot of
03:05:40.460 the things that you can buy organic for very little more than the very same thing, non-organic,
03:05:49.600 like this rice that I eat. Uh, it's just organic, uh, long grain, white rice from California.
03:05:57.240 And it's this great big bag of it that I buy is like six bucks. Well, if I want to save money and
03:06:03.060 buy the non-organic, it's $5 and 70 cents. I mean, the 30 cents is worth it to me for organic. Um,
03:06:11.200 and yeah, I see what people are saying because like a lot of the organic meat comes pre-packaged
03:06:16.880 is grass fed beef and all that. And the same cut of meat that's not packaged that way. That's not
03:06:23.220 organic might be say six bucks. And the one that's packaged as grass fed or not grass fed, but yeah,
03:06:29.240 grass fed, uh, organic Angus beef, the very same cut, same size will cost nearly $20. And I understand
03:06:37.480 that that's a problem, but there are ways to get around that stuff. Um, as much as you can afford
03:06:43.340 organic, it's good because if you see that it has the organic seal on it, then, you know,
03:06:48.280 there's no roundup in it. There's no, uh, hormones in it. There's no antibiotics in it. And those are
03:06:55.200 the three big things that you don't want in your food. You don't want the pesticides, the hormones and
03:07:00.540 the, um, uh, antibiotics. Um, because they put huge amounts of antibiotics in commercially raised
03:07:09.840 poultry and meat and they'll do it when they don't even need to, because the reason that they do it
03:07:14.620 is that they pack these animals in so close together and they pay so little attention to them.
03:07:20.280 They know that under these situations, they get horrible infections and diseases and things. So
03:07:25.960 they just have a guy coming around on a schedule every so often and pumping a giant shot of a cocktail
03:07:33.160 of antibiotics in them. And you definitely don't want to be eating that, but yeah, it's a fairly
03:07:38.280 hormone injections cause them to get more infections. The, the rate at which they grow
03:07:43.560 chickens where they develop them like super rapidly with, uh, estrogen injections that causes an
03:07:49.900 increase in infections. So a big part of it is to cover for the, uh, for the hormones that they're
03:07:58.180 using. I mean, this is an insane, it's a totally insane system of producing food that shouldn't really
03:08:03.560 be legal, but they, uh, they do get away with it. Well, yeah. And, and amazingly enough,
03:08:09.440 and this is one of those things that Alex Jones gets 100% correct is that the people who are
03:08:15.660 producing this Franken food and not, not just the hormones and the, and all that, but the ones who
03:08:20.180 are making the weird hybridized vegetables and the genetically modified stuff and all, they don't eat
03:08:27.180 it. Like the, uh, the, uh, lunchroom at Monsanto serves 100% organic everything.
03:08:35.600 Yeah. That is a good point. Alex Jones has. Uh, yeah. I mean, he, he sensationalizes it so much
03:08:42.900 though that this is going to give everybody cancer and it's like, maybe that is true, but everybody's
03:08:48.600 probably going to die of cancer anyway. Um, but you know, I mean, I, I would, I would recommend
03:08:55.320 organic food and, and, and all things being equal. I mean, it's, it's your health, but I, I do understand
03:09:02.300 that people say it's, it's very expensive. Um, you can go in probably your local whole foods. If you
03:09:08.680 make a little bit of a buddy buddy relationship with the hipster at the counter, um, he'll save you
03:09:15.080 the, the missed cuts. Cause you know, when they're slicing up the meat, they have little pieces of it
03:09:19.100 that they can't include in, in various cuts. And you can get a bag of this, um, probably from the
03:09:26.160 guy and you can make some kind of arrangement where he collects it for you and you can pay
03:09:30.380 very little. Um, you can probably manage to do that. If not, I don't know if your local whole foods,
03:09:39.440 you know, it'd just be, if you can talk to the guy, if it's not a whole foods, you have a lot better
03:09:43.260 chance of being able to do that. But this is good. I mean, you can get the meat and just boil it,
03:09:49.500 um, or fry it. If you, if you fry anything, you should only use butter. And in my personal view,
03:09:57.680 I think anything should be fried in butter. You know, they'll say that, that, um, uh,
03:10:03.480 olive oil is safe, but olive oil is not safe in, in a frying situation because this is getting to
03:10:09.880 boiling point where it's popping and the, the molecules, um, change to omega sixes that are,
03:10:19.200 or to omega threes rather. And this is not, um, something that you want to eat basically turns
03:10:26.160 to vegetable oil, um, chemically. What do you think about avocado oil? Do you know anything about
03:10:33.600 that? Because it's supposed to be really good for you and it's supposedly safe to cook at high
03:10:38.520 temperatures with it. Um, yeah. I mean, I don't know specifically, I've never used avocado oil. I
03:10:46.800 know that avocado is healthy as a, as a thing to eat as, as a fruit. Uh, it's, it's very good for
03:10:55.660 you. It has very, very good fats in it. Um, I'm sure it's expensive. It's, uh, I mean, the fruit is
03:11:01.320 expensive. The oil must be expensive. Um, coconut oil. Well, I was saying like a little, a little
03:11:10.640 quarter of a pint vial of it's like seven or eight bucks. I mean, it's not like you're going to be
03:11:16.180 deep frying chicken tenders in it. Yeah, no, I mean, coconut oil is a cheap one, but I mean,
03:11:22.380 butter is, is going to be the cheapest and that, that is fine to eat. I don't, I don't eat anything
03:11:28.460 with, with, um, lactose. Um, there is none or virtually none in butter. This is, this is just
03:11:36.540 the fat reduced. Um, so it's, it's fine to eat for me. And that's agreed on, that's agreed on by 100%
03:11:45.740 of the paleo websites too. I can confirm is that butter is, uh, uh, an okay paleo form of, uh, dairy.
