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April 28, 2021 - Slightly Offensive - Elijah Schaffer
58:27
Is It Okay to Hate White People? | Guest: Sydney Watson | Ep 148

Your life shouldn’t matter less because of your skin color, but is there a skin color that will prevent you from getting the job you want or the school you want to attend? Sydney Watson joins the show to discuss how people of less color are being treated around the world.

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Why did you get married and hit the computer?
I'm sure you on camera, right?
Yeah, I am.
I'm going to show you on camera.
So this is the type of people that have working here.
You grew with my whole life, man.
Everything is racism today, especially when it's a white person, because white people can't make mistakes.
We're not allowed to have mental breakdowns.
You know, that's only for, of course, the BIPOC, the people of color.
What you saw right here was a video, if you can go to my screen, Savannah, of a man named Caleb who had a mental breakdown after his computer ran into a system error.
And he was berated by this man who presumably must be black, as he said.
Tariq Nasheet said, a white Holiday Inn Express worker has a nervous breakdown after he got scolded by a black customer because of a mistake in the reservation system.
And of course, on white people, as one of the most intense and favorite subjects of our society is, I have YouTuber Sidney Watson, who has a lot of experience with being white.
I brought her on as a white person expert.
Welcome back to Slightly Offensive.
A white person, you know, I am a white person expert.
I have, in fact, lived the majority of my life as a white person, except a brief period there where I identified as an emo kid.
Is that racist to say?
Are you allowed to still claim whiteness?
I think I prefer beige.
Beige.
Beige is my go-to.
Yeah.
A person of less color?
A person of less pigmentation.
Where's the less pigmentation?
Guys, we're going to be talking a lot about this specific scenario and many other ones where it's become okay in society to just hate on white people, but also it's okay to be violent towards white people or see white people suffer and then berate them for it.
All that and a lot more coming up on this episode of Slightly Offensive, the best worst show on Blaze TV, where we always have confetti of color.
We wouldn't put white confetti, Sydney.
Can you get Sidney some confetti real fast?
Yeah.
Give confetti me.
Confetti her.
Does it feel good all over your face like that?
It does.
I like it.
Oh, God.
That's my favorite.
Okay.
That's one thing to say.
Confetti.
That's what we're talking about here, mate.
Okay.
Nothing derogatory or bad.
You have confetti of color all over your face, a big black thing, a long black thing on your lips.
Beautiful.
It's nice.
My name is Elijah Schaefer.
I'm your top 17 host.
I'm joined by the lovely and beautiful Sydney Watson and Savannah Hernandez, who, of course, is here in the studio.
And we got a lot coming up for you.
Before we jump into that, guys, I got to talk to you about something important.
This is something none of us should hate on, and that's a good cup of coffee.
Not only just a good cup of coffee, but the best damn cup of coffee in America.
Just as we were walking in here, we were talking about Bag of Coffee, which happens to have a giant cock on the front.
It doesn't stand for bag of cocks.
And Sydney, what did you notice about the flavor and the aroma of this bag, just bringing it in the room?
I actually said, and this, I didn't know what this was when you first brought it in, but I said that smells really good.
Yeah, it does.
It smells really good.
You can smell it in the room right now.
And that just tells you about honestly how good of coffee this is.
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I've met the owner.
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That's what I recommend to you guys.
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can also get it and put it in reusable Keurig containers, save the environment.
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Go to bagofcoffeecompany.com, use code SOB, subscribe and save, support an American veteran-owned company that supports you, and also support your mouth with a cock coffee that stands for bag of coffee.
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Okay.
Why, Elijah, why do people watch this show?
I don't know.
I don't know.
It's just remarkable for the C-level humor, obviously, Sydney.
Come on.
It is a disaster of a show.
So good.
Okay, so let's talk about this.
So basically, it's become popular, and I know you know it's become popular, to literally blame every problem, not only on white people, but also to blame every problem that white people have on their skin color.
And so let's break this video down.
So can you put the video on the screen for a second?
You don't have to turn on the sound.
We're going to put this on the screen.
So you have a holiday inn worker.
This name is Caleb.
And apparently what happened according to the quartering, the YouTuber who's in contact with him, this man ran into an air, got frustrated.
The black man, who we're just going to emphasize is black because of Trick Nasheed emphasized it, started calling him the F slur for homosexual, started talking, braiding him for his homosexuality.
We see a lot of homophobia in the black community.
There's a lot of that out there.
Starts calling these things.
He says he needs a moment.
He was saying, I need a moment.
I just need a moment because I have a mental illness.
He starts blaming him because he's saying that he's getting mad because he's dealing with a black customer and that's the problem.
And then he literally has a mental breakdown, ends up self-abusing himself in a clear case of mental illness.
Like that's clearly this guy's not just having a bad day.
That's a problem.
This guy's got a clinical issue.
He quits, obviously.
Then the hotel throws the black man out of the hotel and they claim this is all due to racism.
Why can't white people just have a mental breakdown without it being about racism?
It's, I mean, it's a good question, right?
But I think when what annoys me a little bit about the United States in this regard is that when you have people of different races interacting with one another, everyone makes it a racial issue rather than the fact that perhaps, you know, that the customer that this young guy was dealing with was a complete to him.
And perhaps the reason that he reacted as he did was in response to that.
It has nothing to do with race, I'm assuming.
But I would wager that the response of the black customer pulling out his phone to film it and behave in the manner that he is is actually predicated on race.
I feel really bad watching this clip.
And actually initially, Savannah and I were talking about this last night and I had a pretty visceral reaction.
And I'm getting to this point where I'm just, I'm so sick of people being so horrible to one another.
This was such an unnecessary situation.
And it's clear that this kid has probably had a very, very rough time, especially with COVID.
I think people are extra, extra mean with all the COVID stuff.
And then to go ahead and turn this into a racial issue when this person is obviously having trouble, it just makes me, it just makes me really, really agitated.
And can I also jump in here and discuss the fact that, too, allegedly this black man was calling this individual to get and evoke a response out of it.
Right.
Remember to de bleep that too, because apparently we keep getting in trouble for using that word.
But also I'm using it for context.
No, but it is important.
That's my point.
Is it like he's berating him, calling him like a gay?
He's using gay as a slur.
Like, oh, you're gay because you're having a mental breakdown.
And can we just like call this out?
That like, if this happened in a reversal of race, this would be easily, this guy would be considered the racist that's filming.
But because the victim is white who's had a mental breakdown, which is a serious thing, nobody cares.
The media doesn't care.
The reaction from Hollywood isn't there.
Nobody's like, I can't believe this would happen on a frontline worker in a pandemic.
They're making fun of him.
I'm making fun of him.
I mean, Savannah's totally right.
Both of you are totally right in this.
