White Excellence Radio - v6t40fv
Episode Stats
Length
8 hours and 16 minutes
Words per Minute
149.2607
Hate Speech Sentences
682
Summary
Nigga alert, nigger alert, get the fuck out of bed, bitch go! The Aryan Unity Show is a show where we talk about white power and all things related to it. Featuring Aryan Fellowship, White Power Lunch Hour, and 48th Radio. Also featuring Face Maiden and Percy Weekly, and Karen Rad and Awelside Shirts.
Transcript
00:08:41.980
They got a white fund because they will not be a child so long.
00:09:00.980
They got a white fund because they will not be a child so long.
00:09:18.980
They got a white fund because they will not be a child so long.
00:10:07.200
The guy said, what the fuck did you try so long?
00:10:34.960
The guy said, what the fuck did you try so long?
00:10:40.740
You are now listening to the greatest face on eggs
00:11:47.900
To help us by quickly liking and reposting the space for bridge to reach a broader audience
00:11:54.040
It's Wednesday morning and we would like to thank you all for joining us today
00:11:59.700
We have got a wonderful day of programming here on White Excellence Radio
00:12:03.620
Here on the Aryan Unity Show, you are part of the show
00:12:06.900
And we welcome you to feel free to come up on stage and let us know what's on your mind
00:12:12.580
The views shared here on this show are that of the co-hosts only
00:12:16.840
And not reflected by White Excellence Radio nor its producers
00:12:32.160
Everything said on this show is strictly for entertainment purposes only
00:12:36.200
And nothing should be taken seriously or literally
00:12:40.200
And no threat should be made throughout the duration of this show
00:13:24.700
And I grabbed the radio and I said, what's up, what's up
00:13:36.140
And we got, you know, I guess the NATO summit's going on
00:14:40.880
I've seen the stories come in throughout the day here
00:15:11.260
With a big fucking fat honking Jew nose right now
02:05:46.040
money. It just is a game of time. Our 401ks at some point are going to start taking massive hits
02:05:53.060
when the economy starts to slump. And then if you watch crypto and you actually have the
02:05:57.080
opportunity to understand how the blockchain works, it actually is extremely easy to follow
02:06:01.820
the trends because every single one of the top 30 follow the exact same trend. If Bitcoin is
02:06:07.380
going to start crashing, guess what? XRP, ADA. Yo, bro, are you qualified to give people financial
02:06:14.120
advice? I actually am. I own three restaurants and that's how I started. I mean, if you want,
02:06:19.280
I can stop. I actually was here the other day and I tried offering suggestions. So you took a test
02:06:23.340
with the SEC? Oh, hold on. Brian, Brian, Brian. Why are you cutting this guy off? Let him do this.
02:06:27.060
Yeah, we want to hear what he's got. So Brian, go ahead and ask your question. I'll give you a
02:06:31.580
courtesy of asking the questions. You can't go in a space and give people financial advice if you're
02:06:35.980
not legally allowed. You're opening yourself up to liability, bro. Bro, this is some gay liberal
02:06:41.240
shit. Come on, Brian. Actually, we're in a space where suggestions are being made. And just so you
02:06:46.760
know, yes, I was licensed for many years in the financial sector. In 2020, I stopped to help my
02:06:52.960
mother because she had two restaurants and she was trying to expand to a third. I ended up taking all
02:06:57.580
my money out of my 401k and putting it all into the crypto environment. And now I'm worth $30 million.
02:07:02.400
Now, let me just also, oh, I see some of you guys are laughing. That's fine. Some of you guys don't
02:07:05.920
understand how the market works. And that's okay. But just so you know, yes, I was licensed
02:07:09.800
for many years. I worked for JP Morgan. Just so you know, now, and again, just so you guys
02:07:16.140
understand, for the last six years, I have been quiet. Like, I haven't been able to act or talk
02:07:22.500
the way we've been able to talk in these spaces. Because literally, when I started doing X, as soon
02:07:28.580
as everybody found out I was a Donald Trump supporter, my mom's restaurant in Philadelphia that
02:07:32.500
we opened up, we literally had protesters, and we had to shut that building down. That
02:07:37.500
was a fucking nightmare. Now, anyway, going back to it, the understanding of the crypto
02:07:42.020
environment is not as complex as people think. The stock market has millions of options.
02:07:47.460
The crypto environment only has 10,000. So all you need to do is get smart about the top
02:07:52.300
30. Now, am I making actual suggestions? No, what I am doing is driving people to a product
02:07:58.500
that people should get in the know of. Because in the coming years, we are going to run into
02:08:02.800
financial troubles with our actual dollar. So knowing that there's a global economy that's
02:08:07.540
actually fueling a financial sector, it's actually not a, it's not a bad idea to at least get in the
02:08:13.440
know. But Brian, I do appreciate your question, just so you know. And again, I'm a business owner
02:08:18.880
myself. Again, went from the financial industry into restauranting. We ended up transitioning my
02:08:25.380
family's company, which were all in LLCs, to go under an S-corp, meaning that I bought the companies
02:08:30.960
and I lease everything to those, to those restaurants. And I make a killing because I
02:08:36.400
understand how the financial system works. So that being said, I'm not trying to hear, I'm not here to
02:08:40.900
argue with you. But what I am trying to do is help people understand that there are options out there
02:08:45.460
because ignorance at this point is not bliss. If anybody in here knows what banking is, tell me
02:08:51.080
about fractional banking and then understanding fractional banking behind the scenes.
02:08:54.440
What does that actually benefit to you as a consumer to the banking institution? It's a zero
02:09:00.480
sum, just so you know, you're worthless. All you are is you're a dollar bill to them times 100 that
02:09:05.800
they can lend out to their friends. So anyway, that all being said, if you want advice, I'm not
02:09:11.360
trying to give advice. What I am trying to do is give direction. And again, it doesn't take much.
02:09:16.060
I never actually told anybody what to buy, but I'm trying to just drive people to that spot.
02:09:20.880
So I hope that you guys were okay with that bit of it. Another thing, thank you for hosting spaces
02:09:27.620
like this. Like I said, I have been following, I'm not going to, I'm never going to promote another
02:09:32.740
spacer, but I only recently got involved with spaces in the beginning of the year because at that point,
02:09:39.600
I just felt like everything was piling up against me and my family. I am not foundational white.
02:09:46.160
My family came here though, from Italy in the 19 or in the 1700s. My wife, on the other hand,
02:09:52.380
she's been here since the late 1500s from, and she was Dutch. So my point is like our family,
02:09:57.900
we're the biggest targets right now. And the Muslims, not only do they take advantage of us,
02:10:02.160
they're destroying us. And then the Indians that are being brought in, the government is subsidizing
02:10:06.720
these people. If you hire them, they're paying 50% of their income from the state. That's a subsidy
02:10:13.160
that's offered. Same thing happened with ESG, with hiring the LGBTQ folks. Now, just so you know,
02:10:20.860
I have a whole other opinion on that. I think the fag environment is 100% worthless. They do not
02:10:27.100
create jobs. They only create safe spaces. So on that, thank you for giving me a chance. Corvus,
02:10:33.640
good to see you brother. And like I said, there's a bunch of people in here that I see that are in
02:10:39.200
some of the spaces I'm in. Trust me when I say this, I don't need to be on here. I like to be
02:10:43.540
on here. I make suggestions because I do want people to win. I'm sick and tired of seeing the
02:10:47.900
others win. Because right now, every chip is stacked against us. And that's exactly what it is.
02:10:52.420
It's a gambling chip. Because if you spend money and you take the risk, you're more than likely going
02:10:56.620
to lose it if you don't educate yourself. So in that, just understand that it's all about love,
02:11:00.760
white power, and unity. And if you want to go ahead and fight the current, that's totally fine.
02:11:07.840
But I'm ready to start taking over. And I want my white people to make fucking money.
02:11:11.940
And yes, just so you guys know, I can actually send you screenshots of my Coinbase account. So
02:11:17.020
if you are curious. I don't know this guy, but I'm going to tell you something right now.
02:11:22.100
I just heard his pitch. And I know someone who's been in sales for a long time, and he's a
02:11:26.860
professional. Some of the lines he did, and the way he talked, and the tone, and how he controlled
02:11:31.800
his voice, he's actually a really good salesman. So he's someone who's been doing this for,
02:11:38.960
obviously been doing it for a while. So, and that's, I'm going to, I'm blazing you a little bit.
02:11:43.460
Because you actually sound like you are actually a professional. The line you just gave was
02:11:49.000
something we used to do when I used to be, did like a mortgage broker back in like 2008,
02:11:54.360
when it was a housing crisis, it would be like, I don't need your business, but I want your business.
02:12:01.420
And like, it was those type of lines and controlling your voice and your tone is very important to
02:12:06.540
winning you over. And the, and I'm going to let you know, I'm, I'm blazing him. I don't know this
02:12:11.820
guy, but he's obviously a professional salesman. And that's, so that, that says something to where
02:12:18.860
he's coming from. Just want to put that out there.
02:12:20.600
And Fitz side, thank you for saying that because, you know, it was a sales job. I mean,
02:12:26.020
I was literally creating, um, literally in investment portfolios for one, for 401ks with
02:12:32.720
JP Morgan. It was not a very fun job. It was very, it was very frustrating. A lot of Excel
02:12:38.580
spreadsheets and nothing but numbers. Uh, but thank you. And you're right. Listen, it's sales. Listen,
02:12:43.260
the only way to succeed in this life is to learn how to hustle. I'm sorry, if you're not in sales,
02:12:47.340
or if you don't know how to sell, you're going to be in the middle class or below. Like you need
02:12:52.040
to know how to use your tongue. You need to go ahead and bring people to your, to your cause to
02:12:56.420
speak. And just so you know, I love these fucking spaces. When WHL is talking about the people that
02:13:02.240
share the space, I'm the guy sharing the space, not only on the front end here on Twitter, I go
02:13:07.060
into Facebook and I push it there. I also noticed there's someone in the tunnel, um, that actually
02:13:12.680
messaged me saying that they're listening. They couldn't believe how exciting this was. Um,
02:13:17.260
cause I shared on Facebook as well, because I don't really care what people think anymore. I'm
02:13:21.220
tired of being called a racist because it doesn't affect me anymore. I'm just tired of it. It's such
02:13:25.740
a weird word to use. It doesn't affect me. And good side again. Thank you. Um, and I appreciate the,
02:13:32.060
uh, the encouragement. It really, I really do appreciate it. This is only my second time chatting in
02:13:35.840
here and I'm not going to lie. I'm a little bit nervous. So thank you. And thank you everybody who's
02:13:40.460
listening. And if you don't mind me also throwing it up there, I am new here, but boy, oh boy,
02:13:45.480
this has been the best follow that I've ever had follow both of those two accounts, the host and
02:13:50.600
cohost. They are incredible. And again, they gave me the opportunity to speak. This is now technically
02:13:56.080
my third time, but in two different spaces. So thank you for giving me that chance. And I'm,
02:14:00.800
I'm humbled and grateful. Always a pleasure. Always a pleasure. Um, yeah, no, what he said is very
02:14:09.200
true. Uh, you know, you need to have some hustle in your, in your step. You need to,
02:14:13.920
you need to really like be ready, be ready to prance on any opportunity that comes our way.
02:14:19.340
Because when you, you have an idea or you have an opportunity and you just kind of like,
02:14:24.480
let it linger, it's going to disappear. So, you know, you gotta, you gotta be the one to
02:14:29.080
have some drive and really, really put that shit together, really get out there, step out of your
02:14:34.860
comfort zone, because when you're out of your comfort zone, you're going to feel a little bit,
02:14:39.080
you know, uneasy, a little bit uneasy, but that's when you really grow as a person. That's when you,
02:14:43.720
you, you get to new spaces, new places where you've never been before. And when it comes to crypto,
02:14:49.680
um, he said it very well, you know, um, don't throw, you know, you can never put as you basically
02:14:58.360
imagine that it's money that you've already lost when you invest it because you could lose it in a
02:15:03.320
second. But the, the people who, uh, dollar costs averaged over the years into Bitcoin, crypto,
02:15:10.040
whatever, are the ones who, you know, and just set it and forget it. Some, you know, a monthly
02:15:14.760
hundred dollars into crypto. They're the ones who did the best on all these gains, all these rises.
02:15:20.260
They're the ones who did the best, um, you know, without, with minimal risk, minimal gamble,
02:15:25.340
but because they're only putting a little bit, a little bit in each month, you know, they're not
02:15:29.140
getting caught up in the hype. Oh, I need to sell my house and buy every, you know, like,
02:15:34.500
so, um, if you, if you're new to it and you don't really understand it, you don't want to figure out
02:15:38.820
how the markets work, how the fluctuations in the, you know, the, the, there's, there's plenty of
02:15:44.780
resources. I'll post one up in the Eagle Nest above, but there's this guy, Mitch Ray, I've been
02:15:48.440
listening to for years and he's been teaching me for free, uh, how to read these charts and how to
02:15:55.000
decipher, you know, risks versus reward, uh, good times to invest good times, not to invest.
02:16:02.020
Um, and how to, you know, different strategies for all this kind of, uh, markets. So I'll post
02:16:07.600
that up above. He's also very based Alabama guy. And, uh, yeah, he's very based, uh, and kind of
02:16:14.220
the same level of on our talking points also. So you won't feel like it's some kind of liberal
02:16:18.740
tard that you're listening from. He actually wants the best for his, uh, followers. Anyways,
02:16:23.980
I'll stop glazing him, but, um, yeah, uh, we need to actually learn how crypto works because it's,
02:16:29.980
it's beneficial to learn how to, to navigate for our people to get away from this Jewish banking
02:16:36.340
system. Yes. Bitcoin is largely controlled by a lot of nons and Jews and, uh, you know, entities that
02:16:42.740
want the worst for the people that come, that come in late. But at the end of the day, the system,
02:16:48.480
uh, is very beneficial to learn how to use because you, you can accept money from anywhere in
02:16:53.920
the world, from anybody in the world for anything that you want and not follow the rules. Um,
02:16:59.640
you know, you don't need to be worried about the bank cutting you off. Um, you, you can have in
02:17:04.500
your own wallet, you can learn how to make sure that you don't have to depend on third parties.
02:17:09.340
Uh, you, you can offload it to cash if you need, you can learn how that you, if you don't want to
02:17:14.820
store it in Bitcoin, you can have a stable coin, which is basically like putting it in us dollars.
02:17:19.240
There's even digital gold. They have a token. Let's, uh, basically the price flux is, uh,
02:17:25.620
exactly the same as gold. So you don't have to actually buy physical gold. You could have this
02:17:30.280
coin and it acts the same way and you can sell it and buy it and sell it and buy it and take profit
02:17:36.380
a lot easier without the percentage, you know, that you would have to pay per sale and buy in the actual
02:17:43.100
physical gold market. So, I mean, just learning about it a little bit, it will get your foot in the
02:17:48.160
door. So you're not completely lost when, when things, you know, get to that level. But, um,
02:17:53.860
I wouldn't, and I wouldn't advise going all in on any kind of crypto. So make sure you do your
02:17:59.340
research. No, no, you gotta do the research. You didn't do the research. You gotta do research.
02:18:05.860
Listen, investing at, it's all about timing. Just so you guys know. Sure. I mean, it's great if we
02:18:12.080
could have invested a year and a half ago, right. When everything was at their all time lows
02:18:15.960
right now, it's about actually understanding how media impacts crypto because it is a global
02:18:21.660
commodity, not the stock market in just America, right? Like with Donald Trump going to Iran,
02:18:27.100
the stock market didn't budge, but the crypto environment dropped a little over 14% in a day,
02:18:32.840
but then it's all rebounded. So my point is just understand how media happens and how it impacts
02:18:37.980
people understand where the money is actually being invested because technically right now,
02:18:42.660
the middle East is one of the largest, um, holders in the crypto environment, specifically
02:18:47.480
in Bitcoin. So it's just having an idea. And then, you know what, you hit it right on the head,
02:18:52.700
WHL. People don't realize that if you invest into something and you feel that you're comfortable where
02:18:58.660
the top is, remove it, put it into a stable token. You can create a USDC wallet on crypto.com or
02:19:04.320
Coinbase and you get 5% interest, everything over $10,000. So at least you have something making money,
02:19:11.600
even when everything else is being volatile. So in that you, you can sell off at whatever your,
02:19:16.920
your feeling is at the top. And then when you rebuy in, you just pull from your USDC wallet,
02:19:22.540
and then you just pay a small fee to go ahead and reinvest. And I would say that you can scrape
02:19:26.840
10 to 15% on a couple of products. And again, I'm not, I'm not going into detail specifically,
02:19:33.080
but if you're curious, people are absolutely welcome to ask.
02:19:36.260
And I'm sorry if I over-talk someone, I apologize, brother.
02:19:40.060
No, that's, uh, I'm glad you came back in with that. I appreciate that. And we're going to go
02:19:49.860
No, I was just going to chime in on the crypto. Uh, if an idiot like me, like a dumb felon,
02:19:55.820
idiot carpenter can figure out crypto, like all you other smart, strong white men can figure it out.
02:20:01.820
Trust me, just give it a couple, you know, a couple of days watching some YouTube videos,
02:20:07.260
some tutorials on getting into it and you'll figure it out. We're all smart white men here.
02:20:13.500
And to the guy that was just speaking, I'm really happy that you're in the space.
02:20:17.540
I'm really proud that we have such a diverse, uh, atmosphere where we can come talk and share
02:20:24.420
thoughts where we have such a diverse group of people, of proud white people coming together and
02:20:32.240
sharing ideas and, you know, just shooting the shit. It's pretty awesome. I, I, I'm happy that
02:20:38.880
everyone's, uh, chatting it up this morning. I like the chat and I'm happy. I'm happy today. Thank you guys.
02:20:46.640
So one thing I do know about crypto is you want to find one that's being pushed heavily by an e-grifter
02:20:53.020
and something that's J proof maybe. And, uh, yeah, that's, that's probably the best thing to look
02:20:59.560
for. You're looking at something that is a little bit hard to understand for like a newcomer. It's
02:21:05.940
easier to follow the trend just by going on coinmarketcap.com. You can drill down on any
02:21:11.100
product and you can literally watch their trends over the years and see that they're nearly identical
02:21:15.440
in between each bit fall. So you can invest that whenever you choose, just make sure you pull it
02:21:19.860
out before it, it is going to hit that, that, that wall, so to speak this year. Again, there's some
02:21:25.880
things out there. There's, there's a lot of information out there. Just do yourself a favor
02:21:30.200
and just learn a little bit about the blockchain on its own and then learn where BTC and LTC fit into
02:21:37.180
the entire equation. So, Hey, uh, um, I want to bring it, bringing concepts back because we're all
02:21:45.400
talking about like white plight and white unity and white greatness. Right. And earlier I was talking
02:21:52.740
about how if, uh, the majority of, uh, non-whites were the majority of the time we have slaves, we would
02:22:00.560
still have slaves in the day because the concept of being free and not having slaves is a white moral
02:22:06.000
issue. Right. It's something, uh, it's a morality we spread across the world. Right. But that's not the
02:22:12.420
only thing we, we spread the constant of ancient times. The concept of rape was different in these
02:22:19.940
cultures. Some cultures didn't even have the concept of rape. It was all just procreation.
02:22:24.300
Right. And we know that like in New Zealand, the, uh, the Maury and all that, they didn't even have
02:22:29.860
a word for rape because just beating the shit out of the women and taking and taking them was
02:22:34.300
considered procreation. It was okay. So we had to teach them that what rape was and it was different
02:22:39.760
from normal sex and that it was immoral. And, and even like, if you go back to other groups,
02:22:47.540
like the Jews and all them, their concept of rape had to do with you stole my dowry. I can't sell my
02:22:54.260
daughter off. Right. And that's a totally different concept from what our ancestors saw as rape.
02:23:00.580
Our ancestors saw rape as, uh, as a woman didn't have a right to choose who she parochialed with.
02:23:07.560
That right was taken away. And that's the, the idea of rape. Now, fast forward today,
02:23:14.180
our understanding of rape or what we say rape is, is the standard of morality because we are
02:23:24.360
erring ancestors in us. We spread our morals on our ethics across the world. And these things have
02:23:30.180
been adopted. So, and the reason why I'm trying to drive this, the point I'm trying to make is
02:23:36.240
if you look at how everyone's trying to preach our morals back to us, they don't actually care
02:23:43.600
about those morals, especially like people from India. They rape people all the time. No problem.
02:23:49.980
Raping is like a normal practice over there. And, and if you think about it, if you mean,
02:23:56.260
they come over here and they try to preach our morals about slavery, which they still practice
02:23:59.560
slavery over there. Uh, if they, if you look at it, they try to preach these things that we
02:24:06.680
actually are the bearers of these morals and ethics. And the reason why it hurts us because it's in our
02:24:14.220
soul, our very spirit to do good and be good. And so it hurts us and shams us. And we feel guilt over
02:24:22.020
these things. And this is why they have a whole industry of a false history that only rights did these
02:24:27.200
things, because if you were to teach people in India, Oh, Indians only do the same. They, they
02:24:32.860
wouldn't give a fuck because it's not a part of the genetic code to have this type of morality.
02:24:39.320
Their only reason why they hold morality that rape is bad or slavery is bad is because white people
02:24:44.720
power and influence is still abundant on the earth. And that's the only reason why, but it's like,
02:24:52.640
you can't make them feel guilty or ashamed about it, but you can make white people have guilt and shame
02:24:57.400
about it because we naturally have an inclination for justice and what is morally right. And, and you
02:25:07.160
have to start thinking in these terms, why these people are over here preaching to us about our morals,
02:25:14.580
because these are our cultural morals, not theirs, because it's effective on us. But if we were to preach
02:25:21.640
our cultural morals onto them, they wouldn't care. The only reason is why they even follow it or
02:25:28.480
pretend to follow it is because our thumb on the economics across the world still exists and we
02:25:36.040
would be an uproar if they did it. So there's still, we don't have enough power and influence within
02:25:42.440
our own government, but there's enough power and influence where they have to pretend that they
02:25:46.880
care about our morals culturally. Right. And these are terms you have to start thinking. Like when
02:25:53.720
people ask, what is white culture? Well, spreading morals and ethics, like what rape is considered
02:26:00.880
today and the, uh, and why it's bad or how slavery is evil and why we appreciate freedom more than any
02:26:08.720
other group. That's part of our culture. And we are spreading it. And with our might,
02:26:15.560
we are forcing these parts to follow these morals. They don't really follow them. They pretend to follow
02:26:21.880
them to appease us. And as soon as we lose absolute power, they will no, they will no longer pretend to
02:26:28.720
follow these morals and ethics. And this is something you need to keep in mind. Not only do we want to survive
02:26:34.720
for, for our own reasons, for our own self-interest, but if we go out the light of, of what is holy
02:26:42.880
will go out across the earth, the earth will no longer be become holy. It will become demonic or
02:26:51.360
become dark. And in the Aaron scriptures, it says, bless those are descendants of Fred because through them,
02:27:00.000
the earth will become holy. And if you think in those terms and how our moral and ethics are being
02:27:05.520
spread across the earth with our might and empowered influence, the earth is becoming holy. But if we
02:27:13.520
die and we go out, the earth would not be holy because no one would keep those morals and ethics.
02:27:18.160
Absolutely true. Yeah. Um, you got a lot of points in there. Um,
02:27:34.080
so I was just doing some, uh, clean up down below. We had some, uh, non sneaking in, uh, we got about, uh, 45 minutes
02:27:41.520
left here before the white power lunch hour. So feel free to grab a mic. Um, feel free to jump up
02:27:48.160
here and let us know what's going on. If you want to put in on this conversation, love to hear from the
02:27:52.320
new faces down there. Welcome to all the new faces down there. Um, great to have you here. So that being
02:27:59.120
said, yeah, feel free to jump in. Uh, I know Magus, I don't Magus got Gus. He's been thinking over
02:28:03.680
there. He's been cool. He's been quiet. He's been internalizing. What are you?
02:28:06.240
What's going on, Magus? I've been internalizing into my car and I'm on the road
02:28:13.120
right now, but I'm still here, still listening. You know, if I got a good take, I'm definitely
02:28:19.360
going to chime in. You know, I'm not shy about that. I just love throwing you the mic sometimes. Hot potato.
02:28:29.120
By the way, admin, if we could, uh, if we could get, uh, co-host for WTF.
02:28:36.240
Um, I don't recognize Tex-Max Rex, but I'm going to let you up here and get, uh, I'm feeling,
02:28:53.600
I'm feeling, uh, you know, feeling it. Uh, let's get you up here real quick. No, no, not good. Not
02:28:59.600
good. What's going on? I think he was in the general space yesterday and he got, he just was a whack.
02:29:06.240
Yeah. Gotcha. Yeah. I was kind of on the fence here. No posts usually means there's something
02:29:12.960
up with the account. So good. Thanks for the vet. No problem. He actually tried coming in today and
02:29:18.560
we wouldn't let him up. So yeah. Gotcha. Gotcha. Okay. Well, good thing I didn't, uh, uh, let them
02:29:26.480
in there here. It's, uh, yeah, that's, that's kind of the way we go. If they, if they don't have any
02:29:31.680
posts, we're kind of iffy, but if you don't have any like weird posts, you know, uh, sometimes we'll
02:29:37.040
let you up, but yeah, thanks for the vet. And, uh, we're gonna, we're gonna, you know,
02:29:41.280
we're not going to have you up here, unfortunately. Sorry, Tex. Um, yeah. What's everybody thinking?
02:29:47.760
What's going on? Kind of lost my train of thought here. Uh, and, uh, the news, the news seems to be
02:29:56.880
kind of, um, basic here today, but we do have something in here actually that just happened
02:30:02.880
today. Uh, there's been mass police raids in Germany. 170 Germans were arrested, uh, and had
02:30:11.920
their houses raided by the German police, um, for insulting politicians and for quote unquote,
02:30:20.080
hate speech in Germany, unfortunately. So, um, yeah, looks like they've done a large scale raid
02:30:27.440
and they've gotten a bunch of our, uh, you know, people arrested today, unfortunately.
02:30:33.760
So that sucks. Um, freedom in Germany to speak your mind is, uh, not, not allowed anymore.
02:30:43.600
And that's very unfortunate because, you know, when they bring out these hate speech laws,
02:30:48.320
who knows what kind of things are got brewing in different countries in regards to the same
02:30:53.120
kind of thing. So what do you guys think about that?
02:31:06.560
I was just going to say, I just saw a thing, like a little video of how Germany is now. And it was
02:31:12.480
just nothing but blacks having this big ass fucking party in the streets. Like, you know,
02:31:18.400
how you would think of, uh, an army would do after they've taken over a country or something like that,
02:31:24.240
you know, and it's fucking horrible. And it's like all these politicians are wherever they just get
02:31:31.040
their fucking pockets lined by Soros money. And they're like, oh, we can fuck up this country.
02:31:36.480
And we'll just fucking hop on a plane. Israel, because, you know, Israel's going to be getting
02:31:40.960
rebuilt to a city here pretty soon, you know, off American tax dollars. So, uh, yeah, just, uh,
02:31:47.440
get your lube ready guys. Be sure to get, you know, call up Puff Daddy's lawyer. I'm sure they got a
02:31:53.440
extra fucking baby oil and shit like that. You get a discounted price, but, uh, yeah,
02:31:58.080
us Americans are going to get fucked right up the ass over here sometime soon.
