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June 16, 2020 - Full Haus
02:04:53
20200616_Longshanks
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Time Text
The concept of legitimacy is thrown around a lot in political circles, usually by establishment toadies as a means to coerce some errant group or rogue government into doing the bidding of the neoliberal world order.
The assumption by the lecturer, usually an academic or NGO or governmental Bien pensant, is that he, of course, is dictating from a position of perfect legitimacy.
Well, let's take a peek under the hood of our own system's legitimacy for a moment, shall we?
As we speak, our frontline public safety defenders are terrified of the orcs terrorizing our streets, knowing that doing their job could mean life in bars.
An anarchic autonomous zone is established in the heart of one of our great cities, governed by a felonious SoundCloud rapper.
Our people are terrified to speak honestly and candidly, even anonymously, knowing that a single wrong speak could end their careers.
Business owners are being interrogated if they don't publicly celebrate the glorious life of curious George Floyd and some kind of Red Guard revanchism.
Our bravest truth-tellers are censored off the internet by faceless digital commissars acting at the behest of communists.
Every major election is now disputed as fraudulent or manipulated by foreign governments.
Our beautiful historical monuments are desecrated and torn down by mobs as the cops stand back and watch until a statue smashes the skull of a vandal, of course.
And our most precious possession, our innocent and beautiful children, are herded into government schools with gender-neutral bathrooms and instructed by purple-haired cat ladies to hate themselves for their whiteness, but to worship the other.
So the next time you hear some talking head pontificating about legitimacy, ask yourself: does this system feel legitimate to you?
All right, we've got a rough and tumble special guest in the white room with the birth panel tonight, and it's go time.
Mr. Producer, let it fly on.
Episode 52 of Full House, verbose host edition, apparently, and the world's most stubborn show for white fathers, aspiring ones, and the whole bio fam.
I am, as always, your spitting mad host, Coach Finstock, back with another two hours designed to remind you, yes, you, dear listener, that you are not alone with your rebellious thoughts at this time.
Before we meet the birth panel this week, though, special thanks to none other than Blind Dad, who insisted on sending us some shekels this week for our troubles.
That's right.
We are now shamelessly accepting donations from blind guys in a pay-for-play scheme, apparently.
No, but seriously, he just wanted to.
I was like, all right, man, you don't have to, but thanks very much, BD.
And also, special thanks to our pal Robert Smith, if that's your real name, for his donation this week.
So if you'd like to be like Blind Dad and Robert Smith, drop us a line at fullhouse show at ProtonMail.com.
But that's enough of me.
Let's get on to the birth panel.
First up, he's homeschooled more children than you'll probably ever have, slackers.
And if this podcast thing doesn't work out, he's got a promising career as a white nationalist marriage counselor waiting in the wings.
Sam, welcome back, my friend.
Thank you, coach.
It's great to be here.
Yeah, this.
I know we're on overload and we can all hardly stand to speak anymore about this things going on, the riots and the demonstrations and all that type of thing.
I'll just say this one observation, which is from my perspective, that it is certainly having the effect of pushing people our way.
I'll put it like that.
And I could just compare to other decades.
I'm remembering being in high school and college in the 80s and working in the 90s and in the first decade of this century.
You know, I could argue with liberals.
There were liberals I could argue with.
If I wanted to have fun, I knew who to go talk to.
There are no more liberals anymore.
I would say that generally any white person I talk to is may not be to the exact position we are, but it's not like it was at one time where I could count on having an argument with somebody who is voicing the leftist or even just liberal or mildly liberal talking points.
So if you could take that as a little bit of encouragement, these things going on are not getting any, not creating any sympathy in the average person.
And I'm talking about people I talk to at work, people I talk to on the street or in the stores, family, friends, people I know.
It's hard to find a liberal to argue with anymore, honestly.
Yeah, it's easy to be spooked or I guess maybe intimidated by the sheer numbers and the fearlessness that they show on the streets, as disgusting as that is, too, that the cops and the governors and the government let it happen.
But you're absolutely right.
Yeah, center can't hold.
Everybody's going to be forced to choose, as we talked last week.
And before the show, we were saying that we did the riot show and then we did the sort of terror psychosis anti-white thing that's going around.
And I don't think they're going to be able to put that genie back in the bottle.
Well, what it is, is that any remaining framework that people had to look at race and just the way they think about society, that's been shattered.
And people don't have a framework for how to think about this.
Many people, they live in the society.
They don't maybe exactly hate blacks, but they know that they don't want to live around them, but they know some good ones, maybe.
And the way they think about the world, their lives, the society, religion, maybe how that all fits together, that's all shattered right now.
And people seem to know that they cannot go back to the way it was.
Yep.
Onward and upward for us at least.
All right.
Yeah.
Welcome.
Welcome back.
Thank you.
Next up, he is our very own Mr. Fix It, as well as our very own Mr. Break It.
And he won't charge you extra for any frustration holes in the drywall, as he calls them.
Le Potato Smasher.
Welcome back, buddy.
Hey, man, I heard about racism this weekend, and now I'm missing a whole wall.
I couldn't stop punching it.
That's a true, that's a true story.
Smasher was helping us out with some work, and I was like, What the hell happened here?
He's like, Don't worry about it.
I'll fix it.
I do.
I think it was a hammer.
I don't think it was my fist.
Well, whatever.
Everything good with you?
Other than living in Sodom and Gomorrah?
Yeah, no, it's all right.
You know, we're the world is what it is, and we're going to fix it.
And that's really all that counts.
And I'll just like Chaos Wizard post the whole way until we get there.
Whatever that means.
Very good.
Just our brain.
Look, remember, I looked into the void and it looked back.
All right.
Just don't fall into the void.
All right.
And finally, our very special and patient guest this evening.
He's a little meaner than our kind-hearted guest from last weekend.
That's okay.
He looks like he might shive you in a prison bathroom if you step on his slippers.
But he's also a loving father and husband and a devoted warrior for the cause.
Longshanks, we finally got you on full house, man.
Welcome.
Thanks for having me.
Our pleasure.
You, yeah, you've been a listener and a supporter from the beginning, from the get-go, man.
So thank you.
And you didn't buy the mic, unfortunately, but you sound pretty good tonight.
Well, I actually do have a real nice mic.
But like I said, I couldn't find a place to set up that wasn't going to have like kid noise in the background.
That's a beautiful problem when you got a house full of rug rats.
Shankson is in his car getting a little bit of me time with the birth panel tonight.
So we appreciate it.
And Long Shanks, was that your nickname in college, what the Sorority Girls called you?
Or why'd you pick him?
Actually, just because my favorite movie is Braveheart.
Sure.
And they were doing this back.
There was a meme going on about, you know, throwing people off rooftops or whatever.
And I said, and I cut that clip out of the movie and I kept posting.
I was like, you know, I was like, the British did it first.
And so I just adopted that name.
And I was like, we don't have to be Muslims.
The British did it first.
And I just ran with it and it just stuck.
It stuck.
And so I think Cato made me a couple memes about it.
So it just stuck from there.
Yeah.
It's like Nam said, yeah, you don't really know what sock name you're going to pick that's going to stick, but that one's not bad.
But anyway, pal, lay it on us, first-time guest, long-time listener, your ethnicity, religion, and fatherhood status, if you would.
Yeah, I'm British, German, Dutch, and Swedish.
Pretty much in that order.
I was dumb and did the 23andMe, like, I don't know, before I was like red listed, you know?
Yeah.
So I did that a long time.
I just had a curiosity.
It matched my family history.
So it was kind of a waste of money, really.
But religion, Christian, but I think JO said on one of the previous shows, some days he wakes up and he's not sure.
And then other days he wakes up and he's absolutely positive.
And I think I'm kind of in that boat.
We read the Bible and stuff like that.
You know, it's just, it's not something that ever really stuck that deep in me, but I'm trying.
I'm trying.
Sure.
What were you raised?
And are you taking your kids to church or just doing it at home?
We're doing it at home.
I can't find a church that doesn't have a rainbow flag in front of it.
So I'm not going to go to a rainbow flag.
I'm not going to one of those.
So we're just doing it at home.
We're just reading the Bible.
We're starting from cover to cover and we just try to read a little bit every day, a little bit every night.
As much until the kids, I can tell their eyes start wandering, like, okay, I'm not interested.
All right, we'll put it up.
You know, we don't have to, we don't have to just do like an hour a day, you know, or something like that.
It's not rigid.
But just as long as we're, we're getting to it.
And then I grew up a couple of different versions of Christianity.
Probably the longest running one my mom stuck with was Jehovah's Witness, which that's that really probably got me out of Christianity, to tell you the truth.
Sure.
Yeah, you want to talk about the most racial miscegenation branch of anything.
That's got to be it.
Where I grew up, yeah, if two black ladies show up at your front door, you know, they're evangelizing for Jehovah.
Yeah.
And vaguely, how many rugrats you got?
I got two.
Two boys.
Okay.
Yeah.
I can't be too vague about the number of your kids.
Could still understand.
I don't understand numbers.
How many kids?
Out three.
There you go.
Yeah.
How many kids you got?
I don't know.
We tell all our guests that they can fudge little details here and there if they want to, but Shanks is a man.
He's like, nah, bro.
I'm good.
Anyway, how about how did you come into our milieu?
You know, the standard question, red pill, et cetera.
And if you want to, if that was from childhood or later on in life.
Well, I've always been race aware.
That's never been an issue.
And that goes pretty much to my childhood.
Like I grew up in a black neighborhood.
Some people know that.
You know, otherwise, some of the listeners probably don't.
But I grew up in a black neighborhood when I was young.
And you could just see it at Stark.
Like there were three white kids in my elementary class.
And it was every single week.
Like it was our three names were competing for the top.
And everyone else couldn't even finish their homework.
You know, like it was just, it was just night and day.
And there's no other reason for it.
You know, you just, you'd see it and every time.
So there's, there's no amount of programming that'll get that out of you.
But as far as like the JQ stuff, well, before I found like the alt-right or whatever it is people want to call it, distant right, I was actually getting a little depressed because I felt I felt like I was alone.
Because we, I, we lived in a pretty nice neighborhood and everyone I talked to just very liberal.
And I just felt alone.
Like nobody saw the world the way I did.
And that's just the way it was.
And then when I got in an office work, it got worse because when blue color work, you could people still knew.
Sure.
You know, like you could talk about racial stuffs.
You can make racial jokes.
You go to the office.
You can't tell a joke, like any kind of joke, because somebody's the butt of the joke.
Yeah.
So you just can't, there's no humor.
So you just, you're just basically you can work with someone 40 hours a week and barely say five words to them because nobody knows what to say to each other.
Like literally, it's like you talk to talk about the weather and it's like, it's so alienating.
And I think that goes to what Sam was saying when he was opening, you know, people, you used to be able to have conversations and now you can't even have a conversation.
It's just like, oh, you don't think the way I do?
Heretic.
And it's just all the world's in eggshells.
Yep.
So when I go ahead.
Sorry.
I'm rambling.
No, no, no.
Please go ahead.
I'm going to have a chatty guest.
Well, they let us work from home.
That this is actually what did it.
I was working from home and I was just kind of bored.
