This week on Full House, no dad lecture or locker room speech to start the show.
Just a brief parental service announcement.
It's mid-July, and it appears that at least here in Appalachia, we are near peak lightning bug season.
If you have young ones under the roof, be sure to get out there at sunset and conduct as many catch and release raids as you can.
I'm hard-pressed to think of a simpler, happier summertime memory with the kids.
If yours are too old for that sort of thing, consider bribing them and going out to have a goofy, self-aware time.
If yours are already out of the house, we wish you many grandchildren very soon.
And if you're not in the fatherhood game yet, get motivated to make those joyous moments with your future progeny.
The lightning bugs won't be around forever this year, and your kids will grow up before you know it.
All right, the infamously low-energy Alt Skull rejoins us over one year since his first appearance on Full House tonight.
We are going to cover more territory in two hours than the Germans did on the march in Barbarossa, and we're straining our leashes.
So, Mr. Producer, let's slip the dogs of war.
Everyone, episode 55 of Full House, the world's most unflappable show for white fathers, aspiring ones, and the whole biofam.
I am, as always, your sentimental host, Coach Finstock, back with another two hours of talking about whatever the hell we want to talk about.
That's right.
I am deliberately suppressing my managerial tendencies this week to just have fun and see where this thing goes.
Smasher did have a special request to talk only about COVID and Skull's take on masks, though.
So we'll make an exception for that.
I'm joking, of course.
All right, real quick housekeeping, and then we'll get right to it.
Huge thanks to Durendle and Mr. Burns for answering the siren sound of shilling last week.
You guys are awesome.
Thank you so much.
And to the rest of you, bums, we see you holding out there.
Just kidding.
We love you all the same.
Also, if you ever heard a song on Full House that you really loved but failed to take note of or download, we've got them all linked on the site this week.
It's up near the top of the blog at full-house.com.
Music heard on Full House.
Check it out.
It took several hours to do, but it was a labor of love.
So hope you enjoy that.
And we are going to prioritize getting our very best shows from the library, from the vault, up on BitChute and YouTube ASAP.
We've gotten a lot of requests from people to say, hey, can you put up the homeschooling episode or the Sam women parts, birth control, tantric episode?
So we're going to go back.
It's not going to be, we've been working back chronologically to date, and we're going to prioritize a few just based on requests.
So let's get onto the birth panel and then I will shut up.
First up, he had a crisis of confidence this week over his decades in the pro-white cause.
He said he felt ashamed and that maybe Antifo would be a better fit for him.
But Smasher, Mr. Producer, and I flew out to Oshkosh, staged an intervention, and he's finally come to his senses.
Sam, welcome back.
Thanks, Coach.
Thanks for that introduction.
You know, this week I was listening to a book and rifle and George Lincoln Rockwell was talking about the evils of birth control.
And that made me recall that one episode we had and where we talked at length about it.
And I did want to get that link.
So thanks for that.
And also inspired by our listeners here continuing through the summer.
And early on when we had that episode about gardening, I've been getting my garden in swing this last few weeks.
A lady friend of ours gave me some potted lettuce plants and some Swiss chard and squash.
And over maybe about a month ago, I got it in and put some nice pots up on some cinder blocks.
And they've been coming along very nicely.
Maybe I'll put some pictures in the chat for everyone to appreciate.
Outstanding.
Yes, please definitely do that.
And glad to hear you're getting your green thumb on.
And of course, I was joking about our intervention, but it was a somewhat serious thought.
I wondered if you had ever wavered in your beliefs at all or a lot over the past two, three decades.
Well, you know, maybe it would be like to degrees, because especially when you're younger, you are influenced by your surroundings and things just because of your own lack of maturity.
And I can remember going into college.
You know, this is going into college is a time where a lot of people get their beliefs challenged because you're suddenly thrust into often a very international kind of environment.
You have people from other countries and you're being exposed to maybe a bunch of ideas that you never considered before and things like that.
And frankly, that's what happens to a lot of people, right?
They go to college, maybe they try pot or they, you know, they date different type of girls.
I don't know, whatever it is.
And that was no different for me in a sense.
I went to a rather conservative type of university.
You know, I think in general, people would know that if you go to like a technical or a scientific type of a university, those tend to be much more conservative.
And that was the case for me.
It was a more conservative type of experience, but even so, I did go through a period of feeling kind of overwhelmed with the experience of going to university.
Though I would say that the very most core beliefs would never change.
For instance, I would never date a non-white.
I never approved of race mixing.
But, you know, the force of that experience kind of pushes you right up to close to the gates.
So, you know, so I would answer your question like that.
All right.
Well, don't go wobbly on this.
Not that I'm worried about it.
Thanks, Sam.
All right.
Next up, Hashammer will travel.
That's right.
If you have work that needs done, as he says, can't do it yourself, won't do it yourself, but you want to keep it in the fam, keep him in mind.
That's right.
I did not ask him for permission to show his work on the show tonight, but I'm doing it anyway.
Potato Smasher.
Thank you for the screened in porch, my dude.
Excellent work.
Hey, yeah.
How's it?
How's it?
How's it working?
Bug free.
Excellent.
That's what I want to hear.
And that's it.
Resume complete.
Yeah.
Know it's got some fine tuning to do in terms of the exterior and stuff, but uh, wonderful stuff.
Yeah, for the audience, my uh, we have a nice porch, uh, and my wife wanted it screened in.
And I just looked at it, and my eyes rolled into the back of my head.
I was like, it was a good idea, but there was no way that I was going to be able to do a competent, bug-free job on it.
And when you need work done, you call Smasher, Hammer time, and he got it done.
So, thank you, friend.
That is so embarrassing.
I can't believe I just did that.
I will put that in the greatest hits clips.
But seriously, are you?
I'm not going beyond my remit here and saying that you're willing to travel to do work for our guys, right?
I am.
Well, I travel to do work for you all the time.
I may be out at Johnny, our favorite conspiracy tard.
I might be out at his place soon.
I've got a couple other people, people that you've actually put me in touch with.
Sweet.
Trying to figure things out.
It's mostly scheduling.
Got some car troubles right now, vans in the shop.
I did.
I don't know if you heard the conclusion, but I'll just tell it here on the show.
Basically, I problem with the van.
The flex plate cracked.
Automatic transmissions have flex plates.
Manual transmissions have flywheels.
They serve the same purpose, but they're different.
I take it to the local fix-all shop.
I'm like, hey, I've done X, Y, and Z to the van.
I think this is what's wrong because I haven't been able to fix it.
They call me back.
They're like, no, it's this.
I'm like, okay, you're the experts.
They do it.
They call me back.
They're like, no, it was that thing.
And I was like, did you even check?
They're like, no.
And I was like, okay, I'm calling corporate.
And long story short, we got all of our money back and now the van's in the proper shop.
So good for you.
Yeah.
Stuck to your guns.
I was surprised they gave you a full refund.
But I mean, there's the long, the long story is that they had no option, really.
You know, it's like, how can you, how can you receive a vehicle?
The person goes, this is what I believe to be wrong.
You could only know this if you were a competent mechanic, and then you don't even bother to investigate.
They called me and they were like, no, it's your AC compressor.
It's not your flex plate.
And I was like, okay, if you investigated both, then go ahead and change it.
And then it turns out that they didn't even look until after I had or after they had done the work and found out, oh, it's still making this horrible noise.
And so that's when I talked to corporate.
They kind of pushed back, but then as soon as I started spitting out terminology and stuff, they were kind of like, that knows exactly what he's talking about.
You weren't trying to cheat him and cheat them.
You were the one who got cheated.
Yep.
Yep.
So I'm having a pretty good week.
Pretty good week.
Glad to hear it.
All right.
And finally, our very special and very patient guest tonight.
He is chairman and CEO of Plant the Potato Faggot Incorporated, a virtually 24-7 online mainstay of our cause for, I don't know, almost half a decade now.
The always brutally honest, indefatigable, upbeat, and wicked smart alt skull.
Now, if Dan Bilzerian is the king of Instagram, you, my friend, are the king of Telegram.
So welcome back, buddy.
Hey, man.
It's good to see you guys again.
Thanks.
You bet.
What's new in your neck of the woods?
We already, yeah, we did our introductions from the first show.
You came on in June 2019 for D-Day.
They're turning the kids gay on D-Day.
We talked about whether we want our sons to enlist.
So it's been over a year, but go ahead.
Let us know how you're doing.
It's been quite a year, hasn't it?
Oh, man.
Yeah.
It's been a year like nothing I've ever experienced in my entire life and probably like nothing anybody's experienced in even elderly people at this point.
Me personally, there's been a lot of upheaval.
And even though I'm far from the, I don't know, if there even is an epicenter, I mean, the thing started in China and went to America and spread all over the world.
But I've, you know, I've experienced the plenty, plenty, let's just say, here as well.
And there was some what appeared to be a negative effect to my business, but I've judoed it into a positive effect for me, downsized a little, and did some downsizing that I've been wanting to do for a long time, but I'm such a nice guy that I didn't want to get rid of certain aspects of my business, but I did.
And it turned out to all work out really well for me.
And then, on top of it, I'm fixing to close on a new house.
And the house is in an even more rural area than I already am in.
And it's got a good bit of property.
And I'll talk more about it when we get to that portion of the thing.
But it's been, I can't complain, man.
I can't complain.
Sounds good.
I'm all smiles.
And in all sincerity, seriously, you are, you're sort of, you know, if I'm a coach in quotes, you're sort of like you're a ringleader or a spirit booster almost constantly, both in terms of brutally honest shivs into the narrative and the system, as well as, you know, kicking people in the ass to get them to live healthier and live better.
So we salute you right off at the top, buddy.
Thanks, buddy.
I've been meaning to ask you for a long time.
And the guys are probably like, Coach, you said you were going to be all managerial about this one.
But anyway, I got a couple of questions I got to ask you.
I've been meaning to ask you this for a long time, but I saved it specifically for the show.
No, but it is relevant.
And I think a lot of people will relate to this.
But you are an extremely online guy.
You're there pumping out content regularly, but at the same time, you're a gym rat.
You're a dad.
You're a father.
A husband and a dad.
You are now getting into gardening, being more self-reliant, et cetera.
And how the hell do you do it?
I'm not fanning your balls here.
I want to know how you squeeze it all in.
Are you on your phone when you're out there hoeing the fields?
Are you in the gym?
Break it down for us.
Yeah, I'm just, I usually just think all the time and I don't like being idle ever.
And so the phone's with me all the time.
And it's probably with me far too much, if we're being honest.
But just, you know, whenever I have a thought, it gets, I mean, I just treat Telegram kind of like my diary.
And as soon as I have a thought, I don't want to lose, it just goes in there.
And I also, because I own my own business, I can set things up to where I actually, there's lots of business people that are really busy, but I actually have a lot of free time, believe it or not.
And especially as I'm no longer interested in like growing into a whole bunch of businesses and making tons of money and being some guy with multiple locations and stuff.
It's just like, God, man, I tried doing that for a few years and it's just exhausting.
And then I realized that it was taking away from things that are a lot more important in life.
And so that's what I've sort of shifted my focus to those things.
So reduce the hours at work, increase the hours at home, increase the time with my kids.
And that gives me a lot more freedom to do the Telegram stuff and to get out, do my gardening, and get out and do that in the morning and then have a workout.
Yeah.
And then, you know, roll in.
I work at night.
So, you know, I can come in a little bit later and then take time off too whenever I want to because I have employees and I can come home and have dinner with my kids and spend time with my family.
And so, I mean, it's just the way I've set my life up.
And I that way, if they determined to do so and made a plan and executed the plan.
Practicing what you preach.
Very good.
We had you on.
I wanted to have you on again at some point, but we were chatting and you had, we'll put some family-friendly, comfy stuff right up at the top.
Gonna have fun this week, but you had a pet incident or teachable moment that I also had like the same week.
And I was like, all right, that's a little bit of, I don't know if it's synchronicity, but the coincidence was enough that I said, ah, let's get Scully on this week.
