This episode is about a man that was dismembered by a 9 year old boy and how he should have been punished for it and how we should have done something about it. I hope you enjoy this episode and if you like it please leave us a review on Apple Podcasts.
00:00:00.000Play like a stain at the cleaner, little beater go home to the beer, why are you all so angry, why are you all so gay, why are you all in my face everything, this ain't your country, you little stick.
00:00:14.380Little beater, little beater, stop playing with your weir, wash you away like a stain at the cleaner, little beater go home to the beer, why are you all so angry, why are you all so gay, why are you all in my face every day, this ain't your country, you little stick.
00:00:38.380Little beater, little beater, stop playing with your weir, wash you away like a stain at the cleaner, little beater go home little beater, why are you all so angry, why are you all so gay, why are you all in my face every day, this ain't your country, you little stick.
00:01:08.380Little beater, little beater, stop playing with your weir, wash you away like a stain at the cleaner, little beater go home little beater, why are you all so angry, why are you all so gay, why are you all in my face every day, this ain't your country, you little stick.
00:02:05.160So that's a long cut, it's different, all because you want to get in the cap, Race Trader, Race Trader, don't get in my analogy, I wanna see ya later, Race Trader, because you broke, you're so nasty, Race Trader's so gassy.
00:02:35.160Race Trader, Race Trader, don't get you like an alligator, don't like you, don't want you Race Trader's all trash, Race Trader, Race Trader, don't get you like an alligator, I wanna see ya later, Race Trader, or an invader, so that your own kind, it's different, all because you want to get in the cap, Race Trader,
00:03:05.160Race Trader, don't get you like an alligator, I wanna see ya later, Race Trader, never say word, gotcha, gross, you're so nasty, Race Trader's so gassy.
00:03:21.160Race Trader, Race Trader, don't get you like an alligator, don't like you, don't want you Race Trader's all trash, Race Trader, Race Trader, don't get you like an alligator, I wanna see ya later.
00:03:49.160Race Trader, don't get you like an alligator, I wanna see ya later, Race Trader, one day I'll dodge a groke, you're so nasty, Race Trader's so gassy.
00:16:32.380But they were doing an interview, and he said something about all the protesters in D.C. were old white hippies, and they just needed to go home and take a nap.
00:17:39.380And, uh, yeah, very, uh, that's, that's kind of interesting.
00:17:43.380Um, I had, there's not a lot of news going on today.
00:17:46.380Uh, just a lot of people talking about market type things, but, uh, yeah, I haven't seen anything too crazy.
00:17:53.380Uh, we got this, uh, I seen it on HT show last night, but this, this nigger bitch beat the shit out of a white, a one year old kid that was at daycare or whatever.
00:18:04.380And, uh, yeah, the kid just got, kid got messed up.
00:20:03.380So, yeah, it's, uh, it's coming to the point where, you know what, if people don't really understand what's going on, what's happening right in front of them.
00:20:11.380Well, I hate to say it, but they're part of the problem too.
00:20:14.380And they, uh, they can go just as easily.
00:20:31.380And, uh, yeah, a few people are really, people are really done with this shit.
00:20:35.380Um, even the normies are getting like passed on with this shit.
00:20:38.380So, um, yeah, keep spreading the message.
00:20:41.380Tell your, your, this is a kind of story that would, uh, be good to share it with your normie friends and, uh, get their opinion.
00:20:49.380Like, why do you think it's okay for, uh, you know, these niggers to harm the kids and the old folks and, uh, you know, really press these ideas that, uh, these people are not human.
00:21:00.380They're, they're demons, they're demons, and they only know how to do things like demons.
00:21:06.380And this basically, you know, the, uh, the, the people keep saying, Oh, you know, they're people too.
00:21:13.380And they just came here for a better life.
00:21:15.380You know, they're just here to, to, for a better life and, uh, and to escape their, their country.
00:21:45.380And, and it just goes to show, this is why they, uh, they chimp out in like fast food locations.
00:21:52.380Cause they, they, it's the one way that they can feel somewhat superior or like in, in charge or, you know, in power over someone else is like the, a, they're beating up kids.
00:22:23.380Like the most, they usually would have to deal with this as a security guard.
00:22:26.380Cause the cops aren't going to come to that very fast and they provenly haven't, you know, in the past.
00:22:31.380So, um, that is one thing I think that they do that for is that, cause it's their one way of feeling powerful that in, in public, you know?
00:23:17.380Uh, I really hope that, uh, that we change these things, uh, very soon.
00:23:21.380It's, it's very fatiguing every time, uh, they bend the stories to make these people feel, you know, like make, make them out to be like the, the, the, uh, you know, they make them out to be these angels who just do nothing wrong.
00:23:37.380You know, they, it's so frustrating, like in court and their finger in people and shit, it's just getting old.
00:23:42.380So yeah, we gotta keep pushing our points to the normies.
00:23:46.380Uh, they're, they're pretty receptive right now.
00:23:49.380So, I mean, don't waste this time window because they will go back into hibernation of their minds.
00:23:54.380They will, their minds will, uh, be, you know, distracted.
00:23:59.380They, most of them, you know, they're like goldfish.
00:24:02.380They'll, they, they, they don't remember everything right away.
00:24:05.380So, uh, they'll, they'll get easily distracted away from thinking this way and they'll get put on another page by some kind of psyop or, uh, you know, trend or whatever the fuck they do.
00:24:17.380So, um, it's up to us to really push these points in their heads as many people as we can right now while they are actually a little bit receptive to this thing.
00:24:41.380For once it feels like it's easy to actually bring these points to people.
00:24:44.380And it's like, just in this last month, just in this last month, I think the heat of the summer, the, you know, this and that everyone's seeing all the news.
00:24:53.380And, uh, it's really, uh, yeah, this is our time to shine.
00:24:57.380So if you guys aren't out there flyering, uh, and you don't have flyers, you know, get some flyers printed.
00:25:03.380They got like a hundred something dollar printer you can get and just print the fuck out of all those GTV flyers or make your own.
00:25:31.380So there's four on a sheet or, you know, 10 on a sheet, however you want to distribute them and just get it out there, you know, get out there and do some flyering.
00:25:38.380Uh, you know, be a, be a big, be a member of your community, volunteer, get your, uh, you know, make your face shown in the public.
00:25:48.380And, uh, yeah, get, get, you know, we got to build our communities up again.
00:25:55.380Like it says in the start of the show, uh, or what does it say on your song?
00:25:59.380Get the fuck out of bed, bitch. Go. There you go.
00:26:02.380Get the fuck out of bed, bitch. Go. Damn right. Damn right.
00:26:08.380And I mean, uh, yeah, there's no excuses. Uh, I mean, uh, if, um, if you got two legs and, uh, two arms, you know, there's no excuses.
00:26:24.380And even if you don't want to do the flyering, just get out there and make conversations with people.
00:26:28.380Like, don't be afraid to start conversations with people and like, ask them questions that are kind of, you know, normie friendly.
00:26:37.380And get, you know, dig a little bit deeper and see what they are. If they're kind of not receptive and, you know, maybe just don't, don't waste your time.
00:26:44.380Some of these people are locked and locked and loaded in their complete ignorance.
00:26:48.380So, um, but honestly, this is the time, this is the time.
00:26:52.380Uh, you know, there's plenty of, um, uh, I guess like end of summer festival, stuff like that going on, you know, get out there and do some, do some active, uh, IRL.
00:27:04.380And, uh, yeah, we'll hopefully see this change come.
00:27:13.380Well, you saying that it made me think, man, how far we've come from the eighties and nineties when everybody was talking to everybody, you know, and now you got to pick and choose who you talk to.
00:27:22.380Exactly. Exactly. It's, uh, we're, it's crazy how we have more ways to communicate with people now, but we're talking with people less.
00:27:32.380And back then you have to like dial up their phone. Hello. Is this person there? Is this person there? You talk with, you know, their family, you'd, uh, you'd, they'd ask you questions.
00:27:43.380Like, who are you? Uh, okay. I'll tell them to call you back. You know, there was no answering machines. Well, there were answering machines, but they're, you know, usually if somebody's home, you, you, I would never use the answering machine anyways.
00:27:53.380But, um, yeah, exactly. Like there's more ways to communicate now, but we're, we're doing it less and we're, we're like not used to, uh, like a lot of people just, I guess, mostly talk online and they don't really actually interact with like people sometimes.
00:28:09.180And it's kind of like, you gotta, you gotta break out of that shell and really just, you know, talk to everybody. You're at the grocery store, talk to people, you know, fucking make conversations and, uh, yeah, even if they go nowhere, you know, it's still good to practice, uh, you know, conversating with different people and, uh, you know, work on your charisma and all that crap.
00:28:29.920So, so that you are ready when that conversation comes with the right person. So, uh, I encourage you guys all to do that. Uh, and, uh, yeah, keep, keep doing, keep doing it. You know, you can easily say, hello, how are you? Bam. There's your starter.
00:28:47.540Exactly. You know, holy fuck. These prices are high. Can you believe it? That's a good, that's a good conversation starter. These fucking prices, you know, and then somebody, you know, they're like, yeah, I know what the fuck is going on here.
00:28:59.920You know, so yeah, people are just, uh, too much in their shell, I think. Uh, but I'm, uh, you know, kudos to everybody who has gone out there and done some, you know, some flyer drops. I know fifth side's, uh, always at the, uh, at the sports, uh, sports events, uh, doing, uh, flyering in the, in the rooms and stuff.
00:29:19.820Well, the high school, high school events. So you gotta look, if you go to the sporting events, like where all the adults, 40 year old men go.
00:29:26.920Like, guys, you're not, it's not a, you gotta know your audience, right? Young men who are, who are angry and having trouble getting jobs, who are applying everywhere, who see the school being, like, who are being constantly, constantly with unjust violence by minor, uh, by non-whites.
00:29:50.080All your audience. The 40, 50 year old guy who lives in the suburbs, who, uh, has a bit, uh, a big belly, you know, from living a good life, who has kids and has a wife that he gets to see every night.
00:30:07.580And doesn't, and nothing else really matters. Isn't really your audience, right? If you want, uh, if you want people who are willing to fight, then you gotta recruit from the people who have nothing, who have, who have nothing.
00:30:23.840So they have something to fight for. If you, if you sit there and try to recruit people who have everything, it's going to, yeah, maybe they will join us.
00:30:32.760And, and, and if you're trying to recruit them because they have money in their, like, set up, maybe they will donate money, right?
00:30:38.780But, like, what I have found is, like, with, uh, Denny Europa, all these, like, high class value, uh, things, you know, I haven't seen any real, real push or real change from them.
00:30:55.080And if you, if you want real change, you need to attract the guys who are hungry and angry enough to want change.
00:31:02.760And those are the younger men. So you want to do high school sports. You want to do where high school guys who are just angry and full of testosterone, ready to pick up a torch, ready to pick up a fight, right?
00:31:17.240Looking for a fight. And, and that's who you want to target. You keep targeting. I mean, sure. Target the other guys because we need them.
00:31:25.220But if you just concentrate on them, what you'll find is, what you'll find is, is, is, like, the next 10, 15 years, you're going to still be doing the same thing.
00:31:35.560Because if you look at, like, like I said, Denny Europa and the people who created the American, uh, Americanism movement and all this, I forgot what it's called.
00:31:44.620Look at all that. They're still doing the same thing and they're really nowhere. They're, like, you don't even know their names anymore.
00:31:50.000Like, Casey and all of them, like, they're not any big names in the movement, but they still have a movement. They're still doing things.
00:31:56.300But they just have never gotten anywhere.
00:31:57.620Absolutely. Yeah. You got to know your audience, target them appropriately. And then, uh, yeah, just, you know, and, and a lot of the target is, like you said, you know, the youth, we got to get these youth, they're already kind of receptive to it.
00:32:18.080They don't like what they're seeing. They haven't been fully conditioned yet. Um, you know, the, uh, so it's, we got to get out there.
00:32:27.620And if I think the, the left likes to, uh, shame you for targeting young people, like your group, like you're doing something wrong, don't buy into that bullshit.
00:32:37.780That's, that's a psyop. Like, because the, you're, all youths, like people in high school and middle school, they're being targeted by the gays.
00:32:45.460They're being targeted by the anti-life. They're being targeted by everyone.
00:32:48.920And if you sit there and it's like, I'll wait till they're 20 or 21 or till they're four adults before I even even try to talk to them or give them that information that they don't have access to.
00:33:00.820So what you're going to find is these, these people are fully indoctrinated and then you just, they're just going to be combated with you.
00:33:06.720And it's going to, you're going to have to deprogram them.
00:33:08.840It's going to take a few years before they join your side.
00:33:11.220And by that time, they're like 28 and they're already getting tired and they're already, they're already have a house, a mortgage and have a family.
00:33:20.760And so you're, you're, you're getting a hold of these people in a part of their life where they're concentrating on building their family, you know, a generational wealth.
00:33:31.820The young men aren't concentrating on it.
00:33:34.460They're concentrating on conquering something.
00:33:39.280Because if you look at these guys, when they were young and they get all, all agitated by our enemies, they're all doing Black Lives Matter protests or, you know, they're doing Antifa protests or breaking shit.
00:33:50.320Like they're, they're fucking doing the violence against people.
00:33:52.960But when they get older, they're done with that.
00:34:28.880I think sporting events in general, you know, like even the twenties and thirties that didn't, you know, the people that didn't do that, you know, Antifa or any of that, you know, you can get some people there.
00:34:39.060Cause if we can get them, if we can get them to stop watching go away ball, I mean, you know.
00:34:46.000Well, it's like three or $4 to go to a high school game.
00:34:49.440Well, I mean, maybe $10 depending where you're at.
00:35:04.300But it's, they're more, they're more into the shock culture, shocking things and trying to figure out why they have, like, they're more willing to look at something that's shocking than someone who's older.
00:35:16.720If someone who's older is thinking shocking, they're just going to like, oh no, I don't want anything to do with that.
00:35:20.440But a younger person is like, what is this?
00:35:22.040And they're going to want to look into it.