02:32:06.080
Yeah. Unfortunately, they're trying to get us all to be silent, but you know, we can't stop what we're
02:32:11.600
doing. We're fighting for the white race and future of, for our children. So, you know, at the end of
02:32:17.600
the day, um, I mean, how, yeah, they can, they can fuck around like this and try and, you know,
02:32:24.960
get us to stop speaking, but it's just fear tactics. And, you know, we gotta, we gotta keep
02:32:30.720
this fight up because this just shows that they're, they're, they're starting to get afraid and, uh,
02:32:35.920
you know, hate speech. Like, how do you even really legitimately define hate speech?
02:32:41.520
You know, like they're just wasting everybody's time really, I think. So Arian, take it away.
02:32:56.880
Might need to cycle real quick. We'll go to a friend in the meantime. We're welcome.
02:33:11.520
It just, you know, your mic. I can't hear a thing from your microphone. Uh,
02:33:22.960
I hear it noise, but I don't hear, I can't hear anything. If you're maybe your microphones
02:33:30.560
in the same position. All I'm hearing is like little mice in the corner or something like that.
02:33:37.600
Yeah. If you, uh, uh, friend, if you got a, maybe his microphone screwed, I will get Arian up here.
02:33:45.520
He might also be connected to a Bluetooth, uh, headset that's in a different room or different,
02:33:50.080
you know, in a car or something like that. Sometimes that happens. So let's go, let's try again, Arian.
02:33:54.480
Hey, do you hear me? Yeah, we got you this time. Okay, cool. I was just saying that my heart goes
02:34:04.320
out to our German bros, dude. In the heart, in the homeland, in the fatherland of all places,
02:34:14.160
it's like they're, you know, if anybody knows the story, uh, you know, the book Germany shall perish,
02:34:20.160
they've wanted to do this for a hundred years now. And, uh, when it comes to politicians,
02:34:27.840
uh, we blame the politicians a lot, but those politicians have security.
02:34:33.520
And there are men who are taking money to protect these evil, disgusting,
02:34:41.200
fucking filth, uh, just subhuman pieces of shit. They have men who are actually protecting them and
02:34:48.480
being paid to protect them. And they, I would say the, the modern Praetorian guard,
02:34:54.880
they're the fucking problem because they know that you think they're stupid. Those guys know probably
02:35:00.960
more than any of us know about what's going on. They're there, they're listening to everything.
02:35:05.920
And they still decide that, no, I'm going to retire doing this. So, uh, you know, the politicians are
02:35:11.840
going to be politicians, our fucking armed security that are protecting these people.
02:35:16.800
They have choices and they're not making them and they should be known. Whoever,
02:35:20.880
I don't know if that's public knowledge, who those people are, but it should be.
02:35:26.160
Absolutely. We did have a guy in here before. I haven't seen him for a few days, but he's,
02:35:30.320
uh, putting together a website just for that purpose and to try and keep it, like, keep all
02:35:35.760
the race traitors and all these, uh, politicians who are going against the race and standing up
02:35:40.800
for Israel and this and that. Um, uh, hopefully, you know, something like that will be coming out
02:35:59.040
You're breaking up again a little bit. Well, I didn't catch that.
02:36:05.120
Yeah, it must be your signal or something cutting out.
02:36:07.920
Well, um, maybe we'll give it a few seconds and come back to you for the last little bit. I did.
02:36:15.600
I missed it. Um, but we'll go to friend and then Donovan.
02:36:21.440
I hear you a little bit. If you got a Bluetooth device, you, you, that's, uh, got your microphone,
02:36:26.000
you might be connected to your car wifi or your car Bluetooth or something like that.
02:36:30.560
Because I do, I faintly hear you, but I can't hear like, it's very, very faint.
02:36:42.640
I literally just changed earbuds. I guess that's all I needed to do. But anyway, when I see what's
02:36:47.600
going on in Germany and the rest of Europe, like that kind of shit kind of concerns me.
02:36:56.800
shit started moving that direction in this country, I can't see most Americans giving a
02:37:01.600
fuck about those kinds of rights being taken away, especially when they're going to have
02:37:05.680
the media saying, Oh, you know, it's just these evil Nazis who, who take advantage of these laws
02:37:12.000
and these freedoms. You know, you don't want to enable them. Cause I mean, even 15 years ago,
02:37:17.360
I was enough of a faggot. I would have been like, Oh, well, who cares then? It's just some Nazis.
02:37:22.160
Like, that's how I would have felt. So I know there's fucking a hundred million,
02:37:26.880
150 million people whites in this country who would be like, Oh, well, yeah, we shouldn't be
02:37:31.440
able to say whatever we want if Nazis are saying this shit. So I don't know, man. I'm,
02:37:36.400
I don't feel like this level of freedom is promised to us. You know, I wouldn't be surprised if they
02:37:41.920
chip away at it in the next five, 10 years. So I don't know. What do you guys think?
02:37:45.440
Yeah, it's, uh, they're definitely trying to like, they're, they're, they're feeling it and
02:37:52.640
they're seeing how fast our talking points and how our, uh, you know, rhetoric is spread across,
02:37:58.240
uh, you know, the normies even. And so I think they're starting to feel it. They're starting to
02:38:03.840
realize, Hey, you know, we got to nip this in the bud and, and then they're trying to do little
02:38:08.720
stories like this to, you know, try and stop it. But at the end of the day, um, the more we grow,
02:38:16.320
they're, they're going to, this is going to be unstoppable, but they're going to be constantly
02:38:19.440
coming out with these kinds of things, these stories, these, um, Germany definitely has a lot,
02:38:24.160
uh, like no freedom of speech laws there. Uh, so I remember when I went there, there,
02:38:30.560
everyone was like, you can't say that. You can't say that on the phone. You can't say that. I was like,
02:38:34.320
oh, why? Okay. Uh, because I guess they have no rights when it comes to free speech at all. Uh,
02:38:39.520
so at least in America, they've got, you know, you guys have got a little more leeway in the,
02:38:43.680
in that sense. So, uh, but I mean, yeah, these Jews are fucking going to try and get everything,
02:38:50.400
uh, stacked against us here pretty quick. So if you look at the nests and what you're saying is true,
02:38:58.160
but it's even one step further, they're using white supremacy as a catalyst to take away
02:39:04.240
freedom of speech for all, right? Because they're there, they've been making the argument that
02:39:09.760
free speech fuels white supremacy. But if you look in the nest, there's a, uh, this is one of
02:39:16.560
many articles you can find of people advocating of policing free speech.
02:39:23.040
Jews probably wrote that, but yeah, it's unfortunate that, uh, people will fall for this kind of
02:39:28.880
shit. Like a friend said, and you know, that that's why we just got to accelerate what we're
02:39:34.880
doing. We've got to accelerate things because, uh, end of the day, you know, we're running out of time
02:39:39.920
when it comes to these kinds of things. We got, we, you know, talking in these spaces is great,
02:39:43.600
but we need to keep, uh, the IRL going on. We need to keep, you know, getting the subtle talking
02:39:49.200
points to the normies. Um, you know, the people that will be on the other side, you know,
02:39:55.600
rooting against us kind of thing. We got to get them on our lines, get them on our side,
02:39:59.840
get them on our talking points. If we don't do it faster, then, uh, yeah, they're just going to be
02:40:05.200
our own enemy. Right. So it's, uh, it's just more incentive for us to keep, keep the fire going.
02:40:12.160
America, America for all its flaws and for all, uh, the, uh, cause it was a, an ideal,
02:40:19.920
the Aryan spirit that was also, uh, influenced by reaction, the reactionary movement to, uh,
02:40:27.600
to enslavement by the monarchy in the banking system of Europe. Right. And so it wasn't to sink
02:40:33.600
in this idea ideology when America founded, but because of the foundation of that ideal,
02:40:39.120
the Aryan spirit that was there, we were able to create something that didn't exist for at least
02:40:46.800
2000 years since the, uh, since the old Aryan societies were destroyed.
02:40:54.160
And this is a re spark or revamp of Aryan ideals coming back to existence, freedom of speech,
02:41:02.160
freedom of all that did exist in societies back in the day. It just, there was a time period in which
02:41:09.920
we lost, we, we, we lost those societies to foreign influences of the mad GE and the mad gear,
02:41:18.720
who were the shaman priests, shaman king priests, who were most likely protégies. Right. And,
02:41:26.960
and that's kind of what you're dealing with. There's a big internal struggle against these false priests
02:41:31.280
who like writing articles like this, trying to influence people with a false morality or ethics
02:41:37.280
to get them police stuff. Because one thing about whites, it burns deep in our hearts of justice.
02:41:43.840
And, and so if you can get whites to adopt a false morality, they will logically conclude
02:41:50.320
conduct and how society must behave or the ideal society based off that morality, whether it's a true
02:41:56.960
morality or a false morality. And that's one of the biggest things we have to, uh, deal with going into
02:42:03.840
the future is making sure these false priests or these foreign influencers cannot instill, uh,
02:42:20.640
I mean, yeah, this is, uh, this is kind of a wild thing that I guess happened in Germany. Hey,
02:42:26.560
I guess like when the SWAT team shows up, you don't know if they're there to arrest you for a meme on your
02:42:31.680
phone or if they're just there to take all your guns away. So it's, you know, what, what precautions
02:42:39.440
can you actually put in the way of something like that knocking on your door? It's, uh, it's kind of
02:42:47.520
freaky, honestly, because if they really wanted to, I mean, they could round everybody up in this call,
02:42:55.040
So it's, yeah, just like the way I'm thinking about this kind of, and the way I've, I'm trying
02:43:01.440
to learn how to talk about it. It's like, we are all living in civilization or like the remnants of
02:43:07.840
it, but it's, you need to actually kind of forget that. And you need to think about it that we need
02:43:14.560
to actually recreate civilization within this like husk that we're living in. Because we are, we are
02:43:21.600
essentially, you know, we're, we're just a moment away from gunpoint. And you don't know why that gun
02:43:28.160
is going to be pointing at you. They're not going to tell you like, oh, you know, here's the warrant.
02:43:31.760
We're here to collect all your guns or like, oh, we're here because, you know, you have a meme on your
02:43:36.880
phone. So like, what are your, what are your precautions? And like those of us who don't actually group up,
02:43:44.880
there's, I mean, you're, you're either subject to the hordes that are being imported in.
02:43:49.200
And, but yeah, then there's like the bigger thing. Like, yeah, no, I saw that this morning
02:43:54.320
and I was just like, oh, fuck. Like, you don't know if, if those are actually German men
02:44:00.320
that are there to arrest them. Those could be all like, you know, Israelis for all you know, right?
02:44:08.000
Yeah, that's why it pays to be on your OPSEC at all times. You know, you don't want to be too
02:44:12.640
loosey goosey with your OPSEC. Um, and it'd be hard to find is another good way, you know,
02:44:20.000
be hard to find, be off the radar, be a ghost. Um, it takes a lot of, uh, discipline in your
02:44:26.080
lifestyle to get kind of off that radar and, you know, living a more private life. Um,
02:44:32.000
um, but it does pay and, uh, you know, it's, it's compound interest in a way, you know, you want to,
02:44:39.280
uh, you want to try and minimize your, your visibility and, uh, you know, don't do things,
02:44:46.480
uh, you know, if we're in these spaces, but you don't want to like go overboard on certain things,
02:44:52.240
you know, you want to keep your, your confidentiality. Uh, if that means, you know,
02:44:56.640
living kind of, uh, off the grid of nowhere, you know, renting cash and paying cash and renting,
02:45:02.080
you know, this and that, uh, don't, uh, you know, minimize the, you just want to minimize
02:45:08.480
your visibility. But at the end of the day, yeah, if they want to find you, they will. Um,
02:45:14.160
as so, I mean, there's really not a lot you can do at the end of the day. You just have to be,
02:45:18.400
you know, uh, not out there trying to cause, you know, not, you know, be quiet and not quiet,
02:45:25.200
but like be on, on top of your opsec, you know, don't give people more than the reason.
02:45:30.480
It's a tricky game, but like, we're going to see this happen a lot more. Like we're,
02:45:36.000
it's going to, this is just going to happen a lot more going forward.
02:45:40.480
And that's why we got to accelerate things and move a lot faster. Like, uh, because you know,
02:45:46.400
we're already in this thing. And, uh, if a little, if jail time and this and that scares you,
02:45:51.360
then you're maybe not, you know, you're maybe just kind of, um,
02:45:58.080
if you haven't already accepted that that might be a possibility, then, you know, you're, you're
02:46:06.800
No, I was telling my buddy this, you know, it's like, I don't fear death. I actually fear life
02:46:12.800
more than death. It's like death is kind of, you know, it's the ultimate release from all that is,
02:46:20.320
that is essentially, but in life itself, that is where the true horrors lie.
02:46:27.920
Well, yeah, especially when they have these, uh, uh, what do they call them? The, you know,
02:46:34.160
the virtual reality prisons they're developing where you go into the prison quote unquote for,
02:46:39.040
you know, 15 minutes and that's your in the, in this, you know, whatever simulation you're in,
02:46:45.360
that's like years and years and years. And, you know, to do that, they're going to have to take
02:46:49.680
away your, your health rights and all that stuff. And, um, you know, that's probably going to be
02:46:54.720
worse. Uh, but I mean, you still can come, you know, who's to say that we're not already in a
02:47:00.480
simulation. That's a prison right now. And we're all doing time and having to, you know, that's,
02:47:06.320
that's a whole different rabbit hole, but well, I mean, it is because like, you know,
02:47:10.400
you can interpret the simulation as simply your ability to perceive and interact. So,
02:47:17.360
you know, your, your concept of reality is subject to your own experience, which,
02:47:22.160
you know, you could interpret that as like simulation because others are determining much
02:47:30.960
Absolutely. Yeah. And they, um, yeah, it's a whole big rabbit hole really. And the thing we
02:47:39.680
got to realize is that we're going to, if we either can worry about, you know, prison,
02:47:45.520
or we can worry about, you know, the fact that we're going extinct as a race. And if we don't
02:47:51.280
do something either way, they're going to find a way to take us out. So, I mean, whether they come
02:47:56.640
with for us in the day, you know, middle of the night and, you know, in a big swoop and this and
02:48:00.880
that, well, we're still under attack from other aspects. And, you know, we can imagine, you know,
02:48:07.040
that we're going to just ignore it and live a happy life, but it's going to come knocking at your door
02:48:11.200
one way or another in the future, whether it be, you know, for hate speech or whatever, they'll find
02:48:16.800
a way to get you. They'll find a way to, you know, to, to, you know, make it so that we can't live
02:48:23.200
our lives that we want. And this is all just, you know, it's going to come one way or another.
02:48:29.280
So we can either keep fighting and have it, you know, maybe we're going to get that knock on the
02:48:34.560
door, whatever. But if we stop fighting, you know, they're going to find a way, they're going to find
02:48:38.880
a way to do it anyway. So why stop? Why worry about that? It's like worrying about death, you know,
02:48:45.040
it's going to come either way. So, I mean, why worry about it, live your life and do the,
02:48:49.520
do the work that needs to be done. And not, you know, we talked about this the other day here is
02:48:54.400
that, uh, you know, thinking about the world ending or this and that, it's going to stop you
02:48:58.720
from living your full extent of your life. You're going to make these choices, which kind of don't
02:49:03.440
make sense. And, um, it's the same thing with these things, these kind of stories, you know,
02:49:09.680
if you let it fill you with fear, if you let it worry you too much, you know, that they might put a,
02:49:15.280
they're going to do it anyway. So why worry about it? Just keep going. And, uh, with that,
02:49:25.120
Uh, dude, you literally took the words right out of my mouth. Like what a great answer to,
02:49:31.840
you know, that gentleman's concerns. Um, if going to prison concerns you, you know, like it shouldn't,
02:49:40.160
dude, there's no greater, you know, reward than to sacrifice yourself for this race, whether it be
02:49:47.120
death or whether it be going to prison. So don't look at it as like a fear. Look at it as like an
02:49:53.040
honor, like it'd be an honor to go do time for any one of my brothers or sisters, you know, or for a
02:50:00.160
cause that I believe in, you know, like, don't be afraid of it, man. Uh, yeah, pal, you did a great
02:50:08.720
job answering that, man. Took the words right out of my mouth, dude.
02:50:14.080
Hey, right on, right on. And yeah, it's true. You know, um,
02:50:19.520
6% and we got, we got up those numbers. So focus on, you know, focus on the mission.
02:50:26.480
If you're not going to be doing activism, focus on creating a, you know, a family, a large white
02:50:31.680
family and training them the right way and getting them into the positions of power that we need them
02:50:38.560
in, you know, uh, lawyers, doctors, um, and you know, all the, uh, uh, my, my mind's kind of drawing
02:50:47.920
a blank, but we, we need to focus and we can't stop living and doing the things that we need to do.
02:50:53.040
You know, we can't stop the activism. Uh, we can't stop waking people up. We got to keep pushing.
02:50:59.680
So it's, it's either that or we're going extinct. Right. And then we already know the,
02:51:03.680
we already know that. So yeah. Um, we got, uh, 20 minutes here left until the white power lunch hour.
02:51:13.120
So I hope everybody's been enjoying the show and, uh, make sure you guys, uh, let me see here.
02:51:18.480
Okay. We got 30. We're always around that 33, uh, reshares. So if we can just get like,
02:51:25.760
you know, five of you guys, so we don't even have to, whoa, everyone else is a bot. That's why
02:51:38.800
You know, it could be, it could be, but, uh, yeah, if, if, if we could get everybody to repost
02:51:44.720
the space, uh, it would help, uh, you know, it'd help big time. And if we can jump past that 33,
02:51:50.640
Jewish 33 number would be amazing. We got 91 listeners. And so, I mean, it shouldn't be too
02:51:55.920
hard to get to 91 reposts, but, uh, I understand a lot of people listen here while they're working
02:52:01.040
and they, you know, don't have access to their phone. Maybe they're listening on a Bluetooth.
02:52:04.960
So we, we understand. And, uh, we appreciate you guys, uh, tuning in anyway. So thank you for being
02:52:11.200
here. Uh, Donovan, take it away. Yeah. Okay. I wanted to ask you about music. So I'm, I'm
02:52:17.680
extremely picky when it comes to music. Like how long have you been making music for? And then
02:52:26.080
if you were to, when you're, I guess you're approaching a song, what are some basic considerations
02:52:31.520
that you establish? Uh, for me, uh, I've been doing music since 2004. I've been producing,
02:52:41.120
my own music. And, uh, I took a class in high school to learn how to work one of the most complex,
02:52:47.120
uh, DAWs, which is basically just saying, you know, like audio interface. So it's a program
02:52:53.840
called reason. Um, and basically it's a digital studio. So you get all the equipment like in
02:53:01.120
digital forms of all the equipment you can get basically in a studio. So you got your process,
02:53:06.560
your samplers, you go, you got your effects, you got a drum machines, you've got, um,
02:53:12.720
you know, you can plug in a MIDI keyboard and use a synth, uh, create different sins,
02:53:17.360
you know, tweak all of the knobs that are available in real life. You can use, it's basically a virtual
02:53:23.760
form of a studio. So it's been very beneficial to use that. And it gets, uh, you know, a lot of
02:53:30.000
flexibility. It also has a little bit of, um, setbacks on certain things. Uh, you have to have
02:53:35.680
the, uh, if you want to record things, it's, you know, you have to have the apparatus for that,
02:53:40.320
but at the end of the day, it's, it's the best thing I've used. And, uh, yeah, I've been doing that
02:53:44.240
since 2004. And for me, I just like to keep it unique. I like to, you know, uh, I like to play around
02:53:52.640
a lot and experiment and, uh, yeah, I, uh, you know, I was always just trying different things
02:54:00.320
with these different knobs, trying to get the sound that I like. Like I've always wanted to
02:54:03.760
find and tweak the sound and, uh, yeah, just kind of from there, I was making songs. I started making
02:54:10.720
beats, uh, and I, I was, uh, then I got into dubstep a lot and, uh, I moved on to different forms and I
02:54:18.960
really like the nineties type, you know, uh, I don't even know what it's really called, but,
02:54:24.480
you know, like the saved by the bell feeling type music, you know, like, uh, that, that,
02:54:31.200
that whole era just of music in the late eighties, early nineties type thing, uh, was really,
02:54:36.960
I love that stuff. And I like techno, you know, like, uh, electronic stuff, but when I'm starting a
02:54:43.120
song, it has to have a start with a, you know, a good beat, good baseline.
02:54:47.040
And I, I really like a T and D on my mind. I've been sharing that a lot and it's gotten a good
02:54:52.640
response. Like, I don't know the, the, the banjo coming in. It's a, it's pretty funny.
02:55:00.880
Yeah. The banjo really takes it over. I liked that, that too. So, um, yeah. And, and now there's
02:55:07.280
a lot more tools actually to, you know, get the sound I want. And sometimes I have a sound in my head,
02:55:13.520
but I, I can't, uh, I can't bring it in fully. So now I can, you know, um, and I, I'm not really
02:55:23.280
a good singer. So I, uh, I've been fucking around with some of the AI voices and stuff to, to do the
02:55:29.360
singing for me and then tweaking that inside the studio. And it's been a lot, it's been actually
02:55:34.400
really helpful to get my, uh, points across on some of the songs, but I've always been, you know,
02:55:39.760
an instrumental producer. So, uh, that's always been my thing and I've really loved, uh, remixing a lot.
02:55:47.600
I like to remix songs and, uh, yeah, but, uh, basically I just love experimenting and I love
02:55:55.680
pushing the boundaries and, uh, making now I've really liked making racist music too. So
02:56:03.120
it's been a lot of fun to make all these songs. So I'm glad you like it. And thanks for sharing.
02:56:07.040
Okay. And we'll go to area now. Yeah. I was just going to say, Hey Donovan, uh, when you're making
02:56:18.480
music, like you, nobody can really teach you how to make your own music. You're going to have your
02:56:22.240
own style. It's going to come to you in your own way. But what I can tell you is like, don't fall in
02:56:28.280
love with something and get kind of hung up on it, on a style or anything like that. Try different styles.
02:56:34.880
Try to, um, not, if you're not liking a song and you can't get it right, just move on, leave it
02:56:42.800
behind, get rid of it. Uh, you're a white man. You can come up with a million songs. You can spend a
02:56:48.240
lot of time wasting. Yeah. Trying to, you know, trying to attain the perfect and throwing away the
02:56:52.640
good or, you know, however you say that thing, there's a saying that says that, but you, you can
02:56:57.600
get five good songs out before you'll ever write your magnum opus. So the, just, just worry about
02:57:02.800
getting, getting more work. The more you work, the better you'll get, the more you'll understand
02:57:07.440
yourself and what you like and your skill level and what, what you need to work on and then focus
02:57:12.720
on what you need to work on. Yeah. Well said. Uh, I will say it to that. I also, I have like a million
02:57:21.280
songs that I didn't finish. Um, and I kind of on the same page, like if I wasn't feeling, you know,
02:57:27.740
that I could go further with the song, I'll just, I'll just save it and start a new one,
02:57:32.060
you know, start fresh. And, uh, sometimes it's, uh, it's very freeing to do that and just like,
02:57:37.420
leave it on, leave it behind, start something new. And that's, you know, if I didn't do that a bunch
02:57:41.900
of times, a bunch of my, uh, songs that I was writing wouldn't have, wouldn't have come out,
02:57:46.200
come to be. So very good point. Sorry, I cut you off, Donovan. What were you going to say?
02:57:52.100
Yeah. Yeah. I mean, man, I, I'm either listening to like autistic, like fucking funk music, like,
02:58:00.280
you know, the electrics music stuff, or I'm listening to just like piano with like rain in
02:58:05.300
the back. It's, it's like one or the other. I'm, I'm super picky when it comes to like, uh,
02:58:11.400
like sounds. I, I always have been just cause I, I live most of my life with headphones on.
02:58:16.460
Um, yeah, definitely. I, I've gone through so many, so many, um, genres myself. Uh,
02:58:26.360
so now I actually, um, I, I don't usually have music on in the background, but I used to be that
02:58:31.660
guy that always had music on and always, uh, but now I feel like, um, I don't know if it's my PTSD
02:58:37.720
or whatever, but just, uh, having music on all the time. Sometimes I just lose myself and I lose my,
02:58:43.200
like, I lose my focus. I don't know how to say that, but, um, yeah, I find it distracting for me
02:58:49.260
to have music on all the time. So, um, yeah, I haven't been. I normally just, uh, I normally just
02:58:55.340
play, uh, uh, recorders of me, uh, of me talking like things like people like you, gosh darn it.
02:59:03.040
You're nice. You know, it makes me really, I believe you 110%.
02:59:08.480
Listen, guys, you should have recordings of me saying things like that to you too.
02:59:14.500
It'll bring up your mood. Don't do your own voice because you know.
02:59:19.740
Fitz, that made me laugh, bro. Oh, did we lose him? His mic's still on, but I think we lost. Oh,
02:59:27.900
there you are. Let's go to Art, Art, Art, Artorias.
02:59:32.380
Hey, uh, I actually, I live in the same area as Donovan. Like, we've hung out a few times and,
02:59:42.440
uh, I didn't even really realize that I could, like, I have a MIDI keyboard and I have, like,
02:59:49.180
a computer with Ableton and all types of shit. So if you want to, like, I can show you how to use my
02:59:56.140
DAW and, yeah, if you want to fucking try your hand and make it some beats, like, come over.
03:00:04.420
Yeah, for sure. Honestly, I, I want to learn vocals because, like, I, I had, I had neck injuries a few
03:00:11.040
years ago and I, I studied, like, you know, kind of how all the neck and the spine works and, uh, you
03:00:18.700
know, I had to learn kind of how to speak again at some points. So I, I'm, I'm not so interested in
03:00:25.320
instrument, instrumentals or, like, beats, but more just, like, yeah, like, learning how to sing,
03:00:31.900
too, because it's, it's very powerful. But yeah, we can, we can definitely check that out. There's a,
03:00:37.600
there's a lot we can do with music. Yeah, just let me know, man.
03:00:42.220
Awesome shit. Awesome shit. Making connections. That's what it's all about.
03:00:49.020
You can, you can drop me back down there. I'm good. White power, boys.
03:00:53.100
White power. Yeah, well, uh, you can stay, stick around up here. No problem. Uh, we don't have too
03:00:59.020
many speakers, but yeah, if you want to, if you feel free to drop at any time, but, uh, we will be
03:01:03.500
switching over to the white power lunch hour in 10 minutes. Uh, so we're going to be, uh, cutting off
03:01:09.760
the mics in five minutes. So if anybody has any last minute points, uh, anything they want
03:01:14.980
drop, uh, in the, you know, drop, uh, now's the chance. Now's the chance.
03:01:20.560
Yo, we, we got to get Mythos to try to, you know, produce some art. I know he's a pretty busy guy,
03:01:26.560
but, uh, that'd be interesting to see him, uh, put something out.
03:01:31.800
Absolutely. Yeah. I actually, um, when you were asking that question about what people like to do
03:01:36.700
on the side too, uh, I, I do a little bit of, uh, painting myself, uh, oil painting. Um,
03:01:43.740
I have one, uh, that I'm trying to get, you know, sold, but, um, I'm starting a new one.
03:01:50.440
I'm looking at right now. It's just, uh, the base coat right now. I'm waiting for it to dry
03:01:55.000
and I'm going to be doing some white power painting soon this week if I find the time.
03:02:00.060
But, uh, yeah, I mean, that's one thing I love doing too. So yeah, I would love to see what
03:02:05.220
Mythos is creating over there. It'd be very cool. I'm sure it's some, uh,
03:02:08.720
Oh man, White Paladin is going to start a fucking, uh, a Bob Ross painting on GTV. Uh, just let you
03:02:16.620
guys know, you're the, you're the first people to hear it right now. He's going to start, uh,
03:02:20.820
painting happy little trees and scenery on, uh, GTV. He just needs to get himself a little
03:02:25.980
afro and he's golden, you know, maybe Cookie Monster might go in if he gets his, you know,
03:02:30.460
little, uh, puppeting arm stick going in there. But, uh, yeah, look forward to that.