When you are trying to get people to react in a certain way so that you can film it and put it on the internet and then get your oppression points, it's absurd to me.
I mean, again, I just feel if you're pushing a kid to the point where he's punching himself in the face, for those who are listening and haven't seen this video, if you are pushing someone to the point where they're punching themselves in the face, and then part of this clip that hasn't been shown yet is him going off to the side and basically starting to bowl his eyes out.
You're probably the head in this situation.
Let's be totally real.
You are, I don't care what color you are.
If you're eliciting this kind of reaction from someone who's just trying to do their job, is not being antagonistic towards you, you are in this situation, especially if you're familiar with it.
And I would like to say that the man is the racist because he is making this about homosexuality and race.
And that's what everyone always says that white people are hyper-focused on sex and race and stuff.
That's not us.
We're not the ones.
And you know what?
I want to bring this up with Tariq Nasheed.
Tariq Nasheed even puts this video up to cause dissension.
If you know about him, he has it right here in his bio.
He's the worst person.
He says, I am the world's number one race baiter.
I bait racists and expose them.
Sir, that's not what you do.
You post propaganda and you divide our nation.
Yes.
And he pushes anti-white propaganda all the time to push hatred towards people who don't look like him.
That's a class, that's a classic textbook example of a peaceful person.
He's not my favorite.
Every time I see anything that he does or says, you know what?
He takes innocuous situations a lot of the time and adds the racial element to them where it actually doesn't exist.
And again, this is why people are so hyper-focused on race in the United States because you can't get away from it.
No one will let you get away from it.
I'm tired, honestly, of being told how crap white people are.
I'm tired of being told that we're inherently, you know, that we're okay with white supremacy.
I'm tired of it because at the end of the day, this is not moving the needle.
This is not a helpful narrative.
And if, again, if you're pushing people to be beating themselves up at their job, there's something wrong.
Dude, this guy, not good.
The Tariq man, not a nice person.
But white people have been abandoned, honestly, even by the government, because, you know, even though the government says, you know, for, you know, they go, well, if white people want to help each other, that's collectivism and racism.
And then they go out and say, well, we have COVID relief for minority-owned businesses.
And then all corporations put out videos going, we're here to sponsor and help black people and black businesses.
And everyone's like, we want to invest in black communities.
And you're going, well, black businesses help each other.
Every corporation tries to get you to buy something based on someone's black.
Everybody's helping other communities.
Who's helping white people?
Nobody.
They've been completely abandoned by everybody.
And if you say, hey, that's not fair, that's not right.
Then you get called a white nationalist or like a neo-Nazi or something for just simply pointing out the discrepancy that to disproportionately try to help another race over another is in itself overt racism.
And I think that's really important.
It's like, look, so you bring this up.
And it's like, so then what do we do to help this kind of situation?
Well, Jeremy from the quartering is a good guy.
He set up a GoFundMe for him, which we have a link in the description.
You can support this.
He quit.
He lost his job and he quit.
There's no coming back from this.
The man blasted him.
Look at this.
They've raised $41,616 of their $5,000 goal.
And good job, Jeremy.
Like, I mean, when you see that, that's what I'm saying about if white people get abandoned, this is what we have to start doing.
Yeah.
Honestly, can we just like a round of applause right now for this fundraiser?
Because like this is like, we do Nancy Pelosi ones like this.
Beautiful.
Yeah, as far as possible.
AOCs, her.
I don't want to pop myself.
I don't want to pop whoever's in the headphones.
So let's get into this.
So this is a common, this is a common thing, right?
This is a common thing.
Recently, we've been talking a lot about police violence, specifically when it encapsulates violence from a white officer into an unarmed black man.
But throughout the entire country, regularly, there are questionable interactions between police and white people.
I know it's hard to believe, but do you know that white people sometimes are treated unfairly by police?
Really?
That's really?
Are you sure about that?
The media has never told me that.
I don't think I've ever heard that, Elijah.
It's just shocking.
Truly shocking.
And so what happened is, if you didn't hear about this story, if you can go to my screen.
DailyMail.com reports, apparently I have an ad blocker, so I can't read their story.
This is the moment Colorado cops fist bump and laugh at a video of themselves breaking arm and dislocating the shoulder of a dementia suffering woman 73 years old.
We can't see the story, Savannah.
We can't see it.
After she left Walmart without paying $13.
So basically what I'm pointing out here is that not only when someone has a mental issue, that it's okay to make fun of them if they're white.
Right.
Right.
But also what we're seeing is that there is a problem and discrepancy with white people being treated unfairly by police, but that nobody not only cares about, but they act like it doesn't exist.
And we have the video of this interaction with this old woman who posed no threat, who's a female, and she's mentally ill.
And the media is silent.
There's media silence when white people suffer because they like white people suffering because they want that.
They want to change white countries from being white countries.
That's a true statement.
They admitted that.
And the guy who crafted the great fortification of the election said that they're trying to invest in the changing of the demographics of the country in order to understand their future.
Some people call that a white supremacist conspiracy theory.
If it is, then the left is white supremacists because they're the ones pushing it the most.
So that's up to them to be that way.
I'm just pointing out what they're pushing out.
But watch how she's treated.
It will break your heart.
Let's play that.
All right, let's stop, ma'am.
So obviously she's just walking.
Who called the police?
Like, why is she being I think that she was shoplifting $13 worth of stuff in Walmart because she had dementia.
Oh, okay.
So that's the story.
She's just walking on the side of a road.
You just left Walmart.
Just clearly mentally ill.
No, no, no.
Okay.
Let's stop.
Come on.
Come on.
I'm going home, stop, please.
It's like, she's like, did you see her?
She was like, I don't know.
Yeah.
On the ground.
On the ground.
Okay, like this is a 73-year-old woman who plays, has no threat to anybody about anything.
And he dislocates her shoulder.
I mean, look at that.
She's like, it's popped out.
She has a complete problem.
And later on, they're seen laughing about this when they're reviewing the footage.
And nobody talks about this.
And nobody cares about this woman.
And where's the media outrage over the manhandling of a clearly mentally ill patient that ends up being severely hurt while in police custody?
And the police mock the situation and laugh about it.
I suppose my question more than anything is, why was this the response of the police officer when this person obviously is posing no threat?
I mean, realistically, I just, I don't understand how it went from her walking along, giving him a shrug, going, I don't, clearly like giving him this look that says, I don't really know what I'm doing to get on the ground.
Now I'm going to handcuff you in the most uncomfortable way possible.
He tackled her.
I just started, I'm just really confused.
I suppose that I'm not a police officer, right?
And so this is why I do reserve a certain level of empathy for cops.
And I do, I've always had that because I'm not a cop.