And I was, I was flicking around through YouTube and I came across Gavin McKinna's videos.
And I was like, wow, this guy says stuff that I think.
And back then, you could, your playlist, you know, white people talk about your playlist.
So actually, this video is for you.
Oh, this Ben Shapiro guy.
This is great.
Awesome.
Awesome.
And then it's like, after a while, I'll tell you the first person I started to hate was Ben Shapiro.
I just couldn't stand the way he talked.
Yeah.
And then Cernovich is definitely the one I could never stand because I can't, I couldn't get over the lisp.
Call me childish, but I did.
And you're just like, no, I can't, I can't do this.
I can't have a dude talking tough.
High-pitched with a lisp.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So, yeah, I kind of just went down the rabbit hole from there.
I found TDS and the TRS stuff and fascination.
And it was just like, oh my God, there's people in this world that think like me.
So that was pretty much it.
Amen.
Yeah, I know that feeling.
I've told the story before, but just mowing my lawn in the backyard, listening to podcasts and knowing that there were wrong thinkers and funny and brilliant ones out there.
But all the rest of my interpersonal relationships, including with family, just sports, weather, kids, you know, nothing meaningful about all the garbage that we see every day.
And same thing for the office, too, right?
Yeah.
You just better just not say anything lest I offend someone.
So, yep.
It's funny how many of us come from very similar backgrounds and coming into this thing of ours.
So you were one of three white kids in your elementary school, but that's not all.
You also had a fairly unconventional and we'll say less than ideal childhood, if I understand it.
Want to go off, talk about that a little bit?
Sure.
So my parents divorced when I was pretty young.
Me and my brother, and my brother's older than me.
So they got divorced when I was still pretty young.
My mom was that mom that would not let my father see us.
And it was just, it was hell.
And the courts didn't let, you know, the courts totally ran railroaded my dad.
And it just was a terrible situation.
I can still, for the life of me, can't understand why the courts didn't give my father custody.
I'll never understand that, you know.
But yeah, so my mom ended up marrying a black guy.
So I had a black stepfather for a good number of years of my childhood.
And that was interesting.
I noticed you said a good number of years, but did they end up staying together or did he bail?
Oh, it was off and on.
He would cheat on her, beat her, she'd take him back.
And, you know, he was never really abusive to us.
I think once or twice when he was drunk, but I don't believe he was more just that's very uncharacteristic.
Yeah, right.
So, yeah, I mean, he would, it was more just like the like you, it's a stereotype like from TV.
You know, he beats the, you know, dude beats wife, wife takes him back because he says I'll never do it again.
And it was just that on and off.
And, you know, so we lived dirt poor.
Welfare kid because obviously he didn't work.
Surprise rate.
Again, I think you're fibbing a lot.
I know, you know, we smudge details.
He's covering for his father-in-law anonymity.
But like, come on, man.
I think you're going a little too far.
Stepdad, not father-in-law.
Oh, yeah, yeah.
That's what I mean.
No, I'm stupid.
It's all right.
We're all so like jaded and partially checked out of the sick world right now.
Are they still together?
And do you ever talk to your mom about like after the fact, like what were you thinking?
No, I don't talk to my mom anymore.
He died when I was a teenager.
He OD'd, basically.
Yeah, right.
Could have been George Floyd.
He just needed to wait.
And how about your old man?
Have you reconnected with him, stay on good terms?
Or I have.
It's been actually really great.
I spent a way too many years hating him because I didn't understand some of the stuff.
And I started figuring it out.
And I reached out to him and he had tried to reach out.
And I was still too angry when I was younger.
Like when I was like 18, 19, he tried to reach out.
And I was just, I was going through like really angry phase of my life.
And so yeah, I wasn't ready for that.
And, but sweet, since we connected, and it's been great.
We got a pretty, we talk a lot.
He's come to visit us and I'm planning to go up there.
And yeah, it's been really nice.
Good stuff, man.
I'm glad to hear it.
Yeah, it's nice.
So, you know, you're married with Kit with two kids.
Does the experiences of your childhood motivate you or does that inform your parenting style?
Like you're trying to give the kids the childhood that you never had.
Sorry for being melodramatic or whatever about it.
Yeah, I mean, to an extent, I don't want them to be spoiled brats either because I've worked really hard.
So coming up from basically nothing and paying my mom's debts, let alone not getting anything.
Yeah.
You know, I worked several jobs.
You know, there was a time in my life where I was working 80 to 100 hours a week.
So I've just kind of worked my tail up to where now I can afford a lot for the kids.
And I kind of, I do want to kind of spoil them, but at the same time, I don't want spoiled brats because I know there's a double-edged sword.
So I make them do a lot of chores.
I make them work for it.
You know.
Sure.
Yeah, I feel like with parenting and all of us have, you know, good, bad experiences from childhood.
And I was fortunate enough to have a really nice one.
No major complaints.
And of course, no parent is perfect.
So I could recognize the flaws in my mom and dad.
And I try to correct those.
And I'm sure I have my own that my kids will then grow up and be like, ah, dad, you're on your phone too much or whatever else.
But yeah, I imagine, yeah, we're all trying to correct the things that we saw growing up.
And at the same time, yeah, like you said, not get, and I maybe probably had too soft of a childhood, right?
Like I wasn't forced to do enough things, maybe was handled with kid gloves too much.
So I don't mind being a little rough, not physically, but, you know, toughen up the kids.
They're not coming into America in the 80s or the 90s.
They're coming of age in this hellscape.
So I feel like, you know, at the risk of gambling a little bit of their blissful innocence in these ages, it is incumbent upon us to talk to them about things and show them things carefully about what's out there.
But yeah.
How about Shanks?
How are your sons handling seeing the things going on in society right now?
We don't watch a lot of TV, so they're kind of shielded in that regard.
And I don't know if that's a good thing or a bad thing.
We just don't watch TV.
And if we do, it's like we watch Lego shows that are on Amazon or Netflix or whichever one I'm paying for.
I can't remember.
I never watched TV myself.
So yeah, they're limited to like Lego shows and just stuff like that.
So they're little.
They're little then.
Yeah, it's 7 and 11.
So my oldest is starting to ask questions, though.
My youngest son, he's, he's, this is upsetting to him to a certain extent.
And so I've had to talk to him about it.
We don't really watch TV either, but you see it through YouTube or the different things that the way we get our news.
Even the radio on car rides, yeah.
Yeah, radio or whatever, just different ways you hear about it.
He's, he told me he's upset by it and things like that.
So I had to tell him, like, well, this is things like this have happened before.
And I can remember even in the 70s when I was a little kid hearing about all these left-wing radicals and they took over several buildings in Washington, D.C.
They took over like the Lincoln Monument and I forget which ones they were, but there's, I think, maybe three different buildings they took over and held by force, you know.
So this type of upheaval is not unprecedented.
And in a way, it's hard to see it this way, but as bad as it is, and we're seeing that if we are holding on to any conceptions about America, even though we are wiser, but those older conceptions that we might be hanging on to are being torn away from us.
There's something a little bit unsettling or even sad about it, you know, that America really is going to be different now and for the worse, at least for a while.
But finally, my point is that we have to go through this to get to a better level.
And I think of maybe the first century of Christianity where there were a lot of martyrs or the first couple of centuries.
And those people, they looked at it that, well, yeah, some people are losing their lives and things like that, but this is how we get to the next better level.
So we have to go through this.
Yep.
I showed, I'm sorry, Sam.
I showed Junior the footage of the commies tearing down the Confederate statue where it fell and crashed that guy's skull in just because, you know, I thought it was important for him to see he's eight and he's advanced.
He's sharp.
And at the time, I thought, damn, when I was his age, it was roughly when the Berlin Wall came down.
And I remember seeing Germans gleefully celebrating taking a sledgehammer to mortar and cement and thinking, what a cool, wonderful thing this is.
And instead, he gets to see not that, but this other horrible thing.
But, you know, you got to arm them with that.
Was the Berlin Wall falling actually a good thing?
I don't know.
I don't really have a position.
Yeah, at the time, right?
It was like a blow against communism.
Sure.
But now, yeah, now we know which countries in Europe, of course, are doing better demographically.
And well, yeah, they're not all, there's a lot of Eastern European countries that have really low birth rates, but they're less culturally paused.
Hail to Poland and their president Duda, who today called out the LGBTQ or the other day garbage and called it basically neo-Bolshevism, which has been my go-to for a long time.
So I could remember things when I was very little.
Maybe you know about these things from history, the SLA, Symbionese Liberation Army.
I remember that they were doing terrorism and robbing banks and killings.
And there was a big standoff with the police.
And it's just when you're young, you start to, those things can kind of scare you.
Conspire, scare, same size of a different coin.
Yeah, that's right.
But, you know, a young person can get upset by these things.
And maybe even adults, too.
Like I said, there's that painful feeling of whatever little vestige we might be holding in our mind, something about America, it's a new day here, and people are going to need a different type of framework to understand their world.
That's right.
And real quick shout out to John Q. Publius, Alt Skull, and Nick Griffin.
They reinvigorated or resurrected the cocktail hour this week and they had a real nice tight 60-minute talk, 70-minute talk, whatever it was about everything that's going on.
And Skull, who came on the show in our early days, just said, you know, I'm taking this as a white pill.
I'm motivated.
Like, what a time to be alive to see the edifices finally start crumbling down and the scales fall from our eyes.
Maybe he didn't see it.
Maybe I said it better than he did, but no, but you should check that one out.
It was a really good discussion.
Where can we find that?
I think there's still, well, I don't even want to say what service they're on because I know a very good show that, well, it's the Manor Bunt Dispatch got showed from Spreaker this week.
So, yeah.
And we'll put that show in the show notes and kind of gave the game away there.
But whatever, you know, like as I said in the opening, there's like no safe places anymore for people to even have non-profane, candid conversations about the issues of the day.
I want to curse, but I'm not going to.
Shanks, you've been pretty good so far, too.
We're not finding people for profanity anymore.
We gave up that bit.
Well, I bought a large amount of property with the funds because we just had so many it wasn't necessary.
That's right.
It was all my money, anyways.
Let's pivot on to slightly cheerier content and news.
And Shanks, without giving too much away, you are a youth coach, man, close to my heart.
Let us know a little bit about how that is and how you approach dealing with youngsters on a field and whether you're going to keep doing it.
Yeah, I enjoy it.
I really like doing it a lot.
I like coaching baseball way more than I liked coaching football, even though I grew up playing football and I know the sport like back of my hand.
Baseball, I'm not as familiar with.
Like, I've had some of the kids teach me things and my first year coached, and I was like, oof, I don't know as much as I thought about the sport.
I mean, I played baseball, like pickup games as a kid.
Never like, it was mostly football in the neighborhood I grew up, but or basketball.
And I couldn't, I'm not a good basketball player.
So, yeah, I really enjoy it.
Baseball is a lot more fun.
Could just be the area too.
Now that we live here, I've only coached baseball since we've moved.
And it's really nice.
The kids are all good.
I've had no issues with parents.
Parents, you know, kids are really well more behaved and mannerly around here.
So it's been really easy.
But I like it.
I like to run around with the kids.
I mean, when my kids have sleepovers, you know, they will run around, play laser tag together.