00:35:31.080And, you know, when we're, you know, doing that, we need to have more of like a place for them to find us, you know, find this whole, find this whole circle.
00:35:40.800Because, I mean, a lot of the people, you know, when you, when you're doing like flyer jobs, they get, they get the information, they spread the word.
00:35:49.420But there's no way that like a lot of them find their ways to our circles, you know, to, to these places, these spaces, these, you know, they, they might watch the documentary, but they don't actually find their way into like these communities that we built and are building.
00:36:06.020And so the more that we build, you know, places like land, like if, okay, like a landing page, you know what I mean?
00:36:15.280Like stuff like that, so that they have a little more information, you know, when you want to listen to some white power stuff, you come here, when you do want to do this, you go there, when you don't, you know what I mean?
00:36:24.480And it's sometimes that's, that's the biggest obstacle is just having, you know, from A to B.
00:36:48.560But I mean, it would be, it would be worthwhile for sure.
00:36:52.980You know, cause people are misguided too, right?
00:36:56.040They, they'll, they'll hear the talking points and they'll get stirred away again.
00:36:59.660They'll just get distracted away from all of it.
00:37:01.940And, you know, so it's, it's, uh, yeah, it's definitely something we, yeah, I could, I could probably figure something out, you know, a little bit of something.
00:37:13.260I was just saying, you said it was so much real.
00:38:02.980I'm like, the chicken fried steak is pretty good, like, but they're like, they have very, very traditional, uh, American, uh, meals, like chicken fried steak, uh, corn on the cob, stuff like that.
00:38:16.960If you want a good country meal, you go to Cracker Barrel if you're eating out.
00:38:21.400But, uh, Paladin, I sent you a message with the, uh, post about it.
00:38:29.420Yeah, I'm just looking at that now, actually.
00:38:31.400Yeah, that is, that is definitely one fucking Jew right there.
00:39:35.940I don't want to get a littering charge, so I'm not going to hand out flyers.
00:39:38.840But I will stand in a very populated area with my family and fucking throw Romans at people and hopefully, you know, get some good responses and maybe even have some people come over and talk.
00:39:49.060But, uh, I was wondering what you guys think would be, like, a solid, short, sweet message.
00:39:57.240You know, I was thinking something like that, too.
00:40:00.340Like, send them all back or, like, clear them out and have, like, a star of Ramfan and, like, a Mexican flag and then, like, a fucking nigger.
00:40:09.400Well, no, I wasn't saying about any symbols, but I was just saying, you know, because that way you're not calling a certain specific ethnicity out.
00:40:17.060You're just saying the invaders deport them all.
00:42:05.040Um, but yeah, it's, uh, it's a good, good, um, good thing to brainstorm, you know, what's, uh, what's the appropriate, uh, you know, that's not gonna, you know, ruffle too many feathers and, you know, um, I guess you kind of want it too, but, uh, at the same time, you don't want to get, you know, have litigation fall on you, all that crap.
00:42:24.680Yeah. And I looked into it. It's pretty safe here. Uh, what the, what I really want is to bring even leftists. Like, uh, I'm willing to sit and speak to them. I was a leftist at one point. I was like an anarchist Satanist and, you know, knowing their position and knowing why they are that way.
00:42:40.780I think I could bring, cause I feel like the more extreme left work, we're, we have a lot more in common with the extreme left than we do any moderates that are like highly religious or, or like very set in their ways.
00:42:51.300So, um, I'm hoping to even piss a couple of leftists off and maybe have them come over and try to talk to me and think they're going to prove a point. And then maybe I can red pill them a little bit, white pill them.
00:42:59.880So how'd you, uh, as an anarchist, how did you become race realist? Like what was the tipping point for you?
00:43:08.580Well, I would say like 20, I was kind of racist, but I went to prison back in like 2012 and that was pretty, uh, that was pretty disgusting having to live in that close of proximity with them, but it didn't turn me into like a full on white nationalist.
00:43:22.720I actually became one, uh, one of us after 2020 and the race riots and, uh, COVID was when I, and I started looking into who funded all that and who was behind it.
00:43:33.740And that's when I finally was like, all right, hail Hitler, motherfucker. Here we go.
00:43:37.880So did you not, uh, were you not, when you grew up, were you not around non-whites? Were you mainly around white people, I guess?
00:43:44.660We've got American Indians here and a couple of Mexicans when I was a kid, but mostly it's just like, we got some Indian reservations, but yeah, there's no Nick. There was like literally one black kid in our high school.
00:43:55.300Okay. Yeah. That's, that's normally what I've seen. A lot of these Antifa types, they, they never actually grew up around blacks or non-whites. It's mainly they're in a white city and maybe there's like a token black or a token Mexican, but like mainly it's all whites and being ran by whites.
00:44:12.200Yeah. And his name was Scott and he was just a white kid, really with dark skin. It was kind of funny. He was one of the most racist people I know.
00:44:25.260Yeah, that was me. I grew up, my high school, we had like three black kids and none of them ever acted out or anything like that. So I never, I never seen what they actually were. It was the beaners that, that opened my eyes to everything.
00:44:45.380Goddamn binders. Yeah, here in Canada, where I am, Western Canada, we had a lot of chinks, but it wasn't until in about high school until they started bringing lots of niggers and lots of these Afghan, you know, after the whole 9-11 thing, they started, we started getting lots of these like Afghans and
00:45:12.180bunch of bunch of Arabs, right? So, but, but definitely had a large state, you know, taste of everyone and just fucking hated them all for all from the beginning. Like I didn't like it.
00:45:26.500And I can't imagine how these kids feel today being completely outnumbered by non-whites and, you know, having to be like, oh, you know, they're friends, they're friends, they're people too. And, you know, singing songs and gay shit like that in their class, I'm sure.
00:45:46.640Well, that's what'll change a lot of them, you know.
00:45:50.920My son's first day in kindergarten, I walked into the school that we had signed him up for, and all the signs were all half in Spanish, half in English. And I immediately walked out and told my ex-wife at the time, I was like, hey, we need to take him out of this school.
00:46:09.300And he's, it was like 65, 70% Mexican. We need to get him out of here. And she's just like, you're racist. You're being stupid. Relax. He's fine. I was like, no, you don't understand.
00:46:20.400Those kids are going to gang up on him because he's a beautiful white child and they're going to treat him different and they're going to pick on him and he's going to get bullied.
00:46:27.880And within three days, he was already getting bullied and my ex-wife took him out of the school.
00:46:33.640So he's already got it figured out. Doesn't take much.
00:46:41.480That's so true. It doesn't take much. Just a few examples and you're like, okay.
00:46:45.940Yeah, I'll take this moment to say thank you to the 15 of you guys who reposted the space.
00:47:03.520Thank you. If you guys could repost the space, help us get out there and get some more listeners in here.
00:47:09.040Um, that are white power, uh, would help us out greatly, especially if you guys enjoying what we're doing here.
00:47:16.660And, um, yeah, if you guys want to grab a microphone, uh, feel free to grab a microphone.
00:47:20.600We got lots of space up here today. Uh, so, um, yeah, if anything going on in your neck of the woods, anything you're wondering about, uh, anything, just come and come up and say a quick white fucking power, you know, feel free to do that also.
00:47:32.740Um, but it's always good to hear from new, new faces and, uh, you know, returning, uh, returning speakers. So feel free.
00:47:43.880Feel sad. I'm just wondering when you go to these high school games, are you wearing your old high school cheerleading outfit? Can you still fit in?
00:47:52.960Yeah, I'm a, I, I, I'll go there with, uh, letter in this game. I used to play football here.
00:48:15.320We're losing you, Arian. I could, I turned into a robot.
00:48:19.540Uh, but, uh, but yeah, we need, uh, you know, we need large groups too, right? Like they got the NSN in Australia. They're, they're really pushing hard, uh, you know, with numbers. And, uh, we need, we need shows of force like that also here, uh, in Canada and USA.
00:48:43.620Okay. And in Europe, um, it's good to see what they're doing in Ireland, you know, uh, they're actually fed up with it and, you know, taking a stand. So, uh, we need more of that here on our, on our, uh, turf also.
00:48:55.300Um, cause these nones are just going around thinking that they've, they've already won, they've already invaded. And for most part of the, uh, they have, they're everywhere. It's unfortunate. They're even in small rural areas. So, um, we need to, you know, if you're not going to join an active club, create one, I would say. Um, and do, you know, do it smart. Um, but it's coming to that point. You know, even if you're not going to do, you know, uh,
00:49:25.300why is it okay for thousands of Sikhs to come into our streets, walk through the streets with their gay ass flags, marching, you know, singing and listening to their music and this and that. But if a white, if a white does that, you know,
00:49:41.140Oh, they're horrible white supremacy. They can't, how dare they be proud of their race? You know, it's so fucking backwards and it's just, um, it's gotta be pushed, uh, to normalcy, you know, um, that we're going to be doing these things and we're going to be proud. We're going to have big fucking festivals of white pride everywhere here and there. Um, so, I mean, even if you don't want to do the marching thing, it's good to organize something in your community, maybe a white pride day. Um,
00:50:10.020European pride day, you know, something, something like that. So people can come together and, uh, it's a good place to spread the message also. So, um, if you guys got a community like that, um, I'm definitely going to look into something like that too here. Um, cause we've got enough. Uh, but the problem is people, our people are always working, right? So, um, our people are fucking working our hands, you know, to the bone pretty much. So, um, with double jobs, because,
00:50:39.800we don't get handouts like these other, these nones, right? So everyone that's white is pretty much working. It's, uh, unfortunate, but it is, it is what it is. So, um, the more that we can, uh, you know, get people self-sufficient, not, not, uh, you know, having their own businesses and not, you know, relying on a paycheck from some big company. This is where we need to get our people to more and more and more.
00:51:05.800And, uh, yeah, so I think it's good, you know, to go ahead.
00:51:12.040I was going to say, that'd be an interesting thing. Maybe we could crowdsource.
00:51:16.020We could crowdfund or something. You know what I mean? Like we could say, we want to go do a demonstration on September 30th or something, or March, you know, November 11th.
00:51:24.620And we want to be able to help some of our guys that can't afford to take the day off.
00:51:29.260So we're going to crowdfund, be able to pay our boys for the day. I don't know. That's something interesting. I never even thought of that. So you just brought that up.
00:51:37.280Yeah. I mean, uh, definitely could, uh, definitely be, could, you know, help things out.
00:51:43.520Cause I mean, uh, even if it's a half day, right. It'd be, it would be a few hours and, you know, um, so why not? That's a good idea.
00:51:54.620Yeah. That's a really good idea. You know, cause like you said, Paladin, a lot of us are having to work our ass off. We don't, we don't get a lot of time to go do what we want to do.
00:52:06.820I mean, I get to do fishing, but you know, there's a lot of other stuff I'd like to do as well.
00:52:14.300Absolutely. Like we don't even, I mean, people, people don't even want to like go vote cause they have to work.
00:52:19.500And I mean, even though you're just technically supposed to get the time off to go and vote, uh, a lot of people don't, they just, uh, they just say, I don't want to look like I'm taking time off and let somebody else take my shift.
00:52:30.960Cause then they get more and more shifts and this and that, but yeah, it's good to, uh, you know, get our people self-sufficient, uh, and, uh, you know, uh, making their own money for themselves and their businesses.
00:52:42.400And, uh, and the more we can encourage that to the youth even, uh, would be better too.
00:52:48.320Right. So these people aren't thinking, oh, you know, I'm going to go and get a job, uh, working this and that, you know, start a business being that guy that does that job, you know, it's, uh, way more beneficial.
00:52:59.060So are you saying something? Cause I can't hear you.
00:53:23.500Have y'all seen this where the graph where it was showing the buying power of, uh, like what it was in the seventies compared to today.
00:53:31.920And it said that, uh, minimum wage would be $150 an hour now to have the same buying power in the seventies in America.
00:53:42.400Absolutely. Yeah. It's, um, it's getting pretty crazy. Cause like nobody can afford anything even to take a day off.
00:53:58.840So, uh, yeah. And there's not, they're not doing anything about it.
00:54:05.260They're just giving the access and funds to these nones, you know, so they can have their comfort or whatever the fuck they makes them feel comfortable.
00:54:13.520I don't know, but it's getting, uh, you know, this money, this money that they're giving to these nones deserves to be given to the people who've been working.
00:54:23.040Um, but they're taking away from their future pensions. Um, and they're taking away from their, their children by, and giving it right to these nones.
00:54:56.160You gotta stop paying them fucking taxes. That's what I think. I think if we just massively like half the country, stop paying taxes, that'd make a fucking point.
00:55:04.320We wouldn't, you know, we wouldn't even have to fed post.
00:55:09.140I mean, uh, the problem is, you know, is getting people to drop that fear and actually, you know, do it.
00:55:20.080Um, a lot of people would be like, yeah, let's do it. Let's do it. But then they wouldn't actually, you know what I mean?
00:55:26.700I think there's been a lot of times in history where people say, you know, we'll stop paying taxes or stop doing this.
00:55:31.900But yeah, I don't know if that would be, if that would actually work.
00:55:37.140Um, I haven't paid since 2020. Fuck the fucking IRS, dude. It's like my dick.
00:55:42.320Um, well, um, I would say offset offset. Um, but, uh, yeah, I mean, um, you know, I guess in the end of the day, if you don't interact with these, uh, entities, um, then really they, it's a contract, right?
00:56:02.920It's contractual with these, uh, agencies. Um, like taxation technically is theft. Um, you're only really paying these people when you, uh, when you're entering contracts with them.
00:56:16.040And, uh, by filing your taxes, it is technically entering a contract with them. And so if you just, you know, I don't know, I don't know about it. It's just kind of a thing. I haven't really, um, figured out yet.
00:56:29.460But I mean, technically they're, they're not even really a, like a government thing. It's just like a, what is it? It's like a business, right? So when you're entering contract, I consider it, I consider it a first amendment, right? Dude, this is a protest.
00:56:45.000I think our government is so corrupt and doing such vile things and using that money to destroy the fabric of the ethnic American identity. And I have no responsibility to help pay for it and fund that. And I'll say that in front of any judge.