I don't know what it's like to be out there every day as a police officer, but I watch things like this and I think, what is going through your mind as a cop when you're in a situation where you're not under threat, no one's threatening your life, you're not being shot at or stabbed or whatever the case is.
Why was this the response?
I mean, and I'm not, I don't, for me, this is not a racial issue, but I completely understand where you're coming from.
If this had been a black person or an Asian or something like that, we know that this would have actually made media headlines, but instead it gets ignored because it's just an old woman who's having a hard time.
So I completely understand that element of it.
But I think the other side of this too is that why is this the response from cops?
I mean, I don't know how we've gotten to this point where you treat, especially old people.
I think, I mean, how many people are.
Regardless of race, and an old person doesn't pose a massive threat, especially when they're not armed.
And you can clearly tell they're just shrugging.
But my point is, this is a clear sign of misjudgment and not fair treatment.
But the media doesn't care about this because the race is wrong.
And that's, I mean, you know, that's exactly why.
If this was a black old woman, this would be everywhere.
We would have panels and reckonings, and people would have to talk about the plight of black people.
This stuff is happening every day to Americans across the country.
Americans.
But the thing is that the only Americans that now matter are black people in culture.
Even the Asian stop Asian hate.
Where did that go?
Yeah, I know.
That disappeared as soon as we worked out the majority of people who were.
But the crimes didn't disappear.
The crimes have not disappeared.
But you know what?
I always think about the fact that, I mean, and I know people will be sick of George Floyd being brought up because it's been talked about to death.
But, and pardon the pun, but when I think about this exact topic, let's take that Tony Timper case, for example, where the situation was.
Here, right, in Texas.
Yeah, I believe that actually was in Texas.
Yeah.
And for those who don't know, it was very similar to the George Floyd situation, where effectively a young man who had actually called the police himself because he had also mental illness had stopped taking his medication to combat that.
I believe he has had schizophrenia.
People can feel free to fact check me on that one.
But the long and short of it is that he calls police, again, confused, you know, has not really particularly shared what's going on.
The police end up again kneeling on him.
This kid was also high on cocaine and also suffered cardiac arrest and died subsequently.
And what's interesting is that that really did not make the media in any significant way.
You can find articles about it.
You can find people talking about the body cam footage and what have you, but that was not a national story in the sense that that didn't dominate our headlines as a conversation about police brutality or the police treatment of individuals in this country.
And I find it so ironic because a young man lost his life, I believe, in a way that was probably not super okay.
It's not super okay to kneel on people and cause them to have cardiac arrest, effectively.
But we don't hear about it.
But we do hear about George Floyd.
We definitely hear about George Floyd for weeks and weeks and weeks and weeks and weeks.
It's because the race is wrong.
And I know that.
And I'm not just complaining.
I'm telling you the truth.
If you look here from this article from the New York Post, this is a real story.
This is horrifying.
But this is where we're at.
It says BLM protesters rally for victim leave after learning he was white.
This is a real story.
Let me read this to you.
Black Lives Matter protesters in Minnesota dropped to a knee and set off to march over a fatal police shooting, only to return when they learned it was a white carjacker who had fired at police, according to reports.
Dozens of people protesting outside Governor Tim Wals' mansion in St. Paul on Sunday were filmed by Fox 9 reporter Mitty Hicks as they knelt for a moment of silence over initial rumors that Sunday's 3 p.m. fatal shooting.
Protesters kneel after hearing there was an officer involved shooting in Burnsville moments ago.
So this is where we're also getting racist.
The fact that you hear an officer involved shooting and you automatically assume it's a black person.
Well, what's so funny to me about that too is that what people don't seem to realize is that even if we did actually remove unarmed black men from the crime statistics of people who've been shot by police, you're removing a third of a percent of that number of people who've died.
That is, well, I don't know how I wouldn't argue that it's necessarily insignificant because it's loss of life, but I mean, it's sort of like an outlier, negligible number, really.
And at the end of the day, more white people are killed by police than black people, even though black people represent, what, 48% of overall crimes and 15% of the population.
And when you, you know, work all that out, that's a, I mean, they're killed in less at a less frequent rate than white people, even though white people don't commit as many crimes.
The point is, I am tired of this narrative that, I mean, I don't know necessarily like whether this is a commentary about police, but I am certainly tired of the narrative that it's okay to not give a crap about the lives of white people.
I mean, think about it, allege.
We've been told this forever since the birth of Black Lives Matter.
When you say all lives matter, they go, that's racist.
Why is that racist?
Why is that racist?
Why?
I just want to know why is it that we can't value the lives of every American and it has to only be a certain portion of Americans?
That's what I want to know.
When the statistics don't even back up the narrative of that particular group of people.
And I am not saying for a second that black America should be treated differently to the rest of America.
That's not what I'm saying here whatsoever.
I'm saying that the life of a black person being murdered matters just as much as the life of a white person, an Asian person, a Pacific Islander.
People's lives matter equally.
I don't think that this is an argument about who matters more because I have more melanin.
It's absurd.
And that's, but that's where we get into with these cases.
And to kind of put it into perspective, like, that's what when people even say, like, oh, well, you know, let's not talk about white people.
Let's talk about investing in black communities or investing in the black culture.
Well, look, look, here's the deal.
You get means tested out of everything when you're white.
Right.
And this is my point, though, is that like people say, like, well, they think everything about white people are racist as racist.
Like, here's a crazy fact for you that a lot of people don't talk about: is that like they go, oh, it's racist to say that 13% of the population commits over 50% of the crimes.
And you go, yeah, that is racist because, as we found out recently, that's actually being nice to people when you say something like that.
Because most of the violent crimes, just as go statistical averages, would be done by men.
So cut 13% in half to six, just to basically 6.5%.
Then you know people probably over 60 aren't committing violent crimes and probably under 15 are not committing, mostly not committing violent crimes, maybe under 14.
I don't know.
So if you're taking men like 14 to 50, that's like 3 to 4% of the black population.
So really 3 to 4% of the population, 3 to 4% of the country is committing like half the violent crime.
It's not black people.
It's young black men without fathers.
Right.
And that's insane.
And this is why I don't know why this conversation always has to be around like police brutality and all these, all these other things, or you know, even white supremacy, for example.
And I will never forget, for those who remember, when Candace Owens, you know, regardless of what you think about her, I think she makes some really, really, really valid points when she was speaking.
She was speaking at a hearing about white supremacy, I believe.
And she basically made the point that if we were to list out the most important things affecting the black community, fatherlessness is right at the top.
I mean, your role models are people like George Floyd.
And what was the kid?
More black kids know about George Floyd than MLK at this point.
It's just a nutshell.
That's their example.
It's just nuts to me.
I mean, and again, I really feel for children who don't even stand a chance at growing up in a normal environment where they can actually grow to their full potential and become fully fledged, awesome people that go out into the world and contribute and make something of themselves.