And I like playing with kids.
I assume that you stay away from life lessons from long shanks and just stick to the sport?
Or do you try to give them a little bit of moral spine or life coaching too?
I don't dwell on that stuff because I don't know where the line is.
And I'm not, I don't need a parent yelling at me or anything.
So, no, I just stick to the sport.
I will discipline the kids though.
And because there's a few kids that'll just, they'll be a little wild.
And it's like, all right, you're going to sit in the box.
You're not batting.
And I know one of the parents got irritated with me, but at the same time, I think they could see that their kid was acting up a little bit too much.
And, you know, when you beam a ball at a kid that's at the kid that's not looking at you, it's time to go sit down.
Yeah.
I had a baseball coach growing up who is such a kind-hearted, but steely-eyed, moral exemplar.
He coached me for probably three, four, five years, and he was always calm, but he kept discipline.
He was a great instructor.
He was congratulatory when you did great.
And he was sort of a hand on your shoulder when you messed up.
And I still think back fondly to him.
I can't say that maybe he formed the man that I was.
But when I coached my, I coached my son's soccer team for two years.
And then I helped out a little bit on the fringes of baseball.
But I would love to coach baseball.
But those positions are always sort of like locked up.
The dads have those already set for themselves.
And I just remembered thinking, all right, I'm going to try to do what that guy did for these little kids.
And it was frankly really tough.
Little kids playing soccer is really cat hurting.
And Jo came to watch one game when our squad just got completely BTFO'd.
And it was really grotesque because the other team had this like giant Indian or Sikh player who was just running laps.
He was like, he was like a foot taller than the rest of the kids and like scored every goal.
And of course, I'm just, you know, like chewing the inside of my mouth.
Like, what the hell's going on here?
But yeah, it's rewarding.
Sam, did you ever coach anything?
No, no, not really.
I mean, I have had my sons in different things through the years, though they never really stuck with it for a long time.
But we've done wrestling, Park District wrestling.
We did the soccer and I had to chuckle to myself as you were talking about that.
My son that was in that at the time, it was exactly like you say, hurting cats.
I mean, it's like they just wanted to run around.
They didn't even understand that a game was going on.
Just chasing the ball.
But, you know, yeah, it's just the idea of it, just to be out there and running around and doing something.
And then hockey, a couple of my sons, they played that for a couple of years.
And the whole family is, or I should say, each of us are good skaters.
Everyone in the family can skate.
So that's, yeah, but never, never as a coach or anything.
But when, you know, when it was the, especially the wrestling, I was always there.
I went to all the meets and I would be at the side of the mat and everything like that.
So, yeah, I got a taste of what that's about.
Pro sports, anti-sports ball are creative.
Right.
That's right.
Kids out there.
All right, Smasher.
Anything on your mind real quick before we move on?
No, I never had to teach little kids, but I had to teach privates, and that was basically the same thing.
Very good.
All right.
Long Shacks, you dropped a bomb in the chat the other day.
It was worse than a Fed post.
And you let us know that you mow something like 11 miles of lawn on your property.
What's up with that big guy?
I mean, you know, I love mowing the lawn so much that I started drafting my lawn poem tonight.
I didn't finish it before the show, but we'll do it again.
And then, yeah, a couple of guys jumped down your throat, like, you're wasting your time, man.
It was Smasher, actually.
He was like, your time is, but all right.
You're mowing how you do it.
Yeah, how do you do 11 miles?
Go for it.
Kind of Ricky got there.
He's smiling.
Okay, so I mean, I have an like an acre of nice lawn that I love to keep perfect.
And well, now my son's my oldest.
I got him mowing a lot of it.
But on a day that I want to knock down like all the weeds around, you know, every other week usually, yeah, it's about 11 miles because I do the little pedometer thing and I'm pushing, I push mower.
So oh, and yeah, that's fun.
That's no, that's the waste of time.
Like if you got 11 miles and you cut it all, I agree.
But bro, get a riding mower.
Just do it.
But it's good exercise, man.
I get to listen to podcasts and I just jam out with podcasts.
That's why like on a Saturday is usually when I listen to this show and other fun ones.
I don't like to listen to politics shows when I do it.
It's more of a relaxing thing to me.
Just sit out, cut grass, listen to some podcasts.
It's more lighthearted, funner.
And It's just, I don't know, it's kind of fun.
I enjoy it.
All right, screw it.
I'm going with my draft for my poem.
Here it goes.
This is an official.
It's called Omoers.
Oh, grass.
This is in the spirit of a Maya Andrew.
I'm quitting.
Yeah, this is.
I'm getting off this call.
I got that pentamic pentameter going on this one.
O mower, oh, grass.
Add me, and three become one.
When you pull that cord or turn that key, catch a whiff of gasoline.
Are you ready to be free?
Neither blazing sun nor overcast skies can stop us men from treading the emerald prize.
That's all I got so far.
Yeah.
Nice.
I got to add some more racial puns in there and stuff like that.
No, yeah.
Sorry.
It's the whitest thing you could do for your front for the front of your place.
I mean, have you ever been to a black neighborhood?
There's no nice lawns.
That's white people thing.
If you do see a white, oh, if you see a nice lawn in the ghetto, it's the Gran Torino guy.
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah, no, that is like that's accurate.
But like, bro, I just cut my grass and it looks fine.
I don't need to spend $6 million on crap to spray on my lawn.
You're lawn.
I don't do anything.
You can't do anything with it.
I'm coming over.
Yeah, you got too many weeds.
Bro, you can come spurg out on my lawn all you want.
You're welcome to.
I cut it and I weed whack.
Oh, I did buy a new weed whacker.
Mine went bust and I couldn't do anything about it.
And so I got the Milwaukee 18-volt weed whacker.
And that thing, dude, it's really nice.
It's really nice.
I love it.
It's fantastic.
I'm on team shanks here when it comes to the lawn because I know that feeling.
You've seen that Garfield meme where it's like Monday out on the work site, no nagging wife.
And when you're mowing, when you're drinking claws, there's no laws.
And when you're mowing the lawn, there's no in-laws or wife for kids.
Me and my space.
Although you get a rider mower and then the kids want to come and ride on it.
And they always say that's very dangerous.
You shouldn't do that.
But there's something to what you're saying there, Shanks, about it's good exercise.
It's good outdoor time, which too many people don't spend enough time outdoors.
And you listen to the podcast.
I don't have as much lawn as that.
Living in the city here, the plots are a lot smaller, but there is a certain amount of yard work and things to do.
And I look at it the same way.
You know, if you apply yourself and you care about your property and things like that, it is like exercise.
You know, you can really get something like a workout going out there.
And whether it's pulling the weeds or fixing things and mowing the lawn and trimming and all those things.
It's just like a haircut for your property.
Yeah.
When you mow that lawn, even if it's full of weeds and then you look at your house, you're like, yeah, I just upgraded this baby, right?
Yeah, for sure.
Yeah, it feels good.
Makes your property look good.
Plus, we do a lot of, I try to keep the kids outside.
So, you know, it's stuff that they help me with.
And we kind of do, we'll do it as a family somedays.
And we always work, we do barbecues a lot.
So we go and sit on the grass and eat, you know, dinner on the grass and stuff.
So it's not like it's just a lawn.
It's an ornament, a lawn ornament.
Just an ornament.
But you guys are probably going to laugh at me for this.
Dude, we play, we do play croquet a lot.
Yeah.
Oh, it's wonderful.
Are you a bagging man, a mulching man, or a side discharge guy?
Bag it.
Why?
Oh, man, that adds a lot of time to your task.
Yeah, it does, but the thatch starts to get too deep because when the grass grows here, it grows super fast.
So the first time I put down like the weed and feed and stuff like that, I won't.
I'll just mow without the bag and just let it go in because it still has all those nutrients.
And then after that, I pretty much bag it.
Yeah.
We have a couple lawn, real lawn spurgs in our stable of talent here at Full House.
And you all suck.
Yeah.
Echo Gang is like grow weeds and plants and or grow weed and no, don't grow weed.
Grow weeds and food in your yard.
And like, you know, here's your ideal picture.
And it all looks like this tangled mess of native plants and stuff like that.
But, you know, radical centrism from coach is always like, you can have your cake and eat it too, right?
Have your garden, give yourself a little pasture or whatever, let it grow wild.
My father-in-law would always like keep this giant circle in the middle of his big lawn and just let that grow naturally so you can see what it would look like, but then mow the rest of it.
So it's funky.
Good idea.
I like that.
Yeah.
Well, yeah, I mean, well, you know, the people that usually are against lawn stuff are still young.
I used to hate it when I was a kid, too.
And a wonderful first job for your kids.
That was my first job just mowing our two immediate neighbors growing up.
Got 10 bucks to do the front yard of one guy.
That was awesome because he had a small yard.
And I think I got 15 bucks to do the front and the back of the other guy.
And yeah.
Sweat equity and everything else.
Speaking of lawns, I'm going out on a limb here, and I'm going to guess that you are not a golf fan, Longshanks.
Tell me that's true.
No, I hate golf.
It's boring.
Same.
The golf question is one that comes up often.
And I have to admit, my wife broke out the clubs the other day and was whacking them around.
And I was like, all right, give me one of those things.
And of course, I swing it like a baseball bat and just totally hack in it.
You know, it's fun to see that thing fly off.
But Smasher and Sam, you're not golfers.
No, I mean, occasionally, some of the older sons and I, we would just go to the driving range.
That's about as much as my attention span can handle with that sport.
I get what it's about.
My father really liked to golf, but, you know, I, yeah, it just hasn't been me.
It's not me, I guess.
Yeah, that's what I was going to say is that the extent of my desire to golf does not go beyond the driving range.
Yeah, and that can be kind of fun.
I got a couple of drivers in my basement hanging in the rafters and occasionally we've gone and, you know, just to kind of laugh and hit a bucket of balls and watch what each other's doing and critique everybody and all that.
And that's fun, I suppose.
Yeah.
My old man was a caddy at a country club in North Jersey growing up.
And he said that that was the formative event that taught him to hate not just golf, but golfers as well, I guess.
Arrogant skin flint pricks up there who didn't appreciate their caddies sweating all over the summer, you know, during the summer carrying their clubs around.
And yeah, I always just think back to the time, you know, getting up and going out and leaving your family, especially if you work Monday through Friday and then you go out on a Saturday and Sunday and miss out on those beautiful days when you can be having a picnic with your kids.
It's time consuming.
Yep, exactly.
And then the snootiness and the perfectionism that goes along with it, not to mention the fact that almost every political or global muckety muck seems to enjoy the golf course as their place to really kick back and have a good time.
Like, just don't get it.
Yeah.
We're banning golf in the ethnostate.
Yeah.
All right.
I've already went out on a lot.
I'm going to have a decision.
Happening.
Yeah, the golf clubs will be needed for something else.
Um, all right Shanks, you uh we did a gardening episode way back actually.
It was like early spring when people were getting going and you have been sharing photos.
So let us know uh, how you got started this year and any successes or uh, things you did wrong.
I'm still trying to figure out what I did wrong.
Everything I started indoors died when I put it outside.
Um, everything that I sowed directly to uh outside is growing wonderfully.