03:02:37.120
Cookie Monster, like drawing, you know, Israel on fire. So like now when you, uh, when you're
03:02:43.280
making your brushstrokes, you got to imagine all the Jews on fire.
03:02:50.320
Oh man, that would be funny shit. Uh, my favorite part.
03:02:54.060
There, there's no Jews in the fire if you don't envision them in the fire when
03:02:58.620
you're painting the fire. Just remember that you can't just paint fire and tell
03:03:03.000
people later that there's Jews in there. You got to actually see them in there when
03:03:09.620
We're going to have happy melting Jews right here. The kikes on fire right beside a
03:03:16.300
willowing brook. Uh, wow. Do you just do the strokes here? And that would be funny as
03:03:22.540
fuck. But, um, yeah, my favorite part will be, uh, when I get to tap the brushes
03:03:27.320
on me, beat the devil out of it, beat the, you know, when he gets the, uh, cleans his
03:03:33.380
brush and gets the shit off of his, tap the devil out of it or whatever the hell he
03:03:37.240
said. That would be my favorite part because I'll imagine I'm bashing a Jew's head.
03:03:41.860
Anyways, um, beat the devil out of it. Happy trees. And, uh, yeah. Um, okay.
03:03:57.260
Go ahead, Arian. Yeah, I was just going to say there's a really good Nietzsche quote
03:04:14.380
that music is the mediator between the spiritual and the sensual life. All other forms of art
03:04:23.540
try to imitate the feelings that music give us, gives us. I think that that, uh, it's
03:04:30.900
really beautiful. I really got to get into his, his work, but man, there's, I just, I
03:04:36.340
have a mountain of literature and it's, it's mixed in there, but, uh, yeah, that's, that
03:04:41.720
I, yeah, that sounds awesome. Do you have Spotify?
03:04:44.100
Uh, yes, I do. They have a bunch of audio books on Spotify of his that you can, you
03:04:50.920
can get, and some of them are pretty short. Like the Antichrist is only like an hour and
03:04:58.560
Okay. Yeah. I'll check that out. That could be a good thing to download when I'm out and
03:05:06.000
Yeah. And the birth of tragedy is really short as well. And it was his first book. So it kind
03:05:10.240
of lays out the foundation of the rest of his ideas later. So it's not a bad place to
03:05:20.960
Oh, we had a request from a Duncan doonuts. Um, I, uh, I love the Teutonic flag there.
03:05:28.440
Yeah. I, I, I don't know when I see that, it just, uh, it makes me feel a tight, uh, in
03:05:33.600
a certain way. I swear in my last life, I was one of them Teutonic nights or something.
03:05:37.940
Cause whenever I see them, uh, in the books and all that, I used to, one of my
03:05:43.240
favorite books when I was growing up was the arms and armor. And I would just look
03:05:47.120
at all the arms and armor, you know, the armor, uh, of the medieval nights and all
03:05:52.200
that. And it was just, I always just love looking at that shit, but kind of a
03:05:56.040
random, random fun fact. Um, sorry, I missed you there. Uh, we, we closed the mic, uh,
03:06:02.900
uh, at quarter two. So if you want to try and request a mic for a white power lunch
03:06:07.060
hour, uh, feel free, but, uh, yeah, we've got to keep the mic closed for now. Uh, we
03:06:12.020
got five minutes left. So yeah. Any last minute takes anybody.
03:06:18.580
Did you see what Stephen Miller posted a couple hours ago about what, what happens
03:06:23.480
when a migration takes over your state in New York city with this guy, this Muslim
03:06:28.420
guy getting elected to run for a note? Tell us about it. Oh man, this is a fucking nightmare.
03:06:34.540
So this guy, um, like Zoman or whatever his name is, was going up against Cuomo. And last
03:06:42.180
night, last minute, somehow or another had a 12 minutes, a 12 point spike, which put him
03:06:48.060
into the victory lane. And Stephen Miller, um, who is one of Trump's like closest advisors
03:06:56.220
is literally speaking against migration. And the funny thing is, is this think of New York
03:07:01.240
city, right? And, and if you're old enough to remember, uh, nine 11, you'll know that that
03:07:08.280
was a pretty tough time for Muslims to have any kind of existence in this country. But now
03:07:12.400
in the big apple, the jewel of our country, uh, you have a Muslim who has the potential of
03:07:20.500
being the mayor of that state, uh, come the midterms. And that's pretty scary.
03:07:25.340
I'll actually look for the article because it's actually really, uh, really interesting
03:07:31.660
or not the article, the post, cause it's, it's crazy to me.
03:07:35.340
Stephen Miller is one of those weird, uh, those weird, uh, people. Cause he's, I believe
03:07:41.160
he has Jewish ancestry, but like, Oh, he's a Jew.
03:07:44.280
Yeah. Yeah. He's one of those Jews that, that also believes whites. Like he's, it's a very
03:07:52.340
weird thing to see some of these Jews. Cause I actually think he believes like he cares
03:07:57.780
for whites, but his loyalty is Jews first, you know? And it's just one of those things
03:08:03.080
like you have to navigate these weird half breed whites with Jewish blood because not all
03:08:09.320
of them just hate whites. Right. But they're like, they are caught in this weird situation
03:08:15.300
where they have to have, they have loyalty to both sides, but they, but both sides hate
03:08:21.400
each other. You know what I'm saying? So it's a really weird thing. I'm not saying he gets
03:08:26.940
into the ethno state. I'm just kind of looking at it from a situation. Like I can kind of sympathize
03:08:32.180
with someone who's in a fuck situation like that too. What's cool about him is he's actually
03:08:40.800
one of the very, like there's a small selection of Jews that actually believe that Christ was
03:08:47.040
a prophet. He's on that side of it. He's not the one that thinks that he's in a pot of his
03:08:52.860
own feces boiling or whatever it is in the, um, in the Talmud. So he's actually a little bit
03:08:59.000
more of a based Christian Jew than one of the hard, hardcore Zionists and having him
03:09:05.600
on our side has been a tremendous benefit. Um, because let's face it, the Jews have been
03:09:11.960
playing both sides of this thing since the 1800s, maybe even later, you know, probably
03:09:17.280
for the last 6,000 years. I just don't know enough about it. Again, for the last five years,
03:09:21.220
I've been kind of quiet. I only just got into this a couple months ago and I'm really grateful
03:09:24.680
for it, but yeah, I mean, there are, uh, some evil motherfuckers out there and it's the guys
03:09:31.840
who play both sides because at least 50% of their team is going to win. And think of this
03:09:36.980
also, right? We're pandering to the Jews right now. For what reason? I don't get the Jews
03:09:41.680
don't even vote conservative. 80% of Jews or 79% of Jews vote liberal democratic. So it's
03:09:51.680
nice to have a guy like Stephen Miller on our side. He used to write, um, Trump's, uh, speeches,
03:09:56.400
uh, in his first term. So the fact that he stuck with them all these years has been really,
03:10:06.280
On that note, uh, I'm just gonna finish up here. We're going to be switching over to the
03:10:12.560
White Power Lunch Hour. It's, uh, been great to have everybody here. Uh, uh, pleasure to,
03:10:18.300
uh, be co-hosting for all the White Excellence Radio and, um, yeah, uh, it's been a good conversation
03:10:26.600
also and, uh, pleasure to have all you guys here on the speaker panel. So make sure it was my last
03:10:32.100
plug for the day that you share the space. Um, let's see here. We got 40 reposts. Thank you very
03:10:37.520
much. Everybody reposted, follow the White Excellence Radio account, follow everybody on the speakers
03:10:42.880
because there's a lot of good speakers up here and yeah, I'm going to sign off for the day. So
03:10:47.780
White Power, everybody have a great rest of your day. Unite the clans. We'll see you tomorrow.
03:10:55.260
White Power, buddy. Sorry. I'm having technical difficulties all day. It keeps kicking. Well,
03:11:01.120
I keep leaving because I keep having no audio. Can't hear you guys. And also, uh, I've been working
03:11:06.940
at it cutting concrete. So sometimes I couldn't hear you anyways, but, uh, White Power, buddy. Have
03:11:12.020
a good day. Stay cool. Hot as fuck out. White Power. White Power WTF. Thank you, sir. We appreciate
03:11:19.260
you. Keep, keep America moving. Uh, welcome to White Power lunch hour. Good to be here. Uh, Skull Mask,
03:11:29.500
good afternoon or good morning, uh, wherever you are. And, uh, good afternoon, Mythos. Good to be
03:11:37.140
here. Thank you. You ready for, uh, packing a, uh, White Power sandwich today? I'm, uh, I've got a
03:11:43.740
certain topic I want to dive into. It's kind of a general, not a current events topic. Um, but, uh,
03:11:51.540
you know, how are you doing? Uh, have, did you get to, uh, get a lot of, uh, of listening in on the
03:12:00.160
previous space? I, I did not. Unfortunately, I have been bouncing around on and off the phone,
03:12:08.400
but, um, if you lay out a topic for us, I would greatly appreciate it. I'm sure everybody else would.
03:12:15.020
Yeah. Well, I was thinking, yeah, thanks saying that. So I don't think I'll repeat anything that
03:12:19.180
happened before because it's kind of, uh, um, it's a, it's a, uh, a topic that, uh, impacts us
03:12:26.960
greatly. And, uh, as a people, uh, it's basically a part of our genetic makeup, um, being that, um,
03:12:36.680
being the blue collar man. Uh, and that's, um, that I think I just, uh, want to dive into, uh, and talk
03:12:45.560
to, uh, the, uh, the audience members, uh, about the blue collar man and what he means, what he is
03:12:53.160
to our people. Um, clearly, uh, we cannot, um, excel and build what we build without the blue collar
03:13:04.900
man. Uh, I, I want to take it all the way back to ancient Greece, right? Those, uh, those marble
03:13:12.300
statues, the, the marble, uh, columns, the pantheon, the architecture, all of that, uh, built by the
03:13:22.940
blue collar man, right? The, uh, the engineering that went into the, um, the baths, the Roman baths,
03:13:32.520
the, uh, the infrastructure there. Um, I saw, um, a post about how one of the baths in ancient
03:13:41.920
Rome was heated by underground, um, airwaves filled with hot air. So they had, um, you know,
03:13:51.080
these, these feats of engineering that have propelled us to now, you know, could not be done
03:13:58.080
without the blue collar man. And, and the blue collar man is not only an artisan and a, um, and a
03:14:06.360
hammer wielder, right? He is a thinker. He's a designer. He is a, a, um, a, uh, a renaissance
03:14:17.220
man, a sophisticant. He is an intellectual, uh, as well as being somebody who can use his, uh, his
03:14:27.040
arms, legs, hands, feet, uh, and his energy to construct, uh, greatness around us. And so that's,
03:14:37.140
that's what I wanted to get into on this, uh, white power lunch hour, kind of go into that and
03:14:43.040
talk to our fellow blue collar workers about their craft. I mean, from, you know, I'll give, uh,
03:14:50.220
my background and my experience here, you know, I started out of high school working, um, for, uh,
03:14:59.580
a, uh, contractor that worked for AT&T. We were putting up, um, and, and working on, um, cellular
03:15:08.020
towers and antennas. So this was in, um, Ohio. And so we were working there, um, and climbing towers,
03:15:18.640
uh, re-taping, um, junctions and, um, ensuring waterproofing and, and all sorts of things.
03:15:29.240
Right. And, and when, when you're doing that, there is techniques involved and, and, uh, and
03:15:38.220
attention to detail in order to properly wrap and tape a, um, a junction, um, a connection
03:15:48.040
that, uh, will keep us from having to go back there, uh, for, you know, years, you know, the,
03:15:55.360
the, one of the worst things to do is to fix the, uh, the problem and then do it in a, in a
03:16:03.300
sloppy way and an effective way or a way that degrades quit more quickly over time, where we
03:16:11.120
have to go back there in two weeks because, and, and when we know we have to go back there in two
03:16:15.760
weeks, everybody's looking at the guy who climbed the tower and did the junction like, Hey, that's
03:16:21.940
your handiwork there. We're all having to come back out here for you because you didn't do it
03:16:26.480
right the first time. And so there's, there's artistry in all of that. And even in the smallest
03:16:31.860
things when it comes to building. And my second job was as a, um, a cabinet maker and I would do
03:16:39.560
the installations at the houses. So I was the finished product. The, uh, the team would get all the
03:16:44.220
cabinets together. We would go throw them in the house. And, uh, when we would leave,
03:16:50.120
we're the last touch. They has to be completely level. Everything has to work. Uh, all of the
03:16:56.460
finished molding has to be perfect. Uh, especially when we're doing custom cabinets for million dollar
03:17:02.480
homes, uh, where they, um, they expect everything to be, um, you know, without flaw. And so there's a lot
03:17:11.600
of artistry that goes into being a blue collar worker, uh, in that as well. And that's what I
03:17:16.820
enjoyed about that work was my, my ability to exercise that artistry. I talked earlier today,
03:17:23.820
uh, with Donovan shortly about things that I do that are, you know, uh, more hobbies and,
03:17:31.620
and artistry is one of those things. And it's a, it's something that always speaks to me. And when I
03:17:37.520
craft something and, and even, and I'll say, um, I think we can relate to this UNI school mask when
03:17:44.040
designing code, right? When you have a code and you've put in a, um, you've written code that it is
03:17:51.740
flawless and beautiful. You can see it. It has an aesthetic quality to it, even in coding. Um, and
03:18:00.660
that, that's something that, uh, translates from, you know, from blue to white collar. Um, but I
03:18:09.520
really wanted to, to see if I could get some, uh, speakers who work in blue collar to talk about
03:18:15.100
their craft, talk about how they, uh, how they go about their work. Um, you know, I've seen, um,
03:18:23.640
houses built by Mexicans that, you know, you can see this is, this is a Mexican built house and
03:18:30.020
these are, this is, uh, not, this is not perfect. This is not excellent. Uh, and it's not even good.
03:18:38.280
And you realize, uh, you know, that there is a big difference between our ability to create quality.
03:18:45.320
So that's the topic I wanted to kind of dive into here. Skull mask, do you have anything you want to,
03:18:51.140
um, add to that? Any, uh, any experience or reflection, uh, on what you see out there in the world
03:18:59.440
along the lines of the blue collar worker? Absolutely. My friend, absolutely. Um, one of
03:19:06.420
the things that, that, the, the, it's interesting aspects of the more creative and craft like
03:19:15.960
artisanal pursuits is this concept of structural integrity. Like you were talking about these,
03:19:23.020
you know, um, quick built Mexican houses that you see just all these kind of mistakes in and
03:19:28.480
everything. And as a Finnish carpenter, I'm sure you've seen things that were not done correctly
03:19:35.380
and, um, they were not done correctly at such a simple level that it's almost impossible to cover
03:19:41.100
up the mistakes later on. Really? I've noticed that really good craftsmen and really good artisans
03:19:46.980
will understand this whole, this, this holistic comprehensive aspect to making something well.
03:19:56.240
And it's, it can't be, it's, it can never be as simple as making something poorly and then covering
03:20:03.420
it up with a veneer that makes it look good on the surface. And that just never works.
03:20:09.180
When you were talking about code, it reminded me of it because I personally have written slapdash code
03:20:14.380
to get prototypes out of the door. And I have made it as obvious as possible to things I've worked on
03:20:21.440
been like, this is prototype code. This needs to be changed in production, et cetera, et cetera.
03:20:26.600
But if it's not, if that's treated as foundational stuff, then you are going to have issues later down
03:20:32.440
the line. And no matter what you do, you're going to encounter these bugs and you encounter issues
03:20:36.720
because the fundamental structure of the framework was not composed correctly at the outset. And, um,
03:20:44.160
it takes a while, I think, especially for people working with their hands, because I've never been
03:20:49.660
a carpenter and I've never been a woodworker and I've never been a person who really does these
03:20:56.900
foundational works with my hands at a blue collar kind of level. So it's the, the, the closest thing I
03:21:04.020
have in, in experience is not only writing software, but making food, which is, uh, about as low
03:21:12.720
kind of class as it gets, I suppose, about as low on the blue collar totem pole as you can do,
03:21:19.580
you can get is being a chef. But, um, the equivalent to being a chef with that is starting
03:21:24.380
with ingredients. So it is interesting because I, I do love how much experience a lot of our, uh,
03:21:31.500
audience members have, and a lot of people have with all sorts of different fields, trades,
03:21:36.760
expertise, and I would love to, uh, get the input on this. So this is a great topic,
03:21:41.920
mythos. And it really is a, um, it's a wonderful, it's a wonderful kind of, uh, thread between the
03:21:48.140
abstract and the concrete when you get into these things. So let's have, um, yeah, well said,
03:21:53.640
well said brother, great lay out there. Absolutely. Yeah. Let's have some of the,
03:21:58.380
some of the boys take it away then. Yeah. Corvus, uh, you came up and then we'll get to Arian.
03:22:03.720
Go ahead, Corvus. Yeah. Thanks guys for having me up. Yeah. So I'm in the trades. I'm in, uh,
03:22:10.660
steel. So a lot of architectural metals, like, uh, handrails, like I do fireplace surrounds
03:22:19.840
decks, you know, like the structural part of decks, but you know, in the last few years,
03:22:26.640
we've had a lot of this Mexican labor come in and I've done a lot of these jobs where they're
03:22:33.700
building the building shit, basically like kind of low income, uh, housing in a way. I don't know
03:22:40.900
if it's low income, but it's just like apartments. And then they want me to come in and put kind of
03:22:45.680
lipstick on the pig, you know, with metal. And, uh, yeah. So you see a lot of the out of plum walls
03:22:53.840
and whatnot. And it's funny, you'd get there and you'll install stuff. And I always install my stuff
03:22:58.060
plum. Right. But it makes their work look like their work will stand out. And at first I would
03:23:03.560
always go in and I would, okay, well, let's try to balance this out. And it's like, you can't make
03:23:08.280
it look good. Right. And that's kind of like foundational. If you don't set the studs in
03:23:12.500
there plum, then your end product isn't going to be very good, but I'll tell you about, you know,
03:23:18.480
I wanted to come up cause just about the challenges that you have in being a creator and people coming to
03:23:25.120
you and having their rough idea of what they want. You can get into the weeds by sometimes, um,
03:23:33.220
yeah. Putting too many of your ideas, you got to listen to them and you don't want to solve all the
03:23:38.000
problems, right? You kind of want to come in and say, listen to what they want and kind of achieve
03:23:43.780
a balance. And that's kind of the hard part because it might not be what you would want to create
03:23:49.380
necessarily, but it's, it's kind of their idea. And so that's kind of the tough balance.
03:23:54.920
In my job is to, you know, build something that's going to be easy to, you know, easy for me to
03:24:00.540
build. It makes sense. And the end is going to be aesthetic and also is going to, you know,
03:24:05.880
make them happy and me happy at the end. And so that's, that's probably the toughest part of the
03:24:11.140
job really is actually just finding that balance. Cause I don't want to get too much. I don't want
03:24:16.040
to spend too much of my time, you know, like trying to design it perfect. Cause I can kind of be that
03:24:20.980
way a little nitpicky on stuff and just, uh, just achieving that balance when you're, when you're
03:24:26.420
making custom, custom, uh, things for people's houses and, and, and, you know, I'll go into
03:24:32.400
$10 million houses and I'll go into, you know, $200,000 apartments, you know, and, and do the
03:24:38.360
same, the same type of, uh, same type of work, but just.
03:24:42.820
Yeah. Corbis, if, if it's, uh, not too intrusive, can I ask, um, are, is this decorative metal
03:24:50.380
that you're working with is, uh, or is it a spectrum of everything from like decorative
03:24:54.920
metal to, um, you know, maybe, um, uh, more, uh, larger installations? Like what's the, what's
03:25:07.280
the spectrum of your, your product? Yeah. So it's like the decorative metal is really
03:25:14.320
taken off. You know, I, I, I started out in this as when I was 16 was on my first job
03:25:19.200
doing structural steel and bridges and whatnot. And, and now, so now, yes, I will do steel
03:25:25.980
frames for houses. Some of those steel, like that's not a lot of work that I do. Cause I
03:25:29.920
don't have cranes and all this stuff. I can't compete with the big structural guys, but a lot
03:25:34.040
of people will incorporate the steel structure, but they want it shown, right? So instead of
03:25:39.860
having exposed wood beams, you'll have exposed metal beams. And so, yeah, what I, what I focus
03:25:47.320
on and what people like is the patining, like doing patina on raw metal. So rather than getting
03:25:54.460
it powder coated is actually, you know, you get your raw steel, you clean it up that they
03:26:00.400
want it darker. You can, you can, you can buy chemicals that'll like darken it or it'll
03:26:06.200
kind of turn it different colors. And then you, and then you hot wax it and you like, you
03:26:11.880
know, you'll run your abrasive disc over the metal and you'll like highlight different parts
03:26:17.960
of the metal. So it'll stand out like in the corners or the exposed corners and whatnot.
03:26:22.140
And then you wax it and that gives you the aesthetic and kind of the, the, the appeal
03:26:27.260
of the metal without just covering it up with paint. And so, yeah, a lot of it is, is, is
03:26:32.520
more of the aesthetic metal than that's what I'm into now versus what I used to be. And
03:26:38.100
that's, and when I went from, you know, it was, I was doing structural steel and I was on
03:26:43.060
the road all the time traveling all around the country. And when I, when I had a family,
03:26:47.880
I realized like, okay, I can't do this anymore. I got to be here for growing this family that
03:26:53.000
I have. So I kind of, you know, but I was, you know, and, and so I needed to get a different
03:26:59.080
skill set, but I wanted to keep it in metal because that's kind of what I knew. And so
03:27:03.160
for a couple of years I had to go work for people. And that's, so that's what I did is
03:27:06.680
I showed up to jobs and that were, you know, from sheet metal to other different types of
03:27:13.500
metal forming and whatnot. And I just basically went to work for them and I learned, you know,
03:27:19.840
how to take what skills I had and to put them in a new context as far as residential and whatnot.
03:27:26.520
And, and went from there and I just learned what I, and I was pretty selfish in doing it. I'd show up
03:27:32.480
to a company. I worked there for a year. I would build a skillset. I would, you know, get contacts
03:27:39.780
with clients. I wasn't necessarily stealing clients from them, but you get contacts when
03:27:43.900
you're working with these people because you're in their houses. And, and then I would move on to
03:27:47.940
the next, to the next employer till finally I, I felt I had a good grasp on, on the new,
03:27:55.640
on the new place I was. So yeah, that's, that's very cool. You know, one, one aspect you just
03:28:03.100
kind of touched on was building out a skillset that is niche, but also, uh, has enough clientele or
03:28:16.320
enough, uh, commercial applicability to be a viable, uh, career path as well. Right. You can't be too
03:28:25.060
niche because then you don't have enough clients and you don't want to be too generalist to where
03:28:30.460
you're not, um, you're not fitting a niche. Right. And, uh, and so that's, it's, uh, it's a very
03:28:37.700
Aryan, um, uh, uh, complex algorithm to, to work with as you, as you went there. I like that. Then
03:28:46.640
I just, one more question. I see a hands. I want to get to those, but since we're kind of in the metal,
03:28:51.480
um, working area, which is quite unique, um, the, you, you mentioned some of the artistry
03:29:00.220
about your craft in, um, in different coatings or using chemicals to, um, to, uh, create a aesthetic,
03:29:12.080
uh, or a certain surface, uh, colors and, and look to it. Uh, and that comes with time that comes
03:29:21.300
with experience. It comes with, uh, being around, um, others like you discussed, uh, who have been in
03:29:28.480
the industry and you can learn, uh, you know, tricks of the trade and different, how, how things,
03:29:33.920
uh, operate from people who have more information and more experience than you, or you just different
03:29:40.360
experience and being able to collect all of this into yourself and go, okay, now I have this, this
03:29:46.520
broad, uh, view. And a lot of it is a bit of artistry, some, some science to it. Um, how long,
03:29:54.420
um, have you been in this industry to, to, uh, collect all of this? And then also, um, you know,
03:30:02.080
how much of that, do you really, is that your favorite part is the artistry of it all when you
03:30:08.520
get the, the concept from your client and then you're, you're, you're working, like you're trying
03:30:13.680
to problem solve for how to bring this idea into fruition in a way that both meets the budget,
03:30:19.340
uh, and also hits the, the note on their desire for what they're trying to get out of the project.
03:30:30.640
Yeah. Um, yeah. My favorite part is like seeing the finished product come together and, you know,
03:30:36.740
installing it and yeah, it is, it's kind of a, it's kind of love, a love hate relationship. Sorry. I got a
03:30:44.900
murder of crows out here at the shop. You hear them in the background there, but, um, step in here
03:30:51.340
for a second. Um, but yeah, that's my favorite part is actually seeing it come together when you
03:30:57.380
patina and wax it and you get it all finished. But at the same time, it's also, it is a bit toxic
03:31:02.880
and that's where, like, I'm kind of thinking where I want to go in a different direction. Cause I do see,
03:31:08.560
you know, I'd like to, uh, yeah, I like to be here for as long as I can for my family. And, and, uh,
03:31:15.240
there is a lot of chemicals that you're dealing with, but, but yeah, no, the, uh, yeah. Putting
03:31:20.500
the patina on it and making it look old and, and getting it to that aesthetic is, is probably my
03:31:27.640
favorite part really more than design or anything, because it is pretty unique. Not a lot of people
03:31:32.640
know exactly how to do it, but it doesn't take, you know, all that much. Like I basically just work out
03:31:38.020
of a, like it's, my shop is pretty small. It's the size of a garage. I don't have any employees. I,
03:31:43.460
I do have other friends that, uh, have their own businesses and are self-employed. And I usually just
03:31:50.660
end up reaching, you know, schedule, reach out to them when I have a big project and have them come
03:31:56.480
and help. But for the most part, I'm a, I'm a one man band and, uh, I kind of like it that way
03:32:02.100
because it is kind of hard to rely on, um, it's hard to rely on a new guy that doesn't really know
03:32:08.960
what he's doing when you're like doing installation and whatnot. And that's usually where I, I would
03:32:14.680
need the help. So usually I reach out to people that I can trust and that, uh, yeah, just to speak
03:32:21.300
on another topic, you know, yeah, that's, yeah, I think that's, that's awesome. Food for thought for
03:32:28.360
those who are, are a bit younger in the, uh, their career path and, and looking at, um, at where they
03:32:36.520
can go. Um, that, that's another part of this conversation. I think that will be, uh, really
03:32:41.920
productive in, uh, in broadening people's perspective, but also giving them a realistic look about how,
03:32:49.860
how the path, how the path walks. It's you don't just jump into your own thing because you have
03:32:58.860
one little idea of you, you have to cultivate, um, a, an experience and, uh, and, uh, depth and
03:33:06.740
breadth of knowledge in your, in your field. And then you find, uh, like you did how you can adjust
03:33:13.820
to, to meet your personal needs. So whether it's growing a family or whether it's needing to move to
03:33:19.820
a new area or whatever it is, you learn that, you know, this is, it takes, uh, one part, uh, hard
03:33:27.400
science and another part, um, you know, some soft skills and, and area and ingenuity in order to
03:33:34.020
accomplish this. Uh, no, I appreciate it Corvus. Thanks for, for coming up and sharing that, uh,
03:33:40.900
Yeah. So I don't know if you guys have ever heard of my Miyamoto Musashi. He has a quote that
03:33:50.560
mastery in one thing is mastery in all things. So like your Renaissance man idea is totally spot on.