00:56:57.940I agree. I agree. Yeah. Um, you know, and, um, I, I just, for me, I just opt out of the banking system altogether. I hate dealing with banks. I will keep no money in banks. I don't trust banks.
00:57:11.560And they're also using your money to fund wars and fund all sorts of dog shit that, uh, you know, is being used against us. So I, uh, I recommend people like figure out how to get the most of their money away from the banking system.
00:57:25.220Um, and, um, if we were all, if we were all dealing with, you know, say like gold, silver, crypto, this and that, and doing trades in that matter, you know, we wouldn't have to rely on their system.
00:57:36.260They couldn't really tax you, um, for trades and stuff like that. So, um, end of the day, if we get our people on that page and then just out of the system, opt out, um, you know, it could, it could be beneficial, but it is going to take a lot of work.
00:57:51.400And it's going to take a lot of people to figure a lot of things out and also, you know, structure it.
00:57:57.020So it's going to take a lot of work and we might not have that time, uh, might be better focused on other things.
00:58:03.500So, uh, but also keep that on the back burner.
00:58:13.460Yeah. Get it back to where people are living off their land, you know, cause if you can, if you can provide off your own land, you don't need as much of the outside world.
00:58:26.380Yeah. And, um, uh, I was going to say something, but I kind of lost it.
00:58:36.480Yeah. Even if you're just doing a little tiny farm, you know, you got some chickens, maybe a, a, a hog, baby cow, you know, and some gardening, you just practice, just get ready for it. Get ready.
00:58:48.580I actually wanted to bring this up. I think it was yesterday. We were talking about, maybe it was the day before we were talking about water filters. Sammy brought it up. It's so easy to just take a five 55 gallon drum and fill it full of activated charcoal and sand and a little bit of aggregate. Like it's, it's not hard. I do it almost every time I go camping in a new spot just so we can have clean water to wash with and stuff, wash our dishes and stuff.
00:59:10.700So, um, it's, it's not that hard. You should get the practice in now because it might come to a situation where we're lining up to get into the grocery store and all they got in there is bread and water. So you would probably rather have a couple of eggs and some milk at home. If we come to that.
00:59:33.840Absolutely. And that's one thing they're taking away from us when they, uh, build these high rise complexes and, uh, you know,
00:59:40.400get rid of the housing is they, they take our, take away our ability to function and farm. And, uh, you know, if the, if the system in the building shuts off while you're fucked, if the elevator's gone, while you're taking the stairs. So, um, uh, as nice, as nice as it sounds to be able to crime, uh, how many, however many people into a small space like that, it's, uh, it's detrimental to our freedom and, um, uh, our, our, our ability to prepare for
01:00:10.400certain events, you know, cause all those people are going to be screwed. If something happens, you know what I mean? They're going to be zombies in the streets coming after the people who are, uh, you know, able to take care of themselves in that way.
01:00:25.000It's like idiocracy, you know, watch that movie. If you haven't watched it in a long time, man, it's crazy. It's funny because it starts off. Everybody's white too. And then it, and then it goes in 500 years in the future and everybody's brown.
01:00:40.400That's crazy. But I know that's one thing I'll definitely be ready for. Cause I hate elevators.
01:00:46.740I always take the stairs. Seen too many, uh, things where they didn't, they didn't make it.
01:00:53.200Absolutely. Get rid of this whole escalator, uh, comfort, uh, Jewish fucking comforts, right? And get, get self-sustainable. Yeah, no. I mean, I used to live like on the 34th floor and I'm always thinking like, Jesus Christ, like what if this elevator, you know, it has broken a couple of times. I've had to use the stairs. So, um,
01:01:22.640uh, yeah, that was a crawl. That was a, but, um, definitely got my exercise that day, but I was thinking all the time. I'm like, I don't like this. I don't like feeling so vulnerable. And, uh, you know,
01:01:35.140something does happen. I'm, I'm fucked. So I moved out. Um, you know, back in the, uh, rural areas and, um, yeah, like, uh, had a garden the last few years and I've loved it. I love growing, you know, you figure out what is the most, um, useful stuff to grow.
01:01:52.800Um, like, you know, when you first, you, oh, let's grow corn. Let's grow, you know, let's grow strawberries and this and that, but when you should really be, you know, growing some squash, um, growing some, you know, carrots, potatoes, uh, things that you can store and that'll last you through winter. Right. If you, uh, if you need a lot of this fruit and, uh, vegetables, a lot of them will just go bad.
01:02:18.260It's hard to store them. So, uh, it's good to like, take that, you know, get that learning time in and, and really realize, you know, okay, well, maybe I'll plant like a hundred, a hundred garlic in this, this plot here and, uh, potatoes here, you know, oh, I can grow potatoes in bags, garbage bags, and just keep adding dirt. And then you just get like a, oh, okay. And then you figure out, you do that, you know, and, um, you can save that plot for something else like a squash or, you know, um,
01:02:47.540stuff that'll last really squash will last you until almost the next, next summer, uh, if you store it. Right. So, um, it's definitely good to look at that too. Right.
01:03:01.020Yeah. And I just want to give you props brother. Cause there's no way in hell I would live on the three, four, four.
01:03:12.680It's weird though. It does something to your brain. I don't know. Like, uh, being at that elevation, living at that elevation, uh, it does something to you.
01:03:23.260I think like, uh, I don't know. It was weird, but, uh, yeah, you're having, just going up and down every day, you know, your ears pop and shit.
01:03:30.920Uh, every time you go up and down the elevator, you realize like, okay, I got a, I can't hear or down.
01:03:38.240Um, yeah, anyways, but, um, yeah, yeah, it was getting to be a bit, uh, I like to live, uh, and have my own garden now and I'm working on some chickens here.
01:03:47.880Um, if, uh, yeah, probably for next season anyways, but definitely, uh, yeah.
01:03:53.500So, yeah, any, anyone else got any news coming across other than, uh, what we've already talked about or, um, uh, see, uh, you know, a lot, a lot of talk about Ukraine these days.
01:04:21.040Um, I think they had a big strike of drone strike on Ukraine from Russia the other day, the other day.
01:04:32.200I, there's not, uh, they say they, uh, the real numbers for the death toll for the men in Ukraine, Ukrainian men is 1 million.
01:04:40.100Yeah, I was seeing that yesterday, like 1.7 million.
01:04:46.740Yeah, it's, and like, you know, it's very easy.
01:05:19.680And still, that's not enough for him to give a fuck about them.
01:05:23.640So, it's just, I mean, it's one of, like, if, if you're going to push any narrative about Ukraine or any talk about Ukraine, that's the only narrative that needs to be pushed.
01:05:38.040That the, Zelensky is okay with sending, destroying that whole country and destroying that whole people because it's not his people.
01:05:48.060He's Jewish and he's, and he has property in Israel.
01:06:12.660Like, that race, that ethnicity of whites is probably going to, is probably not going to be able to bounce back like that.
01:06:17.760The only thing that's going to happen is that maybe some of the white, the Ukrainian women, the white women over there are going to have to find a husband who aren't Ukrainian.
01:06:46.360And, you know, it's going to be a long time for the ones that are.
01:06:50.360And they're probably going to try and turn all the ones that, you know, all the kids that are young, all the teenagers into faggots, right?
01:07:51.720Yeah, like, and like, for those who don't know, there's, before the war started, there was ODS information that came out that Jews wanted to create a second Israel in Ukraine.
01:08:05.820And that's, like, kind of what they succeeded at doing.
01:08:10.400And if Ukraine stays free, like, doesn't become part of Russia, you're just going to see Jews take over Ukraine and control Ukraine completely.
01:08:20.720And they're going to be able to do what they want with the women now.
01:08:23.400Yeah, one thing I've been thinking is that they're probably going to turn that into, like, not Israel, second, like Israel 2.0.
01:08:32.120But they'll turn it into, like, a United Nations headquarters, you know, like a, some kind of United Nations nation.
01:08:41.540And just from there branch out and be like, oh, well, you know, we need to unite for our peace and blah, blah, blah.
02:19:04.960Hey, um, I was just going to say, though, uh, the guy had a point about, uh, if you stick a gun against something, typically speaking, it'll take it out of battery.
02:19:13.660But this is where the 1911 excels, because what you do is you can stick it up against something, pull the trigger while the, um, the safety's on.
02:19:21.580And if you drop the safety, it'll fire and it won't take it out of battery while you've got it pressed up against something. So that's why.
02:19:27.340The 1911 for that situation is the best, but I just want to say that.
02:19:31.660Or you can just pull back as you fire.
02:19:43.640Wouldn't the bushing, you know, get in the way of it going out of battery anyways on a 1911?
02:19:50.620No, I've tried. I mean, it will. It'll, if you don't have it locked, it'll, it'll go out of battery slightly.
02:19:57.640Now, I never tried to fire it, but I know that if you, um, if you got the safety on and everything and you hold the trigger and it'll drop every time and fire.
02:20:05.260Another nice pistol is, uh, the Beretta 92s. I always liked those. Those are very nice.
02:20:13.500It's a classic, man. That's a good one.
02:20:33.480We might have to start us a gun spice, guys.
02:20:35.580I always love talking about guns, but most of them, you know, like, uh, live spaces are like, we can talk about everything except for religion, guns, so I just always kept it quiet.
02:20:48.900Well, I don't think nobody's fed posting or anything, you know, we're just talking about what we have, what we like, and possibly buying stock in it.
02:20:59.900I used to have, um, one of those, um, Yugo, uh, PSLs, you know, they're kind of like a Dragunov.
02:21:13.400I sold it, but I made a good profit on it.
02:21:16.660This guy, he's, he painted the shit out of it, and I, I went through that gun.
02:21:22.760I probably put 12 hours of detailing and refinishing the wood, cleaning up every surface of paint off of it, and it was beautiful, and I, I made a profit on it.
02:21:35.660I made a solid 800 profit on that gun.
02:45:30.580I think all the hobbyists from COVID have worn off too, because I've been looking.
02:45:46.280If you look on Craigslist or Marketplace now, you can find this outdoor equipment that's pretty much brand new in the box for like half price.
02:45:56.600And I found, I found so much, I found Merino wool socks on there completely unworn, still in the package.
02:46:03.860I think a bunch of these people, when COVID hit, they bought this stuff and they kept telling themselves like, oh, I'm going to go out.
02:50:42.200I only tried in the past fucking like 10 years since I got to miss, I had a couple milkshakes from Sonic.
02:50:51.540And I didn't, they don't taste right, so I don't even have them anymore.
02:50:58.940Yeah, I didn't see that one, but I seen something about Chick-fil-A and it had like 55 ingredients in the chicken sandwich.
02:51:05.820And there should only be like four, five if you include the pickle, you know?
02:51:11.240Yeah, they're, that chicken, it's like probably ingredients that probably something to do with their soaking it in or something, that chicken, right?
02:51:25.660Yeah, and it's a, it's a Christian company that's closed on Sundays.
02:51:36.140Sorry to go religious, I never do, but it's just kind of funny, you know?
02:51:41.240Sammy's ears are ringing right now, he's about to pop into the space.
02:51:48.180Oh yeah, he just did a three-wheelie on his tractor, hold up, Paul said something about Christian.
02:52:00.700He's got his headphones in, listen to the channels.
02:52:03.900He's just, he's shutting off that thing, did fucking Paul just fucking say something?
02:52:11.240Hey, uh, Farrix, uh, notice you came up to the speakers, I was, uh, wondering if you had anything you wanted to contribute or you were just, uh, just, uh, felt like joining the speakers.
02:52:22.740All right, we've got a panel rider up here.
02:52:39.600All right, yeah, I noticed, I noticed I'm up here walking, so I was just double checking that.
02:52:46.420Uh, now we know, um, yeah, so we got about, uh, 20 minutes left here, uh, five minutes till we close the speakers off.
02:52:53.780So, if anyone wants to grab a mic, do your last chance.
02:52:56.880Uh, other than that, um, yeah, been a good conversation today.
02:53:01.140I just posted up above in the nest, uh, you can get the Good Jeans White Excellence Clothing, um, T-shirts are now available.
02:53:09.080Uh, if you want to show the world that you have good genes, you know, uh, and support the, uh, space, support the White Excellence Radio, uh, as a whole, um, yeah, consider, you know, checking those out.
02:53:22.160Maybe grabbing one for a friend or family or yourself.
02:54:32.160Yeah, I just want to give one last comment on firearms.
02:54:35.480Um, if you're in Canada and they have strict gun laws, I've said this before to all my Canadian brothers, go ahead and get yourself a good old-fashioned infield.
02:54:45.220It's in .303 British, and they're a bolt-action, um, rifle.
02:54:50.820Very well tested over the many decades, if not century.
02:54:55.740And that should do you the trick, um, if you're hunting or whatever else.
02:55:00.220Um, and then the other part I wanted to say to those who are not necessarily in Canada, but if you're in America, um, which Canada is America, but if you're in the United States, if you have the calibers in which the law enforcement and the military are using, if there's ever, you know, hard times and you can't get ammunition, remember, they have coffers of it.
02:55:30.220Well, that's why you want to have a couple off-rounds, too, right?
02:55:36.900A lot of times when the shelves go empty, certain things are gone, like your 9-millimeter, but then you'll have other rounds that are still on the shelves, and you'll still be able to find 10-millimeter in some of these other rounds sometimes.
02:55:52.420So, I, I, while I'm not a big advocate of having tons of off-rounds, it's good to have some sometimes, because the shelves go bare and some of that stuff's still there.
02:59:26.380Yeah, just making sure that these, uh, these big apples, uh, probably have about, say, two to four weeks before, uh, some of them are ripe and be able to pull them off.
02:59:42.180Uh, but yeah, they're about the size of tennis balls right now, almost.
02:59:48.640Is it like the third, second or third year you've had the tree growing, or how old is the tree?
02:59:54.040They were here, they were here when we bought the house, and, uh, and they produce, uh, it's just two trees, but they, uh, they produce almost a couple hundred apples between the two of them.
