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unidentified
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Well the virus has now killed more than a hundred people in China and new cases have been confirmed around the world. | |
So you don't want to frighten the American public. | ||
France and South Korea have also got evacuation plans. | ||
But you need to prepare for and assume. | ||
Probably warning Americans to avoid all non-essential travel to China. | ||
That this is going to be a real serious problem. | ||
France, Australia, Canada, the US, Singapore, Cambodia, Vietnam, the list goes on. | ||
Health officials are investigating more than a hundred possible cases in the US. | ||
Germany, a man has contracted the virus. | ||
The epidemic is a demon and we cannot let this demon hide. | ||
Japan, where a bus driver contracted the virus. | ||
Coronavirus has killed more than 100 people there and infected more than 4,500. | ||
We have to prepare for the worst, always, because if you don't and the worst happens, War Room. | ||
Pandemic. | ||
unidentified
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Here's your host, Stephen K. Bannon. | |
Okay, it's Father's Day weekend. | ||
I want to thank everybody. | ||
Welcome into the War Room. | ||
It's Saturday the 19th of June, the year of our Lord 2021. | ||
I want to continue on from our Friday shows, which kicked off the Father's Day weekend, about masculinity in America. | ||
This is our special day. | ||
It's going to play the entire weekend. | ||
I want to thank all of our distribution partners, particularly the folks over at Real America Voice. | ||
Samsung TV Plus is our newest distribution outlet through Real America's Voice. | ||
I want to welcome everybody watching on channel 1029. | ||
Also, G-News and GT for putting this up in Mandarin and blowing it through the firewall to Lao Bai Jing. | ||
So we're Masculine in America. | ||
We're packed today so we're going to have to really chop some wood and get through all of this. | ||
Got a lot of boxers and fighters and really a lot of tough, tough hombres as we call them. | ||
But they all want to talk about the situation with Masculine in America. | ||
My wingman for the show today is Jack Posobiec, our editor-in-chief now for Human Events. | ||
We've got a new book out with the Antifa. | ||
It's a real story, true stories from the Black Block. | ||
The Black Block. | ||
The book is a bestseller. | ||
It's going to be a New York Times bestseller. | ||
Hope so. | ||
Hope so. | ||
Everybody wants to get it. | ||
Of course, my sister, who raised two boys. | ||
One's an army sergeant, right? | ||
Was an army sergeant, her son. | ||
So she's a mom of two boys and did that for many years as a single mom. | ||
So notice how tough it is. | ||
But I want to go, we've got so many people to get to on this, but I've got to ask you, when I asked you to come in, And co-host the special with the title. | ||
I think the title should be Crisis of Masculinity in America. | ||
That's right. | ||
Do we have a crisis of masculinity? | ||
We do. | ||
I mean, you look at the summit that Biden and Putin just held and you see Biden up there crossing his legs, taking his jacket off. | ||
You know, he comes into the entire thing from a position of weakness. | ||
He's already given away all of his leverage, etc, etc. | ||
And when I talk about that, I'm not trying to make... Boy, I realize you politicized this right out of the box. | ||
Right, right. | ||
But I'm not trying to politicize it. | ||
I'm getting out of it. | ||
I'm getting out of it. | ||
The oldest trick in the book. | ||
I'm going to throw it out there. | ||
I know, right? | ||
But I'm not trying to politicize it. | ||
But I'm not trying to politicize it, right? | ||
So wait, the point though is... You're so MAGA. | ||
Is that understanding these Power levers and power dynamics and powers of leverage. | ||
This is traditional masculinity. | ||
Putin does understand this. | ||
Like him or not, right or wrong, he certainly understands to use it to his advantage. | ||
But is that macho? | ||
Remember in the 50s we had Jimmy Stewart, you had Gary Cooper, you know of High Noon. | ||
And these were our Hollywood stars. | ||
Stars. | ||
Remember, that was not Rambo. | ||
We kind of went to the situation of Rambo that kind of said, hey, masculinity's got to be a thing you're allowed to do now. | ||
The only thing you're allowed to do as a man in society to be masculine means you have your man cape, you eat bacon, you drink beer, and you watch sports, right? | ||
That's masculine. | ||
It's only allowed masculinity. | ||
But that's not true masculinity. | ||
True masculinity is discipline, it is expertise, and it really comes into its own through fatherhood, through being the father figure for the next generation, for your children, preparing them for life in the outside world. | ||
That is, and Thomas Aquinas writes about this, the full actualization, this idea, the concept of man's last end, if you read Summa Theologica. | ||
This is Aquinas' belief that by realizing our full potentiality then we become actualized and to go to the Catholic angle that that is what brings us closer to God. | ||
That is our journey. | ||
I want to drill down on this because part of the crisis in masculinity in America is about formation. | ||
unidentified
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Yes. | |
It's about the young generation. | ||
This concept we've had in the Judeo-Christian West for millennia is about the responsibility of men to take charge of the formation, not just of their daughters, right, but particularly of their sons, to make sure that there's moral, physical, spiritual, and mental development. | ||
So let's talk about, let's go back to Thomas Aquinas, let's talk about what you just said and put that in the context of formation. | ||
So when you put it in the context of formation, it is, you know, we were told, you know, go out and find yourself. | ||
That's what society tells us. | ||
Go out and find yourself. | ||
Find out who you are. | ||
Be, you know, be you. | ||
Just do whatever, right? | ||
And we fall into these traps of, well, that turns into video games and Netflix and | ||
Whatever's offered up to us on our iPhones as opposed to actually having fathers sitting down with their sons and their daughters Preparing them from the world preparing them with financial literacy and understanding basic economics home economics Understanding how to be prepared physically right knowing that those types of things that you don't have to be some kind of macho Like you said Rambo, but having a basic health regimen eating right having a good diet Not just going to McDonald's all the time, right? | ||
and understanding how that will help you later on in life as we all age, right? | ||
Because Father Time wins in the end for all of us. | ||
But then also that spiritual guidance and the actualization, understanding that we all as individuals have a potentiality, right? | ||
Jesus teaches this in the parable of the talents, that it is by using those talents that we develop fully into the people that we are destined to become if we choose that through our free will, right? | ||