I don't know if it's just the difficulty of the different plants, because outside the stuff that's growing really well is like radishes parsnips uh, kale and spinach and uh, I think I made a joke about why I planted parsnips.
Who the hell eats those?
Yeah, I like them in soup.
Yeah like yeah, a beef stew.
Yeah, i've had them, slice them thin and throw them in there.
They're kind of like carrots, almost similar to carrots, just a little bit more bitter.
Rather yeah, it's a little more sharp taste to them.
I don't know if i've ever had one.
Yeah, they look like a big, like carrot potato.
Right, they're kind of pale and they look like a white carrot.
Yeah hey, if it's white, it's all right.
There you go, parsnip gang, I I got to admit to the audience.
You know we we did that gardening show and I got really geared up for it.
I did my jiffy pods, I put the seeds in, I transplanted them outside and then we had there were back-to-back frosts right before mother's day, which is what my mom always told me.
Don't transplant your seedlings until mother's day.
And, lo and behold, it was like the two nights right before mother's day that kind of decimated my crop and I was like, all right, i'll get out there again and I have been procrastinating.
So uh, gonna flagellate myself tomorrow and get out and just put some seeds in the ground, even though it's june, and see how the hell it goes for the rest of the year.
Yeah, it's been a lot of cold weather.
Uh, just like what you're describing.
You know we've had frost days and and uh, even today was was when you're outside you you really may want to have a sweater or light jacket or something it's.
it's been unseasonably cold.
Yeah.
Well, uh, even though we were going to take a little bit of a break from the riots and the melees and the disturbances of the peace on this one and keep it comfy, uh, I did want to pivot a little bit to something that's been bugging me.
And that was what happened in London, England, uh, just a day or two ago when I guess the, uh, rough and tumble white collar boys from South London decided to go into, uh, downtown and, uh, defend.
the Churchill statue and I guess it was near Westminster, and they got.
They got a little bit roughed up uh the icon.
They did create that iconic photo of the uh the beast guy just standing there holding his ground as a non-native, uh swarthy one was kicking at him and the cop seemed to be like more concerned with the white guy standing there minding his own business than the the black Assaulting him.
And I saw a narrative from a couple of our guys.
I won't name them since they're not on the show.
I won't throw them under the bus, but I usually like their takes.
And they were like, oh, way to go, guys, way to give the system the narrative that it's the white men's fault for these riots and things like that.
And I'm like, how can you possibly knock, assuming that it wasn't actually a gay opinion, right?
A lot of these rough and tumble British guys are maybe Sibnat cucks or they care more about soccer maybe than white nationalism.
But it reminded me a little bit of Charlottesville.
It's like, how can you possibly sit on the sidelines and tut-tut about guys going out there?
It's not about Churchill, right?
We know that Churchill was a drunk and a traitor and oversaw like numerous.
Yeah, you're not red-pilled if you don't hate Winston Churchill, but it's like it's a statue of a great white historical man that's being vandalized by savages.
And if some rough and tumble guys from South London want to go out there and say, no, that's enough, I can't respect big brains on the sidelines saying, oh, you gave the system a narrative advantage by going out there.
I don't know.
It's like, like, I'm not a fan of the Proud Boys, right?
Like, they're stupid shirts and they're like Gavin McGinnis and their base non-whites in the group.
But if they're going to go out there and rumble with Antifa or, you know, defend themselves from Antifa, I'm not going to be like, oh, screw the Proud Boys.
You know, they get what they deserve.
I'm going to be like, hey, you know, tip my hat to guys willing to go toe-to-toe with the enemy, essentially.
And I don't know.
Well, it's just remember the, like Horace the Avengers said, I mean, the first thing that is going to happen on a large scale is it's going to be radical left versus normies.
It's not going to be the white nationalists versus left.
That's not going to be the first battle.
The real, the first real confrontation is the normies versus the left.
And that's, you know, you could see that in this country too, to a certain extent, the MAGA guys and things like that.
Sure.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It reminded me of Charlottesville, too, right?
Like, okay, yeah, Charlottesville didn't go really great.
Ha ha, what a surprise.
And all the backbenchers and the Monday morning quarterbacks after that saying, you guys really ruined it, right?
You know, you threw everything off.
And yeah, did we really, how's that?
How's that working out for you?
Mr. Producer says, F optics F's, which I, of course, agree with, right?
Yeah, little Nikki finally said, you know, what do these Republicans actually do for us anyway?
Yeah, we've been saying that for years.
It is wild to see there's something going on because I'm not on Twitter, but of course you go in and check it and you see guys like Dan Bongino, Charlie Cuck starting to go hard in the paint, starting to tiptoe around race and like they're coming for you and all this stuff.
And my first response is, man, Trump's internal polling must be absolutely terrible.
Yeah.
I mean, I think what's going on is that basically they don't have like a good response.
Like they don't have a good kosher response.
So these guys are just like trying to toe the line between their old kosher software update and like the current trend and where people want it to go.
And so they're like, they're just kind of trying to do it.
Yeah, like I said earlier, their framework is falling apart.
You know, whatever you thought America was supposed to mean, and what do we stand for, and what are we defending exactly, and all those things.
Now, people they have no choice but to come our way, however, awkwardly they that they must do it.
This from Lisa Booth, who looks like a real milquetoast center, right?
Uh, verified Twitter user, you know, smiling face.
She could be a Fox News gal with a short skirt.
Does anyone else feel increasingly unaffiliated from everything?
I don't feel like anyone or anything represents me anymore.
Yeah, you could say that's nihilism, but that's what we've been saying.
You know, we don't have any true representation in this system.
I've got this wonderful book for you.
You should check it out.
Yeah.
Did you guys see some of the headlines from those London riots, though?
Or the London, whatever.
I saw it on going around on Twitter.
I verified there were real articles.
It was saying that far-right protests could risk COVID outbreaks.
And that says, if white extremists or whatever, far-right, they kept saying far-right groups are going to ignore social distancing.
Can they be charged for terrorism for spreading coronavirus?
And I'm like, Yeah, what a joke.
Shockingly, shockingly hypocritical.
I don't know how anybody can see stuff like that and just not just like, wait, what the hell is going on here?
Yeah, well, this is exactly the thing that is making people the whole thing fall apart is because they see it in the same in this country.
You could say the same thing.
All of think of the people who got in trouble or the arrests you heard of or whatever, or people who would not be served in an establishment.
They didn't have a mask or something.
Well, how about all these rioters?
How about all these gigantic organized protests of the Black Lives Matter and everything?
They don't have to follow any kind of rules.
Apparently, not.
And Archo Tyrion people.
A hundred or so quote-unquote health officials decided that white supremacy was a bigger health issue than COVID.
Right.
I saw some people making jokes about how long before they just say, you know, white supremacists or white nationalists or racists or whatever buzzword they want to pick is just going to be considered a mental illness.
Oh, yeah.
And it's, you could see it happening.
I can.
That's what they did in the Soviet Union.
Yeah.
They would put dissidents into psychological facilities and just lock them.
Yeah.
If you can't lock them up by the law, you'll lock them up by medicine.
White supremacists miscalculated with these protests, Mr. Producer says.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Sure.
Yeah.
It's like shooting fish in the barrel when it comes to narratives that come out with this.
You could, they just come to you in waves, but it's all been said before.
And there was a good debate that we had the other day, or maybe it was just today.
Time flies so quickly these days.
And it was like, are we really going to just sit on the sidelines and eat popcorn and watch this as it happens?
And yeah, I mean, we don't have a dog in this fight.
Like we either go out and we defend the neoliberal Jewish system against their precious dog that got off the leash, or we support blacks that are really not our enemy.
They are just saying like, kill YE.
So we either support people that want to openly genocide us or we support people that want to quietly genocide us.
So we don't really have a dog in the fight.
Let them go at each other's throats and we just have to protect our own.
You know, I will, I will say I do, I do support the blacks causing problems for the Jews, but I, it's a very tentative support, right?
Like, very, very, very tentative.
Yeah, you see them go off the reservation here and there, and then their handlers or their high yalas sort of say, yeah, ice cube, put it, put that cork back in the bottle, right?
But no, yeah, go ahead, Black.
I was going to say, I think it even goes further to just not having a dog in the fight.
I see nothing wrong with just letting conservatives go get stomped by these people because these conservatives are the same ones that you see videos of threepers kicking some guy that might have went a little too edgy with a poster and they're kicking him out because they want to show how not racist they are.
There's no room for you in our circle.
So I think it goes beyond that.
Let them go get stomped and let them go get arrested for defending, defending themselves because we got law and order here.
No, you don't.
You're going to get your head kicked in and then you're going to get arrested for getting your head kicked in.
I see no reason to stop it.
Yeah, this is the fight between the normies and the radical left.
Now, after that fight, then maybe that's when more people come our way.
Maybe things change as far as what, you know, then the whole circumstances change as far as what's being defended and what's at issue.
Cops are increasingly resigning or retiring.
Truckers are saying, F you, I'm not going into your city.
Good, good article from Zero Hedge today.
I'm not going into your city that's disbanding the police.
Houses are going up for sale in Minneapolis.
It was like, what, 17% of the market or something?
Yeah.
Recent listings in like the past 30 days.
Yeah.
So the churn is happening.
The systems contradictions are starting to collapse in on themselves.
And of course, now to the guys who are, you know, chewing the inside of their mouths and like we have to do something, there is legitimate concern that right everything just goes crazy.
And then that's their excuse for an absolute totalitarian police state that just snuffs everything out and then Biden wins.
And then all of a sudden, the N-word pass is the most precious possession that you have in the world because you get locked up on the street for saying that.
I sent the chef my compliments.
My compliments were the N-word.
To add to that, you know, letting the conservatives and these dweepers or whatever get, you know, just sit back and watch, you know, watch them happen.
I would add that I don't think we should, when these people come walking over to like what's going on, like looking for answers, we don't say, I told you so.
We try to provide them.
Sure.
Because I've seen a lot of that on Twitter and stuff where it's just like they're going to mock these people.
It's like, no, they don't need mockery.
They need an explanation because they're confused as all hell.
Their whole ideology is like crumbling.
They need a new one.
Blacks have set their ideology on fire.
Yeah.
All of us have been wrong about something at some point, or more than once, even.
And yeah, there's no condemnation in that.
We just want people to come over and do the right thing.
Yeah.
We were normies once and young, or at least most of us were.
I had a fairly candid conversation with an old-timer the other day.
And I guess I dog whistled, or I specifically said demographics, or I specifically said, yeah, it's law and order when it comes to your family and coronavirus.
And it's absolute anarchy and anything goes when it comes time to burn things down and tear down statues and hate Whitey.
And his eyes sparkled a little bit.
You can tell he got a little jump in his step from hearing, I'm not young, but somebody like me just speak calmly and candidly about it without going overboard.
So it's very refreshing to these people.
It's refreshing.
Somebody who's more, let's say, of a normie or something like that.
It's very refreshing when they hear our viewpoint.
Yep.
It is a long struggle and brick by brick or normie by normie, we will bring them over and peel them off from the herd.
And it's easy to do.
Well, it's easier now than ever.
I'll use the sports analogy since we talked about that.