Yeah, if we were hockey buddies, I would definitely call you Scully.
But Leah, let us know what happened in the Skull House, the pet family drama and how you handled it.
Okay, so my boys are 8 and 11, and they've never had a pet before other than like beetles and fish and stuff, which aren't really very empathetic type pets.
And we got them a hamster finally.
We're going to get a dog when we move into the next place.
And I'm going to get some chickens and stuff.
We just, this place that we're in right now, even though it's super nice, it's a rent place and we're not supposed to have pets.
And we thought about breaking the rules and just like, ah, you know.
So the next place we're going to get a dog, we got a hamster and a little white Jungarian hamster.
They're super cute.
They're very docile.
You can just pick them up.
And I don't even think this hamster knows that I'm an other creature.
I think it thinks I'm furniture or something.
It doesn't really seem to respond as an animal would to another creature.
So like if I stick my finger, I can stick my finger in its little house and it'll nibble on my finger thinking it's trying to figure out if it's food or not.
But it's still really cute, right?
It's this little white mouse-looking thing without the ugly rat tail that mice have.
And so we got it.
We got the cage and the food and all, you know, the wheel and all the he got the deluxe hamster mansion and the kids love playing with him and stuff, but it's their first pet, right?
So they don't have any experience actually taking care of an animal.
And I explained to him before the responsibilities of taking care of another creature, but of course, until things get real, they're not going to actually understand the gravity of the situation.
So we've only had him like a week, okay?
And this happened a couple nights ago.
And I had time off from work.
So I came home to have dinner with my family.
We're just hanging out and stuff.
And then I look, and they've got all these boxes and lunch pails and stuff all in front of the hamster cage.
I'm like, what are y'all doing?
The hamster can't even see out.
You can't see the hamster.
And so I look and there's no hamster in the cage.
Yeah.
And so my wife and I were just pissed.
And then the added problem is that the hamster's cage is right in front of the sliding glass door.
And my wife has this thing where, like, we have a dryer, but she likes to hang the clothes outside.
And so I'm like, were you, you know, was this door open?
And she's like, yes.
And yeah, right.
Yeah.
And so we're looking everywhere on this lower floor of the house.
I mean, I don't, I don't see where this thing could have been.
I mean, long story short, it didn't die, but I couldn't find it anywhere.
We couldn't find it.
We looked literally everywhere.
The kids were very upset, and they noticed how upset we were.
And then my oldest starts crying, and I'm like, you're crying, but you know, you realize this hamster, if it's outside, it's gone.
And if it's outside, it's also dead.
It's going to get eaten by a hawk or a cat or a tanuki or it's going to get run over by a car or it's going to fall into the gutter and drown or something.
That thing's not going to live.
It's not made for life outside, right?
Tough, tough bad love there.
Yeah.
Yeah, man.
And I was, I was livid.
My wife, too.
Boy, she was.
And so both my kids are crying.
And then I had to go back to work.
So I'm like, I can't be here.
I got to go back to work.
I had a class to teach.
And come home at night, still gone.
And my wife's like, buy some sunflower seeds.
We'll put payout and see what happens.
And they had all this food in front of the cage because the thing will go back into the cage on its own if you let it.
It doesn't like being out, it likes being in its little safe place.
And so then I'm outside and I'm, and there's a sidebar.
I know.
Yeah, right, right.
So I'm outside with my Coleman high-powered lantern looking for this thing in the yard.
And mainly I'm just like, I don't want my, I want my kids to learn the lesson, but I don't want them to have to kill a hamster, you know, to learn it.
If they have to, they have to, but, you know, there's better ways you can learn that lesson.
And so, yeah, a little sidebar thing.
I found these beetles, these Japanese rhinoceros beetles on a tree.
And I was like, oh, cool.
Like, usually people buy those things.
I've got them in the trees in my yard.
And I checked the next night and the night after, and they're there every night.
I had it.
They didn't have hamster fur from their car.
Yeah.
No, no, no.
So I just gave this thing up and I was like, all right, dude, it's done.
I come back inside, and it's like midnight, and I'm on Telegram, sitting in my living room, the same place I am right now.
And I hear this little sound behind me.
And I'm like, what is that?
And I push back the curtains and this little hamster standing on his back legs looking up at me, sniffing.
There he was.
I don't know where the hell he was hiding the whole time.
He was like a super hamster.
I don't know what that thing was doing.
Did you go wake up the kids?
Like, I found him.
I woke up my wife because she was super upset about the whole situation, especially being a woman.
Like, you know, I wasn't going to cry that the hamster's gone.
I was just upset about the situation, but she was actually upset.
So I woke her up and showed her, and she was happy.
And then the next day, I sat down with them and had a very serious talk about responsibility and taking care of another living creature and how when you do that, you can't just treat it like a toy.
That thing lives or dies according to you.
If you don't feed it, it dies.
If you let it out, it dies.
If you do feed it, it lives.
If you protect it, it lives.
And it's your responsibility now, and you need to treat it that way.
And I think it was a good lesson for them overall.
And I didn't have to.
I have a friend.
I have a friend that says she should have just killed the thing.
I taught them a real lesson.
Oh, man.
Yeah, the bloody pulp.
He's not a dad yet.
I said, you're going to be a fun dad.
We had, so in sixth grade, we had a pet or a class pet, and it was a hamster.
It was female and it was pregnant.
And we didn't know that when we, you know, when the teacher purchased it.
And so they really, rodents really do do this thing where, like, if you touch their babies when they're too young, they won't recognize them and they'll kill them.
And so we got to witness this on Valentine's Day.
So a few, about a month or so before Valentine's Day, they give birth.
And the teacher's like, don't touch them.
Don't do it.
Don't.
Right.
And everybody's like, okay, got it.
And we don't know.
We never found out who did it.
Nobody owned up to it.
I assume it was a woman or a female.
And the night before, somebody touches the babies or during class or whatever.
And in the middle of class, you just hear this gnarly hamster attack sound and blood is flying all over the cage.
And that is my eat your heart out Valentine's Day story.
That's brutal.
Grizzly.
Yeah, I mean, we've said for, we don't beat the drum of get a pet faggot.
But if you have kids, you know, you can start small.
It's like maybe getting a dog with your girlfriend is good training wheels for taking care of a human life down the road, unless it becomes an obstacle.
But having a pet is unquestionably a good thing for your kids.
Responsibility.
Yeah.
Life's death.
Treat your girlfriend like a dog.
Smasher has five pit bulls, so he knows all about taking care of pets.
That's a joke.
But yeah, the thing that happened with us, this is like a coach's uncomfy corner, is that when I was a kid, before we had cats, we never had dogs.
We had a beta fish that stayed up on the little cabinet in the kitchen, and we had them for two years or something like that.
And I fondly remember that little thing swimming around, feeding them, changing the water.
My mom changed the water with hot water once and killed him.
So that was like a drama early on in life.
But we got a beta for Junior and daughter.
I think it was even before Potato was born that we got him.
So the kids and I have been taking care of them, changing the water, feeding the food, et cetera, and had him for about two years.
And he sits up on a shelf near Junior's bed.
And I always ask him, you know, did you feed the fish, feed the fish?
And he says, yes, I did.
And he started moping about two or three days ago.
And I noticed it.
And I kept asking him, what's going on?
You know, maybe he's just like his old man.
He's thinking about the state of the world.
And he said, no, everything's fine, Dad.
And we got to his bedroom two nights ago or something like that.
And I said, did you feed the fish?
And he sort of went white as a ghost and he knew that the jig was up.
And he looked at me.
And as soon as he looked at me, I knew that the fish was dead, but he didn't tell me.
He was afraid that it was going to make me mad.
And I'm not like a hell-raising, you know, fire-breathing father.
I can bring it in serious situations.
So he was sitting up there in his bed with the dead fish floating in the tank because he was afraid to tell his old man that it died.
So I said, Oh, you know, buddy, I'm so sorry.
I'm not mad.
The fish was old.
You know, the beta had a good life.
I'm just upset that you didn't tell me.
So we took the tank down and got the spoon to get Captain Blue Moon was the name that the kids gave him.
He's a blue guy.
And we went out to the deck.
And my wife was in the other room with Potato trying to get him down.
So I took the two kids out on the deck and we gave a little homily, a little sermon for Blue Moon, living a good life, et cetera.
And then we tossed them over the deck into the yard.
And they handled it pretty well.
Junior was totally quiet, got him back into bed, and daughter started crying pretty seriously.
And the beds had to go comfort her.
And then my wife was upset that I didn't go grab her for the ceremony.
She wanted to be there for it.
So anyway, little pet drama.
And I explained to Junior, you know, it's not about the death necessarily.
I don't think he did anything wrong or overfed him.
It was just that his fear of telling me the truth.
I told him the old adage that bad news does not get better with age.
I don't know if that's going to stick or whatnot, but especially with decomposing bodies involved.
Skull, does the hamster have a name?
Yeah, Cheese.
My youngest boy named him Cheese.
I had two hamsters before, and the first one was named because every time you held them in your hand, he'd boop in your hand.
And then the one we had after that was named Hamburger.
And I told them to name him, and my oldest was coming up with all these stupid names.
And then my youngest, the first one he comes up with was Cheese.
I was hoping for something like Tojo.
So we had some triops.
You know what Triops are?
I don't.
It's probably like a marketing thing.
It's like back in when I was a little kid, you had sea monkeys.
Oh, okay.
Yeah, yeah.
This is the same type of thing.
They're like, you know, it comes in a nice little, like a kind of a cute fish tank, I'll call it, or some kind of container, and you let them grow in there.
So we were letting them grow.
My son was taking care of them.
And, you know, they get pretty big.
You seem swimming around in there.
And there's all kind of information on the package about them, how they grow.
And they call them triops, which is, you know, they make it look like they're sort of like prehistoric creatures swimming around.
I always thought though like the last thing should be like maybe some kind of stir-fry recipe.
I thought triops were what you call a tranny who had the surgery and then this guy went back to his or her parson.
Well, saying we're going to get we're going to get you out to the country and I could see you having German shepherds running all over the greenfields and wherever.
Yeah, well, yeah, maybe.
My plans to get a key.
Yeah, my plans.
No, they don't really, you know what?
I like the dogie meme, but they don't really have that much personality, actually.
I want a black lab if I can get a hold of one.
But you guys, dude, dogs are so expensive here.
It's ridiculous.
I mean, if you buy them from, I don't want to buy it from a dog pet shop because they have those breeding places and they're just really miserable for the dogs.
But it's hard to find one.
And if you go to a pet shop, like the average price for a dog, a cheap dog, is $2,000.
Damn.
A million.
I know, right?
Dude, for like a, you know, like a toy poodle or something.
It's between two and three thousand dollars.
And then I saw this, they're not St. Bernard's, but they look kind of like St. Bernard's.
And I forget what it's called.
A really, really cute puppy.
And they grow really big.
It's some kind of sheep dog.
It was $5,000.
Like, what?
Yeah, so I don't know.
I'm going to click on the internet and stuff.
I want a black dog.
They were talking about that on Paranormis.
Can I get those?
I don't know.
I'm moving to Gundam Land and becoming a dog breeder.
Yeah, I know, right?
I should.
I should change my career.
We have a tiny Brussels Griffon that is 14 years old and by now deaf and largely useless.
She sort of just walks like a moving carpet.
She's my best friend.
We almost lost her the other day because she's so old and like can't breathe in the heat and she snuck out and like we just found her lying outside in the sun panting and had to go rush and grab her and bring her in give her a cold shower.
But bark at least?
Sort of.
She sort of snorts.
It's really, I mean, people give small dog owners a hard time.
I know I'm like, yeah, you guys are not wrong.
But she was our training wheels back before we had kids.
But yeah, I think we're going to go.
I would go with a Doberman, but wife wants a German shepherd and that's fine by me, hair aside.
What's the disease where your blood doesn't clot?
Poor cereal.
Haemophilia.
Haemophilia.
It's something like 90% of dobermans have hemophilia.