03:11:54.260 And apparently so is sour cream and yogurt. Um, certain kinds of, of yogurt, um, would probably
03:12:04.540 be okay. The, I mean, the problem is the laws of the way that, that, um, milk has to be treated in
03:12:12.120 Western countries, not just the United States, mainly the United States. Uh, if you can get raw
03:12:18.720 milk, raw, whole milk, that's, that's good to drink. I mean, the, the problems are the way it's,
03:12:24.660 the way it's pasteurized and, um, uh, chemically. Yeah. It destroys, it destroys all the good enzymes
03:12:32.300 and only leaves in the stuff that makes you grow fat really quickly. Yeah. It's, I don't think
03:12:38.940 there's any reason to drink processed milk. Um, I don't, I don't drink it, but, um, yeah, I mean,
03:12:46.840 butter is the best thing if you need to, if you need to fry things, that's, that's definitely the
03:12:50.840 best thing to cook in. And you can, you can cook big meals of, of fried foods and, and butter. And
03:12:57.880 I mean, this is pretty hearty food. Um, unless you're addicted to sugar, which a lot of people
03:13:03.160 apparently are, I never have had that issue. So I don't know. I've been a smoker, so I understand
03:13:10.580 the concept of addiction. Um, but yeah, I mean, sugar, there, there's no reason, I guess that
03:13:18.400 goes without saying. I mean, that's the first thing. The first thing to do on your diet is just
03:13:22.520 to not get anything that's in a box, anything that comes in a box with a package label that has
03:13:28.600 a bunch of different ingredients that you don't know what they are. You can't pronounce the name of
03:13:32.720 this is just going to be poison. Do not eat that. Do not under any circumstances, eat anything that
03:13:38.840 comes out of a box or in a plastic wrap package. This is not going to be healthy for you. Um,
03:13:46.640 the, the, the fruits and vegetables and, and the meat section, um, this is where, this is where
03:13:55.060 you want to get your food, what you want to eat. Right. And, and when you take the sugar out of your
03:14:01.720 diet, like you said, that should be one of the first things you do is take the sugar out of your diet.
03:14:05.600 But don't be replacing it with aspartame and things like that because it's, there's just too
03:14:13.140 many. Well, first of all, we know that aspartame itself has a lot of bad health effects, but even
03:14:19.060 the, uh, artificial sweeteners that have not been shown to have all these horrible effects have been
03:14:25.580 shown to be counterproductive to your diet because it turns out that when you, um, even, even if there's
03:14:33.800 zero calories and zero sugars and zero carbohydrates in your artificial sweetener that when your taste
03:14:39.760 buds taste all that sweetness, when they're fooled by that artificial sweetener, it floods your blood
03:14:46.000 stream with, uh, insulin. It causes a reaction in your brain that causes your pancreas to excrete tons
03:14:52.120 of insulin in your blood. If there's one thing you don't want over time, it's extremely high levels
03:14:57.700 of insulin in your blood running around looking for sugar to consume because it, A, it'll make you so
03:15:03.560 much more, uh, have such a larger tendency to put on weight easily, but B, over time, the presence of
03:15:12.260 too much insulin causes your body to become resistant to insulin, which is called type two diabetes.
03:15:19.700 Yeah, no, the, the, the diet drinks are worse than the, the normal ones. Um, like I say, I mean,
03:15:28.480 I don't want to say that anybody, I, that somebody who has a problem with sugar, I mean, like I say,
03:15:34.780 I've, I've had addictions before. I'd say I'm probably have a caffeine addiction. I don't know.
03:15:39.980 I've never stopped drinking it. I know that I I've been addicted to smoking. Um, so I understand the
03:15:46.260 concept of addiction. So if you have that problem, look, I'm not trying to say that this is not
03:15:50.020 something you're dealing with, but I think overall, um, if you measured up the health effects, it'd be
03:15:54.920 better to smoke your whole life than eat sugar. I mean, this is, this is not at all good for a
03:16:01.460 human being's body. Yeah. Well, you know, people who die from diabetes and, um, uh, heart disease,
03:16:09.840 non-smoking related heart disease, they generally die at an earlier age than people who die from
03:16:15.700 smoking related things like lung cancer and emphysema. No, absolutely. And I think that
03:16:21.040 we are kind of prone to developing some kind of chemical crutch, um, as it is. And I, I think
03:16:31.020 that people who use bad food as that, that crutch do ultimately turn out worse than, than, uh, smokers.