And fathers have that role, men have that role where we are developing children not to be, you know, prepared for the home life, but be to be prepared for reaching and confronting the rest of the world. | ||
I think this is, and I'm going to jump in here, I think that this is part of what modernity or modern culture, starting in the 50s with the sitcom dads, and those sitcoms were great, but the father was always looked at as the guy that was kind of clueless, it got worse in the 60s and 70s, and finally devolved down to the man cave. | ||
Where all the shows now, they're basically like some sort of beast that you just have to feed. | ||
It only responds to this kind of basic thing like eating the bacon, sitting there watching TV all day long. | ||
It's devolved so that the father does not have a place of respect. | ||
The father does not have a place of honor. | ||
That is one of the principal things that the cultural Marxists have tried to do. | ||
What modernity has tried to do is to Destroy the nuclear family and in doing that one of the central things is to destroy this whole concept of the father as really Principally responsible not just for the care of the family but for the formation of the next generation and particularly the sons Right, so fathers, you know, that's taken away. | ||
The father's role is, okay, you have to have dads around, men around for procreation, but the rest of that role, think of it, we outsource our opinion, certainly with the lockdowns and all, that's the experts, that's Fauci, that's the government. | ||
We outsource our decisions. | ||
Well, whatever the government says is best, whatever the CDC says is best, right? | ||
And we've confronted them because as men, we can look at the science and we can go to PubMed, we can go to ResearchGate and look at these studies for ourselves. | ||
And that's why so many people have challenged this because they're looking at the actual data and taking agency, right? | ||
Having agency, this idea of being a prime mover and a first mover. | ||
Because so much of modernity teaches, what do they teach? | ||
Victim mentality, victim patterns. | ||
Society is against you. | ||
Or, you know, if you're born a certain way, then, you know, you are set up to fail. | ||
that or more. | ||
Or, worse, your people are oppressors, and you are responsible for all the ills of the past, and everything is done because of you. | ||
Sorry, little Timmy, you may only be six years old, but guess what? | ||
Your people are colonizers, so we're going to have to ruin the rest of your life. | ||
It's ridiculous. | ||
And so, we're not teaching kids anymore this idea of living through Growing to your own personal development, because we're teaching them to be victims, as opposed to taking responsibility for their actions, understanding that, look, if you're the person, you know, if you started a situation, this is just to keep it small, right? | ||
You have to keep it small, but you have to teach accountability to kids. | ||
Where we've outsourced accountability for adults, they're looking to us, they say, hey, it's not my fault the government said so. | ||
Hey, it's not my fault Fauci said so. | ||
Hey, it's not my fault the CDC or the sign that was up on the door, right? | ||
I've got to follow the sign. | ||
No, no, no, no, no. | ||
You are accountable for your actions. | ||
If you are the prime mover for right or wrong, you have to take any action back to its first cause, right? | ||
To its first cause and understand, did you play a role in setting those events into motion? | ||
This needs to be taught from such an early age and you get to the point now where And I even pushed back a little bit, this might be a little controversial, but I was asked recently... Jack Pasovic, a little controversial? | ||
I know, right? | ||
I'm so shocked. | ||
I was asked recently if I was, you know, just going into a store, going into a Wawa, actually, and of course, gotta have my Wawa. | ||
This is what a Pennsylvania guy... And they were outside. | ||
A poll in the audience, are you Sheetz or Wawa? | ||
unidentified
|
Oh, oh, oh. | |
And they asked me, they said, do you want a science petition? | ||
We're doing anti-bullying. | ||
It's an anti-bullying petition. | ||
I said, well, what's your program? | ||
What do you, do you teach kids how to stand up to bullies? | ||
Is that what it's about? | ||
Anti-bullying? | ||
They say, no, no, we want schools and teachers and principals to push more policies for anti-bullying and to have more awareness about bullying. | ||
And I said, no, I don't support that actually. | ||
unidentified
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Right. | |
So I don't support it. | ||
I support self-defense. | ||
It's a kid had a fight assertiveness as a kid. Yes, right And that's what I'm gonna teach my kids and that's what my father taught me that when that when someone is bullying you, right? | ||
You stand up to them and you fight back and you be as assertive as it takes that doesn't mean throw fists That doesn't mean cuss them out That doesn't mean that but if they push you you stand your ground and they don't push it You may have to come to fit and that's you know, that's why you take care of that It's actually the cover of my book if you look at the cover of Antifa, that's that's all I'm doing right there is I'm standing my ground I've got the same Tifa guy in my face, but I'm not moving. | ||
I'm Nothing you can say is gonna get me to react it was that was that was that was that was that? | ||
Done was that down here? It was that in Washington down at Lincoln. That's Lincoln That's the original Lincoln Monument. | ||
Lincoln Monument, where they surrounded you that day. | ||
I told Posobiec, he's a true hero for standing his ground. | ||
I also said, you've got to get out of that business. | ||
unidentified
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You're a bigger... No, you should have heard what my wife said. | |
We've got a couple of minutes in this segment, and I know it made a huge difference in raising your son, Meribeth, when one of your boys went into the military. | ||
You're a naval officer. | ||
I'm a former naval officer. | ||
The military, I think, is so revered today, and it's looked at as the most equal of all the thing with the least discrimination, etc., because in many respects, It has taken over for a couple of lost generations of young men to be what is the formation. | ||
From boot camp all the way through, they get the structure that they haven't gotten in the modern family. | ||
I had a conversation with my boot camp instructor about that as we got towards the end. | ||
Because I was already in my 20s when I went in. | ||
I was a little bit older. | ||
I'd lived in China for a while. | ||
And I said to him, I said, you know, this boot camp stuff, it's really not all that hard, right? | ||
unidentified
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He just, he sat me down and said, Pesobic. | |
Walk in a straight line, put your clothes on right, show up on time when you're told to be there. | ||
