Aug. 21, 2022 - Slightly Offensive - Elijah Schaffer
01:59:56
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He is the same type of caricature as Trump in terms of someone with money, power, influence, and social media prowess that the media hates, the establishment hates, but he makes good points.
And is his life clean?
May he be a criminal?
Probably.
He possibly is.
I don't think anyone gets that point without doing some criminal shit, honestly.
Again, I can agree with the cheating thing and that women are different than men.
But I really think that Andrew Tate is like a symptom of men being so devoid of masculine energy that they will attach themselves to anything that has any semblance of that.
Like, for example, I'm an Eagle Scout.
I was in Boy Scouts growing up.
That was a really fundamental and really instrumental thing in my development of what it means to be a man.
I was in a fraternity, having male peer-to-peer relationships.
Again, that was really important.
And I think Andrew Tate is a symptom of that.
In our society, all men are told that you can't be a man.
You can't display any forms of masculinity.
And I agree with what Tate says, again, about the cheating and about men and women being different.
He just loses me a little bit when he takes it to the extremes.
For example, again, men and women are different, but he advocates for having a harem, right?
I don't think that's masculine to have sex with a ton of women.
I think that's easy, actually.
What's more difficult is to submit yourself to one woman for your entire life.
That's one thing that Andrew Tate, that I agree on, that men are biologically wired to dominate, right?
To have sex with a ton of women, to conquer.
That's, you know, being, you know, having holy matrimony with one woman through the Holy Spirit, through God for your entire life, that is a difficult thing.
That's what makes it unique.
That's what makes it impressive.
That's what makes it, you know, what marriage what it is.
unidentified
Really?
No way.
Come on, Mike.
You've got to admit that it's harder to be committed to your wife.
Well, listen, I think it is interesting, but I do feel for the young men that are, again, craving masculinity, that are craving a space to be just men.
Like I said before, I'm an Eagle Scout.
I got my Eagle Scout the year before women were allowed.
And to me, that was the destruction of an exclusively male space that was really important and really instrumental in developing young men.
And I think they ruined that with introducing women to it.
That's not to say that women can't have their spaces, but I think that there is something very important to be said about men having an exclusively male space where they can make mistakes, where they can hash things out when they're going through puberty and they don't know what's going on and they don't know what's right versus wrong.
One of the executives at my company, because I only make $11 a week.
I'm not an elite.
I wish I was.
I've been around them.
I've been arrested at Mar-a-Lago before because I was dressed so poorly.
They thought I was an intruder, and I got arrested by Secret Service.
That's my life.
Anyway, so I bump shoulder to these people.
I wish I was something more, but unfortunately, we collect disabled Barbies here.
But I went to this executive's very nice country club.
Do you know that when you went into the locker room at the country club, which by the way, I think was like $50,000 just to start joining, not including fees, you go in and there's a door in the locker room, and then you go in and there's a bar in the locker room.
Only men are allowed.
There's a woman's one too.
So I'm not just defending just male-only spaces.
I'm also defending female-only spaces called the home anyway.
While the husband's at work, but there are, listen, listen.
Like, even at the gym, the butts, every, like, no, but I meant like men feel like if they don't let women into everything, like, this is, it's kind of like the immigration thing.
Like, if we don't let people in, then we're racist.
It's like men let women into every space where, like, quite frankly, there are just spaces that women shouldn't be allowed in, including politics, where it's just like, I feel genuinely like there's no spaces in terms of when the boys feel like it's kind of like the idea of they always say that the white guy has the sixth sense.
It's the look over the shoulder before he says a racist joke.
Like, he goes, and then he says his joke to make sure there's no minorities to get offended.
Like, there is a racial, social, religiosity, like, continuity that's important.
And the most basic is sex.
Like, the way to defeat racism is on sex.
Like, just to be around the boys, like, I could be around my brothers, my, like, black guys, Hispanic guys.
If we can just be the boys hanging out and like really talk about women, there's no unifying factor more than being around the boys, just being able to be raw and real about their wives, their sisters, their mothers, women in their lives about how things when women are around.
I'm saying it doesn't work because women are gossip.
They can't keep secrets.
And I love them and they're beautiful, but meaning men need male-centric spaces.
And the problem is someone always brings their girl.
They bring their wife.
And I feel like there needs to be a lot of people.
Even if we have the men's space, I mean, even I was going to say, even if we have those clubs now, in terms of the social clubs that men had 70 years ago compared to now, it's just not even comparable.