It's a huge, huge issue.
Really?
So you have to be really careful with them.
Yeah.
I only know that because one of my customers had a brand new Doberman and she was like freaking out.
She wouldn't let me near him.
And she's like, he hasn't been tested for hemophilia yet.
It's a huge issue.
We paid a lot of money.
I was like, okay, I got it.
I understand.
Dogs are expensive.
I have a recommendation.
Yeah, coach, I have a recommendation if you haven't fully committed to one yet.
When I was a kid, we had Weimer Honors, and I don't know if you know what they are.
They're German hunting dogs.
They're beautiful, silver coat dogs.
And the hair isn't an issue.
They're extremely loyal, extremely intelligent.
They're just fantastic dogs.
And if I could get one here, I would get one.
I've seen one in my, what, 18 years in Japan?
One.
Yeah, they don't, yeah, they don't bark.
I mean, they're just great dogs.
And when we were growing up, I'll tell you a funny story.
I grew up in South Texas.
And so you can imagine there was already a demographic issue at that time.
And our neighbor was this Mexican guy named Jesse.
And he was pulling his kids and me and my brother in a wagon one time.
And he was pulling us down the street.
And we were all screaming, right?
And so my dog, Brandy, she thought that he was attacking us and she laid into him and she attacked him.
And we thought we were going to have to go to court and stuff.
It was kind of bad for a little bit.
But the dog thought we were in danger and just attacked that Mexican.
Sure.
Yeah, my wife is the big dog lover.
So she'll listen to this and see what she thinks about Weimerainers.
And Mr. Producer says that Dobermans are not nice dogs, but that Weimarainers are great ones.
I don't know.
Dobermans just seem to have the nice combo of looking aggressive, but also being good family dogs.
But we'll do more homework and hopefully our little land slug will not leave us too early.
But let's shift gears.
We had a little bit of fun there, and I'm sure we'll get feedback from the audience with dog recommendations.
I'm already smiling thinking about that incoming.
But Skull, you have been banging the drum for months now, virtuously, I might add, about people becoming more self-reliant, more autonomous, learning to grow their own foods, disconnecting from what we all recognize as an evil and probably corrupted beyond correction system.
You've put a lot of effort posts out there.
And for I suspect that most of the audience is familiar with you, but they might not all be on Telegram and follow your stuff.
What is at the top of your head right now?
Distill it, if you would, for the audience, the important things that the conclusions you've come to and that you want people to take to heart.
Just a small, as you know, I thought we were all excited in 2016 when Trump got elected and we thought that things were about to change.
And, you know, as I said last night on Telegram, you called it earlier than I did that this is all, it's just a big puppet show, right?
And no matter who's, yeah, I actually believe we live in some sort of simulation, actually.
But this isn't the paranormal, so we won't go there.
But I think we can all agree that no matter who's in power, it's all one big system.
And that's just a false binary.
Trump is the one that was supposed to be the pressure release valve for all of the white people who were upset about the direction the country was going after, you know, decades of movement in the wrong direction.
And then we realized finally that, no, he's actually just bringing us even further, even more headlong into this horrifying communist style one-world government system that is a police state.
And we've, you know, all of us here probably finally recognize that there's not a political solution.
There's no way to vote your way out of this.
If that was true, things would have changed starting in 2016 from the very first day Trump was in office.
He would have started signing executive orders and kicking ass and taking names and doing whatever to get things done.
And obviously, you know, it's just more of the same.
So when those missiles started flying towards Syria, it was clear in Houston, we had a problem.
Washington.
Yeah, yeah.
And my big awakening moment was actually, like I said, much later, but it was the Iran thing.
And I thought we were going to go to war with Iran.
And there was this massive buildup.
And I've been watching the news and paying attention and thinking, oh my God, this is it.
We're about to enter World War III.
And then he does this big press conference and he's like, oh, we're going to do sanctions.
And it's just like, what?
Like, what's even happening here?
And I just, I think it was that moment that I realized like, none of this is real.
And it's like inevitable.
It doesn't matter who's in there.
This is like a runaway train on a track with no brakes.
Right.
And then it's going to go to this logical conclusion, and there's nothing that you can do to stop it or slow it down or speed it up.
Yeah, script is being played out.
And the script is being played out for us.
And there's two options.
It's like you can either participate in the script or you can just throw it away and walk off stage.
And when I first came to Telegram, like I'll admit, I was pretty fed up with the system.
And when people were sharing certain violent incidents, I was very angry.
I thought that there was some way to overthrow the system and that people would rise up and finally get sick of this and throw off the yoke and stop complying.
And then this year happened.
And I just saw everyone put on a mask and believe every single thing.
Even the people on our side who I expected to understand because we realized that we're lied to about literally everything, literally everything.
And you want to start, you know, you want to go back to World War II, the story behind that.
You want to go to the Vietnam War, the Gulf of Tonkin, you want to go to USS Liberty, you want to go to, I mean, just on and on and on.
The news, every single story that comes out of the news, the story about how the white genocide narrative is just completely made up and that, oh, we're just, you know, all of this.
I wasn't aware.
Yeah.
I thought our population dropped since the last census.
Yeah.
Climate change and just everything, right?
Everything.
I don't have to go off on a list.
We all know that they lie about everything, but all of a sudden this year, they're telling the truth about literally everything and all the numbers that they're putting in front of our face.
Those are totally real.
And, you know, you're going to die for sure.
And you're also going to kill everyone's grandmother on the way down.
And meanwhile, you know, no go ahead.
Certainly, when it was a fresh story for the first month, at least, I would say nobody really knew what to think because, you know, when they come at you with this COVID-19 and, you know, scary numbers, scary stories about it.
But then after a while, it started to sink in, like, you know, wait a minute.
And at least in our area, it's funny.
You go to the store or something like that, and the white people are not wearing masks, but the black people wear masks.
Black people are smarter than white people.
Right.
I kept challenging people on my Telegram channel.
I got two Telegram channels, and like I have a combined total of over 8,000 followers.
And I kept asking people: is anybody in your life personally that you know who didn't have any prior conditions and morbidities and who's not 80 years old, who's not some octogenarian who's ready to go anyway?
Do you know anybody, healthy person, otherwise healthy person who's died of this thing?
And nobody to this day has told me, yeah, I know by several degrees of separation, maybe, but no, not one or two personally degrees, yeah.
Right.
You personally, anybody in your sphere.
And I'm not even, I, I, yeah, like you, like you said, it could be second degree.
It could be like somebody that you know is a real person on the internet.
None of these people knew.
And that web of like, yeah, I know somebody who knows somebody is like in probably the hundreds of thousands, if not the millions, when you do the six degrees of separation thing, right?
Yes.
And so I finally, I finally realized like everybody's just going along.
Everybody's just doing everything that the government says.
Even the people who should know better are just running with the narrative, right?
And I felt like Cassandra or something.
I'm like, don't you people see what's happening?
And no one's listening to me.
And that's when I realized it's like, okay, so this is all a script.
This is all like, we don't have any control over where this thing is going.
The train has jumped the tracks, but the momentum is all so massive that we're not going to change anything that way.
But we can change things.
And it's like, what can you change?
Well, it's like, well, you can change your personal situation and you can change your community and you can change your life.
And that is actually the most powerful thing that you can do.
And the way that you do it is you stop depending upon this system that wants you to follow its script.
And geez, this is a huge topic.
I don't know.
You want to interject or should I just keep going?
To be honest, I'll say.
No, I'll go for it.
Well, here's my thing.
Like, I'm not worried about me getting the virus, right?
Like, I'm a young, healthy dude.
And most people I know are young, healthy people.
But, like, my grandma is old and has like lung conditions and I don't even know.
So, like, I'm okay with not seeing her for a few months until things are kind of settled, you know, because I could be a carrier.
You can carry something that doesn't necessarily affect you.
And that's for me, it's easy to make that decision because I lived abroad for so long that it's like, okay, if I just talk to family on the phone, that's good enough.
But, you know, it would be crappy, like whether coronavirus is real or not.
We really can't say because the government's definitely lying about the numbers.
But could they theoretically invent an entire virus outside of like literally inventing it?
Hard to say.
I mean, I wouldn't put it past them, but I'm just saying, like, as far as this script goes, the numbers themselves, like that they put out, their numbers say that 0.02, oh no, 0.2% of people who get the thing that they say, whatever it is, actually die from it.
So you have a 99.8% chance of survival.
So because of that, it seems a little weird.
You actually have a 16 times greater chance of dying of diarrhea.
Those are their numbers, right?
So when you see...
Or how about being killed by a Negro?
I mean, what about?
Oh, that's too edgy for this show.
Please, come on.
Yeah, it's absolutely true, man.
So then when you see the entire world being shut down and there's small businesses all across America and I'm sure every other country too.
Well, yeah, this country where I'm in, Japan, like I've seen down here and I had to downsize and it benefits me because I'm so small to begin with and I've got enough credentials here that I'm not going to go out of business.
It may just have to come down to just being me alone, but I'll still be able to make plenty of money.
But there's a whole bunch of other businesses like poor restaurants, man.
Like they're just decimated and getting closed down.
And there's orders where, oh, yeah, all you small businesses have to close.
I have a friend in America who has a hair hair salon and he's not allowed to go.
I don't know.
Maybe he is now, but he wasn't allowed by the mayor of the city that I live in, wasn't allowed to work, wasn't allowed to be in his own business.
And all these businesses get scooped out, right?
Hollowed out.
And then these mega corporations are all allowed to stay open.
These, you know, Costco and Super Target and Walmart and all these places.
And then they, and then all the people that would have, you know, sort of dispersed from the small businesses are all packed into these places, right?
So none of them.
They're touching the doors and the products.
Yeah.
And pushed in next to each other.
And it's like, come on, man.
Like, I don't know what's y'all's threshold.
My threshold was exceeded a long, long time ago.
Even the conservatives on Twitter are like posting.
Joseph Curl, the guy from the Washington Times who used to do the drudge report, he posted the death rate.
So even though, yes, it's spiking again in cases, the actual deaths per week are virtually.
Yeah, it's very tiny.
Like if you double a tiny number, it's still a tiny number.
Yeah, exactly.
So real quick, I wanted to tell Skull because Skull put out, he was basically like, if you wear a mask in a store, you're a faggot.
And I'll tell the truth.
That's fine.
I give you credit for that.
And the other day, I had to go to Walmart and I had, now they exempt kids too, right?
That kids under a certain age don't have to wear a mask.
And I'm walking up there and I've got my skull mask in my pocket and I'm like sweating.
I'm like, oh, God, this is the skull running the gauntlet.
What am I going to do?
And I got up there and I'll tell you, buddy, I was just like, I don't want hassle right now.
I don't want to deal with it, but at least I'm putting on a skull mask.
So take that forward.
It's really fun wearing a skull mask around the store.
Well, what about if they won't serve you if you don't have one on?
So then what do you do?
Right.
Well, here's what I found.
There are some places like that.
But then, like I say, there's other places where you don't have to wear one, but the black people will be wearing one and the white people won't.
So, I mean, there are some places I have to go and certain places do require it.
So, like the pharmacy, they're constantly blasting the message every couple minutes.
We will not serve you if you do not have one on.
So, like, if you have to go to something like that, you might have to wear one.
But here's, here's something I found.
Like, it's all, you know, it's up to you.
It's a, it's obviously up to you.
If it's some place where they want you to wear one and you wear one and you don't want any hassle, I've got a friend in New Jersey and he just doesn't want like crazy people screaming at him.
And he just doesn't want the hassle and it's not that big of a deal.
It's not a hill to die on.
And if your intention is correct, then it's not a big deal, right?
Like it's all about intention.
If you're the people I'm speaking to, coach.
Yeah.
Well, the people I'm speaking to, coach, are not like people who are like, oh, I don't want to do this.
I'll just put this stupid thing on just for, I'll just put this stupid thing on just for now so I can get through this without any hassle.
That's fine.
I don't care about that that much.
What I'm talking, who I'm talking to are the people who are like, you're going to kill us all.