03:16:40.120 So I'm not saying like start smoking, but, uh, no, no, no, no. Stay away from nicotine. Believe me,
03:16:48.280 if you're not addicted to nicotine at this moment, when you hear this podcast, if you've never been
03:16:53.380 addicted to nicotine, stay the hell away from anything that's got nicotine in it, because
03:16:58.740 as a person who has been addicted to nearly every drug there is to be addicted to, I can tell you
03:17:04.860 the most addictive drug on the planet is nicotine. Yeah. Or it might actually be sugar. Um, there's
03:17:12.400 more people addicted to sugar than there are to nicotine, at least in the United States, you know,
03:17:17.780 other, I guess in the whole world, you know, the China has the most people and they don't have a
03:17:24.200 sugary that it's not a part of their culture to eat sugar. I don't know how the West became so decadent
03:17:31.060 America in particular to make their whole, maybe it's because we didn't have a traditional cuisine.
03:17:36.340 You know, I've kind of heard this argument thrown out there about the United States did not have a
03:17:41.500 traditional cuisine. So that's why we have the obesity problem. I think it's complicated. There's
03:17:47.720 a lot of decadence in America that is, that is, uh, exclusively American. Oh yeah. Oh yeah. To the
03:17:55.180 point that even, you know, virtually 100% of Chinese restaurants that are run by Chinese people who
03:18:03.360 can't even speak English in many circumstances, they don't serve the kind of Chinese food that
03:18:08.580 they eat at home. They serve this stuff that is just full of sugar because that's what Americans
03:18:14.340 expect from Chinese food is that it's going to be sweet as ice cream. Yeah. And they, the Chinese hate
03:18:21.180 it. Um, it's funny. I lived in China, uh, younger. Um, yeah. And they, the food is very good there.
03:18:32.220 It's very healthy. I mean, you see these thin people. It's also, I mean, when you see thin people
03:18:36.300 from like Southeast Asia, the, the darker Scandasians, I mean, their bodies are more designed
03:18:41.760 to be able to process sugar because they lived on so many sugary fruits and our bodies. I mean,
03:18:49.420 if you think about like a can of Coke, um, in the, in the, uh, Europe, Northern Europe,
03:18:58.520 uh, 10,000 years ago, this, uh, a single can of Coke would, would contain more sugar than you're
03:19:05.520 going to run across in your entire lifetime. So your body reacts differently to it than,
03:19:11.140 than somebody who evolved eating, eating mangoes and pineapple.
03:19:17.760 Right. Yeah. And even our fruits, the apples and, and pears and so on have been engineered,
03:19:25.400 not genetically engineered, but just selectively grown. I forget what you call that.
03:19:30.540 It's called hybridizing.
03:19:33.900 Yeah. I mean, there's, there's something for just picking the seeds.
03:19:37.260 You cross different species. You create a new species. It's hybridization.
03:19:41.960 Well, there's that, but then there's just the, the traditional, um, method of just picking the
03:19:48.460 seeds from the sugariest one in the batch and using those to, there's a term that's a common term.
03:19:56.560 There are some crops, uh, corn and now wheat to a lesser extent, but corn, uh, is the greatest
03:20:04.080 example of this. You know, at one time, corn was likely a healthy vegetable for us to eat. If you go
03:20:09.920 and find some kind of, uh, heirloom corn at one of these, uh, whole foods, and it doesn't look
03:20:16.080 anything like the commercial corn anybody's ever seen in their life, you know, because every little
03:20:20.040 kernel is a different color and it's hard and all this stuff. But, uh, you know, the corn that,
03:20:25.760 that like say the pilgrims encountered when they came here, uh, had almost no sugar in it and it has
03:20:32.100 been hybridized, not just hybridized, but, uh, genetically engineered in labs. And, and of course the
03:20:38.440 method you're talking about too, probably most of all, uh, and that, that's why now if you ask a
03:20:44.260 farmer, you know, what's that crop there, they don't say corn and it's been this way forever.
03:20:48.340 They say sweet corn because it has, you know, it has been altered to be as sweet as possible.
03:20:56.200 And it's so sweet that now most of the products that you buy that are full of sugar don't have
03:21:01.220 actual cane sugar in them. They have high fructose corn syrup that's, you know, made in a press where
03:21:06.040 they mash all the juice out of corn. Yeah, no. And that's a real serious poison. There's some
03:21:12.540 documentaries about that. You can watch about this soul corn industry. There's one called King
03:21:18.100 corn. That's pretty good. I think there's another one. Yeah. It's, it's really bad for you and
03:21:23.060 people's diets are like 80% corn. It's like, what is going on? Um, because if you look at any food,
03:21:30.860 it's like, it's all made of corn and soy, um, which that's real bad for you. I mean,
03:21:37.580 a big thing with men is, is your testosterone level. I mean, that's what is going to keep you
03:21:43.640 vigorous and healthy. And I haven't gotten to the age yet, but when I, I, I am reading about it.
03:21:50.980 And when I get to the age, I might go for the, uh, the replacement therapy. I mean, I think there's
03:21:56.940 some good arguments to be made. That's a good idea, but most of the listeners probably aren't
03:22:02.380 to that age yet. So you want to maximize, I mean, that's the core. I don't know why I didn't say
03:22:07.040 this earlier. I'm a little bit off kilter today as, um, been a little bit sick. That's why my voice
03:22:13.240 sounds like this too, but, um, not bedridden sick. You know, I, I, I haven't been bedridden sick
03:22:21.080 in years and years and years and it's because I, I keep a healthy diet, but I do get, you know,
03:22:27.120 sinus head cold type thing. But, um, the most important thing is to keep your testosterone.