03:33:59.880
If you master, uh, just the fundamental understanding to that degree of one thing allows you to have the
03:34:07.780
structure in order to understand and learn new things. Uh, it's the auto didactically just by
03:34:13.000
yourself to self-taught. Uh, I got into doing foundations when I was a kid, I was like 17.
03:34:22.000
So almost 15, 16 years now I've, I started on foundations, which I really do believe it is the
03:34:27.500
best trade to start on. If you're going to stay in the trades, cause you, you, it's kind of what you
03:34:32.240
guys were saying with the studs being out of plumb. Well, if the foundation's out of plumb, you're
03:34:37.140
fucked to begin with even before the studs. So really learning how to do concrete and build
03:34:43.420
homes from the ground up, taking a pad of dirt and putting a beautiful million dollar home on it
03:34:49.000
is, uh, there is something artistic about it when you want it to be. If you're just showing up to
03:34:55.060
bang it out and go home and drink your beers at night, then yeah, you're going to, it's going to
03:34:59.140
show in your work. And I've seen it with a million guys on a million, but plenty of guys around me,
03:35:05.960
just don't give a fuck, but there's plenty of white guys around me that do. And there's some
03:35:11.480
of the most based, uh, helpful, solid ass white boys you'll ever meet. Uh, and, and they're all,
03:35:18.020
they're all down for war too. They're all down for war. Every single one of them, uh, just at the tip
03:35:23.600
of their tongue, it's they're, they're ready to go. They just need a leader. They need a movement.
03:35:28.080
They need a direction. Uh, but they all know they all see it. When you talk to them, they might not
03:35:34.660
have the, the complete wealth of understanding that we do, but they, they have the, they have
03:35:39.520
the emotional understanding and, uh, I'll leave it there. Thanks.
03:35:44.180
Yeah. Thanks, Arian. Uh, yeah, you were mentioning the book, um, a book of five rings by Miyamoto
03:35:52.260
Musashi. Uh, a great, great book. Uh, excellent read. Uh, he is a samurai, one of the greatest
03:36:00.740
samurais to ever live, if not the greatest. And he wrote a book about being a samurai. It is a book
03:36:07.800
that wall street, um, uh, warriors read because it has things like, uh, Arian just brought up. I
03:36:15.940
think it would be an excellent book for all tradesmen as well to read because it has, uh,
03:36:22.400
principles in it that it's very hard to, to actually, uh, drill down these principles.
03:36:29.700
It's more of a, it becomes a lifestyle. He's a, he's an excellent author and it's an excellent book.
03:36:35.020
One of my favorites, um, my favorite quotes from the book is, uh, you know, um, today is, uh, defeat
03:36:44.060
of yourself of yesterday and tomorrow, or no, today is victory over yourself of yesterday. Tomorrow
03:36:50.040
is victory over lesser men. And that quote means that you improve yourself today. And the, the,
03:36:58.260
the competition you will face tomorrow will be lesser men as a result, because you will be greater
03:37:04.160
than them. Uh, a great book, a book of five rings, very short read and a worth worthwhile. So thanks
03:37:11.320
for bringing that up. Uh, Donovan, go ahead. Yeah. Okay. I wanted to bring up an interesting
03:37:17.020
observation with this whole blue collar working like environment. So I, I used to work like my first
03:37:26.380
like five or six jobs. We're all line cook jobs. I, I cannot imagine the idea of making a meal for
03:37:33.980
somebody that I don't like. And most of the people that are customers, like, like 80% of them are just
03:37:40.820
shitty human beings. So like, if I was to be making a meal for like skull mass or mythos, like the whole idea
03:37:50.720
and the approach, like, I'm not going to be cutting my corner. So, you know, if I was to be making
03:37:57.520
something for our own people, I feel like the whole intent behind what I'm actually doing is
03:38:05.580
different. Like, imagine you're making a house, but you know that the person is that's buying it is
03:38:12.140
like a Mexican family. Like, is your heart really going to be in that craft? Like, I know we all have
03:38:20.220
our, like our pride, right? You don't want to do a shitty job because that's your reputation.
03:38:27.160
But like, you might work a bit slower. You know what I mean? This is something I'm interested in
03:38:34.760
hearing about some of you guys who, you know, you actually have a lot of experience because like,
03:38:39.200
I can never work on a line cook again. Like, but when I make, when I make food for myself,
03:38:45.560
sometimes I impress myself because it's like, oh, this is for me, right?
03:38:53.520
I'll chime in on this. This is interesting because I have written software that I knew was
03:39:00.920
going to be used basically by Jeets. And, uh, I, I pumped out, you know, hundreds of lines of code
03:39:11.500
using Claude and, uh, skipped a couple of the tests and shipped it. And it's really like, at that point,
03:39:18.400
it's, um, it's hard to really get yourself to care versus where I'm at now, where, uh, I have
03:39:27.820
actually personal relationships with clients and it's, it's a whole different, it's a whole
03:39:33.280
different atmosphere like that. Like I, these people have my email address and these people
03:39:37.100
talk to me and I'll, I'll see them in meetings and such. And, um, you know, they're across,
03:39:42.840
they're across the country, but, uh, when you do a good job and they, and they say things like,
03:39:48.020
uh, you know, if you're ever in the, in the area, give me a ring and we'll get together.
03:39:54.620
You can come over, you can stop by for dinner. And, um, I just, I don't think I could live with
03:39:59.800
myself going to a fellow white man's house for dinner, this family, and having sent,
03:40:05.360
having shipped crappy code for his business. That would be utterly disgraceful and, and
03:40:11.760
unconsciousable, unconscionable, unconsciousable. So yeah, there's definitely something to that,
03:40:17.120
Donovan. Well, yeah, no, it can really, like a lot of us are very disenfranchised and I mean,
03:40:23.300
that's a whole other perspective of it. Like the work that we are doing, who is it actually for?
03:40:31.080
Yeah, no, that's that. And I agree with the points there. Um, you know, when we're passing
03:40:35.920
something down to our, our, uh, posterity, uh, we are obviously going to care for it much differently
03:40:43.500
than when we're passing it on. Uh, and that goes to the demoralization of our people right now.
03:40:49.680
And I talked to a friend of mine about this and he was arguing that, you know, white people, uh,
03:40:56.100
aren't coming to work. They're not, they're not putting their heart into it and so forth and so on.
03:41:01.360
And it's because they're not getting the return on their investment anymore. We, we have a higher
03:41:06.120
standard for that and we shouldn't be competing with Indians. Uh, we shouldn't be competing with
03:41:11.800
these, with this, uh, slop, right. These, these homes that we talked about where the, they,
03:41:16.760
the studs aren't plumb, the, the, the walls aren't straight. You can see it. It's like,
03:41:22.560
it's, it's shitty craftsmanship and, um, and works, you know, and, but it's still selling on the
03:41:30.560
market for just as much as a house next door built by a white man. Um, and so, uh, ultimately it's,
03:41:38.160
everything's being devalued by having these people among us and, and, and we shouldn't expect our
03:41:43.880
boys to show up and work for a, uh, a Mexican's wage and live a Mexican's life. This is a white
03:41:50.480
man's world. So it's, it's, it's kind of our responsibility back to like creating these,
03:41:56.160
these communities where that return on investment and that, and that investment into the community
03:42:03.160
gets to stay and, and live on with our people. Uh, even if it's not just our children, but it is
03:42:09.820
still our white people, uh, there's, there's higher nobility, there is higher standards and
03:42:15.100
there's higher expectations, uh, in that environment. So yeah, no, good, good point there.
03:42:21.180
Fit side, what you got for the, uh, the blue collar who wants to be more than just, um, the blue
03:42:30.240
color who wants to, uh, master his trade and, uh, and become a, a brute intellectual. You should
03:42:40.180
look into, uh, a history of Greek mathematics by Sir Thomas Heath. He made, uh, he published
03:42:46.660
these books, uh, in, he published the book in 1921 and, uh, now you can get the book in two
03:42:54.240
volumes and it's, uh, it goes in depth of, uh, it's right up, it's right up our alley as
03:43:01.760
blue collar workers with the type of math and the type of understanding we have of the
03:43:06.160
world. And so it's called a history of Greek mathematics. And you should, if you really want
03:43:12.500
to take your, uh, your education as a blue collar to the next level, that's what you should
03:43:24.240
Thanks for that. I was just looking it up right now. Uh, yeah, uh, Rebel, go ahead.
03:43:32.040
Yeah, cool. Thanks. Uh, I was listening to Corvus talk about his artistic abilities with metal
03:43:38.800
working and making the metal look aged. I think that's what I heard him say. And I just wanted
03:43:44.560
to pick his brain about that. I have a, a project coming up that it would be very helpful to,
03:43:50.160
to distress the metal and make it look artistically finished. And, um, it's going to be a piece that
03:43:57.200
goes on my house. Um, it'll be beautifying my space for my, for my family. So, um, yeah. And just
03:44:03.920
talking about the, you know, the craftsmanship that you get when you hire white, white people, uh,
03:44:09.440
I had a masonry project completely fall apart. Um, there were stones falling 20, 30 feet down
03:44:17.800
and crashing into the yard. I hired a white crew and, um, they, they ripped the whole thing down
03:44:26.940
to the brown coat and built the whole thing back up and, in, in, uh, the proper stone. Uh,
03:44:34.240
and at the end of the project without even me asking him anything, he's just like, look,
03:44:39.380
if, if anything happens to this thing in a year, you just, you just call me and I'll come back and
03:44:43.220
fix it for you. So, and yeah, now I'm part of the family. So fucking love. I love that. You get a
03:44:51.900
lot of that in Sydney, Montana, a lot of these contractors and these people who do work for
03:44:55.940
you is, Hey, if anything goes wrong, just call me and I'll come back and deal with it. And that's
03:45:01.300
the type of shit I love about a community like this, all this contract shit and all this warranty
03:45:07.240
shit. That's garbage. Yeah, it's family. It's a, it's a family connection. He's a very good friend
03:45:14.300
of mine. Uh, is, you know, related to a very good friend of mine. So when he, he heard I was in need
03:45:20.660
and, um, you know, he saw the project, he, he looked around the house and fixed, uh, uh, four or five
03:45:29.280
other different things, which ended up being 20 little things, right? Always with houses, it's a million
03:45:34.480
projects, but, um, yeah, just keep it in the family, man. I would, I would way rather pay top
03:45:40.460
dollar for a white guy to do the job, right. Then, um, what I, what I got when I completed my
03:45:45.300
house the first time. Imagine paying for a Mexican and not paying a little extra for a white guy.
03:45:50.740
Just saying. Yeah. Anyway, I hope Corvus is still listening and, uh, can, Oh yeah, I got to follow.
03:45:57.060
Excellent. Yeah. We'll be in touch, but I would really love to hear more about that. Yeah, no, I love that.
03:46:02.620
I, I would love, uh, for you to come back when this, uh, comes to fruition rebel and, uh,
03:46:08.140
show us a picture. Uh, that would be great. Uh, Corvus did come back up. I'll let Corvus
03:46:14.200
get back in here. Uh, go ahead Corvus. Yeah. I gave you a follow rebel. If you have any questions,
03:46:20.960
you can message me, but I could send you a few products that I use on metal and I can show
03:46:26.800
you a few pictures and, and, uh, yeah, if you have any questions with it, you know, with your
03:46:31.800
project, let me know. And, uh, yeah, we can go from there, man.
03:46:42.480
And I don't know if this is completely applicable here, but there is a, a level of competence and,
03:46:49.680
um, uh, and ability that white people share to, to, uh, to Arians point about, um, you know,
03:47:00.460
become a master at one, become a master at all. Um, and, um, and that's it. I think another way
03:47:09.000
that's put in that book also, uh, just more on the samurai side is, you know, uh, kill, you know,
03:47:15.340
kill one, you kill a thousand, something like that. Um, but you know, that, that level of expansion
03:47:22.180
when knowing what it takes to do something excellent, uh, you learn certain techniques
03:47:29.800
of the mind, uh, and exercise that through the body in a way that you care about what your product
03:47:37.700
is, uh, is going to be. And you know, how fragile the material is one mistake and you ruin it. So the
03:47:46.640
step-by-step process is so important that you, you can frame that out in your mind to be able to adopt,
03:47:53.460
uh, kind of what rebel and Corvus are doing here, right? Corvus has a lifetime of experience that he
03:48:00.320
can't just download on rebel, but he can show, uh, in a certain application, how to get a certain
03:48:08.080
result out of a project that is applicable. It's transferable and it's teachable, uh, across
03:48:16.520
those, uh, those crafts. So that's, that's one area. And, and, uh, you know, when we share that,
03:48:23.420
you know, it makes our whole people better and tricks of the trade and, and intellectual property
03:48:32.280
and, and that sort of thing. Um, there is groups of people who they lack the ability to create value.
03:48:40.820
So intellectual property is a means to an end for them where we are able to share amongst each other
03:48:47.600
and be, and create better white people across the board that just make our civilization better.
03:48:55.840
And I think that's, that's one of the keys to creating a white civilization and why we do it so
03:49:01.220
exceptionally well, because we're willing to, uh, to, uh, to help others become better to share things
03:49:14.580
that we, uh, we know are proprietary to ourselves, but they also are a gift to our people when we give
03:49:24.840
them away. And, and that multiplies our ability to build and to grow. And, uh, it's, it's much different
03:49:33.640
than these, uh, than these other, uh, groups of people around the world. When we look at, uh, the
03:49:39.860
civilizations that we ended up building as a result. So good stuff there. I can't wait to see the result
03:49:45.180
of that. Um, uh, Schwarzvalder, go ahead. All right. Uh, well, first of all, can you actually
03:49:54.780
hear me today? Loud and clear. That sounds great. Fantastic. I was just having some really weird
03:50:03.200
issues yesterday, but that works out because what I wanted to talk about yesterday kind of fits in a
03:50:07.700
little better with today's topic here. So I'm, I'm pretty much at the end of about a six month journey
03:50:15.940
on trying to get into a career that I think I'm just going to give up on. So I don't hear this being
03:50:23.880
talked about much within our, you know, I do a lot ideological circles. Uh, but I've been trying to
03:50:31.140
get into a law enforcement career for the past six or seven months. And I'm, I'm kind of ashamed
03:50:39.220
at the fact that I can't get hired over something so medial. So the, the issue that I'm running into
03:50:46.400
now, I'll give you a little preface about, about who I am now. So, you know, um, I'm in my thirties.
03:50:52.860
I own a business. Um, I I've never been arrested. I haven't even gotten as much as a ticket in
03:51:00.160
seven or eight years. You know, I'm married. I have kids, just a, just a decent white dude.
03:51:07.380
Well, 11 years ago, there was a time when I was hanging out with some coworkers at this company
03:51:15.860
that I was an assistant manager for. And I think what I had put on the application is that I had
03:51:23.280
done cocaine probably like 10 or 15 times over the course of a couple months, 11 years ago. Keep in
03:51:29.300
mind. And every department that I have applied for has denied me after going through the whole
03:51:36.880
process of doing all these interviews and stuff because of that, because the state I live in,
03:51:42.040
the actual Academy will not accept me. That's an automatic disqualifier, a stupid mistake I made in my
03:51:50.220
very early twenties, you know, over a decade ago. I don't know what you guys think about that, but
03:51:56.320
I think that's kind of a disgrace because, you know, I, I, I, I don't want to generalize,
03:52:02.700
but I would imagine that a pretty large portion of people who, you know, share this ideological
03:52:09.300
stance that we do who are, you know, very pro white now, you know, they've, they've probably done some
03:52:16.180
stupid shit in their past. So it's, it's crazy that, you know, I'm, I'm trying to get into a
03:52:24.620
position to make a difference, to, to better my white community. And I'm not allowed to do so
03:52:31.580
because of a decision, because of a stupid thing that I did over 10 years ago, but yet,
03:52:36.320
you know, they're more than glad to let, you know, a bonic speaking underdeveloped frontal cortex
03:52:42.480
monkeys wear badges and guns and, you know, and force our laws. Oh no, dude, dude, they're,
03:52:51.740
they're, they're everywhere around me and it's a shame, but I'm, I'm curious what you guys think
03:52:59.300
about that. Do you, do you think that's kind of a good route to go? Like, do you think that's
03:53:03.440
reasonable for them to, you know, automatically basically just discredit my application over
03:53:10.380
something like that or, or not, you know, share with me your thoughts. I don't know if you can
03:53:16.460
necessarily count that as a blue collar job, but I mean, I do think it's admirable for,
03:53:21.200
for someone in our position to try to make a difference in our communities doing a career
03:53:27.040
like that. So what do y'all think? Yeah. Well, I want to, I want to put it out there before,
03:53:32.880
before we get in, I want to make the call on this for wisdom of the crowd situation that what,
03:53:41.560
where does that fall? Uh, law enforcement, I think it falls in blue collar and this is kind of the
03:53:47.260
nature of the conversation. I think as we progress through here, uh, is, is also, uh, elevation in
03:53:54.500
blue collar jobs, uh, you know, requires then the, the, uh, development of a white collar, uh,
03:54:02.760
administrator. I think, uh, uh, law enforcement is a really, really great example of this, but I think
03:54:10.380
it's blue collar. I'd like to hear from others on, on whether they think, uh, law enforcement is blue
03:54:14.640
or, or, uh, or not. Where does that fall? I I'd say blue collar. My opinion is blue collar. Uh,
03:54:20.700
my, the kind of way I make a distinction is if you are going to have to, if you're not like a
03:54:28.260
emergency engineer or, you know, um, ER surgeon, trauma surgeon or something, but you have to end up
03:54:38.100
working like second, third shift, I think that falls, falls into blue collar, especially because
03:54:43.500
like the police are, you know, Leo's are everywhere. Law enforcement's everywhere. Um, I think some of
03:54:50.080
the higher ones, like maybe vice or detectives might, might kind of start getting into white
03:54:55.460
collar territory, but, uh, that civil, the civil servant, it can be almost a mixture of both. I know
03:55:03.220
I, one of my family members was a, started his career as a ranger in, uh, national, uh, working
03:55:10.120
for the forest service in national parks and worked his way up to being, you know, indisputably white
03:55:16.820
collar administrative. But, um, that's interesting. I'd like to get, uh, get some opinions on that.
03:55:23.420
So, so sorry. I just wanted to mention, is there, is there a way that you can get them to like
03:55:28.020
purge that information? And then there's other things about like, obviscating who you actually
03:55:33.900
are on paper? Um, that'd be worth looking into. Like what database are they referencing this from?
03:55:44.780
Like, why do they, why are they holding your information? Is there a way that you can get that
03:55:49.580
I just want to chime in real quick to kind of add something to this. So, uh, all of that information
03:56:01.440
I have free and willingly shared because it is a life experience that I have had. It's part of the
03:56:08.220
character that I have today. So I, I find it disingenuous to leave anything out of my past good
03:56:15.740
or bad because it doesn't necessarily mean that that's the same person I am now. So I don't want
03:56:21.360
this conversation to necessarily get derailed. Mostly what I'm getting at is what do we as a
03:56:28.040
white nationalist collective think about someone like myself getting into law enforcement? And then
03:56:35.400
secondly, what do you all think about this prerequisite that they have where they're basically
03:56:41.220
just denying me instantly for, you know, some, some drug usage 11 years ago, when we allow,
03:56:49.020
you know, dumb monkeys to become cops and all these other retarded Browns that that's mostly what I'm
03:56:57.280
Yeah. I mean, we, we need you as a cop. Like I don't like, if I showed you the pictures of all
03:57:02.000
the cops in my city, you'd be, you'd freak out.
03:57:04.500
Yeah. And I can point the same thing down in LA. It's disgusting. Let's let, and as we go through
03:57:13.360
here, let's keep that, that question top of mind to, you know, one, do we need more white law
03:57:21.040
enforcement members? I'm a, I'm a yes on that. Two, do, does law enforcement qualify as a blue collar
03:57:29.340
job. Uh, so Brian, get in there. Yeah. Thanks mythos. Uh, yeah, I, I do believe, uh, law enforcement
03:57:36.980
is a blue collar job just based on the things you have to deal with. It's not like a corporate
03:57:42.520
structure. It's like, you're dealing with real people. You're trying to solve problems, just like
03:57:46.720
a contractor wants to fix a house. You're solving problems. Um, and I was just going to say on that
03:57:52.320
point, like, don't ever hire like Browns for anything. Like, cause where's that money going to go?
03:57:58.320
They're going to send that shit to Mexico. They're going to send that shit out of it's
03:58:01.480
destroying the economy. Like I will go, I've said this before. I will go find a gas station
03:58:05.940
that's owned by white people just so I will, and I'll pay more just cause they're trying to
03:58:10.080
survive. And they're trying to, uh, like say the gas price is three 20 a gallon and all the
03:58:15.120
Indians are selling it for three 20 gallon. And then the white gas station is three 50 gallon,
03:58:19.140
bro. I will fill up my whole tank of that gas station and then not have to go to another,
03:58:22.600
like you should do shit like that tip fucking white businesses, high amounts to keep
03:58:28.220
them in business. Like do your part as a person, because that's the whole reason all these Browns
03:58:35.100
everywhere is because people weren't doing their part. Uh, they were just like, Oh fuck
03:58:38.840
it. This is cheap labor. We can just get away with this, but that didn't fucking work obviously.
03:58:42.840
So like, and then another thing with the cops, I literally drove by a cop, uh, in this town
03:58:48.280
that's like pretty white. It was like a fucking pretty well off town, but it wasn't like fully
03:58:52.820
white. It had like some black cops. And the first fucking thing I thought when I saw this
03:58:57.480
fucking black with the gun was all I thought was that fucking nigger has a gun. That's
03:59:05.420
So I, I don't, I don't mean to sheriff this space, but I would really like to hear from
03:59:09.900
both fit side and white Reich, because I know that they will both have really intelligent
03:59:17.360
You have my, you know what? I'm kicking you off the stage.
03:59:20.480
Um, listen, dude, listen, you're, you're already, uh, mythos dot return to California
03:59:29.620
coin. So we're all, there we go. They send them to the website. I need to pump those numbers.
03:59:36.640
Um, uh, yeah, we, uh, we're going to go to white Reich, uh, you know, based on, uh, uh,
03:59:42.120
stage presence and, uh, uh, and so forth. So white Reich, uh, and then, uh, fits. If you
03:59:49.020
want to get back in there as one of our fellow, uh, co-hosts and then fueled by hate, uh, I
03:59:56.740
Yeah. So I'll be brief. Um, I would say anything that falls into public service would be considered
04:00:02.840
white, uh, blue collar, unless you are, um, pencil pushing in your public service. Like
04:00:09.520
if you're a secretary in a courthouse, um, you're pencil pushing, but if you are standing
04:00:15.680
for long periods of time, um, partaking in any amounts of physical labor, which would
04:00:21.660
include, um, tackling nons and putting them in cuffs, I would say that's, that's blue
04:00:26.980
collar. Um, but in regards to, you know, white nationalists seeking jobs in the police
04:00:32.720
force, I am 100% for that. I think that we need to be seizing as much power by any means
04:00:39.480
necessary. And that includes wearing a badge, um, and being able to influence police departments,
04:00:47.280
uh, via exemplary character. Now, something that I did want to bring up, um, where I guess
04:00:54.980
I'm going to kind of bonk you on the head over this Schwartzwalder, um, is that, um, number
04:01:01.300
one, right now, the government is not our friend, right? So you being open and honest with a government
04:01:08.220
that is pitted against us in regards to your history, did yourself a disservice. And I would
04:01:15.480
say ultimately did our folk a disservice because we want you in that position of power. We don't
04:01:22.200
want you, um, not able to attend whatever police academy that wouldn't take you because of a past
04:01:31.600
experience. Now it's very honorable that you're willing to admit to past failings. And I
04:01:38.200
would say that honor should only apply to our folk, being open and honest with us in one thing,
04:01:45.880
but being open and honest with a system that is designed to essentially oppress us, right? Um,
04:01:55.300
would be doing yourself and our people a disservice because it's, it's putting you in a position where
04:02:00.880
you're not able to wield authority on behalf of our people. Um, so yeah, that, that pretty much
04:02:07.960
sums up my take for the most part. Again, I, I do think it's honorable that you were honest.
04:02:13.300
I just think you were honest to the wrong people. Be honest to us. Don't be honest to our enemies until,
04:02:20.560
uh, until they're facing the wall. Um, but yeah, I'll yield with that. Thanks guys.
04:02:25.440
Yeah. And I'll be very quick on that note there, white. Um, there's two answers you should memorize
04:02:33.280
and put in your pocket. You should think about these two answers every day. Uh, these, uh, well,
04:02:40.680
one's an answer and one's a response, uh, to authority that does not, uh, have jurisdiction
04:02:47.600
over you. There are two responses. One is a response to any of the questions that they may ask you.
04:02:54.380
And the answer, I cannot answer that is your answer to them. I cannot answer that.
04:03:02.600
Whatever question they ask you, if they have no jurisdiction, if they are not white and coming from
04:03:08.660
a place of white power and our network, your answer should be, I cannot answer that. It's a,
04:03:15.380
you have to find out how to apply that in your life, but that is the answer you owe them. You
04:03:20.980
don't owe them any other answer. I cannot answer that. And the other is to, to understand and
04:03:25.700
internalize that they have no power here. So when they demand anything of you, you have no power
04:03:31.660
here. And we, we must collectivize this and separate ourselves and our sovereignty from that,
04:03:38.460
which would want you to become a part of the clergy, uh, nonsense out there and to start taking your
04:03:46.960
power back. I cannot answer that. And you have no power here. These two things.
04:03:55.280
Well, and, and, and briefly, you know, I'll, in simpler terms, what I said is, is don't shoot your
04:04:03.240
dick off. Don't, don't shoot your dick off being honest with people that want to shoot your own
04:04:08.660
dick off. Just don't do it. Yeah. I, I cannot answer that as a qualified fifth amendment, uh,
04:04:16.920
principle, but as well, it is also a denial that you have any information to give, right? I can,
04:04:24.140
I answered that solves for two items there. Skolmask, go ahead. And then we got, uh, we'll go,
04:04:28.680
we will go to, well, make a pass. Skolmask is my co-host here, Fitz, and then, and then you can
04:04:34.700
go. One sec, Fitz. Yeah. This is a problem. You got to understand we are at war. Do not cleave to
04:04:40.560
morality. The objective is the most valuable thing. Stay mission oriented and, um, save the morality
04:04:48.400
for your, for your fellow white dudes. Lying to the enemy is quite fun as well. Hey, Donovan,
04:04:54.460
you're not a co-host. You, you pipe down there. Fitz side, go ahead.
04:04:58.680
All right. So let me, uh, if it's a blue collar worker, it's pretty interesting if it's blue
04:05:05.060
collar worker, because being a police officer is not the same as, uh, as a mechanic or a technician
04:05:11.820
working on, uh, an oil rig or something like that. Right. Uh, but it falls within the managed,
04:05:19.320
a managerial, uh, management of society in admin, uh, administration work, right. Of society.