Yeah, some people are into it.
Yeah.
Yeah, man.
The voluntary mask wearing thing where it's like, I'm going to die, even though 99.8% of people don't recover who even get the thing in the first place.
And nobody I know has the thing in the first place.
These are the people I'm speaking to.
Sounds like any given 2 a.m.
Or sometimes it's dictated by company policy.
For instance, in the industrial setting that I work in, we were going to have the insurance guy was going to come in and do his regular assessment, whatever, workers' compensation type thing.
And then he says, well, what is your policy on the masks?
And I said, well, you know, the people in the office don't wear them because nobody works close to each other.
But some of the, you know, I mean, the people in the plant do wear them.
But then within like a few days, the company canceled that policy.
So I called him back.
I said, hey, as of the end of this week, we don't, nobody's wearing a mask here.
He says, well, then I'm not coming out.
I mean, it seems silly to me, but I did see a lot of people who had masks on just to get through the front door.
And then once they got in, they took them off and none of the employees were giving them guff.
They were like, yeah, whatever.
I'm in here.
I'm not like coughing on anybody.
So just get.
Okay.
So that's a good point.
And that's a point I actually really wanted to make.
Here's the thing about most places that I think most people don't understand is in Japan, every single store says you need to wear a mask.
There's big signs that say you need to wear a mask.
You need to social distance.
You need to keep six feet apart from everyone.
And in Japan, because there was already a culture of it here, I'm going to say, rough estimate, 98, maybe 97% of people are wearing masks at all times, even in their stupid car by themselves.
And I look around and I'm like, whoa, dude.
I just went, I just entered Invasion of the Body Snatchers, but here's the deal.
So it says you need to wear a mask.
Okay, here's a funny one.
So we're going into a restaurant the other day.
My wife and I were going to the restaurant to have breakfast.
I don't wear a mask anywhere.
I've not worn a mask once this entire time.
I never do.
I won't.
I refuse to.
I'm a stubborn old man.
I will not comply.
Right.
F you, I won't do what you're telling me.
My wife knows that it's all just a scam, that it's all not what it's being presented as.
But that said, because she's Japanese, and this is the reason that most Japanese are wearing the masks, is they don't want to be the one who's not wearing the mask.
And when you're supposed to, right?
So you go along here.
So it's not an individualist country.
And so she just doesn't want to make people feel weird and she doesn't want to stand out.
And she's the only one wearing the masks.
So she puts a mask on.
So there's nobody in this restaurant.
Like we're literally the only people in the restaurant in the morning.
And she starts putting the mask on.
And I just rip it off of her face, right?
I'm like, don't wear it right here.
And the receptionist is wearing a mask.
And she's like, oh, please put the mask on.
And then I'm standing there without a mask.
She's saying it to my wife.
And I'm like, do you people not see how absurd this all is?
Right.
And so my greater point was that even though it says a lot of places, it says it's mandatory, that word is actually just a suggestion in many places.
And you'll find if you're just like, I'm just going to walk in.
And like you said, Coach, if it's in your pocket anyway, right?
Yeah.
And so if let's say they start giving you trouble and you just don't want the trouble, you just put it on, right?
But a whole lot of places I think you'll find, like you just walk in and nobody says anything.
And a whole lot of other people too.
They're like, oh, I don't want to wear this thing.
I don't want to confront some person and get into an altercation with like a lot of the stuff you see on the internet is the stuff that gets pushed to the top to crazy people in the videos of this.
like I put that video of that crazy guy and everyday Joe like myself can find a little action now.
Beetlejuice to speed. Mr. Producer says oops, leave that in.
She's perfect.
Yeah.
Do you think that she deferred to you because you were guide Jin and they like give you a pass or was it sexism?
Like, you know, dude, dude, it's just, that's, that's how it is.
It's like she saw she had a mask and she was taking it off and she's like, oh, you're supposed to wear a mask.
And then it's like, yeah.
And she literally probably didn't even think that I'm not wearing a mask.
Like it's just, you know, it's just this green, this blue screen.
Yeah.
Green.
Well, it's a good segue because I wanted to ask you, since you have a front row seat to a country that a lot of our fam, our side of the aisle, are fans of the Aryans of the East, as Uncle called them.
But before we segue briefly before the break to a little bit of Japanese commentary, I want to draw attention to one other thing that you put out, almost like a mantra, which is do one thing.
And that is also tied into what we talked about last week, which was dealing with melancholy or the blues amidst civilizational collapse and all this manifest evil around us.
And the other day between the last show and this one, I was feeling a little bit not blues, but just lazy and like dissatisfied with everything.
And I was like, ah, you know what?
I got one or two things outside the house that are easily attainable to check off the list and might even be a little bit fun.
Went out, did them, and boom, felt better about myself, about everything.
So just get out there and do something.
Go for it.
Go outside and do something.
It is such a cure.
Yep.
Whatever it is, whether it's working out, whether it's eating a healthy meal if you're a crap eater or fixing something around the house, even if it's freaking vacuuming, right?
Like just do something.
Being productive is how we have evolved to feel satisfaction and get the good, healthy, positive, natural upcomies for lack of a word.
Reproductive.
That too.
Break stuff and then fix it yourself.
I got lucky before the show smasher.
I never share that on the show, really.
Me too.
Me too.
She robbed me of my vital essence.
So if I'm a little slow, that's why I should have went.
But yeah, Skull, thanks so much.
And let us, I'm curious personally.
I hope the audience is too about what, if anything, is changing in Japan in these crazy times.
Not coronavirus so much, but whether for you know, I've only been through Narita on layovers or quick flight changes.
My impression of Japan is a once great people broken down by World War II and then American occupation, and that they're either alcoholics or anime addicts or in cells or bug men working 12, 14 hours a day.
Let me know.
You don't have to talk about me like I'm not right here.
But yeah, real quick before the break, let us know what's going on on the ground there on a metal level.
So I live in a part, not small, small, but my area I live in is 120,000 people here, and there's another 250,000 people in a city close to me.
And where I live, man, people are having kids.
They're getting married really young.
They have families.
There's houses popping up everywhere, new apartment buildings popping up everywhere.
So like from where I live, everything looks awesome.
Now, differences when you go into the big city.
Black Lives Matter.
No.
No.
Like in Poland or something where you see him trying to do something.
He'd get crushed.
There was one in Tokyo when the just after the George Floyd incident thing, there was one like, and it was like 50 people and all the people online were saying, those aren't Japanese, they're Koreans.
And Koreans are, yeah, Koreans are like the Jews of Japan, of the Jews of Asia.
They come here and they get a Japanese name and they pretend to be Japanese, but they're actually Korean.
They move into Hollywood and politics and stuff.
Seriously, I'm not joking.
They actually do this.
My wife's not a fan of the Koreans.
And I've talked to other Japanese and they've said the same thing.
I'm like, wow, they sound like another certain group of cosmopolitan people that we're aware of, don't they?
So anyway, it's the big cities are more, the problem I think is just that the culture is so work driven.
And now that worked back when it was a society that wasn't dominated by consumerism.
But once you get the consumerist aspect into it, then it just all becomes about becoming putting more into something to develop more and create more.
And what you're creating is just more junk, just more stuff and more video games and TV stuff and technology and developing your smartphone and putting all these hours in.
So like Japanese people in the cities, man, they'll literally work from that, they have an hour or two commute and then they work until 10 o'clock at night sometimes and then take their hour or two coming home.
And so they don't even have the opportunity to meet another person of the opposite sex and have a family.
And if you do have a family, you're in this tiny little apartment.
So if you have more than one kid, it's almost impossible.
And then the kids raised by daycare all day.
So yeah, that aspect is really poisonous.
But once you get out of the city, which all of us should do, it becomes much better.
It becomes very nice, actually.
And, you know, I love where I'm at, man.
It's beautiful.
There's families everywhere.
My kids have tons of people to play with.
We're in a nice rural setting.
It's very wholesome where I am.
And I'm sure there's most parts of America that are rural and white are also wholesome.
It's just cities are cities are poison.
Urban centers are poison.
Oh, yeah, dude.
Urban talk about gas.
Don't hurt the, don't destroy the infrastructure in the buildings.
Just gas them all.
And then, you know, get some fans down there, clear it all out.
And then we can move in.
Or at least those of us that are urbanites can move in.
And then at least we know it's not a disgusting crap hole where you get stabbed.
Cities are a white thing.
I mean, you know, the architecture and the culture and everything, it's the cities are not the problem.
It's a race problem.
Name one city in Africa by Africans.
Right.
No, there aren't.
But look at these beautiful cities all throughout Europe.
Thousands of people.
Centers of culture and architecture and all kinds of good things.
I mean.
Yeah, true story.
It's the people in the cities.
And then it's also the overarching thing that we worship now.
Like there's a reason that beautiful buildings like were built in Rome are no longer being built.
And it's because the general society itself has a disease, right?
So it's not just, it's not even only race.
Like, look at what people put their focus on now.
It's just like materialism and social upcomies.
That's one thing that I think was pretty prescient with the Irish.
Because, you know, Newsflash, I'm Irish and I read a lot about the Irish Revolution.
One of the things that Michael Collins says is that they underwent the very negative action of removing British influence.
And after that, you're left standing there kind of with your blank in your hand, like, what do I do?
So at that point, you have the very positive action of rebuilding the Irish or Gaelic identity and nation.
And we're kind of in the same situation, right?
If we remove Jewish influence from our society, what do we do?
What are we left with?
We're left with a bunch of materialistic fat retards, and we have to take them and fix them one way or the other.
Yeah, this is actually why I push for the rural enclaves and the white no-go zones, because I think that people need to develop individual identities again from the ground up in America because we've just been so mixed together.
So like, I'll give you an example.
Italians still have their own sense of identity, right?
And often Italians wouldn't want to be lumped together with the word white because they're like, well, Anglos are white and they're not a big fan of the Anglos.
And when the statues were coming down, do you remember whose statue was protected so many of the so many so often?
And Columbus.
Yeah, Columbus.
The Columbus statues don't come down.
They stay up because the Italians will go out there in squads and they're not afraid.
Yeah, they'll hit you with a little knee breaker bat, right?
Except in Baltimore, where they've all been chased out.
Yeah, Columbus went right in the harbor.
Yeah.
Well, if there's no Italians there to protect it, then yeah, that's what's going to happen.
But where there are these enclaves of people with a strong group identity, they'll form a no-go zone and even cops won't be able to push them out.
I mean, look at how even, I know we're not fans of the Muslims here, but they go to another city in Europe and then they just band together with this group identity that's so strong that the cops won't even go there, right?
And I think this is what a model that white people need to follow.
The best example that I've found for a group of white people who've done this is Amon Bundy, and I cite it all the time because Amon Bundy has a group of people, a group of family and friends and community.
And the full force of the U.S. government came in and wanted them to get off that land and to give it to them.
And they said, no, we're not going anywhere.
And yeah, they did lose one of their family members.
But in the end, the government backed down.
And the final punishment for the Bundies was a fine.
And then the Bundies didn't pay the fine.
He didn't even pay the fine.
It's unpaid to this day.
So it shows you that this model does work.
And I think that a lot of times the things like Waco and stuff are so pushed in our face as to make people think that that's not possible and that's what'll happen.
But it's not necessarily what will happen because the Bundies prove that.
And there's another story that was shared by a friend of mine about this guy in Texas.
And I, ah, geez, I wish I remember the guy's name, but what happened was he's this old guy and he's got this big piece of land and he's got this big family and probably some friends living there too.
And they're completely self-sufficient.
They don't need to leave the land.
They've got their own water source.
They've got their own food.
They're growing their own food.
They've got their own cattle and animals for protein sources and chickens and all that, right?
So this guy got into an altercation with a police officer and he bit the cop, right?
And he ran off.
He bit the cop and he ran off and the cops were chasing him and they were trying to come on the property to arrest him.
And he was like, nah, you're not coming on my property.
And they had guns and rifles out.
And the cops, they had a standoff and the cops finally backed down.