You understand, we take most kids, when they're coming right out of high school, they've never been asked to do that in their lives before they come here. | ||
They've never been asked. | ||
And so that is our job. | ||
We have to teach them. | ||
We only get eight weeks. | ||
We only get eight weeks when society has 18 years. | ||
I want you to go back over there, because so many, you know, we had the generals on here, the flag officers for America, and one of the generals saying, hey look, I think it's two-thirds of the possible recruits into the military are not fit. | ||
Not just physically, but not fit either through drugs or not just fit because they haven't been raised, they can't even do the modicum of basics. | ||
That instructor, to say things like back in the draft in World War II, etc. | ||
You look at those pictures in the 1940s, you see all these guys and they're not bulked up or anything, but that's your average man in the 1940s. | ||
They all look tough. | ||
unidentified
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Tough. | |
Tough as boot leather. | ||
They didn't have the greatest diets in the world. | ||
Peaky blinders in there. | ||
Not just that. | ||
You didn't have any, you know, no overweight from too many chips or sitting on the sofa watching video games all day or something like that. | ||
These people were out working. | ||
They were active. | ||
They were robotized, right, by their base life. | ||
The military today provides that. | ||
They provide that structure. | ||
They provide that structure that actually performs the formation aspect for so much of this lost generation. | ||
But the military is changing. | ||
But a lot of that is starting to change and that is why the social engineers are targeting the military because they know that that's what was going on through the military, that this was taking kids, adolescents, getting them to be adults, but they don't want that because they want you to be trapped in a perpetual adolescence We're government, we're experts, where your decisions and your agency are completely outsourced. | ||
That is the great reason. | ||
That's one of the reasons so many veterans, so many flag officers, even my daughter Maureen Bannon, all of her posse, everybody's fighting this what they call the de-radicalization. | ||
You'll own nothing and you'll be happy. | ||
Exactly, you'll own nothing and be happy. | ||
I gotta tell you the other thing about the military too, we'll get into it later, it's the least Rambo place because the Rambo gonna get you killed. | ||
You've got to go as a team. | ||
That's Patton, right? | ||
The goal is to get the other guy to die for his country. | ||
His country, exactly. | ||
Don't be Rambo, right? | ||
Because you don't want to get... All these guys walking there are going to be Rambo. | ||
No, no, no, no. | ||
You've got to be the guy that can sit there and take the fire, take the incoming, work as a unit, work as a team. | ||
Okay, short commercial break. | ||
We've got Jack Masovic. | ||
It's got to be a Steve Bannon presentation. | ||
When I start Masculinity America, and I start with two Polish guys. | ||
I got Jack Posobiec, and I'm going to have Arthur Pawlowski, the pastor, from Poland in Canada. | ||
But he's touring America, so he's going to give us some insights. | ||
He's fantastic. | ||
So Pastor Pawlowski will be on next. | ||
Masculinity America, Posobiec's already arguing, so there should be the crisis in masculinity. | ||
I tell you what, if we keep working it right, we're going to get to talk more about Thomas Aquinas later in the show. | ||
Short commercial break. | ||
We'll be back with our Father's Day weekend special, Masculinity in America. | ||
You're in the War Room. | ||
unidentified
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War Room. | |
Pandemic. | ||
With Stephen K. Banham. | ||
unidentified
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The epidemic is a demon and we cannot let this demon hide. | |
War Room. | ||
Pandemic. | ||
Here's your host, Stephen K. Banham. | ||
Okay, welcome back Father's Day weekend. | ||
This is Masculinity in America from the War Room. | ||
Got a whole two hours on this day. | ||
Started Friday. | ||
This is going to play all weekend. | ||
Want to thank everybody here. | ||
Also want to thank our sponsors at MyPillow. | ||
Go to MyPillow.com right now. | ||
Type in promo code War room you get the total sleep system 30% off got to go there get it today. | ||
Also you got pillows sheets Slippers all of it on sale type in promo code war room support the freedom apparatus of Mike Lindell Mypillow.com the great manufacturing company in the war room go there today Jack Posobiec in studio as my co-host. | ||
Already quoting from Thomas Aquinas in the first segment. | ||
You've been bugging me for a while, my sister Maribeth, about masculinity. | ||
This is how they try to destroy a country. | ||
unidentified
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Right. | |
This is by feminizing our... That's called a microphone. | ||
By feminizing our men. | ||
That's how you take over a country. | ||
You think that's an issue? | ||
unidentified
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I think it's a very big issue and it's intentional. | |
Why is it an issue? | ||
unidentified
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Because you have no one to fight. | |
You were on, talking about fight, you were on, you went to the service. | ||
I actually had you in, because we're from Richmond, you went to Midlothian to this great church. | ||
You saw Artur Pawlowski, this great preacher, this pastor from Poland via Canada. | ||
unidentified
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Yes. | |
Tell me what your experience was. | ||
unidentified
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Amazing. | |
Incredible. | ||
The people that showed up, we could not stop talking about it. | ||
Every priest minister needs to speak as he speaks. | ||
He speaks the truth. | ||
He's firm. | ||
He's not afraid. | ||
But our churches have been taken over as well. | ||
They're not teaching The church militant. | ||
Right. | ||
It's all love, peace. | ||
A manly type of Christianity. | ||
unidentified
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And he was amazing. | |
I mean, he truly affected my life. | ||
Let's bring in Pastor Artur Pawlowski from Calgary, Canada, formerly of Poland, from Poland. | ||
And I'm proud we've got two Polish guys. | ||
I've got Pasobek and I've got Pawlowski. | ||
Pastor, I want you to let out your bona fides before you turned your life over to Christ as a pastor full-time. | ||
You were a martial arts instructor. | ||
You were a martial arts fighter. | ||
unidentified
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That's correct. | |
I was also a boxer representing my country. | ||
So since very early, we were taught as boys to defend ourselves, to stand up, to fight. | ||
I mean, is that not the job? | ||
The definition of a man is not a protector, provider, a hunter, someone that the wife can go to with whatever. | ||