You know, we got to play with the team we have.
It's not like we can get rid of the members of our race we don't like and then call in some other people.
You got to meet, you got to meet people where they're at.
Yeah.
We got to, I mean, our uncle spoke about this in his book when he was, he would be sitting there doing the day labor and he would he would hear his fellow workmen talking badly about Germany and ridiculing it.
And that was the thing to do in that day.
But he looked at those men and he said, well, somehow these are the people we have to win with.
We have to reach these people.
Amen.
I told you so.
I will admit it feels good, right?
Like to see this happening, to see some Normie get his head stomped after saying some really stupid, like cringe crap.
It's like, good, good, but not actually good.
Like, I would never say, I told you so.
It's just like, have a seat at my table, sweet summer child.
That's right.
Yeah.
Well, certain things have come around.
It's really funny if you've known anyone who was on the other side.
And like, even having a gun in these times, right, is like your duty.
You probably, guys like us, you couldn't even imagine not having a gun or several for that worst case scenario where you got to defend your life or your family or your home or something like that.
But, you know, I yeah, sure.
And I can remember certain people saying, like, oh, you have a gun?
Is that like your dick?
You know, things like this.
And now those same people are like, well, you know, maybe I need a gun.
Well, you know, good luck.
It is like my dick.
It's tiny and I keep it to myself.
Well, what I would, what I'd like to imagine saying to that person is, well, good luck defending your life with your dick.
I thought you were going to say, Smasher, it's long and it shoots very quickly.
But sorry.
Just a little family show.
Yeah, family show.
Family show.
Yeah.
And yeah, remember when everybody, whenever anyone does that, like, oh, you, you like guns, you know, it's a phallic thing.
You just say, oh, yes.
Go say that to the Black Panthers out there with their rifles, right?
Yeah.
Go tell them.
Yeah.
It's about my dick.
I'm so worried about my dick.
That's what I say.
Like, why are you thinking about my dick, homie?
Yeah, that's right.
Yeah.
Gabriel.
And we're at an hour, so we got to go to the break.
But just, you know, breaking poll today was that Trump is up only 1% or maybe 2% in Texas.
Now, grain of salt.
It's early.
It's Quinnipiak.
Like he's probably going to win Texas.
But it just says right there, like demographic change in Texas, the rock of the Republican Party in the South, 30, whatever electoral votes.
And I just couldn't help but smile.
I mean, we've been saying this for so long.
And hey, hey, Trumpy, you know, like we elected you based on your promises to stop the invasion and reverse it.
That has not happened.
Two-bit fence and dithering around the edges notwithstanding.
And yeah, we told you so.
This is what's happening.
And when Texas flips, that's when the GOP goes the way of the Whigs and another opportunity opens up.
But yeah, we're playing with fire in this system and it's going to be interesting.
Stay strong, fam.
What a time to be alive.
All right.
Let's go to the branks.
Go to the break.
Shanks, thanks so much.
You down to play two?
Yeah, if you'll have me.
All right.
Absolutely.
Good man.
Mr. Perdusa, thank you for manning the command center once again this evening.
And given these crazy times, take us into the break with this epic instrumental track from the drive soundtrack.
This is Tick of the Clock by the Chromatics.
Clock is ticking on all of us, fam.
Ask yourself: what are you going to do today or tomorrow to strengthen yourself and your family?
We'll be right back.
episode 52 of Full House.
Special thanks, gratitude to our pal Long Shanks for joining us for the first half and the second half.
Shanks, you want to plug your Twitter?
I don't know which iteration of account you're on, or you want to keep it secret for longevity purposes.
I couldn't spell it right now if you wanted to.
All right.
We'll put it in the show notes if you want to.
Before we go to our congratulations on New White Life this week, I wanted to give an update on our book giveaway sweepstakes, no grift edition, no docs edition.
We got, I mentioned it last week, but we got four or five typed pages, a beautiful heartwarming story that was far and away.
The top one that we got from, he said in his message that I could say vulture.
But vulture, if you're listening, I can't send you the book without your address.
Get a P.O. box if you're worried or whatever.
I can send it to Joe Citizen or resident.
But you won, pal.
So Cultural Critique is coming your way.
And then for the Runner-Up and the Camp of the Saints book, which I was informed goes for almost $200 secondhand these days.
So real, real full house generosity here, which I wasn't aware of.
If I knew that to begin with, I wouldn't have offered it up.
No, I'm kidding.
But we got a story about overcoming maybe self-indulgence or a little bit of selfishness in getting into fatherhood.
But we're waiting to see if we can share it verbatim or which details.
We are taking this very carefully, dear audience.
We do respect your privacy and your OPSEC, your InfoSec, et cetera.
Coming up, Full House in the Works, we are going to finally have our pal Dark Enlightenment on to talk.
There's so much stuff that I want to ask him about, including suburbia, technology, the fate of the movement from somebody who's been in this for a long time.
So we're going to slate him in in the next couple of weeks.
And then our very own Mr. Producer discovered a very well-written and wise women's blog called The Woman Question, I think, or that was the name of the article that he linked us.
And one of those ladies agreed to come on the show.
So we got that in the hopper and more, plus maybe a little special live edition when some of us get together in the coming weeks.
Womanquestion.wordpress.com.
We'll put that in the third position womanhood, it's called.
We'll put that in the show notes for people to read.
And then hopefully that show will go well and we'll get to the bottom of this once and for all.
So without further ado, this week, I missed them last week.
I knew that I missed one and I mentioned that, but I couldn't remember who.
And it is too, our pal Chet and his wife.
They were apparently trying for some time and they finally hit pay dirt.
So congratulations, guys.
You know, sometimes it takes 60 seconds to make a baby.
Sometimes it takes 60 weeks.
Whatever it was for you guys.
Thank you for your perseverance.
And we all salute you.
Listener Bobby dropped us a line.
Bobby, he said he was married last November and he's got a baby due this October.
So quick work there, Bobby.
Yeah.
Lickety split.
Thank you too.
We're happy for you and God bless.
Good luck heading into October.
Coach's prerogative, Coach's Comfy Corner, real quick one this week.
Grandma and grandpa splurged on a electric vehicle.
It's a John Deere sort of off-road thing.
It's ages four to eight or something like that.
It's not like a big gas-powered UTV or whatever.
But the kids are having a ball, driving around the property and packing things in the back.
It's got a little cargo bay in the back.
So they're putting flashlights, duct tape.
You know, they're getting ready for you-know-what in their own minds, even if they don't know it yet.
And the other day, I was, I think I was cleaning out the car, and I just look out of the corner of my eye and I see that Junior is driving.
Potato's too young to drive.
Junior and dear daughter can take that thing, and they're really good.
It's actually a little bit like good driving practice for them, too.
It's got a reverse, it's got two speeds, slow and fast.
And Junior is driving with potato and shotgun, and Potato has the green plastic AK imitation assault rifle with a little click-click-click so it makes a sound.
And Junior, on his own volition, taped a high-powered LED flashlight with gorilla tape around the barrel.
So he put a light on it, and Potato is going choo-choo choo-choo, driving riding shotgun with potato driver.
I said, oh man, this is awesome.
I took a video shared.
Yeah, boy, loves that, that little plastic gun.
He had it the last time we were down there, just going.
And now, every time he picks up a stick, he goes with it.
All right.
Well, he knows the shot, literally.
That's awesome.
We'll get him another one.
I don't know where the heck they got that.
I mean, I think they're illegal.
I'm kidding.
Yeah.
It's like the most obvious toy gun ever, but whatever.
Somebody said, oh man, you got to slap like Toyota stickers on that thing and put him in blackface and pretend I'm a critic cruising around North Africa.
Anyway, but no, I was delighted to see the two boys taking care of business out there in the lawn.
All right, moving on.
We got plenty of things to talk about here in the second half.
So let's go to the mailbag real quick because it dovetails a little bit.
Here's the mail that never fails to make me want to wag my tail.
Mail from, let's see, listener JW, and it is not Jared Wyand.
Jared, wherever you are, hope you're doing well.
OG from Twitter and, you know, our pal.
But JW says, Hello, I just listened to your Never Kneel show and you explain how people should prepare to bug out.
I think it is much better advice to heavily stress the importance of moving to white areas, rural areas, as soon as possible.
Whites need to begin to deny themselves the high salaries of urban areas because they end up fueling corporate America, cities, all things evil through taxes, and it all sets a bad example for kids.
Whites are better off learning to live with less, living closer to nature, and as a tight family unit.
Whites need to get out of all urban areas and starve the cities of their talents, use their talents to build up their own communities, let family and friends profit from your labor, not rich bankers and minorities.
JW, thank you for bringing in the heat.
I appreciate it.
I agree with you.
I can get behind that.
Yeah.
You know, Sam's dragging his feet.
You know, he refuses to.
Hey, I'm ready to go if anyone's got a good situation for me.
Hey, all right.
Mobile Sam.
Careful what you throw out there.
They got this really sweet place out on the West Coast called Jazz.
That's right.
You can do anything you want.
All your dreams can come true.
Oh, man.
But yeah, the, you know, yes, I think JW is right.
I'm always reluctant to tell people what to do, or, you know, I understand the difficulty of uprooting and disconnecting or whatever.
But I will tell you what to do.
Yeah, get the hell out of there, people, before it's too late.
The hour is nigh.
And I think MP agrees with us strongly.
But I wanted to go back to Shanks because he grew up in diverse hell.
Maybe not a living hell, but it certainly wasn't great.
And he decamped to greener and whiter pastures.
But that ain't perfect either.
You're not in Valhalla on earth.
How's it going for you?
Did you consciously make the escape or did work lead you there?
And what are your experiences getting out of that rat race?
Actually, it's been great.
I've been wanting to get out for a long time.
I'm not originally from California.
And I think, you know, my early development years being from a rural area, it's just always been a part of where I like.
I see pictures of mountains and I'm like, home.
I don't know how to describe it.
It's just like, I've always hated the big city.
It's even worse living with extreme diversity.
And so I had been trying to talk the wife into it, and she wasn't really having it.
She didn't want to leave her family, you know, stuff like that.
And I'm just like, babe, it's getting bad.
Things are changing rapidly, you know.
And then what finally got her to switch is our, the high school that we had, they were starting to do busing from the inner cities and back and forth, swapping, right?
Because they want to bring the test scores up to the inner cities, which always fails.
But anyways, well, diversity fairy does call it.
Yeah, they sprinkle it around to yeah, you know, like we need to get the test scores up, pump some white kids down there, but there's no such thing as race, right?
So, anyways, they started doing that, and there was a few incidents that I mean were extreme.
And we knew a girl that was, she got, she got messed up pretty bad at the black school.
High school or younger?
High school.
And we just knew the family because they had younger kids too.
And she got, you know, I don't want to say too much, but basically she ended up in the hospital and it was all bad.
So I was just like, babe, they're coming for the elementary right now.
I was like, we're not going to be able to stay here forever.
And when that happened, that's when my wife was just like, oh, nope, kids are in danger.
Let's go.
So we found some place up in the mountains and it's just been nice.
Everyone around here is so friendly.
It is, it's amazing.
It's a nine-day difference.