04:05:26.940
And it's not quite a service job either. So it's not like it's a, like you're working
04:05:31.940
like as a house cleaner either. It's above that. So if anything, I would say, I would put
04:05:38.100
it as a blue collar worker of like a, um, between management, not quite white collar, but you're
04:05:45.780
at the management level of a blue collar worker, because what you're managing in your administration,
04:05:50.760
you're doing administration work for the public, right. Keeping them in line. But that being
04:05:56.280
said, everything that like, uh, that has been said is correct. Right. So I can only give you
04:06:02.600
quotes to help to go along with it. In the area of the scriptures, it says without freedom,
04:06:10.200
virtues serve to make you slaves and disgrace your origin. It is good on you and, and honest
04:06:17.420
of you. And it's good that you told the truth, but we do not live in an errant society. We
04:06:23.280
live in a society that hates truth and honesty. And so they do not appreciate it. And if you
04:06:30.800
get to the point where you're holding to a morals and certain virtues, where you're being
04:06:36.660
in harvests and you're a slave, you will not have morals or virtues, the slaves do not have
04:06:45.060
morals or virtues. They are, they do what they're told. And so you got to keep that in mind. Do
04:06:53.480
not try to hold a certain morality in which society does that hold itself. And that's where
04:07:00.440
you went wrong. You kept an Aryan morality, which is good on you. And I respect, but this
04:07:06.780
society does not hold those morals. So therefore it did not appreciate you holding those morals.
04:07:17.880
I apologize, but I got to chime in here real quick. Um, I, I get all that and my, my truthfulness
04:07:25.560
50 50 has to do with my white morality, but the other 50% of it is I, again, if anyone
04:07:33.760
in here has ever gone through the process of trying to become a police officer, um, they
04:07:38.660
will find that shit out. Whether or not I tell them, uh, when you, you, you go through
04:07:43.780
a lie detector test and I can tell you that a friend of mine recently just got hired with
04:07:49.020
a department and they had a detective go out and they literally went up and down his block
04:07:54.300
to every house on the street. He lives on asking them. They went and found kids. He was friends
04:08:00.160
with in like elementary school and went and talked to them. I can guarantee you that it's
04:08:04.580
not worth lying because the they're, they're going to find out shit you did, whether you
04:08:10.340
think so or not. So I appreciate the, uh, moral compass discussion there, but it's, it's
04:08:17.980
not a hundred percent applicable in this situation.
04:08:21.220
Then, uh, you can always move to a different, uh, area and apply because there are certain
04:08:25.280
police stations that won't do that, right? They won't do that level of scrutiny and you
04:08:29.960
can become a police officer in those areas. Right. And, uh, do you really want to be a police
04:08:34.400
officer filled with a city of blacks? Because eventually you're going to have to shoot one
04:08:38.360
of those, uh, federal rules and then they might arrest you in the prosecution court.
04:08:46.560
I'll, uh, I'll say this. The Irish are immune to, uh, lie detector tests. We are too charismatic
04:08:52.640
and, uh, yeah, I'll, I'll yield with that, but no, but I, I did it. Svog, Svolder. Um, the,
04:09:01.160
the, the authorities have a way of figuring things out. So I, I get where you're coming
04:09:07.460
from, but let them put in the footwork, but let them put in the footwork and figuring it
04:09:12.120
out. And if they figure it out, then they figure it out. But if they don't, then you
04:09:15.800
have nobody but yourself to blame in regards to the situation of, uh, kind of shooting your
04:09:22.840
dick off. The moral of the story is when working in law enforcement, don't shoot your
04:09:33.140
dick off. Hey, uh, the question that wasn't answered. The other question was, do we find
04:09:38.480
this right? No, I think that you showed repentance and you turned a, uh, a new leaf and you're
04:09:44.080
ready to be a servant for your people. And that should be overlooked. It's been over 10
04:09:47.620
years since you've done it, like you said. And, and I think that should be holding you
04:09:52.800
back after a decade of not doing those things. And I think it's sad that we live in a society
04:09:57.560
in which they don't appreciate, appreciate the revival of the honest man, the, uh, the
04:10:04.100
betterment of, uh, of what you were yesterday. And, and I do believe that should have been,
04:10:09.800
uh, the only deciding factor or the nail, the final nail in the coffin for that being a good
04:10:22.800
All right. Who's, uh, fueled by hate. Get in there.
04:10:30.980
It sounds like the worst Bluetooth in the world. Uh, can we get any better?
04:10:37.660
Let's see if we can get that. Go. Hey, can you hear me now? That's way better. Yep. Go ahead.
04:10:47.420
Hey, so, uh, Fitz, uh, let's see, Mr. Schwatzwalder, I would recommend, um, I, I, you might be better
04:10:55.760
off in a situation where you know somebody who's a cop and works in the department that
04:10:59.680
can vouch for you. Um, a few years ago, there was this, uh, loser. Yeah, I already did that.
04:11:10.480
Nope. Uh, so, so I have friends that work in four departments local to me and that, that didn't do
04:11:17.840
Well, what, what was, what did they have to say about it? I mean, like, did your, did your honesty
04:11:23.860
go in some sort of database? Cause I would, I would fucking lie. If that's what you want
04:11:27.920
to do, pursue it. And, uh, don't ever mention that again, unless it's on your criminal record.
04:11:36.520
I don't know if that helps, but what, and there's also no, another way to look at it,
04:11:40.660
right? So let's say you do hire the, like, look for a police to stop corrupt, uh, potential
04:11:47.120
corruption, even though you probably won't be corrupt, uh, do corruption, but someone who's
04:11:51.320
done cocaine in the past quite a few times may pick it up again. And then the next thing
04:11:56.540
you know, they're using the department to do cocaine and distribute cocaine to, uh, support
04:12:03.100
their habits. Right. And, and so there, there is another viewpoint like coming from, like
04:12:09.420
statistically, they may be looking at it. Well, this might be potentially pop up again.
04:12:14.020
And now that he has this power and influence over the society and there is cocaine trafficking
04:12:20.320
society that he might be able to use his power and influence to control the cocaine trafficking
04:12:25.140
for him personal use. And so there is that other side that you're looking at. And so
04:12:30.080
like, how would you, uh, convince the department that you won't be that person, that you won't
04:12:35.560
do that? Well, I think you just have to build a reputation of good moral character, like
04:12:40.400
volunteering as much as you can, volunteering where cops are going to volunteer so they can
04:12:44.740
see you like flag day, Memorial day, things like that will go a long ways, but it's nothing's
04:12:51.320
guaranteed to get, you go over that hump, but you do have to change how they perceive you
04:12:57.820
because a lot of times they may not know who you are. Right. But they may be scared and
04:13:02.660
they may be getting out of a number game that the potential of you relapsing and using the
04:13:07.860
apartment to, uh, as a way to support your habit can become easily done. Right.
04:13:15.080
No fits. It's, it's probably Shaniqua in the department. Shaniqua saw that. She's like,
04:13:21.420
Oh, look, we're not hiring him. We got the hit. We're not hiring the hair Schultz for all day
04:13:26.120
here. And then they checked out your stream on GTV and it was over for you, brother.
04:13:31.960
Right. No. So, um, fit side. Well, so I'd have to first ask if you are a yoga instructor,
04:13:38.140
because that's quite a stretch there, brother. Uh, I could agree with that stance. If I was like in
04:13:43.540
my forties, but you know, I was in my twenties when I did that, like very early twenties and I'm
04:13:50.020
in my thirties now. So I, I don't think I would piece that same thing together. Uh, I would also
04:13:54.620
like to preface that information with the fact that it's not necessarily, it's not really the
04:13:58.960
departments that are not accepting me. They're always going back to the, well, the state's academies
04:14:05.920
guidelines automatically disqualify you because of that. So take, take that for what it's worth.
04:14:13.540
Then the only thing, if that's, if that's a barrier, uh, you can contact your congressman
04:14:18.500
and he can write a letter for you. And that might have some sway. That's the last, uh, line
04:14:23.320
of defense because there's always a, uh, there's always a, uh, like a, uh, a way to get around
04:14:31.220
certain rules and policies like that, but you need someone with a little bit more power.
04:14:36.020
Like, like that's probably the last thing you can do right there. If you're really interested
04:14:39.500
is contacting your congressman, telling him your story about how you clean and you'd like to serve
04:14:43.900
your community by doing that. And to see if you can get your congressman to step in and write a
04:14:49.080
letter for you or recommendation. Perfect. I will go ahead and reach out to Randy fine and see if
04:14:55.780
he'll recommend my white nationalist ass to get it. I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm being serious. A lot of these
04:15:01.780
congressmen would just do these simple things because that's what you do. And it's not that hard to get
04:15:06.540
his office to write your letter. Maybe he won't write it, but someone, no, no, I, I, I know, buddy
04:15:10.840
I'm being, I'm being facetious. Yeah. You're actually being quite facetious, like over and over
04:15:16.860
again. And it's kind of starting to grind my gears a little bit. Well, well, yeah. And I was going to
04:15:20.640
switch the topic. This, this is a DM, uh, you know, conversation, not on topic of what we're going
04:15:26.760
through here. We want to talk about the craft, uh, you know, first, uh, and foremost, uh, take lessons
04:15:33.780
from what's fault. Spalter is going through everybody because there's valuable lessons
04:15:37.680
in there. Um, and, uh, but we do want to get back to the blue collar, um, craftsmanship
04:15:44.480
and the artistry. Again, uh, I do want to hear from people though, as we go through this,
04:15:49.900
uh, what do they think is, uh, is law enforcement, uh, even what was brought up earlier, uh, forest
04:15:57.480
rangers, uh, are those blue collar or those simply administrative, um, positions and, uh,
04:16:06.300
and where we fall on that. It's very, that's a very interesting kind of razor on that one,
04:16:10.620
but we wish, uh, wish you the best small spot as you go through that. And again, uh, you
04:16:16.700
know, if it's not on paper, uh, then it didn't happen. Uh, and, uh, that's what I would stand
04:16:22.500
on personally, but, um, let's go ahead and, uh, and continue that conversation on the,
04:16:30.220
the white collar, uh, fueled by hate. What do you do for a living?
04:16:39.440
I'm the guy no one likes. I'm a union electrician.
04:16:42.980
Oh, you're, you're lucky Sam. He's not here. He would, uh, he would have some words for you.
04:16:48.260
Yeah. Yeah. I wasn't, uh, I wasn't in the union, but I was an electrician, uh, for about a year
04:16:55.160
and a half. Um, but I, I didn't get into that part, but my junction boxes and, and my power boxes,
04:17:04.240
uh, all had perfect 90 degree angles. Um, everything, you know, uh, perfectly to the T, uh, you know,
04:17:16.120
knowing when to use, uh, stranded, uh, or braided, I guess, uh, versus solid, uh, in, in order to,
04:17:24.340
uh, make the job, uh, perfect. Uh, I always knew when I would come across, uh, a less than,
04:17:31.880
uh, person and I, I don't know if they were Mexican or not, but when you show up to, uh, a panel
04:17:39.160
and you just got a bunch of garbage in there, uh, you know, the, the difference. So what's,
04:17:45.520
what are you, what's your specialty in that? Is it, uh, is it commercial? Is it big,
04:17:50.700
big jobs? Uh, what's your, what do you do? Uh, personally, I do, uh, commercial industrial,
04:17:57.640
and I'm also a high voltage cable splicer. So we're, I just have more, more access to,
04:18:03.680
to work than the average guy. And, um, right now I'm pursuing a, uh, position with a well-known
04:18:10.180
utility company without trying to say too much, but, uh, yeah, man. Um, I love what I do. I get lost
04:18:20.320
in what it's kind of, it's an art to me. And, um, I, I just, I want to, uh, provide, uh,
04:18:31.860
you know, quality work as opposed to these, these Mexicans. I mean, I I'm out here, um,
04:18:39.880
in California. I don't really want to say where, but, uh, it's majority majority Mexicans out here
04:18:45.380
and you can, you can typically tell the difference between, uh, who did it between a Mexican and a
04:18:52.120
white guy. So, all right. I'm sorry, guys. I'm currently working on my Bronco right now.
04:18:57.040
I took the day off, but no worries, man. Yeah. Yeah. Glad you joined and thanks for your
04:19:03.220
contribution. You know, uh, uh, uh, I, uh, we, we need electricians too. Yeah. If I were to go
04:19:11.580
back and redo it all over again, I would have been a lineman. I know my kids, uh, if they're a lot like
04:19:19.640
me when they grow up and, uh, college just really isn't their thing, then, then I'm going to, I'm going
04:19:24.800
to get them into the lineman field because they make more money. And, uh, the apprenticeship is
04:19:30.380
only like three years and, uh, they just soak up a lot of overtime. So personally, if you have kids
04:19:37.300
and they, they, you, you think that the, uh, the tradesman field would be better option for them,
04:19:44.960
get them in the lineman, uh, school. So yeah. All right, guys. You have a good one.
04:19:51.820
All right. Thanks. Fueled. You got it. Have a great day, brother. Thank you. White power, man.
04:20:00.460
If he had to, if he had more time, I'd, uh, start asking questions about that Bronco.
04:20:16.720
Yeah. I dug it out of my backyard for 1800 bucks, dude.
04:20:21.820
Oh, it's fucking great. I'm down here in SoCal. So not a whole, there's barely any rust
04:20:30.240
Uh, no, no, no. They painted over it. Um, yeah, it's a custom.
04:20:37.980
Right now it's a blue, a dark blue. I'm going to paint it blue.
04:20:42.280
Um, but yeah, I fucking, or dude, there's like all the, it's all straight.
04:20:46.000
There's a little bit of rust down behind the, uh, the rear quarter panels, but that's, that's
04:20:51.780
something that can be fixed. It had the 351 M in it. I took that out and currently having
04:21:02.260
Yeah. You got, you got, you got big swampers on it yet, or are you going to put those on
04:21:07.320
Yeah. It's got a four, it's got a four inch lift and it has a 35s on it right now with
04:21:22.680
Uh, the drive shaft? No, no, no. I think that was already done. I had the rear end already
04:21:29.840
Oh, for sure. Yeah. Cause the U joints, the U joints take a lot of fucking, uh, punishment
04:21:36.180
if the kit, depending on the kit, but anyway, we'll let you get back to it, man.
04:21:45.060
Uh, yeah, I got a, uh, an old, uh, 2004, uh, Jeep Rubicon.
04:21:52.440
Um, so I like the, I like those, those old Broncos.
04:21:58.320
Um, but, uh, yeah, it's gotta, gotta have one of these old, uh, non-computer, uh, you
04:22:05.760
know, uh, vehicles for, uh, when things get a little hairy, right?
04:22:13.380
Um, but yeah, that's, that's definitely white power, definitely blue collar, uh, wrenching
04:22:19.520
on, uh, wrenching on your ride and, uh, and kind of knowing how to do that.
04:22:24.760
Yeah. I was, uh, I was blessed to have an uncle who, uh, taught the basics.
04:22:32.380
Uh, um, taking five horsepower, uh, lawnmower engines and strapping them up to a centrifugal
04:22:43.440
clutch and tying that all together and, and, uh, putting some gas in it and letting, uh,
04:22:49.940
letting us rip around the, uh, rip around the yard.
04:22:54.300
Fun times, uh, Southern California's, uh, the Southern California area, especially as
04:23:01.020
you get a kind of into the desert, um, the high desert in that area, those, that's where
04:23:06.060
a bunch of bad-ass motherfuckers still live who, uh, all, uh, get out there in the dirt
04:23:11.500
and, uh, you know, ride two wheels, four wheels and, and, uh, fly, uh, fly high.
04:23:18.820
Um, that's, uh, that's a good old times, good old boys out there.
04:23:39.280
I'm actually, uh, working on a house in, uh, the North shore of Massachusetts right now.
04:23:44.580
Just put, put in a double pane window in the front of this house and just finished the
04:23:51.220
We're wrapping up today and, uh, going to be going to another spot tomorrow, but yeah,
04:24:01.240
Um, interior, exterior, single family to large scale, residential, uh, commercial grade.
04:24:14.420
I can't even, you know, name it right now since 18 to 36.
04:24:24.240
And, um, so you, uh, you work with an architect then or a draftsman.
04:24:36.800
So normally, yeah, I'd work with an architect and, uh, run off blueprints for framing.
04:24:52.480
Uh, if it's just finished work, you know, you kind of just do your own thing at the customer's
04:24:59.040
recommendation, depending on where you are, what you're doing.
04:25:01.720
Um, but obviously for framing, you have to follow strict blueprint guidelines for, you
04:25:09.980
know, layouts for everything, for windows, for, um, stairways, entries and exits.
04:25:17.320
Um, what are the trends right now, um, in, in like the finished work, what, what are the
04:25:32.600
Is it a traditional, is there something new we don't know about exterior exterior right
04:25:40.660
I'd say the big thing is, uh, AZAC PVC, uh, mock wood, you know, for like the, uh, fascias
04:25:50.000
and rakes of houses and the, uh, picture frames of windows.
04:26:01.100
Well, you can do, you can do hardy trim as well.
04:26:09.280
Hardy board is a cement, is a cement panel and AZAC's more like PVC plastic.
04:26:24.200
And just to touch on the kid talking before being a cop isn't based dude until we have a
04:26:29.720
ethno state, which we don't have yet, being a cop is not based.
04:26:37.620
I don't care unless you're in like a hundred percent, like non neighborhood, you're going
04:26:43.260
to run into your own folk and you're going to be arresting them.
04:26:46.500
So until you're like not a Zog bot and we're not controlled by them, you cannot be a cop.
04:26:52.860
Well, it's kind of a longer, it's kind of a longer play boss because there's a very good
04:26:56.800
likelihood that every asset that's inside some of these organizations is going to have
04:27:04.440
So, I mean, I would, there's in several kind of fictional works, there are men who are described
04:27:13.080
as even being like from the time they're teenagers told by the older members of an
04:27:21.660
organization to follow a certain route, follow a certain path because they can end up in
04:27:30.760
And if you've got stripes on your sleeve and you're one of us and you've managed to keep
04:27:34.640
that hidden for 20 years, then you've become an immensely valuable asset.
04:27:41.200
Might not be based, but that's sometimes those longer plays need to need to pan out.
04:27:47.340
But I think that's actually one of the interesting things about the discussion that has been going
04:27:52.120
on the past couple of days in 1488 with, you know, guys not wanting to join orgs or something
04:27:57.320
like that is that everybody has a role to play.
04:28:06.520
Yeah, that's, that is kind of one of the, the underlying and as far as father, we'll get
04:28:11.860
back to you here that, but these guys who are in certain positions and are able to understand
04:28:21.700
the inside of an organization and institution and learn and listen to conversations that
04:28:32.360
There's a lot of Intel inside that is not exposed to us.
04:28:38.940
And we can suss out to some degree the, based on the communications coming out, based on
04:28:45.360
the operations and the, and what we see in the manifestation, we can, we can deduce what's
04:28:51.780
happening on the inside, but there's a lot of politics involved that some of these guys
04:28:55.660
are privy to that we don't have that information.
04:28:59.000
And just to have somebody inside being able to work within, even, you know, even playing
04:29:05.900
a role that like Bosco just said is adversarial to our people you know, that, that cost is,
04:29:14.320
is maybe something that we have to bear in the turn of the tide.
04:29:20.360
I, it is a, it is a complex question that I don't have a simple answer to, but some of
04:29:27.080
these guys who are operating within Zog, uh, are, uh, are operators and the, and some of
04:29:34.080
them are operators at a really high level, way above my pay grade that, you know, they're
04:29:39.220
hearing discussions that nobody else gets to listen to.
04:29:42.820
And depending on how they're, they're running their, their, uh, position, uh, you know, these
04:29:50.360
are very, these potentially very valuable assets to us, uh, that will be instrumental in the
04:29:59.380
That's kind of the, uh, the interesting, uh, also the, the, the career path of, uh, a blue
04:30:08.120
collar worker, like a, like, um, and this is, you know, whether this is blue collar, in
04:30:13.900
fact, but like the border patrol guy, Tom Homan, right.
04:30:17.020
He's a, he's a, from the, from the, you know, the foot soldier to the top of the food chain,
04:30:26.500
uh, career path for him, uh, is it, it, it's given him a certain, uh, level of, of pedigree
04:30:36.520
and, and caliber, uh, even with some credibility.
04:30:39.540
So it's, it's, it's not a very simple, uh, right off there.
04:30:44.900
I think it, it does have some nuance worth, worth discussing, but we'll get to Schwartz
04:30:49.940
Valdi because he had a kind of a response to maybe, and then we'll get white.
04:30:56.880
Uh, so, so Bosco, how, how long have you been doing, you know, uh, carpentry work?
04:31:02.980
Because that, that is an area of blue collar work that has always fascinated me.
04:31:07.300
And I, I'm sure you've watched some of his stuff, but every time I think of blue collar
04:31:11.780
work, my mind always tends to go to a gentleman named Larry Hahn.
04:31:16.820
I don't know if you, I'm sure you've probably seen his videos, but like the way that that
04:31:20.640
guy and his one coworker literally frame an entire house by themselves in like a day and
04:31:26.860
a half is probably the most based white power shit I've ever seen in my life.
04:31:38.260
Um, I mean, I've done that, you know, me and a buddy just like, I don't know about framing
04:31:44.240
an entire house in two days, that's, that's pretty serious, but, uh, me and a buddy could
04:31:52.500
frame like a small ranch in like a, you know, a day or two, I'd say, you know, definitely
04:31:58.260
like a secondary level or, uh, boss, you're pretty robotic, coming through pretty robotic.
04:32:04.680
I don't know if it's just me or if, uh, yeah, it's really hard to hear.
04:32:11.680
I'm on, I'm on, I'm on, I'm on the highway, so I'll, I'll, I'll chime out.
04:32:17.720
Yeah, we'll get, yeah, we'll get, we'll get back to you on that.
04:32:23.260
Um, just in regards to what you were talking about a little bit earlier, Mythos, um, I want
04:32:30.700
all the blue collar workers, I want all the administrative workers, I want all the white
04:32:37.080
collar workers, I want the cops, the firefighters, the EMTs, the electricians, the foundation workers,
04:32:51.160
I want the judges, I want the lawyers, I want the politicians, I want everything.
04:32:57.260
This is our country and we got to play the long game.
04:33:02.820
I want the sheriffs, I want the CIA, I want the FBI, I want it all.
04:33:13.280
I want the homeless, I want the stay-at-home moms.
04:33:20.340
I, I want every single one of them and that requires strategy.
04:33:30.760
It requires grooming our children for something bigger than themselves.
04:33:37.040
Um, and it also takes honesty amongst ourselves and how bad do we want to win?
04:33:45.140
Do we want to complain about the problem forever?
04:33:48.180
Or do we want to take the actions that are necessary in reseizing our homelands and grabbing the snake by the head with the power that we've acquired and finally lopping its head off?
04:34:15.220
Uh, that is the, the full spectrum of, uh, desire necessary to pull this all together.
04:34:22.840
The, uh, the collective consciousness of our people that was disrupted in the early 1900s, uh, it stole from us everything that could be.
04:34:38.100
It's like, this is what life would be like if, uh, you know, not for X, Y, Z.
04:34:44.020
And it's just completely futuristic, uh, world, uh, full of white people.
04:34:52.480
And I think why you, you might've been the one who brought it up, but the, um, the very simple futuristic reality, uh, that is presented in back to the future is, is, uh, that's, that's basic.
04:35:08.700
That's basic bitch future like that, that we should be very beyond that even at this point.
04:35:13.920
And, uh, I think that was what, 2015 that they ended up, um, you know, launching into, um, you know, the, the, the intention is most important.
04:35:29.120
The intention is, is extremely important in what's being manifest, right?
04:35:40.080
It's what are we building with that technology and to build these bombs and build the surveillance state.
04:35:53.760
We don't need to live in a world unless we're living in a world full of Browns who are retarded and, you know, kill children in the streets.
04:36:05.900
This is a waste of, it's like, well, because we have these animals running around, we need to build a bunch of fences and those fences get in the way of all of our white people things.
04:36:14.620
And our white people energy and the things that we could build if we didn't have all of this garbage and we'd have to have all this red tape and all these building codes, because we have to make sure that the retards are also building along to our standards.
04:36:25.920
And then we have to make exceptions for these retards, because if not, they actually can't build anything.
04:36:31.020
So we have to then, you know, given, we're like, well, this, this wall isn't plumb, but we're going to go ahead and pass it because you know what, you know, that's, it's just like hundreds of others of homes that are now being built with, you know, uneven walls and, and, uh, you know, unlevel fortifications because we, we need more homes.
04:36:50.080
So we're going to go ahead and pressurize that, that, uh, avenue in a way that is detrimental to the infrastructure that we're going to end up handing down to our, to our ends or our, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, so this, this, all of our problems come from the fact that we're dealing with these lower level beings that are impeding our progress.
04:37:11.060
They're dragging us down. And it's been happening for a very long time. And it's intentional because we are we move so swiftly.
04:37:19.840
We fly so high that these other people who have very high narcissistic tendencies and fancy themselves to be the people who should rule over others because of their inferiority complex that they naturally have in looking around the world and seeing that they actually don't understand how things work,
04:37:45.440
are bent on using our technology to destroy the world instead of to build it.
04:37:52.180
So, you know, we are missing out on so much. And the world that would be built like that that futuristic world and the imagery and the buildings and the and the light rails and all of the things and the flying cars and all of these things.
04:38:10.180
These shouldn't be built by machines. These shouldn't be built by robots. These shouldn't be built by automatons.
04:38:19.180
These should be built by human beings. You know, we should be collectivizing that human effort to build handcrafted, beautiful works of art that express our spirit and express our soul in the civilization that we're building.
04:38:35.260
And the other people don't understand this. They are willing to cut corners and and, you know, there is a few.
04:38:45.940
And I know a lot of guys in Southern California is full of beautiful homes that they have exceptional taste and they spare no expense in building some of the most magnificent interiors and exteriors on the planet.
04:39:05.260
But these are what white people are building for a very select few people instead of building the entire civilization this way.
04:39:18.260
And what happens in that regard is we end up looking like Brazil and we have a purpose and an obligation not to end up like Brazil in America.
04:39:33.960
So this is, you know, this is what blue collar people, you know, bring to the table.
04:39:39.700
But the other thing I want to get into this, too, is is how many of our blue collar workers have taken on the administrative roles now and work in the administrative side of their craft?
04:39:56.700
Because you can only swing a hammer so, so long, you can only carry an 80 pound sack of concrete on your shoulder so long.
04:40:09.120
You can only haul, you know, giant stacks of asphalt shingles up a flight of ladders for so long until you need to find somebody else to do that.
04:40:25.340
And Bosco, you might be one, but, you know, being somebody who learns the craft and is able to get a general contractor's license and start to lead a team and actually do the, you know,
04:40:43.160
I don't doubt you still get out there and swing a hammer, but there is a, there is a transition there, isn't there, that, that comes with mastering a craft and going into, and my uncle, by the way, is like 70 something years old.
04:40:58.440
The one I talked about earlier, the one I talked about earlier, who, who built our, our go-karts 40 years ago.
04:41:05.220
He's, he's still doing construction and he's doing some high level work on mantles for folks in his, in, in his area.
04:41:19.380
He's doing a very, very, very high quality work and he's in his seventies doing that.
04:41:24.920
So, you know, you can do it a long time, but he's not doing the heavy lifting he used to do in his youth.
04:41:34.380
Hey, am I coming through all right or am I still robotic?
04:41:38.180
Yeah, it's still a, a, a breaking up pretty bad.
04:41:49.380
Yeah, Bosco, you're a, you got, you got some kind of a lot of gnarly, gnarly connection going on.
04:42:01.780
Maybe it goes because you raised something that's just so pertinent, but it's a lot.
04:42:07.140
It's, it's one of these fundamentals, I think about what's going on, you know, more so than this.
04:42:14.440
Um, the obvious signs of decay in, in our white countries, there is a, for many years, thousands of years, uh, white countries, Europeans retained this near, uh, religious adoration of these fundamental principles.
04:42:35.280
And like Fitz was saying, this, the history of Greek mathematics up into the, uh, middle ages and into the Renaissance and into the, the establishment of the new world.
04:42:49.080
We had in our, in our, in our craftsmen and our designs in our general perception of, of social structure and cohesion.