I mean, the participation, you know, Robert Putnam wrote extensively about this, whether it's bowling clubs, social clubs, the Moose Lodge, even.
If you go to those places now, they're either only attended by boomers or they just don't exist at all.
And, you know, even yacht clubs, country clubs, those places have been occupied then by millennials and they have to kind of lax the standards for entry.
And the reason we don't want women isn't because maybe Elijah is right, you know, women shouldn't be involved.
I think it's primarily because for young guys who are trying to figure out what it means to be a man, we need to be able to be focused on what our elders are telling us.
We need to be able to be focused on what the older guys are telling us, how the world works.
And because we're young men, we're stupid.
We're like monkeys.
And if there are young women around, we get distracted and it quickly devolves into basically like a dick measuring contest.
And I think that's very negative for young men to experience.
Also, I think the reason that this is legally enforced in terms of the integration between the sexes into all spaces is because they know that every time anything threatening has happened throughout history or cool throughout history is when young men are allowed to get together and just talk, whether it's in bars, it's in social clubs, it's in whatever.
When men get together, we start to strategize and we start to figure out how exactly we're going to fix problems that we all agree exist.
And when you can destroy the Boy Scouts, which would be a great ground for that to begin to be bred, you can destroy anything.
And now young men don't even know what it means to be a man.
And so anytime a guy like Jordan Peterson comes around or Andrew Tate comes around, they immediately cling to that because unfortunately their fathers aren't the men that their grandfathers were.
And so they're starving for somebody to just tell them what it means to be a man.
And maybe Jordan Peterson or Andrew Tate aren't the best guys to tell them about that.
But I agree that the social clubs are great.
And like the IDG social club is probably great.
I would love to be invited to a meeting.
It's not to say that we don't need to be doing that.
It's just, as you probably recognize, it just isn't what it used to be, which is why we should start doing that.
No, I absolutely agree, especially on your take that the boomers have probably gotten that right in that they are still the population that has those clubs available.
And to young dudes who are looking for something like that, like listen, I grew up caddying.
There is no more masculine place than a caddy yard in the summer because you're hanging around with a bunch of degenerate dudes, dudes who have seen some shit, dudes who work multiple jobs, dudes who get up early, 5, 5:30 in the morning to go work in the heat.
They're at a place where it's pretty much exclusive to men at a country club to begin with.
So I think that could be a good place for young guys to go, especially if they want to make some cash to do it.
But I mean, Elijah, it's just kind of weird that you bring up like men aren't allowed to have these spaces anymore.
Like what I also agree with what John was talking about, how millennials now have lax the standards about what men-only spaces are or spaces exclusive to men are.
But like, I just don't understand why this whole idea of we're not allowed to have our own spaces.
Discrimination is illegal when discrimination is actually good in terms of like not like not like a but not like an incorporation or an LLC, but I'm talking about with you gathering a bunch of guys and just having a weekly night or something like that to get together.
Why does it have to be under the ban of like a company or a?
Because we do, because you want people to find it.
So some guys like, you know, I'm married, I group with sisters.
I want to find out what it means to be a man.
Here's this gentleman's club, not a strip club.
We've cheapened that.
Not girls with their titties out like, hey, here's real men that are in business trying to meet together.
It genuinely has become to the point to where now, like even all boys' schools are inviting women in.
That's a real thing.
And women's schools are inviting men in.
Like, our culture has degraded to the fact they don't understand the sanctity of gender-exclusive spaces.
And I mean that on both ends, like, I think, I listen, we've talked about on the show.
Women ask, like, oh, well, why can't I meet with other wives?
They go, maybe you should start your own, you know, Saturday brunch with women who are coming over in Bible study and talk about what needs to be done and bring and say, bring your kids and you actually get together.
Maybe you want to talk and you don't want to watch your kids.
Then maybe you come together and everyone gives $50 and you hire a babysitter to watch all your children while you all talk together and meet on a Saturday afternoon and have a nice brunch together.
Meaning, we can do that individually.
It's very nice.
I just mean that we've lost the sex-centric part of society where men and women are distinctly different more than race or anything.
Like I can get along probably more with a black dude or a Mexican dude than I could with a white woman.
Meaning, in terms of just like the understanding of us talking about the same things, we might have different cultures, different ideas, different even understandings of women, how we relate, but we still have the same problems, the same issues.
And in our culture, we've said there's no such thing as male spaces.
Boy Scouts accept girls.