03:00:17.000Maybe I can use grok to, to find out, I don't know, but, yeah, one of them, they're, they're two different styles of, uh, of apples.
03:00:23.740One of them, uh, starts harvesting earlier than the other, but by the, by the end of summer, into September, uh, they'll be like, some of them get to be the size, bigger than a tennis ball, like just huge, huge apples.
03:01:25.660I, uh, um, I'm looking at a big fucking, like, shopping, you know, those, like, shopping, uh, not the, not the shopping carts, but, you know, the, the basket, shopping basket full of fucking giant Macintosh apples.
03:01:39.320I got to juice them all, or make applesauce or something, but I've already gone through, like, oh, I've already gone through a fuck ton of apples, just juicing them all and turning that into ice cubes.
03:01:50.260And so I've got a, it's a really sweet juice, too.
03:01:53.080Um, but yeah, I was a fucking, I gotta get to it.
03:01:56.240But yeah, it's nice having an apple tree that, you know, when they actually grow the fucking fruit and, uh, it's edible.
03:14:52.660Time for some, uh, to trigger the white power taste buds and olfactory senses with only the highest quality, locally sourced, white power, grill-enhancing foodstuffs for the spirit and mind.
03:15:09.200Hope we're all having a fantastic day.
03:15:11.040I know I am been, uh, been real busy lately.
03:15:17.100Got a lot of stuff going on here on my side.
03:15:28.260And, um, thinking about how I ended up with so many useless pieces of paper over the year.
03:15:35.060That's one of the things I don't like about modern life is you end up with all of these useless pieces of paper that, at one time, five or six years ago, they were really important.
03:15:45.220You pull them out and it's just tattered piece of paper and, um, like, yeah, I remember this.
03:15:54.740This was, this was a very important part of this, uh, health insurance thing that they had going on at that job that I had all those years ago.
03:16:04.880It's taking up space and I have to get rid of it.
03:16:08.460And, um, there's a lot of those, a lot of this build up detritus, modern life detritus.
03:16:14.600You know, our ancestors didn't have this problem living in the log cabin with the wood burning stove, uh, eating porridge and, um, rabbit stew.
03:16:27.880I think I'm going to go back to it again, but burn everything, burn all the papers, burn it all back to the log cabin, apple trees, chasing off the turkeys, chasing off the bears.
03:17:43.880It's what, uh, what we do when we, uh, make babies and bring life into this world.
03:17:52.040It is all the things that drive us forward and make us, uh, human and make us, uh, the great white men and women that we are.
03:18:03.380Uh, but before we get into that, uh, if you can, uh, repost the space, uh, announce the white power lunch hour, uh, nutritious and delicious.
03:18:13.240Always, uh, we appreciate that and, uh, beating the algorithm out there.
03:18:18.840We need more posts about white power lunch hour than Elon is getting retweets about his, uh, waifu obsession with, uh, digital AI art naked chicks.
03:18:30.340And, uh, and, uh, and just real quickly on, I, I, I called that about two, uh, almost three weeks ago now, uh, on, uh, on August 3rd, uh, I said, Elon is cringe.
03:18:45.740He was reposting these romantic AI entanglements that, uh, that people were producing and, and, uh, he's, he's just, uh, D degraded and degenerated since then to this
03:18:59.480last, last, last one that's really got a lot of attention of, uh, some, uh, some anime art, uh, stripper, right?
03:19:14.380I don't know if it's him or somebody running his account, uh, but he, he tweets, uh, the, the ugliness of the Tesla truck and the, the ugliness of AI, uh, software.
03:19:29.480Porn, uh, consistently, uh, you know, what, whatever's wrong with this guy, uh, you know, people are noticing.
03:19:37.240So it's, uh, but we need more white power out there on the timeline than, uh, than Elon is getting attention on this, uh, this nonsense.
03:19:46.880So any of your help would be greatly appreciated as always.
03:19:51.240Um, you know, there's a, there's a reason why they're posting that stuff, right?
03:19:55.400Is, is it actually does, uh, trigger a release of, of these chemicals, these feel good chemicals, uh, because we understand what beauty is.
03:20:06.060And the, the brain, uh, is not necessarily, uh, organized simply to know the difference.
03:20:15.520And, uh, that's where the, the vector of attack comes.
03:20:18.780So a healthy balance of your dopamine, oxytocin, serotonin, endorphins, and dinamide, uh, gamma, amniobutric acid, norepinephrine, uh, phenylethylamine, and cortisol.
03:20:35.220Uh, not to mention, what was the other one that, uh, is the, the men's bonding defense one?
03:20:42.260Um, I think it begins with an A, um, I'll look that one up too.
03:20:47.900That one's not a feel good chemical, but it does bond men to, uh, to defense, right?
03:20:53.820And, uh, you know, to, to activate and to have a, um, a management of these chemicals, it requires all of the regular things that we know are good and true to us, which is good sleep, good diet, healthy exercise, socialization, singing with each other, uh, martial arts.
03:21:21.060These are all things we know to do, and they will, you know, they will interact and they will activate these chemicals.
03:21:32.380So not only do you feel good, but you're stronger, you're healthier, and you're more able.
03:21:37.780And that's one of the things, like when you're, when you're faced with a situation that you're incapable of overcoming, you know, depression is going to sink in.
03:21:46.260You know, we don't, we talked the other day about fighting.
03:21:48.580You know, when you're, when you're capable of fighting off three people at a time, your confidence is going to boost.
03:21:55.360Your serotonin is going to be sky high.
03:22:04.380You are the, the premium product of this world.
03:22:08.540And a part of that is defending and being able to fight off these hordes that are, are coming.
03:22:16.480And, you know, being somebody who has that level of, of energy and real, then you are able to attract other men who can see that in you and say, yeah, this actually is, is a guy who can stand by me shoulder to shoulder in the trenches and do something when it matters.
03:22:37.260And so you're going to attract the right people as well, right?
03:22:40.080They say like attracts, like, it's a, it's a very interesting paradox.
03:22:44.140Like attracts, like, and opposites attract, right?
03:22:46.900Um, so, you know, we have, we all have these chemicals and they all, uh, impact our mood and our feelings and our, our, uh, our sense of optimism, right?
03:23:00.200And you get that some, some guys, uh, you know, recently we've talked about getting black pilled.
03:23:05.440Well, this is a means to, to being white pilled.
03:23:09.920This is a means to exercising your resistance and your counterpunch to what life is throwing at you.
03:23:18.300When you see all these, these nons, uh, and the, the things that they're doing to destroy our world, then, you know, having the ability to, uh, to respond, right?
03:23:32.280The responsibility, the ability to respond to these situations, uh, it comes from inside.
03:25:05.240It's about, uh, making sure you're paying attention to, uh, for white power.
03:25:15.220Let's say daily routine for white power.
03:25:17.780You know, you are owing it to yourself and to your, your family, uh, to be the best you can be every day,
03:25:26.220to be the stable rock on which they, they rely, uh, to be able to guide them, uh, to not lash out at people who are demanding things from you,
03:25:38.060how to organize your thoughts, organize your body and, and bring that into, um, to your power.
03:25:46.420So you can make an impact on your community and your family that you need.
03:38:03.540Like we're, uh, like most men, like most men don't hold, like they really don't.
03:38:11.320And, uh, but, uh, like unlike the women, the way that the evolutionary pressure they had, they were hanging out at the village or whatever they had with the other women.
03:38:22.820And there was a, more of a pecking order of like, uh, uh, uh, hierarchy there.
03:38:28.340And if the women didn't act right, they were probably abused by the other women.
03:38:35.240And so they are more likely to seek social conformity because if a woman couldn't socially conform, she would probably dealt with or cast out of the society.
03:38:47.100And therefore she didn't probably pass on her genes or she would pass on her genes with a different group because she wouldn't live there anymore.
03:38:53.840But men, like the way the guys who couldn't like do the hunt, even if they hated each other's guts and worked with each other good enough to do the hunt, they probably both got killed by the other hunters.
03:39:06.280And so there was a, uh, an evolutionary pressure there to make us like come together for our working groups in a way.
03:39:15.940Like white men, if you think about it, our fondness memory is doing like something we can call a working group.
03:39:23.260Like jobs we did, hunting hunts that we do, pretty much activities we're doing with friends is how we bond.
03:39:31.520We don't really talk a lot, but those are the things we bond by doing activities with one another.
03:39:38.080That's the double, it's great because that means if we can get white men together, we can build something.
03:39:43.980Like we can start doing activities together, whether it's, uh, activism or camping and, uh, white power hikes or whatever it is, we'll build something, right?
03:39:53.960It's very, it's a very easy formula, but the double red sword is, it can be hacked, right?
03:39:59.940If you get, if you can get men just working together, men like build bonds through those activities and you can trick white men to build bonds with their enemies by doing that.
03:43:03.720That's a, that's, there's an aspect to this kind of functional organization strategy that our culture, our people have, uh, the masculine element to it that you just don't see existing in other people either.
03:43:17.700And it's one of the pieces of magic, one of the pieces of magic that made it possible for us to create a whole new world, create the entirety of modernity and create the most advanced civilizations that the, uh, that humanity has ever seen.
03:43:36.280And I, I, I, I'm thinking it has a lot to do with this ability for us to rapidly organize into, um, hierarchies and that we have this good feeling that we get from not only helping out our brothers, but also being able to analyze and understand which of those among us are best suited to certain roles.
03:44:05.100We seem to have a natural ability to, um, not, uh, bicker as white men over things that would destroy other attempted organizations at that.
03:44:20.600Like you think of this, there's extremes to this with the, uh, like the, if you read Chinese history, you'll see that it's like, um, strong ruler comes along and rules for a couple of decades, dies, kingdom descends into chaos.
03:44:34.220And hundreds of thousands of peasants and hundreds of peasants and hundreds of thousands of peasants died.
03:44:36.900And that's like the, it's over and over again.
03:44:39.140That's what happens with Chinese history.
03:44:41.120And if you study African history, it's non-existent because they have absolutely no organizational capacity whatsoever.
03:44:47.260Um, there's other cultures just have this inability to really create flexible, dynamic hierarchies of men who are, who understand what their duty is, understand what they're good at and understand who to take orders from.
03:45:05.740And something that seems very unique to us and, and, and in our military prowess was one of the most demonstrably effective methods by which we were able to build these, uh, massive work or organized military endeavors that spanned.
03:45:25.740And, you know, I mean, in the modern age, millions of men across whole continents with logistics, communications, organization, all this stuff, it's really incredible.
03:45:37.180And that is a, uh, unique aspect to our kind of, um, the way that we're able to make decisions and, and group up and say, you know, yeah, I am the best guy at fixing the train tracks.
03:45:52.160And all of the shells need to get to the front line.
03:45:55.600And I am really, really good at actually fixing the train tracks.
03:45:59.140So I'm going to listen to the guy who's really, really good at figuring out which train tracks are, you know, need to get fixed right now.
03:46:05.280And then he's going to listen to the guy who is trying to figure out where we can send the pieces to the train tracks that need to get fixed as soon as possible.
03:46:13.540And you think about the complexity of a system like this, we could just fall into it.
03:46:18.780When you do that, you end up with these massively complicated civilizations, these social structures that made it possible to have things like the Holy Roman Empire, um, you know, the, the United Kingdom, the United States, these, these places like, uh, no, nowhere else on the planet has been able to do that.
03:46:38.680Even though, you know, you could look at other cultures and be like, wow, they built buildings, you know, oh, cool.
03:46:44.520They, they might've invented some stuff or, you know, they did, uh, that's, that's really cool.
03:46:49.880They had silkworms good for them, but there was never any capacity for these deep layered fractal patterns of, uh, what's the word?
03:47:01.900Delegation, delegation, delegation, delegation, and responsibility.
03:47:05.000And, um, Europeans are, we excel at that to a level that's almost, I don't think that's something that's even comprehensible to the other races.
03:47:12.920This idea of logistical organization in that manner.
03:47:18.860It's incredible that, that we were able to, uh, be so effective at this.
03:47:23.380And it's one of the, one of the things it's like, that's why white racial collectivism is the ultimate weapon against the enemy, because it is the most effective organizational tool that has ever appeared in history.
03:47:39.420Bar none, that, that, that the essence of our collective, our ability to collectivize and orchestrate huge masses, working together, knowing their role, doing it well, and, and playing the part that they, then they feel good doing it.
03:47:55.460They feel like they are a part of something.
03:47:57.500And you could see it in the aesthetics of the early United States striking out into the frontier.
03:48:03.480You could see it in the aesthetics of, of national socialist literature in this kind of, in, in their, their propaganda.
03:48:10.080You can see it in the, the, the Roman legion, the organization of the Roman legions.
03:48:16.020You can see it in even our, um, earlier kind of loosely federated, uh, accumulations of, um, like when we weren't centralized in Germany before we had, uh, centralized power structures, like under the Alamani or,
03:48:33.480uh, under the Swabians or something like that.
03:48:36.180And, um, it just keeps popping up over and over again as this really incredible capability that we have.
03:48:44.560And I think we all do adore that in us.
03:48:46.580And that's something that we all realize and understand here in this room.
03:48:49.960Those of us who have seen what our people are capable of and love them for it.
03:48:54.000We, we, we see that we love that structure that we, we are capable of.
03:48:59.000And it's not the, the blind adherence to authority, like the hive mind of, uh, some of the Asiatic peoples, but it's this dynamic meritocracy that, that produces these wondrous organizational structures.
03:49:14.960And it's, it's our, it's our super weapon that nobody else can mimic.
03:49:19.620Well, it's, it's, uh, environmental as much as it is genetics, right?
03:49:22.860It's, it's purely nature and nurture combined that has birthed this for our people, that, that Northern European world and its demands.
03:49:34.280It burdened us, it burdened us with work.
03:49:37.580It burdened us with the, they say, uh, necessity is the mother of invention, right?
03:49:44.780It, it demanded of us to improve because either we were growing or shrinking.
03:49:51.540It demanded us to improve and expand outward.
03:49:55.120You know, the, the proliferation of all these other races is our fault.