04:42:58.880
We had these principles that we did not waver from.
04:43:06.400
And it appears, um, the most material appearance that, uh, the, the forms, the most material form that these principles took was in our architecture for eons.
04:43:19.020
We built these, these, these architectural works, whether it was, uh, military fortifications or religious structures or even housing that had this, these fundamental principles that combined form and function.
04:43:35.000
And it was only recently that we really started abandoning this, um, um, dedication to that, this, this entire dedication to the craft.
04:43:45.100
Uh, we see it in our automobiles today where they're all wind tunneled.
04:43:51.160
There's very little, uh, attention to the aesthetic principle of, of the form that the automobiles, even up into the nineties and early two thousands, automobiles had this, uh, very,
04:44:04.740
very, very aesthetic aspects to them, especially the luxury ones, obviously, but, um, the architecture to the architecture has suffered so much with the reproducible housing, reproducible residential structures, the mass apartment.
04:44:21.640
And in a way we can point to these, you know, horrifically ugly buildings that are, are modern art or, you know, neo brutalist that we see in London and such.
04:44:32.920
But this had set in, uh, like very rapidly after the end of the great war where everything was kind of reduced to this generic shape and, um, bled of its culture.
04:44:48.340
And that's one of the things that I've noticed specifically about white artisans and white craftsmen.
04:44:54.000
And even when I go to Amish country to, uh, and go into their little shops to buy their food, they have this, the packaging will have like small flourishes on it and their, their homes and their barns will have these flourishes on it.
04:45:08.100
But at this like indescribable sense of personality and sense of being with the land to the whole, the whole like edifice of Amishness and, and like the whole personality of the community.
04:45:23.180
We've, we've, we've, we've gotten very far away from that.
04:45:28.960
I'm actually sitting looking at the back of one of these large distribution warehouses and it's all cinder block painted in this kind of gross off white color covered with, you know, rain stains.
04:45:43.460
And there's security cameras everywhere and weeds growing up from the parking lot and rusted semi trailers sitting behind this place.
04:45:52.860
And this is something that in, you know, in, in Vienna would not have been, would not have been tolerated outside of these, um, poor ghetto communities or I guess ghetto is not the correct word.
04:46:07.220
Or these poor quarters of the city where there was pickpockets and people didn't have jobs and there was trash in the street and such, but we have, um, abandoned almost entirely the whole directionality of our aesthetic.
04:46:24.320
And as we, as we, as we, as these, these plagues continue to eat away at our social structure, it's manifest the impact that they're having living in a drab world surrounded by drab buildings and drab generic Calergi peoples is one of the aspects of this despair that many of us feel.
04:46:49.020
And until you, and until you, until it breaks over you, you don't see it, you kind of take it for granted.
04:46:56.420
If you grow up in a city, like I did, you take it for granted and you kind of train yourself to see a charm in these things and look at graffiti murals and think like, wow, that's like, oh, that's like pretty cool.
04:47:08.220
And there's this whole entire mental frame that people will put themselves into look at, like perceive these things as though they're not these, these blisters of sickness popping up all over the land.
04:47:23.380
And there's this, this, this symptomatic, uh, expression of, of an illness that has, uh, been plaguing us, but it's, um, it's too generic, man.
04:47:35.960
This is, this is, we abandoned the fundamental principles.
04:47:41.160
And, uh, that is something that in taking inventory of, of our culture, we recognize this and it's, it can get unpleasant, but I think it's salvageable.
04:47:55.220
It is, it, it, it will reflect in, um, the before and after pictures.
04:48:02.280
And, and that's what we need to remember, right?
04:48:04.460
That we, we look around and we see this, this brutalism and this basic retardation and inversion of aesthetics and beauty.
04:48:12.940
Uh, and, you know, the, uh, what we must do is, is catalog it and archive it as the example.
04:48:22.980
Of, of what happens when you, um, when you allow this subversion and this infiltration, uh, in, within our institutions, uh, because we need to reminder of never, uh, to allow this again.
04:48:37.820
Um, when, uh, as you were talking, I was thinking about a small town in California, it's made, it was, uh, created by the Dutch and the, the beauty of, of, uh, the architecture and the way that, um, the, the Dutch facade, uh, looks.
04:48:58.100
If you know what I'm talking about with the, uh, the, uh, the horizontal and, and diagonal, um, um, uh, trim.
04:49:08.800
That, uh, that, uh, uniquely symbolizes that, that, uh, Dutch aesthetic, uh, it's the, the entire town is this, right?
04:49:18.460
And you drive in and it's like entering into a different world.
04:49:22.180
Uh, you walk the streets and, and the streets are clean and, and smell of pastries.
04:49:28.780
And this is the world, this isn't, it's almost like a Disneyland, uh, uh, experience, uh, right.
04:49:37.680
And like another world almost, this is not how it should be.
04:49:41.000
Uh, the, it's, it's just one of our places where we have, uh, created and, and they have maintained this, uh, this atmosphere and this beauty.
04:49:54.420
Um, the, uh, um, the town still has Viking, um, a Viking or, or, uh, you know, historical museum and it has, uh, several or at least a couple, two, three, maybe, uh, parade celebrations, um, and so forth that exemplify this spirit and they keep it alive.
04:50:21.000
But it is, it is itself under attack and, and the, these, these people who have enjoyed this will also say, you know, it's too white.
04:50:33.500
It is, there's not enough diversity, uh, or it offends those who have never created such a thing, right?
04:50:42.160
It's, it's, and, and these P the, the attitude of these people is we must destroy the wheel because the Africans did not invent it.
04:50:50.300
And then we must help them invent it so they can put something in the, uh, in the annals of history that reflect, uh, their own sense of pride.
04:51:03.800
And, uh, you know what, they've never done anything.
04:51:09.380
And we need to have that sort of attitude because this, our life and our world is beautiful because of the craftsmanship we've put into it and all the way things down to pastries.
04:51:19.100
You brought up a school mass that the culinary arts, uh, are, are exceptional.
04:51:24.060
Uh, is it, you know, it's, it is, um, a, and, and each of our different cultures have created, you know, pastries and, and food and put their touch on it in a way that is uniquely theirs.
04:51:40.860
And this, this was all done, um, without the, the immediate, uh, ability to post it to Instagram and show the world how it's done or TikTok, right?
04:51:52.780
This is, this was done by the soul and spirit of our people rising and improving upon, uh, what culinary experience their people had before them.
04:52:06.100
Um, and then building upon that and building upon that, uh, and there is, this is the soul of our people to improve upon ourselves and improve upon what we've crafted yet and what we will craft then in the future.
04:52:19.800
So it's, uh, it's, uh, it's something that should be respected.
04:52:23.180
Um, you know, the, the blue collar worker, uh, being the one who gets his hands dirty to build the thing that was imagined by another, um, like goes, uh, was spoken about with Bosco and, and him being able to take a, um, an architectural design.
04:52:41.800
And, and, and turn it into a home and the only reason it could become a architectural design is because the architect understands also, uh, the laws of physics, the, the, um, the strength of the material, uh, the, the distance, uh, a thing can go before it must have a, uh, an additional support.
04:53:07.860
Um, though, all of these things go into, uh, this high level exceptionalism that allows, uh, then a, a tradesman to fulfill their part.
04:53:19.760
Uh, and they do it in, in concert, you know, when they build a home, you've got, you know, we had a, the, uh, a guy who worked on foundations, right.
04:53:32.740
And, um, and, um, and the, the foundation is, is, uh, set, right, but it's not, it's not really set first, right.
04:53:42.180
It's, it's set upon the, the infrastructure below it, which is the, uh, there is a pipes for electrical, uh, conduits, right.
04:53:52.520
For electrical to run through pipes for sewage, uh, water coming in, sewage going out.
04:53:58.580
Um, all of these things need to be thought of first and then this foundation gets laid around that and on top of that with these, uh, these ins and outs, uh, for future use.
04:54:11.540
And then the, uh, the next guy comes in and builds the framing, uh, puts up the frame and then the, uh, then the plumbing and the electrical guys come in and set things in the walls.
04:54:23.640
And then the drywall comes in and puts the drywall on, then the cabinet guys come in, put the cabinets in and then the floor guys come in, put the floor in.
04:54:31.420
Then the lighting guys come back and install all the installations on the lighting.
04:54:35.240
And then the, the shower guys come in, they put in all the showers and the shower heads and so forth and so on.
04:54:40.680
Um, and all of this happens in a way that we can pay for, uh, and it's so efficient and so, so well done that we have these, these, uh, these palaces, you know, any of our homes would be considered palaces.
04:54:56.840
Now, even a hundred years ago, these are, these are exceptional buildings and we deserve to, uh, to keep them exceptional for another hundred years.
04:55:07.260
And, uh, and, you know, this is, this is our culture.
04:55:14.500
Uh, but ultimately they need to go, uh, do it in their, their country and for their people where we must continue rising, uh, and doing it, uh, even more and more.
04:55:26.840
Exceptionally, uh, for our people and doing, and, and craftsmanship, we can hand down to our children and our children's children and, and maintain our, uh, legacy, uh, forever and ever and do it in a way that, that, uh, that expresses honor for our history.
04:55:49.840
You know, like Fredericksburg, Texas is, uh, is a German town and there's, uh, there's a German legacy there.
04:56:00.180
It's not just, uh, a commercial, um, manufactured home in, in a corporate, uh, um, uh, think tank, right?
04:56:17.740
We come together and we decide this is where we want to build.
04:56:20.660
Uh, we find there's water, we find there's sunshine and all the things that, that, uh, you know, make life worth living.
04:56:31.400
And the, even in America and in Europe's like this too, but even in America, now you're getting this, these groups of people who come in and they're, it's like, they're living.
04:56:43.840
They're taking a museum trip through our world as if it's, it's, uh, it's, that's what it's worth.
04:56:56.060
And, and this is what we, uh, want to pass on to future, uh, children and get rid of things that are poisonous to them and make, make, uh, uh, places that they can live in comfort.
04:57:09.480
Parks that where they can go and play, and they don't have to worry about razor blades and needles in the grass.
04:57:14.800
And they don't have to worry about, you know, um, nons, uh, uh, you know, treating them in a, a way that makes sense to the non, uh, you know, that is very European and also the accountability.
04:57:28.540
So we've got, you know, we have a beautiful history in all of this.
04:57:33.120
Um, I was happy to, uh, to hear a lot of that from, uh, from the listeners.
04:57:37.420
Um, and if anybody else, uh, has experience in, in, uh, areas that we haven't touched on, uh, if you're a plumber, um, you know, uh, my, you know, plumbers are in my family.
04:57:51.400
Um, I'm, I'm, you know, familiar with that industry as well.
04:57:58.840
Uh, you know, it's a, it's a dirty job and, uh, you know, God bless them for doing it.
04:58:05.520
Somebody has to, and it doesn't need to be, you know, these, these jobs don't need to be for Mexicans.
04:58:10.040
They can be for white men, uh, and get paid $165 an hour to have some guy come out and do my plumbing.
04:58:19.900
And I would rather have that bill knowing it's going to my buddy than to have a $75 bill and have Juan come over with Juan and Jose and come in and, uh, you, we're going to do this for you.
04:58:47.580
Uh, so I think I'm basically qualified as a plumber.
04:59:17.800
You were, you're coming in and out a little bit.
04:59:19.620
That, that last sentence that you gave, uh, was really coming in really well.
04:59:23.400
So, uh, we can get you back up here, uh, with a clean connection.
04:59:52.340
I said, uh, you know, I used to sniff glue as a teenager, so I'm basically qualified as
05:00:11.880
Well, you didn't, you didn't, uh, you know, uh, inaccurately, inaccurately describe some of
05:00:20.760
You know, interesting mythos that you discussed, it kind of opened this topic on something about
05:00:26.040
the Roman bath house that had, was using heated air to warm the pool, to warm the bath
05:00:32.620
and fascinating that as you're discussing plumbing, it comes back to me that I was, I
05:00:38.820
intended to kind of ricochet off that with this, um, for those of you who have not seen, there
05:00:46.580
is a pump that is found in, uh, the, uh, I can't believe I'm drawing a blank on the name
05:00:59.840
There's a pump in the bath house of Pompeii that, uh, was discovered during an archeological,
05:01:06.820
uh, ex, exhibition or, um, you know, excursion.
05:01:15.620
The way that the Romans were able to figure out the plumbing problem is incredible.
05:01:25.020
Everything from the aqueducts, the reservoirs, the piping through many of their buildings,
05:01:31.720
the fountains, um, during the, I think the reforms of one of, one of the huge ref reforms
05:01:40.100
that went down in Roman society brought, uh, large public fountains to several of the cities
05:01:46.840
in Rome or several of the quarters in Rome that before had no access to fresh water.
05:01:51.740
And, uh, these were like completely, there's, there's no way to describe how futuristic this
05:01:59.420
was at the time, because this would have been the equivalent of like an anti-gravity machine
05:02:04.160
to us, what the Romans were able to accomplish with their waterworks, um, that other places
05:02:09.800
would have been, this was not just merely, you know, gravity fed fountains and gravity fed
05:02:15.080
reservoirs that were able to pipe water, but they actually were able to construct these complicated
05:02:19.860
pump systems throughout the city and, uh, provide like a whole sewage system and everything to
05:02:27.900
And it's incredible that, um, all of this was the Romans would hide this stuff, you know,
05:02:36.060
They had this ideal approach to these form and function relationships where they were able
05:02:42.860
to get these resources in it, get this infrastructure built well, maintaining the wonderful, beautiful
05:02:52.380
I mean, there were quarters, some quarters that were, uh, near nightmarish at some, some
05:02:57.380
periods of Roman history, but the, um, their sewage works and their plumbing systems were
05:03:04.020
Um, and it's a, a very proud part of European history.
05:03:08.260
I think, uh, a massive infrastructure achievements of Rome combined with the aesthetics, their,
05:03:17.320
And, uh, the first true Aryan imperium, I would say that we have record of at least that, um,
05:03:27.460
you know, within the past 6,000 years, the, the things that they were able to do were incredible.
05:03:33.860
There's so many good videos about the way they, they built bridges and roads and aqueducts,
05:03:42.540
And, uh, the Africans can't maintain a bridge that, uh, was built for them by Europeans 50
05:03:50.000
So they use ropes to cross these, uh, gaps instead of being able to.
05:03:58.680
They have to ferry across their basket of goods and then crawl across the rope.
05:04:03.860
Yeah, it's the level of, of their, uh, their, it's their highest level thinking is, uh, is
05:04:12.360
to, uh, take, take apart what is made and beautiful and, and utilize it for, uh, its, uh, lowest
05:04:21.840
and, uh, worst use instead of, uh, understanding how to, uh, deliver anything about the highest
05:04:29.980
and best use, uh, it's, it's, uh, it's something that if we can teach them, it would take 10,000
05:04:37.000
years and this isn't efficient use of our time.
05:04:39.480
So, uh, uh, well, adios, tick tock, adios, uh, Schvald, Schvald, Schvald, go ahead.
05:04:47.620
Hey, no, I, uh, I just wanted to say thanks for having me on.
05:04:50.160
I got to take off here in a little bit and, uh, skull.
05:04:53.140
I apologize for the shenanigans earlier, buddy.
05:04:56.220
I, I, I, I realize you're frustrated and it is, it is, it is, uh, we should have our,
05:05:02.920
our white men should be prioritized even if they do have, you know, and that's crazy
05:05:06.940
because the honesty too, but anyway, anyway, thanks for coming up, Schvald, it's good to
05:05:14.960
I, I always, I always really enjoy talking with y'all.
05:05:21.960
Roman's up, uh, and white power, everyone take care.
05:05:29.300
Just, uh, you know, if, if there's a will, there's a way brother.
05:05:33.180
So that's, that's the way I would approach that entire thing.
05:05:36.560
If this is, uh, what you want, then go ahead and get it and push and don't let anybody, uh,
05:05:42.440
And if, if you have to do, uh, deal with, uh, truth and, uh, and, and all of this, do it.
05:05:49.460
And what you'll find, I think is that as you push and push and push, uh, you'll find,
05:05:56.020
that maybe the, the, the position and the place that you are attempting to, uh, get into
05:06:04.100
doesn't quite work out, but something else, uh, in the vein of that will.
05:06:11.960
And, and then that is the way, uh, that you might want to take that, uh, career path as
05:06:18.220
it is provided to you and, and opportune to you.
05:06:21.120
So don't, don't stop wanting and don't stop working toward what you want, uh, and then
05:06:25.880
let the, uh, universe respond with something that may just blow your mind.
05:06:34.380
Uh, yeah, I was going to say, uh, I'm a barber and I get guys coming in all the time that are,
05:06:38.960
uh, small business owners and, uh, different trades and everything from electricians and
05:06:43.660
But I mean, plumbing, man, that's definitely a great job.
05:06:46.400
I've seen multiple guys come in that are retired, um, that ran their own company and
05:06:50.200
they got houses all over the country, vacationing all the time, living it up.
05:06:53.660
So it's, uh, to get into trade and especially now with the boomers are going out, there's
05:06:58.560
going to be plenty of businesses coming up in the next 10 years for sales.
05:07:01.060
So I always encourage young kids, you know, getting trade and everything, especially the,
05:07:07.940
I always thought that was a good trade to get into, but that's all I have to say.
05:07:14.860
Uh, a lot of these things you don't even think about as, as, um, niche, uh, trades to get
05:07:23.720
It's, uh, it's, uh, it's a singular, um, specialty that, uh, to be quite honest, if you look at
05:07:30.820
the, uh, um, you look at the customer base, um, I'll tell you, I'll tell you this, this
05:07:44.220
He's a, he is a, um, uh, uh, an exceptional ghost writer, number one ghost writer in the
05:07:53.440
You can find him here on X, uh, and he has a rule.
05:08:01.580
Uh, and basically what it is, it's, it's accepting that when you get good enough, they're just going
05:08:11.280
Uh, it's, it's, it completely relates to the fed jacketing and the, in the other jacketing
05:08:20.680
Uh, it's, it was his way of, of taking that and making it benefit him.
05:08:33.080
They call you fake, uh, because he's a, he's an exceptional and prolific writer, uh, with
05:08:38.940
a, with an actual career, uh, path that, um, they, uh, that he gets called a liar, a fake.
05:08:48.320
Uh, he's like, there's a, there's like, there's no way you actually did all of that.
05:08:52.100
And, um, one of the, of his other, um, principles is no broke boys.
05:08:57.500
Uh, he, he has a principle called no broke boys.
05:09:00.720
And what he means by that, uh, in the way that he described it is when you're dealing
05:09:09.600
with wealthy people and accomplished people, uh, they pay upfront and they pay on time and
05:09:17.900
When you are dealing with broke boys, they pay late and all they do is complain.
05:09:23.980
And so that I was relating to this, to the elevator, um, trade, the elevator repairman
05:09:30.480
trade, your, uh, clientele is, um, is a very promising clientele and that, and that's also
05:09:41.280
what you should look at, um, that who are you going to be serving here?
05:09:47.800
What kind of clientele are you going to be serving here?
05:09:50.160
And if, uh, you can serve the right clientele with your niche, um, career path, then you
05:10:04.520
And ultimately we want to get to a place and we've talked about it where we're just working
05:10:10.700
among white people with white people for white people by white people, uh, networking with
05:10:16.860
Um, but until then we need to take a look at reality and, and do whatever you can to
05:10:23.540
improve your station, uh, improve your pocketbook so that you can then assist your, your white
05:10:33.220
Not a handout and to be able to, uh, network with very smart people and very wise people
05:10:38.960
and very wealthy people as you elevate yourself from wherever you are to wherever you're going
05:10:45.080
Uh, but we need people in all levels of accomplishment, um, from the, uh, the manual laborer to the
05:10:54.640
CEO, to the, the inventor and the entrepreneur and the politician, et cetera.
05:11:04.840
I'll be real quick, but I just wanted to say that white people are really good.
05:11:07.920
Um, especially in the North, I'm moving down back down South cause I love the South, but
05:11:11.880
in the North business, um, mentality is really good.
05:11:15.420
You go into a city and you open up a business or whatever, and people help you.
05:11:18.440
They'll send people to you and then, you know, you support them, but, um, just, they're really
05:11:24.860
And you don't see that whether the communities, well, I should say like the blacks, basically
05:11:28.540
you see it with the Asians and, and the, uh, Middle Easterners.
05:11:32.280
But yeah, we're real good at that and, uh, I'm proud of that for sure.
05:11:35.520
Cause you, you know, when you hook up, uh, businesses with other businesses, then you
05:11:39.440
see money being made because of you and, uh, white people, we thrive at that, man.
05:11:48.300
Seeing that a lot in my field and we are going to shift over to 1488 radio.
05:11:54.840
Now it is that time of day, brothers and sisters.
05:11:57.280
So thank you for joining us for another excellent white power lunch hour.
05:12:01.440
I am your host skull mask, and this is your other host mythos.
05:12:09.680
It's been a pleasure and we will see you tomorrow.
05:12:23.320
Exactly when we're supposed to turn it over white, right?
05:12:36.340
I'm walking out of the warehouse right now to head to my car for some high levels of
05:12:47.040
Well, if we could ask, uh, and we missed this entirely, uh, last hour, but I think, uh,
05:12:56.660
Paladin did a great job, uh, in the, uh, during area immunity of doing this.
05:13:01.920
Uh, so we got through hours, uh, maybe without needing it, but if you would all, uh, repost the
05:13:08.700
space out announcing the start of 1488 radio, uh, and we can begin to, uh, move through the
05:13:17.600
exceptional next three hours of white power, uh, we'll get this started here on 1488 radio.
05:13:24.360
We observed the 14 words, which are, we must secure the existence of our people in the
05:13:30.760
And the second part of that, uh, is that the white, the beauty of the white Aryan woman
05:13:38.460
does not perish from the earth or shall not perish from the earth.
05:13:42.620
I forget now, but, um, these, uh, these are the 14 words, uh, the 88 precepts, uh, can be
05:13:50.280
found in their complete total at David lane, 1488.com.
05:13:55.860
Uh, or you can download a PDF and also, uh, jump into a bunch of other information on
05:14:02.120
that site that will take your power levels to, uh, levels that you have never before known.
05:14:18.960
So with that, uh, you know, we have a few rules here on, uh, on 1488 radio and that
05:14:25.840
is, uh, that, uh, you are free to come up and, uh, grab a mic, push that little microphone
05:14:32.180
button on your device and, uh, join the, uh, request queue.
05:14:38.500
You, uh, when you're on stage, raise your hand and we will get to you in order.
05:14:45.720
Those are permanent panelists and VIPs, as well as our fellow co-hosts.
05:14:51.060
White Reich is, uh, one of our co-hosts, uh, other co-hosts that we have.
05:15:01.040
Um, and, uh, and that's, that's our, our co-hosts, uh, squad right now.
05:15:06.860
Um, we also have VIPs, uh, HT, also known as Abrahamic L's, uh, a founder of 1488 radio,
05:15:20.640
Uh, he can be found in all his glory on GoyamTV.com.
05:15:25.560
If you're not unaware of that, go over there, make an account.
05:15:28.920
We are streaming over there right now, as well as on rumble, uh, dot com.
05:15:33.700
And you can go search us up over there as well as entropy.
05:15:37.740
And, uh, some other rules of the road here is once you get up on stage, you raise your
05:15:44.940
Uh, we do hope that you are sober, uh, and, uh, are able to articulate your thoughts and
05:15:53.400
If not, we will, uh, send you back down to the listeners where you can think about your
05:15:59.440
actions and what you want to do in the future to comport yourself to white excellence and
05:16:06.320
Um, that said, uh, we also, uh, want to keep, uh, theological debates and discussions to a
05:16:18.340
Well, they are not the most exceptional topics, although, uh, there is some, uh, truth to that.
05:16:26.140
There's some, uh, uh, issues that we face as a white people as a result of certain, uh,
05:16:34.400
But here at 1488, we want the white power at its ultimate extreme.
05:16:39.360
And that means unity at every opportunity, uh, and keeping those discussions to a minimum.
05:16:45.480
Um, um, HT and Abrahamic Elves does host some late night, uh, conversations around those,
05:16:54.260
And if you're interested in that, you certainly can, uh, find him on the internet and, uh,
05:17:00.240
and get, uh, get his, uh, opinion on all of that there.
05:17:16.220
We want everything to be intact as much as possible.
05:17:18.880
Uh, we'll destroy what needs to be destroyed after we regain the sovereignty of our states
05:17:27.620
Uh, and, uh, which point we can blow up anything that we want to in the right way.
05:17:33.400
And in a white area manner that, that reduces harm and, uh, capitalizes on assets and investments
05:17:42.560
Uh, we want to remove all nons from all positions of power and influence because they are not
05:17:51.200
They are not a part of our people and they don't belong here.
05:17:54.680
Uh, we, uh, we know this because, uh, we're white and they are not.
05:18:01.280
So we don't have any, uh, nons come up to stage and talk to us because we're not interested
05:18:06.240
in what you have to say, uh, based on what we're seeing.
05:18:09.800
I don't think we have many nons in the audience right now.
05:18:20.580
Um, and, uh, outside of that white, go ahead, man.
05:18:35.080
Uh, make sure you share at the very least our rumble channel with all of your friends
05:18:41.060
and families, uh, your coworkers, people who are on the fence and are looking for answers,
05:18:47.900
solutions, or just, you know, pro white content.
05:18:51.380
Rumble is probably a little bit more on the safe side, but if you do have buddies that
05:18:56.880
have embraced the Vril and need, uh, a little bit more Swazis in their life, you can go to
05:19:07.280
I want to say the chat on Goyam TV is a lot more active as well in comparison to Rumble
05:19:14.300
So let's get a healthy competition between Rumble and Goyam TV going in regards to our follower
05:19:22.940
Um, but I do have something that I wanted to bring up in today's beginning conversations.
05:19:30.240
It came to my attention yesterday that there was some, I'm not a hundred percent sure what
05:19:36.340
committee these individuals on, but, uh, Rep Raskin and Rep Mouskowitz, uh, two Jews, uh,
05:19:47.040
were kvetching in the halls of Congress yesterday about, uh, how terrified they are of anti-Semitism
05:20:00.400
I, I'm, I'm telling you guys right now, we're doing a lot of good work.
05:20:04.560
I posted up into the Jumbotron this, uh, short 54 second clip.
05:20:10.280
I encourage all of you guys to like, to take a look at this, but they, the, the noticing
05:20:17.300
is not stopping and they're noticing our noticing and they are terrified of it because we are in
05:20:25.920
these people's timelines replying away, calling them foreign assets, calling them Israel shills,
05:20:33.940
calling them the tiny hat, happy merchant mother efforts that they are, and that they are truly
05:20:39.840
foreign assets with no allegiance to ethnic Americans.
05:20:43.680
The United States of America, our founding fathers or the country that we, uh, hold near
05:20:49.400
and dear to our heart, you know, hug that flag.
05:20:53.580
Despite it being in the condition that it is right now, we got a country to save.
05:20:58.880
And, uh, in that clip, more or less, um, Mouskowitz is talking about the woke, right?
05:21:04.820
Um, he's saying, you know, the woke, right there, they're in my timeline, calling me a foreign
05:21:15.140
They don't like Israel, uh, they don't like Jews.
05:21:18.960
And, uh, I just want to say, I'm proud of each and every one of you, right?
05:21:23.440
We've all been putting a lot of work in regards to a shared message against these foreign actors
05:21:29.560
and foreign interests that continue to plague our homelands.
05:21:35.680
Um, so big W's we're, we're putting up W's left and right here.
05:21:45.120
All it's going to take is, uh, maybe a few old people getting out of the way.
05:21:53.560
I'm not going to get too harsh about it, but get out of the way, old people.