Like our culture is degrading this.
So I'm not saying we can't.
I do.
We're here on this podcast.
I don't care.
I love Gina.
I'm not like upset about anything.
I just mean this podcast invites all different types of people on.
unidentified
But on the private end, oh, wait, it just, oh, it's Don Joyle.
I would much rather go through a lawsuit of creating a men's-only social club than have to fucking like kowtow to fucking, you know, in the inclusivity of all genders or sex.
It's absolutely bullshit.
There's a school here in Nashville, an all-girls school that was all girls for 50, 60, 70 years.
I actually think it goes back over 100 years that just started to accept people who identify as women now.
So I agree that the culture is absolutely degrading.
But to think that like no one is actually challenging this and no one is willing to have the actual balls to maybe suffer a lawsuit to show that there can be men-only spaces is absolutely ridiculous and just shows the whole pussification of men today in general.
Well, not only that, but prisons aren't even gender exclusive nowadays, right?
You have prisons that are allowing in transgender people of the other side, and they're letting in men that are masquerading as women, raping a ton of these women, getting them pregnant, right?
It is to say that, yes, you should find local men in your community who get it, who understand what's coming, and you should network with them, have time that is exclusively male to get together.
But it's also not to ignore the fact that 70 years ago, your grandpa was probably a member of a club where he could have gone to any time of the week.
And that's how it starts, too, with poker, with some sort of shared interest.
You know, it's going to be tough to pitch to a bunch of guys.
Hey, let's all just like hang out together.
There has to be some sort of some sort of shared interest.
Like, I remember when I was in high school, we started like a little poker night, which is not exactly a big protest against the regime because it's like you're not going to get a knock on the door because you're playing poker with your male friends in high school, but it's like at least something, you know, guys' night, boys' night, and then expand that, involve your community.
And then you say, Hey, maybe instead of playing poker, maybe let's uh go to the gun range, maybe let's go get pistol training classes or you know, uh, short-barrel rifle training classes, and you know, let's start to practice small unit tactics, and then maybe we take over a precinct, and then maybe you know, and you can expand from there.
As long as the boys are together, we're fraternizing, we're doing what needs to be done.
I used to be very, very critical of people who would take off their own shoes coming into my house because I would say, listen, it's fine.
Wear shoes.
But I understand now, you know, after having a kid and having all, you know, the kind of stuff that they put in their mouth, it's actually pretty respectful to kind of take your shoes off.
Let's just, let's, there's so many, there's, there's so much to go with.
So an open secret posted, I know.
I have to read.
By the way, if you ever, if you reference CP, please reference it as CP.
I just could do this so it doesn't even pick up.
But Nick Fuentes' key lieutenant arrested by FBI for credible mass violence threats against TPUSA, possession of CP on cell phone, Alejandro Richard, Velasquez, Gomez, 18 aka Latina Zumer, and Mestizo Zumer.
And if you go to the actual article, this is from, this is local news, by the way, here in Texas.
FBI says in South Area Teen, San Antonio teen made credible mass violence threat against conservative student group.
And the article goes on to say, a graduate of Wagner High School has been charged in a federal anti-terrorism investigation.
I also went dark after allegedly making online posts that the FBI claims shows that he was planning an attack on conservative student group in Florida.
And I think it goes down to explain what he said.
So he basically said, oh, yeah, here it is.
Velasquez alleged that threat against the Student Action Summit concluded with SAS will be turning point of Latino Zoomer lore.
And it said here that, where did it say something specifically?
Oh, he said like that it was going to be a we're going to have his retribution or something like that.
And he's booked here.
Yeah.
The tweet itself, you can take it off the screen, seemed pretty, pretty innocuous.
What do we feel about the FBI in general?
Because the planting of child porn on his phone, like, I'm not going to defend, I'm not defending anyone, but I want to say planting.
Well, they, you know, that Alex Jones won the case against the federal government, that they literally planted child porn on his servers.
I'm pretty sure the language that they use, like key lieutenant, is absolutely suspect.
I think Nick is Nick.
I've seen him disavow this kid having anything to do with AF or anything to do with himself.
If he's turned up with two Daniel Defense rifles and a new truck, then maybe I'd be more likely to think that the FBI is involved and creating a false flag.
And I don't know.
I don't really know too much about it.
unidentified
I'm just initially skeptical of anything the FBI is involved with.
Yeah, that too.
And initially skeptical of any public attack on Nick Fuentez in America First because he's one of the most politically persecuted people in the country.