03:50:00.680Uh, uh, gotcha, um, that the, uh, the world that we live in, instead of teaching men to fish, it fed the, the, the parasites.
03:50:20.640And that's what they know that Nate, that nature for them is to be given and to be assisted.
03:50:31.660And that's what they demand everywhere they go.
03:50:34.140They, they, they have no ability to, to meet the standards of us.
03:50:40.520It's why they are driving trucks with no talent, no skills, no testing.
03:51:37.900They don't live in the unhospitable North that demands, uh, a very keen and dedicated effort.
03:51:49.900Now, can they organize in the means of necessity when it, when the duty calls, I wouldn't doubt them.
03:51:57.260Um, but on their, on their, their regimen, their, their lifestyle, because of the, the available, uh, trading routes, they were able to live a different lifestyle.
03:52:12.620And I think that has a lot to do with everything that we are today.
03:52:16.040You know, the, the, the frontier that opened itself up to the Germans and Anglo-Saxons, Anglo-Saxons, uh, more about 90%, um, they conquered the West.
03:54:49.940And when we did, we also set up that it would not be destroyed.
03:54:55.280We set up national parks where the wolves and the bears and the moose and all of the, the foxes and the, the wildlife could thrive and exist while we built around them.
03:55:48.180INTJ variables for, you know, who you are as a personality.
03:55:55.180It's pretty accurate from all the guys that, that have taken it.
03:56:01.680And it gives you a sense of kind of where you land.
03:56:05.580And it's, it's more of a, I would say it's a leadership test.
03:56:12.040Where you, where you fall in the leadership quadrants as a man, as a woman, and, you know, how your decision making and your, your thought processes impact you as a whole person.
03:57:05.940Although it's right on the border, you know, it's like, it'll give you a letter because it's a scale.
03:57:10.440Specifically the last one judging, uh, what's the other one judging and, and perceiving or prospecting and, um, it's judging and prospecting.
04:04:38.080What failure in it is you, who have not raised your child, to take that torch.
04:04:46.000I've always gained the most out of getting into situations above my pay grade.
04:04:51.000Saying, yeah, I'll do that with confidence and then putting myself into it and jumping in with two feet and learning it and then accomplishing it and succeeding at it.
04:05:35.260Not only the importance of this, of getting our next generation as well suited to carrying the torch as possible, but allowing them as much time as possible to leave their own mark on it.
04:05:53.260To become men who will enter the ancestral books as well.
04:05:58.340The preparation and the emphasis on the importance of this, of what they're inheriting and what they will pass on.
04:06:09.480And then saying, now it's your turn to leave your mark here.
04:06:51.720I trust you to become the man, to grow into the man who is going to make the right decisions.
04:06:57.100And I am entrusting you like the ones before entrusted me, like our birthright demands that we raise the next generation of men who can be trusted to carry that forward and be themselves and do it well and not fail in this obligation and not neglect their duty, not neglect this legacy that's been handed to them.
04:07:22.460Because we're very close to losing this.
04:07:34.500There's one thing to be given the torch.
04:07:37.620And there's another thing to have taken it.
04:07:40.460There's another thing to have lit your own torch by the fire of someone whose white knuckles are not releasing what they feel is their safety and security.
04:15:26.800And you take all of those skills that you learn and you apply it.
04:15:30.500And so this is from a book of five rings by Miyamoto Musashi is you conquer one, you conquer a thousand.
04:15:44.260The principles and the discipline from one to another are a foundation.
04:15:50.800And these, these people that we have in history, these Michelangelos and these Da Vinci's, you know, they, they, they mastered discipline first.
04:16:25.080Machiavelli is, uh, really one of, interestingly enough, I have seen him referred to as the first political scientist.
04:16:32.100And, um, reading it with some of the historical context about the ways that, uh, the Northern Italian city states were dealing with one another and, uh, their relationship with the, with the church.
04:16:47.300It was, um, when I went back and read it again, I, I thoroughly enjoyed it very thoroughly.
04:16:54.940He's, he's a very clever writer because it was easy to run afoul of the, um, politicians back then.
04:17:01.620And so he had to be careful the way he said things.
04:17:04.740And, um, at some points you have to read between the lines, but that book is, uh, full of, um, I don't want to say lessons exactly, but this way of life.
04:17:17.000It teaches you a way of life that makes you start to think about things beyond the simple.
04:17:22.120I was always, but I was naive when I was younger.
04:17:26.840I used to think that like, I don't know, people generally were good and that they wouldn't try to screw you over and all this stuff like that.
04:17:33.440And growing up as an adult, when you get through an adulthood and you have that kind of perception of reality, you end up getting burned pretty easily.
04:17:41.500And, uh, certain kind of fields, like negotiations and such.
04:17:48.400And, uh, after reading that, it gave me this insight that has changed the way I look at social interactions.
04:17:58.160And, um, it really increases the awareness of what's going on in between people and, uh, vastly increases the kind of subtle, the recognition of subtle communication cues that people will use when they're talking to each other.
04:18:19.500Especially when there's, when, when, when there's money or power on the line, when you're talking about trying to get money from somebody, uh, for sales or in business.
04:18:29.120And there are moments where you're in the negotiation where you can slip, you can like slip in these, these subtle kind of, um, psychological intrusions that they will feel like you are, are powerful.
04:18:52.300But it's all this, uh, the power, recognizing a power dynamics, that's what did it for me.
04:18:56.460And I think that's one of the reasons I haven't read many more of these books, because after reading The Prince, I was, um, so infatuated with Machiavelli and the historical kind of part of that, that part of the world that, uh, I just took it all in and started applying it to a lot of the ways that I was handling negotiating with people.
04:19:16.760And that was honestly when my, um, career field started to open up.
04:19:21.340Like before that, I was kind of like, not a bomb, but I was always just like, you know, kind of go to work and do the necessities.
04:19:29.080And I was like, cool, I'll go to the bar and I'll play some video games.
04:19:33.320And then I started reading this and I was like, wait a minute, if this position is opening up, this was years ago when I was working retail.
04:19:40.080And I'm like, you start retail, I start thinking like this.
04:19:43.700And you're like, my boss is like, oh, they have a shortage, blah, blah, blah.
04:19:48.580And I'm thinking, well, I know that they're going to have an inventory thing coming up soon in a couple of months.
04:19:54.860Now I know they have a shortage over there.
04:19:56.820So next time I saw our district manager, this was immediately after I read the book, I was so proud of myself.
04:20:04.600Next time I saw the district manager, I started talking to him about it.
04:20:07.760And he was so impressed that I had remembered that, that he invited me to take, to do this inventory thing at the other store.
04:20:18.240They pay for gas and such, of course, obviously.
04:20:20.620But I go all the way out of the way to do this inventory management thing.
04:20:24.420And a couple of months later, I get promoted.
04:20:26.840And before I know it, I'm promoted again, and I get to work morning shift, and I'm the boss of like four different people, all because of that little subtle thrust into the mind of this district manager who, at that moment, I went from just another guy in the T-shirt to a potentially valuable resource to him.
04:20:49.140And he was like, okay, cool, I can use this guy to increase my efficiency and my power.
04:20:55.400And I'm thinking I can use this guy to leverage, I could leverage this guy to increase my position.
04:21:03.120And it's, all these power dynamics all of a sudden became clear to me.
04:22:46.000So I just wanted to echo for emphasis what was said by Skoll about Machiavelli and the Prince.
04:22:56.800I think, you know, as far as psychological preparation in negotiations, whether it's political or sales, it's certainly one of the best, especially when you're dealing with people who are not in your in-group.
04:23:13.100I just want to make a distinction here.
04:23:14.540I don't think, I mean, it's certainly good to understand the levels because you can have nefarious actors in your in-group.
04:23:23.440But when you're dealing with people who are not like your immediate family, assuming they're not compromised, that I think that's the distinction here.
04:23:35.580It's not necessarily the best if you're dealing with wholesome people on the same wavelength, but it's certainly very beneficial in the world that we live in today to have at least some inkling of what's outlined in the Prince.
04:23:54.340I had one of my, there's, it's, if you're, if you have people in your in-group who don't understand this stuff or they don't care to learn this stuff or find out about this stuff, then you can get them to tell you things.
04:24:08.880And you can, you can say like, wait a minute, you're getting screwed over here.
04:24:13.160Like this is, this is, that's one of the huge benefits of being aware of this kind of stuff because your friends and family, if they're like, oh yeah, you know, well, my boss, you know, he, he, he, there, there's this guy at work and he's not going to, he said he doesn't want to do this thing anymore.
04:24:29.060And he talked to his, my boss about it.
04:24:31.000And the boss said that, you know, I can do it.
04:24:32.800So I have to come in a half hour earlier.
04:24:34.360It's like, wait a minute, wait a minute, wait a minute.
04:24:38.180Well, I'm getting paid for an extra half hour.
04:24:39.920It's like, no, no, no, you're getting screwed over here.
04:24:42.200You got power played and you didn't realize it by some chump.
04:24:47.360So don't be the chump and understand when you're getting power played.
04:24:51.180And unfortunately, understanding that dynamic is very crucial to having a, getting yourself into a position where you're not a chump.
04:25:01.420And it's, I don't want my friends and family to be chumps ever.
04:25:06.320You never, you never want to give ground if you can help it.
04:25:09.460It seems like it always screws you anytime you give, give ground away.
04:25:13.260And that's one of the things Machiavelli says too.
04:25:15.100He says, if you're going to, I can't remember how he put it at one point.
04:25:19.280He's like, if, if you, you, when you compromise, you have already given that up, like in your head, you have already decided that you are, you're not compromising about what you're going to give up in the actual negotiation.
04:25:32.140You have already decided going into this negotiation that you are going to make a concession in this certain point.
04:25:38.660Like that's, but you hold off on that.
04:26:04.280And I just said, you know, also to add, you know, bluntly and autistically, you know, what's been spoken here is that when you understand these, these books, these principles, these tactics and these strategies, the psychology, you can see when others are employing it.
04:26:23.560It's not necessarily always to employ.
04:26:27.800It is an education to know the landscape, to know, ah, I see exactly what you're doing here.
04:26:34.300And you don't have to let them know that you are aware of what they're doing.
04:26:37.960You let go ahead and lay your trap where they think you're going and let them fall into it.
04:26:43.380Because if they're going to employ these against you, there is nothing moral or ethical about trying to, you know, negotiate with these people.
04:26:57.100And again, this is in-group, out-group.
04:26:58.720If it's, if it's, or, or teach them a lesson, teach them a lesson by, by letting them fall, letting them get them get played and then reorienting and say, that's why you don't do this against your kin.
04:27:16.260You never know what they already know and use that as a, an educational tool, uh, to bring about bonding and not just, uh, exercise, you know, excising them from your life, just because they're willing to, to, uh, use manipulative.
04:27:32.000That's, that's where leadership and, and true power comes from, right.
04:27:35.840Is, is going, ah, I see what you did there.
04:27:39.160You know, I'm better, but you're pretty good.
04:27:41.140And, and, uh, if you would like to, uh, to join your family here, then we can actually make some good progress, but you need to know this will not be tolerated amongst our kin within our walls.
04:27:55.440But certainly we can go out and play this game in the world and, uh, and, and manifest our own wins and W's, put them on the board and bring back riches for our, for our friends and folk.
04:28:11.140The thing is, when you get, uh, started really, um, trying to pay attention to these power dynamics that go on and they are, uh, omnipresent, let me tell you, everybody is into it.
04:28:23.420Um, the deal is very few people can have any kind of conscious, um, understanding of it.
04:28:31.480It's hard for me and I, and I'd actually do try at it, but it's just, uh, it's, it's like anything.
04:28:36.260It takes, uh, uh, uh, an amount of time, you know, to have that mastery over it.
04:28:41.020So what you're faced with out there are these people who are naturals and there's a lot of them.
04:28:46.240Women, women are, uh, pretty prevalent on that deal.
04:28:48.920Uh, you know, uh, Machiavellianism is one of the, uh, dark triads and they're calling it the dark, uh, quadrad now.
04:28:56.340I think they say it's, uh, sadism, Machiavellianism, narcissism, and, uh, shit, one other one.
04:29:04.740But, um, the Machiavellianism part that they talk about, that is, that, those are those people who've been traumatized at a young age and they've got that eyeball, um, to look around and see where can I get power?
04:29:17.820Where can I, uh, have my, my area of safety at?
04:29:21.360And oftentimes women and kids, they'll just, they'll, they'll grow up and become naturals at this shit.
04:29:26.320But, but consciously, you could get them in a room and, and shine a bright light on them and they would not be able to talk to you consciously about the things that they're doing because they, they embody them, but they don't actually think about them.
04:29:39.460It's just an automatic thing for them.
04:29:41.040And when you're dealing with folks like that, let me tell you, they are subtle, uh, masters at it, a lot of them, uh, women and kids especially.
04:29:48.940And you're more effeminate, um, Jewish type of, uh, males as well.
04:30:01.140I think that's a, I think that's an important distinction because there are, we've all, I remember distinctly, like I said, I was quite naive in my youth.
04:30:09.680And, um, I had a couple of friends who were very snake, like, you know, suburban wiggers when I was growing up and they would lie and they would steal and they would cheat.
04:30:19.500And they would always sell you, you know, 0.5 grams short half eighth and stuff like this.
04:30:24.340And it was always like, uh, they were in this kind of mentality that, that they, they had picked up probably, like you said, Kikito from some, uh, neglect in their youth where they had to learn how to navigate this labyrinth of psychological, uh, torture.
04:30:40.220And, and, and negotiate with these things.
04:30:42.980And, um, they always are small or they're always playing for small potatoes.
04:30:47.320Like it's, it's, it's, these people always get, they seem to get roped into this mentality so entirely that they end up wheeling and dealing for small potatoes and, and doing things to like save a couple hundred bucks or rip somebody off here.
04:31:03.600Or, you know, get, get, uh, date two girls at once while deceiving them both and all these things like that.
04:31:10.360And when you, but if you start to understand this, then you start ending up doing these negotiations on contracts that can net you, you know, four or five figures for not that much work and stuff like that.