as she goes and not feeling that, oh my God, I'm going to be attacked or taken. Women need their husbands to be tough and strong and the children need their father to feel that with my daddy there's absolutely nothing that can happen to me. My daddy has my back. | ||
Has Christianity, has Christianity, and particularly the way that modern Christianity is preached and taught by and large the mainstream denominations including, and I'm the first to say this, most of the mainstream Catholic Church, not the more traditional conservative right-wing Catholic Church that Pasovic and I adhere to, but most of Christianity today, Catholicism today, do they teach a watered-down form of, do they teach a watered-down form of | ||
Christianity that takes away masculinity? | ||
unidentified
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Bye. | |
Absolutely. | ||
I see this at every corner. | ||
I mean, this is my biggest beef with my colleagues, with the pastors and priests. | ||
I mean, my God, where are you? | ||
We have been called to stand up, to fight. | ||
We have been called to do something, to say something, to be the leaders in the community, to be the fathers, to be the defenders. | ||
And look at what they have done to the men. | ||
And all of this is on the leadership because it comes from the top. | ||
There is this English old Saying the power, the fish thinks from its head. | ||
I'm telling you, the head stinks. | ||
Look, the Southern Baptist Convention is having a takeover by the pirate ships, you know, it's called Take the Ship, because they're trying to force out the LGBTs, too much of the over-emphasis on that, and the cultural Marxism. | ||
unidentified
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Pacific, jump in here, you don't have to be shy. | |
Yeah, I was actually... So I was down in Nashville when they were having the conference. | ||
I didn't realize I was there to shoot a show and they were actually having a conference across the street in the music center, music city center right there in Nashville. That's where they hold the country music awards and Tanya, my wife and I are sitting there saying, hey what are all these Christians doing across the street? And the whole hotel was full of other hotels and I gotta tell you, the thing that I love that I saw, I said what's that red sticker these guys are all wearing? They have some red sticker on and there's 17,000 people signed up for this. That was registration. | ||
The red sticker, I got close to a couple of them, it said stop CRT. | ||
Stop Critical Race Theory. These people were switched on, they were engaged, they were activated. I loved what I saw. | ||
Isn't that part of cultural Marxism, Pastor, in to destroy the traditional family you have to destroy the father as the center in formation, and not just leadership of the family, but the formation of the morals, ethics, spiritual, and the fighting capability of their sons? | ||
unidentified
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Definitely, you know. | |
I look at the Roman Empire, look at the Persians, every empire, every powerful empire has fallen because the moral standards have been lowered. | ||
People became comfortable, apathetic, uninterested. | ||
The father's role was turned into just having children and eating and drinking. | ||
And that's exactly what is happening right now. | ||
We as men are being told, especially in Christianity, that Jesus is love and you are to love. | ||
And that's, of course, the primary thing. | ||
God is love. | ||
But what is love? | ||
Truly, if you think about it, if someone comes to your house and wants to rape your children, Your daughter or your wife, do you say, well, let me go to my niece and let's pray that you have a safe sex? | ||
Or are you going to stand up and fight the villain? | ||
I mean, is that not what a man is supposed to be doing? | ||
We are being taught right now that defending yourself, standing up for what you believe in, standing up for your family, for your children, for your wife, for your church, That's a bad thing. | ||
You're suddenly a lawbreaker, a troublemaker, and I hear that all the time. | ||
Romans 13, you're not obeying the government. | ||
No, I do not obey evil government. | ||
I do not obey evil laws. | ||
I fight evil because that's what Jesus did on the cross. | ||
He died for For truth, he died for love and he stood against evil. | ||
Actually, it's a fascinating portion of the scripture because he says, I've told you not to take the purse, not to take the money. | ||
And now I'm telling you, sell your clothes and get a sword. | ||
Buy a sword. | ||
Because there is a time, and we talked about that the last time, there is a time for peace, but there's also a time for war. | ||
When someone comes and attacks your family, When someone is trying to steal, to take something that belongs to you, you have to be a man. | ||
You have to stand up. | ||
You have to do what's right. | ||
In the Bible, it says that if a man will refuse to take care of his own family, he's worse than a Gentile. | ||
By the way, this is one of the reasons the Gospel of Mark is not taught in seminaries anymore. | ||
It's the Gospel of Power. | ||
Christ is an exorcist in the Gospel of Mark. | ||
He's the driver of action. | ||
It's the one that came from the eyewitness of St. | ||
Peter, and it's very rarely taught today. | ||
The Gospel of Mark. | ||
You want to see Christ as really leading, taking leadership, exercising demons. | ||
It's Christ versus Satan in the entire Gospel. | ||
That's why it's called the Gospel of Action. | ||
You go to these progressive Christian churches these days and it's all about the gospel of love, the gospel of love, God loves you as you are, you can come to Jesus however you are. | ||
Yeah, you can come however you are, but He will never leave you the way you were. | ||
unidentified
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Right? | |
You're missing all of the rest of it. | ||
So this is the point, what Pasovic's talking about, Pastor. | ||
How do we use, then how can Christianity lead young men and lead men out of this? | ||
What do you think is the solution for this crisis of masculinity in America? | ||
unidentified
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We have to go back to the basics. | |
We have to teach the whole Bible. | ||
Cleansing of the temple that Jesus did, was that hate or love? | ||
I mean, seriously, people are talking about, let's be followers of Christ, but do we follow Christ? | ||
Do we do what he did? | ||
He took a whip, I mean, a weapon. | ||
He takes a weapon and he takes a weapon for a very specific purpose. | ||
He overthrows the table. | ||
Was that hate or love? | ||
We have to go back to the basics. | ||
I'll tell you why the young people are leaving the church. | ||
I'll tell you from my own experience, because I left the church for many years, because they were telling me, sit down, be a good and proper Chihuahua. | ||
But I wanted to be a lion, because deep inside of me, I knew that God created me for something great, to conquer mountains, to go and conquer and possess the land that he has given us, the promised land, if you will. | ||