And so, I mean, not to say that all of it's false, but I'm just always initially skeptical of happy birthday to Nick.
I think that I don't know exactly that he was actually a threat to anybody.
I think that he was probably just being edgy.
This kid seems to be really online.
But that being said, some of the other allegations were probably true based on what's been leaked with his conduct with other people in the sphere, particularly underage women.
That being said, the way that they're trying to link this by extrapolation to Nick Fuentes is just ridiculous.
You know, key lieutenant.
This guy had no position of leadership or relative authority within America first.
He was just more or less a super fan.
You know, they're showing, oh, well, he was at this event.
He was at this event.
Yeah, super fans like to go to event.
You know, this guy was a big fan.
He was really, you know, invested in everything.
But that doesn't mean that he was actually acknowledged by the leadership, let alone Nick Fuentes.
So they're just trying to slander him guilt by association, a tale as old as time, by taking this kid's, you know, anecdote and tying it to America first and Nick Fuentes.
Well, I'm saying this, and they couldn't believe the United States saying that Russia was going to invade Ukraine because the United States intelligence has been so dishonest about Afghanistan, about Iraq, etc., right?
So there's a huge freaking problem that's going on in the country.
They don't believe us on wars.
And I feel like that's the same problem with the intelligence community, right?
It's like, I want to believe, like, someone would be like, oh, Gina, you're so bad.
This guy really did have child porn.
He's horrible.
He's evil.
And he was trying to kill people.
And you're like, yeah, but I would believe you if you also weren't investigating Elijah with an open investigation for wiretapping for January 6th.
Like, meaning, like, I know bad people exist, and I know you probably do catch them, but then why are you politicizing and finding fake fake bad people?
I don't know.
I heard the air kick on.
But fake bad people.
I'm saying that's the problem.
It's like you hear the problem with all these people is that it's just the agencies are not consistent, so we don't trust them.
It's like, well, Epstein, you know, well, we really care about this guy with child porn.
We don't even have Epstein's logs.
We don't have Epstein's video cameras.
You guys care about child porn, but you don't care about children being raped?
He got caught up because he had been allegedly simping after a young woman.
And then they leaked all the screenshots.
They were trying to really dunk on this guy, humiliate this guy, and I felt badly for him.
So, you know, I tried to be nice to him.
I think I met him in an event or something.
We took a photograph.
I was trying really to be nice because my thinking was that if this guy got exposed for simping and he's still showing his faces at these events, he's not unaware of that.
He must be calculating.
He must be plotting his revenge.
So I was like, this kid's going to snap.
I want to be in his good graces.
And then this comes out and he's, you know, taken into custody by federal police.
And it's like, okay, I feel vindicated, frankly.
But it's also like, you know, you really have to be careful to the boys, to the young guys who spend too much time on the internet.
You really have to make sure that they're doing all right, okay?
The Forgotten Gamers of America.
We have to pay very close attention to these guys because they are one or two ratios on Twitter away from doing something that they cannot take back.
He also had a, you know, on his own Instagram, I think he posted something about, you know, turning 18, and that's not going to make me unattracted to minors.
So we have to say, I've displayed some of this behavior before.
If we can get the sound down a little bit on the videos, perhaps, just a little bit.
People in New Zealand, because of the injectables, are getting sick.
So it's compromising their immune systems.
We don't know that though.
It's not scientifically proven.
But we're finding that Western countries are having a declined birth rate, an increased death rate, and also they are getting sick faster.
So New Zealand, which, by the way, has 114% dose mitigation.
So meaning they literally have 114% dose rate, which means they have more doses than they've even given out to people, but they have almost 100% compliance.
Suddenly, their population's immune system is dropping and they don't know what caused it.
I recently bought 40 acres of wild in the Ozark to plan to make an escape for vacation cabins for every close friends and my close family final payments.
We were put into a very fortunate circumstance where actually you even had to sacrifice more than I did to simply not get the jab.
But it's like, you know, even if it was the right thing to do by that meaning not getting it, which I think is still correct, you can't come at it from a place that is not from sympathy.
Where, you know, you're looking at the guy who's working a blue-collar job who doesn't have a choice.
I mean, what is he going to do?
Like, miss two weeks of pay and then not feed his family?
And, you know, he gets the vaccine.
Maybe he doesn't really believe necessarily all the things that are being propagated about it.
So it I still think fundamentally was the wrong thing to do.