04:31:24.960And I think that that's, I think that's a very crucial difference to understand is to kind of be genuine, be authentic, engage with people in sales, especially when you're saying like, look, I have something you want.
04:31:39.540You, you, you have this very honest relationship with a person, but when it comes to numbers, then there's these little kind of things that start to get, you know, it's kind of things like, okay, well, $250, we could do that for you too.
04:31:53.320We could do this service too, and you're not being duplicitous, but what you're doing is you're being a good negotiator.
04:32:01.200And there's a very fine line between being a sociopath and being a good negotiator.
04:32:07.300And I think that comes from the honesty and integrity, because when you look somebody in the eyes and you say, yes, we are going to do, we are going to build this full deck out in your backyard.
04:32:16.740And we are going to build you the flagstone path.
04:32:19.260And we are going to build you the flower bed, even though you didn't want the flagstone path.
04:32:23.400When we started talking, you know, that your guys are going to come in and they are going to build a damn good flagstone path.
04:32:29.480You know, that this person's backyard is going to look amazing when you're done and you feel good about that.
04:32:34.760And the thing is that they might have parted with a little more resources than they initially thought they would when they came in.
04:32:40.740And when they went in, they might have had a different idea of what the negotiation was going to go like.
04:32:52.020But you have basically given them a service that they might not have known you needed.
04:32:59.080I think there's I think there's a there's a difference between these people who are naturally sociopathic and they they're playing for small potatoes.
04:33:06.820They're trying to, like, leave work early or, you know, spend too much time in the bathroom during a rush in the kitchen and stuff like that.
04:34:13.600The business of in the middle of a high caliber business deal.
04:34:16.480Yeah, there's a the there are there are strategies, right?
04:34:23.040There are strategies that you can recognize with manipulative people.
04:34:26.700I had a business engagement recently with a gentleman who is very manipulative, narcissistic personality disorder, likely suffering from some trauma once I found out about his past.
04:34:36.920And he was quite forceful in his negotiations.
04:34:46.020I never had to negotiate with him, per se, but because I ended up I ended up leaving.
04:34:52.460He was just that bad that I ended up detaching myself from his influence entirely because I recognized it.
04:35:00.040And that was when you see behavior like that, then you recognize that there is an insurmountable obstacle between that's in the way of any, you know, reasonable kind of mutually beneficial outcome.
04:35:15.380And these are the kind of things that you see that when they when you see these indicators of I suppose the masters of the craft don't don't do it so so obviously that they're they're not so blatant about it.
04:35:31.320So it would be difficult to pick up on.
04:35:33.120And very likely those people are in positions of power that you're not so likely to encounter.
04:35:40.720And if you do, then you probably walk away thinking you got a pretty good deal.
04:37:19.180But I wanted to share with people who are listening that the wealthy are very, very much more predisposed to this.
04:37:31.220But the other point that I wanted to talk about was talking about the gullibility of our people is because there's this expectation that may not be conscious that there's going to be this honorable reciprocity that would go on.
04:37:56.420However, what I've seen is we kind of have these contending worldviews, shall we say, especially in the last many decades.
04:38:06.740And so it's not really safe for people to just implicitly trust someone that you're doing business with.
04:38:14.760Now, there are instances you can, but I'm thinking more often than not, it's not the case that you can just implicitly trust these people and that you're going to be able to negotiate.
04:44:30.640And it's this situation where it's like having confidence in yourself when it comes to kind of getting things done, too.
04:44:38.020It's this idea of like, yeah, you know, absolutely.
04:44:41.320You could have somebody else build your deck.
04:44:43.000You can get some Honduran people to build your deck and some Armenian guy will pull up with a panel van and six guys will jump out and none of them speak English and none of them are legal.
04:44:53.100And they will slap together a deck and have fun in a couple of years when the rain gets bad and it starts sagging.
04:44:59.480Have fun when it's not sealed properly and it starts splitting and it looks like crap and you're trying to sell your house.
04:45:05.980It's a big part of this kind of like, look, I'm offering you something that's going to be – it's a very white thing to think that way.
04:45:12.980It's a very white thing just to think about like, you know, I'm not going to budge on this price because I have a very – I hold my work in very high esteem.
04:45:23.780I will do my best to make sure that you are delivered something that is going to be satisfying and is going to last for a long time and is going to work.
04:45:32.600And that is – that's the way that I approach a lot of the way that I discuss things.
04:45:38.640I offer quite a few – quite hefty services when it comes to price with repeated contracts.
04:45:49.300And I have had people balk at numbers before and I have had people not want to carry on into a contract.
04:45:58.040I've had people not want to sign because they would rather go somewhere else and every single time that I know of that I've managed to follow up and get some information, they have made the wrong decision because they decided to go with a lower quality product that was not made by somebody that they knew and they could trust.
04:46:15.720So they have ended up with something that is – it ends up being a waste of money.
04:46:21.000And this is a very like European way of thinking where we actually can understand the ramifications of the future.
04:46:28.540We can think about second-order effects.
04:46:32.100We can think about how things are going to last into the future, what it's going to look like down the road.
04:46:38.300Is it better to spend $20,000 today and save $50,000 or is it better to spend $10,000 for the next five years every year?
04:46:49.420I think we – you know, Europeans think like that.
04:46:52.220That's why we know those of us who – we know we value our health or we value our well-being.
04:46:58.920We value the well-being of our families.
04:47:00.760We've seen what happens when that kind of thinking starts to break down and you have people living in these abysmal communities that are ill-cared for and things are completely ruined because they have lost the capability of understanding long-term effects, delayed gratification, third-order, second-order impact of their decisions.
04:48:36.960One of the books that I read in my early 20s was a book called The Wisdom of China and India.
04:48:47.560It was when I was searching for more truth and looking for things.
04:48:54.280And the Upanishads, the Bhagavad Gita, those stories, and now that – the overwhelming potential, I'll say,
04:49:13.440that those are stories of our Aryan people that have been twice removed from our people.
04:49:26.760I hear a lot of wise, Aryan, white power, white conscious, racially conscious men refer to those.
04:49:37.080And what's your – what's your guys' takes on those from that historical perspective?
04:49:50.400It's an interesting topic, and it can get – people have different opinions on it.
04:49:58.180My historical take is that we – I respect the field of linguistics.
04:50:03.380I don't think it's all fake Jewish science.
04:50:05.000I think that linguistics indicate that there was a spread of our genetic cousins that brought wisdom to parts of the world that we look at now
04:50:17.060and are – no longer have those people in them.
04:50:21.240The philosophical history of this tradition kind of starts big time with Schopenhauer.
04:50:27.980Schopenhauer was very interested in Eastern traditions, Taoism, Buddhism, and the Vedic tradition,
04:50:36.980which is the northern region of the Indian subcontinent where the Proto-Indo-Europeans landed.
04:50:44.680And they contributed – the awareness of these traditions, the introduction of these traditions into Western thought contributed very heavily into the evolution of our philosophical outlook.
04:51:00.400Essentialism was a big part of German continental philosophy.
04:51:04.180The answering metaphysical questions outside of the religious tradition became very fashionable after the Enlightenment.
04:51:15.100And I have seen – I grew up with a very pretty close familiarity with a lot of the Eastern cultural traditions.
04:51:25.600I studied Japanese and read – I've read, like you have as well, Mythos, The Book of Five Rings.
04:51:32.980It's always been one of my favorite books since I read it.
04:51:46.800Hermann Hesse, famously enough, wrote a book called Siddhartha that is a German take on Buddhism that follows the life of Siddhartha Gautama, who would go on to become the Buddha.
04:52:14.480So just to chime in a little bit, in the Oralinda book, it talks about how around 1600, a contingent of Aryans left Europe, and they made their way over there, and they established groupings over there.
04:52:32.480And then to correlate the – to provide more literary evidence in the court of Vesta, the Azna of Vesta, it says they went there.
04:52:44.320It says – it mentions the Aryans and the Tyrians went there together, and they're allotted together as two different houses in respect for houses.
04:52:56.020And that's what it says in the Oralinda book, and that's what it says in the Oralinda book, that they picked up some –
04:53:17.220There's a lot of parallels between the – you don't see this in the polytheistic traditions of, for instance, the non-Vedic Indian subcontinent.
04:53:45.220They had a very loosely defined kind of tribal polytheism before outside of the Vedic tradition.
04:53:55.280So what we recognize now, what we have now is this kind of mishmash of Vedic tradition and Indian polytheism that has made this whole mess out of everything.
04:54:09.820So the kiddo is a very – they're cosmogenesis.
04:54:14.140They're kind of the – I think there's the – or cosmogenesis or something like the beginning of a world, the development of reality.
04:54:29.320It's much closer to many of our traditional peoples than there are many of the foundational myths that you find outside of their peoples.
04:54:44.560Chinese, I believe – there's a lot of people who say, like, we was Chinese.
04:55:34.680But I think there was a – there's a cultural spread that may have contributed to Taoism.
04:55:41.300But Taoism is a very – Taoism is a not – it does not have an embodied deity.
04:55:49.660So it is markedly different from the PIE traditions that have these archetypal embodiments of deified folkish legends that became deities or were contributed to this cosmogenesis.
04:56:09.700Well, if you look just quickly – and then I'll keep on that track, though.
04:56:16.060I just want to point out that it makes sense when you look at our people.
04:56:20.320We have such a diversity among our people, all different hair colors, eye colors, so much individualism.
04:56:29.680And you look at the Chinese, and it's all very bland.
04:56:32.620And so it's – it kind of makes sense that their spirituality conforms to that.
04:56:41.520But I just want to – this came to mind as you were talking about the way that works out.
04:57:01.980I see nuggets of truth in all of these PIE branches.
04:57:06.380The Iranians supposedly were PIE at one point.
04:57:11.220Sanskrit finds its origin in that region between what I believe is modern-day Iran over to Mesopotamia and then down into the northern Indian subcontinent.
04:57:22.920So Sanskrit being one of the oldest languages on the planet and being an ancient PIE language contains a trove of knowledge, insight into the traditions that these – that our cousins would have carried with them from our starting point, our origin.
04:58:45.780But just your discussion there about the different books and the Machiavellianism – Machiavelli and the prince and the sort of tie-in then, obviously, to the way to get power, to hold on to power, to manipulate other people.
04:59:03.300Or the art of diplomacy, however way you want to see it.
04:59:05.760And, of course, that's how you can put a spin on things.
04:59:09.580I had heard of the 48 Laws of Power, but never read it.
04:59:13.500And I looked up the Laws of Human Nature.
04:59:17.880And it was 2018, I think, so fairly recent.
04:59:20.580And I've not read either of them, but no doubt I've painstakingly been suffering from not knowing about them and having to derive what they are from first principles and from bitter experience over the course of my 50 years now.
04:59:35.780And, you know, if I was to write a book and I was thinking about leaving, what I would do is to leave an instruction manual for other people, which, I guess, you know, you could say these books are like.
04:59:48.200You would be, first of all, wondering, well, what would be my motivation because I won't be here anymore.
04:59:56.560Especially if we're talking within just the realm of the canon of books, which is all about acquiring power, acquiring material assets and acquiring the ears even or the attention of other people.
05:00:08.120Whether you want their love or whether you want their attention or their respect or their fear, all these kind of things.
05:00:14.700You don't say, well, what would motivate a person to write all these things down to help other people who would read this instruction manual, the secret ways of, I suppose, the roadmap to get your way through civilization or society or up the ladders and to the top.
05:00:30.300But what would motivate a type of person who thinks in that way to leave something seemingly altruistically for others where he will definitely not benefit from because he'll be gone.
05:00:42.020He won't be here anymore, even if there is such a thing as the afterlife.
05:00:45.340The best you can hope for is to look down and kind of go, I helped some people who may not even be, you know, descendants of me.
05:00:51.780So you always have to say to yourself, one of the lessons is like, what motivates somebody?
05:00:56.380I leave it as a question for that aspect, because I don't know what the motivation will be, especially one who sees the world through the lens of how can I gain an advantage in this interaction with my fellow man?
05:01:08.320Like whether it's, you know, somebody from another tribe or within their own tribe, which our civilization until quite recently mostly was.
05:01:16.500And yet me, within my own society growing up or becoming an adult rather, but, you know, from having been a naive child, like some of you guys talked about within the corporate structure and usually large international corporate bodies of people who were mostly American corporations.
05:01:38.740And I noticed that my own people, they couldn't have been all Jews, mostly were Irish people, and they were all very ambitious, highly ambitious, which I didn't consider to be a good quality.
05:01:50.920But I learned that was the quality that most managers looked for in people.
05:01:55.240But that doesn't mean that he doesn't speak to his ethics and he likely doesn't have the type of morality that I suppose, you know, fools, marks like myself, rubes, innocent, naive people thought that I was being prepared for an adult society where we all played fair and we would select the person who had the best skills or had the best aptitudes that could be used in a certain aspect of the corporation.
05:02:19.120Oh, it was just people who wanted power, they were driven, they were driven by the ambition for power over others so they could just put other people down, subjugate them for no particular reason, not even out of revenge, just that they enjoyed making other people's lives miserable.
05:02:36.260And so, excuse me, this is how the psychopaths got so prevalent because they were actively selected for.
05:02:43.480And anybody who was wanting to maybe play fair or share or say, I'll give some quarter if maybe I can expect in the future, you might look kindly on me in my hour of need, what you usually found was that, and I did find this, that even the kinder that I was to people, if later I saw them maybe not being, you know, unscrupulous to me, but to others.
05:03:07.180And I'd say, listen, it's like that parable in the Bible where one of the, or that story in the Bible about how, and I know I'm going all over the place here, but just to make a quick reference to it, where this master set his slave free of a debt and said, look, I don't want to be cruelty, I know you've got a wife and kids, so I absolve you of your debt to me.
05:03:25.340And he didn't even hold on to any contract to say, and you have to do the same to others.
05:03:30.560He assumed it kind of went without saying, but in the case of this guy, it didn't, and he was extremely vindictive to somebody else who only owned him a small debt in comparison.