Right now, what we are saying to the young people, we are telling them, come to a conference, sit down and listen to me. | ||
So they're sitting over there, they're listening to the older guys and it doesn't resonate because young people have energy. | ||
They want to do something. | ||
They want to conquer. | ||
They want to go send them to the battlefield, send them to the community, send them so they can change this side of eternity. | ||
But the leaders of today, they're telling them just be a loving and kind and be a nice person. | ||
I'll tell you something. | ||
Nice people do not change history. | ||
Good people change history. | ||
The people that are willing to stand up for what they believe. | ||
The history from the very beginning to the end of the Bible is history of heroes that did something. | ||
They were willing to stand up. | ||
They were willing to fight. | ||
They were willing to die. | ||
They were willing to live for their faith. | ||
Sometimes it's more than to die for your faith. | ||
Pastor Pawlowski, how do people follow you? | ||
What is the social media you're still on, and what is your website that people can follow you and your teachings and your ministry? | ||
unidentified
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www.streetchurch.ca, Artur Pawlowski TV on YouTube, Artur Pawlowski on Facebook, I am also on Twitter. | |
If you Google my name, it will pop up. | ||
I post videos and I challenge people. | ||
I challenge, especially my colleagues to stand up and fight. | ||
When I cleanse the temple, if you will, when they came during the Easter celebration, people ask me, you know, how do you feel about that? | ||
And I say, you know, I don't feel like a hero. | ||
I just did my duty. | ||
I did my job. | ||
I did what every pastor, every priest, every rabbi, every father is supposed to be doing is protecting those people that God has entrusted us To protect. | ||
And that's the duty of a Christian. | ||
I mean, the Bible calls us the followers of Christ, but it calls us soldiers of Christ. | ||
So let's go on. | ||
Let's move on and stand for what we believe in. | ||
Because the society and young people, they look at the Muslims and what do they see? | ||
They see radical faith. | ||
They see people that are willing to die. | ||
for their faith. When they look at the Christianity, they see, and this is what they say to me, you guys even don't believe what you're preaching because when the crisis came, when the attack came, you're not willing to pay the price. | ||
It's time for the men to be men. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Pastor Pawlowski will get everything up. | ||
Thank you very much. | ||
Thank you taking this time on Father's Day weekend. | ||
Very profound. | ||
You're right, my sister, that he is worth going to see live. | ||
It's incredible. | ||
Short break. | ||
Frank Mir, Colby Covington, Nina Rodriguez, Murderers Road next. | ||
unidentified
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War Room. | |
Pandemic. | ||
With Stephen K. Bannon. | ||
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The epidemic is a demon and we cannot let this demon hide. | |
War Room. | ||
Pandemic. | ||
Here's your host, Stephen K. Bannon. | ||
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Go to MyPillow.com right now. | ||
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I think it's the crisis of masculinity in America. | ||
in now, Frank Meir, mixed martial arts, another one of the champions. Frank, you've heard Arthur Poslowski, you've heard Posobiec. You know, Jack, our weekend special is masculinity in America. Posobiec said, hey Steve, I think it's the crisis of masculinity in America. | ||
So Frank Meir, do we have a crisis of masculinity in this country? | ||
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Absolutely. | |
In fact, I find it very worrisome that we have such an attack on masculinity, on the attack on men being protectors, an attack on a man being a father and having control over his children's choices and yet we don't delete. | ||
We look at strength now and we almost, you know, we criminalize it. | ||
We sit there and go, no, you're not allowed to be a protector. | ||
You're not allowed to be strong. | ||
You know, these are things to be looked down upon. | ||
And so I question that and it brings alarm to me because, you know, a nation of a bunch of weak individuals with no masculinity would be a very easy nation to take over and to control. | ||
And I think that's, you know, not to be that guy, but I'm kind of pointing to my friends around me and go, hey, they're likely to have a lot of sheep, a lot easier to take care of than wolves. | ||
But are we in that situation? | ||
Are we in that situation today? | ||
I mean, have we already crossed the kind of tipping point? | ||
Or do you believe, and they see this, and the globalists see this, and they realize that because of a couple of generations without the military, and then obviously without you guys that are fighters as role models, that we've kind of lost a couple of generations here. | ||
You've got these young men in their twenties, thirties, forties, that really are kind of What I call man boys. | ||
They're children. | ||
They don't think like men. | ||
They don't act like men. | ||
They can't comport themselves like men. | ||
They can't make tough decisions like men. | ||
Have we already crossed that tipping point? | ||
Or do you think we're not there yet and we can still salvage this? | ||
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I am worried, just because, again, I mean, look at even at our universities. | |
Having places like a safe space, an area where you don't have to deal with any kind of adversity or language that could bother you, you know, if you say something that triggers somebody, we now protect people from being offended because they don't even have the character, a strength of character to overcome that, to deal with it, to actually, well, let me address what you're saying and why it's bothering me. | ||
Let me see if there's, you know, at the end of the day, you grow thicker skin. | ||
And so if you think about that type of situation where, you know, even our laws now, I make this statement to my friends all the time where I'm like, hey, you know, if a guy walks up to me at the park and he makes lewd comments towards my wife, You know, we're having a barbecue, we're minding our own business, and he says something to her, and I put him in his place. | ||
I don't have to hurt him badly, but you know, a confrontation occurs because he's being rude and disrespectful. | ||
When the police show up, they're going to take me to jail. | ||
I mean, what does that say? | ||
They'll be like, well, you should have called somebody, asked for help, reached out, and all. | ||
Man, I don't know. | ||
When I hear stories of my grandfather, that's not how they dealt with things. | ||