03:22:33.960 I mean, you want that as high as possible. That's your, that's your lifeblood. Your vigor
03:22:38.960 is in your, in your testosterone levels and that's, what's going to keep you thin. I mean,
03:22:43.440 that's why when you inject, um, testosterone, you know, like as a, as a bodybuilding, um,
03:22:50.760 performance enhancing drug, um, you, you, your body to start shedding weight and you, you feel
03:22:59.380 really, I mean, I've never done it before. Um, but you feel really vigorous and, and your muscles
03:23:06.180 develop real quick and so on. Um, that's what, uh, what you want to keep as high as, as possible
03:23:17.380 is your, is your testosterone levels and, and all of this diet stuff really relates to that. I mean,
03:23:24.300 the worst thing you can do is eat anything with estrogens in it. And the number one offender is
03:23:33.140 going to be chicken and milk that, that are filled with estrogens that you're just, just consuming
03:23:39.520 actual estrogen that's been injected. Um, that's crazy. Um, the second one is soy. The, um,
03:23:53.620 the third one for most people is going to be beer. Um, cause that's, I mean, that's just liquid
03:24:00.420 estrogen. People want to attack me for telling the truth. This is what I say. I'll tell the truth
03:24:04.780 about everything. Um, even if I get attacked for it. Um, it's, it's a shitload of empty calories too.
03:24:12.300 Yeah. I mean, it's just crap. And people say you're a fag if you drink vodka. Well,
03:24:18.000 I mean, are you a fag if you have no testosterone? This must be a thing with your generation or
03:24:24.440 something. I, I, out of all the drinking I ever did. And I wasn't a big vodka drinker until I got
03:24:30.520 to the point with my addiction that I was like slipping out at break and drinking. And I realized,
03:24:37.040 well, you know, I better drink something that I can cover up with a mint. And so I would drink vodka,
03:24:42.580 but, um, and, and of course that's horrible behavior. That's why I've been sober for over 10 years now.
03:24:48.840 But, uh, the, I have never heard this thing about vodka drinking being faggy. I guess it must be
03:24:57.340 something that has come along, uh, ever since, uh, every Frenchman and every American Negro rapper and
03:25:05.720 all wants their own, uh, special, super expensive brand of vodka or something. Because when I was young,
03:25:12.640 it was like, you know, if you had a regular paycheck and you were a vodka drinker, you'd go buy a bottle
03:25:19.380 of Smirnoff. If you got a bonus, you'd go get a bottle of Absolute. Nobody thought any of that was
03:25:23.520 gay or wimpy or whatever. Yeah, no, I don't get it. Um, but that's, uh, the best thing probably that
03:25:34.220 you can drink. Uh, you can, or Jen is okay. Or Jen got the added Jen got the juniper berry. There's
03:25:42.160 probably some nutrition in that. Yeah. Uh, tequila is okay. You know, I mean, if you're going to go out
03:25:50.860 at a bar, I mean, and is it really that big of a deal that you have to look like a man by drinking
03:25:57.740 liquid estrogen? I don't get it. I mean, okay. I'm not going to say never have a beer. Um, I don't
03:26:04.660 do it anymore ever because it, it just makes me feel bad. And the thing is, if you're going to have
03:26:13.840 beer, absolutely do not go by a mass market brand and not, not the premium ones like Budweiser and
03:26:22.480 Miller and especially not the cheap ones like natural light and all that, because, um, you know,
03:26:28.980 there were, it was big in the news a couple of years ago, uh, you know, for a week or so that all
03:26:35.360 these beers are not even beer. They are water with added grain alcohol and flavorings, a high,
03:26:42.640 they're just loaded with artificial beer flavor and corn syrup. Yeah, no, it's, it's complete
03:26:52.180 poison. I mean, I mean, I understand the whole microbrewery. I don't know. I think it's kind
03:26:59.660 of hipstery and I mean, people say I'm the fag for saying don't drink beer, but, um, that hipster
03:27:07.020 microbrewery thing, whatever. I mean, if it's a hobby that people like and so on, a little bit of
03:27:12.860 it is not going to kill you, but you know, I'd say as low as possible. I'm just, I'm just saying if
03:27:20.800 you're going to buy beer, buy beer. I'm not even recommending these microbreweries. I think the
03:27:25.080 whole microbrewery thing's faggy myself, you know, where what's the, what's the special blonde beer
03:27:31.660 today? You know, Hey, who cares? But, but I mean, if you go into like, I mean, everybody's got regional
03:27:40.240 beer that's not made by Budweiser or Miller or somebody like that. And I'm not talking about some
03:27:46.760 little hipster microbrewery, just some old brewery that's been around forever. Like in Texas,
03:27:52.200 you go into the grocery store and you can choose to buy some Budweiser that's made by the same people
03:27:58.840 who make the Coca-Cola and all that crap. Or you can buy a Shiner that's made by the Spetzel Brewery
03:28:05.040 down in South Texas that has been brewing beer there for like a hundred years and who makes it out of
03:28:11.240 actual beer ingredients. And I'm not saying either one's good for you, but if I were to break my
03:28:16.740 sobriety today and decided to do it with beer, I would definitely rather have a Shiner that's
03:28:22.120 actual brewed beer than a Budweiser that's a concoction of chemicals.