05:21:57.700
We got a country to save and you like Jews too much.
05:22:01.200
So go, go drink your lemonade, play your bingo and, and, and stop voting.
05:22:06.920
Um, please, for God's sake, please stop voting because it seems like the youth are going to be all right.
05:22:13.640
The, the zoomers and Jen alpha are in a great place.
05:22:20.340
I got a few other ones that I can post in the comments below and post above in the pill.
05:22:28.100
But I think for the most part, um, it's, uh, it's a big white pill.
05:22:40.620
I look forward to, uh, getting onto that, that, uh, clip there.
05:22:44.000
I, I was seeing a bit of it, uh, on the timeline.
05:22:49.700
So I will do that at my earliest convenience here.
05:22:53.140
I'll say, I'll say this, just a brief preface of, of what the clip entails.
05:22:59.460
So, you know, what rep Mouskowitz is, is talking about in here is that he is witnessing the extreme
05:23:08.940
elements of the right and the extreme elements of the left hating Jews.
05:23:15.180
And it is pressing into the middle, into the center field and becoming more and more, uh,
05:23:24.340
And I guess, uh, a common ideology between both factions.
05:23:42.260
And, uh, with that, we've got radio and Steve on stage.
05:23:46.300
Uh, either of you want to give intros, uh, some, uh, open up some dialogue here as we
05:24:00.800
That's what I came here today for the liver King shakes.
05:24:20.400
Uh, for those of you who know Sizzler, uh, I just come for the liver.
05:24:24.940
Uh, I've got an announcement after this week, I'm going to be stepping back from 1488 radio
05:24:37.040
for a few weeks, uh, because I've got other things I've got to focus on in real life.
05:24:42.320
So, um, um, I'll miss you guys while I'm gone, but I will be back.
05:24:46.260
Uh, it's just a little break to, uh, to get done more important things that I have to prioritize,
05:24:53.360
but, uh, I'll be here for the rest of this week.
05:24:56.280
Um, and, um, something that can contribute to the conversation here.
05:25:00.540
I, it was brought to my attention that the Jewish subreddit on reddit.com is kvetching
05:25:08.460
about the return to the land community and trying to get it shut down.
05:25:17.240
I want to say that's almost bigger news than Rep Mauskowitz losing his shit in Congress.
05:25:25.880
Can you share details about what's going on outside of them just kvetching?
05:25:33.720
So someone posted it to the, uh, the Jewish community.
05:25:38.780
I think the X account of the person has been identified.
05:25:46.040
Um, but basically being like, boy, babe, this can't happen.
05:25:52.160
Uh, everyone needs to go and report this to the, you know, state and federal governments
05:25:59.940
So, you know, they have a legal framework and, um, you know, pretty sure it'll stand up
05:26:05.600
to challenges, but, you know, Jews can't stand white people creating their own intentionally
05:26:12.520
white communities, even though they have their own exclusively Jewish communities.
05:26:23.000
And, uh, that'll be interesting to dig out what the arguments there are and, uh, and where
05:26:29.400
Uh, they are, they are very clever framers, uh, in terms of, of, uh, creating narratives and
05:26:42.100
So this will be very interesting to see what they're doing there.
05:26:48.040
So, so essentially what they're saying is that they're allowed to have intentional Jewish
05:26:53.100
communities with their own police, their own markets, their own apartment buildings,
05:26:57.880
their own schools, their own synagogues, their own college grants, et cetera, et cetera.
05:27:04.860
But whitey, if you're doing it, it is unacceptable.
05:27:15.860
Why these people are, are all, all, sorry, are all of our racial enemies until they no longer
05:27:26.120
And I will end with a statement with is that this show is for entertainment purposes only.
05:27:31.140
Uh, no threats should be made in the duration of this show.
05:27:34.940
And if there are any threats that are made, it is just comedy.
05:27:44.900
Well, presumably a Jew, um, put in the replies that, you know, highlighting the fact that there
05:27:51.620
are exclusively Jewish communities and the author of the Reddit post said, well, no, any
05:27:57.720
non-Jew can move in and we all know that that's not actually the case, um, that people that
05:28:04.820
have tried to do that, or that were already living in areas that Jews were seeking to take
05:28:10.180
over were either, you know, uh, bought out or they were threatened out, harassed out.
05:28:20.300
They put a bag of foreskins on the old lady's doorstep and said, it's time to move or else
05:28:27.340
Is there, is there a way to, uh, to circumvent this, uh, and nip it in the bud?
05:28:34.340
Um, what if, uh, we wrapped the entire RTTL community with a fishing line and called it an
05:28:44.700
Aruv, uh, would that work, um, to, uh, to delineate the magic land that is RTTL?
05:28:52.940
I, I, I say that in jest, but this is the, these are the, the, the things that these retards,
05:28:58.240
these retards, uh, perform and think that they are circumventing God's law, uh, right.
05:29:05.680
By, uh, creating an Aruv with a fishing line around Manhattan and other places.
05:29:11.060
Um, it's, it's odd that we have to deal with these people at all, especially with, uh, in,
05:29:17.720
in court and an attack like this on, on sovereignty and, uh, and segregation.
05:29:25.000
Uh, but it is because they're afraid back to Mouskowitz, right?
05:29:28.760
It's because they are afraid because if they don't have a, uh, a termite in the wood pile,
05:29:36.620
uh, then they know that it will illuminate the reality that one, we're way better off without
05:29:47.260
them, uh, two, that we can certainly live without them, uh, and three, that in fact they are the
05:29:59.580
It is actually just them that ruins everything.
05:30:05.640
Um, well, and you know, onto Moskowitz and a little bit into what Steve brought up is when
05:30:16.300
we observe the undertones of what Moskowitz said, and in the same thing that, um, Jamie Raskin,
05:30:23.820
also a Jew said, is that they are alluding to the idea that freedom of speech is dangerous.
05:30:33.460
And this seems to be a big pattern amongst Jewish communities internationally is that freedom
05:30:42.520
of speech and freedom of association in regards to return to the land hurts their bottom dollar
05:30:49.800
because they want you uprooted, they want you silenced, they want you spread out, discombobulated,
05:30:59.620
not networking amongst your racial kin, not promoting pro-white ideologies.
05:31:05.600
So that way they can continue to extort and parasite and like what Mythos just brought up, corrode
05:31:14.540
the economies and the societies that they occupy until eventually they take their shekels and
05:31:27.460
Um, and I think now more than ever, the Jews hand is visible for everyone to see.
05:31:36.120
They do not value freedom and all of its forms.
05:31:40.000
They are authoritarian at heart and any, and I mean any type of criticisms that you give
05:31:48.620
their ways, you will automatically be labeled an anti-Semite.
05:31:53.220
And I think I saw a post earlier today, it was a meme, but it was from some Jew that survived
05:32:01.480
It might've been one of our 1488, uh, permanent panelists that posted it.
05:32:05.760
But, um, the definition of anti-Semitism doesn't mean the hatred for Jews in the year 2025.
05:32:14.380
No, the definition of anti-Semitism means whoever the Jews don't like.
05:32:21.800
If you are a target for Jews, it has nothing to do with you hating them anymore and everything
05:32:27.940
to do of them wielding this bullshit as a means to silence you and pit your peers and
05:32:36.620
Because if you're an anti-Semite, well, anti-Semitism needs to be eradicated.
05:32:42.580
And what we just learned yesterday, speaking about Mark Levin, it's in our DNA as white people.
05:32:50.000
Jews internationally want to eradicate anti-Semitism, which means ultimately they want to eradicate
05:32:59.640
And there's no strings, ifs, ands, or buts about it.
05:33:09.640
If you can't see the writing on the wall at this point, I almost want nothing to do with you.
05:33:20.300
I got hearts and minds that I need to capture that are willing to hear the message.
05:33:25.920
But if you're not receptive to these things in the year 2025, you're fucking cooked.
05:33:34.380
Yeah, so the reason I was a few minutes late joining this space was I made an edit of this
05:33:45.920
It's got a very catchy song by one of our favorite parody songmakers, Eugen Haas.
05:33:54.240
Yeah, one thing that that I resonated with on that last rip there, White, is the classification of anti-Semitism, what they really mean when they say it.
05:34:14.080
What I have put up on the timeline myself is that Nazi means white person, and that's pretty much the bottom line.
05:34:24.400
What they mean when they say Nazi is white person.
05:34:27.260
When they say punch a Nazi, they mean white person.
05:34:29.680
And when they have movies about killing the Nazis, it's fantasy about white people and everything that we are.
05:34:40.000
This brings into question here a topic I was going to bring up earlier.
05:34:46.680
I'm glad we didn't because there might be a lot of meat on the bone for this one.
05:34:50.360
What is going on between Wasson Watches and Dissident Soaps?
05:34:58.960
I'm pretty sure I know whose side I'm on at this point.
05:35:01.560
At first, it was a little bit ambiguous because I wasn't fully caught up.
05:35:07.200
But Wasson Watches, Dissident Soap, what's going on there in terms of, yes, again, these people who are hiding in the woodpile?
05:35:21.040
So what I've been able to gauge, and I'm going to have details that I'm not 100% educated on.
05:35:32.680
So please feel free to correct me if I'm wrong, but apparently Wasson Watches is a far-right or right-wing adjacent watch company that tries to appeal to the right-wing ideology where Dissident Soap is, let's face it,
05:35:58.840
an alt-right nationalist, national socialist brand that panders towards racists and anti-Semites like ourselves.
05:36:10.420
So if you guys didn't know about it, go follow Dissident Soaps and potentially buy some of his merch because you are supporting a white business and a white family when you do that.
05:36:21.920
But apparently Dissident Soaps got into the replies, which led to Wasson Watches kind of freaking out.
05:36:32.820
And things have been uncovered in regards to the origins of Wasson Watches and how fake they are.
05:36:41.560
Because apparently the founder and the CEO in some way, shape, or form worked in national security.
05:36:51.940
Now, again, I'm not claiming to know all of the details.
05:36:59.320
So if anybody does have more details on that drama that's unfolding, feel free to come up and give us the entirety of the lore.
05:37:07.000
But on the timeline, that's kind of what I was able to gauge.
05:37:11.020
And what it's led to is a lot of our folk right individuals hitting the timeline hard in their replies, making hilarious memes, and essentially just shitting all over Wasson Watches.
05:37:32.380
So we're going to win them with laughter and owning their replies.
05:37:50.500
One of the replies was, I'd say go for it on the condition of the zoo being behind tall fences with barbed wire and guard towers looking in.
05:38:00.680
With one gated access point at which the border control will be vetting everyone that wants to go out from inside the compound.
05:38:09.380
So just like Gaza, the Jews who constantly kvetch about being put in war camps in Germany in the 20th century, want to put everyone that they don't like in concentration camps and act like it's some sort of exercise of human rights.
05:38:30.680
So not only do Jews hate you and will call you an anti-Semite if they hate you, they will also gleefully put you in open air concentration camps and act like it's some sort of social justice.
05:38:50.220
Meanwhile, crying about, you know, having been put in war camps 85 years ago.
05:38:56.180
Yeah, you know, I think this calls for Bastion 1488 to make a star of David brand.
05:39:04.940
And we just, you know, we grab people like Mark Levin.
05:39:08.820
We fucking cattle brand them with a big star of David on their forehead and throw them in the camps.
05:39:22.600
You know, when we seize power, there's going to be plenty of space for all of these traitors, Jews and politicians.
05:39:45.860
From what I've gathered, it looks like something triggered him or the owner of the account or the owner of Wasson Watches and having to do with anti-Semitism.
05:40:00.260
And led to him posting the worn-out Jewish meme of the fictional tough Jew, Quentin Tarantino's fictional tough Jew, hitting the Aryan Chad in the head with the baseball bat from the absolute abomination of a film.
05:40:25.440
And he made the worst film ever, and it's called Inglourious Bastards, and it's absolute joke.
05:40:34.920
So he posts this, and that, of course, gets dogpiled and then doubled down by saying he did the meme.
05:40:45.440
There's no place in Christianity and conservatism, and I'm the right wing for anti-Semitism.
05:40:51.100
And went on kvetching and kvetching, and it looks like this data about him being a glowy is pretty spot on and some ties to Israel in there.
05:41:05.660
So what's interesting about this is this is on the heels of a – or actually not even on the heels.
05:41:13.560
This is a contemporary event to the unmasking of Truth Teller, which I'm not exactly sure how accurate the information is about Truth Teller being a poopskin.
05:41:28.100
But following the Stu Peters event, following the Truth Teller event, and now this, the grifting is off the charts.
05:41:38.460
The grifting is astronomical levels, and it shows you that all we need to do to provide for our people is some good products.
05:41:52.320
I remember watching them come up, and they faced a lot of criticism, and, you know, they were accused of grifting.
05:42:01.440
And I remember watching them come up and getting where they deserve to be, getting the recognition that they deserve to be for offering a good, high-quality product without a bunch of weird chemicals in it that are going to make your dick fall off for a decent price.
05:42:16.320
And supporting a good cause and a good craftsman, and Wasson came in, and apparently the watches that Wasson sells, they sell overpriced.
05:42:29.300
There's a lot of criticisms going on there, but it's incredible how rife with grifters we've been lately, and I love seeing them exposed for who they are.
05:42:46.320
So, Hamilton's like an entry-level Swiss watch.
05:42:53.780
This just – I think this is the skull mess point.
05:42:56.120
These Wasson watches are Hamilton clones that they sell for more money.
05:43:05.380
They barely make the grade to even be entry-level Swiss watches.
05:43:09.160
And they're a clone of a Hamilton that sells for more than a Hamilton, which is a pretty entry-level Swiss watch in and of itself.
05:43:15.380
But it's all Chinese parts with the Swiss movement.
05:43:18.080
So, the bracelet, the casing, and then it's a basic Swiss movement.
05:43:25.660
This is like right-wing Zog Slop for, you know, like the MAGA crowd who wants to support this base watch company, this American watch company, when everything's Chinese and it's entry-level Swiss movement.
05:43:39.140
And I think the moral of the story is I think that the – one of the owners, yeah, they're probably Intel bros, and they also – I think that they have some Jewish ancestry too.
05:43:50.260
So, that's sort of, I think, the moral of the story.
05:43:52.000
I mean, that was what I was able to ascertain just looking into it a little bit.
05:43:55.740
Radio, and I think what sparked this initial conflict as well is that all of these based right-wing accounts came out of the woodwork in regards to the Israel-Iran conflict out of nowhere where they've kept their mouth shut and other situations and other circumstances.
05:44:19.920
But as soon as this Israel-Iran conflict started to happen, they all started parroting these similar talking points.
05:44:29.360
And in regard to this truth-teller thing, he – whether it's 100 percent true or false, I obviously don't know.
05:44:39.680
But I would bet to say that it is 100 percent true.
05:44:43.960
But in regards to the truth-teller thing, he's been outed as an Iranian nationalist in Canada, right?
05:44:58.820
You can observe the overwhelming support for the camel jockeys in Iran, which is a big tell.
05:45:07.780
And then also, if you've observed him over the last year and a half to two years, whenever he's been on stage or in a position of authority in regards to co-host, and you start to present anti-Muslim rhetoric, it is an immediate chimp out and banned from the stage.
05:45:28.980
So, I think things are adding up properly in regards to this truth-teller docs.
05:45:34.280
And if I could be completely honest with you, I think us white nationalists, especially people who have been on point with our messaging and rhetoric on 1488 over almost two years now,
05:45:47.260
This is a prime example why these intellectual Anons that are Jew naming need to be properly vetted and trusted with a grain of salt.
05:46:00.160
Because, yet again, we have another brown Anon account that is advocating for this multiracial Jew naming alliance.
05:46:09.260
When it turns out, he's only serving his bottom dollar, wanting to stay in a white country, while simultaneously espousing rhetoric that is anti-nationalist of the country that he lives in.
05:46:24.160
So, boom, bada-bing, bada-boom, stop trusting these anonymous accounts that have this big reach, that are just naming the Jews, because, yet again, another brownoid outed.
05:46:44.360
And what is the number one thing that these two individuals have in common?
05:46:50.820
They want to buddy up with white people in regards to naming the Jew and expelling the Jews,
05:47:05.640
I don't need Jose, and whatever your weird Middle Eastern name is, Mohammed Momo, right?
05:47:13.640
I don't need Momo on my team to expel the fucking Jew from my country.
05:47:18.040
I need a racial majority to step up, put on their fucking boots, because it's time to do the hard things.
05:47:26.340
And that means getting Momo out of my fucking country.
05:47:29.240
That means getting 1984 out of my fucking country.
05:47:32.220
1984, another great example, teaching his black neighbor how to shoot guns properly so that fucking groid can grow up and kill white people.
05:47:45.620
Fuck all of these Anons that are claiming to have this multiracial alliance bullshit in regards to expelling the Jews,
05:47:52.220
because it's some type of international problem, and we need to care about other fucking countries.
05:47:59.960
I'm only going to give a fuck about white countries, and primarily the main country that I'm going to be focused on is America,
05:48:14.100
I don't care about El Salvador or Guatemala or Venezuela and the Sephardic Jews that they got down there.
05:48:23.920
So take your multiracial Jew naming alliance and shove it up your fucking ass, you traitors.
05:48:39.680
If you look at this stuff that Truth Teller was peddling,
05:48:42.560
if you go to UNS.com or you go to Caspian Report or you go to – I can't remember.
05:48:55.340
What you see is this – if you read between the lines, you get Duganism.
05:49:00.400
You get this pan-Asian, multipolar, essentially rebooted third-worldism without the communist filth thrown in there.
05:49:12.080
That it says like, oh, if we can create a Cossack, Cossackstan, Moscow, Tehran, Beijing, Philippines line,
05:49:29.960
And what Dugan – a lot of the things Dugan says is that, you know,
05:49:34.640
what's really holding pan-Euro-Asianism back, I believe he calls it pan-Euro-Asianism or something like that,
05:49:42.680
is these divisions between white and, you know, Middle Eastern and such.
05:49:49.600
And so this is – it's interesting because you see this thing about the Kremlin influence.
05:49:56.620
And it's something that actually has to be taken quite seriously that we have – there is a fifth column in the digital ecosystem
05:50:11.900
They do not – absolutely do not want what's good for us.
05:50:15.140
And what they're seeing is the opportunity to strike at the core of our well-being
05:50:20.280
by further deteriorating our racial collectivism in the West.
05:50:25.640
And they're peddling this pro-Islam message and advocating for – you know, very gently
05:50:32.880
because they're not so stupid as to just outright advocate for the conversion of white countries to Islam.
05:50:39.260
But if you bring up the fact that these Muslims have to leave and they have to leave as soon as possible right now,
05:50:45.240
then they will all start to bitch and they will all start to freak out,
05:50:49.820
including that little e-whore Ian Malcolm who came from nowhere
05:50:54.400
and all of a sudden appeared on everybody's timeline with thousands of followers.
05:50:58.740
And there's a lot of suspicious stuff going on.
05:51:01.240
And that is why we don't allow trash like that into 1488 radio.
05:51:14.020
I got more because this pisses me off because this is some bullshit trickery
05:51:22.280
They're playing on our empathy and our willingness to open our hearts to do the right thing, right?
05:51:30.700
And they direct it in such a way where they want this multiracial alliance
05:51:47.000
I don't want you to have access to white people.
05:51:50.080
I don't want you to have access in white countries.
05:51:53.140
So you can take that fake bullshit Russian flag off of your fucking profile, truth teller,
05:51:59.520
and put the Iranian flag up there because that's who you are.
05:52:03.180
This person needs to be outed more and expelled from the white country that he's in.
05:52:22.380
I hope he gets deported to Iran and he's fucking stuck there.
05:52:30.440
I wish a bomb was dropped on his head because he's done more damage.
05:52:35.500
I don't care if you think this Jew naming thing is so fucking important that we need to fucking align ourselves with blacks, Asians, browns in order to expose the hidden hand that is ruling over Western countries.
05:52:49.240
No, no, because I know ultimately that you want to continue to live in that high rise in Canada.
05:52:56.520
So you're going to try to align yourselves with white people that are waking up to the number one cause of the demise in their countries so that guess what?
05:53:09.160
Or it'll lead to some type of capitulation where we say these outliers.
05:53:31.300
I don't care if they say, you know, white people are being genocide.
05:53:40.000
It leads to seceding territories, rights and privileges that belong to white people and white people only.
05:54:08.480
Wasson watches, honestly, at the end of the day.
05:54:10.940
It's this there is a rising tide of the recognition that we've been subverted and that we've been infiltrated in our Western nations.
05:54:20.200
And not only is it being tapped by grifters to make a quick buck, but also it's being seen as a very potent threat to the the grift, the parasitism that these people enjoy.
05:54:37.740
The parasitism of the Jews, the parasitism of these intelligence agencies that are given blank checks to carry out intelligence collection against American citizens and to create this panopticon ruling state over us.
05:54:52.620
It's these concessions that we've given, well, that our politicians have given to these subhuman populations that have decided they are worthy of dwelling in our lands with absolutely no, you know, they would never admit that there's an issue with that.
05:55:13.080
They want to be here in the West, they want to expand their population, they want to establish their culture, their insular culture with nobody else allowed, and they want to take our resources and take positions that should be given to our progeny, that were left by our ancestors to be given to our progeny, left intact.
05:55:32.740
They want to subvert and destroy everything about the West and white people as well.
05:55:36.760
And this is when you start to threaten that, when it comes out, when the knives come out, you'll see these people panic and show their true colors.
05:55:47.720
And that is a major issue that we have to deal with is rooting these subversive elements out.
05:55:53.380
And thanks to the digital mask that they can wear, they can believe themselves secure behind these accounts.
05:56:00.540
And of course, people like Truth Teller using the excuse that what they're doing is of such critical importance and that they're, you know, really have to remain undercover because if they don't, then there's a, you know, they're going to get in a lot of trouble, guys, and this stuff like that.
05:56:16.640
And so they have this, they create this aura of mystery and people are like, wow, look at this guy repeating, repeating talking points that, that we've been, we've been telling you these things about Jews for how long has this been?
05:56:33.180
I mean, in white, in white Western countries, it's been 2000 years that we've been warning you about Jews.
05:56:38.800
And these, and these guys would dig up, dig up this shit about finance and then put it out there as their goyslop accounts and they pump it out that these, these, these idiots, these third worlders and these multiracial cucks will, will lap it up and say like, wow, look at that.
05:57:01.060
Yeah, you gave everything up because you're a crypto scammer who got $200,000 in fines for writing fraudulent checks in Canada.
05:57:11.320
So this is, this is like, um, the level of graft is, uh, is astronomical and it's, and I'm, I'm glad that this is continuing to happen.
05:57:26.040
There are so many big accounts that are like this, that Khaleesi account who has a picture of a blonde haired, blue eyed woman.
05:57:31.340
I think it's Daenerys Targaryen from the Game of Thrones account.
05:57:34.320
When she's a fucking fat, ugly, dysgenic, hacky living in the UK, fuck that broad.
05:57:45.480
And we have to find these people and we have to expose who they are.
05:57:49.540
And we have to make sure that our, our kin don't fall into this trap.
05:57:53.100
And we have to lead them here to the 14 words in the 88 precepts.
05:57:56.720
So they can be liberated from their multicultural illusions and join the good guys.
05:58:04.240
Well, you know, and let, I was very passionate, right?
05:58:09.280
And I am very passionate because nothing bothers me more than people placing a veil over my people's eyes.
05:58:19.920
I can deal with the traitors and we'll deal with them when the time comes.
05:58:24.540
I can deal with the Shabbos Goy and we'll deal with them when the time comes.
05:58:28.520
But we also can dive a little bit deeper into how this dox happened, how it happened to a few people, even our own good people, right?
05:58:40.060
If we're looking at the dox of 1984, where did it come from?
05:58:45.860
If we're looking at the dox of Truth Teller, where did it come from?
05:59:00.220
Is it still a win for white nationalists abroad?
05:59:05.180
But we also need to be honest about our OPSEC, right?
05:59:09.840
When you're espousing rhetoric that we espouse here,
05:59:13.040
it is very important that you are careful with the words that you choose
05:59:18.020
and the things that you say on the timeline because they know about us.
05:59:29.200
He knows that we know and we know that they know.
05:59:39.880
It's why they're passing these anti-Semitic legislations across the United States of America
05:59:48.420
Because they know that the only thing that's biding them more time
05:59:52.520
is the metaphorical acts over people who decide to notice and speak out about it.
06:00:13.760
Those anti-Semitism laws are coming from the direction of the World Jewish Congress
06:00:19.100
that wants to shut down the noticing or articulating of any noticing in all countries,
06:00:28.460
And even there was a Jew, something, Mersheimer,
06:00:33.800
on Glenn Greenwald's podcast recently that I've seen going around the timeline
06:00:39.100
saying that, you know, it's getting harder and harder to defend Israel these days
06:00:45.540
because, I guess, they're seeing it both on the left and the right,
06:00:49.700
you know, the condemnation of Israel and the genocide that they're committing.
06:00:55.560
Not that we particularly feel sympathetic for the Palestinians,
06:01:00.080
but, you know, it's just proof of their hypocrisy.
06:01:04.600
And, yeah, they're all confessing about the noticing and continuing.
06:01:07.700
Well, you know, Steve, I'll say this, you know,
06:01:17.900
there is a unifying force between left-wing extremism and right-wing extremism,
06:01:26.320
and it terrifies them because that unifying force is anti-Semitism.
06:01:35.900
But it will be, it will be once these commie libtards are open to the idea
06:01:41.980
and recognize that, oh, my God, these far-right Nazis hate these Jews
06:01:51.880
So they are terrified of, if you look at that clip,
06:02:02.860
That means there's no longer a divide between the two political parties,
06:02:10.000
And when there's common ground, there's a unifying force that's going to do what?
06:02:24.140
and people that hold positions of prominence and influence,
06:02:35.960
these types of individuals tend to hang out more in far-right circles,
06:02:42.620
They're not hanging out with the communist Bolsheviks.
06:03:03.900
and to the point where we are no longer trusting.
06:03:07.800
And this is why 1488 Radio has always been the number one source
06:03:16.020
because we have never changed our message or rhetoric.
06:03:26.760
when Ian Malcolm and Joel Davis were on this stage
06:03:37.180
because we offered Ian Malcolm a way to get properly vetted
06:04:10.780
It's only a matter of time before you're outed as a brown
06:04:13.680
the same way that 1984 was and Truth Teller was.
06:04:20.140
all the people that you've been hanging out with
06:04:36.800
And when this white racial collective rises up,
06:04:40.400
no amount of Jew naming is going to save you from the boats.
06:04:50.880
Well, the only thing that's gatekeeping the left
06:05:04.580
and Israel as an exercise of, quote, white supremacy.
06:05:17.960
except when they're trying to subvert white people,
06:05:32.800
One of the things that you take away from this,
06:05:37.280
from these brown accounts for posing to be what they're not,
06:05:42.120
is they're saying, like, shit against Jews, right?
06:05:46.360
They're saying, like, they're talking about nationalism.
06:05:50.060
And they coped the line with white nationalism,
06:05:59.620
And, uh, they get further reached than they do.
06:06:14.660
But there's no way to explain why these accounts,
06:06:25.080
when it comes to what you will be censored for,
06:06:31.540
They have, uh, they're allowed to operate with impunity.