I think it was still basically bowing down to a regime that ultimately hates you.
But that being said, you know, it is what it is.
It's water under the bridge.
You can't really berate these people.
It's not really American or the right thing to do, I think, to be like, I told you so.
I think you really do have to come at it from a place of sympathy and understanding.
This reminds me of what Kathy Hochlin in New York did today, where she's legislating pronouns.
You can't say mailman or fireman anymore because it's gendered language.
The people in New York are legislating language at the same time that there's mass homelessness, there's mass drug, you know, drug epidemic, fentanyl overdoses in New York.
They're overrunning hotels with illegal immigrants, people that cross illegally housing them in our country.
And their priority is legislating pronouns, legislating language to stay in LA, right?
They're letting people dope up, do drugs, run tent cities.
But it's just like, I mean, this is, you know, what they got Blake Masters for a few months ago.
They unearthed an old podcast clip of him where he was talking about what gun violence really means in practical terms.
And he said something to the effect of, frankly, it has a lot to do with violence between gangs of black people.
And this is the sin of America, which is a country that worships black people.
The same way that France under a Catholic monarchy would think to themselves in any institutional level in terms of decisions being made.
Well, how would God think about, or what would God think about this decision?
This country thinks when decisions are being made at the institutional level, what would black people think about this decision?
Well, how are the black people going to think about this?
So Blake Masters said something to the effect of, you know, it's black people who are committing gun violence against each other during gang shootouts and what have you.
And this is an issue where the fact checkers aren't even going to attempt to gaslight you as to the reality of the situation.
So they simply ran the headline such that it would make him seem like he were a racist and, you know, completely irrational actor.
Because it's just true.
I mean, everybody knows, frankly, that like this is the problem.
If you're going to talk about gun crime, you're going to talk about crime in general.
You're going to have to be a little bit more specific with who you're talking about is committing the crime.
And, you know, you see these people were going into the 7-Eleven.
And whether it's me, whether it's Blake Masters, whoever, the cardinal sin in America is to accurately describe the behavior of different groups of people.
Because our overriding religion, the religion of America in 2022, is egalitarianism.
Practically defined as everybody is equal, obviously, by every metric.
Anything that you would try to measure the different groups of people by is irrelevant because we are all the same.
And so if you accurately describe the behavior of different groups of people, that is a sin because it goes directly against the nature of the overriding narrative, which is that everybody is the same.
There is no difference between any group of people.
We are all the same.
And if there is a difference, it's actually because of racism.
I don't even want to call them disagreements because, John, you and I will have a lot of heated discussions.
Would you agree with that?
You and I really do have a lot of heated discussions where it's like we agree on like the outcome or like the destination, but we come from different places.
Yeah, yesterday we got into it when we were lifting about certain people in America.
And I was telling this story actually to somebody and I was describing it like, yeah, it seemed like Aldo was just like trying to prove to me that he could speak English or something.
Because I'm like hearing everything you're saying and I was like, okay, but you know, look, man, we still agree at the end of the day on like the key point here.
Like, why are you trying to argue semantics or like the little details with me?
Well, it's the same thing with the isms and the phobias where, you know, I don't see, I see the sexism, racism, homophobia, all these things.
I see them as illusions.
I don't see them as actually real.
I think they're distractions and they're there to make you mad and angry.
I think there's two truths, right?
It's either right or wrong.
It's good or evil.
And I think that if you narrow your lens and you look at the world through those mindsets, again, right and wrong, good and evil, then the way that you view everything becomes a lot more simple and you can tackle policy issues a lot easier.
Whereas I'm not advocating against nuance.
I think it's important, but I just think that some nuance is irrelevant or it distracts you or it's not helpful in the real world, right?
Like these people are all voting and they are overwhelmingly voting for liberal district attorneys who refuse to prosecute crimes like this.
Like I don't know in what city precisely this particular incident took place, but I know that in cities like San Francisco, they're refusing to prosecute theft in instances where I think over or less than $1,000 worth of merchandise has been stolen.
So I think that we can all agree that murder and theft and rape and things like that are wrong.
But if we want to move closer towards a society which reflects that, we might have to be a little bit more honest with who's exactly doing what.
I don't know if you guys saw the looting in LA, this flash mob that took over this gas station in L.A. John and I were talking about some of the differences we had.
Not in the conclusions we make about race and about crime, but maybe the way that we get there, I guess the starting point that we get there, I was talking about, I don't really see racism, sexism, homophobia, all that, all those isms as, I guess, you know, good and useful in assessing policy.