These kids don't even stand a chance because they are like disadvantaged from the outset because their home environments are completely screwed up.
They grew up around drugs and crime and gangs and blah.
And that is not the way to live.
I always think about this too.
And I know we've diverged a little.
We've moved away from the original topic a little bit here, but I always think about the fact that people forget to fix and ameliorate the black community is actually a net positive for society.
Because not only do you have then, obviously, lower crime rates, you have fathers who are staying home, you have happier moms, you have happier kids, you have better social cohesion, you have more taxpayers, you have less people in the welfare system.
I mean, this is a net benefit overall.
Why do people always have to make it about a racism issue when it's like, I actually want the black community to succeed because I want them to do better.
I want them to feel better.
I want them, you know, I want to walk around in society and be like, hell yeah, good stuff.
That's not what the race baiters want.
The whole point of the race baiting is to grift off of the black suffering so you can get out.
So a lot of black people grift off of the own black suffering and like get really rich from it, from showing up at funerals.
Al Sharpton, I'm talking about you.
You know, these people that go out there like Triton Sheet.
Let me go back to his page.
Look at how nice this guy is dressed, to be completely honest.
Like, look at this guy.
I mean, that's an expensive suit.
I mean, I love how he's doing this little hand thing.
Look at that watch.
He looks like Dr. Evil.
Yeah, look at that watch.
I mean, this man is satanic, but also he is keeping people down by not representing the issues correctly.
And guys, I want to talk to you about something very important.
The world is crazy.
It is getting insane.
Things are going in a crazy direction, which is like, and even now, maybe even in your state, a lot of like in-person meetings and conferences are shut down.
Now more than ever, I need you guys to be ready and to get ready, not only to defend yourself, but to defend your family and to defend your future about the possibilities of both foreign and domestic problems, which is why I need to talk to you about something vital, something that I use called Personal Defense Network.
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I got to talk to you about that because usually that's kind of expensive to be a gold member.
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So I just got a gun.
Savannah knows.
I do.
I just got a brand new gun.
Try our gun.
Super nice.
It's super cool, guys.
And I'm not the best with guns.
I don't know a lot about them.
That might have scared some of you guys.
So for instance, I downloaded a video that's talking about how to use a gun and how to operate in close tactical situations, how to pull your arm, how to pull your firearm, how to use your firearm, how to disarm people.
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And also, Sid, you should check it out too because you just got a gun.
I just bought a gun too.
Yeah.
I mean, that's true.
I've never owned a handgun before, so that would actually be really useful.
I was just sitting here thinking, I hope they have like self-defense stuff because that would be awesome.
They do.
Check it out, guys.
That'd be very good.
So let's talk about this for a second, too.
So we're talking about the idea of like, yeah, this is these people want you to be hated.
They want you to be discriminated against in your own town.
And this is what we're having is that it's not just happening here in the U.S.
This is happening in Western countries all around the world.
There's this video right now in the lockdowns in Ireland.
They're kicking people out of church.
And these, you know, Ireland is actually, it is a white country.
People don't think those exist, but they do.
Just like bring up this, bring up this tweet here.
It's like, there's Japanese people because Japan is a country of Japanese people who look a certain way.
He says, imagine moving to Japan, then attacking their traditions and culture and opening their borders to the third world and then calling any Japanese who complains a Japanese supremacist and then promoting censorship law so their own government will imprison them if they criticize you.
It's like, yeah, no one would go to Japan and be like, oh, if you like Japan, you're a Japanese supremacist.
It's like Japan is for Japanese people.
I get everyone can accept that.
But if you talk any, if you ever got into like the questioning about if there are white nations, they'll call you a white nationalist.
Even if you're not against other people living there, if you just even just acknowledge the fact that like white people have a homeland, you'll get called a Nazi.
Isn't Europe the home of the people?
Homeland of white people, yes.
Well, Caucasian, yeah, but yes, it is.
Europe is the homeland of Caucasian people, traditional cities.
I just don't, I don't get how it could be perceived as racist to make a factually accurate statement about the origins of the Caucasian race.
I mean, this is what, dude, for anyone who doesn't know, I love history.
I especially love UK history because it's bloody and they've built a lot of castles and I love castles and I think it's very cool.
But it's, you know, I mean, realistically, the majority of the world at one point or another was governed effectively by the British.
I mean, so naturally, they're going to move their population over to other countries.
Australia is a prime example of that.
The United States is another example of that.
These are white countries, Caucasian countries.
Savannah's going to quit right now.
People would argue that they're not because of the indigenous.
Savannah, how much Indigenous do you have in you?
I don't know.
I'm American, bro.
I don't know.
You know, people always ask me this question, and I'm like, I don't know, bro.
Do people care about that?
I love pressing Savannah's trigger points.
I know exactly what's going to get her riled up.
I'm like, hey, Savannah.
Yeah, believe it or not, we're all friends off camera, too.
We are, yes.
For those of you guys that just tuning in for the first time, Sydney's actually my neighbor.
And so is Savannah.
We actually live in the same residential place.
We all coexist somehow.
We don't live in the same house.
It is not a commune.
Oh, Elijah.
It is not a sex cult.
Sorry, Grandma.
I shouldn't have even said that.
It isn't, Grandma.
I promise you, I'm behaving.
You kill me.
I'm doing well, Grandma.
I mean, we do come over to each other's houses and definitely yell at one another about political issues.
That is definitely.
That is so true.
Yep.
Savannah's at my house till one o'clock in the morning having some intense discussion about Arthur Colwell and the White Australia policy.
Not a joke.
Educating her about my country's history.
Yeah, this is something that we can get some spicy.
We'll get into some spicy stuff.
As you can see, I had an asthma attack this morning, so my voice is not doing too well.
Oh, you always sounded this girly.
I was talking about the rasiness.
Oh, damn.
Sorry.
I missed that one.
You know what?
That's the first thing that I said to him, too, when he walked in.
I was like, so you had a long night.
He's like, I had an asthma attack.
I was like, oh, did you steal another water bottle from 7-Eleven to help?
Yeah, I was like, I was like, 7-Eleven?
Yeah, during a riot.
During a riot.
Asthma attack from tear gas.
I had to take a water bottle.
Okay, we're getting off the bottom.
You probably went back and like left like $3 on the counter.
We're like, thanks.
I've offered a 7-Eleven from my thing.
I will send you money.
If you can send me a Venmo, I'll give you money.
I'm sorry.
I had to do it to not die.
Okay, but check this out.
This guy has a good point about the way that white people are being treated differently, actually worse in their country than people of color.
Check this out as these people get kicked out of their church for worshiping because of the scandemic.
And then they point out something very obvious.
So for my blind viewers, I'm just assuming that they're just saying diddly-dee potatoes the whole time.