Well, 14 years later, this guy is still considered a fugitive and he's there on that property to this day.
Wow.
And yeah, right.
And the cops have never done anything.
There's this great news.
I'll find it and share it with them with you later.
Yeah, coach.
And it's a cool story.
And you can counter something and say, oh, well, he's a prisoner of his own property, blah, But at the same time, it's like, well, okay, but he's a microcosm of what's possible if people of like mind get together and all form a community together.
And the more people there are like this, the more possible that becomes.
Mr. Producer, did you get the vast right drop gone yet?
Putting you on the spot.
We got to get one.
Right.
Smasher, you just do it every time.
That's right.
That's right.
Yeah, we don't need no recorded bit.
You just do it when it's appropriate.
No, that's literally my job on the show.
I have no content.
I can't read.
I can't write.
I can't think.
I can just scream.
I asked Smasher before the show.
I was like, hey, buddy, you got anything on the front burner?
He's like, no, I'm good.
Just going to do my thing.
The Irish Longshanks voice.
Oh, by the way, that reminds me.
Longshanks, I put out in the listeners group today.
If anybody had a question for you, Longshanks did have one, and he wrote, let me pull it up here.
Why are you gay, Skull?
Godim.
What was that?
See, I thought it was an original.
I know it wasn't original, but when I said that before the show, I didn't know that that actually came from Longshanks.
A lot of people have this question on their minds, I guess.
I actually, real quick.
Burning the question.
We're way over time.
And bless Mr. Producer, leave this in, please, this time, because I want the audience to know that my DSL is bombed out.
Not once, not twice, but three times during this first hour.
So thank you.
Yeah, I know.
Yeah, breaking out my violin.
But, Smasher, what's the name of the pro-white dad podcast that has the old guy and the young whipper snapper and the middlebrow host?
Full house.
Full house of these nuts.
Godim.
No, I don't know.
I just wanted to work it in somehow.
All right.
We are over time and we're on Skull's precious time.
So let's take it to the break.
MP, thank you very much for keeping the lights on this rambling train rolling on.
In honor of our returned guest this week, please take us out to the song I should have played the first time he came on Full House in June 2019.
You, dear audience, all thought that AlphaVille was a one-hit wonder with Forever Young.
Oh, no, no, no.
This is what I'm declaring Alt Skull's theme song.
It's big in Japan.
Don't go anywhere or we'll start really cursing in the second half.
I had no illusions that I'd ever find the venomous summer seed flaves in your eyes.
You did what you did to me.
Now it's history I see.
And might come back on the road again.
Things will happen while they can.
I will wait upon my mind tonight.
It's easy when you're big in Japan.
Oh, yeah, bigger Japan tonight, bigger Japan.
It's hidden, big Japan.
The eastern seats so blue.
Bigger Japan.
All right, pray that I sleep by your side.
Thinks the reason why you're back in Japan.
Oh, yeah, bigger Japan.
New on my naked skin, dancing silent to strange illuminated mannequins.
So I stay here at the zoo.
I should like out and change my point of view.
I've arrived.
You did what you did to me.
Now it's history all happen while they can.
I've been waiting for my mind tonight.
It's easy when you're big in Japan.
I want you bigger Japan tonight, bigger Japan.
The eastern seats so blue.
Bigger Japan.
All right, pray that I sleep by your side.
Things are easy when you're back in Japan.
I want you bigger than tonight.
Bigger Japan.
Through the eastern seats so blue.
Bigger Japan.
All right, prayer.
I sleep by your side.
Things are easy when you're back in Japan.
I want you bigger Japan.
I want you bigger than tonight.
Big in Japan.
Be tight, bigger Japan.
The eastern seas so blue.
Bigger Japan.
All right, babe.
I sleep by your side.
Thinks a reason when you're back in Japan.
I want you bigger than Japan And welcome back to episode 55 of Full House Alt Skull Redo Redux Special Edition.
I had two cups of black coffee and a truly during that first hour, a little bit before it.
I don't know if that's like a bougie for Loco.
But did you shotgun it?
No, I only shotgun things when you were around, Knucklehead.
There we go.
Oh, boy.
Wheels are falling off in the second hour already.
But in all seriousness, thank you, Skull, for bringing the heat, bringing the energy.
As always, would expect nothing less.
Regretfully, we have no new life that I'm aware of.
I know of some pregnancies, but we're not going to talk about them.
If you guys know of any, have at it.
But no recent births this week if we missed you.
We have several in our area here, but I don't have permission to put them out there.
So that's right.
I'll just mention we do, you know, it's ongoing.
I've got a new life.
James also.
Hey, there you go.
Yeah, he had his second, right?
Yeah, his first son, second kid.
And his wife, poor thing, had to wear a mask the entire freaking time.
No.
Yeah.
During the delivery?
Yeah.
And the nurses had the audacity of correcting her because the mask would slip off because, you know, she's in freaking labor.
It would slip down under her notes and the nurses would take the time to correct her and go, you know, that the mask needs to be above your nose.
Jesus.
Yeah, that's rage fuel.
Like, seriously, imperiling the children, the child without oxygen.
Well, once again, just think about the absurdity of it.
They could have just tested her beforehand.
Right.
Like, well, it's a controlled room, a very clean room.
Yeah.
So, like, what's the risk here?
God.
Like, get back to wiping the crap that is coming out of my ripped butthole.
Right.
Shut the hell up about my damn mask.
Oh, man.
All right.
Congratulations, also.
I assume that that's safe to share, Smasher, but is that public information?
But it is now.
I got it publicly.
I'll say I got it publicly.
Okay, good.
Just checking.
All right.
And what was the other thing?
Oh, yeah.
I wanted to just mention real quickly from the first half conversation that our pal Radcap shared some interesting commentary.
We were talking about looking out for our own people and creating enclaves.
And he shared some interesting commentary from either a Casa Pound member or a fan who said that we need to focus more on ourselves and a little bit less on the enemy who we all know, we all know who they are.
And yeah, there was some pushback.
Obviously, Italy is different than America and Casa Pound is one thing and what we're doing is another, but it was food for thought.
I don't think there's any harm in calling attention to our enemies and combating them lawfully and virtuously.
But at the same time, good reminder that we do have to perhaps be a little bit kinder and more inclusive of our own people and not worry so much about the other.
Could I make a point?
Yeah, please, Skull.
Yeah, regarding that, one of the things that I, because, you know, when I came into this thing and discovered the people who were behind much of the destruction of this world, I was very angry and spent a lot of time pointing out their crimes.
But one of the things that, you know, people get stuck sometimes and they don't grow.
They don't continue to grow.
And I always have been the kind of person that no matter what the truth turned out to be, if I understood it, I wasn't going to shy away from it.
And, you know, that's how I came into this thing in the first place, too.
Like, I could have just been like, oh, you know, it's the Democrats is where some people are, right?
Right.
And then it's, it's the Jews.
And then you have to go beyond that, though, and understand that if, let's say, all the white people in the world stopped watching porn.
We all know that all the white people in the world aren't going to stop doing anything, but stopped watching porn, stopped taking Jewish, stopped watching TV and being influenced by those sorts of things or giving money to Jewish businesses or all of the things that all of the like what they do is they tempt, right?
We have to take it.
And so if we work on ourselves and refuse to watch pornography, refuse to give money to those movies that are promoting the destruction of our people and just starve them, then they don't have any real power over us.
Now, obviously, that's not going to happen at a mass scale, as we've seen as we've been discussing, but you should try to make that happen in your community.
And you certainly should make that a top priority in your life that you don't contribute to the system and you don't contribute to the people who want you dead.
For sure.
Amen.
Yep.
Stop paying your taxes.
Well, that's probably not the best idea.
Hey, and when careful with that one.
When Biden, yeah, we know guys who have gotten up.
Smash's worst Fed post yet.
Yeah, right.
When Biden wins and Kamala is pushing the black reparations project for something like $8 quadrillion dollars, that is going to be a real rubber meets the road.
She only says that because black people can't count.
Yeah.
16 quadrillion keys.
Yeah.
It's going to be going out.
Yeah.
But seriously, if white people take reparations on the chin, especially what about white immigrants who came here like within the past two, three, four decades and had absolutely nothing to do with the legacy of slavery and Jim Crow.
And they're like, what the heck?
Like, why do I got to pay into this?
Reparations for repatriation.
That's it.
That's the agreement.
If we pay reparations, you get the hell out of here.
E-Dair had a pretty edgy article about that.
Like, yeah, we'll do exactly that.
We'll pay it to go back to the motherland.
Marcus Garvey, greatest living African American ever.
I have that sticker on my guitar, Reparations for Repatriation.
It says that exactly.
And it's in the color scheme, like the red, it goes from like red, yellow to green.
Like African Bambada.
You still have the Trump sticker on there as a legacy.
Wasn't there one of those African countries recently that was trying to get people, get African Americans to go back to Africa?
I think they have a, yeah, in Ghana, they have a movement like that.
I like what the Sven Laden channel had on that.
Like, hey, why don't you show these racists?
I mean, since the blacks invented everything and they're so important to this economy, why don't they show the stupid racists and all leave and go back to Africa?
Yeah.
I like that one.
Good idea.
Yeah.
People listening probably know about Liberia, but look into Liberia and how that worked out.
Abe Lincoln quotes, there's a long, yeah, there's a long history of this being talked about seriously and moved toward.
And lo and behold, Evil Whitey is more useful as a source of Gibbs and jobs and all the rest of it than he is a scourge as they claim us to be.
We got to send the blacks back so that I can keep taking money from rich people.
Right.
All right.
We'll go with that.
All right.
Let's pivot to Sam, who's got one in the hopper.
And I have no idea what's coming.
So we're just, yeah, well, I'm looking forward to it.
I wanted to dovetail with the little bit of the first hour talking about the COVID-19.
I know, in one sense, like we can hardly stand to hear anything more about it, but I just want to give one little bit of a good take on it.
And this is perhaps for those prayerful members of the listenership.
We have a certain amount of people.
We talk about spiritual values and Christian things and like that, but perhaps anybody will appreciate this.
So I took this job a few years ago and a little less than three years ago.
I've been taking a certain route into this industrial environment.
And I noticed after taking a certain route for a while that I was passing the strip club every day.
And so I use my time in the car a lot of times for prayerful things.
And so every time I would drive by this place, I would call down the wrath of Saints Peter and Paul on this place to get it shut down.
And so after this COVID-19 thing started, after a while, I noticed the place is shut down.
And the states are paying out.
Seeing how it works out.
Man, there's so many things that work out like that.
You just don't realize how it's going to work out.
Like you think you're, you know, I'm praying on this place waiting for the walls to like fall in on itself.
But, you know, there's other ways of shutting the place down too.
So that place is shut down.
I have two little stories that are very closely related to that.
The first one is the government in Japan didn't shut down any business mandatorily except for one category.
And do you guys know what that category was?
Massage parlors?
I don't know.
No, even the massage parlors, they shut down voluntarily pachinko parlors.
Oh, like gambling.
Yeah, gambling.
And I was like, okay, I have no problem with that whatsoever.
And then the other story is you were talking about praying and trusting in God.
And also, I think the greatest thing that you can do is when you have a situation like this, you have to understand that as much good is always offered.
Like whenever the system presents you with this great evil, they're going to have to make an equal amount of good available as well.
And it's our job as positive fathers and leaders of men to recognize that and to look at it as an opportunity for us to grow and to get something out of this.
And so what happened with us is they there were cases, and Jesus, I could go into a great sidebar about this, but I won't.
But some cases appeared in my town that we live in.
So everything shut down.
And was it a name that you recognized?
No, of course not.
It wasn't.
Some guy came from out of nowhere.
Some guy came from out of nowhere that nobody knew him.
I'm throwing Tinder on the fire that I don't know.
Oh, Jesus, dude.
No, that's what I'm saying.
He's not going to be able to do that.
I could talk him.
He's loud.
Okay.
Okay.
I'll back up.
All right.