That's not the type of men that were the ones that went and fought in World War II, that had to go and depend on somebody else and turn the other cheek and avoid confrontation because we even start that in school where it's zero tolerance for violence, where a child can't even defend themselves because that's wrong to stand up for yourself. | ||
And if they're going to be attacked in school, we establish this protocol where, well, everybody's in trouble. | ||
You even defending yourself, we're going to mark you for that also. | ||
No, Frank, that's exactly... I don't know if you're... | ||
Yeah, I don't know if you were listening when we were in the first segment. | ||
That's exactly what I was talking about, because they came up to me and they said, hey, do you sign this thing for zero tolerance, anti-bullying, this and that? | ||
I said, well, do you teach the kids to stand up for themselves? | ||
Are you teaching them to fight back against bullies, stand your ground, that kind of stuff? | ||
They said, no, no, we're going to have this new program, and it's going to be great, and the teachers are involved, and the principals are there. | ||
So, okay, yeah, but where's the development of the child in all of that? | ||
You know, at what point do you actually have to have him come face-to-face with adversity, go through the test of that confrontation, and learn that the only way you can grow is through friction, through resistance, and overcoming those challenges. | ||
If you don't teach that stuff, and look, I'm not talking about like, you know, somebody's getting gassed up and eating the crap out of him. | ||
No, those extremes are bad. | ||
Sure, right. | ||
But the basic mental assertiveness that comes first. | ||
That's what you have to teach kids. | ||
And if you don't start at an early age, you're going to set them up for failure when they get to adulthood. | ||
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I 100% agree. | |
My job as a father is to prepare my children for the real world. | ||
So one thing that I've always done is that my children sometimes will battle with each other. | ||
There are times where they are having issues. | ||
I don't always jump in and interfere and change. | ||
Now obviously, one of my children is about to get his Her arm broke, I'm going to intervene. | ||
You know, now we're talking about bodily injury. | ||
But as far as the hazing and a little bit of bullying, a little bit of friction back and forth, I sit back and I tell my wife, I'm like, hey, this is how lions become lions. | ||
When they're cubs, they play fight. | ||
They attack each other. | ||
They learn how to address this on a smaller level so that they can become adults and they're not at work where their boss says, hey, why are you late? | ||
They break down in tears because they're having a bad day and they have no idea how to deal with any type of adversity or confrontation. | ||
You know, Frank, it's so funny you say that, because I got a three-year-old, right? | ||
He's a toddler. | ||
He doesn't know anything, right? | ||
But he'll sit there, and I'm teaching him his prayers. | ||
That's what we're working on. | ||
In Latin, by the way. | ||
And I'll be sitting around on the couch just doing something. | ||
He'll grab a pillow or whatever it is, and he'll come at me. | ||
He'll just come at me. | ||
Why? | ||
Because men have that within ourselves innately, right? | ||
He's challenging my status. | ||
He's looking up and saying, okay, so you're a top dog, maybe I could be a top dog. | ||
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And of course, you know... My money's on the kid. | |
I never taught him to do that. | ||
That is innate, that is inherent, that's biological, that's spiritual, and society wants to shut that down. | ||
So Frank Mirra, you've been a championship fighter, people look at you as a role model for that, but you've actually stepped forward now and you're putting your views out on your podcast and other things. | ||
What is your remedy? | ||
This is what I want to ask Nino Rodriguez, this is what I want to ask Colby Covington. | ||
I want to ask you, what's your remedy today? | ||
In a couple of minutes, what's your remedy today to get our hands on this crisis of masculinity and start to bring up this younger generation? | ||
Look, we make education mandatory. | ||
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If our children, you know, if a child's not going to school, we hold the parents responsible for that, because we realize the importance of an education. | |
I think that sports, and specifically the combat sports, MMA, boxing, wrestling, I think should be a requirement. | ||
Not everybody's going to be a world champion. | ||
Look, it's just not how it works, you know. | ||
But everybody can improve and I think that the tools that you learn on the mat, in the ring, I think are invaluable and they can carry over and make you develop to a much stronger person because you have to push yourself. | ||
You're going to see who you are. | ||
You're going to fail and you're going to have bad days. | ||
You're going to have days you quit and then you're going to have a coach sitting there pushing you to the next level, showing you how to improve yourself As a human being, just being a stronger man. | ||
And the only way I can see to do that is through adversity and through suffering. | ||
And right now we live in a very great country where there's not a lot of that. | ||
We're not fighting in war-torn streets, barring certain cities here that are democratically ran. | ||
Wow. | ||
Perfect. | ||
But for the most part, I think that that is what we need. | ||
I would make martial arts a mandatory requirement in our school system to where now children are learning how to battle and become warriors. | ||
And it's an essential skill and it's extremely safe way to push the mind, body and spirit to the next level. | ||
I think you're confident. | ||
Yeah, confidence. | ||
Self-empowerment. | ||
By the way, I would throw young girls into that, too, for the mixed martial arts. | ||
When Maureen was at West Point, she said, hey, combat arts is one of the best things that she ever learned. | ||
She's a pretty tough athlete coming up. | ||
She said when she got into the combat arms part of it and the training of it, it's very empowering for people. | ||
Frank, how do people get to you on social media? | ||
How do they follow you? | ||
How do they get to the podcast? | ||
Everybody wants to know how I can follow Frank Mir. | ||
So how do we do it? | ||
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Yeah, I'm big on Instagram, thefrankmayor. | |
I also have Twitter and my Facebook. | ||
I go live on, at least try to do about once a week. | ||
And even now, I've started in a TikTok with my daughter. | ||
Right now, basically showing techniques, but actually, because of maybe some of the influence I could have in a positive way, I'd like to start showing a little bit of lifestyle changes also that, you know, that help out parents out there, how to guide their children in a way that, you know, to make them the type of people we want them to be when they grow up. | ||
that society can now depend on and we can put on their shoulders. | ||