My wife's a stay-at-home mom now.
So that's been wonderful.
She's loving it.
You know, she never, she was kind of hesitant to give up her job.
And I was like, yeah, but man, we're both commuting an hour each way.
So that's like sick, you know, we got 10-hour days each.
Plus, you know, we're basically spending our weekends just meal prepping.
So we're not eating fast food all week.
So it was just, like you said, rat race.
So living here, it's home cooked meals every single day, breakfast, lunch, and dinner.
We barely go out to restaurants and it's just nice.
It's really nice.
But you did say there are a bunch of swipples or naive whites.
Like it's not all salt of the earth, rock-ribbed conservative voters.
Yeah, no, no.
Yeah, it's very fair.
The problem is, is you run into these people that have never, and or like, I wouldn't say never, but for all intents and purposes, they've never seen a black person.
You know, they've seen the talented 10 that they happen to see in an office or that just happens to be in this area.
And they, you know, even a dumb black is going to be like, wow, this place is like 97% white.
If I pop off, these, I'm going to piss these crackers off, you know?
Yeah.
Well, they don't, they don't, the couple that are here, they're just like white, very white presenting.
So then that puts them, then all they watch is media, which, you know, so they're looking at Don Lemon and stuff like that.
Oh, that's, that's what the normal black guy's like.
And then what adds on top of it is because it's in mostly white area, what's your low-income people going to be?
White.
So then what's the stereotype on TV?
Whites are trailer trash rednecks.
And because they see that with their eyes here, because there's that side of town.
And then where's their black influences?
Television.
So it puts this in their that, oh man, you know, these people really are great.
You know, white people are the problem.
And it's people can get really twisted up because they're, like I said, all their interactions with black people are on TV.
And they have bad interactions with white people because it's all it's around here and really jades their view.
It's really a good way to program people, man.
They did a bang up job with this.
Don't these people, I mean, these people have social media.
They have smartphones.
You're giving them a pass for not like for a long time, I just thought, who the hell are these people?
Even if they live in a 100% whitopia, Mayberry, Bedford Falls, whatever, how can they be so oblivious or so naive to not see what's going on there?
I don't understand it.
I don't think they should get a pass.
We were talking a little bit over the break.
You know, this is the recurring, like, oblivious normie question of whether they deserve derision and to be left to their own fates or a little bit of a helping hand.
But Sam and Smasher had some strong thoughts on it.
I mean, suckers being led to slaughter in their like little la-la land.
Yeah, well, being deceived is a two-party sin.
There's the being the deceiver, yes, that's that's bad, but at some point, you are responsible to find things out and to know things and make decisions about yourself.
So the deceived person at some point is at fault and responsible for themselves.
Yeah.
You know, one thing I'd toss in there real fast if I could.
You know, there's a passage in the Bible.
I don't remember the names.
Somebody will know what I'm talking about.
There's a passage in it and talks about a naive person is just as guilty for any sins that he didn't know that he made.
And it says, and it goes further.
It says, the person that was unwilling to learn is actually more at fault than the person that knowingly sinned because they didn't even take the time to figure out anything that they were doing.
Yeah, being deceived is a sin that you had to repent of.
If you read the old stories where the people of God would fall into some deception, you have to repent of that too.
Being deceived is just not the sin of the deceiver.
It's the sin of the deceived, too.
Yeah, very well said.
Well, and Smasher has a very high tolerance for naive normies and is very kind-hearted.
Yeah, very welcome to them.
But what's your plan there, Smasher?
It's true.
No, I get angry at normies to the point where I might yell or something privately when they're not around.
But I'm pretty good at meeting people where they are and trying to just handle them accordingly and just doing what I can.
If you can trap somebody in an honest conversation, you win every time.
And so, oh, we got to, you know, you just, you got to try to set that trap.
And, you know, right now the trap seems to be that their entire world is on fire and they're trying to find a way out of it.
Yeah, it takes some skill to do this because we were talking a little bit before about maybe if you get a little too far ahead, maybe with the World War II revisionism and things like that, if you get too far ahead, the person is going to see you as dangerous.
So you got to sense where they are and then just give them the little bit that takes them to the next level.
Don't spook the horses.
I mean, the conventional wisdom or the consensus on our side seems to be that we spend too much time.
And I think it's a reflection of our better natures that we still care.
You know, we still think about these people.
We care about them, both out of like a gobsmacked incredulity that they could still not get it, but also because they are our racial kinsmen.
Now, hard lefties who have signed up for the program are a different story.
Yeah, we'll deal with them later.
But, you know, when you're talking about like your grandma or your uncles or your cousins or whatever, it's still in our gene code to want to help them.
And the consensus is they will follow the strongest horse.
So you have to be the strongest horse.
You have to just do your own thing and then they will sort of follow along in your wake.
But it's, yeah, it's like when you see somebody drowning, you kind of want to reach your hand out there and pull them the hell out rather than being like, ah, you know, they'll get up to the boat eventually.
Yeah, if you can, you know, because even maybe they made the bad decision to swim out to the water that was too deep for them or something.
But like you say, we have that instinct to reach out and give a helping hand if we can.
Yeah.
And it's not crazy for me to say that the Christian thing to do is to be accepting and tolerant and not throw that baby out with the bathwater and be there for them whenever the hell they get reality smacked into their head, right?
We were talking about that when you get beat up by, I've never been beaten up by a black person.
I have been assaulted on the metro once, almost assaulted.
Real quick, I was up riding the metro home one day.
This is probably a decade ago.
And this black guy is just like yelling at his girlfriend on the seat next to him.
I wasn't even like racially aware back then, but it was just loud, profane, and offensive.
And she gets off the train and he keeps yelling at her in absentia.
And I was just kidding.
Carry on.
Yeah.
I don't listen to her anyway.
I'll yell at her when she's not there too.
But everybody, I'm like, this is obscene.
This is like, this is unacceptable.
This is supposed to be a civilized society.
And everybody's got their heads and their earphones or whatever.
And I'm like, all right, you know what?
I'm not going to put up with this.
I was like, and I just was like, hey, buddy, can you keep your voice down?
Hey, buddy.
I'm sure he took that as like boy or something.
And then, oh man, did his gaze transfer from his inabsentia girlfriend right onto Hunky in his little cheap suit in the seat.
And he's like, what'd you say?
What did you say, boy?
And I remember he had an empty Snapple bottle in his hand.
And he just looked at me.
He's like, cracker, I will smash this Snapple bottle right over your head.
And I was like, and I was sitting right by the conductor button.
I was like, oh, yeah, well, you see this red button?
I'm going to press this button.
And he's like, push that MF and button, honky.
I was like, all right, push button, sir.
I got abusive.
And that little sense of authority or whatever, me pushing the button and saying, hey, you got a loud abusive passenger back here.
Then he stepped back, got off the train and whatever.
And then, ah, there was another one, but I can't dig it up.
I won't do it.
But yeah, when it happens and when you get that confrontation, whether it's physical or almost physical, you either get reality smacked upside your head and you wake up and you get it.
The talk, John Derbyshire, non-black edition, or like you guys were saying, they still make excuses for them or double down on their cuckoldry.
Yeah.
Anyway, gotta be aware of that.
Sometimes you just have to let reality smack them.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Good lessons for them.
All right.
Well, let's pivot on to another important topic.
And we could do a whole show about this, but we're not going to.
We're just going to keep it real tight here in the second hour.
Best tips for guys.
I'm sure there's a lot of guys listening who either want based waifu or have a girlfriend or wife who isn't quite on our level yet, maybe even hostile to our ideas.
And Sam Smasher and I are all blessed to have spouses who are on board.
They get it.
They're supportive.
They understand everything.
And of course, that doesn't mean that it's all, you know, daisies and roses when talking about these things because we tend to be more heated about these things and want to take more action, even if it means risking personal consequences.
But for the guys whose wives aren't on board or aren't all the way there, they beat themselves up about bringing wifey on the on the road with them or keeping her, you know, good little apolitical on the sidelines person that doesn't need to be a warrior.
So long.
Kicking and screaming.
Kicking and screaming.
Divorce, Mr. Producer just wrote in the chat.
Yeah.
I mean, hey, it happens.
You know, if your wife is not on board and you get doxxed or you go overboard, they freak it out.
So, Shanks, you're in a little bit of a middle ground territory, but I'll let you describe it and how it's going for you.
Well, the race thing is pretty easy.
I mean, my wife, she went in a school for criminal justice, so she understands, you know, she can read statistics, which I think that's probably the most important part.
Half a battle there, yeah.
Yeah, that's the race thing is the most important part because that's a safety issue.
You know, if your wife thinks that every black guy that you know walk by down the street is the same as a white guy, I mean, that's gonna, you know, you can only, you're not gonna be very happy when, when that, you know, something bad happens to your wife because she's so naive and you didn't try to help her.
Yep.
But your kids' safety too.
Yeah.
Yeah.
You know, that's definitely for sure.
I mean, that's just smart.
People need to, people have to understand, you know, statistics and what, what you're going to come in contact with.
But as far as like the JQ stuff with my wife, I'm just, it's not something that you can push.
You can't fire hose that one.
It's, it's, the programming's deep.
My wife's just like, you know, we're just talking about it today again.
It's, it's everything I'm telling, she says to me, she's like, everything you're telling me is the complete opposite.
Like, you know, you sound crazy, right?
And I was like, who wrote the history books?
Who won the war?
Why would they not write the right in their life?
If Germany won, they'd be telling the story that I'm trying to show you, you know?
So, you know, who won who won the war?
History is written by the winners.
And when the winners, you know, you know who, it's going to be that times 10.
And, you know, she, she's just like, you know, I just, I just don't know.
And, but, you know, it's like a work in progress.
She doesn't, it's the whole World War II Hitler-Nazi stuff and Holocaust.
She's just like, I just, I just, you know, she can't, she can't get on board when it comes to life.
Too far for so many.
Yep.
Yeah.
I mean, she started to realize that, like, in this TV, in her TV programming, it's like, oh, wow, they just put some really degenerate stuff in this show that I thought was nice.
And then she looks, I got her to where she'll look it up because she wants to prove me wrong.
I think is how it started.
I think that's how it started.
It's like, I'm going to prove him wrong.
This is probably a white guy or something.
And she looks up, and sure enough, it's like, you know, Pak and Heim and Bach and well, that's a good sign because she's going to convince herself then if she's open-minded enough to say, let's look it up and find out the facts.
Yeah, that's how it always starts.
My wife, when she started, like, it was like, you know, you might have, you might be kind of right, but I don't totally believe you.
And then it was just like, every time I saw something, I would send it to her, or she would look it up herself.
And then eventually she was just like, yeah, okay.
Well, it's tricky because this Jewish stuff is mixed up with our religions and everything.
So it's, it's, like you say, it's deeply embedded and it's hard for these people to break out and to even get to the point where they can question some of these things.
Shanks, how about your anonymous pseudo anonymous activities?
Does she give you a hard time about that?
Does she say, oh, you're, you know, you're risking us by expressing unconventional opinions?
Is it an issue for you?
You're on your phone too much.
Other than that, she doesn't really care.
I think if we all had a nickel for every time our wife said that, yeah.