I'm going to only talk about the thing that I was going to talk about.
All right.
So I had to.
Okay.
So I had to shut my school down voluntarily because nobody would have come.
And so it's like, what's the point?
I'm just going to lose all this money.
So I shut my school down and then we can make up the classes later on.
So because we're shut down and everything else is shut down, there's nothing to do.
Right.
And so we're looking and our kids are home.
And so we're going stir crazy.
We're looking for things to do.
So we decide my wife finds this thing where there's these rhododendron flowers in this temple that's up the street from us has like 30,000 rhododendron bushes or trees or whatever.
They are really pretty, like pink and blue flowers.
And the whole bush blooms with them.
I think I have a bush.
I think I have a rhododendron bush.
Yeah, they're like kind of squat and ground.
They're really pretty.
Yeah, I don't know crap about them.
Yeah, I don't know about landscaping in general, to be honest.
Yeah, this is the extent of my knowledge of it.
But it was something to do.
Yeah, it was something to do, and we never would have done it before.
That's D.
We wouldn't have done it except for we didn't have anything else to do.
Everything else is shut down.
So we decided to drive up the street to this thing.
And then for some reason, my eyes flicked to the left for a millisecond.
And deep, deep in this, not on the road, but in a side street.
So you'd have to look down the street and sort of in.
I saw a first sale sign.
And I was like, okay, I'm making a U-turn.
Made a U-turn.
I go look.
And then found the property that I'm in right now that I'm just about to move into.
And the property was everything that I wanted.
I needed enough land to grow food.
I needed it to be rural.
It ended up being in the same school district my kids are already in.
And then attached to the property, three minutes from it, there's this massive flat forest with all these trees.
And there's a natural park in there.
Nobody's ever there.
There's a river attached to it.
There's all these waterfalls.
There's one part where with a waterfall that's got a swimming area in it.
I mean, it's not Mononoke in your backyard.
Yeah.
Dude, it's like the My Neighbor Totoro world, right?
And then it's got a mountain attached to that.
It's got this massive hiking trail.
There's all these dams and reservoirs in it.
It's just like it's paradise, man.
And I never would have found it if I hadn't been praying.
So, I mean, you got to look for the good in the things.
Yeah.
You deserve it.
You earned it.
Real quick, before we go back to Sam's story, I can't remember.
You were raised Catholic and you still are Catholic skull, or are you non-denominational?
Yeah, I've always been Christian.
No, I've always been Catholic.
Okay.
Very good.
Since I was six years old and took first Holy Communion.
Second to it.
Yeah, I respect Catholics who stay with the faith despite the perversion of it and the corruption and the degradation are a little like white people like us who stick with the white race despite our fallen state.
There is a little bit of parallel there to keep in mind.
So hats off.
All right, Sam, lay it on us.
Well, and again, I was thinking a little bit like what we were talking about last show: how these, especially some of these videos where you see the gleeful cruelty of these devils attacking people, hurting people, doing evil things.
And we talked just a little bit about be careful of showing your wife and your children these things too much because they maybe can't, they're not equipped to deal with it.
And then also, I've been faced with the situation of dealing in working in the plant where some people have actually confided to me how that they were upset by these things.
And they weren't being very specific, but whether the COVID-19, all the Negro rioting, all this stuff, that they were upset, you know, and people are upset by it.
And I was thinking about how we as white men are especially equipped to be able to lead and to be able to guide people to and even comfort people in a way or two to take a good direction.
I don't know what I'm trying to say there, but you know, you have to blackpill them and turn them into wignats.
Yeah.
Listen to Nick Cannon.
We're all barbarians who had to suffer in the wastelands of Northern Europe.
I don't know if you guys know.
We have a unique ability, I believe, to be able to take control of a situation and put things the right way.
And it made me think of a story a few years ago that I thought I would share just to kind of illustrate the type of person that I'm trying to be.
And I, you know, got to be careful how I tell the story.
So I'm not giving enough detail for anyone to go track me down, unfortunately.
But so I'll, I'll do my best.
But this is some years ago.
It wasn't decades ago, and it wasn't yesterday or last year.
So just, you know, it was a few years ago.
Let's put it that way.
And I don't know if any of you guys ever get called for jury duty.
Got called many times, never, or, you know, I got the notice in the mail, but never had to serve.
Well, so I have been called many times on it, and I have to honestly admit that occasionally I've ignored the summons because, you know, I was busy and it is kind of like a waste of time and so forth.
I don't know if I should admit that because I think that is, they always threaten you.
The language on the notice says, you know, failure to respond is punishable by this and that.
But also I have responded at times throughout my life.
And a lot of times you respond and you're not even called or if you or if you do go to it, even though you're in the pool, you don't get assigned to a jury.
So I've gone through the whole mix.
There's been a couple of times where I was just really busy in life and I just didn't respond.
And there's been other times I've gone and not been called.
But there have been a few times that I was called and I was on a jury.
And one particular situation I was thinking about in this context of, like I say, as white men, we have a certain calling in life, really honestly.
And so I go to this, I respond and I go and I'm called and I have to show up and I'm put on the jury.
Now, as you know, this is like a real pain in the ass because you might miss days of work.
You might, you know, they give you some kind of paltry 30 bucks a day or something, which doesn't even pay for parking downtown.
And those, you know, it's like a real pain in the ass.
But this particular time, I just, I guess I was in a place and I said, okay, I'll respond this time.
Sure enough, I get called, I show up, and sure enough, I get assigned on this jury.
And it was a civil case.
And it was a case of an act.
There was an accident.
And the person injured was a black person.
And the person who caused the act.
A what?
A Negro basketball American and trying to keep it, you know, full house friendly here.
And we know what we're talking about.
And the person who caused the accident was white.
Okay.
So I get on this jury and just be the moral conundrum of the story.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Well, and so, and really, and I'm going to, I'm going to explain what the case is about, which you will take a certain racial lesson from, but it's not even the point of my story.
And don't be too detailed.
We don't know.
No, no, I'm not going to.
So already you see I've kind of masked what the exact accident was and all this.
And other than it was a black person and a white person, I'm not saying man or anything like that.
So, okay, so the facts of the case were this accident occurred over 10 years ago, approximately 10 years ago from when the case was, which was some years ago already.
And the person was now coming forward after 10 years to claim many hundreds of thousands of dollars of pain and suffering damages that the person wished to collect.
Okay.
And so the white person who had caused the accident did not deny being at fault or anything like that, but was merely saying that what the black person was after was unreasonable and not proportional to the event.
So, okay, so we're listening.
So, this black person had been in the accident while the person was in college.
And the person in college was an athlete, okay?
And after the accident, which the person was taken to the hospital in an ambulance and treated and released the same day with no other medication or anything, there was one week later, there was a follow-up office visit with the doctor.
The victim was the college athlete or the student.
Okay.
Yep.
Yep.
Black person.
And there was, so on the one week later a follow-up visit with the doctor, there was no prescription or anything beyond the emergency room visit where there was some Tylenol 3 administered.
And that was it.
So the person went on to graduate college.
And what was their occupation once graduating college, graduating college?
Street athletic trainer.
This person's making a living as an athletic trainer.
And now approximately 10 years later is coming to seek pain and suffering damages.
So it just, it doesn't sound real good, you know.
And they had physicians testifying on both sides that it was bold, whatever, you know.
And so now the one thing we were not allowed to know as the jury was, did the white person's insurance pay anything on this?
Was there, you know, there was an accident.
The person had some medical attention.
Was anything paid?
We were not allowed to know that for whatever reason.
Seems like information to me.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So now it gets into the jury.
And this is a, it was men and women on the jury.
There's maybe three white men.
There were three black people, though, a woman and two black men.
And then the rest were white, or maybe there would have been a little mix of whatever, a couple of Mexicans or something like that.
Okay, so I get in here now.
According to Kurt Doolittle, that would make it a hung jury already.
Right.
So I get in there.
And so I'm thinking to myself, okay, I'm stuck on this jury.
Now it's this case of a black person making a claim against white people.
There's blacks on the jury.
Okay, first of all, I want to make sure justice is done in this case.
And second of all, I want to get out of here on some kind of timely basis.
So we got into the jury room and they give you instructions, everything.
And they say, okay, so you got to pick a jury foreman and stuff.
So I stepped up right away.
I said, I'll be the jury foreman.
And nobody contested me or anything like that.
So I'm giving you a lesson.
Like, as a white person, this was my moment to act as a white man, right?
We'll order Popeyes for lunch.
Don't worry.
Take care of you.
So I stepped up right away and I said, I will be the jury foreman.
And it seemed like everyone else was of the sentiment that I can't believe we're stuck here doing this.
And then they were kind of happy.
In other words, they were happy that somebody stepped up and I was the white man to do it.
So I stepped up and then I said, okay, guys, I'm going to state my viewpoint and I'm going to ask each one of you to state your viewpoint.
And I said, this person has not proven their case.
They have not only been an athlete in college, they've made their living and are currently employed as an athletic trainer.
They're coming many years later asking for many hundreds of thousands of dollars for something that is there's just it's just not proved, it's just not believable.
So I don't think that we can give this person that thing now, to be fair, because I again i'm i'm looking out of the corner of my eye at the black people right, I said to be fair, this person did take a ride in an ambulance.
This person was treated in the emergency room.
This person did have to maybe take off a day of work to go to a follow-up visit.
There was the, and we're not allowed to know, did the person, was with that person compensated by insurance for their ride to the emergency room, for their treatment at the emergency room, for their follow-up visit.
We don't know that.
So let's say they were not.
Okay.
So that's fair enough.
You were inconvenienced in your day.
You had to take a ride in an ambulance, a Bamberlance, as they say.
And you went into the emergency room.
Let's say you were in pain.
You were given Tylenol 3.
You came back for a doctor's visit.
There was no prescription or further treatment given at that time.
I said, that's something.
I said, let's compensate, let's say, $1,000 for all that.
Whatever expense and inconvenience and pain and suffering, let's go $1,000 out of here.
How does that sound?
Yeah.
Yeah.
And I'm trying to think like, I want to get out of here on time.
So, so, but I'm getting prepared now for like to fight, you know.
So I go to the woman next to me.
She agrees with me.
I go to this one, that one, and I come to the black woman.
She agreed with me.
All right, good, good.
Coming around.
We're going to point you ambassador to Ghana.
And then, and then, so I'm, I'm coming, I'm coming around to the black men.
They're at the all the way coming around clockwise to my to my right.
I'm coming around and I'm, I'm ready.
I'm like, okay, there's my last hurdle.
I come to them.
I come to them.
She doesn't get anything.
They, that person didn't prove her case at all.
You know, and I'm like, I wasn't, I wasn't ready for that.
I was thinking, wow, yeah, they didn't want to give the person anything.
I said, well, and I was put in the strange position of defending my position, you know, to say, well, wait a minute, this person did take a ride in a Bamberlance and was treated.
There was a crisis of confidence at that moment.
I said, and if there was any prolongation of this event, it was because I had to argue with those two guys.
And so all my years of racism were a mistake.
Going back to the Irved Regional Show when you asked Sam if he had ever, you know, fluctuated in his beliefs.
Yeah, this is it, I guess.
This is it.
So I said, okay, so no, so now I adapted, though.
And deal, right?
Yeah, take the deal.
And then Sam was the real racist the whole time.
Yeah.
Those black people called you a cuck.
Yeah.
Yeah.
They wanted us, they wanted to know, like, could we, could we just find for the for the pain and suffering, or could we just find for the expense of the ambulance ride and the and the hospital visit?
Like, could we break it up like that and say we're not going to give for pain and suffering?
Because we don't believe that, but we're going to going to award something for the other thing.
And I said, and I said, okay, would it help you to agree if I wrote this as a note to the judge?
They and the it was.
It came down to one guy really.
He said yeah, so I said, no problem, I'll do that.
I wrote it note to the judge, I gave it to the, to the bailiff, or whatever his position is called, gave it to the judge.
That gave us the answer and I was able to settle it.