Yeah, if you don't leave in time, they'll take away your rations and potatoes.
What is that was Russian stuff?
So I don't know.
I'll tell you my name right now.
I'll get your name and details as well.
I'll get your name and details as well.
We're here practicing our faith.
Okay, well, unfortunately.
Huh?
Unfortunately.
Nobody went to the Black Pits Mosque in Dublin, did they?
Ooh, huh?
Nobody went to the Black Pits Mosque in Dublin.
I says nobody, there was no guarantees going to the Black Pits Mosque in Dublin.
Okay, finding guard here in that normal.
Yeah, he points out something interesting.
He has to clear out the churches.
Have you tried doing that at a mosque?
Oh, no.
They would never even bother at the end of the day.
Did you try to clear out a mosque?
There is a reason why they call London, you know, what, Islamistan now or whatever it is, or Londonistan, sorry.
Why wouldn't they clear out a mosque, City?
What's that guy?
Is it, do they make fun of him for being balding or something?
What is it about that?
Maybe because they'll get Aloha Akbar.
I don't know.
Oh, no.
Oh, damn.
Me over here like.
I'm just saying, like, I think that, I think that there's a, especially in the UK.
And I don't know how if it's similar in Ireland, but now I guess it must be.
It must be similar.
And I'm presuming they're in the Republic, but certainly in the UK, there is no criticism of Islam.
Just none.
You are asking for it if you say anything against the big guy Muhammad or Allah.
It's not going to end well.
So yeah, no, there's no way that the cops are going to go in and move people out of a mosque because it's not going to go.
It's not going to end well.
They're going to, I can't even speak today.
They're going to end up on the news and it's going to get absolutely bash from all sides.
But it's because Christians are, for the most part, you know, pretty peaceful, normal people that are just like, yeah, okay, cool.
And they, and they'll just, they'll, they'll move on.
They will move out of a space if told to.
I don't know, Christians.
I don't know what to tell you about that.
You guys can comment on this better than I can.
Well, yeah, they just know that Christians are going to comply because Christians have become very weak recently too and have become, because they get the first one turn the other cheek, but it's to the point where they don't, they don't even stand up for themselves legally.
They don't stand up for anything.
And I really get disappointed in the Christian communities in the United States where it's like, actually, we should take a lesson from the Islamists.
Like they're like, hey, you don't mess with us in our religion.
Like that's not, you don't, you know, as the state, this is not your place to mess with our religion.
And so kudos to the Muslims.
And you know what?
I think another core biblical thing that a lot of Christians forget is that we should be standing up for what is right.
And that always, that isn't always a comfortable thing to do.
Following Jesus wasn't a comfortable thing to do.
And standing up against an oppressive government and standing up for your faith is not a comfortable thing to do.
But we've reached a point in society where Christians are just so soft and they're willing to listen to their government.
It's very sad to see, to be honest.
Yeah, it breaks my heart.
And you know what?
And this is my point.
So like, you know, you look at those people like worshiping and they're going, you're the lawbreakers.
And this is what's so weird is that is it in society in white countries that are around the world, like not only people being demonized, but it's like our way of life is being considered like to want to enjoy the traditional white way of life could be considered a racist statement.
So people would say that statement is racist, right?
And I understand that.
And so it's like, I look, people make memes about this stuff now.
That's like, it's like, yeah, you know, this right-wing extremism, like we better not have that traditional white culture come back.
Let's keep, let's keep, where is this?
Where is this actually?
Let me see.
Let's do this.
Let's let's let our country develop and progress into left-wing extremism, which this is real, Sydney.
This is real.
This is, this is the Apple store, not in Kabul, Iraq, but in Portland.
They have to have full non-scalable security barriers with multiple barriers for cars and like an entrance that's like 13 feet high with armed security to get into an Apple store.
And that is, that's, that's cool.
That's progress.
That's left-wing progressivism.
That is, that is a danger.
That is not something that we would want.
But, you know.
Why is this still going on though?
But that's extremism.
This is extremism.
That's them.
This is extremism.
That's just society progressing.
And as society progresses, you should be normalized this because God forbid our culture ever goes back to something like this.
They didn't go through enough security barriers to get to that stake.
That's all I have to say.
Where's the security to get to the state, Clarice?
Where's your security?
I think we forget that this is back in a time where we had, I've brought this up so many times to your wife, actually, in the last little while, and to Savannah as well.
But I think people forget that, you know, back in, I believe it was the 50s.
Again, feel free to fact check me, guys.
But back in the 50s, you know, you had like, what, 2 million, 2 billion people on the planet, sorry.
And now you have nearly eight.
So we've like massive, like we have a massively, massively bigger population than we did back then.
I mean, like, these are the net effect of what happens when you have a massive population boom.
Basically, you're passing on the throat thing to me, Elijah.
It's air infection.
It's COVID.
COVID.
That's what it is.
Yeah.
No, but I think about this a lot, right?
How I think that back in the day, we were so much more simplistic.
Things were so much more straightforward.
There was so much less competition between people doing stupid things.
And now it's just, I look at society and I feel really sad.
I don't necessarily want to go back to the 50s.
Don't get me wrong.
I know a lot of people say that we're like, I just want to be a housewife.
Yeah, being a housewife would be cool.
Yeah, cool, whatever.
But I want to go back to a time where things were just more simplistic.
That's what I want.
I want to go to the shop and buy from the nice butcher man.
Before the internet, before social media?
Dude, I was thinking about this the other day.
As a 90s baby, I think that we were born in the best time because it was just before the internet really took off.
Like I remember having dial-up.
I remember like you couldn't make a phone call while you were using the internet because then, you know, the internet would drop out.
I remember all of that.
You know, where you would go on MSN Messenger and all that sort of stuff.
And life was just straightforward and simplistic.
I like watching shows from the early 2000s because the humor is like genuinely, in my opinion, quite funny.
But there's none of the political correctness that we have today.
We went so far off the rails at some point in like, I don't know, maybe it was like the late 2000s that I'm just like, I'm so glad I was born in a time before everything got out of hand.
No, me too.
And like, I want to bring this up, okay?
About this conditioning.
It's really interesting.
Have you ever watched Harry Potter?
I'm watching it for the first time right now because of making me watch them.
They're actually really good.
I didn't know that I'd like them.
And well, that witchcraft.
You know, so, so, yeah, I know.
Sorry, grandma.
It's like my, my show should be called Grandma Apologies.
Uh, we're just super cut all of them.
Um, sorry for entertaining witchcraft, but no, but one thing I thought was interesting is I was watching that there's the dark lord, Voldemort Voldemort, Voldemort, okay.
And they can't like say his name, they've been conditioned that he's so evil and he's so wicked that you don't even speak his name.