05:03:39.380And by that stage, you can't then say, well, I now put the debt back into place, you know, especially in this legal world of ours.
05:03:44.940But also in the world of comrades or colleagues, we could say to each other, look, we shouldn't need to draw up contracts or hold blackmail over each other that we can then say, ah, do you not remember now?
05:04:01.480You know, people of honour don't do that to each other.
05:04:03.720And what I found is that it was cutthroat, and people would say, ah, yeah, you know, you want to grow up, this is a cutthroat business, it's, you know, all's fair in love and war, or the other phrase I'm trying to think of with a do or die or dogs or whatever, you know.
05:04:23.120Doggy dog, that's it, thank you, doggy dog world.
05:04:25.940And so what I found was people who I, who became my friends and were my colleagues, and I didn't really see much distinction because I was, I knew these guys for maybe 10 or more years.
05:04:37.860And we'd been through a lot together, both, you know, within the corporation and outside.
05:04:43.760And we weren't even colleagues or, like, soldiers on the same flank or phalanx, because as soon as even the tiniest reason for them to stabbing the back became apparent, or for no reason at all, didn't even require that they would get, like, a promotion or much of a material gain, they would do it, arbitrarily.
05:05:03.200That was the really heartbreaking thing, that you, you would find that there are no real friends at all out there, certainly no loyalties, when everybody is inculcated into this world, and I see it as a Jewish world, where they say, that's, that's a, not just a childish way of behaving to assume that there is some honour amongst all of us, but they say that it is in fact an immoral way to behave.
05:05:28.500They actually have made the same thing as morality be, if I get ahead, if, if I feel good about what I did in the moment, if I lord it over somebody else, that's me succeeding, and that must mean that I'm a moral person.
05:05:44.260And so, and I'm not trying to criticise what you're talking about there, if we want to get pragmatic, or at least, you know, stop being always the losers here in our society, let's read what these people write.
05:05:55.500But I'll just say that I looked up the writer of those two books, the 48 Laws of Power and the Laws of Human Nature, Robert Greene, I think his name is with an E, G-R-E-E-N-E.
05:06:10.660And there is such a thing as, I don't know, I've heard it a lot, that people with a name like Greene, not thinking of Adam Greene, but they did suspect him of this as well, that anybody, and I think his is just green like the colour, but that the surname Greene with an E is often a Jewish name.
05:06:27.600And in the case of Robert Greene, it is Jewish, in his bio on Wikipedia, he says he grew up in a Jewish family.
05:06:32.940So, that's not to say that we should then discard everything he's written, and it's likely that, you know, all the psychology stuff, it is a Jewish world, it's a world they've created around us, it was a world that existed before anyone, he or I would say, listening, were born into.
05:06:49.180And we didn't, we took us a long time to figure it out, I think that's what I'm hearing, but it certainly did take me a long time to figure it out, that we never knew a world where our ancestors' law went without saying, or the morals or honourable thoughts of our ancestors could be counted on everywhere, because that's all gone since at least the end of World War II.
05:07:09.300And so, I guess it's always useful for sure to look into the enemy's handbook, but I think these people are the enemy, and the last thing I'll say then is the INTF and the INTJ and all this sort of stuff, the Briggs-Meyer classifications of people's personalities, I don't like being classified into that as if I can be parsed like a human being into just, you know, four different letters.
05:07:32.220I'm not a number, I'm more than a number, I'm greater than the sum of my parts, and I refuse to be categorised by either my IQ or by my Briggs-Meyer personality type, and they would always do these tests on us in the company, and then promote the most ambitious little shit anyway.
05:07:47.820And you go, I did really well on my Briggs-Meyer test, well Briggs-Meyers, by the way, are a mother and daughter Jew team anyway as well.
05:08:00.800I think that there's truth, of course, to all the stuff that they talk about, but it's a way of, I think, getting us to accept their framing of the world, you know?
05:08:24.780And I made that point extra about how that trust in our society, that ability for us to build a trusting society where we did rely on this being done above the table with, you know, it respectfully and with honor was the conduit through which our enemy was able to subvert us.
05:08:43.620But that would say, if you're playing the game and you're a cheater and you have been conditioned to that, there's a contract and understanding amongst yourselves that don't have that cheater is going to be able to deal with some nice stuff.
05:09:21.140Well, I'll just say one last thing then.
05:09:23.980There was a movie that Richard Gervais did, and it was called The Invention of Lying.
05:09:28.560And it's a farcical type of, what do you call it, a concept where there's this world where everybody's so naive, where he as a character discovers that if he says anything, people will just believe him.
05:09:41.360So he goes into the bank, he doesn't, just does a test.
05:09:43.360He says, oh, I'm actually a millionaire.
05:09:45.220So just, you know, give me, let's say, 100,000 out of my account, please.
05:09:56.160Like, I'll just fix the books here, and yeah, there's a withdrawal of 100,000.
05:09:59.220It's like, I can't believe this works.
05:10:00.800So I think, you know, the Jews must have felt like this about our own nation.
05:10:06.040And I suppose there does come a point where they might feel like, look, if we're going to believe all this bullshit, we kind of deserve what we're getting.
05:10:11.820That's, I'm sure, how they would justify it, you know.
05:10:13.800So there's a reason or a necessity for us to grow up a bit, but not lose what we considered was our innocence in having to become a little bit more hard-nosed with dealing with people who are not us, you know.
05:12:18.040And to Eternal's point there, it's interesting because depending on maybe who's reading the 48 Laws of Power, they're reading it as a template and a strategy for their activities.
05:12:36.880And like I said about it, I read it as a cautionary tale of the environment with which these people operate.
05:12:47.720And White Reich, your picture, it keeps making me think of the lead singer of The Cure, because the way the dark shadow over your head, it looks like the lead singer of The Cure with his...
05:13:16.000Yeah, it is the way that we read and the way that we operate and our minds and the way that they've been organized.
05:13:28.000Instead of as merchants seeking to gain a profit through middlemen, we build.
05:13:41.300We have villages, accountability, and those principles hold a completely different paradigm for us than these others, right?
05:13:52.540The talk about contracts came up and our contracts.
05:13:57.940But when I write a contract, it's to set expectations, right?
05:14:01.940It is not to weave in some extra information in there, which I can then point to later and say, ha-ha, you didn't realize I had this in the...
05:14:15.660You know, these ways that we operate with these different people is, it demands separation.
05:14:23.400There's no cooperation with these nonce.
05:14:27.820And again, back to going full throttle with it, rug pulling the nons is a mandatory exercise for white people.
05:14:38.340We should never think that this fair deal should be struck between us and the Aztec Indians, the Chinese, the other Indians, the Africans, the Jews, the Arabs.
05:14:58.540Why the fuck would we ever go, let's strike a fair deal here, sir?
05:15:02.580It's like, fuck no, either you, you know, to be noncompromising, you either agree to these terms with which I get what I want out of it, and that includes protecting me from future you, then no deal.
05:15:20.100They don't have the ability to build anything anyway.
05:15:22.220So it's really, it's a reframing of our entire way of thinking from egalitarianism and fairness and equality to, there's no equality.
05:16:56.120I was just thinking about psycho ex-girlfriends and people I've met along the way that almost a year later just obsessively talk about you.
05:17:11.300So, yeah, that's what I've been thinking about today.
05:17:53.320I want to classify what's going on on Elon's timeline as Goonergate.
05:17:59.640We are witnessing Goonergate happen before our eyes.
05:18:04.040The activation of billionaire gooners preying on our incels to accept AI girlfriends instead of, you know, going outside and touching grass.
05:18:51.220I don't even like, like, I, I hate that, that AI will take an old family photo of yours and turn it into, like, a little six second live action image.
05:19:16.680And I'm going to bring up, like, an old time in the United States when photography was first invented.
05:19:24.980The Featherniggers were terrified of cameras because they thought if you got your picture taken, it would steal your soul.
05:19:35.680And what we're witnessing now with photos being animated to life, in my opinion, is, is something soulless.
05:19:43.660And it should be a horror to all of our eyes because, you know, your memories and your headspace are something that should be considered valuable and sacred.
05:19:54.960They're yours and yours alone, and they're shared with the people that you had them with, you know.
05:20:01.020And when AI is getting involved, their technology is getting involved, in order to create an elusatory image, in my opinion, it kind of spits on the dead, you know.
05:20:23.760We will help you recover that in AI drama and just insert yourself into these goggles here.
05:20:34.020We're going to connect these things to your fingers and your arms, and you'll feel like you are actually there, experiencing the life that you wish you could have had.
05:20:43.380And then, you know, inevitably, it ends up with you at a waifu strip bar with cartoon girls dancing around, right?
05:20:50.040I will say this, though, Mythos, I've been having fun with the face swapping feature recently.
05:21:32.860I know that the conversation was interesting on White Power Lunch Hour.
05:21:36.720I'm totally fine with us, you know, concluding the conversation and getting through these guys.
05:21:42.020I want to dive in here, you know, just imagine the day after an election, right, where Trump wins and Hillary's defeated, and they just go, don't worry.
05:21:57.120For $1,000, we'll put you in this bubble here into this pod, and you can live in an alternate universe where Hillary won and just sucks millions of people out of the world.
05:22:13.300I mean, this is kind of a culling, right?
05:22:15.780This is, you know, if we look at it one way, this is a culling.
05:22:19.280If that's what you want to do, more power to you, right?
05:22:24.680Well, there's a lot of people who are already checked out, you know.
05:22:28.940We kind of touched on this the other day when we were talking about, you know, families and the parents.
05:22:37.020And, you know, once retirement kicks in, they just check out and give up and just pursue selfish endeavor.
05:22:46.860I would say that falls along the same lines.
05:22:49.580You know, the idea of corporatism was brought up in the sense that modern society and the way it's structured creates a bland, meaningless life, you know.
05:23:05.200And here comes AI to give your life purpose, you know.
05:23:10.740Here comes AI to drop you into that reality where Hillary Clinton lives.
05:23:15.520Here comes AI to drop you into a reality where you're slaying dragons and fighting wizards.
05:23:49.900Why wouldn't they install the Neuralink?
05:23:52.480Because all of us, I wouldn't say all of us, but a lot of us here in the United States of America are living a very unfulfilled, meaningless life.
05:24:03.580Do you think they'll let me do the man in the high castle file?
05:24:11.280The more potential national socialist white men they can get to go into that machine, they will gladly prime you with the idea that Hitler won World War II.
05:24:59.860So, ultimately, what they're doing, they're hacking all of those chemicals that I opened up with in White Fire Lunch Hour.
05:25:08.120They would be programmed to activate the impulse to release the dopamine, the oxytocin, serotonin, endorphins, cortisol, and all of that, right?
05:25:24.820And although your body would atrophy, certainly, unless they were activating it with electrical impulses, et cetera, those are the chemicals that they're attacking.
05:25:37.120And they're doing it live right now on social media and TV and movies and music.
05:27:30.980You know, this conversation of Goonergate coming up really got me thinking about Ted Kaczynski and how right he actually was.
05:27:44.140Our society has fallen, and it's falling fast.
05:27:50.320And as AI improves and these systems continue to grow, the in-real-life care will dissipate, right?
05:28:02.100The people who can afford the system to plug themselves in are going to plug themselves in.
05:28:08.220The permanent slave class of the foreign hordes entering our country are going to continue doing their business as usual,
05:28:16.280while the founding stock, whatever's left of the middle class, and the upper class that isn't in the echelon are just totally non-existent, plugged in, jacked in.
05:28:32.100I mean, how many movies have we seen about, you know, people having robotic replacements, right?
05:28:44.240They sit in a chair, that one movie with Bruce Willis or whatever, where you sit in a chair, and then you live through your robot in your everyday life.
05:28:51.580That's coming closer and closer and closer, guys.
05:29:26.960I mean, what we got is basically for the masses is basically nihilism that's being to the point where people won't care about their reality.
05:29:43.060I mean, it's such a double-edged sword, this program.
05:29:46.520You know, we're using certain technology, but we're hoping that, as you said, we'll be able to get our people tuned in to, you know, the IRL.
05:29:57.580But the nihilism is a big, big issue, and that's for the masses.
05:30:03.620The other, you know, flip side of that, which is really for the quasi-elite, is the narcissism.
05:30:08.780I mean, you look at someone, as you mentioned, Elon Musk.
05:30:13.660So I would argue that Elon Musk is more of a narcissist than he is a nihilist.
05:30:18.260However, I would say that for all of this technology and who is he targeting, it's not just him, but he's the easy, low-hanging fruit.
05:30:26.160It's basically targeting the masses, and the mechanism is nihilism, for people to become nihilists.
05:30:37.540Would you mind elaborating on that definition?
05:30:41.500I'm not familiar with the word, so you'd be teaching me something, too.
05:30:44.680Well, I was going to say, a lot of people will just pronounce it nihilism.
05:33:18.400And if they make it sophisticated enough, these Khajiits will live in a virtual world, and while they work, they have surrogate robots that they operate doing their work all day long, you know?
05:33:33.480So when you're out there, and they live in these little cages and boxes, just like a pig does on a farm, on one of those, where the pig is so big, it can't even stand up, it has to squat, you know?
05:33:46.200I can see something like that happening.
05:33:48.400Well, they just jack these Khajiits into chairs in virtual reality and they shit on themselves, but they don't care.
05:33:59.360Well, certain things come to mind as well, like universal basic income, right?
05:34:04.360They're kind of already prepping people with universal basic income when it comes to the ideas of staking cryptocurrency, right?
05:34:14.280If you guys aren't familiar with that, you can have a crypto and then throw it into a liquidity pool.
05:34:21.620So that way it's used as somewhat, it's used as purchasing power for on-chain transactions and you get paid interest for doing that.
05:34:34.100Some of these staking options can get you upwards to 14% to 20% interest paid out every three days.
05:34:46.920So they're testing options in regards to the slave system, whether it's what you just brought up or even the track chase database system of cryptocurrency.
05:35:04.780Sorry, I'm coming kind of black-pilled today, guys.
05:35:12.940You know, nihilism being brought up, it makes me think about everything being fake and gay.