You know, but without me stepping up like that to kind of anticipate the problems and and take the, take the forefront and take the initiative to to resolve this thing, it could have gone otherwise, you know so.
So we ended up finding in a in a just way, I think, a very small, I think.
I think we awarded something like $1,200 to the person who was injured and that was acceptable to everybody and it seemed like a reasonable thing.
And I'm just coming back, I'll come back around full circle to.
The reason for my telling this story is that we, as white men, have this ability to lead and to understand the concerns of the moment or of other persons and to take, take the and in the same way, like I'm saying, I was in the position in the plant of talking to people that were upset by current events and and I and I don't know,
but I hope that I gave that same impression that don't worry, which I know it's easy to say.
That doesn't even mean anything, don't worry, but.
But, just as in so much to say is, I understand your concern.
We're going to get through this, don't give up.
Good stuff, Samen nice story and also a good reminder for everybody listening.
You are all, in theory, subject to jury duty, and I know a lot of edge posters will say this or that about serving on jury duty.
But yeah, answer those damn responses.
Uh, get a day off from work or, who knows, maybe a month or more could be famous and you could end up saving somebody's hide by being the uh, the intransigent one, insistent upon justice in a world gone mad and a country, you know, inflamed by anti-white animus.
Right yeah, all right.
Well uh, from serious to silly is how we do it here, and I want to grind the gears and pivot awkwardly to a.
We got an anonymous bit this week.
No no, navigating the collapse.
Uh, that guy's uh slacking.
Maybe he's got the blues.
No, i'm kidding, he said he'll be back next week.
He pours so much.
No no, he sent me.
He sent me a private message.
He said that he's quitting, he's done with it all he had.
You know he had.
He had a good talk with uh, a guy named Chuck and he's moved completely.
Yeah oh yeah Chuck, and uh no, he's.
He's busy at the next, uh Autonomous Zone helping support black transgender, Jewish voices yeah yeah, or whoever whoever is submitting those bits for navigating the collapse.
Uh, he really poured his heart and soul into the last one.
We got a bunch of feedback from the audience saying, oh man, that was good.
So uh, thank you buddy, slack next week and you're out of the will.
So we're going, we don't, we don't age anyway.
We got uh, an anonymous bit here that none of us have heard.
We have no idea what's coming.
That's how we do it here at the FULL House, we climb blind, but we do know the name of it.
As I scramble here uh oh yeah, I see it here.
All right, this is called.
I have no idea what this means.
It's the fresh prints of no air.
Hit it, mr producer Now, this is a story all about how America was burned down to the ground.
I'd like to take a minute, get away from the scare, tell you how to work before you die from having no air.
Moved to Minneapolis, where it was cool to be black and ever followed white schools, but a catchery of cops who were trying to do good.
Started making trouble for the big stood.
Took a knee to the neck, they afraid got scared.
He said, Police can no longer beat niggas and cut off their air.
George Whistle put some fact, and when it came near, it had a pipe full of math and SARS everywhere.
If anything, he thought hella screws pretty rare.
But says, she forget it.
Now he's dead from nowhere.
And came Buddhas and rioters from all around.
And the antifur group burned it all to the ground.
They took over the nation.
Donald Trump doesn't care.
Very good.
I like how you work Bix nude into that ramp there.
We're going to have to put that up on BitChute with some closed captions.
But thank you, buddy.
That was great.
Very good parody.
I mean, I totally disapprove of that.
I think that's inflammatory and inappropriate given the state of the country right now.
But I laughed.
I think cops should just be allowed to indiscriminately kneel on they're showing the body cam footage only by appointment in the courthouse, right?
You have to come and not have a camera and just like look through the peephole to see it.
Yeah.
God.
I don't know.
Yeah.
Still going on.
I guess the riots, you know, the riots kind of burned out right now.
They just target statues here and there.
And they're off.
No, the riots are still happening.
They are 100% still happening.
They're just not reporting on it.
Really?
Yeah.
I mean, I guess DHS is going in to clean out Portland tonight.
But the last thing I saw that pissed me off was the Columbus statue going in the.
Yeah, no, dude, it's still happening.
And like autonomous, like broke autonomous zone, woke lawless zone.
Like Minneapolis, last I heard was literally just this crap hole.
People dying, like gang warfare, the whole shebang.
Excellent.
I had a little theory about that.
You guys want to hear it?
Go for it.
So it was this autonomous zone, and it was all over the news.
It was pushed in our faces by the media.
And everybody knew about it.
It was a news story, right?
And what does that mean?
It means they want it to be there, right?
If anything is pushed to the front and then all the news stories every day, they want you to hear about it.
And what I said immediately about it was that it's all on purpose.
Like the whole thing is being allowed on purpose, probably orchestrated by somebody up there who knows who it is.
But either way, it would be a very easy thing to shout this so-called autonomous zone, right?
Like the only thing you would have to do to shut the entire thing down would be just turn off the power and water.
Period.
Done.
Turn off the power and water.
They're done.
They don't have any ability to themselves to drink.
And all that was allowed to happen.
And then it was pushed way up to the front, right?
And it was, even though they showed that black guy, what was his name?
Was that the leader guy's name?
It doesn't matter.
That guy.
Raz.
Raz.
I was going to say it rhymed with Chaz.
At least the way they said it.
Chaz.
Raz.
Even though they showed him, like, the main ones were antifa, right?
And I mean, we all know that a lot of Antifa are not exactly white.
They're, you know, they're echo, echo, echo, white.
But frankly, DC stuff, yeah, go ahead.
Fellow whites.
Yeah, but the majority of people think that Antifa are mainly white.
So what did they do?
They showed this totally failed, completely inept white no-go zone that they later dismantled.
And there were people getting killed in it, and it was chaos.
And all videos being released about, oh, was it, there was some car that was doing donuts and stuff, and then they shot it up, and there were people getting their asses kicked.
And so it was just a mess, right?
And what I get is that implant in normal white people.
It's like, oh, yeah, we can't do that.
We can't form our own autonomous zone.
We can't break away from society and form our own enclave and take care of one another and protect one another and keep other people out that we don't want to keep out.
That idea that was implanted, I think.
And I think that was honestly the, you guys know I'm a little bit more conspiratorial minded, but I think that's the reason that that was pushed to the front so hard.
My gut reaction is that that's a stretch.
I mean, it's a little bit like it reminded me of Occupy Wall Street and Occupy DC.
I remember that I worked downtown DC when they occupied Freedom Plaza for a month or two.
And I always saw it as like allowing a little bit of a pressure release valve.
Go ahead, have your like street orgy of drugs and sex intents and pooping on street corners.
And then eventually you burn yourself.
You burn yourself out.
But no, I mean, is there a like, I didn't, I mean, do you think Normies took that message that autonomous zones would not be good for us?
You know, Normies are retarded.
Yeah.
More like white people who are thinking about breaking away from the system is more who I was suggesting.
Normies saw it and they were like, I just, I, right.
I can't, I can't believe this is happening.
Law and order.
Law and order.
Right.
Like Normie's unironically retweeted the law and order tweet.
Yeah, Normies are the people like wearing masks voluntarily.
So I'm not talking about them at all.
Yeah.
Well, I mean, as we go to tape tonight, the latest breaking news on Telegram was that DHS and Chad Wolf were, they were sending in the dogs to clean it up, like to save the city from Antifa or something like that.
And my first reaction was, that's ludicrous.
Saving Portland from radical left-wing commie antifa Jews is like trying to save Tel Aviv from Israelis.
There'd be nothing left.
Yeah.
I mean, that sounds like a good idea.
Let's say still a bee from Israelis.
Yeah.
Some people who would like to get that territory back.
But yeah, I visited Portland sometime in the aughts with a like mid-level foreign official.
And even back then, like on street corners in what, I mean, Portland on its face is an attractive city with Mount Hood, I think it is off in the distance, Portland River and all the rest of it.
And there's these black, I guess they were more goth than Antifa back then, but just these black clad, pale, dyed hair, drugged out people literally hogging significant street corners in the downtown of this beautiful city.
And this, he was from Central Asia and he just and his English wasn't that good.
And he just looked at me and he like remembered his Pepsi programming from whatever.
And he's like, the next generation.
And he was a sardonic commentary on America.
And of course, me being them trying to, oh, no, don't worry about it.
You know, all that stuff.
Yeah.
We'll see.
I visited Portland in the late 96.
Yeah, 96, it would have been.
We took a road trip across the western United States.
We did that twice.
And it was such a beautiful, God, the Pacific Northwest is just the most beautiful area I've ever seen in my entire life.
And I've been a lot of places in this world.
It's such a shame that so many foul, vile people have occupied that.
Even back then, my friends were all commies.
They weren't commies.
They were lefties back then.
They became full-blown commies after Donald Trump got elected, but because their NPC MK Ultra Mind programming switch got flipped, I guess.
And even then, it was just full of hippie, dirty people with dreadlocks and guys who didn't have a house, but they had two dollars and didn't wear shorts at the time and had drum circles and stuff.
Even back then, it was like, oh, the smell of audio.
And I can't even imagine what it's like now.
Go ahead.
So have you ever been to Multnomah Falls?
Multnomah Falls is really beautiful.
I remember going there again.
It was in the 90s.
I went there in the Redwood Forest, which is the most amazing thing ever.
We drove up Highway 1, up north, and we went all the way to Tacoma at a buddy's house that had these massive trees in his backyard.
And he had this tree house.
It was like 100 feet up, and he just climbs it.
He just climbs it.
And it's just this platform up there.
I'm like, I'm not going up there, man.
It was scary.
And then a bald eagle swoops by as we're looking up at him.
And I was just like, wow, man, this is America.
Yeah.
Great book I read back in the day about some hearty lumberjack sons, you know, from the University of Washington up there going over to compete in the crew Olympics in the 36 Berlin Olympics and winning.
I think they won the gold medal, just these sort of salt of the earth white people from hard scrapple families.
And, you know, hard men create good times and good times create soft men.
And that's evident in spades in the Pacific Northwest.
Mr. Producer said the autonomous zone was always going to eventually be put down by the police.
All right.
I agree with him there.
So it was always going to be a win in the end as long as people weren't being killed, which happened.
So they had to shut it down.
Yeah, I agree with that.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Did the same thing with Occupy and the rest of it.
All right.
We are at people died Occupy Wall Street.
I mean, besides from like overdoses?
There were rapes for sure.
Remember reading about that.
Yeah, dude.
And in DC.
I don't remember anything about.
I was not.
Oh, shit.
This brought the show to a screeching halt.
That's it.
Good night, everybody.
Hello, for coming.
That's cool.
Go ahead, smash your pull together.
Oh, God.
No, I was just going to say that I was not like, I remember Occupy Wall Street, but I paid no attention to it.
So like, you know, the people that were politicized back then, or at least Americanly, I made that up politicized back then and paid attention to it.
I can't relate to.
I was paying attention to other things.
So, you know, I remember it happening, but I don't remember it happening, so to speak.
Yeah, I remember that.
I mean, it's just so empty because it's not directed at what the real problem is.
The real problem is Jews.
So until you're going to address that, it's just stupid to be protesting it or, you know, the corruption of it or whatever is your thing.
I mean, you got to go to the root of the problem.
All rich people are Jews, but not all Jews are rich people.
All right, go with that.
Yeah, you know, I worked at DC for many years, and I remember seeing it, and I was not sophisticated enough back then.
Whatever they were for, I was against.
It was just purely reactionary without a ton of critical thoughts.
So they had these like anti-drone.
It was a rogues gallery of just scoundrels and scumbags and commies and hippies and leftists.
Some of them, I assume, were good people.
I remember getting to get one pay Trump.
I remember seeing one guy with this big, like, no more drone killings.
And I was like, oh, if you don't like drones, then I'm all for drone killings, right?
Well, no, I'm all for drone killings, as long as we're in control of the government.
Yeah, virtuously.
I mean, that's going to have to be the way we do it.
I mean, all right.
I don't think the best buy drones support that in my mind.