It's either right, wrong, good, or evil.
And I think if you make it simply down to those four points, then, you know, public policy and law becomes a lot easier.
okay so here's here's the question um why why is it do you think that trans people feel that they be saying anything right now i can't hear anything okay Okay, okay, so go ahead, Mike.
You know what, Abel, that's the degeneration of the myelin sheath on the nerve nodes.
So we are really sorry.
I was going to ask you, would you ever be willing to go on the I'm Doing Great podcast down there to talk about detransitioning on Gina and Mike's podcast to explain what's going on?
Would you ever be willing to talk to them and the public about what that's like?
Well, I just got to say real quick is for Abel, that was extremely brave and courageous for him saying that stuff.
And I can't even imagine what he's going through having such traumatic, invasive, life-altering, unchanging surgeries done to your body at such a young age.
I think he said 19 is when those happened to him.
And it's so heartbreaking to hear that he had people around him encouraging him to do that to himself.
So she just said, stay in the Bible, have kids, follow God.
And that should be the perspective.
What are your thoughts on that?
unidentified
Yeah, I'm trying to work towards that a step at a time.
I've heard you mention a lot.
It's kind of like a day-by-day sort of battle.
You take the wins you can get.
So right now, I live in California.
I don't live in the bad parts.
I'm sort of in the Northern California region.
And it's not as bad here, but you definitely see kind of despair going on, I guess.
Just like the homeless people, the crazy people, man.
It's pretty wild.
And funnily enough, I'm looking to move to Tennessee and kind of try to get some land out there and become more independent than where I'm at right now.
But it's, I'd say, I have a lot of, I look to that to try and look to having kids and like try to make that my reason for the white pill and try and make a better society.
that's mike said that and i will say because because the audience i have a bachelorette for you in tennessee she has a She has a bachelorette for you.
And I'm going to tell you this, my friend, is this is why we have to be very careful not to be judged by people because this is why the SOBs are slightly offensive backers.
We're all bit misovets.
We're a bit weird and we're a bit strange.
But we also understand that like, that's why even Mike was like, oh, you said cunt and a Bible verse in one sentence.
It's true.
It's because I understand there's a lot of people who can quote Bible verses and a lot of people who can be crass, but a lot of us are somewhere in between.
That's why we have the new podcast, Messy Christianity, in general.
We're just complicated individuals.
And the way you do better is just every day.
It's like you look at porn last night.
You fuck a hooker.
You hang out with Hunter Biden, smoke crack, and have 37 hookers.
I'm not that cool, man.
Yeah, I'm not that cool either.
But I'm saying, like, my point is you wake up today, you feel bad.
What's your decision?
You either A, repeat your mistakes or you choose to try to do better.
So, so that's all it is.
You wake up in the morning.
Do I try to do better or do I not?
And what's my standard for better?
Is it the left?
Is it the world?
No, it's God.
Can I believe in God and still be a worldly person?
Yeah, you can.
Is it good?
No.
But you go, I feel anxiety.
I feel pain.
I feel hurt.
I feel separated from people.
I feel separated from God.
Why?
Because my own sin, my own mistakes.
So we try to do better.
I appreciate you.
We're going to let you go and we'd love to talk to you in the future.
Mega Monro Jesse okay, so we have the I'm doing great podcast here on.
You can't hear them because I'm ghetto, but do you have any questions or comments or anything you'd like to talk about or anything you'd like to ask anyone here in the room, and we'd love to answer them for you.
Ready that the floor is yours?
unidentified
Yeah so um well, the first thing uh John, I know I got cars in the text you every day, but check your email, bro.
But secondly uh, so i'm like starting to dip my feet into the um podcast world.
Uh, doing some of the stuff y'all inspired me to do some stuff like that with uh podcasting, with youtube, and I was just wondering from all of y'all uh, just like some practical tips on more of the uh promotion side of things and like trying to draw more attention, because you know, i'm still working on building a brand, i'm still working on doing all that kind of stuff.
But uh, just the um practical side of everything of getting uh, my name out there, getting some of this stuff built up.
One, my attention span has been eroded by the internet and by full screen john.
Go full screen, john.
So i'm not willing to watch something that is like a podcast, that is long form, unless I am familiar with you.
Which gets into the second point, which is like, if i'm not familiar with you, i'm not going to give you 40 minutes, 45 minutes of my time.
That's the one resource I cannot create more of for myself.