03:28:28.980 Yeah. I don't, I don't really know that much about beer. Alcohol generally should be probably
03:28:36.380 used in moderation as a rule. Yeah, absolutely. Unless you've got problems.
03:28:41.180 Yeah. I don't, I don't drink at all. I have problems. I, I, I, unfortunately I was introduced
03:28:50.300 to alcohol and drugs when I was very young, like 11 years old. And I had a place where I could just
03:28:58.600 go and like every weekend I could get that. There was an adult where I could go get drunk and use drugs
03:29:04.700 and things. And there's no way that you can have a situation like that. And if you continue it into
03:29:10.700 adulthood, that you're not going to have a problem, at least in my experience. And it took me like any
03:29:16.960 addict a long time to recognize that I had that problem, but at least I successfully solved the
03:29:24.360 problem. And the way for me to solve the problem is if it's stronger than caffeine or nicotine, I ain't
03:29:29.460 touching it. And, uh, uh, uh, but, but anyhow, so, uh, so yeah, we've given people a whole lot of, uh, a good, uh,
03:29:39.320 discussion here about diet and exercise and all that. And I had said we'd end the show about it and I have
03:29:44.880 had you on a long time. So if we could just briefly, cause I know this is something that you'll want to
03:29:49.820 address. Um, the book clubs are starting to become, uh, a thing. Uh, we've got daily stormer book clubs
03:29:58.420 meeting in every major city throughout the United States every week now for the most part. And, uh,
03:30:06.140 they're getting organized and they're getting ready to, uh, to hit the streets and all. And you wrote a
03:30:12.360 big guide for the book clubs. What was it? Uh, Saturday or Sunday, you wrote a guide on, uh, for how
03:30:19.280 the next step of people getting the clubs more organized. You want to talk about that a little
03:30:23.880 bit about what the purpose of the book clubs are? Yeah, I guess it sort of relates to the whole
03:30:32.760 health discussion. I think the, the core of the, of the book clubs should be men getting together and,
03:30:41.560 uh, bonding. Uh, this is something that, that matters and it's something that we've been
03:30:49.000 stripped of in this modern Jewish society is the ability to have meaningful relationships with
03:30:57.600 other men. Um, I think that the main reason for that is the, is the homosexual thing where people,
03:31:07.100 I mean, it's also just the feminism, it's all kind of connected together. Um, but the, the,
03:31:14.420 the, the, the homosexuality in society makes it so you're, you're scared to have, you know,
03:31:20.800 relationships with, with other men. And so most people have only got the guys they, they knew from
03:31:28.880 high school or whatever, uh, that those will be the only male friends they have for the rest of their
03:31:34.740 life. I mean, maybe they'll know somebody from work or, or whatever, but you know, I mean, especially
03:31:39.460 when you get into this type of information that we're talking about, you want to, you want to
03:31:43.980 talk to other people about it and you want to, you want to have friends that you can, you can share
03:31:49.620 this stuff with and, and hang out with. So, I mean, the basic point of the book clubs is to connect
03:31:56.580 people for that purpose and to, to help people help each other. You know, I mean, this is a society
03:32:02.800 is alienating and we are trying to kind of counteract that the, the alienation that, that
03:32:11.780 men that is inflicted on men by the society that, that we live in. So that's the, that's the core
03:32:20.900 goal. Um, obviously there's more long-term, I don't know if it's obvious or not, but there are more
03:32:27.780 long-term political goals as far as organization. But I think that people now should go into
03:32:32.760 it with, with, with that type of, type of thing on their mind that they're, that they're going to
03:32:39.020 meet, um, men that they can, uh, that they can relate to and that they can do things with, uh, that,
03:32:49.800 you know, that, that, that, that will help them develop as people. I think that I've laid out
03:32:55.820 some ideas for people. I mean, it's, I'm, I'm not running these book clubs, but I've given them a basic
03:33:01.700 layout, I think. And I think that older men who want to get involved, they're going to be helpful.
03:33:07.800 Um, as far as being able to, being able to teach younger men things, I think that, um, we have a,
03:33:14.620 a large age range, so you'll have that. I think that, that younger men will be able to meet together
03:33:21.320 and do, do like we've talked martial arts, um, going to the gym, different stuff like that. Uh,
03:33:29.420 and to just have somebody to talk, uh, so it goes a long way just to have somebody to talk to about
03:33:34.480 this, this stuff that, that we talk about, you know, I mean, people start reading this stuff and
03:33:39.380 getting into it and they feel, they feel isolated. Like everybody around them has kind of gone along
03:33:44.820 with this Jewish program and they don't, they don't really, um, really fit in with it anymore.
03:33:50.780 And they, they want to meet people who are, um, even if they don't want to, they need to meet
03:33:56.900 people who, who are also aware of this. So I encourage everybody to look up their, their local
03:34:03.340 book club. Uh, we have them, uh, I, I think, like you say, I'm not really tracking this. Um, but it looks
03:34:11.580 like every major city in the United States, as well as many cities in, in Europe. And even,
03:34:18.920 you know, if you're, if you're working someplace, if you're working in Asia, there's probably one
03:34:24.120 there. I mean, I saw several in, in different places in, in Asia. So, um, you know, wherever
03:34:33.060 you are, you can probably find one of these and it's, it's good for you to get involved in this
03:34:37.820 and, and to, to meet people who are on the same level that you can feel like you can relate to
03:34:42.720 and communicate with and, um, to form a, uh, you know, to have a support system because we should
03:34:49.420 be taking care of each other. I mean, any of this political stuff is ultimately about people.