And they're not, they're not wrong.
They're not wrong.
They're not wrong.
You know, it hit me one day.
I was sitting there just, I just was not in the mood to do anything.
And just one of those days, it hit me that I'm on my phone too much.
When my son just looks at me, he's just like, Dad, can you put your phone down?
And I was like, yeah.
All right, guys, let's go.
I'll get my, I'll get up.
You know, sorry about that.
Yep, that one stuck.
No, we've, we've all been there.
Yeah, I've seen Smasher on his couch looking at his phone.
God knows I'm guilty of the same thing often.
And then, yeah, after like five, ten minutes, whatever, reading in to the groups, and you just sort of smack yourself like, okay, I cannot be a digitally self-indulgent father and husband anymore.
God, it really, it's hard to, it's hard to read, it's hard to believe that that wasn't there.
You know, like, I guess dad would sit in the lazy chair and watch TV or just read the newspaper, right?
But there is something worse about sitting there staring at your little black screen.
No, I disagree.
I disagree.
Because you know what?
These like boomers and these uppity shitheads are like, why are you on your phone so much?
It's like, dude, you have spent the last 50 years paying like an insane amount of money to a cable company to just consume literal brainwashing.
Like you just paid somebody an insane amount of money to brainwash you for 50 years.
I am on my phone interacting with people that agree with me and learning new interesting things to fight the Jewish system that seeks to destroy me.
Or I'm reading something like a PDF book or whatever.
So like I'm doing something that is social and theoretically productive if you're not just on, if you're not just out there shit posting, which I am guilty of.
I, you know, cannot deny that.
But even then, like if I'm shit posting, that's probably still more productive than consuming MSNPC.
Like, let's go.
I was of the generation where the big complaint was about my generation was how much TV we watched, how many hours per week, and there would be work done about this and explaining the bad of it and how many hours the average teenager is watching TV and all that.
And I agree with what you're saying, Smasher.
There's something certainly better about looking things up, learning things, interacting with people.
That is certainly not the same thing as sitting there completely passively watching some stupid sitcoms and things like that.
So, but even they get into that like vegetative state where they're not asleep, but they're not awake either.
Right.
So it's worse that I'm like doing something actively.
I may be like consumed on my phone, but at least I'm active in it.
Like you were just in a vegetative state and you only woke up because I changed the channel or turned the TV off or something.
Or like, you know, another thing is, is I actually had this with my father-in-law.
He said, man, you like to watch your phone a lot or play with your phone a lot.
And I looked at him.
I was just like, you know, that's funny coming from a guy that can recite every actor and actress's name for the last 40 years on any random TV show.
And he just looked at me like, oh, got him.
Yeah.
Got him.
When I had my first big Twitter hit, you know, whatever number of retweets, a thousand, and a couple football stadiums worth of eyeballs on it, when you looked at the impressions, I remember saying, when mom yells down to the basement that you're wasting your time on Twitter all day, you just tell her, shut up, mom, saving the white race.
When you craft a good piece of propaganda.
And I remember, yeah, what it was, it was a picture of, there was a sitcom, or I don't know if it was a sitcom or a reality show called Soul of Love, I think it was, or something like that.
But it was basically a black guy and a Jewish woman.
And I just took this picture of this, like, this showboat and black guy and this obviously Jewish woman.
And it was, you know, black men and Jewish women make the most attractive couples.
Retweet if you agree and all the shit.
Yeah, yeah.
It's true.
Black men and Jewish women make the most attractive kids.
Tell your friends, tell your mom.
That meme is evergreen.
Yeah.
If you don't agree, you're a racist, anti-Semite, bigot, xenophobe.
You know, another thing is, is even when you're just blank posting on the internet, you know how much research and time you have to spend to get that just right to where you're going to get the likes that you deserve?
There's a lot of research that goes on in there.
You know, we're still digging through, you know, information for people.
Yeah.
Kosher's kosher soul was the name of this show.
Oh my gosh.
I don't know how the Jews let that one get through.
Maybe it was like so grotesque that they were like, yeah, neither blacks, blacks won't want Jews and Jews won't want blacks after this.
Yeah.
Shame that.
Speaking of dangerous relationships, Smasher got a little bit of secondhand information this week that I thought was just a, I mean, it was a brutal story, but it's one that should be shared.
Go ahead, pal.
So when I was in the army, my wife had a job at one point before we had kids, and she met this other like co-worker or whatever.
And I guess, okay, girl, white.
I believe she was married at the time, and then she got divorced, or she was like recently divorced or whatever, right?
She already had kids or a kid.
And then she, I think in the interim, starts dating another guy.
They break up and then she starts dating a Mexican.
And she's, oh, I'm not going to say that because I don't know.
But long story short, the Mexican kills her and then kills himself.
So, you know, toll paid on that one.
Yep.
Toll paid on that one.
She dodged the bullet, but yeah.
Oh, yeah.
Literally.
Seen a lot of tolls paid in my life.
Oh, yeah.
It's, yeah, it's tempting to get what you deserve, but it's really.
Yep, no, Yadum Dasana, you get what you deserve.
That's like it's an interracial atrocity, too.
She's dead.
She can't be saved.
So she got what she deserved.
That is 100% the time to be like, this person got what they deserved.
Because you saying that, maybe some other white girl sees that and goes, maybe I shouldn't mess around with this type of person.
This type of fauna.
I shouldn't be an eco-sexual and screw around with fauna because it'll kill you.
Exactly.
Ollie Tibbets, how many others?
Our pal Marcel, shout out to Marcel.
I'll just leave it at that.
He had the idea to create a 365-day flip calendar, you know, like Gary Larson and the far side of all of the white victims of non-white surprise.
It's a really good idea, but man, who has the stones and the steely soul to flip through that every day?
Put it on your desk at work and be like, oh, yeah, these are all the white victims of black and non-white crime.
Oof.
Anyway.
Yeah.
And like, just don't include South Africa.
Just every single day, just put South Africa.
Yeah.
Evergreen, unfortunately.
Well, you got to talk to your kids about this stuff.
And if you don't, you're liable for anything bad that happens to them.
You have to keep them physically safe by living as safe as possible and also educating them and arming them with the information so that they're not babes in Toyland and wander into an urban street riot or worse, date outside their race in college.
I got news for you about niggas.
Our pal, who's been submitting the navigating the collapse bits, has really been upping his game.
I'm excited for them every week, and I don't want to relegate them to just before the end of the show.
And we're about an hour and a half in, hour 40 in, so let's get right to it.
This is part four of Navigating the Collapse, and we have not heard it yet.
We're going out on a limb that it's going to be a good one.
He says it's fresh.
Welcome to Navigating the Collapse.
Last week, we talked about how to survive in a riot while in your car.
But what about if you need to bail out of your vehicle or are caught in a riot while on foot?
Ideally, you would just stay away from these things.
But as we all know, we do not live in an ideal world.
So here's what I would do to escape a riot.
An ounce of prevention is worth six million pounds of cure.
If you start to see a crowd of mass, riot police start lining up, or windows start breaking, just leave.
Don't stand around gawking or filming on your cell phone.
At this point, there will be many avenues of exit for you.
Don't wait until there are only one or two.
Instead of running, walk quickly away.
Don't draw attention to yourself.
And keep your head down, but make sure to be aware of your surroundings.
Think of a crowd like a rushing river.
Where would you rather be?
In the middle of the current or on the riverbank?
Get to the side of the street and put your back against a wall.
You want to avoid getting surrounded.
If you can, find a cubby where the crowd cannot see you until they are right next to you, or some kind of building to hide in while the crowd passes.
Of course, the building you hide in definitely matters.
I'd avoid any store that sells weave, electronics, or alcohol.
Your best bet is unironically a synagogue.
If that is not available, you have a few options.
First, you could run to the police, although they will likely see you as a member of the riot crowd and treat you as such, so I would not recommend this unless you are a child, pregnant woman, or very clearly not a threat.
Second, you could try to blend in with the rioters.
This also could have negative consequences, as the police will definitely treat you as a rioter, although it could be useful for a very short time to reach safety through a crowd.
Finally, you could keep your head down and avoid the gaze of all potentially hostile parties.
This would be my main strategy.
Move along the wall as much as possible, protecting your face and looking for gaps in the crowd.
An instigator will probably try to punch you in the head and hit you into the wall, so be aware of that and hunch down as best as you can.
If you get accosted by a lone attacker, ignore if possible.
The current of the crowd may sweep him along, so he can only get one or two hits in.
If he continues attacking or if multiple people attack you, realize you are in an extraordinarily dangerous situation.
Realize that you are probably being filmed, so yell for help if possible.
There may be a few good Samaritans nearby.
Yell at the attackers to stop hitting you, but don't wait for them to stop.
Your next action must not be half asked.
Look for a possible safe area and blast through the attacker standing in your way to get there.
If you have pepper spray or something similar, use it.
Don't stop moving until you know your assailants have lost you.
If you suspect you may get into a riot situation, here's a few things to carry with you.
A bandana can be used as a bandage and if wet, can provide rudimentary protection from gas and the like.
Protective footwear is a lot better in these situations than crocs.
And I would also have a sturdy flashlight, which can be used as an impact weapon besides its obvious uses.
If you get exposed to gas or pepper spray, it will be very easy to panic.
Don't.
These weapons are designed to make you feel pain, but not cause permanent damage.
Grit through the pain and tell your body what to do.
The effects of gas should be greatly diminished as soon as you move away from the area.
However, if you get pepper spray into your eyes, it will last a lot longer.
Blink as hard and fast as you can to get any particles of the spray out of your eyes.
If you have a water bottle, poke a small hole in it and spray it in your eyes to get the particles out.
Find a water source as soon as possible.
It will hurt, but you can pry your eyes open to see.
The only thing stopping you from opening your eyes is pain.
You can open them if you want.
However, this is much easier to say than to do.
Look up videos of people being sprayed, and you can know what to expect if the time ever comes.
To close out, a speech from one of the greatest white warriors of the past hundred years, Leon DeGrell, looking back at his service during the Second World War.
When I look back, I have only one feeling.
This is huge regret.
Regret that we have not succeeded, that we were not able to create this European world that would have been the master of the universe forever, which would have provided to the white race the first place, the great domination of the mind.
And when we see what there is before us, what thirty years of victory of the others have done, this anarchy in the world, this collapsing of the white race, this desertion throughout the universe.
When we see in our own countries the breakdown of morals, the fall of the homeland, the fall of the family, the collapse of the social order, when we see the appetite of material goods, which has replaced the great flame of the ideal that animated us.
Well, really, between the two, we chose the right side.
This little wretch of Europe today, with this common tinpot market, it cannot give happiness to mankind.
The consumer society is rotting humanity instead of elevating it.
So, for the rest of us, at least, we have dreamed of something marvelous.
And we have only one desire: that this spirit could be reborn.
And with all my strength, until the last moment of my life, I will fight for this.
For what was our fight and our martyrdom shall one day be the resurrection.
Yeah, baby.
Thank you.
That is really great.
Oh, yeah.
Now, I think most of us probably know to, you know, it seems rudimentary, like, oh, yeah, I'm not going to be near a riot.
I'm not going to go near those things.
But he's right.