07:34:20.920
privilege as as some um systemic advantage that
07:34:36.260
you're perceived by people and and what they're
07:34:42.820
you're smarter than everybody else and it's and
07:34:47.160
you're privileged because you guys built a world
07:34:50.180
that works for you because uh you know that's what
07:34:54.260
you would do if you were smart you would build a world
07:35:06.080
you're you're privileged because other white people who came before you
07:35:11.120
were magnanimous and generous and thoughtful and courageous
07:35:16.860
and loyal and noble and constructive and determined
07:35:22.000
and pioneering and inventive and all the good things in the world
07:35:27.580
so when you're looked at you're looked at as the cream of the crop and the
07:35:31.460
brightest thing so this is this is all of these
07:35:34.640
overlaying realities that that actually constitute your privilege
07:35:39.040
but it's not it's not a a fake thing this is not
07:35:43.460
privilege as in oh it's some you know uh constructed manufactured
07:35:49.020
societal uh you know paradigm that you know we need to tear down in order to
07:35:55.980
you know no this is reality uh you're privileged because you're a white
07:36:01.880
are made by you uh and your people and all of the greatest
07:36:07.020
and most noble truths are made by you and your people all of the
07:36:11.900
the greatest uh events uh were done by you all of the greatest conquests
07:36:18.160
everything that everybody else wishes they could do
07:36:25.100
and we have entire civilizations so uh this is this is not untrue that you
07:36:32.220
have privilege uh but it's not something you should be ashamed of
07:36:36.460
uh it is not something that should be used to shame you
07:36:42.540
uh your privilege comes from your ancestors being the greatest human beings
07:36:46.260
that ever walked the planet and everybody else can suck a dick
07:36:55.980
yeah go ahead yeah it's it's a bunch of whiners
07:37:03.460
that are essentially recognizing that they don't have what it takes to
07:37:09.120
to survive in a white man's world they're all a bunch of pathetic whiners
07:37:17.460
they're literally uh they're literally just dirt dwellers
07:37:28.860
uh and so look you know what you want your white privileges
07:37:32.940
is stepping into an elevator at the age of seven
07:37:36.720
and knowing how to get to the floor that your parents have rented a hotel on
07:37:40.600
that's white privilege why because your parents are a people of means
07:37:46.260
who were able to uh bring you to a elevator as a child
07:37:51.260
uh because white people invented elevators because white people needed to get to
07:37:57.860
our buildings so high that they had to put elevators in
07:38:01.220
just for for uh for travel's sake like these are this is white privilege
07:38:06.400
white privileges is all of these things that we take for granted
07:38:16.600
you know the the uh the world that we live in is oppressive
07:38:20.480
to non-whites in a way that we'll never understand
07:38:24.000
because we were born of the ability to uplift this
07:38:32.340
every single one of us go go back on a far enough timeline
07:38:36.760
came from nothing and we're the ones who built this to uh to a degree that no
07:38:42.980
one else can even conceive of how we even start something like this
07:38:46.520
so they have an impulse to tear it all the way down and burn it down to the
07:38:51.500
they can feel like they're at home and you see this in their behaviors see this in
07:38:55.360
their actions and and they want because you're upholding it
07:38:58.800
you're upholding the patriarchy yeah we're upholding civilization you dumb
07:39:03.120
fucking retards yes we are doing that we are upholding you we are feeding you
07:39:08.920
and we're we're just like 10 seconds from stopping
07:39:13.120
and and this is what we're trying to convince our fellow uh white people about
07:39:17.640
stop feeding the fucking birds that's there's a reason they say they don't feed
07:39:24.000
you're gonna you we've look it's don't feed the bears why don't feed the
07:39:28.960
bears because the bears will start relying on you and thinking that's where
07:39:32.260
they're gonna get their food from okay so that's what we've done with these
07:39:35.680
retarded animals live like this they think they come around and they push the
07:39:40.260
little lever at the social security office and that gives them their daily
07:39:46.820
and we just need to stop we need to abandon the apparatus
07:39:50.440
leave them to their devices and deal with the uh the aftermath here
07:40:03.400
yeah guys um i just wanted to say another fallacy
07:40:08.280
that uh this guy before me was just saying that's very good but
07:40:14.720
america was built by white settlers there's a difference
07:40:18.580
settlers ventured out into the wilderness to build this great civilization
07:40:22.160
and all over the globe from scratch from nothing
07:40:25.100
the modern immigrant comes here to a place that's already built
07:40:31.640
the modern immigrant comes here and eats the fruit
07:40:40.460
then brothers and sisters i don't know how many else to explain it
07:40:44.180
just think of the roman empire think there's not even a ship that's
07:40:48.820
seaworthy in africa there's no bridges there's no skyscrapers
07:41:00.380
well and to that point i mean the same is very much true for canada
07:41:07.760
um it was i can speak to canada was a few hundred uh settlers initially in quebec
07:41:16.240
that had very high fertility rates that created um you know much larger population
07:41:23.720
over just a few generations um same with um acadia which which is now modern day new
07:41:30.840
brunswick the uh the initial population was very small they had high fertility rates
07:41:37.400
through the population so by the time that the first wave of a significant amount of immigration
07:41:45.800
occurred into canada there was already a large population of you know descendants of these initial
07:41:53.740
settlers and that first wave of immigration was actually the empire loyalists that moved up from
07:42:01.080
the united states who themselves were the descendant of settlers and the first real wave of foreign
07:42:08.600
migration into canada of significant numbers was actually um the irish predominantly irish and scots
07:42:19.080
but predominantly irish in the 1830s who were fleeing the potato famine and again these are europeans so it
07:42:27.000
wasn't really really wasn't until um after the second world war particularly into the 70s that you started
07:42:37.240
seeing non-european migration into canada but the one caveat of that being that in the late 1800s
07:42:46.040
there was a large amount of uh eastern europeans selected to help settle the west
07:42:50.600
wilderness um for their ability to farm on difficult soils and through that you know jews managed to get in
07:43:03.560
which i mean there was already some jews in canada before that um the oldest one that i could find is
07:43:10.040
erin hart and the descendants of the hart family influenced louis josette papineau who was a politician in
07:43:17.480
lower canada which is now quebec to um grant jews all rights to citizens and uh in lower quebec one of
07:43:25.000
the biggest mistakes in our history yeah we are not a nation of immigrants we're a nation of settlers
07:43:35.640
i 100 agree real quick milkman um so everything that mythos just stated before steve
07:43:45.960
um is embodied by this meme that i made months ago feel free to steal the retarded meme that i made
07:43:54.040
months ago it's up in the jumbotron but uh it rings true still to this day but sorry for the
07:44:01.960
interruption please continue guys yeah that that encapsulates a lot of my takes they can be pretty
07:44:08.120
much in cat you know uh reduced to a retarded meme uh so just so everybody knows uh i i own it
07:44:15.800
thanks white yeah milkman go ahead yeah i'm just saying again you know back to like what gentleman was
07:44:23.320
saying before about the end of world war ii general patton gave a speech of towards the at the end of the
07:44:29.800
world war ii before he died that how he felt bad inside because he realized we were fighting the wrong
07:44:35.080
enemy he he knew that we should have went after the jews he knew that we should have went after the
07:44:41.160
arabs that the germans were not the real enemy he realized that at the end of the war it's just ironic
07:44:46.280
to me reading these things that you know how some people saw saw what we're going through they saw it
07:44:52.280
back then but they just didn't act upon it it's just one of those mind-boggling things and you know
07:44:57.640
and lastly about white privilege the only way i could say brothers and sisters is the only
07:45:02.360
privilege privilege that the white man has is we don't have the privilege to claim victimhood
07:45:07.800
we can't because we there's nothing else to be ashamed of nothing else to be where we aren't a
07:45:12.280
victim of nothing whatever victimhood we came we overcame as a people togetherness so that's the
07:45:18.600
only privilege that we carry but uh this is the state of where we are and uh again i want to thank all
07:45:24.520
of you for this space this is very very important throwing ideas out sharing history ideas of how we
07:45:30.840
could fix things and make things better so uh keep on fellas keep on thank you
07:45:42.680
no thank you sir yeah uh you got the right energy and we appreciate it
07:46:00.840
all right mythos grade my meme grade my meme on a scale of one to ten
07:46:30.840
yeah okay so i'm gonna go down a little uh little rubric here yeah i mean we got creativity style
07:46:50.440
uh clarity of the message uh you know usage of colors and imagery let's go um so uh we've got um
07:47:01.480
uh i'm gonna say the the green makes me feel like it's uh it's a go-ahead sign so i got to give you
07:47:08.360
you know some uh you know some marks against for using the green i think it should be all red um the the
07:47:16.360
message uh please i like the placement there uh for uh for presentation and style um and i'm gonna give this
07:47:26.600
style and overall uh a nine um uh the the message um yeah i think you had you probably had uh
07:47:38.280
uh um some issues with the graphics uh program whatever you were using uh you couldn't okay so
07:47:46.920
so a little background all i did is i took a do not feed the pigeons sign and i edited it that that's
07:47:55.720
pretty much what i did yeah yeah no i get i see that i see that yeah uh yeah and and uh and i've
07:48:04.200
done this with the homeless sign i mean you go to a rich place and they have like do not feed the
07:48:08.840
the birds and you just put you know homeless over top of that bird sign and it says the exact same
07:48:13.960
thing but they are completely uh ignorant to the reality um yeah overall i'll give this i i'll give
07:48:22.600
this an eight out of ten actually you know the uh except for niggers being kind of thin and small um i
07:48:29.960
do like the the thin small lines down the bottom where you know they they spread disease mites dirty
07:48:35.960
in our public places destroy our countries and leftover the leftover nigger food attracts mexicans
07:48:42.840
that's great that's perfect um uh i give it a overall eight and a half out of ten it's a high mark uh
07:48:50.600
nobody gets a 10 out of 10 in my book so eight uh eight and a half out of 10 for this uh this work
07:48:56.040
of art here it's awesome i'm gonna share it let's go
07:49:05.800
yeah the picture the extra bonus points for the picture uh of the african here with the big smart
07:49:14.280
toothless smile uh total gorilla vibes and uh but gorillas have a you know
07:49:20.360
they they keep their teeth better than this guy what what is it that we're feeding him here what's
07:49:25.160
the hand uh and the the what what is it that is uh that is nigger food here is that um a bunch of
07:49:40.120
it's pigeon feed but that but that is like to you to yeah to your point right it this encapsulates it
07:49:52.840
it's it's exactly what happens and um and so the you know the liberals as we know them right uh they've
07:50:03.160
played the game of avoiding the consequences of um uh of the 1965 or the the civil rights act i should
07:50:13.160
say um you know this has been an iq test right the the the avoidance of the consequences of the civil
07:50:20.760
rights act and they've moved out into the suburbs into places where you know that the africans aren't
07:50:28.040
allowed if they're spotted there they get pulled over by the local police because they know they're
07:50:33.400
not supposed to be there because these are the white suburbs and they continually vote to feed to keep
07:50:38.840
the pigeon food right in the inner city like yeah just keep the pigeon food in the inner city and they
07:50:45.560
vote uh to pay for that because it benefits them right they don't realize that they're cultivating
07:50:52.520
uh city centers filled with this garbage and these and they're feeding these all we had to do was
07:50:59.880
stop stop feeding them at all it's not like they can move into white neighborhoods they don't have the
07:51:05.960
ability to do that they cannot afford it uh they cannot comport themselves it's because we're feeding
07:51:12.760
them that they're causing the problems it's the feeding them is not the solution the ending of the
07:51:18.360
the gravy train welfare system is the solution to most 99 of our problems domestically and that includes
07:51:27.640
jews jews are some of the highest uh uh takers on every single welfare list from corporate welfare to
07:51:36.840
to basic uh social services jews are the highest uh per capita users of our social system uh and they they
07:51:47.000
pretend that they're not it's disgusting uh it's it repulses me uh and the fact that that we are not
07:51:55.960
honest about that uh anybody who takes uh public funds should be on a list we can look on and and find
07:52:05.960
out their name and address i think we've earned that much uh for anyone who takes money i don't i that's
07:52:12.600
just you know seems like square one uh arian you got something
07:52:23.640
arian watch out your hot mic and you never know what could happen on a hot mic
07:52:30.360
yeah that was an accident my bad no worries man no worries
07:52:33.720
oh some embarrassing moments caught on a hot mic guys be careful um
07:52:42.440
spray me anyhow uh yep yeah we want hot takes here we don't want hot mics
07:52:54.360
i'll say this hearing mythos's children in the background living their best possible lives is
07:53:22.840
they are uh they are enjoying it um yeah you know but uh radio uh got to hear earful of you know
07:53:30.920
uh some of the hotter moments earlier um when it came to being a uh you know a summer a
07:53:55.400
so yeah i got something just just random just it didn't seem like we're really
07:54:00.520
talking about anything any of you guys ride horses and if you don't
07:54:04.680
don't you should probably learn because i feel like when shit hits the fan
07:54:10.600
horses are going to be essential and us horses are our area and birthright we domesticated them
07:54:17.560
we brought them out of the step and conquered the world with them so i don't know you guys should
07:54:34.680
think about getting some horses in the background but yeah no worries steve i got it uh yeah um i i agree
07:54:59.320
with that take uh that's that's exceptional living and it really should it's one of those things
07:55:10.840
we collectivize all of these ideas and and uh you know start to put into perspective what life
07:55:18.680
should actually be like you know that's it there right um it we should we should have communities
07:55:26.120
built around uh you know small farms and livestock um you know uh animals uh farm animals and even if
07:55:37.000
not everybody has it right there there should be uh some sense of animal husbandry uh as a part of
07:55:46.360
our zeitgeist right opening a wrapper and eating up uh a manufactured protein bar uh should never have
07:55:56.440
happened uh and we should uh get to a place where it never will right and and uh get to a place where
07:56:04.760
we understand the the reality of of growing food and and having relationships with animals that we're going to
07:56:14.760
eat later uh this is all a part of life um and this is a reality that we we should engender into
07:56:24.120
our children and make it a part of our daily lives riding horses um knowing uh how to uh to treat a horse
07:56:32.440
how to be safe around a horse uh you know how to uh engender affection between animals uh and yourself
07:56:42.280
you know not just uh not just uh not just dogs right i mean dogs are are domesticated wolves right and uh
07:56:49.560
and that's very cool but that shouldn't be the end and or cats right it shouldn't be the end of our animal
07:56:57.080
uh relations like there's these these horses i've been on a couple horses in my life and and they're just
07:57:04.600
they are magnificent uh what what uh beautiful creatures and uh the relationship they have when
07:57:12.040
when you can develop that with uh with the animal and it loves you and it respects you uh and it it wants
07:57:19.960
um you know what's what's right for you in this uh this kind of you know kind of it's it boggles the
07:57:26.360
mind uh area what's what's your uh what's your experience with horses in and uh you know what kind of
07:57:33.080
inspired that thought there yeah i i live in an area where there's a ton of horses so i just was
07:57:41.800
driving by and and saw some and it just sparked my uh piqued my interest in whether or not anybody here
07:57:48.520
in our movement was interested in getting them or or knew how to ride them already i've been riding
07:57:53.560
and uh boarding horses my whole life uh i was born in uh south lake tahoe but i actually moved to
07:58:04.200
oklahoma for a short time and lived on a ranch and while i was there i learned how to ride bareback
07:58:09.800
when i was probably four and uh just continuously i owned horses my whole life now i i have a family
07:58:17.880
horse it's not my horse anymore my old my old man died along a couple years back but uh
07:58:25.480
yeah we got a family horse that we kind of keep it aboard it's a it's my ex-family familial in law
07:58:33.000
owns a boarding station and we have our our we have a mare there and um i i go there and visit her once a
07:58:40.040
week i don't really ride that much anymore but it's something that uh like i said you know dirt bikes and
07:58:46.040
gasoline are cool but what if we don't have you know what what about a year in and we're out of gas
07:58:51.640
i think default horses would be the next best thing and uh i know not everybody lives in an area
07:58:58.440
where you know you live in new york city obviously or boston some of these guys it's not like you're
07:59:02.520
going to be riding a horse around but uh to my fellow rural americans i think it's not a bad idea to
07:59:09.240
at least learn learn about them learn how to ride them so that when uh hits the fan you'll be a lot
07:59:14.760
more comfortable on the net the next best thing yeah what's what's your relationship with that horse
07:59:22.600
what do you sense that you know uh how it perceives you as a person and and and uh a character in his
07:59:32.280
life what's what's that like well she's 12 so she's known me for a long time i was there when she was
07:59:42.200
born uh i helped her give help her helped her come into the world it doesn't take a lot but i was there
07:59:49.000
and uh the so i like i said i see her once a week so i'm probably the one that she likes the most
08:00:01.080
honestly uh everybody else doesn't see her as often and we have sadly they hired a
08:00:06.920
Mexican guy at this boarding station and he he does a lot of the feeding so i i go like i said
08:00:12.840
once a week it's that's kind of out of my way but when i do ride her she's very responsive she's very
08:00:18.840
calm she's a very calm horse she doesn't she's never bit or nipped or kicked or anything like that
08:00:25.080
she's uh she's had a very nice easy going life and she's a nice easy going girl and uh i love her and
08:00:34.440
uh she you know hopefully she might live to be another 12 and have another 12 years in her so
08:00:38.760
so that'll be nice and my son rides her my littlest doesn't yet he's a little too young but
08:00:45.400
my eight-year-old rides her and it's a great time man i i you know i love all animals i have a ton i
08:00:52.920
have chickens i have a guinea pig i have fish i have a dog so i love animals and they are part of the
08:01:00.600
family to me they're just as important as my kids and you know not completely but like i i love them
08:01:07.400
just as deeply as i would any other family member so that's very nice and i think if anybody's lonely
08:01:13.800
like i think donovan donovan kind of sounds like a guy if he's in here it kind of seems like a guy
08:01:18.520
that might might do well having a horse or a dog or something it seems like he really he really would
08:01:23.480
like something like that yeah and horses are are quite expensive uh too they uh um i'm not sure how
08:01:37.160
much you're paying over there for boarding but um i have a friend uh who's uh was almost uh
08:01:46.040
uh uh qualified for the olympics uh in like dressage and and jumping and those horses are like
08:01:59.960
three hundred thousand dollars and for some of us you know some of us plebs here uh it's like
08:02:09.160
i i i can't even really wrap my head around the economics of of uh of that you know having a
08:02:18.040
horse worth three hundred thousand dollars and that's that's a pretty top level horse but there
08:02:23.080
it goes up from there even to uh to some pretty extreme degrees it's amazing what you know what's
08:02:30.760
happening in the world around us that we don't even see right there's people playing games of high
08:02:37.160
stakes on levels that we can't even conceive of and talking about horses made me reflect on that a
08:02:44.120
little bit because it's a it's an it's out of it's a way above above my pay grade personally um uh but
08:02:54.360
you know i i'm i'm imagine your horse isn't in that um area but there is such a big picture and
08:03:03.160
you know and like what i want um is i want people who can be pro-white uh and be white good white
08:03:15.240
people uh who know how to play that game at that level uh to consider us allies right and it kind of
08:03:23.640
goes to uh some conversation we were having uh yesterday and and uh maybe even this morning but
08:03:32.360
there are there are operators out you know at such a high level and it is really our job because
08:03:43.240
this this person could be of great value to us in and i and i could take my children over there right
08:03:53.320
i i've kind of opened invitation to go over there uh and and uh and ride the horses in and uh you know
08:04:00.520
the the the boys can can do that uh but to do that for our people and have a cult you know a community
08:04:10.600
uh with that as a standard and have these operators like teach other other uh of us how to do that
08:04:22.520
uh it's it's uh a bit of how life used to be a hundred years ago like the the pioneers in this
08:04:33.320
area and the people who came over and established these farms and ranches um you know it was it was
08:04:41.800
uh about willingness to put your back into your work right it was it was about uh a willingness to get
08:04:48.520
your hands dirty in and uh toe the line for your people um and you know i i kind of romanticize
08:04:57.720
that a bit as a place we can go back to uh or a place we can go forward to uh in a sense but
08:05:05.480
yeah horses are are really amazing and there's there's so many different kinds you know there's
08:05:10.760
there's there's the race horses there's your um what's the uh quarter horses right um you got a
08:05:19.960
clydesdale farm around here those things clydesdale this is the most based horse
08:05:27.560
yeah are those are those um like big farm horses is that what their main purpose could be for i mean
08:05:34.760
they're they're big and strong right is that what they're they use them here for sleigh rides around the
08:05:40.280
lake you know downtown lake tahoe in the winter but no i don't i don't know if they use them for
08:05:45.320
work i i maybe in the in the past they did i don't think they do anymore yeah that's what i was thinking
08:05:50.520
like as a in in their uh more useful like yeah they are uh more show horses and and um towing wagons or
08:06:01.400
um we have a um a fire engine um that gets towed by clydesdales uh in in the uh winter festival time
08:06:12.760
the army still uses clydesdale for workhorses they're the really good workhorses like if you put a
08:06:19.160
yeah going uphill hauling things uh plowing land the the clydesdale are really good for that
08:06:26.600
yeah that's what i was thinking because they look like that i mean they just they big huge hooves big
08:06:34.440
broad shoulders uh uh just a heavy duty um heavy duty tractor yeah they get they could pull a lot of
08:06:44.760
weight like it's ridiculous how strong they are
08:06:47.960
they're they're kind of bad tempered though they're they're quick bite and kick
08:07:07.800
so yeah bush uh they used to have the bush gardens where they would take care of the clydesdale for
08:07:13.640
budweiser and like they there was some big uh clydesdales like
08:07:20.440
fuck they're so big a grown man can't even fucking ride them just like they're doing splits on them
08:07:34.840
yeah that that's that does sound a bit painful on that um yeah i've never ridden fast i've never
08:07:42.600
ridden a horse fast um but man it was uh there was a a little i think it was winter time uh and
08:07:54.280
there was a little festival on the corner i am sorry this is just this just made me think of this but
08:08:01.720
it's uh it had these little horses they're like mini horses and uh you could you could pay to ride
08:08:09.480
them around in a circle it was kind of a little novelty right mostly kids would do it uh but me
08:08:14.920
and my buddy we were in our 20s and i'm like hey let's let's ride these horses here and they're little
08:08:20.120
minis right they're like up to my waist i guess um or so and my buddy was a bit bigger he was a bit of a
08:08:28.440
bigger guy and so we got on these horses and uh rode them around in the little circle and i just
08:08:36.200
three man i look i look back and this guy was so big on this little tiny horse man i i started laughing
08:08:44.440
until i cried just looking at it and it was he was just bobbing around this uh he was probably a 260
08:08:53.560
pound guy uh riding this little mini horse uh it's just i don't know i just thought of that he's a it
08:09:00.520
it was i'll never forget i laughed until i cried almost fell off the horse it was so funny but um
08:09:08.200
yeah horses are are based horses are white power horses uh um well indians uh rode horses too did we
08:09:15.720
teach the indians ride horses or they were already doing that here i kind of feel like the indians had
08:09:21.480
dogs they didn't have horses they didn't have horses okay
08:09:26.760
gotcha gotcha gotcha yeah all domesticated horse breeds come from the same exact place
08:09:36.440
as the caucasian race they're they're intertwined completely
08:09:44.120
yeah there's a there's dead horses going back like six south six or seven thousand years in like
08:09:50.120
uh northern europe and there's like wagons and wheels with them this is why this is why it's so
08:09:57.640
important to do your research because according to jews in normal history there was nothing there and
08:10:03.000
it's just all bullshit it's just everything was made out of wood and the wood didn't survive and that's
08:10:07.800
the only difference everywhere else when they didn't have a lot of trees they made things out of stone
08:10:12.840
yeah yeah and if i really i'll go ahead eric i was gonna say there's a really good book called the wheel
08:10:25.080
the horse and language and uh that's it's got all this information packed into it it's great
08:10:32.200
nice that sounds like a good read yeah i was gonna say according to uh jewish history uh if you go back
08:10:39.640
far enough everybody was black uh the original swedish were black the original irish were black
08:10:48.200
it's just hilarious so uh yeah uh we're we're uh we need our our real history we need our accurate
08:10:57.160
history uh we need to remember things like uh and this is a nice nice comeback um about uh slavery and
08:11:07.080
uh white privilege and so forth but you know every single african that was brought to america as a slave
08:11:14.360
got a um a lifestyle upgrade uh that the africans can't even comprehend and that that privilege uh and
08:11:26.840
that upgrade has lasted uh for 400 years so those uh those folks owe us reparations uh for everything
08:11:36.200
uh all the food they've eaten uh all the food they've eaten uh all the the the crimes that they've
08:11:44.680
committed uh they owe us uh trillions and trillions of dollars in reparations and the only way white
08:11:52.120
people get reparations is by taking them so regulators mount up um and that brings us to the end of the show
08:12:04.520
uh it was uh it was uh some great meaty conversation uh some uh nice mellow i like that we ended it on
08:12:13.080
talking and thinking about horses um beautiful animals uh beautiful lifestyle uh and uh glad to
08:12:22.840
to have done it with these gentlemen once again uh woden's day on white excellence radio coming to an
08:12:29.640
end uh we will uh pass around the mic uh steve got any announcements here for us uh as we close out
08:12:37.320
not really um depending on how i feel i might do a stream later on gtv so possibly look out for that
08:12:48.920
i know white paladin is live on there right now uh diver went live earlier having a christian pagan
08:12:55.560
unity discussion so that's cool um this saturday reminder i'll be hosting a roundtable with three
08:13:02.840
very very intelligent and wise elders and uh frank to silva paul from and tom bowie the latter of whom
08:13:11.080
tom thanks me for bringing him on to a panel where he's going to be the youngest guy aside from myself
08:13:17.880
so he's quite grateful to not be the oldest one uh on the discussion as i guess he's been in
08:13:25.800
other discussions that he's had so i'm very much looking forward to that that will be this saturday
08:13:30.520
9 p.m eastern time 6 p.m pacific time on going tv and uh yeah thank you everyone for joining the
08:13:38.120
space for those who shared it out and for everyone who came up on the panel nice to hear some new
08:13:43.320
voices and i'll pass it over to mostly hey guys i have been listening i've really been enjoying the
08:13:51.400
conversation i love horses um i we've scheduled saturday's book club i put it in the nest in case
08:13:58.920
anyone wants to put a reminder out we're going to talk about the financial system and who controls it
08:14:05.320
and that type of people from a racial interracial context so uh check that out if you like to listen
08:14:15.480
to eternal extrapolations and frank and all the other big brains that we have in the space and uh
08:14:23.800
looking forward to see you guys and really appreciate if you guys want to share it
08:14:28.920
because we don't get much visibility otherwise but thanks guys this has been a great conversation to
08:14:33.800
to listen to thanks thanks thanks everybody surfs up shoes down ride the wave let's make the kalyuga our
08:14:46.200
bitch why power kalyuga kawabunga let's go all right uh yeah thanks everybody for being a part of the panel
08:14:57.160
thanks uh for uh all of our listeners uh and uh everyone who shared out the space uh uh again like
08:15:04.200
steve said uh we appreciate it uh getting the word out there sharing white power is the best way uh to
08:15:11.160
get through your day and with that uh paul welcome back brother and uh what's up man glad to have you what's
08:15:19.800
happening uh all right close this out um we must secure the existence of our people and a future
08:15:27.960
for white children roman's up have a good night guys white power white power thank you paul young
08:15:35.240
waffen he's making some uh serious edits uh and uh plays a mean piano uh go and check out his uh
08:15:42.040
uh his uh timeline there and give him a follow he's a a genuine uh awesome young man and we look forward
08:15:51.160
to a bright future from him um the future's so bright i gotta wear shades
08:16:03.480
i'll be honest i i really like that song uh i do uh i'm a kind of a i'm a kind of a sucker for some
08:16:14.760
uh cheesy 80s music um and i think that's the 80s i don't know that's because you're old
08:16:22.920
yeah yeah i'll i'll own that og stands for old guy uh that's that's the word all right i'll see you guys