Skull, this one is quick and I think value add for the hearty listeners sticking with us in the second half.
You got two sons.
I assume that they're like you and rough and tumble.
What are some of your favorite activities, real quick, that you like to do with them that the audience might be able to pick something up aside from wrestling and the standard stuff?
We have a punching bag and I like doing bag exercises with them.
And I play chess with my oldest.
I suck at chess.
I'm not good at it at all, but he picked it up right away.
He's got this crazy brain on him for stuff.
I just taught him the moves once and he knew how to play immediately.
And he even beat me once because I was not paying attention.
He actually beat me.
I take the kids out and do gardening with them.
My youngest is really into it.
The oldest, it's really hard to keep him outside with us.
We've been doing bicycling together.
I bought a bike recently so we could all do it and just go places.
And then whenever we have vacations, almost inevitably we go camping.
We're going camping next week and going to set the tent up.
I'm going to try and start my first fire without my fire starter kit that I got for Christmas, for myself for Christmas this year.
We'll see how well I do.
It's one of those, what are they called?
One of those stick things.
I forgot what the name is.
Ferrod.
Farrow Rod.
That's it.
Yeah.
I got my knife.
I got my, what is it, SRK?
And I'm going to try and feather the wood and then use the Ferro Rod to start the fire.
So teaching them stuff like that is fun too.
And they love it.
The other day, I don't remember where it was.
Was it on Full House Telegram?
But someone was saying that when kids get older or when kids grow into adults and they're asked about their childhood, they never ever remember fondly memories of watching TV or playing video games or anything like that.
It was always actual quality time that was spent with their parents and with their family doing things and going outside and getting dirty and wrestling around.
Or even my mom said her fondest memory of her grandparents is they used to pray the rosary out on the front porch.
And she has such an awesome memory of that.
And that's one of her favorite memories of her childhood.
She prayed a rosary with her grandparents and stuff, right?
And so it's really important to take time to do those things and don't let the moments.
I shared a series of photographs on my Telegram channel.
And it was old people being asked.
The question was asked in a weird way, but you could tell that the way they were answering was the thing that they regretted not doing in their life.
And one of them, I won't lie, man, I got a little emotional reading it.
It was some, this old guy said, I wish I had spent more time traveling with my dad, but we were just too busy.
And he was 89 years old.
And I was just like, oh, man, that one hurts.
And I never want my kids to grow up to say things like that and to have regrets because, you know, I was just too busy doing this or that to have time.
So you guys keep that in mind.
You guys means the audience.
I know you guys know.
No, it's a good reminder.
The years fly by.
And if you don't stop and make them count, not to quote Ferris Bueller, you know, that they will pass you by.
I was just looking at my oldest son the other day and man, he's getting tall and gangly.
He's not even near teenage years already, but he's looking like a real boy, Pinocchio style.
Well, I can only say this is that it's just our human nature.
No matter what you do, you will always say, what could I have done better?
So do your best, you know, and give yourself a little slack that you're only human, but balance it with what Skull was just saying.
Sam, you have fondest memory from childhood?
Oh, I know I'm putting you on the spot.
Smasher.
Yeah, sure.
You know, my grandparents had some property downstate that we would go to and we would spend maybe a few weeks there in the summertime.
And it was a tiny little town where, you know, there was an outhouse.
There was not indoor plumbing.
And, you know, the activities were very simplified from what we would otherwise have.
There was no TV reception, for instance.
And so we would go fishing or we would go look at the livestock that was in the adjacent property and we would go swimming and things like that.
So those are good memories.
Amen.
Smasher, how about you?
No.
All right.
Next question.
Nothing comfy here.
Nothing comfy here.
Nothing just Irish.
Squalid.
I've got.
Go ahead.
Skull.
No, Smasher.
All right.
We'll give him one more chance.
Yeah.
No, yeah, no.
You used to drink a lot of whiskey as a child, I'm thinking.
Well, we didn't call it whiskey.
We called it Ishkabaha.
No, but it's Duolingo.
Yeah.
No.
Duolingo didn't teach me that.
My grandfather did.
And that's my comfy memory is nothing specific, but just comfy times with the family.
A bunch of drunk Irish dudes.
My dad fought my cousin one time and threw him into the Christmas tree.
And my grandmother absolutely had a shit.
It was wonderful.
Go ahead, Scully.
And this is why Smasher doesn't have Comfy Corner.
My dad, or I grew up in rural, very, very, very rural Texas.
And we had horses and we had one cow and dogs.
And we lived in a trailer with a big propane tank in the middle of nowhere.
And it was the best time of my life, man.
And when I grew up, I just we moved to the suburbs when I was 10.
And after I grew up, I just thought the best times of my entire life were before then when we were in the middle of nowhere out in nature with the family and my dad teaching me how to ride a horse.
I remember one time I was in a, my dad was teaching me to ride.
I was four years old and we had a male horse and some little female Shetland pony got it led into the pen and that horse, my horse, just took out, took off out from under me.
And it was like a cartoon, you know, where something goes and then you look around in the air before gravity gets you and then boom.
And I started crying.
And my dad made me get back on the horse.
He's like, if you fall off the horse, you got to get back on.
It was this total, absolute like cliche metaphor, but it was in reality.
And he made me get back on the horse and I learned to ride from that.
It's like that, that was such a much better memory than any of the stupid video games I watched or the movies I went to or anything like that.
So, I mean, obviously, not everyone has the opportunity to do that, but you do things like that.
You work toward that.
Listening back to the Dark Enlightenment episode last week, and I did a little bit of defense of the suburbs, and I was thinking about, you know, mud bike rides to my friend's house and stickball in the streets, which those are real fond memories and nice things for kids to be able to do.
But it's also something like that is not cause or good enough reason for you to live in a suburb and racking my memory for the things that really lit a spark in my brain, things that we did growing up.
And it was always like the first time, I remember the first time we went to the beach with our big extended Irish Polish Catholic family and having all the cousins there, right?
And the first time that we went to a campground and the first time that we went there.
So doing new things, obviously we're all going to go back to places that serve us well on vacation or to visit family.
And there's nothing wrong with that.
But getting out and doing new things and adventuring, I think is something that kids innately sense.
Oh, we've never been here before.
This is an adventure.
Well, this is right.
You just stirred something within the cold heart of Smasher.
At least as long as it wasn't in your loins.
That comes later.
But no, this is something that I've been thinking about a lot, mostly because I played video games for like 20 minutes today, and it was great.
But it's a game called City Skylines and it's all about city planning.
And you have to unlock streets with sidewalks.
And that got me thinking back to my childhood.
I grew up in a natural town, a real town with a town center where all the shopping and churches and schools were located.
Right.
And so when I was in the Army in Germany, there were sidewalks everywhere.
It was great, walkable, wonderful.
And then when I got to North Carolina at Fort Bragg, there's a hunt, you know, there's 100,000 people at Fort Bragg.
It's a very populous area because there are people that live all around it that aren't in the military or aren't civilians working for the army.
But we lived in a pretty decent neighborhood and there are no sidewalks.
And I complained about that all the time.
And I'm not, you know, I'm not a dude that doesn't have a driver's license.
I love driving.
I like working on cars.
But, you know, it is kind of disturbing to be somewhere and be like, there's no trees.
There's no sidewalks.
There's no streetlights.
Like, am I even in a real neighborhood?
And, you know, so, you know, if I was a 12 or 13-year-old kid, I couldn't realistically expect to ride my bike 20 minutes to a buddy's house because it just wouldn't be safe.
It's nothing but suburb, highway, suburb, highway, which I just kind of goes back to what we talked about a little bit last week.
But it's really disturbing.
It's weird and unnatural.
Because again, you know, like I said, I've been thinking back to my childhood and I rode my bike everywhere.
Like you were talking about riding bikes to your friend's house.
My parents would not give me a ride anywhere.
If it took me two hours to bike somewhere, it took me two hours, even though it was only maybe a 15-minute car ride.
Yeah.
You know, I was riding my bike, and we didn't have cell phones.
Pagers were kind of meh.
Nobody really had them yet.
You know, my parents just expected me to give them a call whenever I got to whatever friend's house we were going to stay at for the longest amount of time.
Yep.
No, yeah.
There's suburbs that are interconnected where you could just easily ride your bike across many towns.
And then I know people who live in those not gated, but virtually gated subdivisions where it's just like it's your subdivision and then a state highway and you're stuck in there and it's absolutely unnatural.
And when I was a kid, I did once find a pager on the ground and I wore it in my fifth pocket in my jeans just to have a bad pain.
Bridge, bridge.
Yeah.
All right.
We are at two hours, Mr. Producer, has let us know.
And we could keep going, but we're going to respect Skull's time and we got to go to sleep.
He's got work to do.
So, Skull, we'll start with you.
Thank you so much, buddy.
Always a pleasure.
Always a nice job that you do.
Yeah, thanks.
Thanks, Coach, for having me on.
And thanks to all you guys.
I always have a great time out here.
It's a good atmosphere, great environment.
It's always fun.
I appreciate it.
Thanks, brother.
Our pleasure.
Oh, yeah.
Smasher.
Hey.
Hey, what's up?
Nothing.
Nothing.
I'm having a good time.
We should keep going.
We'll do a third hour.
No, I got stuff to do tomorrow.
I would love.
I actually would love to do it.
I'm feeling good.
Yeah.
MP is like, do it on your own, Fick.
No, it was a great.
I think it was a good episode.
I thought it was comfy.
Yeah.
Smasher gets the prize for that joke of the night, too.
All right.
And Sam, as always, thank you, sir.
Thank you, coach.
And great show.
Good discussion.
Very fun.
Thank you.
Good job, Skull.
Let me know if there's any links you guys want me to put in the show notes.
But with that, Full House episode 55 was recorded on, at least here, it was a hot, humid, and stormy July 16th.
Now it's July 17th.
God knows what date it is in Japan, maybe July 18th or 19th.
Time travel makes you gay.
That dateline, that dateline be messing me up.
Follow us on Telegram at ProWhiteFam.
Follow Skull on Telegram at altskull.
T.M.E. slash altskull.
We'll put it in the show notes.
And we are on BitShoot, bitshoot.com/slash channel slash fullhouse.
Check out our site, full-house.com.
I will get Sam's next chapter of his autobiography up tomorrow, which is Friday.
And the YouTube, of course, is youtube.com/slash C slash fullhouse.
And drop us a line at fullhouse show at protonmail.com to let me know what kind of dog I should actually get.
No, seriously, feel free to do that thing.
So to all white families with kids still under the roof, be sure to get out and enjoy the rest of the summer while it's still in its prime.
Because before you know it, it will be fall and back to school in one manner or another.
And to close us out this week, I am turning the DJ booth over to Sam.
Sorry, Skull.
When you come back, I'll let you do two songs.
But, Sam, uh, I you have one in the hopper, but it's up to you, buddy.
Whatever you want to play to close us out this week, there was the one that you sent me, which is great for anything that's on your mind.
Well, uh, old Albion by Screwdriver, who talked about that one.
If you can get that one on, that's a great suggestion.
You bet, and that uh answers an audience request as well.
So, throw it up wheelhouse.
All right, thanks, Sam.
We love you, Sam, and we will talk to you next week.
The sense of an English meadow west gently through the bars.
The sounds of summer harvesting can be heard from afar.
The beauty of old Albion, a beauty hard to beat.
But the heart has been corrupted by the changing power seat.
Will we stand and watch them taking our freedom away?
Will we stand and watch them taking our freedom away?
Our warriors are slandered and thrown into their jails and kept them all their loved ones in dungeons deep and stale.
They say that self-defense is no offense until the law starts with their lies.
They'll send you down for protecting your own, already guilty in their lying guys.
We stand and watch them taking our freedom away.
We stand and watch them taking our freedom away.
Our hearts are full of love and pride, for England is our home.
The hills and dales are in our souls, and the forest is to roam.
For now we lie back in ourselves and think of times gone by.
We think back of our lives and homes, and the girls who wait and cry.
Will we stand and watch them taking our freedom away?