Frank Mir, thank you very much. American patriot and a hero, sir. Thank you. Honored to have you on the Father's Day Weekend Show, Masculine America. Frank Mir. | ||
Now we're bringing in Colby Covington, another great warrior. | ||
Colby, I got a question. | ||
What I want to ask you is about, start off with about pop culture and this kind of phony machismo and macho that they show versus true masculinity and being a true warrior. | ||
You're one of the toughest guys in this country. | ||
You've fought. | ||
You're relentless. | ||
You don't give up. | ||
Walk us through the thing, kind of this fake macho versus what it really takes to be a warrior such as yourself. | ||
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Yeah, you know, I think the biggest thing is, you know, not having a participation trophy type society these days. | |
You know, kids want, you know, communism. | ||
They want things handed to them these days. | ||
They don't want capitalism. | ||
They don't want to have to earn it the hard way. | ||
They don't want to have to work, you know, with blood, sweat and tears. | ||
And that's how I earned everything in my life, literally with my bare hands. | ||
That's how I've You know, created everything that I have in my life, you know, and I did the hard way. | ||
I did it through challenges, trials, and tribulations. | ||
Not every kid is going to win in everything in life, but you shouldn't get a participation trophy. | ||
You should, if you lose, it just means that you need to work harder. | ||
And you know, if you put in the right time and you work harder than you can achieve anything in life, but not everybody's going to be world champions. | ||
Not everybody's going to be winners, but you know, we shouldn't tell kids that, Oh, it's okay to lose. | ||
Oh, it's okay. | ||
You know, you're going to get a participation trophy. | ||
No, that's, That's not realistic and that's not how it should be, you know. | ||
Look at the generation before us. | ||
They had fallout shelters, you know. | ||
They were worried about Russians, you know, sending rockets over here. | ||
Now today's society, hey, someone hurt your feelings? | ||
Here's a safe space. | ||
Come in the safe space. | ||
Draw a unicorn. | ||
Colby, what have your defeats and what is failure? | ||
The failures you've had and the defeats you've had, what has it taught Colby Covington? | ||
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You know, my failures has taught me everything. | |
You know, my failures, I've learned the most from it. | ||
You know, I realized that I had to work harder. | ||
I had to be more disciplined. | ||
I had to sacrifice more. | ||
I had to work harder more than anything. | ||
And, you know, there wasn't any, you know, corners that I cut in life to get here. | ||
With those failures, those failures just taught me that, hey, you know, you need to look back on those failures. | ||
You need to learn from them and you need to grow from them. | ||
And if you don't learn from those failures, then you're just going to, you know, keep having those same failures again. | ||
What would be your prescription today for how do we get, you know, you said the young kids want communism. | ||
We've got about a minute in this segment we're going to ask to hold you over, but let's start off with what do you think? | ||
What's your prescription? | ||
What's Colby Covington's prescription for how we help this young generation of young men coming up that are kind of lost right now? | ||
What would be your recommendations? | ||
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My recommendations would be first and foremost is, you know, look at the right role models. | |
A lot of these kids, they're looking up to a LeBron James these days. | ||
Okay, yeah, LeBron, he's good at putting a basketball into a hoop. | ||
But when you're talking about if the grid were to go down, That guy would be crying under his bed because he doesn't have his technology and wealth. | ||
You need to look up to real heroes like law enforcement, like military, like firefighters. | ||
Those are the guys that are putting their lives on the line every single day for you. | ||
And they're not looking for, you know, any, you know, clicks and they're not looking for any attention or clout on the ground. | ||
They're just looking to, you know, serve our community and serve our country. | ||
So, you know, I think it starts with having the right role models and not looking up to the wrong people these days. | ||
Colby, just hang on. | ||
We're going to take a short commercial break. | ||
We're going to turn to Colby Covington, one of the great champions out there. | ||
We've got Jack Posobiec in studio. | ||
My kid sister, who's a fighter, beat cancer. | ||
And we're going to get Nino Rodriguez, one of the heavyweight champions. | ||
We're going to have A very special guest, Dr. Colbert, is going to talk about testosterone. | ||
What's the problem in modern America? | ||
Also, I think estrogen, too. | ||
Very controversial guy, but I think he's going to lay down some facts that people... Go search that for yourself, but I think there's another crisis that underpins, may underpin all of this, okay? | ||
Short commercial break. | ||
We're going to return our Father's Day special, Masculinity in America, next in the War Room. | ||
unidentified
|
War Room. | |
Pandemic. | ||
With Stephen K. Banham. | ||
The epidemic is a demon and we cannot let this demon hide. | ||
War Room. | ||
Pandemic. | ||
Here's your host, Stephen K. Banham. | ||
Whether you think it's a biological weapon or a total hoax, the one thing we have learned over the last year and a half, it's your immune system. | ||
You have to boost it. | ||
One way to do it is vitamin D3 and zinc. | ||
You get it free. | ||
Go to warroomdefense.com. | ||
You've got to pay shipping and handling, but you get the vitamin D3 and zinc for free. | ||
But more importantly, get access to information. | ||
Remember, this whole show For the Posse, the Cadre, all of it is about human agency and human empowerment. | ||
Take action today. | ||
go to warrmdefense.com. | ||
I want to bring back in Colby Covington. | ||
I want to say something to the audience. | ||
Now, for years I've advocated veterans get involved in politics and law enforcement officers and police. | ||
One of my new focuses is that our warriors, people that have been boxers, that have been mixed martial arts, and you see Frank Mir, Colby Covington, David Nino Rodriguez, who's going to be on in a minute. | ||
These are warriors that have had to stand in the ring, fall back on themselves in front of humiliation, defeat, some of the toughest fighters in the world, and I've got to tell you, They're so articulate and smart and come out with a lion's heart. | ||
Remember, the most important thing you can have in our movement is courage, because courage is the virtue upon all the other virtues rest, right? | ||
And courage is contagious. | ||
But the one thing I look in a person, it's not intellect, it is what I call gameness. | ||
It's a term taken from dogfighting, right? | ||
Gameness. | ||
Does the dog have gameness? | ||
And that means competitive heart. | ||