Okay, now there's somebody like that on the internet from both the left and the right that it's so evil.
Speaking his name can get you in trouble.
Who am I referring to probably?
I feel like I know, but I'm going to let you say it so I don't look stupid.
Yeah.
I look stupid enough as it is.
Is Nick Fuentes, right?
So today, Nick Fuentes claims that he was banned, or technically yesterday, Nick Fuentes claimed that he was banned from flying, put on a no-fly list for the TSA and is no longer able to fly on airlines.
And this is a really interesting lesson I got on society and how we're conditioned to react to things.
So I wrote a very innocuous tweet, a fact-based tweet.
Yep.
There's no evidence that I hate this guy or that I love this guy, that I support him or wanted to get him.
Oh, you're just writing like a series of information about it.
Did you do journalists?
What is it called?
Journalisming.
Oh, journalisming.
I did journalisming.
It's almost dead now.
So I forget what it's called.
And I wrote this thing and I was like, oh, Nick Fuentes, one of the most banned right-wing commentators online, just trying to be objective, was recently put on a no-fly list.
Many who were at or near the Capitol on 1.6 have found themselves on this list and have been blocked from flying without notice.
Some have also been blocked from buying a firearm.
Totally, totally innocuous.
Show me where on the tweet it hurt you.
You know, what touched me on your body where this tweet touched you, you know?
I don't know.
So I wrote an objective tweet about somebody who people don't like and some people like a lot.
Right.
It doesn't matter.
This is a fact.
I noticed that when I saw this initially, and I know you're going to show this in a second, but one of the first responses was like, why are you defending terrorism?
And I was like, what?
Yeah, it's like this is a Tim Pooh type tweet where he says something that could be taken either way from either side.
It's a neutral journalism.
It's like, yes.
Here's the fact.
Because terrorists are usually not allowed to fly or buy guns.
I don't know why that's so hard to understand.
Best news I've heard all day.
Thanks, Sport.
When are they going to put you on the no-high list?
Sounds good and right to me.
Why is everyone saying he fans?
I don't know what that means.
Finally, the government that does something.
I guess the system does work.
Okay.
Wins across the board.
Great.
So based, sweet.
Okay, so you get into all this and somebody even wrote and they were like, you saw that from there?
Yes.
Schaefer defending a white nationalist.
Okay.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Cool.
Thanks for ratioing that person.
But also, it's like people are so afraid of like this pretend boogeyman of white nationalism.
And Nick Fuentez, of course, the media puts him and scapegoats him as like this alt-right Nazi guy that is like the, I think he's like 22, right, Savannah or something?
He's like, he's pretty young.
He's like a 22-year-old troll who like posts and like makes inappropriate jokes.
And like they act like this guy is like the problem, like not the corporations.
And like, you know, like they're like, it's like, don't worry about Amazon becoming a trillion dollar company and siphoning like 70% of like their income from the middle class to the elite class during a fake, you know, you know, I can't say fake, but just during an exaggerated time of pandemic.
Don't worry about that.
This kid is so bad that I realized just tweeting about an American losing their civil liberties, that our culture thinks that this person's views are so bad that he deserves to be stripped of his basic rights as an American because they don't like his views.
And a lot of people don't like his views.
Me included.
And yeah, but it's not, I'm not, but that's not what I was getting into about this.
I didn't talk about his views in this tweet.
Nothing I said is, I'm not saying anything about him.
I'm just pointing out that this guy is a public profile and he was banned.
That's it.
And people's responses are, praise God.
And also, if you even say his name, like that person, like I just stated a fact, you are supporting him by saying his name.
Like this idea of fraternizing and making white supremacy and white nationalism such the big problem that people think that the world is a better place that this 22 year old kid can't fly.
Like how f ⁇ do you have to be that you don't see the reality of what's going on in the world that you actually bought the lie?
Like, so what if you think this kid's a piece of you think this kid, like going to prison is going to make this country a better place?
You have no idea what's happening.
Well, it's also like, I mean, so what if you don't like his ideas?
I think Nick has some really opinions about women that really bother me.
He's got some other opinions as well.
But when I saw this, I was like, this ain't it.
Because at the end of the day, what people don't realize is that it's the age-old thing.
Oh, first they came for blah and I didn't speak up.
Then they came for blah and I didn't speak up.
At the end of the day, this kid is, look, I'm not going to say he's not a threat.
I don't know where he's at as a human being.
I don't know, you know, what the CIA and the FBI don't know, know that we don't or whatever.
And I'm not justifying, I'm not justifying any of this.
It's so hard to talk about because people take stuff out of context so much.
No, I don't care.
It's just like, there's an American that lost their civil liberties and it shouldn't.
Hold on, hold on.
Hold on.
Hold on.
Let me just, let me just finish this thought because you guys are going to make me forget.
My thing here is how long before they're coming at people like you and me and us and our subscribers and followers and people who think similarly to us because suddenly that line of thinking is the inappropriate line of thinking.
Nick Fuentes, for the most part, I mean, like, he's just a 22-year-old kid with a YouTube channel that says some like super questionable stuff and stuff that most people don't like.
Fine, whatever.
But there are people on YouTube.
Well, yeah, he used to have a YouTube channel.
And so now we've decided that his ideas are the ones that are not okay.
We are punishing people for ideas.
That's where we're getting to.
That's why the whole like the way that the police are starting to act and all this sort of stuff, where we're going after people for doing nothing, not okay.
But how is Tarik Nasheed any better?
Well, he's not.
You know, like, like, okay, I think it's like, they're saying Nick Fuentes deserves it because he's a race baiter or whatever they're saying.
Right.
I don't know.
I can never keep up with the narrative on what people say Nick Fuentez is.
He's like a monolith at this point, you know, like Alex Jones or something where like people just know the name and use it for whatever they can to justify their censorship.
But it's like, to me, this is my point is that we've, we've demonized white people to the extent that the biggest threat that they've painted in our country is like white nationalism and white supremacy when like actually the elitists are power grabbing through corporations and controlling us through a technocracy.
And together, all the people are being screwed by the mega corporations.
That's the real problem.
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So kind of bringing on this, this is my point is that immediately on the matter of this, it's just so funny that you can't even state a fact about somebody who is accused of being a white nationalist or a white supremacist.
You can't even state a fact without also people claiming that you believe the same things they do.
Like this is how confused our society is and how accepted, how accepted.
It's so weird though, too, because if this was a black person that was a black nationalist and they were put on a no-fly list, this would make news.
Yep.
Yeah.
I mean, at the end of the day, like I just said, I mean, how long is it before innocuous statements from people like you and me are the ones that are deemed, you know, worth banning you from life ever basically?
I feel bad for interrupting Savannah before.
I want to like shoot over back to her to hear her thoughts on this.