03:34:56.040 That's what life is. That's, that's what the human experience is, is our, our relationships with,
03:35:01.920 with other people. That's, that's what defines human existence, I think. So, and, and basically the
03:35:10.160 whole argument, the, the whole opposition to the Jews is that they're trying to make that
03:35:15.720 impossible for, for us to do, to be a society. I mean, a society is about people and relationships
03:35:22.760 between individuals. So that's the core of it. I, I also think, um, you know, the, the self-improvement
03:35:33.100 and men can meet women together. I think that's a very good thing for men to be doing. Um, and like
03:35:40.820 I said, getting in shape and just having a, a support system, a group of friends. So that's my
03:35:46.600 main, that's my main goal in the longer term. I do want to use these book clubs that once we've
03:35:54.180 organized a solid network for, you know, political action. So, I mean, that's something that we're going
03:36:01.580 to do right now. I mean, maybe we'll do some flyering things and so on, but in the longer
03:36:06.320 term, um, you know, I think we can take over the Republican party. Um, I, I believe we can do that.
03:36:15.800 Yeah. So, uh, you know, I, I'm, I'm not going to go into all that right now, but that's, that's kind
03:36:22.040 of what I'm thinking in the longer term that there's going to be goals like that. Right. Well, um,
03:36:27.720 you know, in, in a lot of ways, at least some of the book clubs are already, uh, politically active
03:36:34.580 as book clubs, like at the, um, Houston, the Sam Houston statue thing. And, uh, well,
03:36:41.860 it used to be Houston. Now it's no limit city, but we did make that happen. But, uh, uh, you know,
03:36:50.620 you had, um, Vanguard, Texas showed up and they brought a lot of guys, but there were just as many
03:36:56.380 guys who came, who came under the banner of, uh, two or three Texas daily stormer book clubs and
03:37:03.540 one Louisiana daily stormer book club. So, you know, you had, I mean, when you watch the video
03:37:08.460 of that, anybody there, who's not in a white shirt, nine out of 10 of those guys were there
03:37:13.280 specifically as members of daily stormer book clubs. And, um, yeah, it's a great thing, especially
03:37:20.780 when you get a good cross section of different ages of guys in there, because, you know, the older
03:37:27.020 guys have experiences they can share with the younger guys and the older guys need to be around
03:37:33.120 the younger guys so that they make sure that they're staying, uh, hip and up to date with,
03:37:39.900 you know, what are the problems that these younger guys are facing. But one of the things that really
03:37:45.020 inspired me and the reason that, uh, uh, I jumped in with both feet when, uh, you first announced the
03:37:53.220 book clubs and all is, uh, a lot, just about anything that has to do with organizing. It always
03:38:00.040 goes back to this with me. And, uh, and as a preface, I'm not a religious person or any of that,
03:38:06.420 but I was raised, uh, from birth in the Southern Baptist church. And of course they've lost most of
03:38:13.340 this now, but when I was a kid, uh, the whole thing, it was a microcosm of a society where
03:38:21.240 your people in that society, you know, which backed in the Southern Baptist church was basically white
03:38:27.080 conservative Southern people. That's your, that's your microcosm of society there where you've got
03:38:35.980 every phase of life is involved in it, making sure that it's a permanent thing, that it grows,
03:38:43.340 grows, and it continues on. So, you know, all of the older people would spend their time
03:38:50.140 helping the younger people. You had whole programs for it. You had your vacation Bible school. And,
03:38:57.360 and then when they got older, then for that, you had like the Royal Ambassadors, which was like the
03:39:02.620 Boy Scouts, but for the Baptist church, where you would learn how to shoot guns and live in the
03:39:08.340 wilderness and go hiking and things like that. And then when you got a little older than that,
03:39:13.520 they had the singles classes where, you know, you'd go and you'd meet a girl to date and hopefully
03:39:19.960 marry and that kind of thing. And then you had the classes for married people and so on. And it,
03:39:26.320 and it just went on. There was something for everybody from the cradle to the grave.
03:39:30.620 And it was set up to be a movement that would last forever. And of course it got subverted and
03:39:37.220 wrecked and all, but that is one of the most important aspects of any of these type of programs
03:39:46.000 that get set up where it's guys who agree with one another who are meeting is that we are setting
03:39:52.420 something up where the old people, older people, I should say, and the younger people work together
03:40:01.480 to create social systems where we can create a movement that will last. One of the problems with
03:40:10.300 every attempt that we've had at a white nationalist movement, uh, is that they were generational and,
03:40:19.220 and whatever figures you had in that generation, they, you know, they were totally based on some
03:40:24.360 central figure. And if something happened to that figure, whether it was him falling into
03:40:28.280 disrepute or getting killed or going to prison or who knows what, or just getting old and dying
03:40:35.020 and that particular phase of the movement was just over. I mean, does this make any sense?