I don't know you.
Why would I click on a video or a podcast of yours?
It's 45 minutes, it's an hour and a half if I don't know who you are.
So what I would say is that record the podcast, record the content that you want to record however, clip that, market it, even pay for third-party advertisements if you have to.
That will allow my initial viewership.
Exactly that will bump you up into the algorithm.
That will allow you to be competitive.
That's the strategy that I did, probably the strategy that ID is doing, which is why they've been so successful for a long form, a long form podcast just showing up on Youtube and they've already got like what, 15 000 subscribers in less than a year, so you know the content can be good 17 recently they went up like excuse me well, excuse me okay, first of all, nobody respects Id more than myself.
I will say that.
But secondly, that's what you got to do.
The content can be good, but the question is, how do you get that content in front of people?
And I think the strategy is being willing to invest money into advertising and doing so competitively, like everybody else does, and coming on the show too.
Just being on people's shows helps so much with credibility in terms of seo.
No one talks about this like like the the effect, and I and I say this like i'm going on Timpool is a very big podcast um, and I go on, I try to go on there pretty regularly um, I never gain maybe more than like 200 subscribers.
If you're new to the podcasting world, you probably gain 10 000, but I gain like 200 and and uh, Gina would know this the reason why it's important is called relevancy.
So staying in the algorithms, so like just going on other big name shows.
It's not that I gain subs, just that, like when you search up Elijah Schaefer.
It takes relevancy or slightly offensive.
And then I show up on TIM POOL, I show up on Crowder, I show up on FOX NEWS.
You show up on a lot of places like in the search, and they're not gonna go on a, you know a Tim Pool episode from two years ago.
They're gonna take one from this year and what's happening now.
So get them as many podcasts as possible, because you never know who's gonna blow up.
You never know what's gonna happen.
Um, we are gonna let you go.
I appreciate you, but we have to get into some of these things.
Have you ever noticed how Elijah's memes are just like photographs that have Elijah or various characters from his universe inadequately photoshopped onto like other entities within the environment?
I was talking to John today about what are the, what are the, I asked him, what are your, what do you think are the three biggest threats to America right now?
Mine were incels, the three-letter agencies, specifically the FBI and the ATF, and seed oils.
So I feel like with your processed sugars, you know, seed oils.
Most base part of any movie that I've ever seen, I did watch the They Them movie, and there is a scene where these people go to like a gay conversion camp or whatever it is, and Kevin Bacon, who's the camp counselor, separates the group of kids into male and female.
So, this you see this female-looking person go into one of the showers, and he takes off his clothes, and you see him from behind.
I say, wait a minute, that doesn't look like a girl ass.
One of the camp counselors comes in, pulls the woman out of the group, out of the shower, brings her to Kevin Bacon, and he's like, You lied to me.
Yeah, what do I do to lose 100 pounds of my lift, but look try to fuck and raise a pit bull, not have a purebred vijla and fucking be able to kill most people's parents.
Oh, well, dude, I already told you, if you give up refined sugars and gluten for about a month, you'd actually get cut and you probably lose a significant amount of body fat.
As far as owning a pit bull, I don't know how the two are related.
So I think after 27 years of age, you might be able to accept that a pit bull is just a dog and not a human who you can impart human characteristics on.
This nibba is trying to make the argument that when I'm 25 and my prefrontal cortex develops, I'm going to be like, wait a minute, pit bulls are just dogs too.
No, they are biologically predisposed to be attackers, to be vicious, more so than other dogs, which is why, by majority, pit bulls are the most likely to maul children, to maul women, to maul people.
And actually, they're not even that courageous.
Pitbulls will run away from boxers, from Rottweilers, from Rhodesian Ridgebacks.
They're not even that courageous.
They only step up when they want to maul toddlers and pedestrians and what have you.
And, you know, the typical pit bull owner responds, the pit apologist response is, oh, it's not a bad dog.
It's just a bad owner.
You ever realize all the bad owners have pit bulls?
Take it off Mike Alright Alright well listen to him for a second Johnny taking it off John or no Not today Probably not today This is all like Not eating processed sugars And bread for about two months All right.
For me, at least, I always say that the greatest thing that my parents instilled in me is my appreciation for good food.
You know, we've been going to the farmer's market since I can remember.
It was always raw milk, good, you know, good proteins.
And so when I see other people that, you know, really appreciate good foods, I really respect it and I really appreciate it.