And competitive heart means, I'm never going to quit. | ||
You can break me, you can beat me up, you can do anything, but I'm going to get off of the mat and I'm going to continue to be relentless. | ||
And that's what you see in people like Frank Mir, Colby Covington, David Nino Rodriguez. | ||
These are just not fighters. | ||
They're spiritual fighters. | ||
They get off the mat and they will not be defeated. | ||
Colby, only got a couple of minutes here, but I know you gave some good categories. | ||
Soldiers, police officers, law enforcement, all of it. | ||
If I had to pick an individual, I said, don't do LeBron James. | ||
Who would Colby Covington follow? | ||
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If I had to pick out an individual to follow and tell this generation of kids to follow, I would say my friend Cam Haines. | |
He's the last of a dying breed. | ||
He's a guy that's not afraid to get his hands dirty. | ||
He's a bowhunter extraordinaire, ultra marathon runner. | ||
This is a guy that can chop wood. | ||
He's carrying water through the mountains. | ||
He's skinning a buck to bring meat back to his family. | ||
This is a real man. | ||
This is a guy that puts it all on the line. | ||
You know, it's as masculine as they come. | ||
So, you know, if I had to tell the kids of this generation to look up to a guy, look up to Cam Haines, man. | ||
This guy's a real man and, you know, if the grid ever went down, it'd just be another Tuesday for Cam Haines. | ||
Colby, tell me, how do people follow you? | ||
How to get access to you on social media? | ||
unidentified
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Follow me at ColbyCovMMA and just appreciate everybody's support and thanks for having me on the show, Steve. | |
God bless you, brother. | ||
It's a great honor to have you on, sir. | ||
You're a warrior, and you have a great future ahead of you. | ||
When you finally retire outside the ring, I'm telling you, you're a true leader. | ||
Kobe Covington, thank you very much. | ||
I want to bring in now another guy I met down at the wall, helped us build the wall, helped us get people there, put on the conferences. | ||
He told me, Steve, every town's a border town. | ||
This is one of the toughest, best men in this country, David Nino Rodriguez. | ||
Nino, thank you very much for joining us here today on Masculinity America, our Father's Day weekend special. | ||
David, knowing you and knowing your trials and tribulations, the fights you've won, the fights you've lost, the toughness of coming up the way you came up, I want you to tell the audience about the crisis in masculinity. | ||
Do young men today as a race, do they know how to handle failure? | ||
Do they know how to handle defeat? | ||
Do they know how to pick themselves back up off the mat if you've had to done dozens and dozens of times to prove themselves as men? | ||
Do you think so, sir? | ||
Well, let me just start off with this. | ||
I was driving to Albuquerque about three weeks ago and on my way up to Albuquerque there was a young couple pulled over on the side of the road with a flat tire. | ||
I pulled over on the side of the road and started talking to them saying, hey you guys need some help. | ||
It was just his flat tire, Steve. | ||
That's all it was. | ||
The guy that was with her was about 24 years old and didn't know how to change a flat tire. | ||
So there's simple things like this that we're dealing with. | ||
That they were stuck, they were stranded, all because this guy has never changed a tire in his life. | ||
He didn't know what to do. | ||
Those are like the simple things or fundamental sound things that men need to know when they're with their girlfriend or they're with their wife and they go into distress and things happen. | ||
I'm not saying everybody needs to be a fighter. | ||
Not everyone needs to play football. | ||
But there's certain things, there's certain underlying fundamentals that you need to know as a man. | ||
Uh, to be able to provide for family and teach your children. | ||
And that was when that, to me, shocked me. | ||
Because this is, what, a millennial that really didn't know how to change a tire, Steve. | ||
And that threw me for a loop. | ||
I didn't know what to think. | ||
I was like, wow, this is real. | ||
This is a serious problem we have with the younger generations. | ||
You know? | ||
And I don't know if the father just wasn't there or what's going on, but these are simple things you need to learn as a teenager. | ||
You know? | ||
And he didn't know. | ||
I'm seeing that a lot more often. | ||
Do you think we have, you know, Basoba when we started the show said, Hey Steve, it's not masculinity in America, it's the crisis of masculinity in America. | ||
We got about two minutes in this segment, we're going to ask you to hold over. | ||
Do you think we have a crisis, Nino? | ||
Absolutely, and they're building, like I walk around and I feel like I'm like the old model Terminator walking around. | ||
It's like, it's like everything now is, you know, deemed toxic masculinity. | ||
And that's how they're, if you want to conquer or take over a country, how would you do it? | ||
Through the mainstream media, you do it through poisoning them with chemicals and food, soy products. | ||
Japanese researchers successively turned a male catfish into a female using soy compounds. | ||
Okay, there's things like this that are happening that are absolutely pushing the LGBTQ transgender in your face at school system, what I like to call indoctrination camps, pushing it every day, you know, at a kindergarten level. | ||
This is ridiculous. | ||
So, and this is what's happening in America. | ||
If you want to destroy a country, you kill off the male species. | ||
And that's what I see happening. | ||
So they're deeming everything that's masculine Toxic masculinity. | ||
That's what they're deeming everything. | ||
So people need to wake up to this and understand what's really at hand here, what's really at play here. | ||
And that's how I see it. | ||
David, can we hold you over to the next segment? | ||
We're going to take a short commercial break. | ||
When we come back, we're going to finish with David Nino Rodriguez, one of the toughest guys in this country, and a real leader, an emerging leader down in Texas. | ||
Also, we're going to have a very special guest. | ||
Dr. Colbert is going to be on. | ||
He's going to talk about the issues with testosterone, estrogen, all of it, some of the chemicals that David just alluded to. | ||
So we're going to take a short commercial break. | ||
We're going to return. | ||
This is Father's Day weekend. | ||
We kicked it off kind of on Friday. | ||
This is our special, Masculinity in America. | ||
You're in the War Room. | ||
Be back in a moment. | ||
unidentified
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Everything's just beginning For the games you want to play Bring it on and I will fight to the end Just watch and see It's all started Everything's begun And you are over Cause we're taking down the CCP Spread the word all through Hong Kong We will fight till they're all gone |