03:40:40.660 No, I mean, that's what I've learned in studying it. I was never involved in any previous, like I
03:40:50.560 didn't, I didn't get into white nationalism, um, by reading Stormfront. Um, uh, so I don't, I was not
03:41:00.540 involved in any historical aspects of this. Um, but that seems to be the pattern reading about it. Yeah. And I,
03:41:08.800 I think it's, it's very important to organize a system that, that is sustainable. Like, like you
03:41:14.680 just described with the Southern Baptist church, that's, that's my goal, um, is to, is to set up
03:41:21.540 that, that kind of thing. And I, I think that on the, on the individual level, um,
03:41:28.140 older guys would like to teach younger guys things. And I think that, uh, younger guys can really
03:41:35.960 benefit a lot from, from learning things from, from older guys. And so that's something that I
03:41:42.120 would, I would very much like to hear about. Um, if, if people are doing that successfully,
03:41:49.020 you know, this is something I just kind of outlined, um, this week. So I don't know how it's
03:41:55.920 going to turn. I'm, I'm pretty sure it's going to be successful. Um, I think this will work out very
03:42:00.780 well. A lot of the things that you mentioned in there to a person reading them who, especially
03:42:07.960 a young person, they, they, they might think, why is he, he telling us that we should be learning
03:42:13.360 this and this, because it doesn't have anything to do with white nationalism or whatever. But
03:42:20.220 I thought they were just great. Like for instance, you said, maybe some of the older guys can teach
03:42:26.780 some of you newer guys auto mechanics or how to fix things around the house. Well, I think that's
03:42:33.400 one of the most important things that we could be teaching these young guys, because those are
03:42:37.240 important things for a man to know. And the way that we used to learn it was we all lived at a home,
03:42:44.880 in a home with a father. And when we were little and dad, I mean, I had this experience myself when I
03:42:51.440 was a little kid, my dad had a GTO and it was great and fast and all, but the old, those old
03:42:58.120 high rods like that, you had to tinker with them constantly. So like every Saturday morning,
03:43:03.180 my dad would be out there in the garage under the hood of that GTO and, and it would just fascinate
03:43:08.680 the hell out of me. And I'd stand there and I'd ask him questions and he'd say, well, here,
03:43:12.900 and he'd hand me a wrench and he'd say, this is what we're doing. And first you start by turning
03:43:16.640 that bolt. And I'm no auto mechanic by any stretch of the imagination, but if something goes wrong with
03:43:22.560 my car, uh, for the most part, I'm not dependent on waiting for some mechanic to take a 500 or a
03:43:29.980 thousand dollars for me to fix it. I can just go buy a part and fix it. And, uh, you know, this stuff
03:43:35.880 comes in really handy. Like if you broke down on the side of the road in the middle of the night
03:43:39.900 somewhere or something, but a man should know how to fix things. He should know how things work. He
03:43:45.360 should understand how, how motors work and how systems work and things like that. And, um, we
03:43:52.520 have lost that to a great degree. I think a lot of it has to do with not having fathers in the home.
03:43:59.240 Um, there are a lot of other things too, like kids just not being interested in that kind of stuff
03:44:04.440 anymore because all they care about is video games or whatever. I don't, I don't know how big of an
03:44:09.540 impact that has, but, um, young guys need to know this stuff. Um, and it makes you feel like more of
03:44:15.800 a man to know this stuff. And I'll tell you something else. You can have all the degrees in
03:44:20.280 the world and you can be the best at whatever the hottest new video game is or whatever, but nothing
03:44:27.140 impresses a woman like a man who knows how to fix things. And I don't care who the woman is.
03:44:32.800 Yeah. It's, it demonstrates competence and that's, that's attractive to women. I mean,
03:44:41.320 if you're, it's a real thing. I mean, I don't know if anybody's young people have even been in this
03:44:49.480 situation, but if, if you're in a situation where, you know, a car breaks down and one man in your group,
03:44:56.680 um, knows how to fix it, then the girls are all going to be looking at him like, well, this guy
03:45:02.760 knows what's going on. Um, they, they will, I mean, it's kind of, it's not necessarily intuitive
03:45:10.000 that you would recognize that women respond so, so well to that, but they, they absolutely do.
03:45:16.240 Um, and I mean, it's the same thing with anything. I mean, if you can fix, uh, any kind of appliances
03:45:21.420 around the house, if you know how to fix a leaking roof, any, any of this type of stuff is,
03:45:26.260 is looked at as a, as a sexual value. I mean, you know, the, the whole concept of,
03:45:33.100 of sexuality has been so skewed by the media and what women are, are actually driven by is skewed.
03:45:40.980 But, um, uh, you know, that, that is definitely true what you just said. And I think that, um,
03:45:49.380 when, when looking at it as, as, you know, doing what matters for yourself, I mean, you will feel
03:45:54.700 more like a man if you know how to do things that men do and you're not reliant on, uh, on others
03:46:02.740 to do, to do things for you. I mean, just as a general concept, the, the less you are reliant
03:46:10.580 on things outside of yourself, um, the more confident you're going to feel, uh, about your own
03:46:18.500 position in the world that, I mean, that's just a basic fact. I think that the, that the hunting
03:46:24.960 and camping, uh, you know, I mean, you could say survivalism type stuff, but you don't have to look
03:46:31.900 at it as like hardcore survivalism, but just learning these skills that are kind of associated
03:46:36.540 with that, with that, I think is really a, um, confidence booster. You know, I grew up in a
03:46:45.000 situation, luckily, where there were a lot of, a lot of men around that were a little bit more
03:46:51.380 redneck-y. Um, but a lot of people don't, don't grow up with that. Haven't grown up with that.