But it makes me feel bad for the people that have never been taught good nutrition and who just think going to the grocery store, buying box macaroni and cheese is a balanced diet.
So was it the same for you that your parents instilled in you an appreciation for organic, nutritious, healthy food?
unidentified
Yeah, my mom was definitely, ever since I was a kid, she was always into healthy eating.
And I grew up in South Georgia, like a very small town in South Georgia.
It only had one stoplight.
So the typical diet that people eat there was very different than what we ate at home.
But my dad grew up very unhealthy.
So my mom completely changed the way that he ate.
And then, you know, obviously that trickled down to me.
And I remember when I was in elementary school, my mom was like, okay, you and your dad are getting kind of fat.
We need to really switch things around.
And that's when she, you know, taught me about what healthy food is, how to cook and how to bake too.
You know, although you say it's really sad that people think they have to go to the grocery store and they think it's, you know, fine to just eat box macaroni and cheese.
But what I think is also really sad is that people think that healthy means eating salads and not eating red meat and avoiding eggs because of cholesterol.
Like that makes me really sad because we've been programmed by public health organizations to think that grains are really good for you.
I mean, the food pyramid, like how many cups of grains do they recommend that we eat every day?
And grain literally causes brain atrophy and brain atrophy is the number one thing that causes autism in Alzheimer's.
So it's really sad that people, what they think is healthy, like I've had girls post on my page, they're like, you know, I eat really healthy.
All I eat is salads and I gave up meat.
And I'm like, that's a fast track to depression to not eat any animal products and just eat vegetables all the time.
So I find that to be sad too.
So everything that public health organizations tell you to do, just do the opposite.
And I love when you talk about the nutrition and how to lose weight, you know, as a female.
I don't know the female diet as much as you do, obviously, but about eating more protein and that helps you lose weight.
But when I was young, it was even, again, the sad part about our system is that we were buying raw milk from our farmer's market guy for years and years and years.
And then all of a sudden his insurance company, this raw milk producer, dropped him from liability because of the bacteria in the milk because they didn't want to take responsibility for it anymore, right?
Because the bacteria could cause problems, cause death, whatever.
So they dropped him.
And so as a result, we were unable to buy this raw milk.
And so that's another thing that I think is really unfortunate and just so crazy in America is that the FDA and insurance companies won't let us drink raw milk and discourage us from having these organic options.
But they will continue to allow people to drink what?
Multiple Sodas a day with 60 grams of sugar in it.
I can't fly you out, Gina or Mike, but if you'd like to fly out, I can get you tickets to the premiere of this in Dallas.
The new movie, Uncle Tom 2, I helped co-produce this.
So if you type in my code, Elijah E-L-I-J-A-H, it's my code.
I helped co-produce this.
This movie costs so much money.
It is a red pill movie.
It'll wake everybody up to the truth.
It's about how the elites practice in the black community how to destroy wealth, natural identity to use on a whole country through COVID and everything else.
So it explains how they basically practice destruction of a culture and of a race in order to take away their self-worth and their ability to grow so that they could keep them slaves to a system so they could use it on everybody else in this country and eventually the world.
It's really crazy.
It'll make you cry.
It's a red pill movie.
It's not even political.
But if you watch this, it'll wake people up to the reality.
I wanted to be involved in the movie that would change lives.
We worked on this for three years.
It's insane.
I co-produced it.
I helped with camera work.
It's by the same people, 2000 Mules, everything.
It's so good.
Again, uncletom.com, U-N-C-L-E-T-O-M.com.
My code Elijah E-I-J-A-H, 30% off.
Please get this movie.
Do not stop ordering it.
Do not stop sending it to friends.
It'll change reality for you.
I'm not joking.
There's stuff broken in this that we got from Yale archives, Harvard Archives.
People try to hide shit about our history that we unearthed.
It's so fucking cool.
UncleTom.com promo code Elijah, and it just gives you the whole track record.
Do not miss this.
If you're already red-pilled, it'll red pill.
I got red-pilled from our own research.
I learned stuff from our own movie.
It's so insane.
Just uncletom.com, promo code Elijah.
Don't forget to follow us on social media, everywhere you can find it.
Remember, this podcast, this new show, Offensive Live, might not be on YouTube for very long.
I don't know where it's going to be.
We keep getting these pulled, so I don't know how long it'll stay up on here.
Might go on Rumble exclusively.
We'll talk to them.
I'll see what will happen.
But thank you so much to my guests, Gina, Mike, to John, and to Aldo.