05:40:58.720But if you look at the lesser races, like the Indians aren't dead, they don't know what it means to be free.
05:41:04.880They don't even have a conceptual understanding.
05:41:08.640So like what Skull Masters said, yeah, they're going to jump in to their little cubicles, plug in that virtual headset and just live out their days as slaves.
05:41:19.020And that, to them, that's the best way of living.
05:41:24.940The, um, and as part of what it's going to look for, and we're probably going to fight for it, fight for it, uh, we're going to be naturally revoked.
05:41:35.220And as long as there's Aryan blood on this earth, there will always be a group of people who are going to reject the slave mentality of what the elites, the Jewish people want to do to all commandments.
05:41:50.020You know, it's something about these, uh, these Jewish characters I wanted to bring up.
05:42:01.720Cause I saw this, uh, this video is, uh, it was an older video.
05:42:05.080Um, this guy on good morning America, uh, this Jewish guy who basically, you know, told a story.
05:42:13.040I think he was the one, I think told the story about, he was in the, uh, he was in the concentration camp and his wife would come to the wall and the gate and hand him flowers every day or something like that.
05:42:26.660And then he got out and they married and they, uh, he was like, Oh, he's, you know, this love story.
05:42:33.520Uh, and it's just all, it was all bullshit.
05:42:51.100It was in my imagination and it was true.
05:42:53.360And when you look at this, you, you, you see how dug in these people are to their false realities.
05:43:01.280You know, this, this truth is of our people.
05:43:04.740This truth is of, of something that we have, but we have alone not to fall into this life of imagination.
05:43:12.500When you look at who's pushing, uh, trans, uh, transhumanism and, and placing themselves in these machines and thinking, oh, this is the way we can live in mortality.
05:43:24.660And just in our minds, everything is just in our minds.
05:43:28.740And that's all the reality is like, we, we are bigger than that.
05:45:20.480Yeah, I think, um, they've got our whole world existing inside of their little world where, uh, basically everything, it just runs off their Jewish psychology.
05:45:31.740Um, even, uh, you know, and, and, and I don't know, it's everything I've ever read.
05:45:39.120But even when we do, do things that are good, uh, for other people, according to the modern framework way of seeing things psychologically, it's all just, uh, ego serving, right?
05:45:50.940You know, we're motivated to do the right thing because God forbid that we do the wrong thing.
05:45:55.420We just, we don't want to be bad guys.
05:46:05.580But that's what we got to get away from is, uh, the, the framework that we're working from, you know, the, the reason why we're doing things.
05:46:13.060Are we doing things just to, to soothe our little, uh, hurt feelings or are we, we doing things because we want the, the people in the world who are good folks, you know, the race of people who, who tend to put out good and, and, uh, you know, lovely things, just, uh, helpful and make life nice.
05:46:35.720Because, uh, you know, we, we, we tend to be the ones always coming to the rescue.
05:46:40.980Anybody who's in a bind, you know, it's, it's white people that, that come to try to help them out.
05:46:45.480Uh, that's, that needs to be our ethos is, is, is that's what we're trying to proliferate more of us, more of the good stuff, uh, more of the good people.
05:46:54.080I know that sounds, you know, shitty to say it that way, but that's, that's all I know to say it as it just, we, we want to, uh, make the future be great.
05:47:02.460You know, just, it's the 14 words really summed up.
05:47:05.720Is this a bad time to introduce my AI girlfriend?
05:47:54.320Things are falling up around, falling down around us.
05:47:58.000And, uh, you know, we can be going through hard times, but imagine being stuck in one of these, these things and actually all of this being completely out of our control and having no ability to change that reality.
05:48:16.000You know, if we have the ability to change reality, you know, we conquered the West, we made it in our image.
05:48:49.880Just imagine, like, what you're saying.
05:48:52.980All the poor guys were hacked by, uh, by time in the machine.
05:48:58.180And they're using the machine that everyone else is using.
05:49:01.340How fucking disgusting that is going to be.
05:49:06.180And they're just like, all these Indians won't care.
05:49:09.540I, I'm just so repulsed out of the future.
05:49:11.720Like, pretty much they're going to have robotic fleshlights, right, that look and act like androids.
05:49:17.980And then men are just going to spend money, like, pop quarters in the back of it, like it's, uh, one of those Ferris wheel rides at the grocery store.
05:49:27.740And, like, just think of how disgusting that really is.
05:49:32.280And then for anyone who's out there who doesn't understand why, like, like why you, most men don't want to date a woman who's been with a non-white, that's the disgust that you get in picturing that, that's the disgust we get when, uh, someone race misses.
05:50:03.520I think it might've been something like Ready Player One.
05:50:05.860Somebody was going to rent a virtual reality suit and they, they were talking to the place and they said, yeah, we hose them out real good.
05:50:13.080So it's like pretty gross, but I was thinking they would actually assign everybody their own little pod.
05:50:18.660And, you know, like White Reich was saying, imagine being stuck in the pod, basically living in there most of your life, I guess, in the fucking pod, being this atrophied piece of shit who has no ability to go out and, and like, like you said, change the circumstance.
05:50:34.920It changed the world because you're, you would literally become atrophied over time.
05:52:11.680And, uh, lied about Stalin, lied about World War II and that, that Hitler was actually the good guy.
05:52:20.200And, and he, he, they actually touched on something that, that I logically put something in place a long time ago about, about Pearl Harbor, not just on the facts that, that the, that we knew about it before it happened, but from, uh, from the quote, I just, I just deduced this.
05:52:48.000This is a, this is a, this is a stretch I, I got, I grant you that, but when, when, uh, not Chamberlain, but, uh, who's the, who was the, uh, the PM, the prime minister of England at the time?
05:53:13.560Um, yeah, Winston Churchill said, you know, that the, that America is like a pressure cooker and you just have to heat it up enough, uh, and it'll explode.
05:53:58.700And I've always, I've always believed that and all, all the evidence has come out.
05:54:03.500It's just, it's just been a further, uh, affirmation of, of that intuition.
05:54:10.600But, you know, I, as soon as I caught that, I was like, those motherfuckers, man, this is, this is like 25 years ago.
05:54:18.760So, but, you know, for them to talk about that and talk about that, uh, that, that event, Pearl Harbor being fake and gay, you know, just that further destruction.
05:54:30.220And when you look at, at our people and you look at this, this World War II and just a, just a, a collection of all of our best boys going to war and killing each other and who wins.
05:55:17.380And, and, and when you look at the boys that were sent to the front lines there, you know, we, we should never send.
05:55:29.880And it wasn't, this a rule at one point, like if you didn't have, if you didn't have two boys at home that you weren't enlisted, something like that, but that, that should be a standard.
05:55:42.640You better have, you better have, have children already to replace you if you die, but to send our unmarried, uh, children to fight our battles for us is, is immoral.
05:56:00.640It's unethical. It's unethical. It's not 14 words. It's the opposite of 14 words.
05:56:09.560I mean, in, in, in, in a defense scenario, you know, in defense against invading hordes.
05:56:14.920Yeah. Women and children, everybody, man, but that's not at all what that was. That was fighting the bankers wars, fighting the Jews wars. So they really, God, they really screwed us with that deal.
05:56:24.900Yeah. If we have to protect our land from invaders, you know, it, it does, it goes down the ranks. Like you think of the movie, the Patriot, right?
05:56:36.280The father and the son fighting beside each other and young kids, 13 year olds.
05:56:41.440Yeah. When you got to protect your women and the other, the other children, the youngers. Yeah. You, you get, you get it. You get a uniform.
05:56:54.440Yeah. I thought it was very interesting that, that, uh, that kind of rhetoric is being put out there. You got Mark Levin, uh, you know, questioning it, of course, cause he's a Jew who's, uh, who's a part of the Kalergi plan and a part of this whole mess, uh, you know, trying to shit on it.
05:57:21.240And, you know, we've got white Reich in there saying, no one cares. Your error is over. You lose. But the, the comments here all the way through it is, uh, is these are the, the affirmant, the online affirmations we need, right?
05:57:42.960Right. These split between our men and the others.
05:57:54.420We need that split to become as clear and wide as possible.
05:58:00.640Our men and everybody else, because we hold all the cards, we hold all the power, we hold all the value.
05:58:07.220And if we're going to, uh, allow our women to go back and forth, that's an, that's an us problem.
05:58:19.700But if we're collectivized, say, no, you either pick this or you pick that.
05:58:25.980And if you pick that, let me fill in for Frank.
05:58:29.820We need to get these young boys like them to, uh, monstrous fucking chads in that video right there and, uh, have them help them be positioned as the, uh, the most dominant, uh, asset on the marketplace, you know, dating and marriage.
05:58:46.320Uh, so that these, these white girls don't see anything else as an option, except I, I want that, you know, that, that, uh, high school quarterback guy.
05:58:54.480Yeah, we talked about, um, we've, we've talked about the dating apps and how the dating apps actually, uh, in many ways, destroy this dynamic too.
05:59:09.880Because you have the, the, uh, the dates go the one direction and you've got a bunch of guys on those dating apps and maybe they're, uh, the, the top 5% of guys, something like that, maybe top 10%.
05:59:27.960And, and, and they just use it to run through girls.
05:59:34.220And so they run through what they talked about the, the nine, the eights and nines on those apps, they run through the sixes and the fives and the sevens even.
05:59:45.280And so the sixes and the fives think that they are worth the, the eights and the nines.
05:59:52.080And so they reject all their, their compatible sixes and fives or even sevens because they, they think they deserve an eight because they were run through.
06:00:03.020And it just destroys the, their, everyone's brains.
06:00:52.540I mean, there's, there's, there's questions, but he's based to a certain degree, but, you know.
06:01:03.360Well, for one thing, they, people are starting to see that this is becoming a really dominant narrative and they're wanting to get on there and get that clout.
06:01:10.980From it by getting on there and saying, yeah, white power.
06:01:13.940When they may have been singing a different tune, uh, last year at this time, because this is getting to be a pretty big question that everybody is, uh, talking about it in their own ways.
06:01:44.300Everybody will end up where we are and further, right.
06:01:49.100In their, in their racial consciousness.
06:01:50.840This is where we will, that we will come all of the religious talks, all of the political talks, all of the relationship talks, every, all of the economic talks, all of the policy talks, all the geopolitics talks.
06:02:09.200It all lands here, like the, like the spokes of a son and rad coming to the center will all end up here and further.
06:02:22.360Can you say a little more what you mean?
06:02:25.220What, what's keeping this issue, the, the, the white excellence issue at the center of all those things?
06:02:30.700What do you think is that we're, we're kind of the standard that everything is seeking to, uh, um, well, it's white, it's white racial consciousness, right?
06:02:41.460The truth is white racial consciousness.
06:02:43.600So everyone's journey toward any truth will, will just keep bringing them closer and closer and closer to the center of white racial consciousness.
06:02:53.460That, that is the lens of truth that, that all of our people will see through, right?
06:02:58.160They're all in some way, shape or form, lobotomized, uh, or propagandized, uh, and living a false reality.
06:03:07.360But as that breaks apart, and as you see this on the timeline, as this, as this conversation, uh, and the taboos that once were become mainstream talking points, you know, it, it is in many cases, an attempt to gatekeep.
06:03:23.800That's, that's, that's what some people said about Tucker Carlson's interview with this guy, this David column is that.
06:03:56.880What Nick Fuentes said recently about Tucker Carlson is very true.
06:04:01.760And I would add this, Devin Stack said it first, he, he did a podcast on Tucker Carlson, who he's connected to, how he's been a part of the CIA in his early life.
06:04:31.760So they will allow this conversation to be had in the sense of like, oh, you know, maybe we did side with the wrong people in World War II.
06:04:40.580But that's only in order to capture more of an audience because the lid is off.
06:07:54.040For 10 years they ran the consensus, pretending things were popular when they weren't.
06:08:00.460And these people felt safe to deny reality.
06:08:06.920Well, it'll come to the fact that they cannot deny reality.
06:08:11.320And everything that they've bought in and invested in will just become garbage.
06:08:19.920And then the question becomes, I think, will those people be radicalized or demoralized?
06:08:25.380When I found out that my community I lived in was filled with hippies, cowards, and queers, it was me to decide to be demoralized or to be radicalized.
06:09:09.260Regarding some of the ways that they do what we're calling gatekeeping, somebody had mentioned a while back in another space, I think, that they kind of do concentric circles of gatekeeping.
06:09:23.840And like you had mentioned, at the end of each one, a rabbit hole of bullshit.
06:09:27.600And so, also, concentric circles of bullshit.
06:09:29.980And the whole system is designed like a treadmill.
06:09:46.940When an issue comes up, we learn of things, and we start pushing it in our vernacular, and it becomes a thing, you know, and it winds up basically peer-proven because, you know, we do have a, you know, people that are not in our little group that, you know, are on the same shit we are.
06:10:04.520Well, they have to, you know, make a new gatekeeper for that shit.
06:10:08.440There's even guys out there who do name the Jews, but they're gatekeepers as well.
06:10:12.140They'll send you down the rabbit hole of Bolsheviks or Zionists or lizard people, whatever the fuck.
06:10:18.060But the way to look at that is that we're pushing them back, and they're having to give ground to us.
06:10:24.660And the thing is, once we push them back off of that ground, they go ahead and maintain that concentric circle, as I say, that hedge around that area of information.
06:10:37.740It's to slow people down on their journey to get to the end of the whole thing that it's the Jews and the white people are the only damn cure for it, how they use blacks, et cetera, et cetera.
06:10:48.800It's really kind of a simple deal, the shit that they do, but I guess maybe it's unbelievable or something.
06:10:55.080But somebody had mentioned that shit in another space, and I wanted to bring that to light, that they're very scientific about the way that they do this shit, but the reason they're having to do it that way is because we're pushing them back.
06:11:05.420Over the years, we have this bitch busted wide open at this point, I think.
06:11:13.040I think more than ever before, I think this is unprecedented, uncharted territory.
06:11:20.040And I'm on one hand, trying to keep track of it.
06:11:28.860On the other hand, doing what we can to move it, right?