03:46:56.600 And they don't, they don't have any of this. Um, I think you should know how to shoot a gun. You
03:47:01.500 should know how to kill and skin and at least a rabbit. I mean, if you can, if you can do any animal,
03:47:09.800 you, you know, you could, it applies to all of them as far as the way you, um, fix it up after
03:47:16.880 you shot it. And, um, I, I think that every man should know how to fight. I think that every man
03:47:23.320 should know how to fix a car, change oil and change a tire. I mean, guys don't know how to change a
03:47:28.900 tire. This is, this is nuts. You should definitely, you should definitely know enough about fixing
03:47:35.940 random things to where when something pops up that's simple, but that you've never fixed it,
03:47:42.000 that there's no question in your mind that you're going to fix it. Like say the faucet in the kitchen
03:47:47.380 sink needs a washer. Well, there's no reason you should be calling a plumber for that. You're a man,
03:47:52.700 you know? Yeah. So, and you look like a fag if you do that. I mean, if, if, I mean, in any situation,
03:48:00.160 and I mean, that's a good way, that's a good way to get women to, to meet women is, I mean,
03:48:05.820 if you're somebody needs help doing something and you're a competent man, then you're like I say,
03:48:11.520 you're automatically, you're, your sexual value is raised. Um, well, you know, just changing a
03:48:17.440 woman's tire for this is like, this is like, uh, uh, a sexually arousing experience for a woman,
03:48:25.020 for, for a man to, you know, come and change a tire. This is like a, almost like a fantasy.
03:48:30.700 Yeah. Well, I remember when, when, um, when I was about 18 or 19, uh, this gal left a message on my
03:48:38.560 answer machine. She was kind of a hot gal and everything. And, uh, but she, or at least to me,
03:48:44.020 she was, but she had left me a message wanting me to come and change the shower head in her shower.
03:48:50.560 And it kind of pissed me off that this broad out of the blue had done that. And I just happened to
03:48:56.520 be, I hadn't called her back or anything. And I happened to mention it to my dad. And he said,
03:49:00.960 you get your goddamn tools and you get over there. That gal is going to give you some pussy. That was
03:49:06.340 his exact words. And I went over there and changed out her shower head and I'll be damned. My dad was
03:49:12.260 right again. And you know, that's the thing. It's just like red green. I don't know if you're familiar
03:49:19.940 with it. It was a really, it was, they were, it was funny, but it was a stupid Canadian show that
03:49:24.500 they used to play on PBS, the red green show. And he was, he fixed everything with duct tape. Like
03:49:31.240 I said, it was a joke, but his signature saying was, and at the end of every show, he'd say, and
03:49:37.660 remember if the women don't find you handsome, make sure they find you handy. And he was right.
03:49:44.040 Yeah. Yeah. I mean, it's, you know, I mean, this is basic breeding and the way people
03:49:55.540 mate. Yeah. I mean, it's, it's basic. Yeah. And if, if the readers take anything away from the,
03:50:06.800 not readers, the listeners, I forgot what platform I was on here for a second. I have readers. I have
03:50:12.380 readers because I can't. Well, so do I. I mean, I write. I don't talk well. Right. But if the
03:50:19.560 listeners take anything away from this and I'll be the first one to say, I'm not a pickup artist.
03:50:23.940 I haven't been running around scoring with babes like Brad Pitt or anything, but I've done pretty
03:50:28.580 well for a guy in my situation. And what women want is never what they tell you they want. What they
03:50:37.960 want is for you to be a man. And unfortunately, uh, the society has been lying to us about what it
03:50:46.160 means to be a man for so long that most people have no idea what that means anymore, but it doesn't
03:50:52.160 mean wearing your emotions on your sleeve and crying when it feels appropriate. And that that's what they
03:51:00.820 were actually trying to teach us when I was a kid. You know, you like we'd go to school and on film
03:51:07.280 day, they'd play these afterschool specials and everything. And the main romantic couple in it,
03:51:12.540 you know, the, the, the, the boy would always have trouble expressing his emotions. And the girl would
03:51:17.980 put his hand on her, her hand on his shoulder and say, Timmy, there's, it's not unmanly to cry.
03:51:24.140 As a matter of fact, if you'll go ahead and cry, I'll respect you so much more as a man. And he
03:51:27.820 breaks down and starts sobbing that his mom said something mean to him or something like that.
03:51:31.980 And suddenly she loves him. Now life don't work like that. That's a Jewish program to get you
03:51:37.280 turned into a manlet. You want to just remember if you want to know what it means to be a man,
03:51:45.000 go watch the original Conan with Arnold Schwarzenegger and everything you need to know is in there.
03:51:51.280 You don't give a shit what anybody thinks and you do whatever. Uh, thank you for coming and
03:51:56.140 listening to the crypto report again. Thanks to Andrew Englund for being my guest,
03:51:59.900 but we've gone long enough. Hope you enjoyed this episode. We'll be back hopefully next Wednesday.
03:52:07.360 Talk to you then.
03:52:08.220 We'll be right back.
03:52:21.560 We'll be right back.
03:52:25.940 We'll be right back.
03:52:31.980 We'll be right back.