Sorry, Sab.
No, it's fine.
I think that the overarching issue here, too, that we need to touch on is that once they take away rights from one of us, they can take rights away from all of us.
Though this far exceeds speech and, you know, being banned off of social media, if we're advocating to get someone put on a no-fly list because we don't agree with what they say or we don't like them as a person, well, guess what?
That same exact principle and that same exact ideology and logic is going to be applied to you.
So I think when a lot of these people, especially foreign correspondents who don't live in America, comment on these issues and talk about global liberties being taken away from Americans.
I think it's something that needs to be called out.
Yeah, no, I saw that as well.
I know who you're talking about and I thought the same thing.
Don't put on the screen.
Yeah, let's put it on the screen.
We need to do that.
And this was funny because Ian Miles Chung is like calling me out online, being like, Nick Fuentes isn't actually on the no-fly list.
He was likely just banned by an airline for getting verbally abusive towards their staff in December, although there's no evidence of that either.
He posts some thread from Fuentes and then writes, I didn't realize so many conservatives would turn into intersectional feminists and go, I'll listen and believe anytime someone makes a baseless claim.
Which he literally just made a baseline.
Yeah, far be it from anyone to dispute the lived experience of a member of the LGBTQ plus community.
Well, first of all, Ian, we know what you're talking about.
Mostly talking about me and probably Lauren Chen.
So I'm not a conservative.
I don't like the conservatives very much.
I think they're weak.
And I think that they are trying so hard to like be nice that we need people who are tougher to actually win the war, the culture war.
Conservatives are always playing victim.
Like, what are you conserving?
What are you conserving?
It's like, dude, what are you conserving in your bedroom typing?
What are you conserving?
Go out and get married and stop being a simp, like, and just go out and do something with your life.
Have children.
Pioneer.
Make something of yourself.
Stand up for your freaking beliefs and be unpopular with certain groups.
Everyone's a shill.
So just go out there and try to do your best and try to find out who can link up with.
And he's like this.
He's like, he makes a, he's like, so you guys are making baseless claims.
It's like, well, so I wrote, I wrote, I'm like, well, I come in here.
I'm like, I reached out to him directly, which is crazy.
You can do that today.
You can reach out to people.
You can have personal conversations.
Yeah, to verify his claim.
Might I remind you, I also contacted the Department of Homeland Security who I'm waiting for a verification.
He's apparently on a federal TSA no-fly list that stretches across all airlines.
And this is where I tell Ian, Ian here, as a foreign commentator, because Ian lives in Malaysia.
Yes.
And Ian is a nice enough guy, but he's constantly making, he's constantly calling on Americans to act certain ways.
For instance, in this case, I said, as a foreign commentator, please don't justify the liberties of an American being stripped away just because you hate his rhetoric.
I know Ian and Nick hate each other.
And I know Ian has blocked Nick from what I understand.
I used to have Ian blocked, but he posts, he reposts a lot of good stuff from people.
But it's like when you're from a foreign country and you're like telling people in Minneapolis, just let your city get burned down.
Or when you're telling people like, hey, you know what?
He actually deserved this because once you just made a claim.
He's not on the no-fly list.
Oh, Ian, did you message the Department of Homeland Security and they told you that?
Or did you just make up a baseless claim and run with it because you hate someone and make people think you're an American journalist who's doing journalism, but you don't actually live here?
That's all I'm trying to say.
You don't live here.
I don't think you have contacts in DHS.
I don't think so.
I could be wrong.
And if Ian, you do, I'm sorry.
But it's like, my point is, is that it's like, it's just become okay to hate this guy because of some things he said and things that people don't like that he believes.
And it's like, but it's like, it's okay to persecute him because his extreme beliefs are white extreme beliefs.
And you can always persecute extreme white people, but you could not, you actually get rewarded if you're black and you're extreme.
You might actually just get a seat in Congress and your name could be Ilhan Omar.
Eugene Waters or Louis Farrakhan, guys from Nation of Islam, who thinks that white people are blue-eyed devils.
I mean, at the end of the day, like, I don't know.
And this is no shade at Ian either because like, you know, he's always been nice to me.
I have no personal belief with him.
But I mean, he's made a couple comments that, yeah, I mean, objectively, when you live in a country and you're actually going through what's happening in that country, and this is not to say that you can't comment on world events.
I mean, that's the great thing about being able to see what's happening around the world and research and whatever is the ability to comment.
But when you're not living there and perhaps you come from a country that has different standards, for example, you know, when I see Australians commenting on things that happen in the U.S., a lot of the time I often think, well, your sort of value system doesn't actually align with the U.S. value system.
So you're coming at it from a completely third-party perspective.
You have no skin in this game.
So when I see this sort of stuff from people like Ian, I often think, I mean, you're kind of misleading people in a lot of ways.
I mean, you're not doing something that's representative of necessarily the population of the United States.
And again, that doesn't mean you can't have an opinion.
Can you put video six on B-roll while she's talking, please?
It just means that, you know, I don't necessarily know how valuable that is.
So I think my frustration here is that, again, and it's like Savannah just said, yeah, right now we're talking about speech.
And I think that's the most important thing at this point, because if you say something that, you know, whichever group of people doesn't like and you can get chucked on a no-fly list, which again, we don't know whether whether or not that's actually the case, but let's just say it is for the, for the sake of this, that's messed up.
If we, Elijah, in 10 years' time, five years' time, two years' time, when we say something and someone's like, that offends me.
And then we end up in the same position as, you know, Australia and the UK and Canada, where police come to your house and go, you said something offensive on the internet.
I'm going to arrest you.
That's not okay.
I don't want to live in a country like that.
I don't want to live in any situation like that.
So, yeah, it starts with Nick Fuentes, who people universally don't like for whatever reason, for whatever personal reasons they have.
And it ends up with people who are just as innocuous and normal as you and me saying whatever we have to say and getting chucked in prison or whatever the case is.
I don't like it.
And again, I don't like that this only happens to specific people.
I don't like this only happens to conservatives.
And I think this will become a conservative issue or a right-wing issue, you know, whatever, however you want to term it.
But it's definitely not going to happen to people like Louis Farrakhan.
It's definitely not going to happen to people like Tariq.
It's definitely not going to happen to people like Elon Omar.
Well, you were asking if you asked why that was on the screen.
Can you put it out back on the screen?
It's like they're talking about right-wing extremism.
And look at all these Proud Boys in Miami airport beating each other up at the gate.
This is a problem.
The Proud Boys have a serious problem.
I wonder why Proud Boys get put on a no-fly list because they have a serious problem.
They keep fighting in terminals.
And so, so, you know, I mean, you're seeing this, right?
These are groups of clearly marked Gavin McGuinness followers just going around pushing their white supremacy on all of us in front of our faces.