I was driving around a sleepy town the other day with the wife and kids in the car, not particularly prepared.
And lo and behold, you've got the typical Cretans holding signs, some of them wearing bandanas, masks, some of them looking menacing.
And I thought, son of a gun, like I could have inadvertently wandered into one of these things.
It kicks off.
So, man, yeah, we talk about prepping and stuff like that.
And in that situation, I was kicking myself.
I did not have adequate stuff in the car in case we, and it's a minivan too.
I'm not going to be able to get out of there as skilled or with as much force as I might need.
So, yeah, take those lessons to heart.
Read your degrill.
And Mr. Producer says you got to always be ready in your rides.
So, yeah.
Don't be like coach.
Yeah.
Everything is.
I'm going to say that's something about prepping that we didn't actually necessarily talk about during the show, but it's a good reminder or a good thing to put out.
Yeah.
Is that like prepping goes beyond having stuff?
Right.
You could spend an infinite amount of money on buying stuff, but if you've never used any of that stuff, it doesn't matter.
Everything that is in any of my bags or my gear, whatever the case may be, whether it's a firearm, a load-bearing vest, medical equipment, it doesn't matter.
I've used every single thing, every single thing I have used.
It may not be the one that I keep in my bag.
I might buy two or three of an item and then use two of them for practice and then throw the good one in the bag.
That way I know, okay, 100%, I got this.
And that goes for tactics as well.
So Like we're talking about with Navigating the Collapse, all the stuff that he's putting out is really good, but it's also a lot of stuff that you can find in publications and books.
And, you know, you can only get so much out of four to seven minutes at a time.
So buy books and read them.
Good stuff.
Don't leave the house unprepared.
Your family's life could depend on it.
Yep.
Yeah.
I was kicking myself.
I am currently reading the Fame of a Dead Man's Deeds, which is, so far as I know, the only biography of Pierce written by a guy who spent significant time out in his compound or, you know, place in West Virginia when he was alive, given to me or lent to me by a friend.
Don't worry.
You'll get the book back.
I'm not one of those guys who takes a book and keeps it.
And what's interesting, it's not only a fascinating, I'll put it in the show notes too.
It's not just a biography of Pierce, but what this author, who I suspect, if he wasn't sympathetic, he grew sympathetic by his immersion in that world and in all the readings.
But he sort of gives a wonderful summary of all of these influences on Pierce, all the way from Uncle to George Lincoln Rockwell to Revelo P. Oliver, who was one of the first guys to recognize conservatism as an utter sham.
And he does a wonderful job of taking these nuggets out and putting them right there in your hands.
And he does a little bit of the mincing words and, oh, of course, it's all about the Jews with these guys and stuff like that.
But it almost sounds like he's talking through his teeth.
And in that was this one from George Lincoln Rockwell that I wanted to say on the show because it's so accessible.
And this is from a speech that Rockwell gave in front of a hostile audience at Brown University in 1966.
And he's got people hooting and hollering on him.
You know, he's been beaten in the streets.
He's had attempts on his life.
And he's still out there.
It reminds me of the Halcyon days of the alt, right?
When we were doing the campus talks, and we were all celebrating those.
But, you know, without further ado, this is GLR trying to smack some sense into the hostiles, the neutrals, and the supporters in the crowd.
He says, they are destroying our culture, our civilization, and they have millions of good Americans like many of you helping them to do it because you really believe you are helping to build a better world.
They tell you about what happened to the poor Jews in Germany, but they don't tell you what the Jews did to Germany and what they are trying to do here.
And anybody who tries to tell you, they use terrorism to shut him up.
As true in 1966 as it is in 2020, a little paraphrase there.
And he continues, every time I speak, I get letters saying, I agreed with what you said, but I was afraid to say it.
This has to stop.
No man in America should be afraid to say what is in his heart.
And we are.
And that is why I am a Nazi, because I am no longer going to be a slave to fear.
I'm no longer going to be afraid to say what I believe to be the truth.
If I'm wrong, show me and I'll quit.
But stop calling me sick and stop calling me names and trying to punch me in the face.
It will never stop me.
It never stopped our forefathers.
No American worthy of the name in the history of this country has ever backed down because somebody beat on him or called him sick or threw something at him.
And I'm not about to either.
So that's a great recording.
I have that entire thing recording.
Yeah, it's great because Rockwell went into this hostile crowd.
People are jeering him.
But by the end of it, he had him cheering.
And it's funny, near the end of it, he's taking some questions from the audience.
And then these Jews are piping up and yelling things.
And he says, All right, unless you shut these Jews up, I'm not going to talk anymore.
And then you hear people in the crowd saying, Shut up, Jews.
Well, yeah, that's awesome.
Let's get that.
Let's get that recording.
Yeah, I almost got a little guilt like, you know, me narrating it.
I was channeling the commander there.
But yeah, I will, yeah, buy the book.
I assume it's still available somewhere.
I'm certainly not.
I can't put it up for another book sweepstakes on Full House, but it's just packed full of nuggets and quotes and stuff like that that the author either intentionally or inadvertently put in there.
And it's a good backstory of Pierce as well.
All right.
We are coming close to bringing this puppy home.
But before we do so, Long Shanks, sincere thanks.
You are a good guy.
And I always, you're in a lot of chats, right?
You know, we've known each other virtually for years now, probably.
And I smile thinking about you escaping less than ideal circumstances and raising a beautiful family.
So if you have any other last thoughts or things you want to share, have at it?
Well, just as a dad tip, we're talking about, you know, having preps in your car for like in case of bad situations like that, but just have a toolkit in your car, have emergency blankets in your car, some flares, stuff like that.
Because, man, just you could break down in the middle of nowhere and you didn't plan on doing that night road trip or just anything like that.
Saved my butt a lot of times.
My wife thought I was crazy when she first met me because I have just this box in my back of my truck of just all this stuff.
She's like, you keep that everywhere?
Bought a new car, put it in the next car, and we've used almost every single part of it.
So I would say that's a good tip to have.
Just every car should have a little bit of that stuff in it.
A candle in a metal folder scan or a metal coffee can can increase the internal temperature of a vehicle by 18 degrees.
Wow.
Good winter tip.
Candle.
Yeah.
I thought you were going to go FedPussy with that.
Like, you know what you can make with it?
No.
And, you know, you'll see some variants based on like vehicle size and how crappy the weather seal is and stuff.
But suburban's not going to heat up quite as well.
Yeah.
And Shanks, I meant to ask you, are you out of the baby game or are you still, is it still on the cards that you might have another one?
I'll be honest.
I got snipped a long time ago.
Oh, oh, yeah.
All right.
We got to delete this episode then.
Sorry.
That's the rules.
No, this was back when before I was red-pilled and whatnot and on this stuff.
And, you know, we were doing the rat race.
And I was just like, you know, if we, if we had another kid, like, we wouldn't be able to keep this up anymore.
Like, we were already just strapped for time.
And, and, um, you know, they tell you, oh, you know, it's an easier procedure for the man than it is the woman.
And we're just like, you know what?
Let's just, let's just go ahead and do it.
And now it's like, I'm kicking myself.
I can't, I cannot express, you know, enough.
I say it as a warning, and I tell people about what I did because it's a warning.
Do not do it.
You might, you might change your mind later.
I know once we moved here, she became a stay-at-home mom.
It's just like we talked about a reversal, but it's so damn expensive that it's just, it's basically a lifelong decision unless you got a lot of income.
So don't do it, guys.
Don't do it.
Well, I always think of, God forbid, what if your wife died and then you met another woman and she wanted to have kids?
Then what?
You know?
Yeah.
No snip gang.
Well, you got, you got two, Shanks.
We're happy for you.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yep.
We won't dwell on the bad stuff, and it makes it all the more important that you raise those two youngsters as well as you can, which we're sure that you will.
All right.
Smasher, my friend.
Thank you, sir.
Yeah, I'm glad to be here.
I guess parting words.
Don't be afraid to take yourself seriously.
I know I joke a lot, but don't be afraid to take yourself seriously.
Get something done.
Damn straight.
Yeah.
Think about what you're going to accomplish when you're listening to this.
What are you going to do after this?
Even if it's small, just do one thing, as Skull says, and start with something, whether it's planting a bush, planting a seed, buying some self-defense thing, or cleaning out your car and packing it full of good stuff.
And we can help you along the way with that.
And Sam, thank you, of course, as always.
Thank you, coach.
It was a good discussion.
And thanks to Long Shanks for being on the show.
I really enjoyed having you on the show.
Good job.
Thank you.
Thanks for having me, guys.
All right.
Full House episode 52 was recorded on, at least here, it was cold and rainy, June 14th, now, June 15th, 2020.
Follow us on Telegram at ProWhiteFam.
Subscribe to us on YouTube at youtube.com slash C slash full house.
There's no two C's in there.
Like I messed up last week and our errant Mr. Producer.
Let's slide through.
Got to give him a little bit of hell there.
And check out installment four of Sam's autobiography exclusively on full-house.com.
And we also are going to get all of those Savitri Debbie clips that Sam provided us into one file that people can clip on instead of a bunch of them.
And that will be value added.
And we also posted our gift list that we put together last Christmas when we had a big Twitter account.
It was just up on Pastebin as this sort of jumble of text, which is still accessible, but we put it up on the site on the blog.
It's there.
And we have a couple of submissions in the hopper that we're going to be rolling out.
And I know the site looks still a little bit bare bones because there's been some issues with design and how we're going to fix this or that, but we're working on it.
Bear with us.
We are busy dads and we will use that as our home base.
We also have some merch in the pipeline 100%.
So that will be coming forth very soon.
And of course, drop us a line at fullhouse show at protonmail.com or with anything else that's on your mind.
So to all white parents who are either trying to emulate the idyllic childhoods that their parents bestowed on them or are working to correct any pains that they may have experienced in their own, we do salute you.
Mr. Producer, we haven't gone out with a banger in a while.
So from 1983, please put on, if you would, Bang Your Head by Quiet Riot.
I was two years old when this one came out.
Let me tell you, I remember fantasizing about rolling into the ghetto and an APC blasting this one at a thousand decibels to go clean up those streets.
It was true then.
It's true now.
We love you, fam.
And we'll talk to you next week.
See ya.
I'm not the laser, since dream razor.
I've got a mouth like an elector.
I want it louder, more power.
I'm on a rocket till it strikes me hour.
Bang your head.
Now the drive, you man.
Bang your head.
Let's have a drive, you make it straight out, take it.
I really wanna be overrated.
I'm a finder, I'm a keeper.
I'm not a loser, and I ain't no weaver.
I'm not the voice, chopping the noise.
Won't ever let her hope it annoyed you.
Shorten the fire, you can cry.
We're down here, there's no way man.
Bang your hand.
Let'll help the drive, you man.
Bake your head.
Let's help the drive, you man.
Let'll help them cure you crazy.
And no help will cure you, man.
And I'll help this one.
Bang your hand.
Wait a day.
You're a bit so man.
It's for your head.
So bang your hands and raise the day.
Better pay.
It's for your bad.
Bring your hands.
Better up and drive your razor inside tonight.
I want the drugs.
The fit voice of your saturation.
Rock and rock and rock.
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