This is common behavior of the Proud Boys, apparently, from what I've been seeing from videos across Twitter recently.
And it's just funny because, like, this is like not talked about.
This is like okay.
And no one talks about these problems, but it's like some 22-year-old kid.
Oh, yeah, that's the real problem.
And that's what's so funny to me about all of this: it's just like they just kind of wanted you to always think that white people are the problem.
And I just think they overexaggerate the effect of Nick Fuentes.
I think they need him.
I think they need Alex Jones.
I think they act like these people are like a bigger threat to the world than they actually could ever pose.
And I think it's just because they're easy targets and they it's the boogeyman.
And meanwhile, like, look at this video.
This was where a disabled man was, these guys, all these, all these white supremacists were drifting in the street.
And what happened was, is they're drifting in circles, and then a guy accidentally hit the car because you know, it's an intersection and you're just driving in the street.
And they pulled him out and beat him up.
Now, this is not funny, but what's kind of funny is one of their other white supremacists breaks out the back window of his car.
Watch, you'll see this.
And he climbs through the back window and then gets out of the door.
They think that he was in the car.
He's one of his friends.
And then they knock him out.
Hit one of their own.
They knocked out.
Watch, watch him.
So he gets in.
This is the guy.
He thinks, I think that's David Duke, actually.
And he gets out.
Look, see, they knocked him out.
Yep.
Because they thought he was in the car.
That's how stupid white supremacists can be sometimes.
And so honestly, David Duke, shame on you for doing that.
That was bad violence.
But it's like, that's my point.
It's like we see videos like this all the time.
We know what's really going on in the country.
And then they scream, oh, actually, white nationalists are the real issue threatening our nation.
White supremacists.
I mean, by this evidence, maybe they have a point.
But on the side note, it's like, oh, yeah, Nick Fuentes is the problem.
And it's like, yeah, you cannot like the guy.
And maybe he said things, but also like, I can see where the real problems are at.
And it's definitely not some 22-year-old shit poster on his own website.
Like, that's not the problem with the country.
That's the problem.
We can debate his rhetoric later, but we have a serious issue on our streets.
David Duke is on the loose, okay?
And we've got to like, he's attacking people, disabled people in their cars and beating people up inside of terminals.
We have real social issues we got to address, but we're not allowed to talk to them about them because we're too busy blaming white people for everything.
We're not allowed to talk about them because as soon as you do, you get cold racists.
And again, I come back to the fact that if we actually want to ameliorate a problem in society, we actually have to like interrogate it, strip it down, and look at it for what it is.
And we're not able to do that.
I think at the end of the day, like not all opinions are equal.
And it's very clear that the opinions of a race baiter like Tariq is not on an equal platform as someone like Nick Fuentes.
And that's actually what I think is kind of disturbing: is that, you know, there's a similar rhetoric happening, but from completely different viewpoints.
And it's basically, I mean, if you really just swap the colors around when they say things, I would argue that you can probably end up with the same sort of comments.
I mean, don't they just merge together and become the same person at the end of the day?
Right.
But I mean, like, I just, I look at this and I just think, like, where does it end?
Where does it end?
I don't know.
Maybe people can answer me on that one.
Well, you can answer that.
And I want to read this, guys.
You know, if you make it this far in the podcast, remember, this is an audio-only podcast, and we really appreciate you guys.
We're growing there.
We now made it in the top 50 podcasts for news and commentary in America.
Very, very special.
Well, I mean, it's not the best, but I mean, like, we're not like in the top 10, but like, we're far from there.
But that's pretty good.
You know, there's like, there's like, there's tens of thousands of podcasts, and there's a couple thousand commentary podcasts.
So we've made it into the top 50.
Maybe you should have your Sydney on a little more.
Maybe.
Yeah, I know.
Maybe it'll help.
But we have some reviews that I want to read for you guys.
This one's from STJ WenJSN.
I hope that's not, it doesn't mean anything bad.
It says, this is the best show ever.
This is honestly the best show.
Thank you, Elijah, for continuing to show us the truth and keeping journalism alive.
Keep doing what you're doing.
I love your show and I watch every single episode.
Awesome.
Also, make sure to take care of yourself and your wife.
Stay out there.
And Sav too, please read my comment.
It would mean the world to me.
Truly, the best worst show on Blaze TV can't get any better than this.
Thank you again and God bless you.
That is so cute.
You can thank Savannah.
I want to squeeze that person.
That is the nicest thing.
Yeah, Sav.
I love squeeze.
You want to read the next one, Sav?
Sure.
I'll read the next one.
Okay, so our next review comes from Ark Haggles.
It says, different opinions and expertise enrich us.
I'm a young man who was the obnoxious Crowder kid.
I love these guys.
However, discovered Slightly Offensive this week and it binged hours on my overnight shifts.
I enjoy the different takes and lack of fear.
Thanks to the love of God.
Thanks you too and all the people who help you.
That's so good to hear.
It's so encouraging.
That's so cute.
And if you leave a review, you might be able to find, you might be able to get yourself as well here.
And also remember, guys, that we have our white guy who went to a BLM protest.
Can you grab him real fast, Savannah, from there?
We have a white man who went to BLM, peaceful BLM, mostly peaceful BLM protest, diversity coalition member.
Get on camera.
His weave is still ripped off, guys.
So he's white.
He's a white guy who went to a mostly peaceful BLM protest.
And he's the new member of our diversity coalition.
And this is the last month.
We get a new member every month.
You're still voting on the name.
We haven't launched his name.
Time is running out.
It is getting to the last end.
This is the last week to vote.
Let me know in the comments.
Let me know in the description.
Let me know in the reviews.
Anyway, thank you guys so much again for watching another episode of Slightly Offensive.
The best worst show on Blaze TV.
Just lick a little bit.
Get a little bit in your mouth.
Go get sit on screen.
Get it.
Get it.
People are going to take stoles.
Oh, it's still going.
I'm Elijah Schaefer, your top 17 host.
I was joined here by Sydney Watson today from the YouTube channel, Sydney Watson.
You can find the links to her description or in our description to all of her, all of her social media.
I encourage you to follow and to check it out.
Also, please remember, guys, that the quickest and fastest way you can support this show is by getting a membership at blazetv.com/slash Elijah.
If you continue to watch the show and you're wondering, when should I ever get a membership?
Well, honestly, now's the time.
We're demonetized fully on YouTube, on Facebook.
We get restricted in a lot of places.
But guess what?
Thanks to you guys supporting and becoming members of Blaze TV, you support us, you support Crowder, you support Levin and a lot of great names, even some people coming up soon, which you will find out.
Got a big project in the works.
Anyway, go to Blazetv.com/slash Elijah.
As always, have a great rest of the week and may God bless the United States of America.
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